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Biology ( englanti )

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The remarkable feeding behaviour demonstrated by the woodpecker finch involves the use of twigs and cactus spines to push, stab or lever insects and spiders from tree-holes and crevices (3). Displaying extraordinary behavioural adaptability, this species will not only seek out a variety of different feeding implements, but will also manipulate them to make them more manageable, for example by shortening cactus spines with its bill (7). Although the woodpecker finch's use of tools enables it to access inaccessible sources of food, particularly those with the high energy content such as spider egg sacs, it incurs a significant cost by being a relatively time consuming foraging technique. Therefore, it is a behaviour most commonly exhibited by woodpecker finches in the arid zone during the dry season, when easily accessible food supplies are scarce. In contrast, during the Arid Zone wet season, and throughout the year in the Scalesia Zone, invertebrate prey are generally abundant and easily accessible, hence the woodpecker finch is more reliant on its specialised, pointed bill to probe amongst moss and bark for prey, and rarely uses tools (3). Darwin's finches usually breed during the hot, wet season when food is most abundant. Monogamous, lifelong breeding pairs are common, although mate changes and breeding with more than one partner have also been observed. Breeding pairs maintain small territories, in which they construct a small dome-shaped nest with an entrance hole in the side. Generally a clutch of three eggs is laid, which are incubated by the female for about twelve days, and the young brooded for a further two weeks before leaving the nest. The short-eared owl (Asio flammeus), frequently preys on the nestlings and juvenile Darwin's finches, while adults are occasionally taken by Galapagos hawks (Buteo galapagoensis) and lava herons (Butorides sundevalli) (2).
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Conservation ( englanti )

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The majority of the Galapagos archipelago forms part of the Galapagos National Park, a World Heritage Site. A management plan is in place for the islands, and the Ecuadorian government and non-governmental organisations are working to conserve the unique biodiversity of the Galapagos (10). More specifically, scientists at the Charles Darwin Research Station are working to improve our understanding of Darwin's finches to ensure their conservation. This includes monitoring of populations and investigating introduced diseases (8).
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Description ( englanti )

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Perhaps the most famous of Darwin's finches, the woodpecker finch has attracted popular and scientific attention for its remarkable usage of tools to assist feeding (2) (3). Like the other Darwin's finches, this species has evolved a specialised beak form, enabling it to exploit a particular habitat and diet (2). In the case of the woodpecker finch, its beak is long and pointed, allowing it to probe deeply into cavities in search of food (4). Adults and juveniles both have dull, uniform, light greyish-olive plumage (5), with the only distinguishing feature being beak colouration, which changes from pink to black as this species matures (3).
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Habitat ( englanti )

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The woodpecker finch is mostly found in the Scalesia Zone, a lush, humid evergreen forest dominated by the daisy tree (Scalesia pedunculata), which is found between elevations of 300 and 700 metres. This species also occurs in the lowland Arid Zone, which is dominated by deciduous trees, shrubs and cacti, but is much rarer in this habitat (3).
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Range ( englanti )

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The woodpecker finch is endemic to the Galapagos Archipelago, where it occupies the islands of Isabela, Fernandina, Santiago, Pinzón, Santa Cruz, and San Cristóbal (6).
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Status ( englanti )

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Classified as Least Concern (LC) on the IUCN Red List (1).
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Threats ( englanti )

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Like other bird species endemic to the Galapagos, the woodpecker finch is affected by ongoing habitat destruction, invasive species, and introduced diseases, such as avian pox (8). Nevertheless, despite being uncommon in some parts of its range, the global population of this species is not considered to be small enough, nor undergoing a sufficiently significant decline, to warrant a threatened classification (9).
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Woodpecker finch ( englanti )

