The Wallace Line runs between Borneo and Australia where Asian flora and fauna rarely crosses and mixes with the Australian flora and fauna. If memory serves, the sea currents are very fast and the winds are often turbulent, making it harder for species to migrate.
I love woodpeckers! In the Pacific Northwest, we have Hairy and Downy woodpeckers, a few sapsuckers, and a lot of Northern Flickers, whuick are my favorites with their sad clown faces. Dull brown with spots, there is a big surprise when they open their wings, vermillion to beight yellow underneath. Ours are Red Shafted with some intergrade hybrids with Yellow Shafted. They feed on the ground and eat ants!
Very interesting. Woodpeckers are some of my favorite birds, but I really don't know that much about them. I have a little familiarity with some of my local American species, like the Red-Bellied and Downy (or maybe Hairy) that live in my yard, but just about all of the non-American species you showed in this video were new to me. And wow! Some of them are amazingly colorful and impressive. I'll definitely have to look into them more. Thanks for the info!
I'm literally watching woodpeckers at my hanging bird feeder right now! We got Downy/Hairy woodpeckers here in Pennsylvania near Valley Forge, and another slightly bigger one with a white underside and face, with a red cap and a thinly striped black-and-white back. It's got black eyes, legs and beak. I don't know what species it is, any suggestions?
The birds with similar appearance but not closely related was fascinating. Evolution is absolutely amazing!
The Wallace Line runs between Borneo and Australia where Asian flora and fauna rarely crosses and mixes with the Australian flora and fauna. If memory serves, the sea currents are very fast and the winds are often turbulent, making it harder for species to migrate.
The Wallace line is between Borneo and Sulawesi
Fascinating facts & gorgeous colors of my favorite family of birds! Thanks for sharing this wonderful information with us! 🥰
Would be nice to hear their sounds included in the video.
Glad you showed a preview of this. Have always been curious about these courses and this is a great example. Will consider giving it a purchase.
Loved this video. They are so beautiful
Very interesting 🙌 🐦 Thanks!
Beautiful birds.
I love woodpeckers! In the Pacific Northwest, we have Hairy and Downy woodpeckers, a few sapsuckers, and a lot of Northern Flickers, whuick are my favorites with their sad clown faces. Dull brown with spots, there is a big surprise when they open their wings, vermillion to beight yellow underneath. Ours are Red Shafted with some intergrade hybrids with Yellow Shafted. They feed on the ground and eat ants!
Very interesting. Woodpeckers are some of my favorite birds, but I really don't know that much about them. I have a little familiarity with some of my local American species, like the Red-Bellied and Downy (or maybe Hairy) that live in my yard, but just about all of the non-American species you showed in this video were new to me. And wow! Some of them are amazingly colorful and impressive. I'll definitely have to look into them more. Thanks for the info!
Downy, Hairy and Pilleated are very common here, but the call really distinguishes them.
Wow this is so interesting 🤗 ! Thank you
I find bird evolution fascinating. Please make more videos like this one.
This video was a very interesting lesson.
I'm literally watching woodpeckers at my hanging bird feeder right now! We got Downy/Hairy woodpeckers here in Pennsylvania near Valley Forge, and another slightly bigger one with a white underside and face, with a red cap and a thinly striped black-and-white back. It's got black eyes, legs and beak. I don't know what species it is, any suggestions?
Could be a Red-bellied Woodpecker! Despite the name, their belly looks white-ish from most angles, and they have a red cap and barred back.
The evolutionary mimicry of the woodpecker pairs is fascinating, what other bird species display this?
This extraordinary phenomenon seems to be unique to woodpeckers within the world of birds! Just one more way they amaze us.
Super video
What makes a woodpecker a true woodpecker?
The map that you showed in the beginning is inacurate (Czechia have 10 species of woodpeckers)
Isn't our Creator amazing!
Yes, Cornell Lab of Ornithology is certainly amazing!! Amazing UA-cam creator. 😍