The wrynecks (genus Jynx) are a small but distinctive group of small Old World . Jynx is from the Ancient Greek iunx, the Eurasian wryneck.
These get their English language name from their ability to turn their heads almost 180°. When disturbed at the nest, they use this snake-like head twisting and hissing as a threat display. It has occasionally been called "snake-bird" for that reason.
Like the true woodpeckers, wrynecks have large heads, long tongues, which they use to extract their insect prey, and zygodactyl feet, with two toes pointing forward and two backwards, but they lack the stiff tail feathers that the true woodpeckers use when climbing trees, so they are more likely than their relatives to perch on a branch rather than an upright trunk. The sexes have a similar appearance.
Their bills are shorter and less dagger-like than in the true woodpeckers, but their chief prey is and other insects, which they find in decaying wood or almost bare soil. They reuse woodpecker holes for nesting, rather than making their own holes. The eggs are white, as with many hole nesters.
The two species have cryptic plumage, with intricate patterning of greys and browns. The adult moults rapidly between July and September, although some moult continues in its winter quarters. RSPB Handbook of British Birds (2014). UK. .
The wryneck subfamily Jynginae has one genus, Jynx, introduced in 1758 by Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the 10th edition of his Systema Naturae. Linnaeus placed a single species in the genus, the Eurasian wryneck ( Jynx torquilla), which is therefore the type species. The genus name Jynx is from the Ancient Greek name for the Eurasian wryneck, ιυγξ, iynx, and ruficollis is from the Latin rufus, "rufous" and collum "neck". The English "wryneck" refers to the habit of birds in this genus of twisting and writhing their necks when agitated. It was first recorded in 1585. The red-throated wryneck was first identified by German ornithologist Johann Georg Wagler in 1830.Gorman (2022) pp. 35–36. It is also known as the rufous-necked wryneck or red-breasted wryneck.Gorman (2014) pp. 38–39.
The two wrynecks form a superspecies that probably separated early in their evolution from the piculets, although there has subsequently been only limited divergence between the Jynx species.Gorman (2022) pp. 39–40.
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