Lesser Spotted Woodpecker - Dendrocopos minor

Description

The smallest and least common of the three woodpeckers that are resident in Britain. Apart from its tiny size (it is about the size of a House Sparrow) you can easily recognise one because its upperparts are crossed with numerous narrow white bars instead of the big white patches of the Great Spotted Woodpecker. The male is distinguished from the female by its bright red crown.

Identification difficulty
Habitat

Open woods, copses, parkland, gardens and orchards, but it tends to frequent the tops of trees, searching for larvae, spiders and wood-boring insects on smaller branches

When to see it

In spring when it is active and there are not too many leaves on the trees, and when it is likely to call and drum

UK Status

Resident breeder with 2,000 breeding pairs. Absent from Scotland and Ireland

VC55 Status

Uncommon resident breeder in decline

Leicestershire & Rutland Map

MAP KEY:

Yellow squares = NBN records (all known data)
Coloured circles = NatureSpot records: 2020+ | 2015-2019 | pre-2015

UK Map

Species profile

Common names
Lesser Spotted Woodpecker
Species group:
Birds
Kingdom:
Animalia
Order:
Piciformes
Family:
Picidae
Records on NatureSpot:
16
First record:
01/01/1979 (Patricia Evans)
Last record:
23/05/2020 (Smith, Robert)

Total records by month

% of records within its species group

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