“…The Magellanic Woodpecker is the largest woodpecker species in South America and the main primary cavity excavator of the southern temperate rainforests (Short 1970, Vergara and Schlatter 2004, Ojeda and Chazarreta 2006. Like other large woodpecker species, Magellanic Woodpeckers have relatively long parental care duration (two to three years), large territories (0.2 to 1.3 km²) and low densities (0.1 to 1.8 individuals/km²), which make them highly sensitive to forest loss and degradation caused by logging, wildfires, and natural disasters (Vergara and Schlatter 2004, Chazarreta et al 2011, Soto et al 2012, Ojeda and Chazarreta 2014, Vergara et al 2014; see also Lammertink et al 2009). Specifically, the loss of large, dying, or dead trees reduces availability of foraging, roosting, and nesting sites and, thus, induces population declines across multiple species of woodpeckers (Lammertink 2004, Mikusinski 2006, Bull et al 2007, Pasinelli 2007, Lammertink et al 2009, Kumar et al 2014, Nappi et al 2015.…”