Showing posts with label Bird Profile--Birds of Orange County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bird Profile--Birds of Orange County. Show all posts

Monday, August 17, 2015

Northern Flicker-- Colaptes auratus (subspecies--Red-shafted Flicker)



Male Northern Flicker.  Photographer Karen McQuade.  Copyright, all rights reserved.

All photographs unless otherwise attributed are taken by Karen McQuade and are under copyright.
 

It's eye catching. You see a sudden flash of reddish wings and tail as a bird the size of a pigeon but a bit more svelte flies away into the trees. The Northern Flicker is the largest woodpecker in Orange County, and one of the largest woodpeckers in North America. Only the Pileated Woodpecker which is not found in Orange County is larger. The Northern Flicker in the picture above didn't expect me. I, on the other hand, had seen a few salmon flashes in the distance as I headed over, and so I did expect him. The male on the tree trunk above was very close to the ground. Like many woodpeckers if there is no threat nearby, they will often start checking for insects and other edibles at the base of the tree.  All male red-shafted Northern Flickers have red mustaches like the one pictured above.



Female Northern Flicker feeding on the ground at Mile Square Park golf course in Fountain Valley

The Northern Flicker above has no red mustache and is a female.  She is feeding on insects, spiders, and any creepy crawler that peaks her interest.  Ground feeding is common for Northern Flickers.  The first time I ever saw a Northern Flicker was very early in the morning at Descanso Gardens on a fairly isolated lawn.  So remember to watch ahead of you as you cross a lawn.  Lots of very interesting birds are overlooked and dismissed as something more common until they fly up in front of the surprised birder. 


Male Northern Flicker at Huntington Central Park. Photographer, Karen McQuade


The Northern Flicker has two subspecies:  The Red-shafted found in the western United States and the Yellow-shafted found in the east.  In Orange County, we do rarely see Red-shafted/Yellow-shafted hybrids or an occasional Yellow Shafted Flicker.  If it is not seen in flight, the most obvious field mark is the black rather than red mustache on the male.  in flight, the yellow wing linings and yellow on the tail are the most obvious field mark or the red on the back of the head.  Our Red-shafted Flickers have no red on the back of their head.   The Northern Flicker we almost always see is the Red-shafted.  Its wing linings and undertail coverts are salmon colored.  In the picture above, the salmon color can be seen just a bit on the edges of the wingtips. 





Female Northern Flicker, red-shafted.  Notice the white rump is visible

Northern Flickers have white rumps, but usually the white is not visible.  In the picture above, you can see the white rump.  



Red-shafted Northern Flicker pair Wikipedia David Margrave Photographer

And though Birds of North America says they are primarily a ground feeding bird, I mostly see them in the trees in Orange County parks.  And that may be because there are so many people around in the parks.  

Female Northern Flicker feeding on the ground at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley

Above we can see the a female Northern Flicker from the front.  Like the male, she has a large, black wedge or bib on her chest just below the throat.  The female has no red mustache.  I took this photo through the fence.  She was actually on the lawn at the golf course adjoining Mile Square Regional Park.  The golf course attracts a lot of interesting birds.




Male Northern Flicker courtesy of USFWS  Dave Menke Photographer

Like many woodpeckers, Northern Flickers are cavity nesters.  They excavate a nest in a dead or diseased tree, buy will also use utility posts.   They will use nest boxes.  Check out the nestbox specifications on Nest Watch here.




Female Northern Flicker at Fairview Park, Costa Mesa, CA

Northern Flickers are especially fond of ants.  Orange County is a cornucopia of ants.  We are a perfect match.  Lawns with their short grass are places to forage for their favorite food--insects.  Seeds and fruit round out their diet.




Four Northern Flickers--Huntington Central Park
photographer

I have noticed that occasionally I do see groups of male and female Northern Flickers together and not just individuals or pairs or individuals. 




Male Northern Flicker--Huntington Central Park



Sometimes the first thing that draws my attention is the call.  Northern Flickers like many woodpeckers are loud birds.   Check one of their longer calls on Lark Wire and on All About Birds here.   I often hear their Kyeer call.  It may be hard to identify if you are not familiar with it.  It almost can sound a wee bit hawkish.  Another call is the wik, wik, wik call.  Quite loud and very hard to miss.  Has a similar quality to the Acorn Woodpecker without sounding exactly like it.  



Male Northern Flicker at Huntington Central Park. Photographer, Karen McQuade


One of the best skills to develop if you are a birder is listening.  If you know what you are hearing, you know at least some of the birds that are present.  Sea and Sage has some birding by ear classes taught by experienced birder and teacher Sylvia Gallagher. 





