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A male great spotted woodpecker (Dendrocopos major) sitting on a tree trunk
A female Hoffman's woodpecker in a tree on a beach in Guanacaste, Costa Rica.
hoopoe in the field ( Upupa epops )
Stock photo showing close-up view of black-rumped flameback (Dinopium benghalense) perched outside hole in tree trunk. This bird is also known as the lesser golden-backed woodpecker.
Male Acorn Woodpecker Perched on Tree Branch Eating Seed/Food
closeup of pronghorn antelope in the wild
Golden-backed form with brightly colour back and eyebrow,
A female Great spotted Woodpecker taking food to the nest. there is copy space all around the picture.
Beautiful Eurasian jay ( Garrulus glandarius ) is sitting on oak
A female Hoffman's woodpecker in a tree on a beach in Guanacaste, Costa Rica.
One red-shafted Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus) perched on a tree branch with yellow leaves in the background. Taken in Victoria, BC, Canada.
L 10,5-12cm.\nBreeds in coniferous forest, often in older moss- and lichen-rich spruce, locally in S. Europe in deciduous woodland.\nResident. In N Europe joins winter tit bands.\nOften forage on ground or low branches. Not exactly shy, through usually difficult to approach.\nVisit bird tables only rarely.\nNest excavated in rotten trunk or stump.\n\nThis is a quite common Species in the Netherlands in the described Habitats.
Woodpecker on a tree. Great spotted woodpecker sitting on a tree in the forest, empty space for text on the right.  Banner.
Pronghorn or antelope standing, close up on hill in the Yellowstone Ecosystem of western USA, North America. Nearest cities are Denver, Colorado, Salt Lake City, Cody, Jackson, Wyoming, Gardiner, Cooke City, West Yellowstone, Bozeman and Billings, Montana.
A photo of a woodpecker
Southeast Oregon's High Desert.\nSteens Mountain Wilderness/SE.
A Woodpecker arrives on the deck
Eurasian nuthatch on  a blossoming cherry twig,Eifel,Germany.\nPlease see more similar pictures of my Portfolio.\nThank you!
Hornbill bird
L11,5-13cm.\nBreeds in untinned, often damp deciduous woods with plenty of dead and dying trees; also in larger gardens and parks with older fruit trees and understory.\nResident. Frequently at bird tables in winter. Fearless.\nDominant over Willow Tit where ranges overlap.\nNest s in cavity (tree-hole made by Willow Tit, nest box, natural hole etc.).\n\nThis is a less frequent Tit than Great- and Blue Tit in the Netherlands.
Pair of juvenile pileated woodpeckers in tree cavity
Two yellow billed hornbills perched on a branch
Also known as a firetail because of its bright red tail
Flying to find the five-colored pigeon female prey that is being cultivated in a sad year 560
A Woodpecker on the deck fence
A woodpecker making a hole in a palm tree for a nest.
common singing birds spotted in australia
L 19.5-22 cm.\n\n
Treecreepers use their bills to forage in the trunks of trees for insects, spiders and seeds in the winter. They will start at the bottom of the tree, working their way up in a spiral.
Monteiro's Hornbill, Tockus monteiri, Etosha Pan National Park, Namibia,  Bucerotidae, Bucerotiformes. Male.
Free Images: "bestof:Natural History, Birds - Spotted Woodpecker.jpg en Spotted Woodpecker as Picus major Linn Image from Natural History Birds 1849 https //archive org/details/..."
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