Chestnut woodpecker
The chestnut woodpecker a species of bird in subfamily Picinae of the woodpecker family Picidae. It is found on Trinidad and in every mainland South American country except Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The chestnut woodpecker has these six subspecies:- C. e. hellmayri Berlepsch, 1908
- C. e. deltanus Phelps, W.H. & Phelps, W.H. Jr., 1950
- C. e. leotaudi Hellmayr, 1906
- C. e. elegans
- C. e. citreopygius Sclater, P.L. & Salvin, 1867
- C. e. jumanus
Description
The chestnut woodpecker is about long. Subspecies C. e. hellmayri weighs, C. e. leotaudi weighs, and C. e. jumanus weighs. Males of all subspecies have a wide bright red malar area and cheek; females have no red. In the nominate subspecies C. e. elegans adults of both sexes have a buffish cream forehead, crown, and crest. The rest of their head including the chin and throat are deep chestnut brown. They have deep rufous-chestnut upperparts with a cream-buff rump and uppertail coverts, and sometimes faint black bars on the back. Their flight feathers are blackish brown with rufous bars at their base. Their wing coverts have small white spots. Their tail feathers are blackish with some rufous on the outermost pair. Their underparts are dark chestnut brown; sometimes the belly and vent are lighter. Their flanks are a paler creamy cinnamon-buff and often have obscure darker bars. The adult's bill is ivory to yellow or greenish yellow, their iris red-brown to red, and their legs olive to dark gray. Juveniles are similar to adults but havea dull blackish face and darker mottling on their underparts.Subspecies C. e. hellmayri is somewhat darker than the nominate overall and especially on the crown; its wing coverts have more spots and the flight feathers more bars. C. e. deltanus is even darker on its crown than hellmayri. Subspecies C. e. leotaudi is paler and brighter than the nominate and has a tawny crown and a yellower rump. C. e. jumanus is darker overall than the nominate and the three above subspecies. Its crest is shorter, its back feathers have rufous tips, its wing coverts no spots, and its flight feathers are more rufous. C. e. citreopygius, like jumanus, has a short crest, but is blacker overall with less rufous.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the chestnut woodpecker are found thus:- C. e. hellmayri, eastern Venezuela, Guyana, western Suriname, and northern Roraima in Brazil
- C. e. deltanus, northeastern Venezuela's Delta Amacuro state
- C. e. leotaudi, Trinidad
- C. e. elegans, eastern Suriname, French Guiana, and northern Brazil north of the Amazon between the Rio Branco and the state of Amapá
- C. e. citreopygius, eastern Ecuador and eastern Peru
- C. e. jumanus, from eastern Colombia and southern Venezuela south through western and central Brazil into northern Bolivia