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An up close shot of a taxidermied ivory billed woodpecker.
A pileated woodpecker clings to a tree trunck in Maryland.
Black Woodpecker, Dryocopus martius, isolated on white background
Male pileated woodpecker on a fallen tree in the New England forest. Males can be distinguished from females by their fully red crest and red stripe, or mustache, behind the bill. \
Pileated woodpecker portrait sitting on a tree trunk into the forest, Quebec, Canada
A pileated woodpecker is seen making a nest in a tree trunk.  The woodpecker has a bright red crest on its head.  The bird is the same size as a pigeon.  It is large for a woodpecker.  In this photograph, the wild bird is making a hole in a tree to be used for nesting.  The blue sky can be seen in the background.  This bird is found in the Costa Rica rainforest.
Lineated Woodpecker bird (Dryocopus lineatus)
A female Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) resting on the side of an oak tree.  The Pileated Woodpecker is the largest of the woodpeckers found in the United States, almost the same size as an American Crow.
Lineated Woodpecker (Dryocopus lineatus) adult  clinging to tree trunk.\nTrinidad, Trinidad and Tobago
A male and female Pileated Woodpecker outside their nest in a tree near Nelson, British Columbia, Canada.
Black Woodpecker, Dryocopus martius, isolated on white background
Glimpse of a male pileated woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) on a sugar maple in the thick, lush-green New England forest of early spring, surrounded by blurred leaves and tree trunks
Digital Painting of  Pileated Woodpecker
A close-up portrait of a lineated woodpecker in Colombia.
A North American woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) perches on a tree trunk. It uses its beak to tap on trees to feed on ants and delimit its territory.
A pileated woodpecker is seen making a nest in a tree trunk.  The woodpecker has a bright red crest on its head.  The bird is the same size as a pigeon.  It is large for a woodpecker.  In this photograph, the wild bird is making a hole in a tree to be used for nesting.  The blue sky can be seen in the background.  This bird is found in the Costa Rica rainforest.
The habitat of this species is forests and more open woodland. A nesting hole is excavated in large dead trees. The entrance is fairly large, about 45 to 50 cm (17.5 to 19.5 in) in diameter, and oval-shaped. Female lays 2 to 3 white eggs, sometimes four. Incubation lasts about 9 to 14 days, by both sexes. Woodpeckers have short incubation period, but the nesting period is longer than in other birds’ species.
Pileated woodpecker searches for food in summer in the Laurentian forest.
Bright red crested woodpecker walking on grass in the woods
Araucania Region, Chile, Andes, Animal, Animal Behavior
Woodpecker on tree
Black Woodpecker (Dryocopus martius)
Male pileated woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) in the lush-green woods of early spring in New England, perched on a sugar maple tree covered in lichen, with copy space on the right
The crimson-crested woodpecker (Campephilus melanoleucos) is a very large woodpecker which is a resident breeding bird across most of northern South America. Photographed at Fazenda Barranco Alto, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil.
An adult male Crimson Crested Woodpecker is seen on a dead tree trunk.  There is a baby woodpecker with its head sticking out of a hole in the tree trunk.  The male adult Crimson Crested Woodpecker is looking at his baby chick.
Mannetje Magelhaenspecht; Male Magellanic Woodpecker
A young pileated woodpecker (pileatus dryocopus) lands on a deck rail and looks up.  The bird is in very sharp focus with lots of detail while the background is out of focus due to shallow depth of field.  Pileated woodpeckers are noted for their large size and bright red heads.
Red-Headed Woodpecker perched on a fencepost.
Red-headed woodpecker on tree with Spanish Moss in Ocala Wetlands Recharge Park in Ocala, Florida.
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