Male Northern Flicker at Huntington Central Park. Photographer, Karen McQuade



Become familiar with the habits, habitat, and diet of birds you want to see.  Then look where they are most likely to be found.  Know what to expect where you are birding, but be prepared for anything.







Female Northern Flicker at Huntington Central Park in Shipley Nature Center. Photographer, Karen McQuade

You may notice that there is a reduced number of Northern Flickers in Orange County from late-spring to summer.  Northern Flickers do migrate.  Some do leave California entirely, but many travel to higher elevations within California.   By fall, the Northern Flickers have returned to Orange County.

 
Male Northern Flicker at Huntington Central Park. Photographer, Karen McQuade

Northern Flickers are great birds to observe.   As with all woodpecker, look along the trunk of the tree as well as the branches.  Don't forget that they are ground feeders as well, and take a good look at the birds feeding on the ground.  You may get lucky and find a Northern Flicker feeding on the lawn at your local park.



Male Northern Flicker at Huntington Central Park. Photographer, Karen McQuade


Enjoy birding in Orange County, and listen and look for our largest woodpecker, the Northern Flicker.




Videos






Where can you see Northern Flickers in Orange County?

Many of the Regional Parks including Mile Square Park,  Laguna Niguel Regional Park, Irvine Regional Park, Carbon Canyon Regional Park, Santiago Oaks Regional Park.

Upper Newport Bay

Huntington Central Park--both sides of the park

Fairview Park in Costa Mesa down by the marsh.

And many small park and residential areas


Where have Yellow-Shafted Northern Flickers been seen?

Both Yellow-shafted and hybrid Yellow-and-Red-shafted flickers have popped up a few times a year in various areas all over Orange County in the last decade.  They are still rare.  If you think you see one, all the details of where and when, and the field marks and report it to ebird and Orange County Birding.  Document, document, document.  Write the details, take pictures or video if you can.  Do this with any rarity so that others can try to verify your findings and perhaps gather more information.  Remember, there is no disrespect in this.  The best of us make errors, and science is all about documenting and duplicating findings.




OC Birder Girl Links


Woodpeckers of Orange County, California










Resources and Links 







Sound library.  Northern Flicker calls.



Videos taken by many individuals of the red-shafted and yellow-shafted Northern Flicker.


















Friday, June 26, 2015

Downy Woodpecker--Picoides pubescen



Female Downy Woodpecker.  Donna Dewhurst, Photographer. USFWS Digital Library.

The Downy Woodpecker is the smallest woodpecker in the United States. While the Nuttall's Woodpecker is a California bird rarely found anywhere else, the Downy Woodpecker is a North American bird found in every state in North America including Alaska.  The Downy is also found in Canada, but not in Central or South America like the similar Hairy Woodpecker.



Male Downy Woodpecker.  Dan Sudia, Photographer.  USFWS Digital Library
 

Like many woodpeckers the Downy Woodpecker is black, white, and the male has red on his head.  Both males and females have a large patch of white feathers on their backs. 



Male Downy Woodpecker looking mighty fluffy.


The white feathers on the back of the Downy are soft and fluffy looking, hence the name "Downy" Woodpecker.  


Male Downy Woodpecker Huntington Central Park


The Downy Woodpecker is dainty.  Its bill looks little and cute.  Nothing like the big drill bit bill on the Hairy Woodpecker or most other woodpeckers.  Remember, it is the smallest North American woodpecker, and so think little and cute.





Male Downy Woodpecker Huntington Central Park

Downy Woodpeckers like deciduous trees no matter where they are.  You will see them in forests, woodlands, parks, and even in apartment complexes with deciduous trees.  Years ago I saw an adult Downy Woodpecker and her three babies on the trunk of a sycamore tree in front of my apartment.  Caught me totally by surprise because I usually wouldn't think of an apartment complex as a woodpecker magnet, but it was.   But regardless of where the trees are, most of the Downy Woodpeckers I have seen are in trees like sycamores, oaks, or even eucalyptus rather than pines.


Male Downy Woodpecker Huntington Central Park



Males and females tend to forage in slightly different types of trees or locations on trees that vary across its range so that where the male and female Downy Woodpeckers forage may be different in California and New Jersey.  However, the male will still take the  better foraging areas no matter where in the country you see him.  The male is the dominant woodpecker.


Male Downy Woodpecker foraging among the bark and leaf litter on a eucalyptus.
 


