<h2><SPAN name="THE_IVORY-BILLED_WOODPECKER" id="THE_IVORY-BILLED_WOODPECKER"></SPAN> THE IVORY-BILLED WOODPECKER.</h2>
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<p class="drop-cap">IN size, though hardly in beauty,
this is indeed the prince of
Woodpeckers, the largest of
our North American species.
Its length ranges from nineteen
to twenty-one inches. There is one
other Woodpecker, called the Imperial,
which is larger, measuring twenty-three
or twenty-four inches in length.
This bird is found in Western Mexico,
north along the Sierra Madre, and
probably, according to Davie, has not
yet been observed within the limits of
the United States.</p>
<p>The Ivory-billed is now rare, and is
apparently restricted to the extreme
southern states, especially those bordering
the Gulf of Mexico. It is of
a wild and wary disposition, making
its home in the dark, swampy woodlands.
The dense cypress swamps
of Florida are one of its favorite
haunts.</p>
<p>The nest of the Ivory-bill is
excavated in a tree, about forty feet
from the ground, the cavity often
being nearly two feet in depth. Three
or more eggs are laid.</p>
<p>This bird does not remain long in
one place, and during the day ranges
over an extended territory. Its call is
a high, rather nasal, <i>yap-yap-yap</i>,
sounding in the distance like the note
of a penny trumpet.</p>
<p>To use the language of Chapman,
whose "Handbook" is a mine of
ornithological knowledge, Woodpeckers
are rather solitary birds, but
are sometimes found associated in
scattered companies during their
migrations. Above all other birds,
they are especially adapted to creep or
climb. The peculiar structure of the
foot, with its two toes directed forward
and two backward, except in one
genus, the Three-toed (which will
appear in the April number of <span class="sc">Birds</span>),
assists them in clinging to an upright
surface, while the pointed, stiffened
tail feathers serve as a prop when the
bird is resting. The stout, chisel-like
bill is used to cut away wood and
expose the hiding places of grubs, etc.,
when the long, distensible tongue,
with its horny, spear-like tip is thrust
in, the food impaled and drawn out.</p>
<p>All Woodpeckers are of value to the
farmer. It has been shown that two-thirds
to three-fourths of their food,
consists of insects, chiefly noxious.
Wood-boring beetles, both adults and
larvae, are conspicuous, and with them
are associated many caterpillers, mostly
species that burrow into trees. Next
in importance are the ants that live in
decaying wood, all of which are sought
by Woodpeckers and eaten in great
quantities. Many ants are particularly
harmful to timber, for if they
find a small spot of decay in the vacant
burrow of some wood-borers, they
enlarge the hole, and as their colony is
always on the increase, continue to eat
away the wood until the whole trunk
is honeycombed. Moreover, these
insects are not accessible to other
birds, and could pursue their career of
destruction unmolested were it not
that the Woodpeckers, with beaks and
tongues especially fitted for such work,
dig out and devour them. It is thus
evident that the Woodpeckers are
great conservators of forests. To
them, more than to any other agency,
we owe the preservation of timber
from hordes of destructive insects.</p>
<p>The Ivory-billed Woodpecker, living
his almost solitary life in the vast and
nearly impenetrable cypress swamps,
at a height of forty and fifty feet from
the ground, is rarely seen by man.
The specimens we present in <span class="sc">Birds</span>
are so nearly life-like that our readers
need only imagine themselves in the
dense forest of cypress to realize a very
natural scene.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</SPAN></span></p>
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