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Short-toed treecreeper
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==Description== All the treecreepers are similar in appearance, being small birds with streaked and spotted brown upperparts, rufous rumps and whitish underparts. They have long decurved bills, and long stiff tail feathers which provide support as they creep up tree trunks looking for insects.<ref name= Harrap/> The short-toed treecreeper is {{convert|12.5|cm|in|abbr=off}} long and weighs {{convert|7.5|-|11|g|oz|abbr=on}}. It has dull grey-brown upperparts intricately patterned with black, buff and white, a weak off-white [[supercilium]] and dingy underparts contrasting with the white throat. The sexes are similar, but juveniles have whitish underparts, sometimes with a buff belly. The call of this species is a repeated shrill ''tyt...tyt tyt-tyt'' and the song of the [[Subspecies#Nomenclature|nominate subspecies]] is an evenly spaced sequence of notes ''teet-teet-teet-e-roi-tiit''. There is some geographical variation; the song of Danish birds is shorter, that of the Cyprus subspecies is very short and simple, and the North African version is lower pitched. European birds do not respond to latter two song variants.<ref name= Harrap/> This species shares much of its range with the common treecreeper. Compared to the short-toed, that bird is whiter below, warmer and more spotted above, and has a whiter [[supercilium]] and slightly shorter bill. However, identification by sight may be impossible for poorly-marked birds. Vocal birds are usually identifiable, since Common has a distinctive song composed of twitters, ripples and a final whistle and a ''shree''' call rarely given by the short-toed; however, both species have been known to sing the other's song. Even in the hand, although the short-toed usually has a longer bill and shorter toes, 5% of birds are not safely identifiable.<ref name= Harrap>{{cite book | last1 = Harrap | first1 =Simon |last2=Quinn|first2=David |title = Tits, Nuthatches and Treecreepers | year = 1996 | publisher = Christopher Helm | pages = 177–195|isbn = 0-7136-3964-4}}</ref> The brown treecreeper has never been recorded in Europe, but would be difficult to separate from the short-toed treecreeper, which it much resembles in appearance. Its call is more like the common treecreeper's, but a vagrant brown treecreeper might still not be possible to identify with certainty given the similarities between the three species.<ref name= Harrap/>
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