TYRANTS TO TAPACULOS
Muscisaxicola rufivertex RUFOUS-NAPED GROUND-TYRANT.
Open, stony hillsides. Andes of Peru and n Bolivia; sw Peru, sw Bolivia,
Chile and w Argentina. The race occipitalis has been reported to
be sympatric (perhaps migrants?) with rufivertex, but they are not known
to intergrade and may be separate species.
Muscisaxicola juninensis PUNA GROUND-TYRANT.
Open, stony hillsides. Andes of Peru, w Bolivia, n Chile and nw Argentina.
Muscisaxicola albilora WHITE-BROWED GROUND-TYRANT.
Open, stony hillsides. Andes of Chile and adj. w Argentina.
Muscisaxicola alpina PLAIN-CAPPED GROUND-TYRANT.
Paramo grasslands. Andes, 3300-4200 m, of Colombia and n Ecuador;
Peru and wc Bolivia. Ranges of M. alpina and M. cinerea meet along
the eastern cordillera of Bolivia in Cochabamba. The race grisea
may be a separate species; its vocalizations are poorly known.
Muscisaxicola cinerea CINEREOUS GROUND-TYRANT.
Open, stony hillsides. Andes of c,s Bolivia, n Chile and nw,wc Argentina.
Sometimes treated as a race of M. alpina.
Muscisaxicola albifrons WHITE-FRONTED GROUND-TYRANT.
Boggy areas in puna zone. Andes of s Peru, wc Bolivia and n Chile.
Muscisaxicola flavinucha OCHRE-NAPED GROUND-TYRANT.
Open, stony hillsides. Andes of Chile and w,s Argentina to Tierra
del Fuego.
Muscisaxicola frontalis BLACK-FRONTED GROUND-TYRANT.
Open, stony hillsides. Andes in Chile and w Argentina.
Muscigralla brevicauda SHORT-TAILED FIELD-TYRANT.
Arid scrub. Coastal areas of sw Ecuador and w Peru and probably n
Chile. Although close to Muscisaxicola, brevicauda is sufficiently
distinct to warrant a monotypic genus.
Lessonia oreas ANDEAN NEGRITO. Damp, open
areas near water. Andes in c,s Peru, c,s Bolivia, n Chile and nw
Argentina. Now generally treated as a species distinct from L. rufa.
Lessonia rufa PATAGONIAN NEGRITO. Damp, open
areas near water. Lowlands and Andean slopes below 2000 m of Chile
and Argentina s to Tierra del Fuego.
Knipolegus striaticeps CINEREOUS TYRANT. Dense
scrub. E,se Bolivia, sc Brazil, Paraguay and n Argentina.
Knipolegus hudsoni HUDSON'S BLACK-TYRANT. Open
scrub. C Argentina.
Knipolegus poecilocercus AMAZONIAN BLACK-TYRANT.
Forest, usually near rivers. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes, of se
Colombia, s Venezuela, Guyana, Amazonian, n Brazil and ne Peru.
Knipolegus signatus ANDEAN TYRANT. Shrubby
hillsides. Andes of n,e Peru; c,se Bolivia and nw Argentina.
K. s. cabanisi has been placed by some authors in a genus different
from K. signatus but is considered conspecific by others; cabanisi
was tentatively considered to be closely related to K. cyanirostris,
but there is no evidence to consider signatus and cabanisi as other than
subspecies. See Traylor 1982. Fieldiana Zool. (n.s.)13:18-20.
Knipolegus cyanirostris BLUE-BILLED BLACK-TYRANT.
Forest edge, woodland, bushy areas, usually near water. E Paraguay,
se Brazil, Uruguay and n Argentina.
Knipolegus poecilurus RUFOUS-TAILED TYRANT.
Forest, thickets. Mts., 900-3100 m, from Colombia, w,n,s Venezuela
and adj. n Brazil s through Andes of se Ecuador and Peru to c Bolivia.
Knipolegus orenocensis RIVERSIDE TYRANT. Thickets
near water along the Orinoco and Amazon rivers and some tributaries.
Locally in lowlands to 300 m, e of Andes, of e Colombia and c Venezuela;
ne Peru and Amazonian Brazil. More than one species may be involved
(Ridgely and Tudor, Birds of S. Amer., 2:624).
