This is a large family of small to medium-sized birds, ranging from 9 to 35 centimetres in length. The ovenbirds are a diverse group of insectivores which get their name from the elaborate, vaguely "oven-like" clay
nests built by the
Horneros, although most other ovenbirds build stick nests or nest in tunnels or clefts in rock. Furnariid nests are always constructed with a cover.
While individial species often are habitat specialists, species of this family can be found in virtually any Neotropical habitat, ranging from city parks inhabited by Rufous Horneros, to tropical Amazonian
lowlands by many species of
Foliage-gleaners, to temperate barren Andean highlands inhabited by several species of
Miners. There are even two species, the Seaside and the Surf
Cinclodes,which
are associated with rocky coasts.
Ovenbird,
Seiurus aurocapillus, of family Parulidae is unrelated to birds in the ovenbird family, Furnariidae. For both cases, the name derives from the oven-like nests that are created.
Miners and Leaftossers
Genus Geositta
These
miners of South America are unrelated to the miners of Australia. Their name refers to the tunnels they build for nests. They are ground-dwelling birds, somewhat resembling the larks and wheatears of other continents. They are mostly drab brown in coloration and often have a fairly long and slender bill.
Miner,_Campo Geositta poeciloptera Found: Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay
Image by:
1)
Claudio Timm 2)
Hector_Bottai - Brazil
Miner,_Coastal Geositta peruviana Found; Peru
Image by: 1)
Dominic Sherony 2)
Richard Gibbons 3)
Mark_Peck
Miner,_Common Geositta cunicularia Found: South America
Image by: 1)
Nick Athanas - Argentina
2, 3, 4) Cláudio Timm - Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil 5)
Hector_Bottai - Brazil
Miner,_Creamy-rumped Geositta isabellina Found: Argentina, Chile
Image by: 1)
Birding Chile 2)
Andre_Vielma_Mansilla
Miner,_Dark-winged Geositta saxicolina Found: Peru
Image by:
1, 2) Opisska 3)
Nick_Athanas
Miner,_Grayish Geositta maritima Found: Chile, Peru
Image by:
1)
Orgbigny 2)
altabpe00 - Peru
Miner,_Puna
Geositta punensis Found: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Peru
Image by:
1)
Richard Gibbons - Peru 2)
Opisska - Argentina 3)
Nick Athanas - Argentina
Miner,_Rufous-banded Geositta rufipennis Found: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile
Image by: 1)
Julio Martinich 2)
Nick Athanas - Argentina 3)
Hector_Bottai - Argentina
Miner,_Short-billed Geositta antarctica Found: Chile, Argentina
Image by: 1)
Jose - Chile 2)
Nick Athanas - Chile
Miner,_Slender-billed Geositta tenuirostris Found: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Peru
Image by: 1)
Tor Egil Hogsas - Peru 2)
Nick Athanas - Peru 3)
Tor_Egil_Hogsas - Peru
Miner,_Thick-billed Geositta crassirostris Endemic to southern Peruvian Andes.
Image by:
1, 2) Tony_Castro
Genus Sclerurus
Members of this genus are commonly known as
leaftossers or
leafscrapers, and are found in
Mexico,
Central America and
South America. They are close relatives of the miners (
Geositta), which are essentially an open-country version of the leaftossers, being lighter in color and longer-legged.
Leaftosser, Black-tailed Sclerurus caudacutus Found: South America
Imalge by:
1)
Krystle Angelica - Peru 2)
Pinned
Leaftosser,_Gray-throated Sclerurus albigularis Found: Costa Rica, Panama, South America
Image by:
1)
Don Faulkner - Costa Rica 2)
Nick Athanas - Ecuador
3, 4) David_Rodriguez_Arias - Costa Rica
Leaftosser,_Rufous-breasted Sclerurus scansor Found: South America
Image by:
1, 2) Dario Sanches - Brazil 3)
Nick Athanas - Brazil
Leaftosser, Scaly-throated Sclerurus guatemalensis Found: Mexico, Central America, Columbia, Ecuador
Image by:
1)
John Gerrard Keulemans 2)
Nick Athanas - Ecuador 3)
Richard_Gibbons
Leaftosser, Short-billed Sclerurus rufigularis Found: South America
Image by:
1)
Castelnau 2)
Don Faulkner
Leaftosser, Tawny-throated Sclerurus mexicanus Found: Mexico, Central America, northern South America
Image by: 1)
Michael Woodruff - Ecuador 2)
Marcel Holyoak - Brazil 3)
Montejo Jorge - Mexico