Salpinctes mexicanus
TAXONOMY
Thryothorus mexicanus Swainson, 1829, Real del Monte, Hidalgo,
Mexico.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
French: Troglodyte des canons; German: Schluchtenzaunkцnig;
Spanish: Saltaparad Barranquero.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
5–5.6 in (12.5–14 cm). Male 0.35–0.52 oz (9.9–14.8 g), female
0.35–0.43 oz (9.9–12.2 g). A slender, long-tailed wren with a
fine decurved bill, quite unlike any other species in its range or
HABITAT
. Crown and nape are gray-brown, back is reddish, rump
is chestnut. Throat and upper chest are white, contrasting with
chestnut-brown belly and rich red-brown lower belly. Crown
and back have numerous white speckles; wing and tail feathers
have blackish transverse bars. Eyes are dark brown, bill is grayish
black and paler at base, legs are dull gray-black. Sexes are
similar. In the juvenile, pale speckles on upperparts are obscure,
and underparts are less brightly colored.
DISTRIBUTION
Mountainous regions of western North America from southern
British Columbia, east to Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota,
and western Texas; south through Mexico to Oaxaca and disjunctly
in Chiapas. Largely sedentary; northern populations descend
in winter. Some vagrant records outside breeding range.
HABITAT
Confined to areas with rock faces, canyons, bluffs, and, rarely,
sea-coasts; also occurs in ancient ruins, especially in Mexico.
Sea-level to 9,800 ft (3,000 m), lower in northern parts of
range.
BEHAVIOR
Forages on rock faces, over which it crawls much in the manner
of a wallcreeper; the tail is not used as a prop as in the true
creepers. Frequently enters narrow crevices and cracks in rock
face; will sometimes hawk for aerial prey, more rarely forages
on ground. Song is a superb descending trill, ending in a series
of six or seven beautiful clear notes.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Specially adapted to gain access to narrow cracks in rock; the
long bill, flattened head, special articulation of the skull and
spine, and widely spaced legs are all adapted for this purpose.
Food is entirely invertebrate, including beetles, spiders, termites,
etc. Has been seen to steal paralyzed spiders from nests
of mud-dauber wasps.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Monogamous. Nest, built by both sexes, is an open cup of hair,
feathers, and wool with a base of twigs situated in crevices in
rock faces; sometimes in artificial cavities in ruins or buildings.
Eggs number three to seven, usually six; they are glossy white
with fine reddish spots. Clutch size is smaller in Mexican populations.
Incubation is by the female alone, for 12–18 days.
Young are fed by both parents for 12–17 days. Does not build
special roosting nests.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not threatened; the remoteness and ruggedness of its habitat
gives it substantial protection.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
None known.
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