|
Page 249
|
391. Texas Kingfisher. Ceryle americana septentrionalis.
Texas Kingfisher.
Range.--Southern Texas, south through Mexico.
This variety is much smaller than the Belted,
length 8 inches, and is a lustrous greenish
above, variously speckled with white, and is
white below, spotted with greenish. It is a
common and resident species in southern
Texas, where it lays its eggs in holes in the
banks along streams. The eggs are white and
glossy, and measure .95 × .70.
WOODPECKERS. Order XV. PICI.
Family PICIDAE
Woodpeckers are well known birds having
sharp chisel-like bills, sharply pointed and
stiffened tail feathers, and strongly clawed feet
with two toes forward and two back, except in
one genus. Their food is insects and grubs,
which they get by boring in trees, and from under the bark, clinging to the
sides of trunks or the under side of branches with their strong curved nails,
aided by the tail, for a prop. They are largely resident where found.
Ivory-billed Woodpecker.
392. Ivory-billed Woodpecker. Campephilus principalis.
Range.--Locally distributed, and rare, in
Florida, along the Gulf coast and north casually
to South Carolina and Arkansas.
This is the largest of the Woodpeckers found
within our borders, being 20 inches in length.
But one other American species exceeds it in
size, the Imperial Woodpecker of Mexico, which
reaches a length of nearly two feet; as this
species is found within a few miles of our
Mexican border, it may yet be classed as a
North American bird. The present species has
a large, heavy, ivory-white bill. They can
readily be identified, at a great distance, from
the Pileated Woodpecker by the large amount
of white on the secondaries. They used to be
not uncommonly seen in many sections of the
southeast but are now found very locally and
only in the largest and remote woods. They
nest in holes in large trees in the most impenetrable
swamps; laying three, and probably as
many as six pure white glossy eggs measuring 1.45 × 1.00.
|
|