Hey, don't cry, 236 species of woodpecker, ok?

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Hey, don't cry, 236 species of woodpecker, ok?

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Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus), males, family Picidae, order Piciformes, St, Louis, MO, USA
photograph by Joe Burkes
Campo Flicker (Colaptes campestris)
Observed by leandrorezende
Red-headed Woodpecker (Melanerpes erythrocephalus). Family Picidae, order Piciformes.
Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA. March 2024.
Flickers always remind me to feel lucky to live in a world with birds.
Something about an earth-toned bird with highlighter orange feather shafts always gets to me (on the East Coast Norther Flicker’s have yellow feather shafts)

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Robust Woodpecker (Campephilus robustus), L - male, R - female, family Picidae, order Piciformes, Brazil
Uncharismatic Fact of the Day
If there's an award for best son/big brother, it would surely go to the red-cockaded woodpecker! While female offspring usually leave to seek out mates as soon as they're able, male offspring stay with their parents for a year or two to help maintain and excavate the family's tree cavity, incubate eggs and provide food for their siblings.
(Image: A red-cockaded woodpecker (Leuconotopicus borealis) by the Hitchcock Woods Foundation)
Get your own damn lunch!
Northern Flicker, yellow-shafted, eastern subtype (Colaptes auratus auratus). Central Park, NYC (2026). Two male birds fighting over food access.