Melanerpes candidus
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| Photo by Dario Sanches (Wikipedia) | 
Common name:
white woodpecker (en); pica-pau-branco (pt); pic dominicain (fr); carpintero blanco (es); weißspecht (de)
Taxonomy:
Order Piciformes
Family Picidae
Range:
This
 South American species is found from French Guyana, in the north, 
through most of Brazil and into southern Peru, Bolivia and northern 
Argentina.
Size:
These birds are 24-29 cm long and weigh 98-136 g.
Habitat:
The
 white woodpecker is mostly found in dry savannas and dry tropical 
forests, but also in dry grasslands and scrublands with some trees, 
moist forests, agricultural fields, palm groves, orchards and exotic 
plantations. they occur from sea level up to an altitude of 2.200 m.
Diet:
They
 feed on fruits, seeds and insects and are also known to eat honey from 
bee hives. Their insect prey are mostly Hymenoptera, namely leaf-cutting
 ants Acromyrmexi, other ants, the wasp Polybia scutellaris and the stingless bee Trigona spinipes.
Breeding:
White
 woodpeckers breed in September-December. They sometimes breed 
communally, in groups of 5-8 birds.  The nest is a hole in tree or 
stump, or sometimes a hole among rocks. there the female lays 3-4 white 
eggs, which are incubated by both parents. there is no information 
regarding the length of the incubation period. The chicks fledge 35-36 
days after hatching.
Conservation:
IUCN status - LC (Least Concern)
This
 species has a very large breeding range and  is described as uncommon 
and patchily distributed. The population appears to have expanded its 
range in the south since the early 1990's. In some areas they may be 
persecuted due to the damage they cause in orchards and fruit 
plantations, and in some cases trapped for the cage bird market, but 
overall the white woodpecker is not threatened.

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