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In each Random Bird Thursday (RBT) episode, the goal is to highlight a bird species that probably isn't going to get featured in a full-length podcast episode. These are birds we might overlook, even though they certainly deserve some appreciation and attention.
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⚠️ SPOILER ALERT!
The featured species in this episode is the White-throated Treerunner (Pygarrhychus albogularis).
White-throated Treerunner sounds (Xeno Canto recordings XC49939 and XC52238)
Hello and welcome.
This is The Science of Birds.
I am your host, Ivan Phillipson.
The Science of Birds podcast is a light-hearted exploration of bird biology for lifelong learners.
In case you hadn't noticed, it's Random Bird Thursday.
Random bird Thursday episodes are relatively short and sweet.
In each I spotlight a bird species that probably won't get featured in a full-length episode.
With over 11,000 bird species in the world, Random Bird Thursday gives us a chance to celebrate
one that we might otherwise overlook.
Now Random Bird Thursday is truly random.
We don't know what species we're going to get unless we push the Random Bird selector button.
So let's do that right now.
Okay, the Random Bird generator gave us the white-throated tree runner, Pygericus albogularis.
Pygericus albogularis.
Now I'm not sure of the best pronunciation of that scientific name.
I'm going to go with Pygericus for the genus, but I think it'd be okay to pronounce it
Pygerichus or Pygericus.
Take your pick.
In any case, it's the white-throated tree runner.
This is a bird from the New World, from South America.
And let's go ahead and get into it.
The white-throated tree runner is a medium-sized songbird.
It's about six inches long from beak to tail, which is 15 to 16 centimeters.
And if you're looking at its body shape, it is reminiscent of a nut hatch, if you're
familiar with nut hatches.
It's not a nut hatch, but it kind of looks like one.
It has short, broad wings that are adapted for high maneuverability in the dense forests
where it lives.
The tail is somewhat rounded, and the shafts on the rectacies, the tail feathers, the
end in these little spines.
So for these tail feathers, there's the central rakeus, right?
That's the central shaft, and there are the barbs that come out to the side.
Well, the tips of these feathers don't have barbs.
So for about 0.35 inches or so, or 9 millimeters at the end, there's this kind of protruding spine,
which is just the bare empty rakeus.
And the bird uses this tail with these stiff feathers to brace itself on tree shrunks
when it's climbing vertically, very much like what we see with woodpeckers.
The bill of the white-throated tree runner is pointed, and it has a chisel-like shape.
But if you think of a nut hatch, again, this is not a nut hatch, but if you think of
a nut hatch, it has this straight Coleman, so the upper bill is straight, and the bottom
curves upward, so the lower manable curves upward.
And that's what's going on with the tree runner as well.
In adult tree runners, the bill is bicolored.
The upper part is dark, and the lower part is pale, more whitish.
The white-throated tree runner is overall a brown bird, but indeed it does have a white
throat, so the throat and breast are bright white.
And that contrasts sharply with this chestnut brown back and cap that the bird has.
So on the top of the head and the front of the head, it's this darker brown, and then
as it fades to the back of the body, it becomes more of a chestnut color, so a little bit
more rufus-y or chestnut towards the rump.
And then if you look at the belly and the sides, there's this irregular scalloped look
or scaly look, and it's quite pretty.
Where there are basically white spots surrounded by brown.
The bird has dark eyes with a dark brown iris, and the feet are gray or brown.
What does the white-throated tree runner sound like?
Well it has a relatively simple repertoire.
It makes these short little metallic notes, either as single notes or little galloping
couplets.
It can also make a high-pitched trill or a loud peat-peat call.
But luckily I do have some recordings to share with you, so these are from the east slope
of the Andes in Argentina, and the first one was recorded in the National Park L'Anine,
so Parque Nacional L'Anine, and here we go.
This next recording was made a little further north in Argentina from around Lago Cayenne,
which is also again on the east slope of the Andes.
So that gives you a little taste of what these birds sound like.
This is a strictly arboreal species, so that means it hangs out in trees, it doesn't
fly long distances, typically it just moves from one tree to the next.
And if you're observing one, it kind of spirals vertically up the trunk.
And as it goes, it moves its head first, and it uses its rigid tail as a brace.
It's been described as a confident bird that often ignores people, and rather than flying
away or freaking out, it just moves to the other side of the tree trunk and goes about
its business.
You often see white-throated tree renters in pairs, especially during the breeding season.
But in the Austral winter, so we're talking June, July, August, this bird often joins
mixed species foraging flocks, and two species that it's often in the company of are the
Thorn-tailed rayadito, rayadito, great bird, and the striped woodpecker.
So at least in the Austral winter, if you see some Thorn-tailed rayaditos, those are fairly
common birds, and they tend to move around in flocks, and keep your eyes open because
you might also find a white-throated tree runner.