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The woodpecker finch (Camarhynchus pallidus) is a monomorphic species of bird in the Darwin's finch group of the tanager family, Thraupidae endemic to the Galapagos Islands.[2] The diet of a woodpecker finch revolves mostly around invertebrates, but also encompasses a variety of seeds.[3][4] Woodpecker finches, like many other species of birds, form breeding pairs and care for young until they have fledged.[5] The most distinctive characteristic of woodpecker finches is their ability to use tools for foraging.[3] This behaviour indicates that they have highly specialized cognitive abilities.[6] Woodpecker finches have also shown the ability to learn new behaviours regarding tool use via social learning.[3] Not all populations of woodpecker finches use tools equally as often, as this is influenced by the environment in which they live.[7]

Description

Illustration of a woodpecker finch

Woodpecker finches range in weight from 23g to 29g and are about 15 cm long.[2][5] Although their tongues are quite short, they have a relatively long bill compared to other species of Darwin's finches.[2]

Distribution

Woodpecker finches are native to the Galapagos Islands. They are commonly found on the islands of Isabela, Santa Cruz, San Cristobal, Fernandina, Santiago, and Penzón. They occupy all areas of the islands, from the most arid zones to more humid zones. However, the density of woodpecker finches is greater in the more humid zones than in the drier ones.[5] Woodpecker finches are also found at a variety of altitudes, from sea level to higher inland elevations.[2] They are a not a migratory species and when they do fly, they only fly short distances.[2]

Diet

Woodpecker finch diets mainly consist of arthropods found in and around crevices in trees.[3] They eat both adult insects and larvae, which are often located within trees and shrubs.[5] Their habit of pecking at branches is similar to a woodpecker's drumming on a tree trunk.[8] Wood-boring beetle larvae are a staple of their diet.[2] They also often feed on moths, caterpillars and crickets.[5] Another significant part of their diet includes fruit and seeds, making woodpecker finches important dispersers.[4]

Foraging behaviour

One of the most distinguishable traits of Camarhynchus pallidus is its ability to use a twig, stick, or cactus spine as a tool. This behaviour earned it the nicknames tool-using finch, and carpenter finch. The finch manipulates the tool to dislodge invertebrate prey, such as grubs, from crevices in trees.[3] It has been hypothesized that due to the absence of woodpeckers, woodpecker finches filled a similar niche on the Galapagos Islands.[8] Woodpeckers have strong bills for drilling and drumming on trees, as well as long sticky tongues for extracting food.[9] On the isolated Galapagos islands, without competition from South American woodpecker species, the woodpecker finch was able to adapt, and evolve its tool-utilizing capability to compensate for its short tongue.[8] The ability to use tools is a highly specialized cognitive ability as it involves the animal creating and recognizing a relationship between two foreign objects found in its environment.[6]

Woodpecker finch on branch

Woodpecker finches are capable of using a variety of materials to construct the tools they use.[3] They are capable of modifying the tools they find in order to maximize their efficiency. Scientists have observed finches shortening the length of sticks or cactus spines in order to make them more manageable for tool use.[3] The same tool can be used multiple times and on different trees.[5] Woodpecker finches may also try various sticks or spines at one site before finding one that can reach and extract the prey item.[3] There is conflicting evidence of whether or not this behaviour was acquired through social learning, as juveniles have been observed using tools without previous contact with adults.[10] In contrast, juvenile woodpecker finches have also been observed utilizing novel tools made from non-native plant species, such as blackberry bushes.[3] After observing adult woodpecker finches prep barbed twigs and use them to obtain prey from crevices in trees, juvenile finches displayed the same behaviour with the novel tool.[3] These observations contrasted previous studies to show that social learning may occur in wild woodpecker finch populations.[3]

The frequency of tool use by woodpecker finches depends largely on whether they live in a more wet or dry environment.[11] Woodpecker finches that live in more wet environments seldom use tools as prey is much more abundant.[7] In contrast, they employ tool use much more when living in dry areas.[7] During the dry season, woodpecker finches use tools while foraging to acquire up to 50% of their prey.[7] The use of tools has allowed woodpecker finches to be able to obtain prey that they would otherwise be unable to reach with their short tongues.[7] It is thought that this behaviour came to evolve due to the harshness of the dry and unstable environmental conditions of the Galapagos Islands.[5]

