
Downy Woodpecker
Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Chordata, Class: Aves, Order: Piciformes, Family: Picidae, Genus: Dryobates, Species: D. pubescens
Family: Picidae (Woodpeckers and Allies)
- Shape
- Relatively symmetrical with slightly curved edges and rounded tips; typical of a smaller woodpecker's inner or mid-primary feathers.
- Size
- Approximately 2 to 3 inches in length; typical for a small woodpecker species with a total body length of 5.5—7 inches.
- Rarity
- Very Common; widespread and easily encountered at bird feeders and in wooded areas.
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Description
These small, checkered black-and-white feathers belong to North America's smallest woodpecker. The bird is known for its white back patch and the male's small red spot on the nape. It measures roughly 6 inches with a 10-12 inch wingspan.
Colour & Pattern
Bold black base coloration with distinct, square-to-rounded white spots (checkered) along both the inner and outer vanes.
Barb Structure
Tightly interlocked (pennaceous) throughout most of the vane to provide lift and flight stability; minor plumulaceous barbs at the base.
Texture & Surface
Relatively stiff and smooth; matte finish with a slight natural gloss characteristic of healthy melanin-rich feathers.
Key Features
Distinctive 'piano key' white spots on a black background; small size compared to Hairy Woodpeckers; stiff rachis for flight.
Habitat
Found in deciduous forests, woodlots, residential yards, parklands, and orchards; often follows rivers and streams.
Geographic Range
Year-round resident throughout most of North America, from Alaska and Canada down through the continental United States to the Gulf of Mexico.
Ecological Role
Primary insectivore, especially beneficial for controlling wood-boring beetles; also creates nesting cavities used later by secondary cavity-nesters like bluebirds.
Similar Species
Hairy Woodpecker (feathers are significantly larger); Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (markings are more elongated or irregular).
Interesting Facts
The Downy Woodpecker is nearly identical in plumage to the larger Hairy Woodpecker, an example of convergent evolution or social mimicry. They also have specialized feathers covering their nostrils to protect them from wood dust.
Condition Notes
Good condition; the vanes are mostly intact without significant wear or 'fault bars' from nutritional stress.