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==Identification== | ==Identification== | ||
− | 22 cm long; weighs 43 g. The head is brown with a yellow crown patch, usually concealed; dusky eye mask and a white supercilium. Upperparts are brown with darker brown streaks on the back. Wings have rufous and white edges; tail and rump have chestnut edges. Underparts are yellowish-white, with marked brown streaks. Sexes similar. Juvenile birds have brown coloring where the adults are black. | + | 22 cm long; weighs 43 g. The head is brown with a yellow crown patch, usually concealed; dusky eye mask and a white supercilium. Upperparts are brown with darker brown streaks on the back. Wings have rufous and white edges; tail and rump have chestnut edges. Underparts are yellowish-white, with marked brown streaks. Sexes similar. Juvenile birds have brown coloring where the adults are black. |
+ | ====Similar species==== | ||
+ | [[Sulphur-bellied Flycatcher]] has a stronger malar, about as strong as the black through the eye, black chin, and often bigger flesh-colored area at base of lower mandible. | ||
==Distribution== | ==Distribution== | ||
− | Breeds | + | Breeds from [[Mexico]] and [[Trinidad]] & [[Tobago]] south to [[Bolivia]] and [[Argentina]]. The northernmost subspecies ''M. m. insolens'' migrates south to [[South America]] in northern winter, while the southern subspecies ''M. m. solitarius'', migrates to the [[Guianas]] and [[Venezuela]] from March to September. |
==Taxonomy== | ==Taxonomy== |
Revision as of 02:36, 25 May 2012
- Myiodynastes maculatus
Identification
22 cm long; weighs 43 g. The head is brown with a yellow crown patch, usually concealed; dusky eye mask and a white supercilium. Upperparts are brown with darker brown streaks on the back. Wings have rufous and white edges; tail and rump have chestnut edges. Underparts are yellowish-white, with marked brown streaks. Sexes similar. Juvenile birds have brown coloring where the adults are black.
Similar species
Sulphur-bellied Flycatcher has a stronger malar, about as strong as the black through the eye, black chin, and often bigger flesh-colored area at base of lower mandible.
Distribution
Breeds from Mexico and Trinidad & Tobago south to Bolivia and Argentina. The northernmost subspecies M. m. insolens migrates south to South America in northern winter, while the southern subspecies M. m. solitarius, migrates to the Guianas and Venezuela from March to September.
Taxonomy
Seven subspecies are recognized:[1]
- M. m. insolens - Mexico to Honduras
- M. m. difficilis - Costa Rica to Colombia and Venezuela
- M. m. nobilis - Caribbean coast of Colombia
- M. m. chapmani - Pacific Colombia to northwest Peru
- M. m. maculatus - Venezuela and Guianas to northeast Peru and northern Brazil
- M. m. tobagenis - north Venezuela and Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago
- M. m. solitarius - southern Peru to Paraguay, Uruguay, Argentina, and Brazil
Habitat
Edges of forests and cocoa plantations.
Behaviour
Typical flycatcher, perching on branch or twig and sallying forth to catch flying insects. Also eats small lizards, and berries. Has a noisy sqEEE-zip call. Nests in a tree hollow or bromeliad plant, building a cup-shaped nest of twigs and grasses. Female builds the nest and lays 2-3 eggs, which are creamy-white with red-brown spots. Incubation is 16-17 days, and both parents feed the young, which fledge in 18-21 days.
References
- Clements, JF. 2008. The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World. 6th ed., with updates to December 2008. Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0801445019.