I had Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers nesting in a tree on our property. Only the 
male worked on the nest cavity, repeatedly bringing beaks full of "sawdust" out 
as he dug. You could tell his progress by how much of him stuck out in the 
process. 

Eventually the male and female brought food to the hole, and then I could hear 
the nestlings begging. During this phase, the male continued to come out 
periodically with his beak full of sawdust.

Was he enlarging the nest cavity as the kids grew? Or did fecal sacs end up 
inside and he grabbed them plus sawdust? Based on the noise level of their 
begging, there had to be 3-5 kids in there. Did they eat all the fecal sacs? (I 
may have seen the female carry out one fecal sac in all their time in the nest.)

Also, the adults would often gather protein (bugs) and then go to their sap 
holes, before taking the food to the nestlings. I don't know if the always did 
this or not. Were they "dipping" the bugs into the sap to train the kids on the 
flavor, or to add nutrition or energy, or what?

As a side note, the mom and dad looked like MSP International Airport trying to 
keep up with their feeding. Depending upon where I stood to watch them, they 
would fly right over my head on the way out of the nest and off to their meal 
gathering. Nothing kept them from their mission.

Thanks for any insight into this sawdust, fecal sac, and sap behavior. 

Molly Miller
Inver Grove Hts
Dakota Co
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