White-throated treecreeper

Cormobates leucophaea

The white-throated treecreeper is an Australian treecreeper found in the forests of eastern Australia. It is unrelated to the northern hemisphere treecreepers. It is a small passerine bird with predominantly brown and white plumage and measuring some 15 cm long on average.
Ant Catcher - White throated tree creeper  Australia,Cormobates leucophaea,Fall,Geotagged,White-throated treecreeper

Appearance

Measuring 13–17 cm in length with a wingspan of 19–26 cm, averaging 23 cm, and averaging 22 g in weight, it has a white throat and breast and barred dark-brown and white belly and flanks. The upperparts and wings are a dark greyish brown, with a buff patch visible on the wings. Unlike other treecreepers, it does not have a pale eyebrow. The bill and feet are black. The female has a pale orange-brown patch on the cheek. Immature birds have an orange-brown rump and white markings on the scapulars.
The call is a shrill peeping.
White-throated Treecreeper It is the third example but I like the shot. Australia,Cormobates leucophaea,Fall,Geotagged,White-throated treecreeper

Naming

Five subspecies are recognised:

⤷ "C. l. leucophaea", the nominate subspecies, occurs in southeastern Australia, from southeastern South Australia, through Victoria to south and central eastern New South Wales.
⤷ "C. l. grisescens" is found in the Mount Lofty Ranges of South Australia.
⤷ "C. l. intermedius", described in 1983 by Walter Boles and Wayne Longmore, is restricted to the Clark and Connors Ranges in Central Queensland.
⤷ "C. l. metastasis", described by Richard Schodde in 1989, is found in southeastern Queensland and northeastern New South Wales.
⤷ "C. l. minor" occurs in northern Queensland. It was originally described by Edward Pierson Ramsay in 1891 after being collected near Cairns.
White-throated Treecreeper - Cormobates leucophaeus  Australia,Cormobates leucophaea,Fall,Geotagged,White-throated treecreeper

Distribution

The white-throated treecreeper is found from the Gulf St Vincent in South Australia, through Victoria, and eastern New South Wales and southeastern Queensland, with an area further north from Mount Spec to Cooktown. Wet sclerophyll forest and rainforest is the preferred habitat.

It is Protected in Australia under the National Parks and Wildlife Act, 1974.
White-throated tree creeper  Australia,Cormobates leucophaea,Fall,Geotagged,White-throated treecreeper

Habitat

The white-throated treecreeper is found from the Gulf St Vincent in South Australia, through Victoria, and eastern New South Wales and southeastern Queensland, with an area further north from Mount Spec to Cooktown. Wet sclerophyll forest and rainforest is the preferred habitat.

It is Protected in Australia under the National Parks and Wildlife Act, 1974.
Cormobates leucophaeus - White -throated treecreeper  Australia,Cormobates leucophaea,Fall,Geotagged,White-throated treecreeper

Reproduction

Unlike treecreepers of the genus "Climacteris", the white-throated treecreeper does not engage in cooperative breeding. The breeding season is August to December with one brood laid. The cup-shaped nest is composed of fur, hair, feathers, and moss in a hollow in a tree 4–5 m above the ground. A clutch of two or three creamy-white oval eggs is laid. Sparsely spotted with dark purple- or red-brown, they measure 23 x 18 mm.
White Throated Tree Creeper As the name suggests, white-throated tree-creepers are most commonly seen spiralling up tree trunks - usually eucalypts with rough fibrous bark. They tend to prefer trees with rough barks over smooth so keep an eye out for these types of trees as the birds’ camouflaged plumage can make them hard to see.
The white-throated treecreeper feeds mainly on ants which it snatches in its beak while travelling up and down the bark of tree trunks, but it will also eat other insects and nectar.

https://parksaustralia.gov.au/booderee/discover/nature/birds/white-throated-treecreeper/ Australia,Cormobates leucophaea,Fall,Geotagged,White-throated treecreeper

Food

The white-throated treecreeper is predominantly insectivorous, eating mainly ants, although will eat also nectar. A 2007 study in the Australian Capital Territory showed the white-throated treecreeper preferred foraging on the rough-barked eucalypt, the red stringybark, rather than the smooth barked species, the inland scribbly gum. Birds would glean and peer, as well as drill in dead wood, for insects. A female was observed feeding on white punk, a bracket fungus.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderPasseriformes
FamilyClimacteridae
GenusCormobates
SpeciesC. leucophaea
Photographed in
Australia