Roraiman barbtail
The Roraiman barbtail is a species of bird in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Brazil, Guyana, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The Roraiman barbtail is the only member of its genus. Beyond that its taxonomy is unsettled. The International Ornithological Committee and BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World assign it these four subspecies:- R. a. obscurodorsalis Phelps, WH & William H. Phelps [Jr.|Phelps, WH Jr], 1948
- R. a. mayri
- R. a. duidae Chapman |Chapman], 1939
- R. a. adusta
At various times the Roraiman barbtail has been treated as a member of genus Margarornis and as a subspecies of the stripe-breasted spinetail. Multiple genetic studies refute those treatments and support its placement in a unique genus.
The species' English name and specific epithet derive from Mount Roraima, a prominent feature straddling the borders of Venezuela, Brazil, and Guyana, and where the type specimen was apparently collected.
This article follows the four-subspecies model.
Description
The Roraiman barbtail is long and weighs. It is a dramatically patterned furnariid that resembles a Margarornis treerunner but is unique in its range. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies R. a. adusta have dark blackish brown lores and ear coverts and a wide bright chestnut supercilium that extends around the nape. Their forehead is bright chestnut, their crown dark brown, and their upperparts chestnut. Their tail is also chestnut; the feathers lack barbs at the end giving a spiky appearance. Their wing coverts are dusky brown with chestnut edges and their flight feathers are brown with a chestnut tinge. Their chin and cheeks are white with a creamy tinge on the lower throat. Their underparts are streaked brown and buff that fade towards the vent area. Their flanks are dark reddish brown and their undertail coverts rufescent brown with reddish streaks. Their iris is brown, their maxilla black, their mandible pale with a black outer third, and their legs and feet brownish gray. Juveniles have much less of a supercilium than adults and a less reddish back and less distinct streaks on their underparts.Subspecies R. a. obscurodorsalis is darker overall than the nominate and has blackish edges on the feathers of its back. R. a. duidae has slightly brighter upperparts and a less reddish supercilium than the nominate. R. a. mayri has a browner, less chestnut, back than the nominate.
Distribution and habitat
The Roraiman barbtail is found in the tepui region where Venezuela, Guyana, and Brazil meet. The subspecies are found thus:- R. a. obscurodorsalis: Cerro Paraque in the extreme northwestern part of southeastern Venezuela's Amazonas state
- R. a. mayri: Mount Roraima in southeastern Venezuela's Bolívar state
- R. a. duidae: Cerro Duida, Cerro Huachamacari, and Serranía Parú in Venezuela's central and southern Amazonas state
- R. a. adusta: Mount Roraima and nearby tepuis in northern Brazil's Roraima state and Mt. Tewk-quay in western Guyana