Spot-crowned woodcreeper
The spot-crowned woodcreeper, is a passerine bird in the subfamily Dendrocolaptinae of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. it is found in Middle America from Mexico to Panama.
Taxonomy and systematics
What is now the montane woodcreeper was formerly considered conspecific with the spot-crowned woodcreeper but they were split in the early 2000s. The spot-crowned woodcreeper's taxonomy since then remains unsettled. The International Ornithological Committee and the Clements taxonomy assign it these three subspecies:- L. a. lignicida
- L. a. affinis
- L. a. neglectus
This article follows the one species, three-subspecies, model.
Description
The spot-crowned woodcreeper is long and weighs. It is a slim, medium-sized woodcreeper with a slim, moderately decurved bill. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies L. a. affinis have a dusky face and sides of the neck with a black malar stripe. Their crown and nape are dark brown with conspicuous buffy spots or diamonds that sometimes extend as thin streaks onto the upper back. Their back and wing coverts are plain brown, their rump rufous-cinnamon, and their wings and tail rufous-chestnut. Their flight feathers have brown edges and the primaries have dusky tips. Their underparts are olive-brown with wide black-edged buffy streaks beginning on the lowest part of the throat that fade on the flanks and undertail coverts. Their underwing coverts are ochraceous buff. Their iris is dark brown and their legs and feet lead-gray to dull green. Their bill is bluish pink, pale gray, yellowish, or dark brown; its base is often darker and the tip a pale silvery horn. Juveniles are darker overall than adults, with less conspicuous spots on the crown, less distinct borders on the underside streaks, and a shorter and darker bill.Subspecies L. a. lignicida is similar to the nominate but much paler overall. L. a. neglectus is browner than the nominate, with a deeper buff throat and wider and paler, almost whitish, streaking on its underparts.
The spot-crowned woodcreeper is quite similar to the streak-headed woodcreeper but is distuished by its spotted, not streaked, crown. In addition, their ranges only minimally overlap.
Distribution and habitat
The spot-crowned woodcreeper's distribution is not continuous. Subspecies L. a. lignicida is the northernmost; it is found in the northeastern Mexican states of Nuevo León, Tamaulipas, and San Luis Potosí. The nominate L. a. affinis is found from southern Mexico south through Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador into Nicaragua. It does not occur in Belize. L. a. neglectus is found in Costa Rica and western Panama.The spot-crowned woodcreeper inhabits both humid and dry forests, mostly in the highlands. These include humid evergreen montane forest and cloudforest as well as drier deciduous, oak, pine, and pine-oak woodlands. It is found in the interior of primary forest but is thought to be more common at its edges and in mature secondary forest. It also occurs in plantations and in clearings and pastures with trees. In elevation it mostly ranges between but is found as low as in the non-breeding season. In Costa Rica it rarely occurs below.