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





Species icon
Cliff Flycatcher

Hirundinea ferruginea
(Gmelin, JF, 1788)
Birro Común
Gibão-de-couro

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

 Request change
Filters

Records from Mina Clavero

Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Other common names: Birro Castaño, Birro Colorado.

Synonyms: Hirundinea bellicosa, [todus] ferrugineus.

Subspecies:


Description: Slender tyrannid 18–19 cm long, highly aerial, recalling a swallow in flight silhouette and hunting style. Upperparts brown with darker wing edges; rump and base of the tail rufous-cinnamon, ending in black. Underparts cinnamon (more intense in the NE). In flight, shows extensive rufous on wings and tail, visible even at a distance. Crown somewhat triangular; bill thin and straight; legs short. In western areas it may be confused with the Streak-throated Bush-Tyrant (Myiotheretes striaticollis), but the Cliff Flycatcher is smaller, more slender and much more agile in flight, with more uniform plumage and a throat without heavy streaking. The Cinnamon Flycatcher (Pyrrhomyias cinnamomeus) is much smaller and plumper, has olive upperparts, a concealed yellow crown, and is restricted to the Yungas.

Geographic distribution: Widespread in South America, from the Guianas and Venezuela to NE and NW Argentina between 350–4000 m, where two subspecies occur: Pallidior (West / Andean-Montane): NW Argentina (Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca); continues into La Rioja, San Juan and Mendoza, and east into the sierras of Córdoba and San Luis. Mainly resident, with altitudinal movements. Associated with ravines, montane scrub, dry yungas and rocky upland habitats. Paler, with softer ventral tones. Bellicosa (NE): only in spring and summer. Misiones and Corrientes, occasionally farther south along the Argentine littoral (current records in Buenos Aires). Also in Uruguay. Occurs in forest edges, towns and wooded open areas. More reddish on the belly, more rufous-brown above, and generally brighter plumage.

Habitat: Montane forests and woodlands, yunga ecotones, scrub, forest edges, cliffs, high ravines and rocky outcrops. Highly adaptable, also in urban zones, tall buildings, wires and bridges.

Behavior: Very aerial; spends much time flying or sallying from high perches. Solitary or in pairs; occasional family groups. Active hunter, with strong aerial sallies and long pursuits. In ravine zones of NW Argentina it commonly coexists with the White-winged Black-Tyrant (Knipolegus aterrimus). Vocal at heights: strong, prolonged whistles, sharper in the NW and deeper, more drawled in the NE.

Diet: Arthropods captured by elastic, prolonged and highly agile sallies, returning to the same perch. Hunts like a swallow: long forays from rocky walls, exposed branches, wires and buildings. Occasionally captures small arthropods on rocky surfaces.

Reproduction: Open cup nest built on rocky ledges, road cuts, high shelves, bridges, buildings and vertical structures. Materials: dry grasses, moss, feathers and small twigs; sometimes small stones used as filler. Clutch: 2–3 eggs, white with cinnamon or brown speckles.

Conservation status: Not threatened. Tolerant of modified environments and broadly distributed, especially in central and western regions.


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




Loading map...




Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 567843
 
Mina Clavero
Córdoba
Argentina
01/31/2023
Pablo Bruni
Foto
Photography ID: 567842
 
Mina Clavero
Córdoba
Argentina
01/31/2023
Pablo Bruni
Foto
Photography ID: 362193
  Adult

Mina Clavero
Córdoba
Argentina
10/16/2016
Desalvo T. Benjamin
Foto
Photography ID: 135049
  Adult

Mina Clavero
Córdoba
Argentina
01/10/2016
Eduardo Soriano
Foto
Photography ID: 45910
  Adult

Mina Clavero
Córdoba
Argentina
03/20/2014
David Omar Rodriguez
Foto
Photography ID: 43382
  Adult

Mina Clavero
Córdoba
Argentina
03/01/2014
Gustavo Ramos
Foto
Photography ID: 42288
  Adult

Mina Clavero
Córdoba
Argentina
03/08/2014
Veronica Edith Schefski



 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
231300501/07/2025ArgentinaCórdobaVilla Luján, Mina Clavero1Juan Bautista Cerminato Granadé
212881903/08/2024ArgentinaCórdobaParaje La Gloria, Mina Clavero1Ricardo Moller Jensen
171623531/01/2023ArgentinaCórdobaMina clavero, Mina Clavero2Pablo Bruni
120950019/02/2020ArgentinaCórdobaZona rural, Mina ClaveroMarcelo Funes
117251819/01/2020ArgentinaCórdobaVilla Luján, Mina Clavero1Ricardo Moller Jensen
116213308/01/2020ArgentinaCórdobaCentro de la ciudad, Mina Clavero2Ricardo Moller Jensen
91776128/04/2019ArgentinaCórdobaMina Clavero a La Gloria, Mina Clavero4Ricardo Moller Jensen
75364105/05/2018ArgentinaCórdobaSan Sebastián, Camino a La Gloria, Mina Clavero2Ricardo Moller Jensen
57511513/05/2017ArgentinaCórdobaPuente, Mina ClaveroHugo Caverzasi
113103416/10/2016ArgentinaCórdobaMina ClaveroDesalvo T. Benjamin
Page 1

 Add a record of this species

Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Cliff Flycatcher (Hirundinea ferruginea) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 23/03/2026.