Species

Search   
email a friend
printable version
print
close
NT
Piura Chat-tyrant Ochthoeca piurae

Justification
This species has a moderately small and fragmented range which is declining owing to habitat loss and degradation. Consequently it qualifies as Near Threatened.

Taxonomic source(s)
SACC. 2006. A classification of the bird species of South America. Available at: http://www.museum.lsu.edu/~Remsen/SACCBaseline.html.
Sibley, C. G.; Monroe, B. L. 1990. Distribution and taxonomy of birds of the world. Yale University Press, New Haven, USA.
Stotz, D. F.; Fitzpatrick, J. W.; Parker, T. A.; Moskovits, D. K. 1996. Neotropical birds: ecology and conservation. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

Identification
12-12.5cm. Small white-browed chat-tyrant, greyish below and brown above, with bold rufous wing-bars. Sexes alike, juvenile undescribed. Similar spp. White-browed Chat-tyrant O. leucophrys is much larger and has weaker wing-bars, Jelski's Chat-tyrant O. jelskii has yellow rather than white frontal area. Voice Call a thin tchiitt, sometimes extending into soft, descending trill lasting 1-3 seconds tchiitt-chtt-t-t-t-t-t-t-t.

Distribution and population
Ochthoeca piurae occurs locally in the Andes of Piura south to Ancash, north-west Peru. It has been recorded in Palambla (in Piura), Porculla (Lambayeque), Samne and Sincicap (La Libertad), and Colcabamba, Wiñapatun, Noqno and San Damian (Ancash) (Fjeldså and Krabbe 1990, Fitzpatrick et al. 2004, I. Franke in litt. 2004, Valqui 2004). However, it is apparently absent from other areas in north-west Peru where appropriate habitat exists, and it has been suggested that the present distribution of the species is limited to relatively good populations in the department of Ancash and southern La Libertad and small populations around Porculla Pass and Amotape, and that the northern populations have nearly disappeared (I. Franke in litt. 2004).

Population justification
The global population size has not been quantified, but this species is described as uncommon, or rare and local.

Trend justification
A slow to moderate decline is suspected, based on on-going habitat loss/degradation and loss of historically occupied sites.

Ecology
Its ecological requirements are poorly known (Best and Kessler 1995). It occurs at the edge of semihumid forest, in montane scrub (Schulenberg et al. 2007), on shrubby arid hillsides, and in riparian thickets (Ridgely and Tudor 1994, Fitzpatrick et al. 2004), at 1,400-2,850 m (Schulenberg et al. 2007), occasionally to 3,300 m (Parker et al. 1996). Its diet is unknown, but is presumed to consist of insects (Fitzpatrick et al. 2004).

Threats
It is not as threatened as many forest-dependent species in the region (Stattersfield et al. 1998), but ongoing habitat clearance and degradation of montane scrub and riparian thickets, in conjunction with overgrazing, are presumably causing population declines.

Conservation actions underway
There are no protected areas within the small range of this species.

Conservation actions proposed
Survey to determine its current range, population size and ecological requirements. Research threats. Protect appropriate habitat.

References
Fjeldså, J.; Krabbe, N. 1990. Birds of the high Andes. Apollo Books, Copenhagen.

Ridgely, R. S.; Tudor, G. 1994. The birds of South America. University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas.

Best, B. J.; Kessler, M. 1995. Biodiversity and conservation in Tumbesian Ecuador and Peru. BirdLife International, Cambridge, U.K.

Parker, T. A.; Stotz, D. F.; Fitzpatrick, J. W. 1996. Ecological and distributional databases. In: Stotz, D.F.; Fitzpatrick, J.W.; Parker, T.A.; Moskovits, D.K. (ed.), Neotropical bird ecology and conservation, pp. 113-436. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

Stattersfield, A. J.; Crosby, M. J.; Long, A. J.; Wege, D. C. 1998. Endemic bird areas of the world: priorities for bird conservation. BirdLife International, Cambridge, U.K.

Fitzpatrick, J. W.; Bates, J. M.; Bostwick, K. S.; Caballero, I. C.; Clock, B. M.; Farnsworth, A.; Hosner, P. A.; Joseph, L.; Langham, G. M.; Lebbin, D. J.; Mobley, J. A.; Robbins, M. B.; Scholes, E.; Tello, J. G.; Walther, B. A.; Zimmer, K. J. 2004. Family Tyrannidae (Tyrant-flycatchers). In: del Hoyo, J.; Elliott, A.; Christie, D.A. (ed.), Handbook of birds of the world, pp. 170-462. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona, Spain.

Further web sources of information
Hear sounds for this species from xeno-canto, the community database of shared bird sounds from around the world.

View photos and videos, and hear sounds of this species from the Internet Bird Collection

Text account compilers
Isherwood, I., O'Brien, A., Sharpe, C J, Symes, A., Temple, H.

Contributors
Angulo Pratolongo, F., Franke, I., Valqui, T.

IUCN Red List evaluators
Butchart, S., Symes, A.

