Maquis canastero
The maquis canastero, or canastero andino, is a species of bird in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Argentina and Bolivia.
Taxonomy and systematics
The maquis canastero is monotypic. At times it has variously been treated as a subspecies of the canyon canastero, as conspecific with the rusty-fronted canastero, and as a superspecies with the two of them. However, it might be most closely related to the very similar sharp-billed canastero.Description
The maquis canastero is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults have a buff supercilium and eyering on an otherwise light brownish face. Their crown, back, and rump are rich brown and their uppertail coverts chestnut. Their wings are mostly rufous with dark fuscous tips on the flight feathers. Their tail's inner two pairs of feathers are longer than the others and dusky rufous; the rest are chestnut-rufous and progressively shorter. Their chin and upper throat are pale orange-rufous, their breast and belly grayish buff with browner sides, and their flanks and undertail coverts tawny ochraceous. Their iris is brown, their maxilla black, their mandible pinkish with a black tip, and their legs and feet dark gray to dark olive-gray.Distribution and habitat
The maquis canastero is a bird of the east side of the Andes, though sources differ on the extent of its range. According to the International Ornithological Committee and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, it is present in Bolivia and Argentina. It has an apparently disjunct distribution and it may also be present between the two known populations. One population is found in the northern Bolivian departments of La Paz and Cochabamba. The other is found in the northwestern Argentinian provinces of Jujuy, Salta, and Tucumán. There are sight records from the Bolivian departments between the two areas. In contrast, the Clements taxonomy lists only the northern Bolivian range.The maquis canstero inhabits a variety of semi-humid to arid landscapes including montane scrublands, scrublands with open woodland of Alnus and Polylepis, montane Festuca grasslands with scattered bushes, and agricultural areas with bushes and hedgerows. In elevation it mostly ranges between though it locally occurs as low as.