Spotted woodcreeper
The spotted woodcreeper is a species of bird in the subfamily Dendrocolaptinae of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Belize, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Panama.
Taxonomy and systematics
The spotted woodcreeper and the olive-backed woodcreeper were formerly considered conspecific but since the mid-20th century have been treated as separate species.The spotted woodcreeper's taxonomy is otherwise unsettled. The American Ornithological Society, the International Ornithological Committee, and the Clements taxonomy assign it these five subspecies that Clements puts into two groups:
- "Spotted" group
- *X. e. erythropygius
- *X. e. parvus Griscom, 1937
- "Berlepsch's" group
- *X. e. punctigula
- *X. e. insolitus Ridgway, 1909
- *X. e. aequatorialis
This article follows the five-subspecies model.
Description
The spotted woodcreeper is long. Males weigh and females. It is a medium-sized member of genus Xiphorhynchus, with a longish, slightly decurved and gradually tapering bill. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies X. e. erythropygius have dusky lores, a buff supercilium and eyering, and dusky olive ear coverts with buff streaks. Their crown and nape are dark olive to brownish olive with small buff spots and a narrow dusky edge. Their back and wing coverts are brownish olive to tawny brown with buff spots and wide buff streaks. Their rump is dark cinnamon-rufous and their flight feathers rufous-chestnut, with olive-brown edges and dusky tips on the primaries. Their tail is rufous-chestnut. Their throat is buffy with narrow dark olive barring. Their underparts are pale greenish olive with large buff teardrops that are lighter on the flanks and undertail coverts. Their underwing coverts are deep buff. Their iris is dark brown, their maxilla blackish to dark brown with sometimes a pale stripe on its cutting edge, their mandible whitish horn to pinkish gray, and their legs and feet blue- or greenish gray to slate gray. Juveniles are similar to adults but browner overall with less distinct spots on their underparts.The other subspecies of the spotted woodcreeper differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- X. e. parvus, smaller with more rufescent upperparts
- X. e. punctigula, smaller and more greenish overall, fine streaks on forehead while crown and nape plain, fine streaks on upper back and otherwise plain upperparts, fewer and smaller spots on underparts
- X. e. insolitus, like punctigula but with slightly darker upperparts and lighter rufous wings
- X. e. aequatorialis, smaller and more greenish overall, buffier eyering, fine streaks on forehead, crown and nape plain, sparse fine buff streaks on upperparts, rufous rump, tail, and wings, spots on throat, larger buff spots on underparts
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the spotted woodcreeper are found thus; the ranges are discontinuous:- X. e. erythropygius, central and southern Mexico from San Luis Potosí and Hidalgo south to Oaxaca and Guerrero
- X. e. parvus, from southern Oaxaca and Chiapas in Mexico to and in Guatemala, northwestern El Salvador, Honduras, and north-central Nicaragua; locally in southern Belize
- X. e. punctigula, from southeastern Nicaragua through Costa Rica into central Panama
- X. e. insolitus, discontinuosly from central Panama into northwestern and north-central Colombia
- X. e. aequatorialis, the Pacific slope from western Colombia to southwestern Ecuador