Des Murs's Wiretail
A species of Des Murs'S Wiretail and Tawny Tit-spinetail Scientific name : Sylviorthorhynchus desmurii Genus : Des Murs'S Wiretail and Tawny Tit-spinetail
Des Murs's Wiretail, A species of Des Murs'S Wiretail and Tawny Tit-spinetail
Botanical name: Sylviorthorhynchus desmurii
Genus: Des Murs'S Wiretail and Tawny Tit-spinetail
Content
Description General Info
Description
It is 24 centimetres (9.4 in) long, with the very long tail accounting for about two-thirds of this, but weighs as little as 10 grams (0.35 oz). The tail consists of just six feathers which are very narrow and filament-like: so few rectrices are elsewhere seen only in the emu-wrens of Australia. The two central feathers are greatly elongated while the two outer feathers are very short. The plain plumage is reddish-brown above, paler on the underparts. There is a pale stripe above the eye. The bird is small and rounded with a very fine bill. The song is fast and high-pitched.
Size
23 cm
Nest Placement
Shrub
Feeding Habits
Des Murs's Wiretail typically consume arthropods, foraging in pairs from the undergrowth to the mid-storey. They glean their prey from foliage and twigs, displaying unique pair-bonded foraging behavior.
Habitat
Des Murs's Wiretail is primarily found in southern temperate and secondary forests, thriving in cool and humid environments. The preferred habitats are forests where Nothofagus species are dominant and woodlands, often in proximity to dense thickets of Chusquea bamboo.
Dite type
Insectivorous
General Info
Feeding Habits
Bird food type
Behavior
It is very shy and difficult to see, being completely unable to enter areas without dense vegetative overstoreys, and cannot typically use corridors smaller than 25 metres (80 ft) or fly further than 50 metres (160 ft) between patches of suitable habitat. When encountered Des Murs's wiretail can easily be mistaken for a mouse. It has the unique ability among birds to curl up its long tail into a ball when alarmed. The ball-shaped nest is made of plant fibres and built amongst vegetation close to the ground. Both partners are highly territorial with a territory size of around 1 hectare (2.5 acres) per pair; however, pairs in territories smaller than 20 hectares (49 acres) are seldom successful at nesting. This territory and the nest site are defended vigorously against conspecifics with a distinctive territorial song, and it is possible that the long tail is used by both sexes as an means of choosing a mate, though no actual tests have been used to determine how wiretails find a mate. As is typical for south temperate insectivorous birds, during the breeding season of October to February Des Murs's wiretail lays a clutch of two to four eggs, but for the bird's mass these are about the largest eggs of any passerine bird. At 20.5 millimetres (0.807 in) long and 15.8 millimetres (0.622 in) wide, they weigh twice as much as expected for a 10 gram passerine and a clutch of four weighs more than the adult female - a feat equalled only by much more fecund kinglets. Little is known about incubation, fledging periods, or postfledging parental care due to the very secretive nature of the species.
Distribution Area
It is found in western Argentina from Santa Cruz Province north to San Juan and in southern and central Chile from northern Magallanes to Valparaíso Region. It inhabits dense thickets of Chusquea bamboo within cool temperate rainforests, occurring from sea-level up to 1,200 metres, but also can occur in early-successional shrublands of highly shade-tolerant Myrtaceae species, chiefly Amomyrtus. Des Murs's wiretail is also known to occur in dense weedy thickets of plants like gorse over the northern extremity of its range. Even in undisturbed rainforests, however, wiretails use only the low-level shrub and bamboo layer for foraging, never flying higher than 3 metres (10 ft) above the ground.