©Mark Hamblin/2020VISION
©Mark Hamblin/2020VISION
©Gillian Day
Great spotted woodpecker
The 'drumming' of a great spotted woodpecker is a familiar sound in spring woodlands.
Scientific name
Dendrocopos majorWhen to see
January to DecemberSpecies information
Statistics
Length: 21-23cmWingspan: 36cm
Weight: 85g
Average lifespan: 2 years
Conservation status
Classified in the UK as Green under the Birds of Conservation Concern 5: the Red List for Birds (2021).
Habitats
About
The great spotted woodpecker is a medium-sized woodpecker. It nests in holes that it excavates in trees in woodlands and parks. It has a distinctive, bouncing flight, but is mostly likely to be heard, rather than seen. In spring, it marks its territory with a distinctive 'drum', hammering its beak against a tree or other hard surface. Great spotted woodpeckers eat insects and their larvae, chipping away bark and probing tree trunks with their extremely sticky tongue. In autumn and winter, they will also eat seeds and nuts, often visiting peanut feeders in gardens.How to identify
The great spotted woodpecker is black and white, with white shoulder patches and red underneath the tail. Males have a small red patch at the back of the head, which is black in females. They are only likely to be confused with the lesser spotted woodpecker, which is much smaller and rarer.Young great spotted woodpeckers are often mistaken for lesser spotted woodpeckers, as they have a red crown – as do male lesser spotted woodpeckers. As well as being smaller than a great spotted woodpecker, lesser spotteds have horizontal white lines across their back, rather than the white shoulder patches of the great spotted woodpecker. Lesser spotted woodpeckers also lack the red beneath the tail.
Distribution
Widespread, although absent from northern Scotland and most of Ireland.Did you know?
In the last few years, the great spotted woodpecker has started to nest in Ireland for the first time.Watch
Great spotted woodpecker (https://vimeo.com/431481123)
Great spotted woodpecker by Tom Hibbert