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Yellow-shafted Flicker

Yellow-shafted Flicker.jpg Great Horned OwlThumbnailsRed-bellied WoodpeckerGreat Horned OwlThumbnailsRed-bellied WoodpeckerGreat Horned OwlThumbnailsRed-bellied WoodpeckerGreat Horned OwlThumbnailsRed-bellied WoodpeckerGreat Horned OwlThumbnailsRed-bellied Woodpecker
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Colaptes auratus

People once called this bird a Yellow-hammer. Lots of folks still do, and it’s but one of the many names applied to this beautiful woodpecker. His brown-barred back, black crescent on the throat, spotted breast, white rump patch and bounding flight, his large size, his loud drumming, his posturing and his loud calls all point to this bird or, if you live in the west, the Red-shafted Flicker. The latter shows a reddish tint to the wings and tail where this bird shows yellow. Heads of males are marked differently, in that the western bird shows a red line extending down from the mouth, while the Yellow-shafted shows black lines.

A flicker prefers ants to any other food, and nature has equipped him with a long, sticky tongue which permits him to explore anthills or tunnels in trees where these insects might be lurking. When ants are not available, he turns to other insects, fruit or berries, one of his favorites the seeds of the poison ivy.

Author
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Introduction to Our Bird Friends, Volume 2, by Lenwood Ballard Carson
Published 1957
Dimensions
588*740
Tags
Birds
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749
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27