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Thorn-tailed rayadito

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Thorn-tailed rayadito
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Furnariidae
Genus: Aphrastura
Species:
A. spinicauda
Binomial name
Aphrastura spinicauda
(Gmelin, 1789)

The thorn-tailed rayadito (Aphrastura spinicauda) is a species of bird in the family Furnariidae. It is found in temperate forests and subtropical dry shrubland south of 35°S, though in shaded areas with relictual forests it can occur as far north as 28°S.[2] Some sources suggest it may formerly have occurred in the Falkland Islands.[citation needed] It remains the commonest and best-known native bird in temperate forests of Zona Austral and Zona Sur in Chile,[3] often occurring at densities of well over one individual per hectare.[citation needed]

Description

Rayadito, Tomé, Chile

The thorn-tailed rayadito is approximately 14 centimetres (5.5 in) in length including the tail, and an average adult weighs around 11 grams (0.39 oz), with males being around 10 percent heavier than females.[4] The most distinctive feature of a bird frequently compared to a tit[5] is the long “thorn”-tail with twelve spiny retrices, which gradually develops in juveniles as they mature.[5] This thorn-tail is believed to be used, not to aid in climbing trees as in other funariids like the tit-spinetails, but to attract the opposite sex during courtship.[4]

The plumage of the thorn-tailed rayadito is brown with several black lines above and generally white below in the nominate subspecies Aphrastura spinicauda spinicauda, whilst in Aphrastura spinicauda fulva of Chiloé the throat is cinnamon instead of white and in Aphrastura spinicauda bullocki of Mocha Island the dorsal side is entirely brown without black lines and the throat is white.

Typical voices of the thorn-tailed rayadito include:[6]

  1. A loud trill
  2. An alarm call, described as a scolding “tsii...tsii...tsii”
  3. A softer repetitive trill “trrrrrreet”[3]
  4. A chorus call used during the nonbreeding season[7]

Genetic diversity and glacial refugia

A recent study of the refugia used by rayaditos when the Patagonian Ice Sheet covered most of the species’ existing range shows that Mocha Island was the most prominent glacial refuge and suggests the possibility that the species was present in areas to the east of the ice sheet in Argentine Patagonia,[8] creating considerable gene flow when most of the ice sheet melted.

Behaviour and ecology

Like most furnariids, the thorn-tailed rayadito is exclusively insectivorous, and like the tits of the northern hemisphere it searches bark and moss surfaces for small insects.[3] In the non-breeding season from March to September it forms large flocks with other Furnariidae species, though generally it is so numerous as to outnumber all other species combined and in almost half of all cases rayaditos are the only species present: at other times white-throated treerunners, striped woodpeckers and fire-eyed diucons may complement them. Rayaditos themselves usually occur in the non-breeding season in flocks of four to seven;[7] however in the breeding season from October to February they are strongly pair-territorial.

Rayaditos are highly curious and fearless birds, and are inquisitive in the presence of humans in their forest habitat. They are adaptable to quite a wide range of forest types, from tall Nothofagus and Araucaria forests in the north to low subantarctic forests in the far south and relatively dry Austrocedrus forests in the east of their range. Rayaditos do not extend beyond the relatively dry cedar forest into the “scrub beech” further east,[9] and generally do require corridors of considerable size if not so wide as many other endemic birds of Patagonian forests.[2]

Rayadito Portrait

Reproduction

The breeding biology of the thorn-tailed rayadito is the most comprehensively studied among the generally little-known avifauna of South America south of the Amazon Basin.[10] Rayaditos, unlike most other furnariids, nest in secondary cavities in old trees, though there are a few reports that in the extreme south of their range they will opportunistically choose to nest in ground level cavities[11] and they willingly accept nest boxes.

Rayaditos breed between October and January, typically laying three or four eggs. Occasionally more are laid though there is little evidence more than four young ever fledge from a nest.[5] The most striking feature of rayaditos and indeed most furnariids is the very large size of the eggs: though not as large as those of the related Des Murs's wiretail, they are still about fifty percent larger than expected for an 11-gram passerine.[12] Because of their large eggs, rayadito females (and indeed all other documented furnariids) lay eggs only every other day, akin to other south temperate passerines like the rifleman and thornbills, though their incubation periods are not as long.[13]

Although rayaditos were historically thought to be multi-brooded,[14] the first detailed breeding studies conducted on Chiloé suggest each pair typically raises only a single clutch per year, and that reduction of clutches after laying by discarding eggs is not unknown,[5] though brood reduction by this method has generally been exceptionally rarely seen[15] and thought to be absent from south temperate passerines.[13] Growth of nestlings is distinctly slow: fledging lasts twenty-one days and postfledging parental care around thirty days. The latter is distinctly longer than in north temperate species at the same distance from the equator, but not nearly so long as in many tropical, Australian and southern African passerines[10][16] where young are not independent for over sixty days. Rayaditos may travel with their parents during the non-breeding season though this is not yet investigated. The oldest known rayadito based on banding studies was six years and four months old,[17] though potential longevity is unknown.

