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The woodcreepers, Dendrocolaptinae, comprise a
subfamily of
sub-oscine
passerine
birds
endemic to the
neotropics. They were formerly considered a distinct
family, Dendrocolaptidae.
Generally brownish birds, the true woodcreepers maintain
an upright vertical posture, supported by their stiff tail
vanes, and feed mainly on insects taken from tree trunks.
However, woodcreepers often form part of the core group at
the center of flocks attending army ant swarms. Though
unrelated, they superficially resemble the Old World
treecreepers. Woodcreepers are arboreal cavity-nesting
birds; 2-3 white eggs are laid and incubated for about 15
days.
These birds can be difficult to identify in that they
tend to have similar brown upperparts, and the more
distinctive underparts are hard to see on a bird pressed
against a trunk in deep forest shade. The bill shape and
call are useful aids to determining species.
Systematics
The former family has been merged into the ovenbird
family,
Furnariidae, due to genetic work showing Sclerus
leaftossers and Geositta miners to be
basal to the Furnariidae and the woodcreepers. Maintaining
Dendrocolaptidae as a separate family between them and the
other furnariids created a paraphyletic Furnariidae, hence the merger.
Interestingly, the
xenops, which were usually considered to be ovenbirds with a
somewhat woodcreeper-like plumage, are in fact closely
related to the latter (Fjeldsĺ et al., 2005). They are best
considered to form a separate tribe and give a good impression of how the ancestors of
the woodcreepers must have looked like. The true
woodcreepers are characterized by a belly feather growth
pattern not found in any other birds.
The systematics of the Dendrocolaptinae were reviewed by
Raikow (1994, based on morphology) and Irestedt et al.
(2004, based on analysis of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA
sequences). As the latter paper revealed, the commonplace
convergent evolution of bill morphology hampered Raikow's analysis. Color patterns, on the other hand, were
more in agreement with the molecular data, but the generally
drab coloration of the woodcreepers renders this character
less informative than desirable. The work of Irested et
al., on the other hand, was severely limited by
unavailability of samples of many phylogenetically
interesting taxa.
For example, the Deconychura species apparently
belong into separate genera, but only D. longicauda
was available for molecular analysis. Moving
Lepidocolaptes fuscus to Xiphorhynchus restores
monophyly of Lepidocolaptes, and Xiphorhynchus
was very much under-split (Aleixo, 2002a,b). Hylexetastes
may contain anything from 1 to 4 species.
It remains unresolved whether the
Scimitar-billed and Long-billed Woodcreepers'
distinctiveness is due to strong selective pressure (and
therefore rapid morphological evolution) of forms related to
Lepidocolaptes and Dendrexetastes, respectively, or to
long-time evolution of distinct lineages which separated
early in the evolution of the group, with genetic similarity
due to long branch attraction. The data gained from the
myoglobin intron II DNA sequence disagrees strongly with
mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data regarding the validity
of Lepidocolaptes in general Irestedt et al.
(2004); as the latter agrees much better with morphological
and biogeographical data it therefore is used here.
More detailed studies are needed to resolve these
questions, namely reevaluation of morphological data in the
light of the molecular findings, and new molecular studies
which thoroughly sample the questionable genera.
FAMILY FURNARIIDAE
Subfamily Dendrocolaptinae -
woodcreepers
Aleixo, Alexandre (2002): Molecular
systematics, phylogeography, and population genetics of
Xiphorhynchus (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae) in the
Amazon basin. Ph.D. dissertation, Louisiana State
University, Baton Rouge, LA.
PDF fulltext
Aleixo, Alexandre (2002): Molecular
Systematics and the Role of the "Várzea"-"Terra-Firme"
Ecotone in the Diversification of Xiphorhynchus
Woodcreepers (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae).
Auk119(3): 621-640.
DOI: 10.1642/0004-8038(2002)119[0621:MSATRO]2.0.CO;2
HTML abstract
Fjeldsĺ, Jon; Irestedt, Martin & Ericson, Per
G. P. (2005): Molecular data reveal some major
adaptational shifts in the early evolution of the most
diverse avian family, the Furnariidae. Journal of
Ornithology146: 1–13. [English with German
abstract]
DOI:10.1007/s10336-004-0054-5
(HTML abstract)
PDF fulltext
Irestedt, Martin; Fjeldsĺ, Jon & Ericson, Per
G. P. (2004): Phylogenetic relationships of woodcreepers
(Aves: Dendrocolaptinae) - incongruence between
molecular and morphological data. Journal of Avian
Biology35(3): 280-288.
DOI:10.1111/j.0908-8857.2004.03234.x
(HTML abstract)
Rajkow, Robert J. (1994): A phylogeny of the
woodcreepers (Dendrocolaptinae).
Auk111(1): 104–114.
PDF fulltext
Remsen, J. Van (2003): Family
Dendrocolaptidae (Woodcreepers). In: del Hoyo,
Josep; Elliott, Andrew & Sargatal, Jordi (editors):
Handbook of Birds of the World, Volume 6: Broadbills
to Tapaculos: 358-447. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona.
ISBN 84-87334-50-4