Plain-mantled tit-spinetail
The plain-mantled tit-spinetail is a small passerine bird of South America in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru.
Taxonomy and systematics
The plain-mantled tit-spinetail's taxonomy is unsettled. The South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society, the International Ornithological Committee, and the Clements taxonomy assign it these four subspecies:- L. a. grisescens Hellmayr, 1925
- L. a. berlepschi Hartert, EJO, 1909
- L. a. aegithaloides
- L. a. pallida Dabbene, 1920
This article follows the one-species, four-subspecies model.
Description
The plain-mantled tit-spinetail is long and weighs. It is a small, slender, long-tailed furnariid with a short bill. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies L. a. aegithaloides have a white supercilium on an otherwise dark brownish, whitish streaked, face. Their crown is dark brown with wide golden-tawny streaks, their hindneck dark brown with grayish-white streaks, and their back, rump, and uppertail coverts dull brownish. Their upperwing coverts are dull brownish with rufous edges and their flight feathers dull fuscous with dark rufous bases. Also, their tail feathers are dark fuscous brown with paler edges; the tail is graduated and appears forked due to the central feathers having reduced inner webs. Their throat is whitish with some dark feather edges that increase onto the upper breast. The rest of their breast is dull grayish brown and the rest of their underparts are slightly paler. Their iris is brown, their maxilla blackish to dark gray-brown, their mandible dark horn to greenish gray, and their legs and feet gray to blackish. Juveniles have indistinct crown and throat markings, a lightly spotted back, and rounded tail feathers.Subspecies L. a. grisescens is overall paler than the nominate, with wider and paler stripes on the crown, a grayer back and buffier rump, paler edges on the wing coverts, and grayer underparts. L. a. berlepschi is larger and bulkier than the nominate. It has a paler cinnamon crown whose streaks greatly contrast, pale buff streaks on the neck, cinnamon rather than rufous on the wing coverts and flight feathers, pale buff outer tail feathers, and entirely buffy underparts. L. a. pallida has the longest tail of all subspecies. Its crown and neck are similar to those of berlepschi. Its upperparts are mostly pale gray with a pale buffy rump. It is pale cinnamon on the wing coverts and flight feathers, and its belly is pale gray with sometimes a buff wash on the belly and flanks.
Distribution and habitat
The nominate subspecies of the plain-mantled tit-spinetail is found in central Chile between the Coquimbo and Aysén regions. Subspecies L. a. grisescens is the northernmost; it is found coastally from Peru's Department of Arequipa south into northern Chile as far as the Atacama Region. L. a. berlepschi is found in the Andes of southern Peru, northern Chile, western Bolivia, and northwestern Argentina. L. a. pallida is found from northern Argentina and southern Chile south onto Tierra del Fuego.The subspecies of the plain-mantled tit-spinetail inhabit different landscapes. The nominate subspecies and L. a. grisescens occur in arid scrublands, open forests, and in the natural vegetation in human-modified areas like agricultural fields, parks, and oases. In elevation, it ranges from near sea level to in Chile and up to in Peru. Subspecies L. a. berlepschi inhabits puna grasslands and scrublands of the Altiplano. In elevation, it ranges from about in Peru and in Chile and Argentina. L. a. pallida inhabits scrublands and woodlands at the transition between the lower elevation forest and higher steppe; it also occurs on salt flats and in arid thorny woods. In elevation, it ranges from sea level to.