Tristram's woodpecker

Tristram's woodpecker
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Piciformes
Family: Picidae
Genus: Dryocopus
Species: D. javensis
Subspecies: D. javensis richardsi
Trinomial name
Dryocopus javensis richardsi
(Tristram, 1879)
Synonyms
  • Picus richardsi
  • Thriponax richardsi
  • Dryobates richardsi
  • Thriponax kalinowskii

The Tristram's woodpecker (kor.: 크낙새 khunak, jap.: Kitataki) (Dryocopus javensis richardsi) is a rare Korean subspecies of the white-bellied woodpecker. It was discovered and described by English scholar and ornithologist Henry Baker Tristram in 1879.[1]

Description

The Tristram's woodpecker, with its 46 cm length, is among the largest woodpeckers. Both the tuft and the cheek patches are crimson red; its upper parts are black, which contrast with its white underparts, wing tips and a white rump. It has four toes of which two are directed backwards. Its tailfeathers are firm. Its native name was derived from the strange call which sounds like kullak!

Habitat and Ecology

This woodpecker inhabits dense mountain forests above 1000 m as well as urban areas. It is commonly found in areas with chestnuts, oaks, poplars, and elms. It prefers dead trees, where it nests in the hollow trunk and searches the bark for insects. The breeding period is from April to May where the female lays three to four eggs. It forages for food before sunrise and it returns its nest at sunset. It can move quickly from tree to tree, and when it perceives danger it jumps into a hollow trunk.

Threats

Historically the Tristram's woodpecker was found on the Japanese island of Tsushima and on the Korean peninsula. Due to intensive hunting and the request for museum specimens in the western world between 1898 and 1902 this subspecies almost completely disappeared from that island. In 1920 Japanese ornithologist Dr. Nagamichi Kuroda found the last specimen on Tsushima. Also in Korea it became a rare bird due to expansive deforestation. Though it was legally protected since 1952, it had vanished from South Korea by 1978. In 1993 a pair were spotted in the demilitarized zone. Today it only exists in North Korea. Probably fewer than 50 birds exist in the provinces of Kangwŏn-do and North Hwanghae in particular in the remaining forests of Rinsan, Phyongsan, Jangphung, Pakyon, Kaesong around the area of Myŏraksan. On May 30, 1968 it was proclaimed as National Monument No. 197 and therefore it enjoyed the special protection of the government. It is listed in Appendix I CITES but there is no special entry for this subspecies in the IUCN Red List.

References

  1. Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael (2003). Whose Bird? Men and Women Commemorated in the Common Names of Birds. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 342–343.


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