Tawny-throated leaftosser
The tawny-throated leaftosser is a tropical American bird species in subfamily Sclerurinae, the leaftossers and miners, of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is also known as the Middle American leaftosser and less frequently as tawny-throated leafscraper, Mexican leaftosser or Mexican leafscraper. It is found from Mexico to Panama.
Taxonomy and systematics
The tawny-throated leaftosser's taxonomy is unsettled. The International Ornithological Committee and the Clements taxonomy assign it two subspecies, the nominate S. m. mexicanus and S. m. pullus.The North American Classification Committee of the AOS and BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World retain an older treatment. They include these five subspecies with the other two:
- S. m. andinus Chapman, 1914
- S. m. obscurior Hartert, 1901
- S. m. peruvianus Chubb, C, 1919
- S. m. macconnelli Chubb, C, 1919
- S. m. bahiae Chubb, C, 1919
This article follows the two-subspecies model.
Description
The tawny-throated leaftosser is long and weighs. The sexes are alike. Adults of the nominate subspecies have a dark reddish to chestnut brown head, upperparts, and tail, and chestnut rump and uppertail coverts. Their wings are darker brown than their back. Their throat and chest are tawny-rufous and the rest of their underparts similar to their back. Their fairly long and slightly decurved bill has a dark maxilla and a bicolored mandible. Their iris is brown and their legs and feet are dark brownish gray. Juveniles are similar to adults but are overall duller and have light streaks on their throat and breast. Subspecies S. m. pullus is generally browner than the nominate but with a redder rump and a paler throat.Distribution and habitat
According to most sources, the nominate subspecies of the tawny-throated leaftosser is found discontinuously from Veracruz and Chiapas in southeastern Mexico through Guatemala and El Salvador into Honduras. The American Ornithological Society also places it slightly more northerly in Mexico and BirdLife International extends its range south into Nicaragua. Subspecies S. m. pullus is found from Costa Rica into western Panama, and separately on Cerro Tacarcuna in eastern Panama. The species is patchily distributed within the broadly defined areas.The tawny-throated leaftosser generally inhabits moist subtropical and tropical lowland and submontane evergreen and semi-deciduous forest. In Guatemala and Honduras it ranges in elevation between ; in Panama it is found down to sea level.