Plain-brown woodcreeper
The plain-brown woodcreeper, is a sub-oscine passerine bird in subfamily Dendrocolaptinae of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in the tropical New World from Honduras through South America to central Brazil and in Trinidad and Tobago.
Taxonomy and systematics
The plain-brown woodcreeper's taxonomy is unsettled. The International Ornithological Committee and the Clements taxonomy assign it these 11 subspecies:- D. f. ridgwayi Oberholser, 1904
- D. f. lafresnayei Ridgway, 1888
- D. f. meruloides
- D. f. deltana Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1950
- D. f. barinensis Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1949
- D. f. phaeochroa Berlepsch & Hartert, EJO, 1902
- D. f. neglecta Todd, 1948
- D. f. atrirostris
- D. f. fuliginosa
- D. f. rufoolivacea Ridgway, 1888
- D. f. trumaii Sick, 1950
In the past some authors have treated atrirostris as a separate species. Subspecies meruloides has in the past been treated as a separate species and also as a subspecies of the white-chinned woodcreeper.
This article follows the 11-subspecies model.
Description
The plain-brown woodcreeper is long. Males weigh and females. The species is a medium-sized member of its genus, with a straight medium-length bill and a slight crest. The sexes have the same plumage but females are smaller than males. The nominate subspecies D. f. fuliginosa has a narrow buff supercilium and a faint buff stripe under an otherwise grayish face. Its crown, nape, back, and wing coverts are dull olive-brown; its uppertail coverts and tail are rufous-chestnut. Its wings are rufous-chestnut with dusky outer edges and tips on the primaries. Its throat is pale gray to buffy with fine mottling. Its breast and belly are paler olive-brown than its back and with fine buff streaks on the former. Its undertail coverts are cinnamon-rufous and its underwing coverts cinnamon-buff to ochraceous. Its iris is yellowish brown to dark brown or pale gray, its bill black with whitish, yellowish, or gray edges and tip, and its legs and feet black, slate gray, dark brownish olive, or light blue.The other subspecies of the plain-brown woodcreeper differ from the nominate thus:
- D. f. ridgwayi, more rufescent, less mottling and streaking, a less grayish throat, and a black bill
- D. f. lafresnayei, more olivaceous especially on the belly, less mottling and streaking, a grayer throat, and a blackish brown bill
- D. f. meruloides, quite rufescent, less mottling and streaking, little contrast between throat and breast, and paler mandible than maxilla
- D. f. deltana, less mottling and streaking, little contrast between throat and breast, and paler mandible than maxilla
- D. f. barinensis, darker and browner upperparts, less mottling and streaking, more dusky underparts, and paler mandible than maxilla
- D. f. phaeochroa, darker and more olivacous upperparts, less mottling and streaking, much whiter throat, and paler mandible than maxilla
- D. f. neglecta, darker and more olivacous upperparts than phaeochroa, paler underparts, less mottling and streaking, and paler mandible than maxilla
- D. f. atrirostris, more rufescent, bold supercilium, conspicuous streaks on crown, and paler mandible than maxilla
- D. f. rufoolivacea, duller and more olivaceous overall, less streaky neck
- D. f. trumaii, more greenish than all others, bold supercilium, conspicuous streaks on crown
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the plain-brown woodcreeper are found thus:- D. f. ridgwayi, from northeastern Honduras through Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, western Colombia, and western Ecuador into northwestern Peru
- D. f. lafresnayei, northern and eastern Colombia and adjoining northwestern Venezuela
- D. f. meruloides, northern Venezuela, Trinidad, and Tobago
- D. f. deltana, the delta of the Orinoco River in northeastern Venezuela
- D. f. barinensis, north-central Colombia and west-central Venezuela
- D. f. phaeochroa, the Amazon Basin of southeastern Colombia, southern Venezuela, and northwestern Brazil
- D. f. neglecta, the western Amazon Basin on both sides of the Amazon River from eastern Ecuador and eastern Peru to the Rio Negro and Rio Madeira
- D. f. atrirostris, the southwestern Amazon Basin in southeastern Peru, northern and central Bolivia, and southwestern Brazil to the Rio Tapajós
- D. f. fuliginosa, the Amazon Basin north of the Amazon River in southeastern Venezuela, the Guianas, and northern Brazil between the Rio Negro and the Atlantic Ocean
- D. f. rufoolivacea, Brazil south of the Amazon River between the Rio Tapajós and the state of Maranhão
- D. f. trumaii, the upper Rio Xingu in Brazil's Mato Grosso state