Black-backed Woodpecker

Order: Piciformes

Family: Picidae

Genus: Picoides

Species: arcticus

**Audio Coming Soon**

 

Description

  • Length: 9.5"
  • Wing span: 16"
  • Weight: 2.5 oz (70 grams)
  • Medium sized woodpecker with an entirely black back
  • Sides are barred black & white
  • Throat, chest & belly are white
  • Face is black with white mustache marks that extend from bill tip to nape
  • Males have yellow cap females do not
  • **female is the very first photo to the right**
  • Juveniles resemble adult forms

Factoids:

  • An uncommon woodpecker of the northern coniferous forests, the Black-backed Woodpecker prefers burned-over sites. It moves from place to place, following outbreaks of wood-boring beetles in recently burned habitats
  • A curious aspect of the Black-backed Woodpecker's distribution is its apparent absence from the central and southern Rocky Mountains. It reaches its southernmost distribution in Wyoming and the Black Hills of South Dakota, while the American Three-toed Woodpecker ranges into isolated mountain ranges of Arizona and New Mexico. On the Pacific Coast, however, the American Three-toed Woodpecker rarely occurs as far southward as southern Oregon, while the Black-backed Woodpecker reaches the Sierra Nevada of central California
  • During the nonbreeding season, individual Black-backed Woodpeckers may move to areas south of the regular breeding range. Movements may be just a few wandering individuals or irruptions involving many birds. Winter records have occurred southward to Iowa, central Illinois, northern Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New Jersey, and Delaware. Irruptions have been attributed to a lack of wood-boring insect prey on their normal range or to overpopulation following an insect outbreak

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All photographs and audio clips are ©Jamie Mullin 2006

Sources: Cornell Lab of Ornithology & The Sibley Guide to Birds.

May 16th, 2008 #241