Red-headed
Woodpecker
Unlike
other woodpeckers, Red-headed Woodpeckers rarely
excavate holes to find insects. Instead, they
employ a wide variety of foraging techniques and
eat a wide variety of foods. They will often
sally out from a perch after flying insects in
the manner of flycatchers, or they will drop to
the ground to capture prey they spotted while
perched. Animal prey ranges from beetles, ants,
and grasshoppers to mice, eggs, and young birds.
Red-headed Woodpeckers have been known to expand
the openings of hole-nesting birds nest
sites to get at the nestlings. Over the course of
a year, about half of their diet consists of
vegetable food. Their fondness for cultivated
fruit and corn may make them a nuisance in some
areas. Winter staples of acorns and beechnuts are
gathered and stored in crevices, cracks, and
other naturally occurring holes. Unlike their
food-caching relative, the Acorn Woodpecker, they
do not make their own holes for storing food. In
some cases, they seal their caches with chips of
wood or twigs. Large insects such as grasshoppers
and June beetles may also be stored for short
periods of time.
Red-headed
Woodpecker Range Map
Red-headed
Woodpeckers range from southern Canada to
the Gulf Coast, east of the Rocky
Mountains and west of New England. They
are birds of wooded savanna, open
woodlands, riparian forests, orchards,
suburbia, and agricultural lands.
Preferred habitat includes dead trees for
use as nest sites, relatively open
undergrowth, and access to the ground for
foraging. In the East, old mature
woodlots with some undergrowth as well as
suburbs and agricultural areas are
typical redhead habitats, whereas in the
South, clearings with tall stumps are
used. Although uncommon throughout much
of their range, Red-headed Woodpeckers
are most abundant in the open forests of
the Midwest. They were once common
throughout much of the Northeast but
declined with competition from European
Starlings for nest sites.
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Males excavate
nest cavities in barkless, dead tree trunks or
limbs from 6 feet to 75 feet above ground. The
task takes about two weeks. In treeless regions, nest
boxes, fence posts and utility poles are
used, as well as more unusual sites such as old
wagon wheels, pumps, and buildings. Both sexes
share in the incubation and feeding, although the
females increasingly assume the workload as the
nestlings grow older. Males sometimes begin
another excavation for a second brood.
Adult Red-headed Woodpeckers are unique and
unmistakable, with a red head, neck and throat,
black tail, black wings with large white patches
at the secondaries, along with a white rump and
underparts. Juveniles look similar but have
streaked dusky brown backs, wings, and tails;
streaked dusky brown heads; and some barring in
the white wing patch. This plumage lasts through
the summer and into the fall. The molt into the
adult plumage begins in September with the head
and back beginning to show adult coloring and
lasts through the winter.
The migration of Red-headed Woodpeckers appears
to depend on the availability of winter foods,
especially acorns and beech nuts. During most
years, birds from the northern parts of the
breeding range move southward in winter. They are
somewhat gregarious outside of the breeding
season, and large flocks, sometimes numbering in
the hundreds, may be seen in passage.
Coveside
Bird House Features

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