Piciformes
|
Piciformes | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scientific classification | ||||||||
| ||||||||
Families | ||||||||
Picidae |
Six families of largely arboreal birds make up the order Piciformes, the best-known of them being the Picidae, which includes the woodpeckers and close relatives. There are about 67 genera in the six families and a little over 400 species.
In general, the Piciformes are insectivorous, although the toucans mostly eat fruit and the honeyguides beeswax. Nearly all Piciformes, like the owls and parrots, have zygodactyl feet—two toes forward and two back, an arrangement that has obvious advantages for birds that spend much of their time on tree trunks. An exception is a North American genus of three-toed woodpeckers consisting of two members. The jacamars aside, Piciformes do not have down at any age, only true feathers. All nest in cavities and have altricial young.
- ORDER PICIFORMES
- Family Picidae, (woodpeckers, piculets, and wrynecks: over 200 species)
- Family Capitonidae, (barbets: about 80 species)
- Family Ramphastidae, (toucans: 42 species)
- Galbulidae, (jacamars: 18 species)
- Family Bucconidae, (puffbirds, nunbirds and nunlets: 33 species)
- Family Indicatoridae, (honeyguides: 17 species)da:Spættefugle
de:Spechtvögel fr:Piciformes fy:Spjochteftigen ko:딱따구리목 lt:Geniniai paukščiai nl:Piciformes ja:キツツキ目 pl:Dzięciołowe pt:Piciformes sl:Plezalci fi:Tikkalinnut zh:鴷形目