Downy Woodpeckers' diet consists of fruit, plant matter, sap, and also most of the creepy little edibles you might imagine on and under the bark and on the leaves of trees: insects, spiders, snails, caterpillars, larvae, and more. Downy Woodpeckers also drill holes in galls, and eat whatever they find in the gall including eat insects, and larvae.

Female Downy Woodpecker



Like all woodpeckers, Downy Woodpeckers have zygodactyl feet which means they have two toes pointing forward and two pointing backward.  Like all woodpeckers, they are able to use their zygodactyl feet to hold onto the tree more firmly and their to use their stiff tail feathers to help them balance and to move more rapidly by providing more stability as they move their feet.  Sometimes woodpeckers move in a circular fashion up a tree, and they fly frequently to other locations. 



Female Downy Woodpecker excavating a nesting cavity. 

Downy woodpeckers nest in cavities they excavate in trees.  Above is a female Downy excavating a cavity near the library at Huntington Central Park.   She abandoned it soon after without finishing it, but the wood chips were flying for a while.  Males and females both excavate the nest and care for the young.  Notice that there are black spots on the edge of her white tail.  The Downy has black spots in the white edges of the tail, but the Hairy Woodpecker does not.  The Hairy Woodpecker has pure white edges on its tail.



Female Downy Woodpecker


The sound of the Downy Woodpecker is distinct.   Try to listen to some of the drumming and calls of the Downy Woodpecker at The Macaulay Library.  Get familiar with it.  Knowing the sound can help you look for it and find it.




Female Downy Woodpecker


Notice the small bill and dainty look of the Downy Woodpecker.  Notice, too, in the pictures of the Downy the sharp angle of the bill.





Notice the small bill on this Male Downy woodpecker. 

Downy Woodpecker and the Hairy Woodpecker are very similar.  The Downy is common in Orange County, but the Hairy Woodpecker is rare.  However, the very similar Hairy Woodpecker is seen on occasion in Orange County.  Notice the spots on the white edges of the tail in the photo above.  This is a Downy.






So how do you tell the difference?



Female Hairy Woodpecker, Donna Dewhurst Photographer. Courtesy USFWS.

Well, the most obvious is the size.  The Hairy Woodpecker is approximately 9 inches long and the Downy is only 6.5 inches long.   Also, notice that the Hairy Woodpecker in the picture above has a much larger bill and lacks the dainty look of the Downy.  In addition, the Hairy Woodpecker's feathers lack the soft, fluffy look of the Downy Woodpecker.  The feathers look more hairy than soft and fluffy.  Also as mentioned above, the white tail edges of the Downy are white with black spots, and the Hairy's tail edge are white with no spots.   But the best thing is to view a lot of pictures, watch a lot of videos, and listen to a lot of audio recordings.  The more you have seen and heard both the species, the easier it is to identify them.  Notice, too, that the Hairy Woodpecker's bill is about the depth of its head.  A big bill, not a dainty one.


Female Downy Woodpecker.  Very fluffy, and very dainty.


Become very familiar with the profile and the look of each.  There is a distinctly different feel you get from a small dainty, fluffy Downy with a little, chisel-like bill and a larger Hairy with a large bill.  The bill is bulkier on the Hairy and the slope of the bill from base to tip is much more gradual.  The Downy has a more sharp angle and a much thinner, pointed bill.  It would take several bills to equal the depth of its head.


Male Downy Woodpecker


The Hairy's bill is longer and thicker.  It has a more gradual slope.  And yes the bill of a Hairy is almost as deep as its head while the Downy covers only a about a third of the head, but get the feel for each bird.  Familiarize yourself with the calls.  It is like knowing twins who look very much alike, but have differences that are subtle.  I used to work with several sets of identical twins, and there are subtle differences when you know them well.  Initially, I couldn't tell who was who, but later I just knew.   Get to know these well and you won't have much hesitation in differentiating them.




Female Downy Woodpecker


Enjoy the parks and wilderness areas and have fun as you look for the Downy Woodpecker and other amazing birds in Orange County.



OC Birder Girl Links

Woodpeckers of Orange County, California


Acorn Woodpeckers 


Nuttall's Woodpecker




Links and Resources


Backyard Birding YouTube Channel

I highly recommend the Backyard Birding YouTube Channel.  There are excellent videos and quite a few on Downy Woodpeckers. Has some good clips of the calls and rattles as well.


YouTube Downy Woodpecker search

View a lot of Downy Woodpecker videos.



Downy Woodpecker and Hairy Woodpecker

Helpful article on how to differentiate the Downy Woodpecker and the Hairy Woodpecker from Cornell Lab's Project Feeder Watch.


