Also known as Picus canus
species of bird
The Grey-headed Woodpecker is a species of woodpecker found in Europe and Asia that forages for insects in forests and woodlands. Like other woodpeckers, it plays an important ecological role by feeding on wood-boring insects and helping to control pest populations in tree ecosystems.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Grey-headed Woodpecker
species
via
The grey-headed woodpecker (Picus canus), also known as the grey-faced woodpecker, is a Eurasian member of the woodpecker family, Picidae. Along with the more commonly found European green woodpecker and the Iberian green woodpecker, it is one of three closely related species found in Europe. Its distribution also stretches across large parts of the central and Eastern Palaearctic, all the way to the Pacific Ocean and south to the Himalaya and the Malay Peninsula.
The grey-headed woodpecker is more demanding than the European green woodpecker in terms of its habitat. It prefers deciduous forest with a high proportion of dead trees, feeding primarily on ants, although not being as exclusively dependent on this group as the green woodpecker. The grey-headed woodpecker's nest is typically excavated into dead or severely damaged trees.
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).