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





Species icon
Cordilleran Canastero

Asthenes modesta
(Eyton, TC, 1852)
Canastero Pálido

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

Description: A 15–17 cm canastero, small and highly terrestrial, active among rocks and low shrubs. Plumage is brownish-gray with cinnamon tones, giving a dull and uniform appearance. Fine, pale eyebrow; whitish throat with an orange gular patch (sometimes faint or absent), bordered by dark streaks. Chest with light streaking; cinnamon flanks. Long, pointed tail with a dark center and rufous outer edges; often held slightly raised. Bill thin, straight, black. Legs dark gray. Juvenile: duller, without the gular patch. Compared with similar species, the Rusty Canastero (Asthenes dorbignyi) is more reddish, with a strongly rufous rump, darker tail and a more marked reddish throat patch; while the Chestnut Canastero (Asthenes steinbachi) is more contrasting and has a gray crown.

Geographical distribution: Broad Andean–Patagonian distribution, from southern Peru and Bolivia along the entire Argentine Andes and Patagonia, reaching even the Tandilia and Ventania hill systems in Buenos Aires Province. In Argentina it occurs in: Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca, La Rioja, San Juan, Mendoza, Córdoba, San Luis, Neuquén, Río Negro, Chubut, Santa Cruz and the Ventania ranges; from 0 to 4,500 m depending on the region. Mostly resident, with winter altitudinal or latitudinal descents in southern populations.

Habitat: Always associated with rocky soils, open slopes, ravines and rocky outcrops. NOA (subsp. modesta and serrana): Andean rocky areas, Puna grasslands, montane scrub. Central Sierras (subsp. modesta): mountain grasslands, rocky outcrops, open tabaquillo woods. Patagonia (subsp. australis): shrub-steppe, canyons and rocky slopes.

Behavior: Very terrestrial, moving quickly among stones and shrubs. Confiding and curious, often allowing good views. Alone or in pairs; short, low and direct flights. Frequently sings exposed from rocks. Its voice is a rapid, ascending trill ending abruptly. Short “pit” calls.

Diet: Small arthropods such as beetles, ants, larvae, cockroaches and spiders, searched for among stones, crevices and the bases of shrubs.

Breeding: Spherical or cylindrical nest made of sticks, with a lateral entrance; interior lined with hair, wool and feathers. Placed in rock crevices, roots of shrubs or old nests of other furnariids. Clutch: 2–4 white eggs.

Conservation status: Species not considered threatened. Common over 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: 594714
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
07/15/2024
Gustavo Daniel González
Foto
Photography ID: 558310
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
11/29/2023
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 332217
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
05/08/2019
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 332207
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
05/08/2019
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 331918
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
05/09/2019
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 313280
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
01/22/2019
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 312660
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
01/22/2019
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 253075
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
02/21/2018
Héctor Bernardo Fernández
Foto
Photography ID: 216297
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
07/26/2017
Enrique Sanz
Foto
Photography ID: 99854
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
04/30/2015
David Juszczuk
Foto
Photography ID: 98263
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
04/04/2015
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 98231
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
05/02/2015
Héctor Schreiber



 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
240650908/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del Barón, El InfiernilloMaria Belén Dri
240609708/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del Barón, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
240645506/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del río Churqui, El InfiernilloMaria Belén Dri
240605006/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del río Churqui, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
221365711/12/2024ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del río Churqui, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
221359708/12/2024ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del Barón, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
212886015/07/2024ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloGustavo Daniel González
192346429/11/2023ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del Barón, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
178250917/06/2023ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del Barón, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
178231117/06/2023ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del Barón, El InfiernilloMaria Belén Dri
Page 1

 Add a record of this species

Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Cordilleran Canastero (Asthenes modesta) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 12/03/2026.