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Acorn Woodpecker - BirdForum Opus

(Redirected from Melanerpes formicivorus)
Photo © by digishooter
Wofford Heights, Kern Co., California, USA, December 2014
Melanerpes formicivorus

Identification

23 cm (8-9 in)
Male is black with a red crown, bright yellow throat, and white and black spotted chest and belly. The crown and throat feathers stand out and look beautiful in the sunlight.

Female lacks the yellow throat and has a smaller red patch on the back of the head.

Distribution

Female
Photo © by bobsofpa
Madera Canyon, Arizona, USA, May 2005

Western United States, Mexico, and northern Central America. Subspecies flavigula is a common bird in the Western Andes of Colombia.

Taxonomy

Subspecies

Subspecies angustifrons
Photo © by Thomas P Brown
Serris De Lagoona, BCS Mexico, March 2016

There are 7 subspecies[1]:

  • M. f. bairdi:
  • M. f. angustifrons: dark brown eyes and shorter wings
  • M. f. formicivorus (aculeatus):
  • M. f. albeolus:
  • M. f. lineatus:
  • M. f. striatipectus:
  • M. f. flavigula:

Habitat

Dry pine and oak woods. The Colombian subspecies lives in the subtropical zone, at 1650 meters above sea level.

Behaviour

Like all woodpeckers, these birds use their tails to steady themselves when clinging to a tree.

Diet

The bird's main diet consists of acorns, seeds (particularly of pine trees), fruits, catkins, berries, sap, nectar and insects.

They live in colonies and store acorns in holes drilled by generations of woodpeckers. Acorn Woodpeckers have the unique habit of pecking individual holes into both dead and live pine and oak trees and then placing acorns within the holes. The acorns, however, are only a reserve food source (i.e. for winter). (The Colombian subspecies has been observed to peck small holes in living trees and put nothing inside, a puzzling behavior given the year-round availability of food in its range.)

Breeding

These birds are highly social and live in groups of twelve or more. In this group, only a few may mate, but all take responsibility for raising the babies and creating nests. The nest is built in a tree cavity. They lay 4-5 white eggs with an 11-12 day incubation period. Fledging occurs 30-32 days after hatching.

Gallery

Click on photo for larger image

References

  1. Clements, J. F., T. S. Schulenberg, M. J. Iliff, D. Roberson, T. A. Fredericks, B. L. Sullivan, and C. L. Wood. 2018. The eBird/Clements checklist of birds of the world: v2018. Downloaded from http://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/download/
  2. Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive (retrieved March 2016)
  3. bird-friends.com
  4. BF Member observations

Recommended Citation

External Links


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