Kaempfer's Woodpecker
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Celeus obrieni (Short, 1973) |
Kaempfer's Woodpecker (Celeus obrieni), also known as the Caatinga Woodpecker or Piaui Woodpecker, is a species of woodpecker from Brazil. The type specimen, a female, was collected in the Brazilian state of Piauí in 1926. No other individuals were collected or seen and the bird was feared extinct, until a male was captured,by Advaldo Dias do Prado during mist netting in 2006 in the state of Tocantins. It was known as Caatinga Woodpecker for some time, but this name is misleading and based on confusion between two places with similar names (see below).
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[edit] Taxonomy
Normally, it has been considered a subspecies of the Rufous-headed Woodpecker (Celeus spectabilis), but an evaluation by the South American Classification Committee in 2003 resulted in it being recognized as a distinct species. This was based on the differences in habitat, size and plumage, combined with the large distance (more than 3000 kilometers [1850 mi]) between the ranges of the two species.
[edit] Description
It has a total length of about 24 centimeters (9½ in). The head and remiges are mainly rufous-chestnut, the underparts and back are buff, the wing-coverts are barred in black and buff and the chest and tail are uniform black. The male has a red malar and mottling on its crest. For comparison, the Rufous-headed Woodpecker is larger and has extensive black barring on the back and underparts.
[edit] Habitat
Little is known about its habitat preference, but it appears to be associated with bamboo (specifically Guadua paniculata) growing in Cerrado and babaçu palm forest; very unlike the humid forest and woodland where the related Rufous-headed Woodpecker is found. There is no evidence to suggest that it occurs in Caatinga. Rather, the authors who proposed the common name Caatinga Woodpecker and association it with the caatinga habitat mistook a place in the caatinga called Uruçuí-Una for the type locality Uruçuí, some 180 km. NNW in cerrado habitat.
This has led to Kaempfer's Woodpecker being suggested as a common name instead of Caatinga Woodpecker. The new name honours Emil Kaempfer who collected the type.
[edit] Status
Being recently rediscovered after 80 years without any records, it is highly endangered. Repeated visits to the site of the recent rediscovered has identified eight individuals with an additional four at a nearby site. The new site is threatened by the construction of a new section of the Belém-Brasília Highway, and habitat loss is likely to be the main threat. However, due to the taxonomic confusion with the Rufous-headed Woodpecker, it has only recently been evaluated by BirdLife International where it has been given a status of Critically Endangered for the 2007 Red List.
[edit] References and external links
- BirdLife Species Factsheet
- Lost Woodpecker Reappears (BirdLife International)
- Evaluation leading to Celeus obrieni being split from C. spectabilis (South American Classification Committee)
- Evaluation leading to Kaempfer's Woodpecker being used as a common name (South American Classification Committee)
- PRADO A. D. 2006. Celeus obrieni:80 anos depois. Atualidades Ornitologicas.Nº 134 - Novembro/Dezembro 2006. Ivaiporã - PR Brasil.