General
Red-naped Sapsucker: Medium-sized woodpecker with white-checkered black upperparts and pale yellow underparts with spotted sides. Head has red crown and nape patch and thick white moustache stripe behind eye. Throat and breast band are black. Wings are black with thick white stripes. Female is similar and has red throat with white chin patch. Juvenile is dull brown overall.
Range and Habitat
Red-naped Sapsucker: Breeds in the Rocky Mountains from British Columbia and Alberta south to east-central California, central Arizona, and southern New Mexico. Spends winters north to southern California, central Arizona, and central New Mexico. Found in edges of coniferous forests, woodlands, and groves of aspen and alder.
Listen to Call
Voice Text
"whee-ur", "mew"
Interesting Facts
The Red-naped Sapsucker is closely related to the Yellow-bellied and Red-breasted sapsuckers. All three were formerly considered races of the yellow-bellied.
Sapsuckers do not suck sap, but are specialized for sipping it. Their tongues are shorter than those of other woodpeckers, and do not extend as far out. The tip of the tongue has small hair-like projections on it that help pick up the sap.
It interbreeds with the Yellow-bellied at the eastern edge of its breeding range and with the Red-breasted to the West. The resulting hybrids can be difficult to identify.
A group of sapsuckers are collectively known as a "slurp" of sapsuckers.
Author
Gary Owen Dick
Related Birds
Nuttall's Woodpecker
Williamson's Sapsucker
Red-breasted Sapsucker
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
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