Knipolegus aterrimus WHITE-WINGED BLACK-TYRANT.
Woodland, brushy areas, scrub. E of Andes of n,se Peru, Bolivia,
w Argentina and Paraguay; ce Brazil. The isolated population, franciscanus,
of ce Brazil, may be a separate species.
Knipolegus nigerrimus VELVETY BLACK-TYRANT.
Brushy areas, scrub. Se Brazil.
Knipolegus lophotes CRESTED BLACK-TYRANT.
Forest edge and thickets, often near water, reedbeds. S Brazil and
Uruguay.
Hymenops perspicillatus SPECTACLED TYRANT.
Reedbeds, swamps. W of Andes in Chile; e of Andes from n,e,se Bolivia,
Paraguay, s Brazil and Uruguay s to n,c Argentina.
Fluvicola pica PIED WATER-TYRANT. Marshes,
swamps, reedbeds, brushy areas near water. Locally in lowlands to
1000 m from e Panama and n,e Colombia e across Venezuela and Trinidad to
Guianas and extreme n Brazil.
Fluvicola albiventer BLACK-BACKED WATER-TYRANT.
Marshes, swamps, reedbeds, brushy areas near water. E of Andes of
e Peru and Amazonian, e Brazil, n,e, se Bolivia, Paraguay and n Argentina.
Sometimes considered conspecific with F. pica, but appears to be a distinct
species.
Fluvicola nengeta MASKED WATER-TYRANT. Riverbanks,
marshes, towns. Lowlands, w of Andes, of sw Ecuador and nw Peru;
e of Andes in e Brazil.
Arundinicola leucocephala WHITE-HEADED MARSH-TYRANT.
Marshes, wet pastureland, riverbanks. Locally in lowlands to 500
m from n,e Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s, e of Andes, through
n,c,e Brazil, incl. I. Marajó, ne Peru, n,e Bolivia and Paraguay
to n Argentina. Sometimes placed in Fluvicola.
Alectrurus tricolor COCK-TAILED TYRANT. Grassland.
N,e Bolivia, Paraguay, s Brazil and ne Argentina.
Alectrurus risora STRANGE-TAILED TYRANT. Grasslands,
marshes, shrubbery. Paraguay, s Brazil, Uruguay and n Argentina.
Gubernetes yetapa STREAMER-TAILED TYRANT.
Open woodland, savanna. N,e Bolivia, Paraguay, s Brazil and ne Argentina.
Satrapa icterophrys YELLOW-BROWED TYRANT.
Woodland, farmlands. Extreme se Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay, e,s Brazil,
Uruguay and n Argentina.
Colonia colonus LONG-TAILED TYRANT. Forest,
edge, savanna, generally near water. Lowlands to 1800 m from ne Honduras
s on Caribbean slope to Panama on both slopes, and from Colombia, se Venezuela
and Guianas s, w of Andes, to w Ecuador and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador,
e Peru, n Bolivia and sw Amazonian,e,s Brazil, incl. I. Marajó,
to e Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Machetornis rixosus CATTLE TYRANT. Bushy savanna,
fields near water, sea beaches. Locally in lowlands to 1000 m of
n,e Colombia and Venezuela; n,e,se Bolivia, Paraguay, c,s Brazil, Uruguay
and n Argentina.
Muscipipra vetula SHEAR-TAILED GREY TYRANT.
Scrub. E Paraguay, ne Argentina and se Brazil.
Attila phoenicurus RUFOUS-TAILED ATTILA. Forest.
Locally in Amazonian,c,s Brazil, ne Bolivia and ne Argentina; a record
from Venezuela probably pertains to a vagrant.
Attila cinnamomeus CINNAMON ATTILA. Mangroves,
swampy forest, woodland, usually near water. Lowlands to 500 m, e
of Andes, of Colombia, s,e Venezuela, Guianas, e Ecuador, ne Peru, n Bolivia
and Amazonian Brazil.
Attila torridus OCHRACEOUS ATTILA. Forest.
Pacific lowlands to 1000 m of sw Colombia and w Ecuador. Sometimes
considered conspecific with A. cinnamomeus.
Attila citriniventris CITRON-BELLIED ATTILA.
