Black-tailed treecreeper
| Black-tailed treecreeper | |
|---|---|
| A black-tailed treecreeper near Marrakai, Northern Territory, Australia. | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Aves |
| Order: | Passeriformes |
| Family: | Climacteridae |
| Genus: | Climacteris |
| Species: | C. melanurus
|
| Binomial name | |
| Climacteris melanurus Gould, 1843
| |
The black-tailed treecreeper (Climacteris melanurus) is a species of bird in the family Climacteridae. It is endemic to north and northwestern Australia.
Its natural habitats are temperate forests and subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests.[1]
Description and Habitat
[edit | edit source]The Black-tailed treecreeper is small to medium in size, generally measuring between 16–20 cm in length, with a wingspan of 8.7–10.2 cm and a weight of 27–36 grams.[2][3] Both sexes are dark brown and black-tailed with large feet. The male has a black throat with white streaking, while the female has a white throat.[4][5] Similar in appearance to the Brown treecreeper.[2]
Habitat includes open grassy woodlands, savanna, dry forest, and moist lowland forest.[6] It is the only treecreeper species found in Northern Australia, and normally travels in pairs or small groups.[2][6]
Calls
[edit | edit source]The Black-tailed treecreeper is most often heard giving a contact call, a loud rapid chee-ting or ching.[2] Other calls include a slow, repeated pip pip pip.[6]
Evolution
[edit | edit source]The Black-tailed treecreeper is thought to be the closest living relative (a sister taxon) of the Brown treecreeper. The two birds were likely a single species, separated over time by the Carpentarian Barrier — a large, historically sparse and dry area in north-eastern Australia, which prevented the two groups from interacting. They diverged genetically and remain allopatric, but share many similarities, including appearance, habitat and similar mannerisms.[7]
Taxonomy
[edit | edit source]Climacteris melanurus was first described as C. melanura by the ornithologist John Gould in an 1843 publishing of the journal Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, of which Gould was a member.[8]
Subspecies
[edit | edit source]There are two recognised subspecies:
- C. m. melanurus – The nominate subspecies, found across Northern Australia from the Kimberley region in Western Australia to the Leichhardt River in Queensland.[5]
- C. m. wellsi William Robert Ogilvie-Grant, 1909 – Only found in the Pilbara region of North-West Western Australia, between the De Grey and Fortescue Rivers. It was originally described by William Robert Ogilvie-Grant as a separate species, Climacteris wellsi, in 1909, but was later reclassified as a subspecies.[9][5]
The subspecies differ slightly in appearance; C. m. wellsi is slightly smaller and has more extensive streaking, with under parts more chestnut, and a rufous-brown neck and breast. Their ranges don't overlap.[10]

Breeding
[edit | edit source]They participate in cooperative breeding, in which multiple individuals assist in raising young—not just the biological parents.[7] A clutch of 1–3 pink, reddish-brown spotted or purplish-red spotted eggs are laid in nests of fur, grass, and feathers, normally in tree trunks and branches. Incubation takes between 14–24 days.[10] They likely reach sexual maturity around 2 years old.
Feeding and behavior
[edit | edit source]The Black-tailed treecreeper primarily feeds on invertebrates found beneath the bark of tree trunks and branches.[5] They generally land near the base of a tree and climb rapidly upwards, often spiraling around the trunk as they search for food.
Conservation
[edit | edit source]The Black-tailed treecreeper is assessed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List.
References
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