Cinnamon-throated woodcreeper
The cinnamon-throated woodcreeper is a sub-oscine passerine bird in subfamily Dendrocolaptinae of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The cinnamon-throated woodcreeper is the only member of genus Dendrexetastes. Four subspecies are recognized:D. r. devillei D. r. rufigula D. r. moniliger Zimmer, JT, 1934D. r. paraensis Lorenz von Liburnau, L, 1895Subspecies D. r. devillei has been proposed as a separate species but differs little from the others in voice.
The cinnamon-throated woodcreeper is genetically most closely related to the long-billed woodcreeper.
Description
The cinnamon-throated woodcreeper is one of the larger woodcreepers, with a heavy body, short wings, and a short, stout, bill with a slightly hooked tip. It is long. Males weigh and females. The sexes are alike. The nominate subspecies D. r. rufigula has mostly medium brown upperparts with a paler crown and rufous-chestnut wings, rump, and tail. A few whitish streaks span the nape and upper back. It is generally paler and more cinnamon-brown below. Its throat is a brightish rusty buff, its breast has wide black-edged whitish streaks that extend to the sides of the neck, and sometimes weak darker bars on the lower belly and undertail coverts. Its iris is red to light brown, its bill horn-gray, bluish horn, or brownish to dull greenish yellow, and its legs and feet slate gray, greenish gray, bluish black, or brown.Subspecies D. r. devillei has a weaker pattern than the nominate, with much fainter streaks on the breast, none on the neck, and no bars on the belly. D. r. paraensis is very like the nominate, but with a bold white supercilium and rounder streaks on the breast and neck. D. r. moniliger is duller and less rufescent than the other subspecies, but has bolder streaking on the breast and neck.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the cinnamon-throated woodcreeper are found thus:D. r. devillei, western Amazonia from central Colombia, eastern Ecuador, and eastern Peru east into Brazil as far as the Rio Madeira and south into northern BoliviaD. r. rufigula, northeastern Amazonia from eastern Venezuela through the Guianas, and northern Brazil from the Rio Negro to the Atlantic OceanD. r. moniliger, Amazonian Brazil south of the Amazon River between the Rio Madeira and the Rio Tocantins and south to Mato GrossoD. r. paraensis, Amazonian Brazil south of the Amazon and east of the Rio TocantinsThe cinnamon-throated woodcreeper mostly inhabits humid forest, both terra firme and várzea. In the Guianas it typically occurs in forest on sand ridges and savanna. It favors palm forest, the edges of evergreen forest, and mid- to late-age secondary forest rather than the interior of primary forest; it also frequently occurs on river islands. In elevation it mostly occurs below but is occasionally found as high as in the Andean foothills at the western edge of its range.