Forest. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes, of s Venezuela, e Ecuador,
ne Peru and w Amazonian Brazil.
Attila bolivianus DULL-CAPPED ATTILA. Riverine
forest, swamps. E of Andes in extreme se Colombia, e Peru, n,e Bolivia
and Amazonian, sw Brazil.
Attila rufus GREY-HOODED ATTILA. Forest.
Se Brazil.
Attila spadiceus BRIGHT-RUMPED ATTILA. Forest,
edge. Lowlands to 2100 m from Mexico in extreme s Sonora, Sinaloa,
w Durango, Nayarit, Jalisco, Colima, Michoacán, México, San
Luis Potosí and Veracruz, s along both slopes, incl. Yucatán
Pen., Cozumel and other small is., to Panama, incl. I. Coiba, and from
w,c,e Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s, w of Andes, to w Ecuador
and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador and e Peru to n,e Bolivia and Amazonian
Brazil; coastal se Brazil. Exceedingly variable in color with a green
morph, a gray-headed morph, a brown morph and a rufous morph; the different
morphs more or less connected by various intermediates. Details of
the distribution and relative frequency of these plumage types are not
well known.
Casiornis rufa RUFOUS CASIORNIS. Open scrub,
riparian woodland, campos, forest. Se Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay, sw,c,s
Brazil and n Argentina; records from Peru, Bolivia and nw Brazil are probably
migrants.
Casiornis fusca ASH-THROATED CASIORNIS. Scrub,
caatinga. C,e Brazil. May be conspecific with C. rufa; intermediates
are known.
Rhytipterna holerythra RUFOUS MOURNER. Forest,
edge, cleared woodland. Lowlands to 1000 m from Mexico in Veracruz,
n Oaxaca and Chiapas s along Caribbean slope to Nicaragua, both slopes
of Costa Rica, Panama and w,n Colombia and nw Ecuador.
Rhytipterna simplex GREYISH MOURNER. Forest.
Lowlands to 1300 m, e of Andes, from e Colombia, s Venezuela and Guianas
s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n,e Bolivia and Amazonian, se Brazil.
Rhytipterna immunda PALE-BELLIED MOURNER. Bushy
savanna. Locally in lowlands to 300 m, e of Andes, of e Colombia,
Surinam, French Guiana and w Amazonian Brazil.
Laniocera May be most closely related to the Schiffornis
group.
Laniocera rufescens SPECKLED MOURNER. Forest,
dense second growth. Lowlands to 1000 m from Mexico in n Oaxaca and
Chiapas s on Caribbean slope to Costa Rica, both slopes of Panama, w,n
Colombia and nw Ecuador.
Laniocera hypopyrra CINEREOUS MOURNER. Forest.
Lowlands to 600 m, e of Andes, from e Colombia, s Venezuela and Guianas
s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n,e Bolivia and Amazonian, e Brazil.
Sirystes sibilator SIRYSTES. Forest.
Locally in lowlands to 750 m from Panama, nw,e Colombia, sw Venezuela and
s Surinam s through e Ecuador and ne Peru to n,e Bolivia and Amazonian
Brazil; c,e,s Brazil, e Paraguay and ne Argentina. The albogriseus
subspecies group (including albocinereus) is vocally distinct and may be
a separate species.
Myiarchus semirufus RUFOUS FLYCATCHER. Arid
scrub, arid woodland. Coastal nw Peru.
Myiarchus yucatanensis YUCATAN FLYCATCHER.
Open forest, edge, woodland. Se Mexico in Yucatán Pen. and
Cozumel I., n Guatemala in Petén and n Belize.
Myiarchus tuberculifer DUSKY-CAPPED FLYCATCHER.
Open forest, edge, towns. Lowlands and mts. to 3400 m from n Sonora,
se Arizona, sw New Mexico, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León and c
Tamaulipas s along both slopes, incl. Tres Marías Is., Yucatán
Pen., and Cozumel I., to Panama, incl. most is. off Pacific coast, and
from Columbia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s, w of Andes, to s Ecuador
and, e of Andes, to n Bolivia and sw,c,e Brazil; on w slope of Andes, to
2400 m, from s Ecuador s through Peru and Bolivia to nw Argentina.
