About the White-browed Tit-Spinetail
The lively little White-browed Tit-Spinetail is an extreme habitat specialist, found only in threatened Polylepis forests in the Andes of southern Peru. This small bird forages actively through the trees in pairs or small family groups, sometimes hanging from branches like a Carolina Chickadee or Tufted Titmouse. It often follows mixed-species flocks containing other Polylepis specialists such as the Ash-breasted Tit-Tyrant.
The White-browed Tit-Spinetail is a small, gray-brown bird notable for its reddish cap, white supercilium (eyebrow), and mottled black and white face, throat, and upper chest. It has a short, thin bill and a long, dark tail with graduated feathers that give it a spiny appearance. This tail is as long as the bird's body! A gray-brown back and wings with narrow white streaks are other field marks of this Andean specialty. The sexes look alike.
The White-browed Tit-Spinetail's size and behavior led to some initial confusion about its classification. Although the White-browed Tit-Spinetail reminded scientists of birds in the tit family, such as the Chestnut-backed Chickadee, it's not closely related to them. Instead, this species is part of the huge Furnariidae, or ovenbird, family, a widely diverse, mainly insectivorous group of Neotropical birds that includes species as varied as the Royal Cinclodes and Pinto's Spinetail.
Songs and Sounds
The White-browed Tit-Spinetail is a vocal species, whose song is a dry descending trill, described as tjit tjit trrrrrrreeeeeeeeuuu. Pairs often call to each other with a note that sounds like check or tjit, and agitated individuals give a shrill tleet call.
Song:
Call:
Agitated calls:
Breeding and Feeding
The White-browed Tit-Spinetail is thought to form monogamous pairs during the austral breeding season, which lasts from October through December. Males may court females with singing or flight displays.
Both members of a White-browed Tit-Spinetail pair gather bark fibers, lichen, and mosses to build a cup-shaped nest within a natural cavity in the main trunk of a Polylepis tree, roughly 7 feet above ground.

The female lays a clutch of two pale eggs. After hatching and fledging, the young birds remain with their parents and regularly forage with them. Unlike adults, the young birds seem to feed in the more protected interior areas of Polylepis trees.
Adult White-browed Tit-Spinetails are active and acrobatic feeders, gleaning the leaves, twigs, bark, and flower clusters along the outer branches of Polylepis trees while searching for prey. They are often seen feeding in pairs or small groups, following mixed-species flocks. Like other birds in their genus, they are insectivorous, their prey consisting of beetles, grubs, flies, spiders, and moths.
Region and Range

The White-browed Tit-Spinetail is endemic to the Andean Mountains of south-central Peru. While it prefers areas of untouched Polylepis forest with dense cover, it is able to tolerate smaller patches of this habitat.
Today, once numerous Polylepis forests cover a mere three percent of their former range. Unsustainable harvesting of wood, land clearing, and cattle grazing have severely impacted these trees, which are the highest-growing flowering trees found anywhere on Earth, and can grow in habitats up to 16,400 feet above sea level.
Conservation
The White-browed Tit-Spinetail's specialized habitat is under threat. Polylepis wood is frequently harvested for fuel, and domestic animals and fires inhibit the natural regeneration of these trees.
Accelerating weather changes, such as rising temperatures, decreased rainfall, and melting glaciers, will affect the health and resiliency of the Polylepis forests where the White-browed Tit-Spinetail lives. Climate change can lead to range shifts, and plants like the Polylepis tree, which are adapted for high-altitude conditions, may be unable to make the move.

Help support ABC's conservation mission!
ABC and our partner Asociación Ecosistemas Andinos (ECOAN) are working with local groups and communities to protect Polylepis woodlands where the White-browed Tit-Spinetail is hanging on to existence.
ABC and ECOAN have helped create nine nationally recognized protected areas in the Peruvian Andes that cover more than 21,000 acres of threatened habitat. ABC has directly supported ECOAN and local Indigenous communities in the Vilcanota mountains since 2002, establishing plant nurseries and greenhouses and organizing replanting events. This work has led to the planting of more than 1.6 million trees and shrubs to restore woodlands and promote fuel-efficient stoves, which reduces demand for firewood. Since 2019, ABC has worked with communities in the Cordillera Vilcanota of southern Peru to make new infrastructure improvements that benefit local livelihoods and increase forest cover, protecting watersheds and rare birds.
Get Involved
Many of the rarest bird species in the Western Hemisphere remain relatively unknown. You can learn more about these birds and the threats they face by signing up for ABC's Bird of the Week email series, which frequently highlights these fascinating birds.
American Bird Conservancy and our partners throughout Latin America and the Caribbean have created and expanded more than 100 bird reserves, which protect upward of 1.1 million acres of vital habitat. Together, we've planted more than 6.8 million trees, helping to restore degraded and damaged habitat. You can help us continue to protect endangered birds by making a gift today.