<h2>XII</h2>
<h3>THE WOODPECKER’S TOOLS: HIS FOOT</h3>
<p>We have studied the woodpecker’s bill and
have found that it is a very serviceable tool. We
shall find that his feet are equally well adapted
to their work.</p>
<p>Here is the foot of a woodpecker. Observe
how it differs from a chicken’s foot,
or a sparrow’s foot. What is it
that especially fits it for climbing?
Perhaps you will notice that the
tarsus is short, and you may be able
to explain why it would be a disadvantage
for a climbing bird to
have long legs, as well as why it is
a help for him to have long toes. Toes long
and legs short is the rule with the woodpeckers.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/fig_012.jpg" class="wide1" alt="Foot of Woodpecker." title="" />
<br/>
<span class="caption">Foot of Woodpecker.</span></div>
<p>I never see a woodpecker’s foot without thinking
of an iceman’s nippers with their short
handles and long, sharp-toothed jaws. They are
designed for similar uses,—to lift heavy weights
by laying hold of smooth, flat surfaces. The
iceman sets his nippers into the ice and lifts the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span>
block; but the bird sets his claws into the tree
and lifts his own body.</p>
<p>Suppose the nippers had one short jaw and one
long one, would they then take as firm hold as
they do with jaws of equal length? In perching
birds the hind toe is much the shortest, but
they sit balanced upon a limb and have merely
to hold themselves in position. The woodpecker
climbing a tree-trunk is out of balance;
he would fall off unless he had a firm grip;
and he could not get this firm hold if his hind
toes were not long enough to give his foot a
nearly equal spread back and forward. Other
birds grasp a limb with the whole under surface
of their toes, but the woodpecker when on a
smooth, upright tree-trunk nips it only with his
toenails. Try with your own hand to hold a
stick as large and heavy as you can grasp, and
you will see that when you clasp your hand
around it as a perching bird takes hold of a
perch, it makes little difference that the thumb
is shorter than the fingers, but when you try to
nip it with your finger tips alone, you must bend
your fingers until they are not much longer than
your thumb,—that is, a pair of nippers must be
equal jawed.</p>
<p>This simple illustration shows why the woodpecker’s
foot reaches as far backward as forward.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span>
But a sensible objection may be raised,
namely, that as there are two hind toes of unequal
length, it is by no means certain which is
the more necessary.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/fig_013.jpg" class="wide1" alt="Diagram of right foot." title="" />
<br/>
<span class="caption">Diagram of right foot.</span></div>
<p>Scientists tell us that a woodpecker’s foot,
though it looks so unlike a chicken’s, is really
very much the same. When we ask how one
of the front toes disappeared and
how the extra hind toe came to be
where it is, they tell us that there
has been no addition and no loss,
but the extra hind toe is only a
front toe turned backward. They
call it a <i>reversed fourth toe</i>. A
bird’s toes are numbered in order
starting with the hind toe and going
around the <i>inside</i> of the foot
to the outer or fourth toe. The hind toe is the
thumb, and the others are numbered in the same
order as the fingers of our hands. So we see
that the woodpecker’s real hind toe is rather
small, like that of most birds. It looks very
much as if it had been found <i>too</i> small and as if
another had turned back to help it do its work.
Do you say that a bird cannot turn his toes
about in this way? Most cannot, to be sure,
but all of the owls can do it. An owl will sit
either with two toes forward and two backward,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span>
or with three forward and one the other way.
The owls have a reversible outer toe, and perhaps
the woodpeckers did also before it became
permanently reversed.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/fig_014.jpg" alt="Foot of Three-toed Woodpecker." title="" />
<br/>
<span class="caption">Foot of Three-toed Woodpecker.</span></div>
<p>That this is exactly what had happened is curiously
confirmed. There are a few woodpeckers
in this country which have but three toes. They
are the only North
American land birds
with less than four toes
(though many sea and
shore birds have but
three). Compare this
picture with a four-toed woodpecker’s foot. One
toe is gone completely, when or how no one can
tell. But in some way the <i>first</i> toe, the <i>thumb</i>,
the one we always begin to count from, has disappeared.
The one left is the reversed fourth
toe, as we know by the number of joints in it.
Undoubtedly this woodpecker needed a hind toe,
but he must have needed a longer, stronger one
than his natural first toe. A toe of the right
length was supplied by turning one of the front
toes back, and the short hind toe in some way
disappeared.</p>
<p>This may seem a roundabout way to show
that a woodpecker’s foot is a pair of nippers.
First we studied nippers till we found out that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>
they were not good nippers unless they were
nearly equal-limbed. Next we studied the woodpecker’s
foot to learn about that extra hind toe.