Myiarchus barbirostris SAD FLYCATCHER. Open
woodland, mt. forest. Jamaica. Sometimes considered conspecific
with M. tuberculifer.
Myiarchus swainsoni SWAINSON'S FLYCATCHER.
Mangroves, bushy savanna, cerrado.
The races phaeonotus and pelzelni are sometimes treated as separate
species, but they are vocally identical to the
swainsoni group (Lanyon 1978. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. 161:427-628).
M. s. phaeonotus Lowlands to 1800 m, e of Andes,
of s Venezuela and extreme nw Brazil, with intergrade zone from Guianas
s to lower Rio Negro, lower Rio Madeira and lower Amazon.
M. s. pelzelni Se Peru, n,e,se Bolivia, sw,c,e Brazil,
w Paraguay and n Argentina, with an intergrade zone from w Paraguay to
ne Argentina and w Uruguay.
M. s. swainsoni Se Brazil, ne Argentina and w Uruguay.
Myiarchus venezuelensis VENEZUELAN FLYCATCHER.
Forest edge, open woodland. Ne Colombia and n Venezuela; Tobago.
Sometimes considered conspecific with M. panamensis or M. ferox, but has
different vocalizations from both and is widely sympatric with panamensis.
Myiarchus panamensis PANAMA FLYCATCHER. Open
woodland, forest edge, scrubby areas, mangroves. Lowlands to 750
m of sw,wc Costa Rica, Panama, incl. Coiba, Taboga and Pearl is., w,n,c
Colombia and nw Venezuela. Sometimes considered conspecific with
M. ferox, but vocalizations are distinct.
Myiarchus ferox SHORT-CRESTED FLYCATCHER.
Forest clearings, riverine woodland, savanna, open moist woodland.
Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes from e Colombia, Venezuela and Guianas s
through e Ecuador, e Peru, Bolivia and Brazil to Paraguay, ne Argentina
and Uruguay.
Myiarchus cephalotes PALE-EDGED FLYCATCHER.
Forest edge, clearings. Mts., 1400-2700 m, from Colombia and n Venezuela
s through Andes of e Ecuador and e Peru to c Bolivia.
Myiarchus phaeocephalus SOOTY-CROWNED FLYCATCHER.
Arid scrub, woodland. Lowlands to 1500 m of w Ecuador and nw Peru.
Includes M. toddi, of n Peru, now regarded as a lipochrome-deficient individual
variant.
Myiarchus apicalis APICAL FLYCATCHER. Dry
forest, edge, woodland, arid scrub. Foothills, 400-2300 m of c,sw
Colombia.
Myiarchus cinerascens ASH-THROATED FLYCATCHER.
Desert scrub, pinyon-juniper and oak woodland, chaparral, thorn scrub,
riparian woodland. From nw Oregon, e Washington, s Idaho, n Utah,
s Wyoming, w Kansas, c Oklahoma and n,c Texas s to s Baja Calif., s Sonora
and, in Mexican highlands, to n Jalisco, n Michoacán, n Guanajuato,
s San Luis Potosí and s Tamaulipas.
Myiarchus nuttingi NUTTING'S FLYCATCHER. Arid
scrub, thorn scrub, open deciduous woodland. From nw Mexico in c
Sonora and sw Chihuahua, s along Pacific slope and interior in México,
Morelos and Puebla and s San Luis Potosí and Hidalgo, and in Pacific
lowlands and int. valleys of Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua
and nw Costa Rica.
Myiarchus crinitus GREAT CRESTED FLYCATCHER.
Forest, open woodland, towns, orchards. From ec Alberta and c,se
Saskatchewan e across s Canada to Prince Edward I. and s Nova Scotia and
s, e of Rockies, to c,se Texas, Gulf coast and s Florida.
Myiarchus tyrannulus BROWN-CRESTED FLYCATCHER.
Open woodland, scrub, mangroves.
The subspecies brachyurus and the magister subspecies groups are
sometimes treated as separate species, but all intergrade where their ranges
are in contact in Central America.
M. t. magister From se Calif., s Nevada, sw Utah,
Arizona, sw New Mexico and s Texas s through Mexico, incl. Yucatán
Pen., Tres Marías, Cozumel and Cancun is., (but not in Baja Calif.)
to Guatemala, Belize and n Honduras, incl. Bay Is., El Salvador and Pacific
Honduras.
