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Straneck´s Tyrannulet

Serpophaga griseicapilla
Straneck, RJ, 2008
Piojito Trinador
Alegrinho-trinador

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

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Records from Ceibas

Other common names: Piojito de Straneck.


Taxonomy: A highly debated form in science. Berlioz (1959) described Serpophaga griseiceps based on four specimens from Cochabamba, Bolivia. Traylor (1979, 1982) considers S. griseiceps as juveniles of S. munda, and Remsen and Traylor (1989) confirmed this. Straneck (1993) revalidates S. griseiceps for a taxon found in Argentina that does not vocalize like S. "munda" nor like S. subcristata. Herzog and Mazar Barnett (2004) mention that Straneck’s (1993) work has methodological issues, claiming that Berlioz’s (1959) specimens of S. griseiceps represent juveniles of S. munda and Straneck’s S. griseiceps specimens are apparently a cryptic species of Serpophaga previously undescribed. Straneck (2007) describes a new species named Serpophaga griseicapilla for the “Straneck’s S. griseiceps” specimens, detailing that the error of authors insisting that S. griseiceps are juveniles of S. munda comes from their studies being based only on skins and not on acoustic analyses of the species, clarifying that such studies of the populations in Bolivia are needed to clarify S. griseiceps from Berlioz (1959). Furthermore, he adds that in the north and west of Argentina, specimens of S. griseicapilla with very little yellow ventral or simply white ventral and subcaudal regions have been observed, which coincides with the behavior of the subspecies of S. subcristata, where the more arid the region, the less coloration they possess.

Comparison with the Common Piojito (Serpophaga subcristata): Twin species that are very difficult to differentiate in photographs. The Trinador Piojito has a uniform gray-brown crown, almost without white. Adults have some black feathers with a white base on the crown, though the white is mostly covered and not visible, never having as much white on the crown as the Common Piojito. The size is smaller than that of the Common Piojito.

VocalizationIt is distinguishable from the Common Piojito by its acoustic repertoire, which they repeat throughout the year, although more frequently during the breeding period. It is worth noting that some calls of the Common Piojito could be considered trills, which could confuse people who do not know in detail the characteristic vocalization of the Trinador Piojito, meaning that not only the Trinador Piojito "trills".

Geographic Distribution: Breeds sympatrically with S. s. munda (the western subspecies of the Common Piojito) from Chubut to Salta in the arid region of central and western Argentina, from the north of Chubut Province, the Andean foothills of Mendoza, San Juan, Catamarca, La Rioja, Tucumán, Salta, and Jujuy; central and eastern Río Negro, central and western La Pampa, central and western Córdoba and Santiago del Estero, western Chaco, and Formosa.

Migration: Coexists with S. s. subcristata (the eastern subspecies of the Common Piojito) only during the autumn-winter period, when it migrates longitudinally toward the east of Formosa, east of Córdoba, and east of Santiago del Estero, Buenos Aires, Entre Ríos, Santa Fe, Corrientes, Chaco, Misiones. It eventually reaches Paraguay, Brazil, and Uruguay.

Behavior: The behavior of the Trinador Piojito and Common Piojito is similar, hopping and fluttering short distances on tree branches to catch small arthropods, so behavioral differences are not considered valid until more studies on this genus are published.

Author of this compilation: Jorge La Grotteria - 04/05/2016

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Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 601696
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
09/07/2024
Elsa Longo
Foto
Photography ID: 601401
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
09/07/2024
Guillermo Marcaida
Foto
Photography ID: 583563
 
Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
05/11/2024
Alec Earnshaw
Foto
Photography ID: 583308
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
05/08/2024
Diego Oscar
Foto
Photography ID: 466805
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
10/16/2021
Jorge La Grotteria
Foto
Photography ID: 343688
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
07/28/2019
Gustavo Puente
Foto
Photography ID: 330263
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
04/28/2019
Eduardo Soriano
Foto
Photography ID: 283341
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
08/25/2018
María Del Carmen Fabeiro
Foto
Photography ID: 200895
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
04/30/2017
Sergio Cusano
Foto
Photography ID: 200776
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
04/30/2017
Eduardo Cusano
Foto
Photography ID: 169493
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
09/22/2016
Susana Gomez
Foto
Photography ID: 153801
  Adult

Ceibas
Entre Ríos
Argentina
06/11/2016
Santiago Alemán



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Last Vocalizations published



Audio playerUserDateCountryProvincePlaceSexLife stageIt was observedDetails
Dolores Fernandez03/08/2026ArgentinaEntre RíosCeibasCeibasN/AN/ANoNo
Alec Earnshaw05/11/2024ArgentinaEntre RíosCeibasN/AN/AYesNo
Jorge La Grotteria10/16/2021ArgentinaEntre RíosRuta sin nombrar (-33,344376, -58,858311)CeibasN/AN/AYesNo
Jorge La Grotteria07/09/2021ArgentinaEntre RíosRuta sin nombrarCeibasIndistinguishableAdultYesNo



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Last Filmings published




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 Reports


 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
244519308/03/2026ArgentinaEntre RíosCeibas, CeibasDolores Fernandez
232131213/07/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosHumedales, Ceibas1Gabriel Carbajales
232123913/07/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosTerraplen, Ceibas2Gabriel Carbajales
232105912/07/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosCamino a 4 Hermanas, Ceibas4Gabriel Carbajales
231652205/07/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosCeibas2Diego Oscar
230679316/06/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosTerraplen, Ceibas3Gabriel Carbajales
228743110/05/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosCamino a 4 Hermanas, Ceibas1Diego Oscar
228720310/05/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosCeibas1Alec Earnshaw
228313403/05/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosCeibas2Alec Earnshaw
228217001/05/2025ArgentinaEntre RíosCeibasDolores Fernandez
Page 1

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Bibliography related


Artículo Berlioz, J. 1959. Description de deux éspeces nouvelles d’oiseaux de Bolivie. Bull. du Mus. Nat. D’Hist. Nat., 3: 218-219.

Artículo Herzog, S. K. y J. Mazar Barnett. 2004. On the validity and confused identity of Serpophaga griseiceps Berlioz 1959 (Tyrannidae). Auk, 121(2): 415-421.

Artículo Remsen, J. V. y M. Traylor. 1989. An anotated list of birds of Bolivia, Buteo Book, Vermilion. S.D. pp 1-57.

Artículo Remsen, J. V., Jr., J. I. Areta, C. D. Cadena, A. Jaramillo, M. Nores, J. F. Pacheco, J. Pérez-Emán, M. B. Robbins, F. G. Stiles, D. F. Stotz y K. J. Zimmer. 2016. A classification of the bird species of South America. American Ornithologists" Union. http://www.museum.lsu.edu/~Remsen/SACCBaseline.html.

Artículo Straneck, R. 2007. Una nueva especie de Serpophaga (Aves: Tyrannidae). Revista FAVE - Ciencias Veterinarias, 6 (1-2): 31-42.

Artículo Straneck, R. J. 1993. Aportes para la unificación de Serpophaga subcristata y Serpophaga munda, y la revalidación de Serpophaga griseiceps (Aves: Tyrannidae). Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia”. Zoología, 16: 51-63.

Artículo Traylor, M. A., Jr. 1979. Check-list of Birds of the World, 8. Mus. of coomparative Zool. Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Artículo Traylor, M. A., Jr. 1982. Notes on tyrant flycatchers (Aves: Tyrannidae). Fieldiana (Zool.), 13: 1-22.



Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Straneck´s Tyrannulet (Serpophaga griseicapilla) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 05/04/2026.