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  2. American three-toed woodpecker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_three-toed_woodpecker

    The female lays 3 to 7 but most often 4 eggs in a nest cavity in a dead conifer or sometimes a live tree or pole. The pair excavates a new nest each year. Three-toed woodpeckers rely on disturbed, old-growth forests and are strongly associated with active spruce beetle infestations, with beetle-infested trees being important for the woodpeckers ...

  3. Woodpecker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodpecker

    Woodpeckers include the tiny piculets, the smallest of which appears to be the bar-breasted piculet at 7.5 cm (3.0 in) in length and a weight of 8.9 g (0.31 oz). [2] [3] Some of the largest woodpeckers can be more than 50 cm (20 in) in length.

  4. Red-bellied Woodpeckers are one of over 300 kinds of woodpeckers in the world, including 22 species in the United States. Vicky McMillan/Special to The Island Packet/ The Beaufort Gazette What not ...

  5. Ivory-billed woodpecker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivory-billed_woodpecker

    The ivory-billed woodpecker (Campephilus principalis) is a woodpecker native to the Southern United States and Cuba. [a] Habitat destruction and hunting have reduced populations so severely that the last universally accepted sighting in the United States was in 1944, and the last universally accepted sighting in Cuba was in 1987.

  6. Red-cockaded woodpeckers' recovery in southeast leads to ...

    lite-qa.aol.com/news/science/story/0001/20241024/...

    Long-leaf pine forests once spanned much of the Atlantic and Gulf coastal regions, from New Jersey to Texas, but logging and development in the region reduced that to only 3% of this original habitat today, said Harlan. Red-cockaded woodpeckers were one of the first species designated as “endangered” in the United States in 1970, and the ...

  7. Pileated woodpecker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pileated_woodpecker

    The pileated woodpecker (/ ˈ p aɪ l i eɪ t ə d, ˈ p ɪ l-/ PY-lee-ay-tid, PIL-ee-; Dryocopus pileatus) is a large, mostly black woodpecker native to North America. An insectivore, it inhabits deciduous forests in eastern North America, the Great Lakes, the boreal forests of Canada, and parts of the Pacific Coast.

  8. Picinae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picinae

    Picinae containing the true woodpeckers is one of four subfamilies that make up the woodpecker family Picidae. True woodpeckers are found over much of the world, but do not occur in Madagascar or Australasia. Woodpeckers gained their English name because of the habit of some species of tapping and pecking noisily on tree trunks with their beaks ...

  9. These are Missouri’s most invasive animals. What should you ...

    www.aol.com/missouri-most-invasive-animals-one...

    Missouri’s most wanted: Report these invasive species immediately There are two invasive species that haven’t established populations in the state yet — but officials are bracing for their ...