Red-rumped woodpecker
The red-rumped woodpecker is a species of bird in the subfamily Picinae of the woodpecker family Picidae. It is found from Costa Rica south to Peru and east to Brazil, Guyana, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Taxonomy and systematics
The International Ornithological Committee and BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World place the red-rumped woodpecker in the genus Veniliornis. However, starting in 2018, the American Ornithological Society and the Clements taxonomy moved all species of the genus Veniliornis into genus Dryobates.The taxonomic systems agree that the red-rumped woodpecker has these five subspecies:
- V. ''k. neglectus Bangs, 1901
- V. k. cecilii
- V. k. continentalis Hellmayr, 1906
- V. k. monticola Hellmayr, 1918
- V. k. kirkii''
Description
The red-rumped woodpecker is about long and weighs. Males and females have the same plumage except on their heads. Males of the nominate subspecies kirkii have a red crown and nape with some dusky brown or dark gray feather tips. The female has a dark brown crown with a tinge of green. Adults of both sexes have mostly olive-brown faces with whitish streaks. Their upperparts are mostly golden olive-brown with some yellow and red feather tips and crimson-red rump and uppertail coverts. Their flight feathers are dark brown with greenish-olive edges. Also, their tails are dark brown with pale buff bars on the outer pairs of feathers. Furthermore, their underparts are barred with dark brown and whitish, with the whitish ones wider on the belly. The iris is dark brown to red-brown, the longish beak blackish with a paler mandible, and the legs are grayish with a green to blue tinge. Juveniles resemble adults except that both sexes have some red on the crown, the male more than the female.Subspecies monticola is larger than the nominate and has heavy blackish barring on its underparts. Subspecies continentalis is smaller than the nominate, has more yellow on its nape, and wider pale bars on its underparts. Subspecies cecilii is smaller than continentalis, and compared to the nominate has less pattern on the chin and throat and more barring on the tail. Subspecies neglectus is brighter above and darker below than the nominate.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the red-rumped woodpecker are found thus:- V. ''k. neglectus, southern Costa Rica and western Panama including Coiba Island
- V. k. cecilii, from eastern Panama south through western Colombia and western Ecuador into extreme northwestern Peru
- V. k. continentalis, western and northern Venezuela
- V. k. monticola, the tepui area where central and southeastern Venezuela, western Guyana, and extreme northwestern Brazil meet
- V. k. kirkii'', northeastern Venezuela's Paria Peninsula, Trinidad, and Tobago