Recommended citation
BirdLife International (2013) Species factsheet: Ochthoeca piurae. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 20/06/2013. Recommended citation for factsheets for more than one species: BirdLife International (2013) IUCN Red List for birds. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 20/06/2013.

This information is based upon, and updates, the information published in BirdLife International (2000) Threatened birds of the world. Barcelona and Cambridge, UK: Lynx Edicions and BirdLife International, BirdLife International (2004) Threatened birds of the world 2004 CD-ROM and BirdLife International (2008) Threatened birds of the world 2008 CD-ROM. These sources provide the information for species accounts for the birds on the IUCN Red List.

To provide new information to update this factsheet or to correct any errors, please email BirdLife

To contribute to discussions on the evaluation of the IUCN Red List status of Globally Threatened Birds, please visit BirdLife's Globally Threatened Bird Forums.

Additional resources for this species

{2}', url: 'http://blog.arkive.org/feed'} } };

ARKive
  • Species
    Species groups
    • All species
    • Mammals
    • Birds
    • Reptiles
    • Amphibians
    • Fish
    • Invertebrates - terrestrial
    • Invertebrates - marine
    • Plants and algae
    • Fungi (including lichens)
    Conservation status
    • Extinct
    • Extinct in the Wild
    • Critically Endangered
    • Endangered
    • Vulnerable
    Random species The world's favourite species
  • Places
    Geography
    • Africa
    • Antarctica
    • Asia
    • Australia/Oceania
    • Europe
    • North America
    • South America
    • Antarctic
    • Arctic
    • Atlantic forest, South America
    • Barrow Island, Australia
    • Eastern deciduous forest, USA
    • Gutianshan National Nature Reserve, China
    • Indian Ocean islands
    • Mediterranean Basin
    • Western Ghats, India
    • Wisconsin's Northwoods, USA
    • Wytham Woods, UK
  • Topics
    Topics
    • Amphibian conservation
    • Coral reef conservation
    • Climate change
    • Endangered species
    • Newly discovered species
    • Reforestation
    • Savannah predators and prey
    • Snakes
    • Jewels of the UAE
    Habitats
    • Islands
    • Rocky shores, UK
    • Sandy shores, UK
  • Educate
    Education
    • 5 to 7 year olds
    • 7 to 11 year olds
    • 11 to 14 year olds
    • 14 to 16 year olds
    • 16 to 18 year olds
  • Fun
    Fun stuff
    • Activities
    • Blog
    • Games
    • Quizzes
    • Survival app
    • Team WILD
    • Google Earth
About us
Help ARKive share the wonders of the natural world.    Donate today »
Please donate
  • Home>
  • Error

Page not found

Sorry, ARKive could not find what you are looking for.

Page not found

Visit the ARKive home page

Jump to a random ARKive species

Technical detail: The server responded with HTTP error code 404.

New to ARKive

Lake placid funnel wolf spider

A new close up photo of the lake placid funnel wolf spider.

Highlights

The fastest animal in the world!

The fastest animal in the world!

Please donate to ARKive today

Help us share the wonders of the natural world. Donate today!

Sign up to our newsletter

Get the latest wild news direct to your inbox.

Get involved

ARKive relies on its media donors to donate photos and videos. Can you help? There are plenty of other ways you can get involved too!

Who we are

What we do
Meet the team
Our supporters

Get involved »

Donate
Contribute
Media licences
Link to us
Universities

Resources

Teaching resources
Games
Fun stuff
Apps
E-cards

Species »

Mammals
Birds
Reptiles
Amphibians
Fish
Invertebrates:
• Terrestrial
• Marine
Plants
Fungi

Join the conversation

Facebook Google+ Twitter Flickr Pinterest YouTube

Check out our   Wildblog

  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Press
  • FAQs
  • Useful links
  • Terms and conditions
  • MyARKive

An initiative of the Charity

Wildscreen Festival logo ARKive logo WildPhotos logo WildFilmHistory logo

With thanks to our principal supporter

Environment agency - Abu Dhabi

Wildscreen is a registered charity promoting conservation through wildlife imagery | UK charity no. 299450 | USA 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization

© Wildscreen 2003–2013. By using this website you agree to the Terms and Conditions.   Terms of use of materials | Data protection policy | Cookie policy

Key facts
Current IUCN Red List category Near Threatened
Family Tyrannidae (Tyrant-flycatchers)
Species name author Chapman, 1924
Population size Unknown mature individuals
Population trend Decreasing
Distribution size (breeding/resident) 20,100 km2
Country endemic? Yes
Links to further information
- Additional Information on this species




Species
Home
Search
Programme of work
Download maps
Taxonomy
References
Publications
Terms and definitions
Climate Change
Data zone
Home
Species
Sites (IBAs)
Endemic Bird Areas
State of the world's birds
Country profiles
Marine e-Atlas
Citizen Science
CBD support
BirdLife Forums
Seabird Tracking
BirdLife
Home
How to help BirdLife

Contact | Disclaimer | Terms of Use | Acknowledgements
QPQ Software Ltd.