Painted

Unknown

Published

1931

Volume

6

Plate

395

Redcockade Woodpecker

Dryobates borealis

Altho colored like the Downy, except that the red is on side of male's head, these Woodpeckers are quite different in manner and habits. They are found usually in tops of tall pines, where the forests are dense, having no fondness for orchards or the ways of man. The home is always excavated in a living pine and the trunk above and below the entrance pierced with numerous holes from which exudes sap which forms a sticky barrier around the tree. When sunlight strikes at the correct angle, this glistening effect can be seen for some distance. Mites and ants are malignant foes of young birds and probably this defence is intended to foil these enemies — which it does most effectively.

If normal fare of insects becomes scarce these birds will substitute seeds and berries and seem to thrive on the changed menu.

BREEDING

RANGE

Pine forests of eastern United States, south of Virginia.

Southern Pine

Pinus palustris

A tree from 100 to 120 feet high, found along the coast of the Atlantic and Gulf states to uplands east of Mississippi River, to Trinity River Valley, thru eastern Texas and western Louisiana.

redcockade-woodpecker