Green Woodpecker

Caught on a camera trap, a Green Woodpecker and a Great Spotted Woodpecker

Species introduction

At a glance
Latin name: 
Picus viridis
Family: 
Woodpeckers
Family Latin name: 
PICIDAE
Category: 
Birds
Vernacular names: 

Yaffle, yaffle bird, laughing Betsey, yaffingale, yappingale and Jack Eikle

Species description

Species description

The Green Woodpecker is Britain's largest woodpecker, a chunky, green bird sporting a red cap. Males have a red centre to the black 'moustache', something females lack. It has a distinctive call, colloquially called a 'yaffle'.

These birds feed on ants, and are resident here throughout the year.

Green Woodpeckers can be found throughout mainland Britain. They have a GREEN conservation status, having in 2016 approximately 46,000 breeding pairs in the UK. The oldest Green Woodpecker was recorded in 1985 with an age of 15.

The photograph shown here shows a Green Woodpecker caught on a camera trap alongside a Great Spotted Woodpecker.

Species photographs

Larger photograph(s) (click to magnify)

Details

Species family information

There are three members of the woodpecker family usually seen in Britain: the Green Woodpecker, the Great Spotted Woodpecker and the Lesser Spotted Woodpecker. Of these, the Lesser Spotted Woodpecker is the least likely to be seen with only 800 breeding pairs; its status is RED. Very occasionally, one can also see two other members of the family, the Wryneck and the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, although sightings of the latter are extremely rare in Britain.

Category information

The earliest feathered dinosaur fossils date from the early Cretaceous, but the ancestry of birds goes further back to Jurassic theropod dinosaurs, which shared a common ancestor with the crocodilians. Well known theropod groups include the tyrannosaurs, allosaurs, and other carnivores. Of surviving bird groups, the most ancient are the ratites (ostriches, rheas, tinamous, moas, kiwis, cassowaries, and emus), followed in evolutionary order by the waterfowl (ducks, geese and swans) and then the land fowl (chickens, turkeys, pheasants and their kin). Heene cemetery’s most ancient bird visitors are the woodpigeons. Strictly, therefore, we ought to refer to birds as dinosaurs, for they are direct descendants. The RSPB would be more accurately restyled as the RSPD. Where known, the conservation status of each bird is given as red, amber, or green, according to its survival potential based on 2016 populations and recent population trends.

Birds are warm-blooded, and have feathers, toothless, beaked jaws, and a strong, lightweight skeleton. They lay hard-shelled eggs. Their hearts have four chambers, and their metabolic rate is high. Although most are adapted for flight, many can also run, jump, swim and dive. Flightless birds retain vestigial wings. Brown, green, and grey are the commonest bird colours, for camouflage.