Bird Note--Downy Woodpecker

An audio description of the Downy Woodpecker complete with its call.  Transcript available.  Video available, too.




SORA: Downy Woodpecker Predation at Goldenrod Galls






The Internet Bird Collection: Downy Woodpeckers


Video and photos of Downy Woodpeckers.




A new clue for identifying Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers by David Sibley

New field mark detail discussed on Sibley Guides.




Tennessee Watchable Wildlife--Downy vs. Hairy

Detailed article with photos of the difference between the Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers.

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Nuttall's Woodpecker-- Picoides nuttallii


 Male Nuttall's Woodpecker--Mike & Chris, Wikipedia



The Nuttall's Woodpecker is a woodpecker that is found almost exclusively in California.  Nuttall's live year-round in a very  limited range.  Mostly in the western part of California with a slight dip into the northwest area of Baja California in Mexico.  There have been accidental sightings in Nevada and southern Oregon.  But for the most part Nuttall's Woodpeckers are California birds. 


Male Nuttall's Woodpecker.  Notice there are two toes pointing forward and two pointing backward.  Photographer "Mike" Michael L. Baird, Wikipedia



The Nuttall's appearance is very close to the Ladder-backed Woodpecker.  There will  be several factors in your determination of which one you are observing.  First is the location.  Nuttall's live year-round in a limited range mostly in the western part of California.  So if you see one outside that range, observe, document, and try to get a picture because it is highly unlikely, and other birders will be skeptical.



 
Male Ladder-backed Woodpecker on a cactus.  Note there is no thick stripe at the Shoulder.  (Photographer Alan D. Wilson, www.naturespicsonline.com)

 
Habitat is another key to identifying the species.  The Nuttall's Woodpecker likes woodlands--either oak woodlands or riparian woodlands.  The Nuttall's likes trees and streams and lakes.  Or at least trees that grow in moister areas.  On the other hand, the old name for the Ladder-backed Woodpecker is the "Cactus Woodpecker."  And that tells you about the Ladder-backed Woodpecker's proclivity for drier habitats.  It lives in the desert areas of California such as the Antelope Valley of Los Angeles, the Inland Empire, and in San Bernardino County.  The Ladder-back is usually found in the drier habitat the cacti, the Joshua tree, the mesquite.  The Nuttall's is in the shadier, moister habitat out in the eucalyptus, the oak, and the cultivated trees in the park.  The Ladder-backed Woodpecker is a desert bird with a much larger list of states in its range: California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Kansas.  Its range also extends down into Mexico as far south as the Yucatan Peninsula with some localized sightings down as far south as the Republic of Nicaragua.  To find both the Nuttall's and the Ladder-backed Woodpeckers you would need to find both their habitats together in one place.  Big Morongo in San Bernardino County is one of the few places where you will find both species, but you will almost never find the Ladder-backed Woodpecker in Orange County. 



Female Nuttall's Woodpecker in Huntington Central Park.  (Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright).


The other thing that will help you decide if it is a Ladder-backed Woodpecker or Nuttall's Woodpecker is the thick, black stripe at the top of the back stripes.  Notice that in the picture above, even though her head is turned, you can still make out that the top stripe is a much wider, black bar than the rest of the back stripes.  This is is key to identifying the Nuttall's Woodpecker.  The Ladderbacked Woodpecker does not have the thick, black bar at the shoulders.   Check out the illustration below.  The Ladder-backed Woodpecker is the upper illustration.


 
Comparison of the Ladder-backed Woodpecker (upper image) and Nuttall's Woodpecker (lower image).  Courtesy of the United States Department of the Interior



Notice in the illustration above of the male of each species, the upper image of the Ladder-backed Woodpecker has no thick stripe at the shoulders and that the male Ladder-backed Woodpecker has some small red spots on the head.   The male Nuttall's has a thick terminal stripe at the shoulders and only small white spots on the head.  



Male Nuttall's Woodpecker in Huntington Central Park (west side).  The tail feathers help with balance.
(Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright)

In Orange County, if you find what you think is a Ladder-backed Woodpecker, document, document, document--and take lots of pictures, because you just don't find them often if at all in Orange County.  Now if you go into Riverside, San Bernardino, Mojave, then yes, there you are likely to see a Ladder-backed, but not in Orange County.



