AMERICAN THREE-TOED WOODPECKER
BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA
A male American Three-toed Woodpecker arrives at its nest cavity in a burnt spruce. In its bill is a beetle larva that it deftly chiselled out of a nearby tree trunk. Certain families of beetles are adapted to life in newly burnt forest, and certain woodpeckers—Three-toed being one of them—are adapted to monopolize their larvae as a food source.