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  • Pecking Order: What Types of Post-Fire Snag Areas Do Woodpeckers Prefer?
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Pecking Order: What Types of Post-Fire Snag Areas Do Woodpeckers Prefer?

  • Article
  • Middle School
  • 1 Classroom Period
  • Fire
  • Wildlife
  • Black-backed Woodpecker
  • Fire Effects
  • Foraging
  • Forest Restoration
  • Sampling
  • Sierra Nevada
  • Snags
A photo of a woodpecker with the title of the article 'Pecking Order' on the top left hand corner.
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Trees that are dead but still standing are called snags. Even though snags are dead, they are still are important parts of the forest. Snags provide benefits to the environment, especially to the animals that live nearby. Because the population of Black-backed woodpeckers had fallen in the Sierra Nevada, scientists wanted to study what types of postfire habitats this woodpecker liked best.

Pecking Order: What Types of Post-Fire Snag Areas Do Woodpeckers Prefer?

Part Of

Wildland Fire 2 - Vol. 13 No. 1

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  • In this FACTivity, you will research black-backed woodpeckers and learn about what they eat and where they prefer to build nests. Then you will pretend to be a black-backed woodpecker...

    FACTivity – Pecking Order

    • Activity
    • Middle School
    • 1 Classroom Period
    • Fire
    • Wildlife
    • Creating Writing
    • Habitat
    • Informational Writing
    • Post-Fire Conditions
    • Research Activity
    • Woodpeckers
    In this FACTivity, you will research black-backed woodpeckers and learn about what they eat and where they prefer to build nests. Then you will pretend to be a black-backed woodpecker...
    Explore Activity Download FACTivity (PDF)
    Explore Activity Download FACTivity (PDF)

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    Pecking Order: What Types of Post-Fire Snag Areas Do Woodpeckers Prefer?

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Glossary

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  • analyze

    (a nǝ līz): To study or find out the nature and relationship of the parts of something.

  • ecological

    (ē kə lä ji kəl): Of or relating to the environments of living things or to the relationships between living things and their environments.

  • forage

    (fȯr ij): (noun) Food for browsing or grazing animals.

    (verb) To wander in search of forage or food.

  • habitat

    (ha bә tat): The place or environment where a plant or animal naturally or normally lives and grows.

  • lichen

    (lī kən): Any of numerous plantlike living things made up of an alga and a fungus growing together on a solid surface (such as a rock or a tree).

  • sample

    (sam pəl): A small subset group, representative of the entire group.

  • severity level

    (sə ver ə tē le vəl): In terms of fire, a measure of the number of trees that are killed due to a fire.

  • species

    (spē sēz or spē shēz): A category of living things that ranks below a genus, is made up of related individuals able to produce fertile offspring, and is identified by a two-part scientific name.

  • Headshot of Chad Hanson.

    Chad Hanson

    Fire Ecologist | Forest Ecologist

    My favorite experiences as a scientist are when I’m doing field work in burned forest habitat. I like working in fire areas where most of the trees were killed by...
    View Profile
  • A photo of Malcolm North standing in a forest while holding a measuring stick.

    Malcolm North

    Forest Ecologist

    “My favorite science experience was climbing into the top of a 175-foot-tall red fir to collect lichen samples during a wind storm.” “[Another] favorite science experience is climbing into the...
    View Profile

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Standards addressed in this Article:

Social Studies Standards

Social Studies Standards are educational guidelines outlining the essential knowledge, skills, and concepts students should learn in subjects such as history, geography, civics, and economics, aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of societal structures, historical events, and global perspectives.
  • People, Places, and Environments
  • Science, Technology, and Society
  • Time, Continuity, and Change

Note To Educators

The Forest Service's Mission

The Forest Service’s mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the Nation’s forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations. For more than 100 years, our motto has been “caring for the land and serving people.” The Forest Service, an agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), recognizes its responsibility to be engaged in efforts to connect youth to nature and to promote the development of science-based conservation education programs and materials nationwide.

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What Is the Natural Inquirer?

Natural Inquirer is a science education resource journal to be used by students in grade 6 and up. Natural Inquirer contains articles describing environmental and natural resource research conducted by Forest Service scientists and their cooperators. These scientific journal articles have been reformatted to meet the needs of middle school students. The articles are easy to understand, are aesthetically pleasing to the eye, contain glossaries, and include hands-on activities. The goal of Natural Inquirer is to stimulate critical reading and thinking about scientific inquiry and investigation while teaching about ecology, the natural environment, and natural resources.

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  • Meet the Scientists

    Introduces students to the scientists who did the research. This section may be used in a discussion about careers in science.

  • What Kinds of Scientist Did This Research?

    Introduces students to the scientific disciplines of the scientists who conducted the research.

  • Thinking About Science

    Introduces something new about the scientific process, such as a scientific habit of mind or procedures used in scientific studies.

  • Thinking About the Environment

    Introduces the environmental topic being addressed in the research.

  • Introduction

    Introduces the problem or question that the research addresses.

  • Method

    Describes the method the scientists used to collect and analyze their data.

  • Findings & Discussion

    Describes the results of the analysis. Addresses the findings and places them into the context of the original problem or question.

  • Reflection Section

    Presents questions aimed at stimulating critical thinking about what has been read or predicting what might be presented in the next section. These questions are placed at the end of each of the main article sections.

  • Number Crunches

    Presents an easy math problem related to the research.

  • Glossary

    Defines potentially new scientific or other terms to students. The first occurrence of a glossary word is bold in the text.

  • Citation

    Gives the original article citation with an internet link to the original article.

  • FACTivity

    Presents a hands-on activity that emphasizes something presented in the article.


Science Education Standards

You will find a listing of education standards which are addressed by each article at the back of each publication and on our website.


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Lessons

  • In small groups (or individually), students will read a Natural Inquirer or Investi-gator article and write a letter to the scientist, asking for clarification on at least four questions. This...

    Lesson Plan – Letter to a Scientist

    • Lesson Plan
    • Middle School
    • Upper Elementary
    • 2-3 Classroom Periods
    • Agriculture
    • Carbon
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    • Guided reading
    • Letter Writing
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    • Scientist
    In small groups (or individually), students will read a Natural Inquirer or Investi-gator article and write a letter to the scientist, asking for clarification on at least four questions. This...
    Explore Lesson Plan Download Lesson Plan (PDF)
    Explore Lesson Plan Download Lesson Plan (PDF)

    Part Of

    Wildland Fire 2 - Vol. 13 No. 1

  • The purpose of this lesson plan is to give students a chance to reflect on their reading and create poems to express what they have learned. The lesson plan is...

    Lesson Plan – Forest Poems

    • Lesson Plan
    • Middle School
    • Upper Elementary
    • 1 Classroom Period
    • Agriculture
    • Carbon
    • Citizen Science
    • Climate
    • Engineering and Forest Products
    • Fire
    • Insects
    • Pollinators
    • Pollution
    • Recreation
    • Social Science
    • Water
    • Wilderness
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    • Creative Writing
    • Haiku
    • Nature
    • Reflection
    The purpose of this lesson plan is to give students a chance to reflect on their reading and create poems to express what they have learned. The lesson plan is...
    Explore Lesson Plan Download Lesson Plan (PDF)
    Explore Lesson Plan Download Lesson Plan (PDF)

    Part Of

    Wildland Fire 2 - Vol. 13 No. 1

Education Files

Project Learning Tree

If you are a trained Project Learning Tree educator, you may use “Living with Fire” and “Trees as Habitats” as additional resources.

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