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Bahama Nuthatch
Episode 2320th February 2025 • Bad at Goodbyes • Joshua Dumas
00:00:00 00:36:46

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Bahama Nuthatch :: Sitta insularis

Bad at Goodbyes :: Episode 023

On today’s show we learn about the Bahama Nuthatch, a critically endangered avian native to the island of Grand Bahama in the Atlantic Ocean, roughly 60 miles east of the North American mainland off the southern Florida coast.

  • (00:05) Intro
  • (02:05) Species Information
  • (24:36) Citations
  • (27:21) Music
  • (34:49) Pledge

Research for today’s show was compiled from


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A note on accuracy: I strive for it! These episodes are well-researched and built from scholarly sources, hoping to provide an informed and accurate portrait of these species. That said, I’m an ambient musician! I am not an academic and have limited scientific background. I may get things wrong! If you are using this podcast for scholarship of any kind, please see the cited sources and double-check all information.

Transcripts

Intro:

Welcome to Bad at Goodbyes.

On today’s show we consider the Bahama Nuthatch

Species Information:

The Bahama Nuthatch is a critically endangered avian native to the island of Grand Bahama in the Atlantic Ocean, roughly 60 miles east of the North American mainland off the southern Florida coast.

The Bahama nuthatch is one of the smallest nuthatches in the world, measuring about 4 inches in length, with a wingspan of about 8 inches and weighing roughly a quarter of an ounce. So tiny, like about the size of teacup and weighing about the same as like 3 pennies.

The Bahama Nuthatch has a brownish cap that extends down to its nape, with a dark brown eye stripe. Its upperparts are predominantly bluish-gray that shift into a chocolate brown at the wingtips. Its chest and belly are a pale white specked with blue gray.

Its black bill is long, pointed and slightly upturned, adapted for probing bark and crevices for insects.

Its tail is short and square.

Its legs and feet are dark gray and its clawed toes are adapted for gripping bark. They’re arranged in a zygodactyl pattern, with two toes facing forward and two facing backward, meaning they can grip and climb up, down, sideways on tree trunks, even gripping and moving upside down.

The Bahama Nuthatch is native to Grand Bahama Island in the Bahamas, specifically the pineyards, a region of Caribbean Pine forests. This is a tropical and subtropical coniferous forest biome, populated with pine trees in the overstory in a warm, humid climate.

The landscape is relatively flat, with occasional limestone outcrops and depressions that create variations in the terrain which may hold seasonal ponds or wetlands during the rainy season. The climate on Grand Bahama Island is subtropical, with warm temperatures and high humidity year-round. Summer temperatures typically reach highs in the 90s °F, while winter temperatures rarely drop below the mid-60s.

The Bahama Nuthatch shares its habitat with Bahama Oriole, Bahama Woodstar, Poisonwood, Bahama Trumpet Tree, Florida Clover Ash, Bahama Warbler, Cuban Emerald Hummingbird, Boas, West Indian Woodpecker, Bahama Pine, Thatch Palm, Buffy Flower Bat, Devil's Gut, Bahama Yellowthroat, West Indian Snowberry, Rock Iguanas, Southern Bracken Fern, Bushy Beard Grass, Bahama Swallow and many many more.

The Bahama Nuthatch is an obligate resident of these pine woodlands. Obligate resident means that the Bahama Nuthatch is totally dependent on the Caribbean pine and these Caribbean pine forests for its survival, for food, safety from predation, and for reproduction and nesting. It cannot live anywhere else.

The Bahama Nuthatch forages for insects and seeds on all sections of the Caribbean pine, trunk, branches, twigs, and cones, spending most of its time feeding in the upper parts of the tree, roughly 40ft above the forest floor. Methodically moving up and down the trunk (using it’s zygodactyl claws), it peels off loose bark, and probes bark crevices, needle clusters and open cones for seeds and for arthropods like spiders, beetles, roaches, ants, and moths. With harder foods, like hardshelled insects and pine seeds, the nuthatch will hammer repeatedly with its bill until the food is safe for consumption.

It is this behavior that gives the nuthatch family its common name. It opens, or ‘hatches’ nuts, to eat the kernel inside.

e Brown-headed Nuthatch until:

nd Skew-doos. In two separate:

Researcher David Pereira, in:

SOUND RECORDING

nuanced vocalizations. From a:

“Inappropriate responses to a predator threat can be costly either by overestimating the degree of threat leading to wasted time and energy … or by underestimating the degree of threat leading to injury or death from the predator. Thus, natural selection should favour alarm calling systems in which signals reliably reflect the threat level a potential predator poses and receivers assess the quality of the source of the information and base their responses on this information quality.”

