Ivory-billed woodcreeper
The ivory-billed woodcreeper is a species of bird in the subfamily Dendrocolaptinae of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua.
Taxonomy and systematics
The ivory-billed woodcreeper has these eight subspecies:- X. f. tardus Bangs & Peters, JL, 1928
- X. f. mentalis
- X. f. flavigaster Swainson, 1827
- X. f. saltuarius Wetmore, 1942
- X. f. yucatanensis Ridgway, 1909
- X. f. ascensor Wetmore & Parkes, 1962
- X. f. eburneirostris
- X. f. ultimus Bangs & Griscom, 1932
Description
The ivory-billed woodcreeper is long. Males weigh and females. It is a medium-sized member of genus Xiphorhynchus, with a long, fairly heavy, slightly decurved bill. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies X. f. flavigaster have a face with fine buffy and blackish streaks, an indistinct buffy supercilium and eyering, and a faint dark stripe behind the eye. Their crown and nape are dark grayish brown with longish buff spots that are almost streaks. Their back and wing coverts are light grayish brown to olive-brown with blackish-edged buff streaks. Their rump, tail, and wings are chestnut. Their flight feathers are paler than the tail, with dusky tips on the outer primaries. Their throat is buffy with thin dusky streaks. Their upper breast is lighter than their throat and has a scaly appearance. The rest of their underparts are light buffy brown with dusky-edged buffy streaks that lessen to the belly. Their underwing coverts are ochraceous buff. Their iris is light reddish brown to dark brown, their bill pale with a brownish or bluish base to the maxilla, and their legs and feet yellowish green, olive-gray, or brownish. Juveniles are overall slightly darker than adults, with bolder streaks on the throat, duller streaks on the back and breast, and a brownish bill.The other subspecies of the ivory-billed woodcreeper differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- X. f. tardus, much smaller, paler, and grayer than nominate
- X. f. mentalis, smaller with a shorter bill than nominate
- X. f. saltuarius, darker and browner than nominate but paler than eburneirostris especially on belly, larger and bolder upperparts streaks, less well defined underparts streaks
- X. f. yucatanensis, smaller than mentalis with pale buff unmarked throat
- X. f. ascensor, overall darkest of all subspecies, richer brown above, streaked crown, wings and tail deep chestnut, all streaks wider with wider black edges, streaks extend onto belly
- X. f. eburneirostris, darker and browner than nominate, crown and nape sooty black, richer buff streaks above and below, throat has only fine streaks at edge
- X. f. ultimus, larger and darker than eburneirostris, richer buff underparts, blacker edges on underparts streaks, longer and heavier bill
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the ivory-billed woodcreeper are found thus:- X. f. tardus, the northwestern Mexican states of Sonora, Sinaloa, and Durango
- X. f. mentalis, the Pacific side of Mexico from Sinaloa and Durango south into Guerrero
- X. f. flavigaster Guerrero and Oaxaca in southwestern Mexico
- X. f. saltuarius, northeastern Mexico from Tamaulipas and San Luis Potosí south into Veracruz
- X. f. yucatanensis, the Yucatán Peninsula and south into Belize and Guatemala
- X. f. ascensor, Caribbean side of southern Mexico from Veracruz and Oaxaca to Tabasco and possibly into Guatemala
- X. f. eburneirostris, Caribbean slope from central Guatemala and Belize through Honduras slightly into Costa Rica, and the Pacific slope from Oaxaca and Chiapas in Mexico through Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras into northwestern Costa Rica
- X. f. ultimus, Costa Rica's Nicoya Peninsula