Cream-winged cinclodes
The cream-winged cinclodes is a species of bird in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru.
Taxonomy and systematics
The cream-winged cinclodes was previously considered conspecific with what was then called the bar-winged cinclodes. In a three-way split of the bar-winged that began in about 2009, the cream-winged cinclodes was recognized as a full species. C. fuscus was renamed to the present buff-winged cinclodes to avoid confusion with the previous much more complex species.The cream-winged cinclodes has these five subspecies:
- C. a. albiventris
- C. a. tucumanus Chapman, 1919
- C. a. riojanus Nores, 1986
- C. a. rufus Nores, 1986
- C. a. yzurietae Nores, 1986
Description
The cream-winged cinclodes is long and weighs about. It is a small cinclodes with a shortish bill. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies C. a. albiventris have a distinct light buffish white supercilium, dark gray-brown ear coverts with pale streaks, and a white malar area. Their crown and upperparts are rusty-gray. Their wing coverts are dark brown with wide buffish edges and their flight feathers dark fuscous with a cream band across them. Their tail's central feathers are dark brown and the rest blackish brown; the outer three pairs have progressively more milky-buff tips. Their entire underparts are whitish. Their iris is brown or dark brown, their bill dark brown to blackish whose mandible often has a paler base, and their legs and feet blackish to dark brownish.Subspecies C. a. yzurietae has darker brown crown and upperparts and a much whiter breast than the nominate. C. a. rufus has more rufescent upperparts, richer brown wings and tail, a more ochraceous belly, and more rufescent flanks than the nominate. C. a. riojanus has darker chocolate-brown upperparts and a browner breast than all the other subspecies. C. a. tucumanus has a deep buff wingband and a more reddish back and paler underparts than riojanus.
Distribution and habitat
The nominate subspecies of the cream-winged cinclodes is by far the most widespread. It is found in the Andes from northern Peru south through western Bolivia and northern Chile into northwestern Argentina as far as La Rioja Province. C. a. tucumanus is found in Argentina's Tucumán Province. C. a. riojanus is found in the Sierra de Famatina in La Rioja. C. a. rufus is found in northwestern Argentina, in the Campo de Arenal area of Catamarca Province. C. a. yzurietae is also found in Catamarca, in the Sierra del Manchao.The cream-winged cinclodes inhabits a variety of open habitats, most of them grassy such as páramo and puna grassland, nearby agricultural fields, and also arid montane scrublands. It usually is found near water, especially bogs and streams, and is commonly seen around human habitations. In elevation it occurs between in Chile, mostly between in Peru, and usually above in Argentina.
Behavior
Movement
The cream-winged cinclodes is mostly a year-round resident throughout its range, though some individuals move to lower elevations in winter, during periods of bad weather, or when favored feeding areas dry up.Feeding
The cream-winged cinclodes feeds on a variety of invertebrates including many insects and also seeds. It forages singly and in pairs while hopping and running on the ground. It probes and gleans from wet and dry ground, rocks, grass, dung, and shallow water.[file:Cream-winged Cinclodes RWD4.jpg|thumb|left]