Okay, so let's move on to look at where the name of this bird came from, its scientific
name anyway.
Let's talk about its family, habitat, distribution, all that good stuff.
The species was first formally described in 1831 by a British explorer named Philip Parker
King, and the first scientific name that was assigned by him was Dendro Calaptis albogularis.
All right, so albogularis means white-throated, and then in 1839, John Gould independently
described the same species as Dendro Dremus Lucosternis, and that was based on some specimens
collected on the voyage of the Beagle, the HMS Beagle Darwin's famous ship.
So Dendro Dremus, Dendro Dremus, translates literally as tree runner.
Pretty cool, it's a great genus name, however, that's not the current genus name for this
bird or any other bird.
There are no bird species out there with the genus name Dendro Dremus.
So the name we do have, the genus we do have is Pygorecas, right?
Pyg-a-r-r-h-i-c-h-a-s Pygorecas.
This is derived from Greek words, Pyg-py-ge, not sure exactly how to pronounce that, that
means rump, and then aricos, ar-r-h-i-k-h-o-s, which means wicker.
You know, like a wicker basket.
So Pygorecas is referring to the stiffness of this bird's tail, wicker rump.
And then albogularis, again, means white-throated.
Now, because this bird is in South America, people there are speaking, or where this bird
lives, the people speak Spanish, so it has some fun Spanish names.
One is comasebo grande, comasebo grande, literally meaning large fat eater, large tallow
eater or large fat eater.
Now the question is, why, why is it called this?
I don't know.
If you live in that part of the world, in Argentina or Chile, and you know why, that would
be great.
Let me know, maybe because it's poking around in the trees, pulling out like grubs that
are kind of fatty, I don't know.
Or maybe it's based on some kind of old wives' tail or something.
But anyway, comasebo grande.
In Chile, another name is carmelita, carmelita, meaning essentially the brown one or the
tawny one, which doesn't really narrow it down.
There's a lot of brown birds, but hey, sure, whatever, carmelita.
And then one more local name in Argentina this time is picolesna patagonico, picolesna
patagonico, picolesna literally means something like all beak or all build, all being AW
L. So something that's thin, sharp, and pointed.
You know, a tool used for piercing leather or other material.
Most kids today are familiar with the common tool, the all AWL, you know, you can use it
for piercing leather or piercing your enemies, just a good thing to carry around in your backpack.
Just kidding.
Kids do not pierce your enemies or your friends, okay?
So that's Pygaricus albogularis, the scientific name.
Now this bird is in the family for Nauria D. And this is the family of the oven birds
and wood creepers.
It's a mega diverse family in Latin America in the Neotropics with 320 species more or
less across Mexico, Central, and South America.
We'll do an entire episode, of course, on this family at some point.
It's really fascinating.
There's all this diversity within the family with the different tail shapes and bill shapes
that are adapted to all kinds of different niches.
This is an amazing example of an adaptive radiation in a family.
And one of the things I love about it, which I'll talk about when I do the episode, is
that most of these birds are some shade of brown or rufus or chestnut or that kind
of thing.
So it's really interesting kind of the uniformity of color among the birds in this family.
OK, so the white-throated tree runner is in the family for Nauria D.
Now within that family, who are the closest relatives of this bird?
So it's in its own genus.
It's in a genus of one, but there are two other genera that are relatively close to Pygaricus.
Now you'd think that the four species of tree runner, other species also in this family
would be the closest relatives.
They are in the genus Margarornus, and it turns out those other tree runners are not
the closest relatives.
Within the family for Nauria D, there are a bunch of these birds that are bark gleaners,
right?
They're running around like nut hatches on the trunks and branches, probing for small
things in the bark.
And you'd think that our white-throated tree runner would be closely related to those.
Despite molecular genetic studies, using DNA, have revealed that nope, Pygaricus, our
lone little white-throated tree runner, is in its own genus, and its similarity to those
other bark gleaners in the family is due to convergent evolution.
They look and behave similarly because they live a similar lifestyle.
Natural selection has acted similarly on them.
And we could say that for nut hatches as well, right?
Nut hatches are in an entirely different family, not at all closely related to these guys,
but there is some similarity because they live a similar lifestyle, convergent evolution.
One key difference though is that nut hatches don't use their tails to brace themselves
as they move around on tree trunks or branches.
The tree runner does.
But anyway, the actual closest relatives to the white-throated tree runner are the Rufus-tailed
Xenops, and that's one species in its own genus.
And then there are four species in the genus Oketorincus, and those are generally called
earth creepers.
So those are the closest relatives of our tree runner.
And what we learned from the molecular genetic data, considering the molecular clock, looking
back in time, is an estimate for the split from those earth creepers, the genus Oketorincus
and our Pygaricus genus, that split occurred seemingly about 10 million years ago.
