Crag chilia
The crag chilia or crag earthcreeper is a species of bird in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is endemic to Chile.
Taxonomy and systematics
The crag chilia was formerly placed in its own genus, Chilia. It is now placed in genus Ochetorhynchus with the straight-billed earthcreeper, the rock earthcreeper, and the band-tailed earthcreeper. Two subspecies are recognized, O. m. melanurus and O. m. atacamae.Description
The crag chilia is long and weighs. Adults of the nominate subspecies O. m. melanurus have a narrow whitish supercilium, dark brown lores and auriculars, and whitish cheeks. Their upperparts are mostly darkish brown with a rufous rump and uppertail coverts. Their tail is mostly blackish brown with some rufous at the base and outer web of the outermost pair of feathers. Their upperwing coverts are dusky brown and their wings are darkish brown with a wide rufous band. Their throat is whitish, their breast dull smoky grayish, their belly dull brown, and their flanks and undertail coverts rufous. Their iris is brown, their maxilla blackish, their mandible pale gray with a blackish tip, and their legs and feet blackish. Juveniles have pale edges on their back feathers and faint barring on their underparts.Subspecies O. m. atacamae is paler and sandier than the nominate. Its supercilium is whiter and more distinct. Its upperwing coverts are grayish brown, its breast pale grayish with white streaks, and its flanks pale brown. Its bill is shorter and narrower.
Distribution and habitat
The crag chilia is endemic to north-central and central Chile. Subspecies O. m. atacamae is found from Huasco Province in the Atacama Region to the Coquimbo Region. O. m. melanurus is found further south, between San Felipe de Aconcagua Province in the Valparaíso Region and Colchagua Province in the O'Higgins Region.The crag chilia inhabits arid scrublands with shrubby rock hillsides and cliffs with sparse vegetation. There is no consensus on its elevational range. In the non-breeding season it occurs as low as sea level. In the breeding season, different authors place its upper limit between.