The wedge-billed woodcreeper is the smallest woodcreeper, with a short, upturned, wedge-shaped bill resembling those of the three members of genus
Xenops. It is long and weighs . The sexes are alike. The
nominate subspecies G. s. spirurus has a grayish forehead, a rich brown to russet-brown crown and nape, light buff
lores, a thin buff to buff-white
supercilium, a buff eyering, sooty-brown
auriculars, and a brown
malar stripe. Its upper back and
scapulars are rich brown to russet-brown, and its lower back, uppertail
coverts, and tail are cinnamon-rufous to rufous-chestnut. Its wing coverts are russet, its inner
secondaries rufous, and its other secondaries and its
primaries dark brown with blackish tips. The underside of most wing feathers have a stripe of buff to buff-white that shows as a band in flight. The sides of its neck are brown with small buff spots and its throat is whitish buff to buff with some dusky spots. Its underparts are olive-brown to russet-brown, its undertail coverts have a rufous-chestnut wash, and its underwing coverts and
axillaries are white. Its upper breast has large round
fulvous spots and its lower breast has narrow streaks of the same color. Its iris is dark brown to amber, its bill black with a gray base to the
mandible, and its legs and feet pinkish gray, dark gray, dark greenish, or brownish black. The other subspecies of the wedge-billed woodcreeper differ from the nominate thus: •
G. s. pectoralis, darker and more olivaceous underparts, cinnamon-buff throat, triangle markings on breast •
G. s. subrufescens, intermediate between
pectoralis and
pallidulus with little streaking on breast •
G. s. pallidulus, like
pectoralis but paler overall •
G. s. integratus, paler than
subrufescens, pale buff throat •
G. s. rufigularis, deep rufous throat, darker ochraceous wing band, less olive underparts than
castelnaudii •
G. s. amacurensis, paler and yellowish throat, more olivaceous crown and underparts, browner back •
G. s. coronobscurus, like
rufigularis but with darker dusky brown crown and more olivaceous underparts •
G. s. castelnaudii, darker and more olivaceous underparts •
G. s. albigularis, narrower whitish throat and breast spots •
G. s. inornatus, paler and buffier throat, browner spotting on throat, browner and unmarked belly •
G. s. paraensis, like
cuneatus but more olive-brown, rufescent tinge to throat markings •
G. s. cuneatus, browner upperparts, paler throat with heavy markings Several of the subspecies intergrade in their contact zones, making assignment of some sub-populations to a subspecies difficult. ==Distribution and habitat==