Common miner
The common miner is a passerine bird in the subfamily Sclerurinae, the leaftossers and miners, of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Peru, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
Taxonomists assign these nine subspecies to the common miner:- Geositta cunicularia juninensis Taczanowski, 1884
- Geositta cunicularia titicacae Zimmer, JT, 1935
- Geositta cunicularia frobeni
- Geositta cunicularia georgei Koepcke, 1965
- Geositta cunicularia deserticolor Hellmayr, 1924
- Geositta cunicularia fissirostris – the type species of the genus.
- G. c. contrerasi Nores & Yzurieta, 1980
- G. c. hellmayri Peters, JL, 1925
- G. c. cunicularia
Among members of genus Geositta, the common miner is most closely related to the puna miner.
Description
The common miner is a medium-size member of its genus. It is long and weighs. The sexes are alike. The nominate subspecies G. c. cunicularia has a pale brownish face with a wide whitish supercilium and a vague darker "moustache" and line behind the eye. It has a dull grayish brown crown and upperparts; the former has dark brown spots. Its uppertail coverts are dull grayish brown with pale brownish tips. Its tail feathers have buff-whitish bases and blackish ends with pale rufescent between them. The pale area is progressively larger from the innermost to the outer feathers and the outermost have almost entirely white outer webs. Dull brownish wing coverts with pale buff tips form distinct wing bars. Its flight feathers are dull brownish with a wide pale rufous band. Its throat is whitish, its breast buff-white with wavy brownish streaks, its belly pale buffy whitish with a pale cinnamon tinge on the flanks, and its undertail coverts whitish. Its iris is brown to yellowish brown, its medium-length bill is black to brown with sometimes a pale base to the mandible, and its legs and feet are dark gray to black.The other subspecies of the common miner differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- Geositta cunicularia titicacae: larger, paler, and buffier; creamier tail base; less distinct streaks on breast
- Geositta cunicularia juninensis: paler and buffier than titicacae; few to no breast streaks
- Geositta cunicularia frobeni: buffy white uppertail coverts; whitish tail base; whiter underparts than juninensis
- Geositta cunicularia deserticolor: smaller and paler than frobeni; gray uppertail coverts
- Geositta cunicularia georgei: like deserticolor but darker wings and tail; pale yellowish buff underparts; heavier breast streaks
- Geositta cunicularia fissirostris: slightly grayer above and whiter below than nominate; darker chest markings
- Geositta cunicularia hellmayri: like fissirostris but whiter uppetail coverts, paler tail base, and paler chest markings
- Geositta cunicularia contrerasi: smallest but overlaps with hellmayri; blackish wings and tail are darkest of all; creamy buff underparts; dark brownish or blackish spots on breast
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the common miner are found thus:- Geositta cunicularia juninensis: Andes of central Peru's departments of Junín and Huancavelica
- Geositta cunicularia titicacae: Andes of southern Peru, Bolivia east to Cochabamba Department, northern Chile to the Tarapacá Region, and northwestern Argentina to Mendoza Province
- Geositta cunicularia frobeni: Pacific slope of the Andes in southern Peru between Arequipa and Tacna departments
- Geositta cunicularia georgei: coastal Peru's Ica and Arequipa departments
- Geositta cunicularia deserticolor: coastally from Arequipa Department in Peru south to Chile's Atacama Region
- Geositta cunicularia fissirostris: central Chile from coastal Atacama to Los Lagos regions and east to the Andean foothills
- Geositta cunicularia contrerasi: Sierras Grandes in Argentina's Córdoba Province
- Geositta cunicularia hellmayri: Andes of central Chile and southwestern Argentina
- Geositta cunicularia cunicularia: lowlands of extreme southeastern Brazil, Uruguay, eastern Argentina, and southern Chile south to Tierra del Fuego
The common miner inhabits open landscapes including puna and temperate grasslands, arid lowland scrublands, and moister restinga scrublands. Most are flat to gently sloping and have sandy soils, short grass, and scattered rocks and shrubs. The species' distribution tends to be patchy. In elevation it ranges from sea level to.