Home | About Us | How to Participate | Biodiversity Modules | Projects | Maps | News | Resources

NatureMapping Animal Fact Sheet for Grades 7-12

Pileated Woodpecker Facts

distribution map

Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus)

Size: Pileated woodpecker is the largest woodpecker found in North America. This woodpecker is about 15-19 inches in length and looks as big as a crow. Their bill acts like a chisel to chip wood away to make their homes in trunks of trees. The bill is just as long as its head. This woodpecker is very unique and is rarely confused with any other woodpecker.

Color: Like the cartoon character, Woody Woodpecker, the tip of the Pileated woodpecker's head is bright red. The throat is black with a white stripe on the side. The body is entirely black except for the white striped throat that extends from the bill down the side of the neck to upper shoulder area. In flight the under wing is mostly white. You can tell an adult male from an adult female by looking at their foreheads. Males have a red forehead, while females have a black forehead.

Diet: A large part of their diet is made up of carpenter ants and beetles. It also eats fruits and nuts. It uses its shark like bill to pull bark off trees to find ant colonies. It then uses its long tongue to poke into holes and drag out ants.

Life Cycle: Their nests are found in a trees trunk. The female lays 2-4 eggs. Both parents incubate the eggs during the day, but the male keeps the eggs warm at night. It takes a little more than two weeks for the eggs to hatch and the baby woodpeckers stay with their parents for about a month.

Range / Habitat: The Pileated woodpecker can be found in open pine forests with large widely spaced older trees. They claim their territory by drumming on trees with its bill. They can be found in Canada and in western Washington all the way down to northern parts of California and most areas of the eastern United States.

Did you know?

  • They like the poles of telephone and power lines for nesting. Due to the size of the nesting hole, eight inches wide by two feet deep, they often make the poles snap.
  • One Pileated woodpecker recently knocked out electricity for 170,000 people in Florida.


Pileated Woodpecker Silhouette

(Fact sheets and silhouettes available to purchase)

Home | About Us | How to Participate | Biodiversity Modules | Projects | Maps | News | Resources