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1/125 f/2.8 108.0 mm ISO 320

Panasonic DMC-FZ200

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Keywords

tree
Anne Elliott
Fish Creek Park
back/side view
© All Rights Reserved
Order: Piciformes
Family: Picidae
Three-toed Woodpecker
Bebo Grove
irruptive
American Three-toed Woodpecker
Picoides dorsalis
uncommon in Alberta
Genus: Picoides
© Anne Elliott 2015
FZ200#3
male (yellow on top of head)
annkelliott
FZ200
nature
autumn
bird
close-up
outdoor
fall
forest
feeding
bark
ornithology
larvae
avian
Canada
Alberta
Calgary
Woodpecker
28 November 2015


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Three-toed Woodpecker

Three-toed Woodpecker
An overcast, dreary morning here today, 14 December 2015, Temperature is -5C (windchill -11C). There was s slight dusting of snow overnight. And Flickr is being a real pain this morning - too many problems.

This photo shows a tree that has had bits of its bark removed, leaving the orange-coloured wood exposed. The Woodpecker wants to get to the larvae that are beneath the bark, once it has been removed. Some trees are almost completely orange, so much bark has been peeled away by a Woodpecker. In winter, when there is snow on the ground, you can see the pieces of bark lying around the base of the tree, on top of the snow, if a Woodpecker has been at work very recently.

"The American Three-toed Woodpecker is found in boreal forests and montane coniferous forests across North America. Because of its choice of habitat, it is infrequently seen by most people." From AllAboutBirds.

www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/American_Three-toed_Woodpecke...

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_three-toed_woodpecker

This bird, uncommon in Alberta, was seen on 28 November 2015, in Fish Creek Park, when I went on a morning walk with friends. We had seen Three-toed Woodpeckers in this particular forested area before, in other years, so we were hoping one might be around. When we stopped to look and listen, I heard a distant tapping and, when we walked in that direction, one of the other birders caught sight of this bird. It was moving through a tangle of branches, up and down the tree trunk. These birds just never keep still, so I had about 50 photos to delete and just a handful to keep.

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