Now also considering the evolution of the white-throated tree runner, some might call this a living
fossil because it is the only living species within its genus.
Whatever other really close relatives it had, other species in that genus, well, they're
all gone.
They've gone extinct.
And it could be that the divergence of this species or the emergence of this species
or this lineage happened when dry habitats opened up in the Myocene epic as the Andes
were uplifted, as the Andes Mountains rose and created dry environments, causing fragmentation
in the forest habitats of these birds.
And speaking of forest habitats, the species is found in forests across Chile and Argentina,
from sea level all the way up to the tree limit, approximately 7,200 feet or 2,200 meters.
But it depends highly on old-growth native forests, primarily of trees in the genus
nothophagus.
And in those old-growth forests, the trees ideally would be large and provide habitat for
nesting and for foraging for our tree runners.
So these are forests in the southern parts of Chile and Argentina.
They're temperate, relatively cool, with lots of moss and ferns.
And I should mention that those nothophagus trees are called in common English southern
beaches.
They're not related to northern beaches so much, but they're called southern beaches.
And we see nothophagus species in various southern parts of the world, like New Zealand
and Tasmania, places like that, places that used to all be part of Gondwana, the supercontinent
many millions of years ago.
But regarding habitat, these white-throated tree runners, they want there to be some large
old trees that are dead or dying.
That provides the maximum amount of nesting and foraging habitats, or micro habitats.
And as soon as you get out of the forest into shrub lands or open habitats, you're not
going to find white-throated tree runners.
This species doesn't really migrate.
It's thought to be resident, so it just hangs out in its forest all year long.
And that brings us to the question of conservation.
How are these birds doing?
Well, at least according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, the
IUCN, this species is in the least concerned category.
And that's good news.
These birds are seemingly doing okay.
Nevertheless, they face some threats as many birds do.
They do.
There has been habitat degradation through the removal of dead trees, the proliferation
of exotic plantations, as well as forest fires, and as usual, there's predation by invasive
species like feral dogs, rats, and domestic cats.
Okay, so I mentioned that these birds are foraging on tree trunks, right?
They're climbing around vertically and they're bracing themselves with their tails, scooting
around hungry trunks.
What are they eating?
They're primarily insectivorous, so they're looking for arthropods like insects and spiders,
both adults and larvae and maybe even eggs of things like beetles and flies, caterpillars,
anything that might be tucked in the crevices of the bark.
Now although they're primarily insectivorous, they are also known to eat some fruit and
some seeds, and there's even some documentation of the white-throated tree runner eating a
small lizard, the blue-green smooth-throated lizard.
And that lizard tends to hang out on tree trunks, surprise, surprise.
So remember that the white-throated tree runner has this chisel-like bill, and that is an adaptation
for pecking it wood and pulling off pieces of bark, and also for just reaching into crevices
in the bark.
This bird also has a specialized tongue, kind of like what we see in woodpeckers.
The white-throated tree runner has a barbed tongue that it can reach into crevices and folds
to pull out prey that might be unreachable otherwise.
So if you watch one of these birds, it'll fly down to sort of the base of a tree and
then spiral its way around the trunk as it moves upwards, and it's going to be flipping
off little pieces of bark, dead wood, maybe some moss, and it's reaching with its bill
and that little spiky tongue into crevices.
When it comes to breeding, this is thought to be a monogamous species, where both pairs
take care of the chicks.
We don't know much about courtship.
There may be some, but we, ornithologists don't really know much about its territorial vocalizations
or the function of its vocalizations in general.
But what we do know is that this is a primary cavity excavator, and that's an important
distinction, because there are a lot of birds that nest in cavities, but they are not primary
excavators.
They don't make their own nest cavities.
They aren't necessarily capable, and that would be something like chickadees, right, or
maybe bluebirds.
Those species depend on primary cavity excavators to make the holes in the first place.
So the white-throated tree runner is capable of making its own nest cavity, but that's
going to be typically in wood that is relatively soft, that has been decaying.
That's why this bird needs there to be some large old senescent or old and dying trees.
The nest cavity is kind of rounded or spherical.
It's lined with sawdust, some dry sticks and grass and pieces of bark.
The opening is circular or kind of oval-shaped, and the entrance hole is maybe one to two point
seven-five inches wide or two point five to seven centimeters.
The cavity itself is ten to sixteen inches deep or twenty-five to forty centimeters.
And the whole thing is located maybe ten to twenty-five feet off the ground or three
to eight meters.
And again, this is going to be in kind of an old decaying tree or a fire-damaged tree.
Now even though this species can and does excavate its own nests, it will also sometimes
use pre-existing cavities made by other species, typically the striped woodpecker or the
Magellanic woodpecker.
