piciform Article

piciform summary

Learn about the characteristics and classification of birds of the Piciformes order

Below is the article summary. For the full article, see piciform.

piciform, Any member of the order Piciformes, which includes the familiar woodpeckers and their relatives the piculets and wrynecks (that collectively make up the family Picidae) and the exotic tropical jacamars (Galbulidae), puffbirds (Bucconidae), New World barbets (Capitonidae), Asian barbets (Megalaimidae), honey guides (Indicatoridae), toucans (Ramphastidae), and toucan barbets (Semnornithidae). This arboreal group of approximately 450 species is distributed on all continents except Australia and Antarctica, but only the woodpecker family is widespread outside the tropics. Piciforms vary in size from 8 to 63 cm (about 3.1 to 24.8 in.) in overall length—one of the smallest species being the rufous piculet (Sasia abnormis) and the largest being the toco toucan (Ramphastos toco). They vary greatly in the structure of their beaks and only slightly less in the rest of their morphology; some species are very specialized. Most species consume insects, some foraging in places (within bark) reached by no other birds. The most numerous and widely distributed groups, barbets and woodpeckers, excavate their own nesting cavities, thereby avoiding competition with other birds and, incidentally, providing homes for many other species of vertebrates.