M. t. brachyurus Pacific slope of Nicaragua and
nw Costa Rica.
M. t. tyrannulus Lowlands to 1200 m from n,e Colombia,
Venezuela, incl. is. from Aruba e to Tobago, Trinidad and Guianas s through
Brazil, n,e Peru and Bolivia to n Argentina and Paraguay.
Myiarchus nugator GRENADA FLYCATCHER. Open
woodland, scrub. S Lesser Antilles on Grenada, Grenadines and St.
Vincent.
Myiarchus magnirostris LARGE-BILLED FLYCATCHER.
Scrub. Galapagos Is.
Myiarchus validus RUFOUS-TAILED FLYCATCHER.
Woodland. Hills and mts. of Jamaica.
Myiarchus sagrae LA SAGRA'S FLYCATCHER. Open
woodland, mangroves. W. Indies in Bahama Is. (exc. Turks and Caicos),
Cuba, incl. I. of Pines and Grand Cayman. M. sagrae, M. antillarum
and M. oberi are sometimes considered conspecific with M. stolidus, but
they are distinct species.
Myiarchus stolidus STOLID FLYCATCHER. Open
woodland, mangroves. Greater Antilles in Jamaica and Hispaniola,
incl. Gônave, Tortue, Grand Cayemite and Beata is.
Myiarchus antillarum PUERTO RICAN FLYCATCHER.
Open woodland, mangroves. Greater Antilles in Puerto Rico, incl.
Vieques and Culebra is., and Virgin Is.
Myiarchus oberi LESSER ANTILLEAN FLYCATCHER.
Open woodland, cleared lands. Lesser Antilles, from St. Kitts and
Barbuda s to St. Lucia, exc. Montserrat.
Deltarhynchus flammulatus FLAMMULATED FLYCATCHER.
Deciduous forest, open woodland, scrub. Pacific lowlands of w Mexico
from Sinaloa s to w Chiapas.
Ramphotrigon megacephala LARGE-HEADED FLATBILL.
Bamboo thickets, undergrowth. Locally in lowlands to 750 m, e of
Andes, from n,se Colombia and nw,s Venezuela s through e Ecuador, se Peru,
n,e Bolivia and w,se Brazil to e Paraguay and ne Argentina. There
is evidence that Ramphotrigon is related to Deltarhynchus and therefore
is associated with the myiarchine flycatchers.
Ramphotrigon fuscicauda DUSKY-TAILED FLATBILL.
Bamboo thickets in forest. Known from a few specimens from localities
in the lowlands to 500 m of se Colombia, ne Ecuador, e Peru and n Bolivia.
Ramphotrigon ruficauda RUFOUS-TAILED FLATBILL.
Forest. Lowlands to 750 m, e of Andes, of e Colombia, s Venezuela,
Guianas, Amazonian, ne Brazil, se Ecuador, e Peru and n Bolivia.
Tyrannus niveigularis SNOWY-THROATED KINGBIRD.
Arid scrub. Pacific lowlands to 1200 m of sw Colombia, w Ecuador,
incl. islands, and nw Peru.
Tyrannus albogularis WHITE-THROATED KINGBIRD.
Savanna, riverine scrub, forest edge, wet cerrado. Lowlands to 1000
m, e of Andes, from se Venezuela and Guianas s through Amazonian, c,e Brazil
to ne Peru and n Bolivia.
Tyrannus melancholicus TROPICAL KINGBIRD.
Open woodland, savanna, forest edge, clearings, farmlands, human habitation.
Lowlands and foothills to 2700 m from se Arizona, Sonora, e San Luis Potosí
and s Tamaulipas s along both slopes of Mexico, incl. Yucatán Pen.,
Tres Marías Is. and most small is., to Panama and from Colombia,
Venezuela, incl. is. from Netherlands Antilles e to Trinidad, Tobago and
Grenada, and Guianas s over most of S. America to c Argentina.
Includes T. occidentalis of w Mexico which is sometimes
treated as a separate species based on vocal differences, but it is morphologically
indistinguishable from other Central American populations.
