Isthmian wren
The isthmian wren (Cantorchilus elutus) is a species of bird in the family Troglodytidae. It is found from southwestern Costa Rica to western Panama. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical dry forests, subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, and heavily degraded former forest. It was considered conspecific with Cabanis's wren and the canebrake wren, together called the plain wren. It is considered as a distinct species because of different vocalizations and genetic divergence.
Isthmian wren | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Passeriformes |
Family: | Troglodytidae |
Genus: | Cantorchilus |
Species: | C. elutus |
Binomial name | |
Cantorchilus elutus (Bangs, 1902) | |
Description
The isthmian wren is a small, drab wren measuring 13 cm (5.1 in) in length.[1] It has a brown back, buffy flanks, white underparts and throat and wide white supercilium. The eye is red.
It has a loud 4-syllable song.
gollark: I guess if you want to send strings across TIS-3D infrared networks, you could with careful design probably get 4 bits/tick then, which is not entirely awful.
gollark: TIS-3D can internally store values between -32768 and 32767. That's, er, two bytes.
gollark: Redstone allows 4 bits (0-15) per toggling. Can those take a tick? No idea.
gollark: Well, you're wasting 15/16ths of the bandwidth, then.
gollark: Analog or digital?
References
- Garrigues, Richard; Dean, Robert (2007). The Birds of Costa Rica. Ithaca: Zona Tropical/Comstock/Cornell University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-8014-7373-9.
- Saucier, J.R., C. Sánchez, and M.D. Carling. 2015. Patterns of genetic and morphological divergence reveal a species complex in the Plain Wren (Cantorchilus modestus). Auk 132: 795–807.
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