Amazonian plain xenops
The Amazonian plain xenops is a passerine bird in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in every mainland South American country except Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The Amazonian plain xenops was formally described in 1811 by the German zoologist Johann [Karl Wilhelm Illiger|Johann Illiger] based on a specimen collected near Cametá in northeastern Brazil. He coined the binomial name Xenops genibarbis where the specific epithet combines Latin gena meaning "cheek" with barba meaning "beard".What are now the five subspecies of the Amazonian plain xenops were formerly included in the "plain xenops". In 2016 BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World separated X. genibarbis, with 10 subspecies, from X. minutus and confusingly called the new species "plain xenops". HBW renamed X. minutus the "white-throated xenops". The International Ornithological Committee recognized the split in July 2023 and kept the HBW English names.
A study published in 2020 described differences in plumage, vocalizations and DNA among the subspecies of X. genibabis. Based on it and other studies, in August 2024 the IOC further split X. genibarbis into two species, the Amazonian plain xenops and the northern plain xenops. The South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society adopted the three-way split with the IOC English names in September 2024. The Clements taxonomy adopted the same split and English names in October 2024. However, as of December 2024 HBW retains the earlier names of "white-throated xenops" for X. minutus and "plain xenops", with 10 subspecies, for X. genibarbis. As of August 2024 the North American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society has not adopted the splits and retains the name "plain xenops" for X. minutus ''sensu lato.
The five subspecies of the Amazonian plain xenops are:
Description
The Amazonian plain xenops has a wedge-shaped, fairly stubby, and slightly upturned bill. The sexes are alike. Adults of the nominate subspecies X. g. genibarbis have a conspicuous buff or whitish supercilium and a wide pure white malar stripe. Their upperparts are dull brown to rufous brown and unstreaked; their crown is darker and lightly streaked. Their tail is cinnamon with much black. Their wings are also cinnamon, with a wide ochraceous band on the flight feathers. Their throat is pale with olivaceous edges to the feathers. The rest of their underparts are plain dull grayish brown with some light buff spotting on the foreneck and breast. Their iris is dark brown, their maxilla dull black, their mandible dull grayish white with a dark gray tip, and their legs and feet bluish gray. The minimal streaking and the wide malar stripe set this species apart from other xenops.The other subspecies of the Amazonian plain xenops differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- X. g. ruficaudus, darker and buff-streaked crown, more olivaceous underparts, foreneck and breast more spotted
- X. g. obsoletus, similar to ruficaudus with more olivaceous upperparts and foreneck and breast less spotted
- X. g. remoratus, little or no crown streaking, duller above and below, ill-defined breast markings
- X. g. alagoanus, very similar to nominate without streaks on crown
Distribution and habitat
- X. g. remoratus, eastern Colombia, southwestern Venezuela along the upper Orinoco, and northwestern Brazil north of the Amazon and east to the Rio Negro
- X. g. ruficaudus, eastern Colombia, southern and eastern Venezuela, the Guianas, and northern Brazil north of the Amazon and east of the Rio Negro
- X. g. obsoletus, eastern Ecuador, eastern Peru, northern Bolivia, and western Brazil south of the Amazon and east to the Rio Madeira
- X. g. genibarbis, central Brazil south of the Amazon from the Rio Madeira east to Piauí state and south to Mato Grosso and Goiás states
- X. g. alagoanus, northeastern Brazil between Paraíba and Alagoas states