Movement The long-billed woodcreeper is a year-round resident throughout its range.
Feeding The long-billed woodcreeper usually forages by itself, but also in pairs and sometimes in
mixed-species feeding flocks. It hitches along trunks and large branches from the forest's mid-level to the canopy and also creeps and probes among living and dead leaf clusters,
epiphytes, bark crevices, and palm fronds. It sometimes feeds on prey fleeing
army ant swarms but does not habitually follow swarms. Its diet is not known in detail but appears to be mainly
arthropods and also includes small reptiles and amphibians.
Breeding The long-billed woodcreeper's breeding season is not well defined but appears to include at least January to May. A nest was discovered in a tree cavity above the ground. Both parents were feeding nestlings. The clutch size, incubation period, time to fledging, and other details of parental care are not known.
Vocalization The long-billed woodcreeper sings during the day, but infrequently. Its song is a "[l]oud and far-carrying...series of 3-4 eerie and plaintive whistles, e.e. 't w o o o o o ó o o...t w o o o o o ó o o'." It is also described as "loud melancholy-sounding, drawn-out calls 'wuuuueet' " repeated three or four times. Its calls include "chat-ak", "chat-at-at", "chuckling notes", "weetut", and "weet-erweet". ==Status==