Chloropicus namaquus (A.A.H.Lichtenstein, 1793) is a animal in the Picidae family, order Piciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Chloropicus namaquus (A.A.H.Lichtenstein, 1793) (Chloropicus namaquus (A.A.H.Lichtenstein, 1793))
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Chloropicus namaquus (A.A.H.Lichtenstein, 1793)

Chloropicus namaquus (A.A.H.Lichtenstein, 1793)

Chloropicus namaquus, the bearded woodpecker, is a large African woodpecker found across much of sub-Saharan and eastern Africa.

Family
Genus
Chloropicus
Order
Piciformes
Class
Aves

About Chloropicus namaquus (A.A.H.Lichtenstein, 1793)

The bearded woodpecker (scientific name Chloropicus namaquus (A.A.H.Lichtenstein, 1793)) is one of the largest woodpecker species native to Africa, reaching an adult length of approximately 25 cm (10 in). It has a distinctive head pattern: a black moustache, a broad black eye-stripe, and a black crown, which contrast with a white supercilium, white face, white chin, and white throat. The male has a red hind crown that is absent in the female. Its mantle is black, and the rest of the upper body is yellowish-brown with narrow white barring. The tail is brown with white barring, and its tail feathers have yellowish shafts. The underparts are grey with narrow white barring. This species has a large greyish-black beak, grey legs, and red eyes. Juvenile bearded woodpeckers resemble adults, but their upper parts have a greenish tinge and more diffuse barring, and both sexes have some red coloring on the crown and nape. This woodpecker is found in Angola, Botswana, Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. It occupies a wide range of habitat types, including woodland with large trees, Brachystegia woodland, Euphorbia and Acacia woodland, gallery forest fringes, and brushland. It occurs from lowlands up to altitudes of approximately 3,000 m (10,000 ft). Bearded woodpeckers often forage in pairs, where members communicate vocally and flick their wings while calling. Each individual spends a long time on a single tree, hammering, probing, and pecking with its beak to glean any stray insects it finds, before flying to another often distant tree. Its diet includes insects and their larvae, spiders, caterpillars, and ants, and it has been recorded catching geckos and small lizards. This species often drums loudly on branches, finishing each drum-roll with four taps. It drills its nest hole in dead wood, up to 20 m (70 ft) above the ground. The average clutch size is three eggs. Both parents take part in incubation, which lasts thirteen days. Both adults care for the chicks, which remain in the nest for around four weeks before fledging.

Photo: (c) i_c_riddell, some rights reserved (CC BY), uploaded by i_c_riddell · cc-by

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Piciformes Picidae Chloropicus

More from Picidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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