Also includes T. apolites, sometimes considered a distinct species,
but now believed to be a hybrid T. melancholicus x Empidonomus varius.
See T. couchii.
Tyrannus couchii COUCH'S KINGBIRD. Open woodland,
thorn scrub, towns, farmlands. Lowlands of s Texas, in Rio Grande
V., e Mexico along Gulf-Caribbean slope, Yucatán Pen., and most
coastal is., n Guatemala in Petén, and Belize. Formerly considered
conspecific with T. melancholicus, but T. couchii is a distinct species
that is extensively sympatric with T. melancholicus.
Tyrannus vociferans CASSIN'S KINGBIRD. Dry
savanna, open scrub, pinyon-juniper-yucca, oak woodland, riparian, woodland
edge. From c Calif., s Nevada, n Arizona, s Utah, Colorado, e Wyoming,
se Montana, sw S. Dakota, w Oklahoma and w Texas s to nw Baja Calif., and
through Mexican highlands to Michoacán, Oaxaca, Puebla and c Tamaulipas.
Tyrannus crassirostris THICK-BILLED KINGBIRD.
Arid scrub, savanna, riparian woodland. From se Arizona, sw New Mexico,
Sonora, sw Chihuahua, w Texas, Sinaloa and w Durango s to Guerrero, México,
Morelos, s Puebla and w Oaxaca.
Tyrannus verticalis WESTERN KINGBIRD. Open
country, grassland, savanna, desert scrub, farmlands. From cs British
Columbia, s Alberta, c,s Saskatchewan, s Manitoba and w,s Minnesota s to
n Baja Calif., Sonora, nw Chihuahua, s Arizona, s New Mexico and s,sc Texas,
sporadically e to s Ontario, w Missouri, sw Illinois, w,sw Wisconsin, w
Arkansas and sw Louisiana.
Tyrannus forficata SCISSOR-TAILED FLYCATCHER.
Open country, scrub, savanna, farmlands. From e New Mexico, se Colorado,
s Nebraska, nc Missouri, c Arkansas and w Louisiana. s to n Nuevo
León and s Texas, with isolated breeding in c Iowa, ne Mississippi,
nc Tennessee, nw Alabama and S. Carolina.
Tyrannus savana FORK-TAILED FLYCATCHER. Open
situations, primarily savanna, scrub, farmlands. Locally in lowlands
to 2600 m from Veracruz, Tabasco and Yucatán Pen. s, mostly on Caribbean
slope, to Costa Rica and c Panama; Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, c,ne, extreme
s Brazil, e Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina s to Patagonia; Falkland
Is.
Tyrannus tyrannus EASTERN KINGBIRD. Forest
edge, clearings, open woodland, farmlands, towns. From sw,nc British
Columbia, s Mackenzie, n Saskatchewan and c Manitoba e across s Canada
to New Brunswick, Prince Edward I. and Nova Scotia s to w Washington, c,e
Oregon, ne Calif., n Nevada, n Utah, Colorado, nw,c New Mexico, wc,e Texas,
Gulf coast and s Florida.
Tyrannus dominicensis GREY KINGBIRD. Open
country, esp. insular and coastal regions, mangroves, beach edges.
Coastal se U.S. from S. Carolina s to s Florida and w to s Alabama and
s Mississippi; W. Indies, incl. is. from Netherlands Antilles e to Trinidad
and Tobago; locally in lowlands to 2600 m of n,c Colombia and n Venezuela.
Tyrannus caudifasciatus LOGGERHEAD KINGBIRD.
Open woodland. W. Indies in n Bahama Is. on Grand Bahama, Abaco,
Andros, New Providence, Greater Antilles e to Puerto Rico, incl. Vieques
I., and Cayman Is.
Tyrannus cubensis GIANT KINGBIRD. Woodland,
esp. pine, swamp borders. Cuba, incl. I. of Pines, formerly s Bahama
Is. on Great Inagua and Caicos.
Empidonomus varius VARIEGATED FLYCATCHER.
Open woodland, second growth, forest edge. Lowlands to 1900 m, e
of Andes, from wc Venezuela and Guianas s through Amazonian,c,e Brazil,
n,e,se Bolivia and Paraguay to n Argentina and Uruguay.