References

  1. ^ Template:IUCN
  2. ^ a b Vergara Pablo M. and Marquet Pablo A.; “On the seasonal effect of landscape structure on a bird species: the thorn-tailed rayadito in a relict forest in northern Chile” in Landscape Ecology; Volume 22, Number 7 (2007), pp. 1059-1071
  3. ^ a b c Ridgely, Robert S. and Tudor, Guy; Field Guide to the Songbirds of South America: The Passerines; pp. 285-286. ISBN 9780292717480
  4. ^ a b Moreno, Juan, Merino, Santiago, Lobato, Elisa, Rodríguez-Gironés, Miguel A. and Vásquez Rodrigo A.; “Sexual dimorphism and parental roles in the thorn-tailed rayadito (Furnariidae)” in The Condor 109(2):312-320 (2007)
  5. ^ a b c d Moreno, Juan, Merino, Santiago, Vásquez, Rodrigo A. and Armesto, Juan J.; “Breeding biology of the thorn-tailed rayadito (Furnariidae) in south-temperate rainforests of Chile” in The Condor, 107(1):69-77 (2005)
  6. ^ Ippi, Silvina, Vásquez, Rodrigo A., Van Donger, Wouter F.D. and Lazzoni, Ilena; “Geographical variation in the vocalizations of the suboscine Thorn-tailed Rayadito Aphrastura spinicauda” in Ibis; Volume 153, Issue 4, pages 789–805, October 2011
  7. ^ a b Vuilleumier, François; “Mixed Species Flocks in Patagonian Forests, with Remarks on Interspecies Flock Formation”; in The Condor; 69(4):400-404 (1967)
  8. ^ Gonzalez J, Wink M (2010) Genetic differentiation of the Thorn-tailed Rayadito Aphrastura spinicauda (Furnariidae: Passeriformes) revealed by ISSR profiles suggests multiple palaeorefugia and high recurrent gene flow. Ibis. 152:761–774.
  9. ^ Ralph, C. John; “Habitat association patterns of forest and steppe birds of northern Patagonia, Argentina” in The Condor, Vol. 87, No. 4 (November, 1985), pp. 471-483
  10. ^ a b Russell, Eleanor M.; “Avian Life Histories: Is Extended Parental Care the Southern Secret?”; in Emu; Vol. 100, 377-399 (2000)
  11. ^ McGehee, Steven M., Eitniear, Jack C., & Glickman, Barry W.; “Unusual ground level tree cavity nesting in the Thorn-tailed Rayadito (Aphrastura spinicauda)” in Boletín SAO Vol. 20 (No. 1) – Pag: 12-17
  12. ^ Based on the formula of egg mass = 0.258m0.73, where m is body mass. From Rahn, H., Sotherland, P. and Paganelli, C. V., 1985. “Interrelationships between egg mass and adult body mass and metabolism among passerine birds” in Journal für Ornithologie 126:263-271.
  13. ^ a b Ricklefs, R.E.; “Sibling competition, hatching asynchrony, incubation period, and lifespan in altricial birds”; in Power, Dennis M. (editor); Current Ornithology. Vol. 11. ISBN 9780306439902
  14. ^ Sieving, Kathryn E; Willson, Mary F. and de Santo, Toni L.; “Defining Corridor Functions for Endemic Birds in Fragmented South Temperate Rainforests” in Conservation Biology; Vol. 14, No. 4 (August 2000); pp. 1120-1132
  15. ^ Moreno, Juan; “Parental infanticide in birds through early eviction from the nest: rare or under-reported?” in Journal of Avian Biology, Volume 43, Issue 1 (January 2012); pp. 43–49
  16. ^ See McMahon T.A. and Finlayson, B.; Global Runoff: Continental Comparisons of Annual Flows and Peak Discharges; ISBN 3-923381-27-1
  17. ^ Jiménez, Jaime and Rozzi, Ricardo ‘¿Cuanto Viven las Aves des Bosque más Australia del Planeta?’; UNAB y la Unión de Ornitólogos realizan X Congreso de Ornitología