WOODPECKERS 
207 
GENUS XENOPICUS. 
399. Xenopicus albolarvatus (Cass.). White-headed Wood¬ 
pecker. 
Outer hind toe longer than outer front toe ; hill with nasal groove ex¬ 
tending nearly to tip; terminal half of hill 
not distinctly compressed ; tongue very 
slightly extensile. Adult male: head and 
neck white , whole body black except for white 
patch on wings and red patch on back of head. 273. 
Adult female: similar, but without red on head. Young male: similar, 
but back and red on crown duller. Length: 8.90-9.40, wine 5.00-5.10 5 
tail 4.00-4.05. 
Distribution. — Breeds in Transition and Canadian zones of the moun¬ 
tains from southern British Columbia to southern California, east to the 
Blue Mountains of Oregon, eastern Idaho, and along the eastern slope of 
the Sierra Nevada. 
Nest. — Usually 4 to 15 feet from the ground in stub of pine or fir. 
Eggs: usually 3 to 7, white. 
Food. — Insects and larvie which are found under the scales of pine bark. 
In the Transition zone forests of Mount Shasta and the Sierra 
Nevada, one of the most striking birds is the white-headed wood¬ 
pecker. Impossible as it would seem at first sight, I have found 
that the snow-white head often serves the bird as a disguise. It 
is the disguise of color pattern, for the black body seen against 
a tree trunk becomes one of the black streaks or shadows of the 
bark, and the white head is cut off as a detached white spot with¬ 
out bird-like suggestions. On the other hand, when the bird is ex¬ 
ploring the light-barked young Shasta firs or gray, barkless tracts 
of old trees, the white of the head tones in with the gray and is lost, 
the headless back again becoming only a shadow or scar. But the 
most surprising thing of all is to see the sun streaming full on the 
white head and find that the bird form is lost. The white in this 
case is so glaring that it fills the eye and carries it over to the light 
streaks on the bark, making the black sink away as insignificant. 
All this applies, however, only when the bird is quiet; in motion he 
is strikingly conspicuous, and in flight his white wing streak makes 
another good recognition mark. Dr. Merrill noticed some interest¬ 
ing phases of this disguise at Fort Klamath. There, he says, the 
pines have stubs of branches projecting an inch or two from the 
trunk which, lit by the sun, appear white themselves and cast a 
black shadow. In winter when a little snow has lodged on these 
stubs the resemblance is still greater, often leading one to mistake 
a stub for a bird. 
Xenopicus works with apparent indifference on trunks or branches. 
Like the Nuttall woodpecker he often lights upside down. In hunt¬ 
ing over the bark he easily backs down the trunk, or if he takes the 