Reproduction

There are no morphological differences between either sex in woodpecker finches, as they are monomorphic.[5] Woodpecker finches mainly use moss, lichens, and grass as building materials for their nests.[5] During the 2 week incubation period when females are sitting on the eggs, males linger nearby, often feeding the females.[5] Female woodpecker finches typically lay around 2-3 eggs.[5] Both males and females participate in the feeding of the chicks from the day they hatch until well after they have become independent.[5] Woodpecker finch chicks will fledge around 2 weeks after hatching.[5]

References

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2021). "Geospiza pallida". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2021: e.T22723783A167283265. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2021-3.RLTS.T22723783A167283265.en. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Woodpecker Finch (Geospiza pallida)". www.hbw.com. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Sabine, Tebbich; Irmgard, Teschke; Erica, Cartmill; Sophia, Stankewitz (2012-02-01). "Use of a barbed tool by an adult and a juvenile woodpecker finch (Cactospiza pallida)". Behavioural Processes. Comparative cognition: Function and mechanism in lab and field. 89 (2): 166–171. doi:10.1016/j.beproc.2011.10.016. ISSN 0376-6357. PMID 22085790. S2CID 20819852.
  4. ^ a b Guerrero, Ana (December 2009). "Darwin's Finches as Seed Predators and Dispersers". The Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 121 (4): 752–764. doi:10.1676/09-035.1. S2CID 85647439. ProQuest 198631933.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Good, Harriet (September 2009). "Husbandry Guidelines for the Woodpecker Finch (Camarhynchus pallidus) at Charles Darwin Foundation" (PDF). Darwin Initiative.
  6. ^ a b Tebbich, S.; Bshary, R. (2004-04-01). "Cognitive abilities related to tool use in the woodpecker finch, Cactospiza pallida" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 67 (4): 689–697. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2003.08.003. ISSN 0003-3472. S2CID 27583776.
  7. ^ a b c d e Tebbich, Sabine; Taborsky, Michael; Fessl, Birgit; Dvorak, Michael (2002). "The ecology of tool-use in the woodpecker finch (Cactospiza pallida)". Ecology Letters. 5 (5): 656–664. doi:10.1046/j.1461-0248.2002.00370.x. ISSN 1461-0248.
  8. ^ a b c Van Driesche, Jason. (2013). Nature Out of Place Biological Invasions In The Global Age. Island Press. ISBN 9781610910958. OCLC 957466880.
  9. ^ Zhou, P.; Kong, X. Q.; Wu, C. W.; Chen, Z. (September 2009). "The novel mechanical property of tongue of a woodpecker". Journal of Bionic Engineering. 6 (3): 214–218. doi:10.1016/s1672-6529(08)60126-2. ISSN 1672-6529. S2CID 136687299.
  10. ^ Tebbich, S; Taborsky, M; Fessl, B; Blomqvist, D (2001). "Do woodpecker finches acquire tool-use by social learning?". Proc Biol Sci. 268 (1482): 2189–93. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1738. PMC 1088865. PMID 11674865.
  11. ^ Tebbich, Sabine; Teschke, Irmgard (2014-03-17). "Coping with Uncertainty: Woodpecker Finches (Cactospiza pallida) from an Unpredictable Habitat Are More Flexible than Birds from a Stable Habitat". PLOS ONE. 9 (3): e91718. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...991718T. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0091718. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 3956741. PMID 24638107.

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Woodpecker finch: Brief Summary ( englanti )

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The woodpecker finch (Camarhynchus pallidus) is a monomorphic species of bird in the Darwin's finch group of the tanager family, Thraupidae endemic to the Galapagos Islands. The diet of a woodpecker finch revolves mostly around invertebrates, but also encompasses a variety of seeds. Woodpecker finches, like many other species of birds, form breeding pairs and care for young until they have fledged. The most distinctive characteristic of woodpecker finches is their ability to use tools for foraging. This behaviour indicates that they have highly specialized cognitive abilities. Woodpecker finches have also shown the ability to learn new behaviours regarding tool use via social learning. Not all populations of woodpecker finches use tools equally as often, as this is influenced by the environment in which they live.

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