This is a post that I have been meaning to do for a little while. As much fun as I think it would be to develop a repository for all kinds of woodpecker information on the web, I simply do not have the time to do so, BUT there are a few places on the web that I do visit pretty regularly that I wanted to share with you in the event that you haven't discovered them on your own yet. Some are relatively new, and some have been around for a while. Obviously, this is not an exhaustive list of woodpecker info on the net, just a peek into some of the things I check out when on-line.
Let me start with a few sites that have recently hit the web. First off, I want to point out Bill Benish's new blog devoted entirely to the family of 11-12 Campephilus Woodpeckers. (You know, that family that includes the Ivory-billed Woodpecker that everyone heard so much about!) Not only is the photography fantastic, but it's pretty informative, and he provides all kinds of great links to other info on the net. Excellent job, Bill - truly a great site that I look forward to pointing my browser to!
Another relatively new site that I've really enjoyed visiting is PicidPics. This is a pBase gallery filled with amazing photos taken by Martjan Lammertink and Julio Pérez Cañestro of woodpeckers from all over the world. These guys are amazing and really worthy of a few minutes of your time to take a look at their work. (Trust me, you'll probably spend more than a few minutes, and you'll keep going back.)
Speaking of keep going back - another site that I love to check on a regular basis is Gerard Gorman's Woodpeckers of Europe blog. Gerard has literally written the book on the 10 species of woodpecker that can be found in Europe, (and is about to publish his monograph of the Black Woodpecker) and the blog is updated regularly with photos and information about these species.
I really have no desire to get into the Extant/Extinct debate that surrounds the Ivory-billed Woodpecker - like religion, I find that everyone has their own take on the situation, and I don't feel like I have the eloquence to firmly express my opinions on the subject. There is somebody on-line though who I feel has done an excellent job of keeping up with IBWO news, and writing well about both his opinions as well as those that go against his own. Cyberthrush's IVORY-BILLS LiVE ???! blog is a great resource to find out the latest happening with the search, and I think he does an excellent job of walking the line of debate while remaining informative and avoiding the inflammatory attitude that is often expressed on both sides of the debate.
There are a ton of websites out there devoted to the Ivory-billed Woodpecker - some are based in large and well funded places like the Cornell Lab of Ornithology or the Nature Conservancy, some are from those who either join a search team or go independently searching for evidence and proof, and I'm not going to try to list them all here (a quick google search on "Ivory-billed woodpecker search" will give you all the reading you can handle) but frankly there is one that I've found intriguing lately called Project Coyote. I especially enjoy the Updates page. IMHO, it's definitely worth a look!
Last but not least, I wanted to make mention of an independently made documentary called Ghost Bird about the search for the Ivory-billed Woodpecker and the effect it had on a nearby small town in Arkansas. I have to admit that I have not been able to catch a screening of this at a film festival anywhere yet (Both times that it played within a few hundred miles of me, I was out of town!) but I've been following the the tweets and facebook page devoted to the movie and the reviews have been outstanding. Check out their page and catch the film if you can!
Have you found some interesting woodpecker information anywhere online (or maybe even a good book)? Please leave a comment and let me know - I'd love to hear about it!














5 comments:
Hi Christopher! Thanks for including my Woodpeckers of Europe blog in your Woodpeckers on the Web post. Just a point, you say I am about to publish my monograph on the Black Woodpecker... well, I wish I was ! Actually, I am about to hand in the manuscript. The book should be out in a year or so from now. Regards, as ever, Gerard.
thanks for the kind words for "Ivory-bills LiVE!" especially since there's a common perception that the blog is too non-objective about its subject. In fact, other than the original Big Woods and Choctawhatchee reports I've seen nothing in the last 5 years (and I've seen a lot) that has gotten me very excited about the prospects for Ivory-bill presence... but on-the-other-hand I've simply seen nothing strongly pointing in the direction of complete absence either. And looking across a full 60+ yrs. of evidence still has me favoring the likelihood of some persisting (though I understand why, at this point, others find that unfathomable!)
Christopher:
Thanks for your interest and kind words about the Project Coyote 2010 webpage. We plan to keep the updates coming as we gather more evidence. Hopefully, in the near future one of the independent search teams will have something definitive, in the mean time, I think it's safe to say that no day spent in the deep swampy woods is completely wasted.
Best Regards...
Frank Wiley and the PC2010 team.
Hi Christopher,
I'd like to add my thanks for your kind mention of Campephilus Woodpeckers here on Picus blog - always a pleasure to drop by. Lately I've enjoyed your fantastic Costa Rica trip report and spring migrant post with super photos of birds I've been seeing in Central Park, NYC. Keep up the good work!
Bill
Hey Guys,
It was my pleasure to link you all here. I enjoy all your sites pretty regularly and have wanted to share your sites with anybody who might not yet found them on their own!
Gerard - sorry about the mistake, I'll be looking forward to the monograph when it is published!
Cyberthrush - it's a shame that people feel like the blog is not objective. I really feel like you do a good job of remaining so, while keeping both realistic and optimistic!
Frank - I agree, no time out there is wasted, and I look forward to your updates - keep up the good fight!
Bill - thanks for checking in. I saw that you linked my Pale-billed WP experience on your blog also - thanks!!!
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