Don't want to see ads? Sign up...





Species icon
Rusty-vented Canastero

Asthenes dorbignyi
(Reichenbach, HGL, 1853)
Canastero Rojizo

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

 Request change
Filters

Records from El Infiernillo

Conservation Status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Synonyms: Bathmidura dorbignyi.

Subspecies:


Description: A fairly rufous canastero about 16 cm long, typical of arid ravines and Puna habitat in the northwest. Back cinnamon-brown, rump and base of the tail deep rufous. Tail blackish, long and graduated, with rufous edges on the outer rectrices. Throat and chest whitish with a reddish to blackish gular patch (variable among individuals). Belly and flanks cinnamon-rufous. Crown slightly reddish. Bill straight, black, medium-length. Juvenile: lacks gular patch, has white throat and somewhat mottled chest. It differs from the Creamy-breasted Canastero (A. steinbachi) by having a gray (not reddish) crown and a more extensive rufous coloration in the tail. The Andean Spinetail (Phacellodomus striaticeps) is larger, has a white throat without a gular patch, a browner tail, and a thicker bill.

Geographical distribution: Arid Andes of western Bolivia and northwestern Argentina, south to Mendoza (subsp. dorbignyi). Present in Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca, La Rioja, San Juan and Mendoza, between 2,500–4,000 m, locally from 2,000 m, with post-breeding downhill movements to lower elevations.

Habitat: Ravines, shrub-covered valleys, stands of cacti, prepuna and puna shrublands, rocky areas with cacti, steep slopes and cliffs. Very typical of rocky ravines with shrub cover in the northwest.

Behavior: Solitary or in pairs; active, restless, runs with the tail raised and moves among shrubs and cacti. May use trees or cacti as perches. Quite arboreal for a canastero. Its voice is a sharp, squeaky trill lasting 3–4 seconds: “chiri-chiri-chri-chri-trrr”. May sing in pairs, often from the nest.

Diet: Small arthropods, mainly insects foraged from the ground or low vegetation. Pecks among shrubs, logs, and cacti.

Nesting: Bulky nest of small twigs built by both parents, often with spines, globular or semi-spherical, with an upper entrance. Placed in shrubs, cacti, queñoa trees, or low trees. Inner chamber lined with wool, feathers, and soft plant material. Clutch: 2–3 white eggs.

Conservation status: Species not considered threatened, common across much of its range.


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




Loading map...




Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 606933
 
El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
01/03/2024
Viviana Fuentes
Foto
Photography ID: 559491
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
11/29/2023
Pablo Alberto Re
Foto
Photography ID: 559490
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
11/29/2023
Pablo Alberto Re
Foto
Photography ID: 333182
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
05/07/2019
Diego Carus



 View all photographs of the species




 Add a photography of this species





Last Vocalizations published




 Add an audio of this species





Last Filmings published




 Add a film of this species





 Reports


 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
220464421/11/2024ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloNicolas Olejnik
222667727/10/2024ArgentinaTucumánSobre Ruta 307 entre El Infiernillo y Tafí del Valle, El Infiernillo1Elsa Longo
218131203/01/2024ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloViviana Fuentes
192846029/11/2023ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloPablo Alberto Re
166932218/10/2022ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloNicolas Olejnik
94021001/07/2019ArgentinaTucumánEl Infiernillo1Dario Juan Wendeler
92440607/05/2019ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloDiego Carus
49549727/10/2016ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloPablo Eguia
25433602/03/2015ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloEmiliano Garcia Loyola
25285002/03/2015ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloMartin Toledo
Page 1

 Add a record of this species

Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Rusty-vented Canastero (Asthenes dorbignyi) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 10/03/2026.