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D´Orbigny´s Chat-Tyrant

Ochthoeca oenanthoides
(d´Orbigny, ACVMD; de Lafresnaye, NFAA, 1837)
Pitajo Canela

Family: Tyrannidae
Order: Passeriformes
Class: Aves
Phylum / Division: Chordata
Kingdom: Animalia

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Records from Manu Road

Conservation Status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Synonyms: F[luvicola] oenanthoides.

Subspecies:


Description: A 15–16 cm tyrant flycatcher with a large-headed appearance and a very conspicuous broad white eyebrow above a dark gray mask. Throat grayish; breast dark cinnamon that becomes intense cinnamon on the belly. Undertail white to light cinnamon. Crown brownish gray; upperparts uniform grayish brown, sometimes slightly washed with cinnamon (subsp. oenanthoides in Argentina). Wings dark brown with 1–2 cinnamon wing bars. Tail dark with a white outer edge on the outermost rectrix. Bill black and sharp; legs black. Sexes alike. Juvenile shows a creamy eyebrow and a browner appearance. Differs from the White-browed Ground-Tyrant (O. leucophrys) by its intense cinnamon belly, contrasting gray throat, and by occupying higher elevations (3400–4200 m) than leucophrys (2000–3400 m).

Geographic distribution: Andes from northern and central Peru, extreme northern Chile (Arica), western Bolivia, and northwestern Argentina through Salta, Jujuy, Tucumán, and Catamarca, south to La Rioja; between 3400–4200 m (occasionally lower). In winter descends to lower ravines or areas with less snow.

Habitat: High Andean shrub-steppes and ravines, rocky slopes, open queñoa (Polylepis) woodlands, and dry shrub–grass mosaics. Occurs in ravines with shrubs, rock outcrops, exposed slopes, and Andean villages.

Behavior: Solitary or in pairs. Perches very upright on dry branches, shrubs, or posts. Hunts through short sallies from a perch, often returning to the same spot. Usually quiet, though more vocal during the breeding season. Its call is a sharp “kvee,” and its song is a strong, rhythmic, repeated series, sometimes in duets.

Diet: Arthropods caught on the wing or by hopping to the ground. Watches from a perch and sallies toward prey.

Reproduction: Nest in cavities of cliffs or rocky walls: an open cup built with plant fibers.

Conservation status: Not considered threatened. Common in suitable high-Andean habitats.


Authors of this compilation: Diego Carus and Maria Belén Dri – 06/12/2025

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EcoRegistros Revista - Related articles




Primer registro fotográfico del Pitajo Canela (Ochthoeca oenanthoides) en la provincia de San Juan, segunda cita y confirmación del registro más austral de su geonemia (Comentarios: 9)
EcoRegistros Revista Nº 1 - Article Nº 13
Publish by: Francisco Lucero
Published date: 08/04/2011 23:10



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Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
37187403/06/2015PeruCuzcoManu RoadSebastián Dardanelli
Page 1

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Bibliography related


Artículo Lucero, F. 2010. Aves nuevas, raras o con pocos registros para las provincias de Mendoza y San Juan. Nuestras Aves, 54: 57-62.



Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. D´Orbigny´s Chat-Tyrant (Ochthoeca oenanthoides) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 09/03/2026.










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