Streaked xenops
The streaked xenops is a passerine bird in the Furnariinae subfamily of the ovenbird family Furnariidae. It is found in the New World from Costa Rica and Trinidad south to Bolivia and Argentina.
Taxonomy and systematics
Early on, the streaked xenops was assigned the binomial Xenops rutilus. In the mid-1900s 1900s taxonomists began using X. rutilans. By the principle of priority, the earlier rutilus is correct, but because of the long usage of rutilans, most systems have stayed with that specific epithet. A major exception is BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World, which uses X. rutilus.The major worldwide taxonomic systems recognize these 11 subspecies:X. r. septentrionalis Zimmer, JT, 1929X r. Incomptus Wetmore, 1970X. r. heterurus Cabanis & Heine, 1860X.. r. Perijanus Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1954X. r. phelpsi Meyer de Schauensee, 1959X. r. guayae Hellmayr, 1920X.. r. peruvianus Zimmer, JT, 1935X r. connectens Chapman, 1919X. r. purusianus Todd, 1925X.. r. chapadensis Zimmer, JT, 1935X. r. rutilans Temminck, 1821
Description
The streaked xenops is about long and weighs. Its bill is wedge-shaped, short, and thick. The sexes are alike. The nominate subspecies X. r. rutilans has somewhat variable plumage. Adults generally have a conspicuous buff supercilium and a pure white malar stripe on an otherwise brownish face with some darker and lighter highlights. Their crown is dark brown with rufous streaks. Their back is rufescent brown with faint paler rufous streaks, their rump and uppertail coverts plain chestnut-rufous, and their tail chestnut-rufous with a blackish inner web on one pair of feathers. Their wing coverts are rufescent-brown with darker inner webs, and their flight feathers are dark fuscous and all but the inner pair have a rufous tinge on their outer webs. Their throat and uppermost breast are whitish with darker mottling. The remainder of their underparts features broad buffy-white streaks with dark brownish edges set against a medium brown background; these streaks become narrower and less distinct toward the lower belly. Their iris is brown to dark brown, their maxilla dark brown to blackish, their mandible whitish to pinkish grey with a blackish tip, and their legs and feet grey to black. Juveniles differ from adults with less distinct streaking, less black on the tail, and a cloudy greyish throat.The other 10 subspecies of the streaked xenops differ in varying degrees from the nominate, though much of the differences fall within the variability of the nominate's plumage. The differences tend to be in the intensity of the rufous of the upperparts, the size and exact color of the underparts' streaks, and the exact base color of the underparts.
Distribution and habitat
The 11 subspecies of the streaked xenops are found thus:X r. septentrionalis: Costa Rica and western Panama's Chiriquí ProvinceX.. r. Incomptus: Cerro Pirre in extreme eastern PanamaX.. r. heterurus: Trinidad, northern Venezuela, east to the Paria Peninsula, and the Andes from Colombia south to Ecuador's Pastaza ProvinceX. r. perijanus: Serranía del Perijá and the eastern Andes spanning the Colombia-Venezuela borderX.. r. phelpsi: Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta in northern ColombiaX. r. guayae: lowlands from Esmeraldas Province in northern Ecuador south to Peru's departments of Tumbes and PiuraX. r. peruvianus: Andean foothills from Morona-Santiago Province in eastern Ecuador south to the Department of Puno in PeruX. r. connectens: eastern Andean foothills from La Paz Department in western Bolivia south to Tucumán Province in northwestern ArgentinaX. r. purusianus: from extreme eastern Peru and northeastern Bolivia east in central Brazil to the Rio TapajósX. r. chapadensis: eastern Bolivia and southwestern BrazilX. r. rutilans: southeastern Brazil, north-central Paraguay, and northeastern ArgentinaIn the Andes and Central American mountains, the streaked xenops inhabits montane evergreen and deciduous forests, mostly at elevations between. In Costa Rica, it occurs from and in Colombia from. In the lowlands, it inhabits a wide variety of forest and woodland landscapes that range from semi-arid to humid. They include tropical deciduous and tropical lowland evergreen primary forest, and also secondary forest. It is found in the forest interior and at its edges. In Ecuador, it reaches in the west and spans from in the east. Much of its Brazilian range is at low elevation, but it reaches as high as in that country.