The Diamantina tapaculo is approximately long and weighs approximately. The adult's plumage is identical to that of the Planalto tapaculo. The male's upperparts are mainly dark gray and the underparts paler gray. The flanks are buff with dark bars, which differentiate it from the similar but unbarred mouse-colored tapaculo. The female is browner.
Distribution and habitat
The Diamantina tapaculo is found only in the Chapada Diamantina in Brazil's Bahia state. It inhabits some of the remaining patches of dense forest in a region otherwise characterized by campo rupestre, a biome of grassland and rockyoutcrops. In elevation it ranges from.
Behavior
Feeding
No information has been published about the Diamantina tapaculo's diet or foraging phenology.
Breeding
Virtually nothing is known about the Diamantina tapaculo's breedingbehavior. One nest has been described; it was a bowl of grasses in a rock crevice. The two nestlings were fed by both adults.
Vocalization
The Diamantina tapaculo's song is a simple note, quickly repeated, often for more than a minute . Its call is unique, described as "a single 'tcheep' note".
Status
The IUCN has assessed the Diamantina tapaculo as Endangered because " has a very small range with fewer than five locations and its habitat is declining owing to the replacement of natural vegetation by coffee and banana plantations, collection of firewood for domestic and industrial use and unregulated tourism."