Female Nuttall's Woodpecker in Huntington Central Park.  Notice the thick, black terminal band at the shoulders.  (Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright).
Huntington Central Park is one of the many areas in Orange County where you can see a Nuttall's Woodpecker.   They breed here.  Nuttall's Woodpeckers are all over the east side of Huntington Central Park in the area between the garden and the lake.   You will also find them in the area up from the parking lot in the pepper trees adjacent to the library parking lot to the east of the library, and in the eucalyptus near the bathroom as you follow the higher path rather than going down toward the lake and the garden.  You will also find Downy Woodpecker's in the same areas.  Downy Woodpeckers are easily differentiated from the Nuttall's Woodpecker.  The smaller Downy Woodpeckers have a large white area in the middle of their back which is easy to differentiate from the Nuttall's striped back.  Downy's are less associated with oak woodlands.  


Male Nuttall's Woodpecker in Huntington Central Park.  (Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright).  See the thick, black bar across his shoulders?


Nuttall's Woodpeckers are all over the east and west side of Huntington Central Park.  On the east side of the park in the area between the garden and the lake. I hear them often.  You will also find Downy and Northern Flickers in that same area.   But there is no confusing them with Nuttall's. 




 Female Nuttall's Woodpecker in Huntington Central Park.
(Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright)

Nuttall's Woodpeckers are cavity nesters.  They chip out a hole in a tree and set up housekeeping.  The males do the main excavation work.



Male Nuttall's Woodpecker.  Huntington Central Park.  (Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright)


The bird above is obviously a male as indicated by the red on the back of the head to the nape.  (Be aware though that juvenile female Nuttall's may have some scattered red feathers on the head.)  This Nuttall's started low to ground on the eucalyptus tree which was back a bit from the pathway.   It then worked its way up.  Nuttall's Woodpeckers eat mostly insects such as beetles and ants with a small amount of fruit, seeds, and flowers.  They also include caterpillars, a few spiders and other creepy crawlers in their diet.  Woodpeckers often start low to the ground in the less traveled areas of this and other parks.  Nuttall's often move quickly sometimes moving around the trunk and upward.  Frequent flights to other parts of the tree or to another tree are common.

Female Nuttall's Woodpecker in Huntington Central Park
(Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright)
While birding between rainstorms in Huntington Central Park, I saw a Nuttall's vigorously bathing in a rain puddle. 

Male Nuttall's Woodpecker in Huntington Central Park
(Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright)


The Nuttall's has not been studied as much as the Ladder-backed Woodpecker.  But we do know quite a bit of information.  When looking for the Nuttall's, listen because it often calls its loud, rattling call as it flies from tree to tree. 


Male Nuttall's Woodpecker.  Huntington Central Park.  (Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright)

There are recorded instances of Downy-Nuttall's hybrids and unsurprisingly Nuttall's-Ladder-backed hybrids in California at large, and specifically in Orange County by very reliable sources. But these are rare, and again a case in which if you find such a bird, you should document, document, document.  And say exactly where you found it so others can try to confirm.  There is no offense in this.  Science is all about being able to duplicate findings. 

Even from the side, you can see the broad black band at the shoulders.
Male Nuttall's Woodpecker.  Huntington Central Park.  (Photographer, Karen McQuade, copyright)



The oakland and riparian woodlands are great places to bird.  Have fun birding in Orange County, and look and listen for Nuttall's woodpeckers.  They seem to be everywhere. 



  Where to find Nuttall's Woodpeckers

Here are a few areas where you will find Nuttall's Woodpeckers in Orange County, but not the only areas in Orange County. Nuttall's Woodpeckers can be found anywhere there are trees in Orange County.


Huntington Central Park

Mason Regional Park

Mile Square Regional Park

Clark Regional Park

Yorba Regional Park

Carbon Canyon Regional Park

Laguna Niguel Regional Park

Irvine Regional Park

Santiago Oaks Regional Park

San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary

Upper Newport Bay

O'Neill Regional Park

Oak Canyon Nature Center





OC Birder Girl Links




Woodpeckers of Orange County, California


Acorn Woodpeckers






Resources and Links


All About Birds--Nuttall's Woodpecker


Audubon Guide to North American Birds--Nuttall's Woodpecker

The picture is very big, and you might not see the text.  Page down on the Audubon Guide page to read the article about the Nuttall's Woodpecker. 


Birds in Forested Landscapes--Nuttall's Woodpecker 
 


Birds of North America--Nuttall's Woodpecker



The Internet Bird Collection: Nuttall's Woodpecker

Videos and photographs of Nuttall's Wookpeckers.
 


Macaulay Library--Nuttall's Woodpecker

Audio and video recordings.


National Geographic--Nuttall's Woodpecker



Xeno-Canto--Sharing Bird Sounds from around The World: Nuttall's Woodpecker

Listen until you recognize the call.