Then it occurred to us that four toes were not
necessary, since some of our best climbers have
but three. What was the essential point?
Might it not be a foot equally divided without
reference to the number of toes? But that is
the principle of a pair of nippers. Then came
the question, is there any similarity in their use?
Yes, the nippers are used to lift heavy weights,
and the woodpecker’s foot is used to lift his
heavy body in just the same way, by taking
hold of a flat, smooth surface. We conclude
that a wide-spread, equally divided, nipping foot
would be the best device possible for the woodpecker’s
way of living, and we find by examination
that every woodpecker shows this type of
foot.</p>
<p>There is additional evidence that this is the
right explanation. Our only other North American
birds that climb on the bark of trees professionally,
as we may say, are the brown creepers
and the nuthatches. In both these the tarsus is
short, as we found it in the woodpeckers, and
the hind toe and its claw are fully equal to the
middle toe and claw, making an equally divided
foot. On the other hand, the foot with two toes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
forward and two toes backward is confined neither
to woodpeckers nor to climbing birds. The
parrots, which climb after a fashion, have it;
but so do the cuckoos, which do not climb, some
of which, like our road-runner, or ground cuckoo
of the West, are strictly terrestrial. The “yoking”
of the toes may occur by the reversion of
the fourth toe, as ordinarily, or of the second
toe, as in the trogons; the arrangement appears
to be definitely related to the distribution of the
tendons that control the toes. But though accounting
for the structure may give a clue to its
descent, it does not justify its efficiency. The
yoke-toed foot is not exclusively a climbing foot.
All our families of climbers have at least one
representative with but one toe behind, and this
clearly proves that the yoke-toed structure is by
no means necessary even though it may be an
honorable inheritance among climbers. The
natural conclusion is that the important point in
climbing is not the number nor the arrangement
of the toes, but the length of at least one hind
toe so as to give an equally divided foot.</p>
<p>There is an interesting point to notice about
the woodpeckers. This reversed fourth toe is
curiously variable in length. In the flickers,
with its claw, it is a little shorter than the middle
(third) toe with its claw; in the red-heads and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
their friends it a little exceeds the middle toe
and claw; in the downy and the hairy it is much
the longest toe, and in the ivory-billed woodpecker
it is abnormally developed. We at once
judge that it is some indication of the bird’s
manner of life, and we look for it to be largest
in the species that live continually upon the
trunks of trees, obtaining most of their food by
drilling. We expect to see the finest development
of drilling bill accompany this enormously
developed toe, and we find them both in the
ivory-billed woodpecker. In imagination we
clearly see the use of it. The great bird, keen
in his quest of grubs, sidling hastily round the
tree, in an unsteady balance and unsupported by
his tail, throws one long hind toe downward
to steady himself, hooks the other into the bark
above him, and hangs between the two as firmly
supported as in his ordinary position. No doubt
he does do this, but does it prove the supposition
that the heaviest and most arboreal woodpeckers
have the greatest development of the
fourth toe? Not at all. There is our rare acquaintance
the logcock, or pileated woodpecker,
a bird nearly as large as the ivory-billed, one of
the most persistent of our tree-climbers and more
than any other woodpecker I ever observed given
to scratching rapidly round and round a tree-trunk,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>
clinging at ease in almost any position
except head-downward, and drilling incessantly
and at all seasons for grubs; he is a typical
woodpecker of the largest size, but his hind toe
and claw are, if anything, a trifle shorter than
his middle toe with its claw. He throws it out
and uses it as we have described, but it has not
that disproportion to the other toes which we
expected to find as the result of a strictly arboreal
life.</p>
<p>What have we proved? We have not shown
that the long toe is <i>not</i> more useful than the
shorter one,—that is a matter of observation;
but we have failed entirely to show that it is so,
and this can be done only in one of two ways:
either by proving that the logcock’s habits are
not what all previous observers have believed
them to be,—which would be assuming a great
burden of proof; or by demonstrating that his
ancestry explains why his feet do not illustrate
our theory,—and this, though it is undoubtedly
the true solution, could be settled only by a very
learned man.</p>
<p>But we have encountered one truth which
must always be held in mind in science—that
a theory is not proved while a single fact remains
rebellious and unsubdued. We might
have examined every other woodpecker in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
continent but just one; we might have seen that
every other one agreed with our theory, as it
does; we might have supposed that the explanation
was good past doubting; but that one exception—if
it was a logcock—would still over-turn
the whole theory; and the very facts that
we relied upon to strengthen us—its resemblance
in size, habits, shape, and color to the
ivory-billed woodpecker—have been the strongest
possible means of totally demolishing our
fine theory. We have learned, if nothing more,
that all the facts must be examined and accounted
for before an explanation is accepted as
indisputable.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />