White-barred piculet
The white-barred piculet is a species of bird in the woodpecker family Picidae. It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, French Guiana, Guyana, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The white-barred piculet was first described in 1825 by the Dutch zoologist Coenraad Jacob Temminck. Six subspecies are recognized:- P. c. macconnelli Sharpe, 1901
- P. c. confusus Kinnear, 1927
- P. c. cirratus Temminck, 1825
- P. c. pilcomayensis Hargitt, 1891
- P. c. tucumanus Hartert, E.J.O., 1909
- P. c. thamnophiloides Bond, J. & Meyer de Schauensee, 1942
The specific epithet cirratus means "curly headed", cirrus being Latin for a ringlet or curl.
Description
The white-barred piculet is about long and weighs. Adult males of the nominate subspecies P. c. cirratus have a black cap with a red patch on the forehead and white spots on the rest of it. Their face is mostly dark buff-brown with faint blackish bars and a white stripe behind the eye. Their upperparts are dull brownish, sometimes with faint darker bars. Their flight feathers are dark brown with buffish white edges on the secondaries and tertials. Their tail is dark brown; the innermost pair of feathers have mostly white inner webs and the outer two or three pairs have a white patch near the end. Their chin and throat feathers are white to pale buff with blackish bars. The rest of their underparts are white with black barring and a buff tinge to the belly and flanks. Their iris is dark chestnut-brown, the orbital ring blue-gray, the beak black with a pale base to the mandible, and the legs gray. Adult females are identical but with no red on the forehead. Juveniles are duller and darker than adults and have an unspotted crown, more obvious barring on their upperparts, and heavier barring on their underparts.Subspecies P. c. confusus has a darker face than the nominate with no white line behind the eye, brown upperparts, and a heavily barred throat. P. c. macconnelli is similar to confusus but without barring on its upperparts; its face sometimes has white spots and the throat and breast have heavier barring. P. c. thamnophiloides has grayish upperparts and fewer markings on the underparts except for "arrowheads" on the flanks. P. c. tucumanus has distinctly barred gray-brown upperparts, a buffier throat and breast with more obscure bars than the nominate, and less red to no red on the crown. P. c. pilcomayensis has grayish upperparts, narrow black and white barring on the underparts, and little to no red on the crown.
Distribution and habitat
The white-barred piculet has two widely separated ranges. The subspecies are found thus:- P. c. macconnelli, northeastern Brazil's eastern Amazon Basin west to the Rio Tapajós
- P. c. confusus, southwestern Guyana, French Guiana, and Roraima state in extreme northern Brazil
- P. c. cirratus, southeastern Brazil south from Minas Gerais and Espírito Santo to eastern Paraguay
- P. c. pilcomayensis, from southeastern Bolivia and Paraguay into northeastern Argentina and also Uruguay
- P. c. tucumanus, northwestern Argentina
- P. c. thamnophiloides, southeastern Bolivia to northwestern Argentina