White-throated tree runners have strong fidelity to their nests, it seems, so they've been documented
coming back at least for a couple years to the same nest, maybe for longer.
And as far as I can understand, they do have a bit of a territory around their nest, a
territory of about maybe one kilometer and radius that they protect and defend.
And when it comes time to lay eggs, there are three to four little white eggs with a range
from one to eight.
And those are going to get incubated for maybe about seventeen days.
Again, with both parents taking care of the chicks, I'm not sure they both incubate,
but they certainly help provision the chicks once they're hatched.
And after about three weeks, the chicks are going to fledge, and they might stay with
their parents for even up to a year, which is pretty remarkable.
And as far as we know, these little buggers can live for up to five years, perhaps longer,
but at least five years.
It turns out that the white-throated tree runner is culturally significant.
It shows up in the traditional stories of the Yagana people in South America, and they
call it Tata-Jerge, T-A-T-A-J-U-R-J.
I'm sure I'm not pronouncing that right, Tata-Jerge.
And this is a bird that accompanies women as they collect fungi from trees.
So it's just hanging out with these ladies as they're collecting fungi.
And so this bird has a long association with humans in Southern South America for many,
many thousands of years.
And so what these women were doing is they're collecting cattron, which is a type of fungus,
a fungus in the genus Cittaria, or Cittaria, C-Y-T-T-A-R-I-A.
And that fungus grows on those southern beach trees, the north of Vegas trees.
And if you've never seen one of these funguses, these fungi, they're really wild-looking.
They grow as this big, woody mass.
They create this kind of big burl or whatever on the tree trunk or tree branch, this dark,
spherical mass.
And then out of that grows these fruiting bodies of the fungus that are pale yellow or orange
and they're spherical.
And the whole thing just looks like something from an alien planet.
It's really wild.
So I'm trying to paint this picture.
So you've got this large, maybe like soccer ball-shaped canker, this woody, spherical mass.
And out of that, you have these bright, orange, or yellow spherical fungi, these escoma, technically.
And they're kind of like a morale, or they've been described as like a deeply dimpled golf
ball.
So these individual fruiting bodies have these little dimples all over them.
So again, very alien.
And the native people call this one or one name for it is Yao Yao.
I believe that's how it's pronounced, L-L-A-O, L-L-A-O, Yao Yao.
And people eat these things.
They have for thousands of years and they still do.
It's part of the indigenous cuisine.
Their common name for it is Indian bread.
And if you eat these things straight up, my understanding is they're kind of gelatinous
on the inside, maybe with a little bit of sweetness, but very watery, kind of rubbery.
One of the species of sataria is sataria Darwinii, named after Charles Darwin.
And he described the species on the void of the beagle.
He said it contains a lot of fluid and is relatively tasteless.
So you've got this fungus.
It is associated with these nothefagus trees.
And of course, the white-threaded tree runner is also closely associated with these trees.
So it's really cool that you have this ethno botanical, ethno-ornothological relationship
that the native people have been involved with for a long, long time.
And then you have to wonder if there is an ecological association with the bird and
the fungus, right?
If the bird requires old trees that are partially rotten, that have soft wood that's decaying,
well, if the fungus has a role in that decay, then the bird would depend on the fungus
to play a role to create nesting habitat.
So there you go.
That's why I went on and on about the fungus, because one, I just think it's cool,
because I've seen them, and I just remember thinking like, what is this thing?
And I love all of these connections, right?
This is one of the things that's great about learning about birds is that how they are connected
to so many other things in nature, everything is connected.
And I have a connection to this species.
I have seen it.
I led a tour in Patagonia, I guess it was last year, a birding tour.
And yeah, this was a really exciting bird to see.
I saw it in several different locations, but certainly down in Tierra del Fuego right
at the southern tip of South America in the southern beach forests.
And I also saw it in Torres del Pinede, National Park in Chile, Torres del Pinede.
And actually in one of my walks, I had a little free time, so I went on a birding walk
by myself, while my group was doing something else.
And I saw these thorn-tailed raiaditos, so I saw a bunch of them, great bird.
And I got to see several white-threaded tree runners.
So we're talking about this mixed floc, mixed foraging floc phenomenon, right?
So just some lovely birds from South America.
And yeah, I hope to see this bird species again.
I have a soft place in my heart for any of these bark foraging species, bark gleaners.
I do love nut hatches.
We will definitely do an episode on nut hatches at some point.
And yeah, that is the white-throated tree runner, Pygaricus albogularis.
I hope you really enjoyed learning about this little guy, this little species.
And if you happen to have seen it yourself, you should let me know.
Tell me your story.
Send an email to IvanatScienceOfBirds.com.
And that, my friends, is all for random bird Thursday for this time.
Catch you later.
