Streak-capped treehunter
The streak-capped treehunter is a species of bird in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The streak-capped treehunter has these six subspecies:- T. v. klagesi
- T. v. tachirensis Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1958
- T. v. magdalenae Meyer de Schauensee, 1945
- T. v. sclateri Berlepsch, 1907
- T. v. virgaticeps Lawrence, 1874
- T. v. sumaco Chapman, 1925
Description
The streak-capped treehunter is long and weighs. It is one of the larger members of its genus and has the least amount of streaking. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies T. v. virgaticeps have a mostly blackish-brown face with buff streaks and a tawny-buff malar area. Their lores are grizzled blackish brown and grayish buff. Their crown is blackish brown with dull buff spots on the forehead that become streaks on the crown itself. They have an indistinct dark brown collar with faint buff streaks. Their back is rich dark brown with a few buff streaks on its upper part; the back color blends to a slightly redder rump and reddish brown uppertail coverts. Their wings are rich rufescent brown and their tail dark chestnut-brown. Their throat is tawny-buff with dark feather borders that give a streaked appearance that widens as it extends onto the upper breast and then narrows again. The rest of their breast and their belly are rich rufescent brown, their flanks darker, and their undertail coverts dark reddish brown. Their iris is dark brown, their bill black, and their legs and feet greenish gray to blackish. Juveniles have an almost unstreaked throat.Subspecies T. v. sumacos crown streaks continue onto its nape; its bill is much shorter than the nominate's and its wing coverts, flight feathers, and underparts are less rufous. T. v. sclateri has a more olive back and is paler and less rufous on the rump than the nominate. T. v. magdalenae has slightly less olive upperparts than sclateri, with a shorter bill, less obvious throat markings, and brighter more golden underparts. T. v. klagesi has a grayer crown with more conspicuous streaks than the nominate, with a much shorter bill, a slightly paler back, a lighter rufuous rump and tail, and a throat more heavily marked with blackish. T. v. tachirensis has a more brownish back than kalgesi, with a darker and less reddish rump and uppertail coverts, darker and more ochraceous underparts, and a dusky wash on the breast.
Distribution and habitat
The streak-capped treehunter has a disjunct distribution. The subspecies are found thus:- T. v. klagesi: the Venezuelan Coastal Range between Carabobo state and the Capital District
- T. v. tachirensis: Andes of western Venezuela in Lara and Táchira states
- T. v. magdalenae: Colombia's Western Andes in Chocó Department, the eastern slope of the Central Andes in Antioquia and Huila departments, and the Eastern Andes in Santander Department
- T. v. sclateri: Colombia's Western Andes between the departments of Valle del Cauca and Nariño
- T. v. virgaticeps: Andes in northwestern Ecuador between Carchi and Pichincha provinces
- T. v. sumaco: Eastern Andes of southern Colombia in Caquetá and Nariño departments and separately in Ecuador's Napo Province