White-chinned woodcreeper
The white-chinned woodcreeper is a species of 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 white-chinned woodcreeper has these seven subspecies:- D. m. bartletti Chubb, C, 1919
- D. m. merula
- D. m. obidensis Todd, 1948
- D. m. remota Todd, 1925
- D. m. olivascens Zimmer, JT, 1934
- D. m. castanoptera Ridgway, 1888
- D. m. badia Zimmer, JT, 1934
Description
The white-chinned woodcreeper is a medium-sized member of its genus with a shortish straight bill. It is long. Males weigh and females. Subspecies D. m. merula and D. m. obidensis are significantly larger than the other five. In all subspecies the male and female have the same plumage. The nominate subspecies has mostly dark reddish brown upperparts with slightly redder wing coverts, flight feathers, and tail. A few flight feathers have dark brown tips. It has a narrow white to yellowish vertical stripe on its chin and throat. Its breast is dark olive-brown that becomes dark rufous at the undertail coverts. Its underwing coverts are pale chestnut. Its iris is reddish brown to brown, its bill browish to black with a lighter, though variable, mandible, and its legs and feet are bluish, olive, gray, or brownish. D. m. obidensis is the largest subspecies but is otherwise almost identical to the nominate.The other five subspecies have gray to bluish irises; they also have some plumage color differences and are generally paler overall than the above two. D. m. remota is the palest of all. D. m. olivascens has an olive cast to its upperparts. D. m. castanoptera has somewhat redder upperparts than the nominate. D. m. badia is redder than castanoptera and has a wider, whiter, throat stripe than all the others. D. m. bartletti has dusky tips to most of its flight feathers.
Distribution and habitat
The white-chinned woodcreeper is a bird of the Amazon Basin. Its subspecies are distributed thus:- D. m. bartletti, from central Colombia and Venezuela south through eastern Ecuador and eastern Peru into northern Bolivia and east into western Brazil to the Rio Negro and Rio Madeira
- D. m. merula, the Guianas and northern Brazil's Roraima and Pará states
- D. m. obidensis, Brazil north of the Amazon River from the Rio Negro east to the Atlantic Ocean
- D. m. remota, eastern Bolivia and probably adjacent far western Brazil
- D. m. olivascens, Brazil south of the Amazon River between the Rio Madeira and Rio Tapajós
- D. m. castanoptera, Brazil south of the Amazon River between the Rio Tapajós and Rio Tocantins
- D. m. badia, Brazil south of the Amazon River between the Rio Tocantins and the Atlantic