Dusky leaftosser
The dusky leaftosser or South American leaftosser is a bird in subfamily Sclerurinae, the leaftossers and miners, of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Giana, Guyana, Panama, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The dusky leaftosser's taxonomy is unsettled. The South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society, the International Ornithological Committee, and the Clements taxonomy assign it these five subspecies:- S. o. andinus Chapman (ornithologist)|Chapman], 1914
- S. o. obscurior Hartert, 1901
- S. o. peruvianus Chubb, C, 1919
- S. o. macconnelli Chubb, C, 1919
- S. o. bahiae Chubb, C, 1919
This article treats the dusky leaftosser as a species with five subspecies.
Description
The dusky leaftosser is long and weighs. The sexes are alike. Adults of the nominate subspecies S. o. obscurior have dark reddish to chestnut brown upperparts, with their rump and uppertail coverts being more chestnut than the reddish back. Their wings are darker brown than their back and their tail is dark brown to black brown. Their face is brownish, their throat is tawny chestnut, and their chest and breast are a darker chestnut. Their bill is fairly long and straight with a dark maxilla and a bicolored mandible. Their iris is brown and their legs and feet are dusky to black. Juveniles are similar to adults but are overall duller and have light streaks on their breast and a light scaly appearance on their throat and chest.Subspecies S. o. andinus is generally paler than the nominate but has a brighter rufous cast to its rump. S. o. peruvianus has entirely dark reddish brown upperparts without the chestnut rump of the nominate and andinus. S. o. macconnelli is similar to peruvianus but is somewhat olivaceous overall with a more tawny throat. S. o. bahiae has a browner back, a much brighter chestnut rump, and a darker throat than the other subspecies.
Distribution and habitat
The distribution of the subspecies of the dusky leaftosser are in dispute. According to the IOC and Clements, they are found thus:- S. o. andinus, from eastern Panama east through northern Colombia and Venezuela into western Guyana
- S. o. obscurior, the Andes of western Colombia and western Ecuador
- S. o. peruvianus, the western Amazon Basin
- S. o. macconnelli, the Guianas and northern Brazil
- S. o. bahiae, eastern Brazil
- S. o. andinus, from the Serranía del Perijá of Venezuela south in the Andes through Colombia to central Ecuador
- S. o. obscurior, the Chocó lowlands of Colombia and Ecuador and possibly Panama
- S. o. peruvianus, the lower elevations from the Colombian Andes south through eastern Ecuador and northeastern Peru and east through Bolivia into Brazil north of the Amazon River and west of the Rio Negro
- S. o. macconnelli, eastern Venezuela, the Guianas, north-central Brazil, and the Madre de Dios River basin of Peru
- S. o. bahiae, eastern Brazil between Pernambuco and São Paulo states
The dusky leaftosser generally inhabits moist tropical evergreen forest throughout its range, from lowland rainforest to humid sub-montane forest. In elevation the various subspecies range from near sea level to about in Brazil, in Ecuador, in Colombia, and in much the rest of the Andes.