Line-crowned woodcreeper
The line-crowned woodcreeper is a subspecies of the ocellated woodcreeper, a species of passerine birds in the family Furnariidae, pertaining to the large genus Xiphorhynchus. It is native to the northwest region of the Amazon basin in South America.
Distribution and habitat
Xiphorhynchus ocellatus beauperthuysii has a distribution that ranges from the northeastern Amazon north of the Amazon River, to the east and southeast of Colombia, the extreme south of Venezuela, the eastern regions of Ecuador, the northeast of Peru and northwestern Brazil, east to the Rio Negro.Its natural habitat is the understory and the middle strata of moist broadleaf forests; in the majority of its localities, it is found in tall trees of terra firme forests.
Systematics
Original description
Xiphorhynchus ocellatus beauperthuysii was first described by the French naturalists Jacques Pucheran and Frédéric de Lafresnaye in 1850 under the scientific name Nasica beauperthuysii. Its type locality is 'Amazonum Ripas', or the Peruvian Amazon.Etymology
The masculine generic name Xiphorhynchus is composed of the Greek words "ξιφος, xiphos": sword, and "ῥυγχος, rhunkhos": the snout; meaning "with a beak in the shape of a sword". The specific name beauperthuysii commemorates the French microbiologist Louis Daniel Beauperthuy Desbonnes.Taxonomy
The taxa is currently treated as the subspecies X. ocellatus beauperthuysii of the ocellated woodcreeper, which is identified in the southern regions of the Amazon river as based on its initial classifications, but at one point was recognized as a separate species by Birds of the World, Birdlife International and the Comité Brasileño de Registros Ornitológicos, based on the significant genetic divergences encountered in a multilocular phylogenetic analysis of Xiphorhynchus pardalotus/ocellatus completed by Sousa-Neves et al. However, the separation of species was not recognized by the Comité de Clasificación de Sudamérica, which declined Proposition N° 600 that proposed the separation of X. ocellatus into three species, citing insufficient published data.The main reason cited by Birds of the World justifying the separation of species, apart from genetic evidence, is the notable differences in vocalization between birds in the north and birds in the south of the Amazon River.
The epithet beauperthuysii replaces the previously used name weddellii, since the latter had a vaguely defined type locality, which would later be used to refer to X. ocellatus.