Why is it said that the Yellow-crowned woodpecker is a common bird in India?

       

 

       The yellow crowned wood-pecker is a small bird, only as big as a bulbul. But they have a long, strong, sharp bills, and stiff, wedge-shaped tails. The male and female birds are slightly different in appearance. The back of the male bird’s neck is brilliant red in colour and the front-upper part of its head is yellow. But the region from the top of the head to the back of neck is yellowish in a female bird. Both of them have black upper part bodies. 

 

 

           These birds are very common in light forests, especially where there are trees that shed their leaves according to seasons. They are also comfortable with mango orchards and stunted trees. They are usually found in pairs or in mixed hunting groups, searching for ants or insect larvae which make up their usual diet. Like a typical woodpecker, the flight of this bird is very fast and smooth, but wave-like.

          This woodpecker is very common in India where it is also called the Mahratta wood-pecker. These birds are not found in the Northeastern states. Myanmar also hosts a lot of these birds. According to the IUCN, these birds are of ‘Least Concern’ regarding global threat to the species.