Piping long-tailed woodcreeper
The piping long-tailed woodcreeper, also known as the little long-tailed woodcreeper, is a species of bird in subfamily Dendrocolaptinae of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found from Costa Rica south to northern Colombia.
Taxonomy
The piping long-tailed woodcreeper was formerly considered to be conspecific with what are now the whistling long-tailed woodcreeper and the mournful long-tailed woodcreeper. BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World has treated them separately since the 2010s, and the International Ornithological Committee followed suit in July 2023. However, the North American and South American Classification Committees of the American Ornithological Society and the Clements taxonomy treat the long-tailed woodcreeper as one species. The AOS notes that it probably consists of at least two and possibly three species.The IOC and HBW recognize these three subspecies; Clements groups them as "long-tailed woodcreeper ":
Subspecies D. l. minor intergrades with D. l. darienensis and there is some dispute as to the latter's validity.
Description
The piping long-tailed woodcreeper is a medium-sized member of its subfamily, with a slim body, long wings and tail, and a slim medium-length straight bill. It is long and weighs about. Males are longer and heavier than females, and both length and weight vary among the subspecies. The species' plumage varies only slightly among the subspecies and males and females are alike. Adults are mostly olive-brown with a darker crown and nape that have fine buff streaks. Their lores and supercilium are whitish to rich buffy. Their wings, uppertail coverts, and tail are rufous-chestnut; their primaries have dusky tips. Their throat varies from whitish buff to ochraceous, their breast is olive-brown with buff streaks, their belly and flanks are plain olive-brown, and their undertail coverts are rufous. Their underwing coverts and the underside of the flight feathers are cinnamon rufous. Their iris is brown, their bill is gray, and their legs and feet are gray. Juveniles are very similar to adults, with a slightly darker head and fewer pale streaks on the breast.Distribution
The subspecies of the piping long-tailed woodcreeper are found thus:- D. l. typica, from Honduras through Nicaragua and Costa Rica into central Panama
- D. l. darienensis, eastern Panama and northwestern Colombia to the Magdalena River valley
- D. l. minor, north-central Colombia