Campo flicker
The campo flicker is a species of bird in subfamily Picinae of the woodpecker family Picidae. It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Suriname, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The campo flicker was originally described as Picus campestris.The American Ornithological Society, the International Ornithological Committee, and the Clements taxonomy assign two subspecies to the campo flicker: the nominate C. c. campestris and C. c. campestroides. Since the early 1900s various authors have treated subspecies C. c. campestroides as a separate species, calling it the "field flicker" or "pampas flicker". BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World continues to do so as the pampas flicker.
Description
The campo flicker is about long and weighs about. Males and females have the same plumage except on their faces; males have a red malar stripe and females a black one. Adults of both subspecies have a black crown and a yellow face with white around the eye. Subspecies campestris has a black throat and campestroides a white one, their only difference. Both subspecies' upperparts are brown with dull white bars; their rump is white with a few narrow dark bars. Their flight feathers are brown with yellow shafts. The top side of their tail is black; the central and outermost feathers have thin paler bars. Their tail is brown with white bars on the outermost feathers. Their underparts are white with brown bars. Their long bill is gray, their iris reddish brown, and the legs gray. Juveniles are very similar to adults but with lighter yellow plumage.Distribution and habitat
The nominate subspecies of campo flicker has several disjunct populations. Three are in southern Suriname and the northern Brazilian states of Pará and Amapá. The fourth, much more extensive one, is from Maranhão in eastern Brazil south and west into Mato Grosso do Sul, central Paraguay, and northern and eastern Bolivia. Subspecies C. c. campestroides is found from central and southern Paraguay, Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil, and Uruguay south into northeastern and eastern Argentina as far as Río Negro Province. The two subspecies hybridize along their contact zone in Paraguay and southern Brazil.The campo flicker inhabits a wide variety of landscapes, most of them semi-open to open. These include savanna, the Pampas, scrub and gallery forest, the edges of denser forest, Pantanal grasslands, cerrado, and altered landscapes like parks, farmland, and heavily grazed pasture. In various parts of its range it can be found from as low as or as high as.