The huntinpeck family is a family first introduced in Pikmin 3, although the family went unclassified until Hey! Pikmin. There are currently three members of this family. Members of this family resemble chimaeras of insects and birds, and hunt by impaling prey on their sharp beaks before consuming them.

Members share the Spourgitis genus.

MembersEdit

ScornetEdit

Main article: Scornet.

Scientific name: Spourgitis advenus (worker)

Scornets are a combination of a bee and hummingbird native to the Twilight River area, resembling cone shaped fuzzy bees with beady blue eyes and large golden feathers. When not commanded by a Scornet Maestro, swarms aimlessly fly around. If any Pikmin are spotted, they form an arrow shape with their facial stingers erect and charge. Pikmin who are caught must be saved before the Scornets kill them.

Scornet MaestroEdit

Main article: Scornet Maestro.

Scientific name: Spourgitis advenus (queen)

The Scornet Maestro is the fourth boss of Pikmin 3, and the queen of a large Scornet colony in the Twilight River. It looks like a large Scornet with a long beak, red and yellow eyes, arms that end in cotton covered hands, and a small tail. The Scornet Maestro strums the strings in its mouth like a harp to command it's colony to arrange in different offensive formations. The Scornet Maestro is only vulnerable when its Scornets fly away after an attack.

SparrowheadEdit

Main article: Sparrowhead.

Scientific name: Spourgitis apium

Sparrowheads are small creatures that usually travel in groups of at least two. They have a yellow, orange-dotted body, and a small pointy beak. When approached by the player, they appear from off-screen, stand in place to face a Pikmin, and after a few seconds, swoop down for the kill. This pause leaves them vulnerable, and they only take one Pikmin throw to kill.

NamingEdit

Huntinpeck is a portmanteau of "hunting" and "peck", since its members swoops down to peck at Pikmin. It could also be a pun on "hunt in packs", as members are usually found in groups. Additionally, it could also be a pun on the expression "hunt and peck", a method of typing on a keyboard. Members will stand in place before making a move, similar to the typing method.

The genus Spourgitis is Greek for "sparrow", a type of bird. Members of the huntinpeck family resemble birds, one even having "sparrow" in its name.

Names in other languagesEdit

Language Name Meaning
  Japanese ムシドリ科?
Mushi Dori Ka
Bug bird family
  Chinese
(traditional)
蟲鳥科
  French picoreurs peckers
  German Raubpicker Predatory pecker
  Korean 벌레새 과
  Spanish Escuadrónfilos From escuadrón (squadron) and filo (sharp edge)