| The Pied Woodpeckers | Gerard Gorman| Pelagic Publishing | 2026 | Paperback | 195 pages, colour photos, b/w illustrations, colour distribution maps | ISBN: 9781784275969 | £24.99p |

The Publisher’s View:
A resonant hammering from the canopy, a flicker of black and white with a flash of red: surely the archetypal image of a woodpecker? This book describes the natural history of five European species, the so-called pied woodpeckers: Middle Spotted Woodpecker, Lesser Spotted Woodpecker, Syrian Woodpecker, Great Spotted Woodpecker and White-backed Woodpecker.
These fascinating birds are important ecosystem engineers, shaping the environment by creating cavities in trees where they can raise their young. This ability makes them keystone species, as their holes often go on to become homes for many other animals. Woodpeckers are also umbrella species, as their conservation invariably confers protection on a plethora of other birds, along with mammals and countless invertebrates. They are indicator species, too, for their presence is indicative of the biodiversity and condition of the woodland habitats they frequent. If you walk in a forest and there are no woodpeckers, this is in all likelihood a sign of ecological degradation.
Each species is covered in detail, with information on taxonomy, appearance, moult, calls, drumming, distribution, conservation status, habitats, movements, breeding, diet and relationships with other wildlife and with humans. The text is richly illustrated with stunning photographs as well as sound spectrograms. The author is an acknowledged authority on woodpeckers who supplements his vast field experience with an in-depth review of the literature.
The Author: Gerard Gorman is a global authority on the Picidae. He has published numerous papers and six previous books on this fascinating family of birds, including Woodpeckers of the World: The Complete Guide (2014), The Wryneck (Pelagic Publishing 2022) and The Green Woodpecker (Pelagic Publishing 2023). For the past 35 years he has travelled the world studying woodpeckers, believing that time in the field is the only way to really get to know them. Gorman lives in Budapest and is a founder member and current leader of the Hungarian Woodpecker Group.
Fatbirder View:
A more accurate title would be The European Pied Woodpeckers, as this book covers just five species, albeit in depth. The strapline being ‘The Natural History of Europe’s Black & White Woodpeckers’.
Having, many years ago, been shown all of Europe’s woodpeckers by the author I can personally vouch for his deep, extensive and truly authoritative knowledge of the family. This is, of course, reflected in the text, which is complimented by excellent photographic illustrations; in acknowledging the photographers the author rightly describes them as magnificent.
I admit to not realising, until reading this book, that our Great Spotted Woodpecker is a distinct subspecies Anglicus and was fascinated to read that, given how wide ranging the species is across European and Asia, there are grounds for suggesting a split into four distinct species.
I guarantee that 99% of the readership will learn many new facts about their own familiar pied woodpeckers too.
I have nothing to add to the publisher’s description which I’d summarise as ‘all you ever wanted to know about Europe’s pied woodpeckers, and a great deal more!’
Fatbirder