So, here’s what that looks like: if a nuthatch observed an approaching predator, they would vocalize a particular alarm call. Alternatively, if they heard another nuthatch’s alarm call, but did not see the threat, they would vocalize a slightly different call indicating that they were like passing along information, that it is not a direct observation. And also the nuthatch will eavesdrop (that is the scientific term) on other birds in their habitat. So, if another species raises an alarm call, a nuthatch that hears it will like translate it, I know that is not the right word but that’s the idea, translate it and vocalize its own alarm but indicating that the concern originated indirectly. So we’re learning that species are encoding substantive information in their vocalization and also that they are assessing what’s called public information from other species, to protect one another from predator threat.

————

In the dream, at the end. The memory of sweet downy fledgingings chittering for food. Of the Kirtland's Warbler visiting every wintertime. And thinking back far now, the mainland, the pines, the home stretching far past where we might ever adventure. Then the storms, the world-enders, the first, the next, the last, sheltering against the impossible wind, alarm muted in the swirling howl. An anxious goodbye, lost, in the dream.

————

Bahama Nuthatch mate and lay eggs from November to May. Each breeding season they form monogamous breeding pairs, and it seems likely these bonds last for multiple years, though we do not have enough evidence to say for certain.

They are cavity nesters, excavating holes in dead or decaying Caribbean pine. The female typically selects the nest site, and both partners participate in excavating and modifying the cavity. They line the nest with soft materials like bark fibers, feathers, and pine needles. The female lays a clutch of 3-5 eggs. Incubation lasts about two weeks, and the female does most of the incubating. And the male brings her food during this time.

Upon hatching both parents feed the newborns. The young fledge (means leave the nest) after about three weeks, though continuing to rely on their family for protection and food for roughly another 2-3 weeks.

The Bahama Nuthatch demonstrate cooperative breeding, so like the family unit consists of a breeding pair, their offspring, and potentially one or more helpers, usually male offspring from previous broods. These helpers assist with all aspects of raising the young, from feeding to protection to teaching foraging.

Juvenile Bahama Nuthatch reach reproductive maturity within about a year. But may stay with their parents in this helper role for one or more years before breeding themselves.

We do not have enough information to determine average lifespan, but their close relatives in the nuthatch family live roughly 5 years.

Over the 20th century the Bahama Nuthatch suffered a dramatic population decline due to habitat destruction and introduced predators. Extensive logging of the Caribbean Pine in the mid-20th century, that was then followed by land clearing for development, significantly reduced their habitat. The anthropogenic introduction of invasive predators like corn snakes, house cats, raccoons, and black rats exacerbated the decline.

ulation to the very brink. In:

Surveys in:

rricane Dorian in late summer:

As far as I could tell from my internet research, no recent large scale observational survey has been initiated, and the bird is tiny, shy, its habitat is relatively remote, so, a very small population could still remain. But it’s been like 5 years, and the birder blogs and recent posts from local naturalists and national park volunteers suggest that the Bahama Nuthatch may be extinct.

ically Endangered Red List in:

I’d like to play another of David Pereira’s recordings, as this could be the very last audio capture of the Bahama Nuthatch.

SOUND RECORDING

Citations:

“Abundance and distribution of breeding birds in the pine forests of Grand Bahama, Bahamas” Journal of Caribbean Ornithology; Vol. 24 No. 1 – https://jco.birdscaribbean.org/index.php/jco/article/view/107

Bahamas National Trust – https://bnt.bs/explore/grand-bahama/lucayan-national-park/

.:

“Further vocal evidence for treating the Bahama Nuthatch Sitta (pusilla) insularis as a species. ” Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club; Vol. 140, No. 4 – https://doi.org/10.25226/bboc.v140i4.2020.a4

//www.iucnredlist.org/species/:

“Land Bird Communities of Grand Bahama Island.” Ornithological Monographs No. 24 – https://doi.org/10.2307/40166704

.:

Sound Recording. David Pereira: XC614665 and XC615085, From Xeno-Canto. Accessible at www.xeno-canto.org/614665 and www.xeno-canto.org/615085

.:

2018 video footage of the Bahama Nuthatch – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eiy6yWxeqA

Wikipedia – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahama_nuthatch

Music:

Pledge:

I honor the lifeforce of the Bahama Nuthatch. I will commit its name to my record. I am grateful to have shared time on our planet with this being. I lament the ways in which I and my species have harmed and diminished this species.

And so, in the name of the Bahama Nuthatch I pledge to reduce my consumption. And my carbon footprint. And curb my wastefulness. I pledge to acknowledge and attempt to address the costs of my actions and inactions. And I pledge to resist the harm of plant or animal kin or their habitat, by individuals, corporations, and governments.

I pledge my song to the witness and memory of all life, to a broad celebration of biodiversity, and to the total liberation of all beings.

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