Great rufous woodcreeper
The great rufous woodcreeper is a species of bird in the subfamily Dendrocolaptinae of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, and Paraguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The great rufous woodcreeper has these four subspecies:- X. m. remoratus Pinto, 1945
- X. m. castaneus Ridgway, 1890
- X. m. estebani Cardoso da Silva & Oren, 1991
- ''X. m. major''
Description
The great rufous woodcreeper is the largest, though not the heaviest, member of its subfamily. It is heavy-bodied with a long, heavy, somewhat decurved bill. It is long. Males weigh and females. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies X. m. major are almost entirely bright rufous-cinnamon. Their crown is slightly darker, their tail more chestnut, and their flight feathers reddish brown with dusky tips on the primaries. Their lores are blackish, their throat pale cinnamon with whitish buff streaks, and their underparts cinnamon with some buffy streaks on the breast and dusky brownish bars on the belly. Their iris is dark brown, rich red-brown, or crimson. Their bill is pale, from horn colored to horn-white, and their legs and feet dark grayish olive, greenish, or bluish gray. Juveniles are generally brighter overall than adults, especially on their underparts; they have stronger streaks on the breast but weaker ones on the crown.Subspecies X. m. remoratus has darker upperparts than the nominate, with less reddish underparts that are more heavily streaked and barred. X. m. castaneus is darker overall than the nominate, with a more brownish head, deeper chestnut upperparts, and less streaking and barring on the underparts. X. m. estebani is overall much lighter than the nominate but otherwise similar.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the great rufous woodcreeper are found thus:- X. m. remoratus, southwestern Mato Grosso state of Brazil
- X. m. castaneus, north-central and eastern Bolivia, southern Brazil's Mato Grosso do Sul state, and northwestern Argentina's Jujuy and Salta provinces
- X. m. estebani, northwestern Argentina's Tucumán Province
- X. m. major, western Paraguay and northern Argentina as far south as Córdoba and Santa Fe provinces