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Stierling's woodpecker

Stierling's woodpecker

Wikipedia

Stierling's woodpecker is a species of bird in the family Picidae. It is native to Malawi, Mozambique, and Tanzania where its natural habitat is tropical dry forests in the Eastern miombo woodlands ecoregion. It is threatened by habitat destruction. The bird is named in honour of the German bird collector N. Stierling.

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Distribution

Region

East Africa

Typical Environment

Found in southeastern Tanzania, northern and central Mozambique, and adjacent Malawi, primarily within the Eastern miombo woodlands. It favors dry Brachystegia–Julbernardia woodlands with scattered dead snags and mature trees. The species also uses woodland edges, riparian strips within dry forest mosaics, and occasionally wooded farmland where old trees persist. Local occurrence is patchy, closely tracking intact miombo and availability of decaying timber for foraging and nesting.

Altitude Range

200–1700 m

Climate Zone

Tropical

Characteristics

Size16–18 cm
Wing Span25–30 cm
Male Weight0.035 kg
Female Weight0.032 kg
Life Expectancy6 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 1/5

Useful to know

Stierling's woodpecker is a miombo specialist named after the German collector N. Stierling. It spends much of its time on trunks and larger branches, probing for ants, termites, and wood-boring larvae. The species can be tricky to spot, relying on cryptic barring that blends into dry woodland bark, but its sharp calls and brief drumming rolls often reveal its presence.

Gallery

Bird photo
Bird photo

Behaviour

Temperament

wary and unobtrusive

Flight Pattern

undulating with short rapid wingbeats and brief glides

Social Behavior

Usually seen singly or in pairs, sometimes joining mixed-species flocks in miombo. Pairs maintain territories and excavate nest cavities in dead or decaying trunks or large branches. Both sexes participate in excavation, incubation, and feeding of nestlings.

Migratory Pattern

Resident

Song Description

Vocalizations include sharp, metallic 'pik' notes and thin chittering calls. Drumming is a short, soft roll given from exposed perches, often used for territorial advertisement and pair contact.

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