Helmeted Woodpecker Celeus galeatus Scientific name definitions
- VU Vulnerable
- Names (23)
- Monotypic
Text last updated April 6, 2012
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Species names in all available languages
Language | Common name |
---|---|
Catalan | picot negre d'elm |
Czech | datel přílbový |
Dutch | Helmspecht |
English | Helmeted Woodpecker |
English (United States) | Helmeted Woodpecker |
French | Pic casqué |
French (France) | Pic casqué |
German | Wellenohrspecht |
Japanese | ナキクマゲラ |
Norwegian | morionspett |
Polish | dzięcioł hełmiasty |
Portuguese (Brazil) | pica-pau-de-cara-canela |
Portuguese (Portugal) | Pica-pau-de-faces-acaneladas |
Russian | Шлемоносный дятел-гренадер |
Serbian | Kacigasti detlić |
Slovak | vlikáč prilbatý |
Spanish | Carpintero Caricanelo |
Spanish (Argentina) | Carpintero Cara Canela |
Spanish (Paraguay) | Carpintero cara canela |
Spanish (Spain) | Carpintero caricanelo |
Swedish | hjälmkastanjespett |
Turkish | Miğferli Ağaçkakan |
Ukrainian | Жовна червоноголова |
Celeus galeatus (Temminck, 1822)
Definitions
- CELEUS
- galeata / galeatum / galeatus
The Key to Scientific Names
Legend Overview
Introduction
Confined to a small range in southern Brazil, eastern Paraguay and extreme northeast Argentina, the Helmeted Woodpecker is considered Vulnerable by BirdLife International, and it is a generally very infrequently observed species outside a handful of strongholds. It occurs from sea level up to about 1,000 m elevation, in semi-deciduous forests as well as in mixed forests with Paraná pines (Araucaria angustifolia). Helmeted Woodpecker is larger than most Celeus. Its namesake crest is large and red and can be held in a variety of positions. It is best distinguished from the similar Robust and Lineated Woodpeckers by its cinnamon face without any white. The territorial call of Helmeted Woodpecker can be heard from over 500 m away, but it typically remains silent for much of the time. One of the rarest and most difficult-to-find of the Neotropical woodpeckers. The global population, while difficult to estimate, is probably between 400 and 8900 individuals and is in decline because of loss of forest cover and the logging of mature forests.