Pearled treerunner
The pearled treerunner is a species of bird in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela, and possibly Argentina.
Taxonomy and systematics
The pearled treerunner has three subspecies, the nominate M. s. squamiger, M. s. perlatus, and M. s. peruvianus.Description
The pearled treerunner is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies have a well-defined yellowish buff supercilium that extends to the nape, a dull reddish brown line behind the eye, dull yellowish buff and dark brown ear coverts, and a dark brown moustacial area with tiny whitish spots that become streaks to the rear. Their forehead is dark brownish with pale rufous streaks and their crown dark reddish brown. Their collar is dull rufescent brown with black-outlined yellowish buff streaks. Their back, rump, and uppertail coverts are bright reddish brown. Their wing coverts are bright reddish brown, their primary coverts dark fuscous brown, and their flight feathers darker fuscous brown with rufescent edges. Their tail is bright reddish brown; the ends of the tail feathers lack barbs, giving a spiny appearance. Their throat is bright buff-yellow. Their breast and belly have a rufescent background. Their upper breast is dense with oval yellowish spots that have dark browish outlines; the spots become stretched out and less distinct by the lower breast and continue onto the belly. Their flanks are darker rufescent than the belly, with longer spots, and their undertail coverts are rufescent brown with a few blackish-edged buff-yellowish streaks. Their iris is brown to dark brown, their maxilla black to gray, their mandible whitish horn to purplish pink, and their legs and feet brownish gray to dark brown. Juveniles have dusky tips on their throat feathers and a less regular pattern on their breast than adults.Subspecies M. s. peruvianus is quite different from the nominate. It has a paler yellow supercilium, less rufous and more heavily streaked ear coverts, an olive-brown crown, and much less spotting on the underparts. M. s. perlatus is similar to peruvianus, but with a whitish supercilium and whiter spotting on the underparts.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the pearled treerunner are found thus:- M. s. perlatus: from western Venezuela's Serranía del Perijá and Andes south through all three of Colombia's Andean ranges and the Andes of Ecuador into northern Peru's Piura and Cajamarca departments
- M. s. peruvianus: the Andes of Peru south of the Marañón River from the departments of Cajamarca and Amazonas, Peru|Amazonas] south to the Department of Cuzco
- M. s. squamiger: the Andes from southern Peru's Department of Puno south into Bolivia as far as Santa Cruz Department
The pearled treerunner primarily inhabits montane evergreen forest and elfin forest, and also occurs locally in Polylepis woodland and secondary forest. It favors tracts heavy with moss and epiphytes. In elevation it mostly ranges between but occurs as low as and as high as.