Griseotyrannus aurantioatrocristatus CROWNED SLATY
FLYCATCHER. Open brushy areas, forest edge, cerrado. Lowlands
from Bolivia, Paraguay and c,e Brazil s to n Argentina and Uruguay.
Tyrannopsis sulphurea SULPHURY FLYCATCHER.
Open forest, areas near Mauritia palms. Locally in lowlands to 500
m, e of Andes, from se Colombia, s,e Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s
through e Ecuador and e Peru to n Bolivia and Amazonian, nc Brazil.
Megarynchus pitangua BOAT-BILLED FLYCATCHER.
Open woodland, forest edge, clearings, usually near water. Lowlands
to 1900 m from s Sinaloa, s San Luis Potosí and s Tamaulipas s along
both slopes, incl. Yucatán Pen., to Panama, incl. I. Cébaco,
and from Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s, w of Andes, to nw
Peru and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador, e Peru, n,e Bolivia, Brazil and
Paraguay to ne Argentina.
Conopias albovittata WHITE-RINGED FLYCATCHER.
Forest, edge, second growth, open woodland. Lowlands to 900 m of
e Honduras, Costa Rica, c,e Panama, w Colombia and nw Ecuador. When
considered conspecific with C. parva, this species is often called C. parva,
but C. albovittata has priority.
Conopias parva YELLOW-THROATED FLYCATCHER.
Forest, edge, second growth, open woodland. Lowlands to 1300 m, e
of Andes, of se Colombia, s Venezuela, Guianas and n Brazil. Often
considered conspecific with C. albovittata, but parva differs in vocalizations.
Conopias trivirgata THREE-STRIPED FLYCATCHER.
Open woodland, often in colonies of icterids. Locally in lowlands
to 1000 m, e of Andes, in s Venezuela, ne Peru, c Bolivia, Amazonian se
Brazil, e Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Conopias cinchoneti LEMON-BROWED FLYCATCHER.
Forest. Locally in foothills and mts., 400-2200 m, of Colombia, nw
Venezuela, e Ecuador and Peru.
Myiodynastes hemichrysus GOLDEN-BELLIED FLYCATCHER.
Forest edge, usually near water. Mts. of Costa Rica and w Panama.
Sometimes treated as a subspecies of M. chrysocephalus.
Myiodynastes chrysocephalus GOLDEN-CROWNED FLYCATCHER.
Forest edge, often near water. Foothills and mts., 400-2400 m, from
extreme e Panama and w,n Venezuela s through Andes of e Ecuador and e Peru
to c,se Bolivia.
Myiodynastes bairdii BAIRD'S FLYCATCHER. Arid
scrub and woodland, deciduous woodland. Coastal lowlands of w Ecuador
and nw Peru.
Myiodynastes maculatus STREAKED FLYCATCHER.
Riverine forest, forest edge, mangroves. Lowlands to 2000 m from
Mexico in s San Luis Potosí and s Tamaulipas s on Gulf-Caribbean
slope through se Mexico, incl. Yucatán Pen., n Guatemala and Belize
to n Honduras; sw Costa Rica, Panama, incl. Coiba, Cébaco and Pearl
is., and from Colombia, Venezuela, incl. Margarita I., Trinidad, Tobago
and Guianas s, w of Andes, to nw Peru and, e of Andes, to ne Peru, Bolivia
and Amazonian Brazil e at least to nw Maranhão; s,c Peru, Bolivia,
c,s,e Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and n Argentina.
The migratory subspecies solitarius sometimes is treated as a
separate species, but does not appear to differ vocally.
Myiodynastes luteiventris SULPHUR-BELLIED FLYCATCHER.
Open woodland, riparian woodland edge, scrub. Lowlands from se Arizona,
e Sonora, w Chihuahua, Nuevo León and Tamaulipas s along both slopes
of Mexico, incl. Yucatán Pen., to c Costa Rica.
Myiozetetes cayanensis RUSTY-MARGINED FLYCATCHER.
Forest, edge, scrub, open woodland, often near water. Lowlands to
2100 m from Panama, Colombia, w,n Venezuela and Guianas s, w of Andes,
to sw Ecuador and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador and Amazonian,c,se Brazil
to extreme se Peru and n,e Bolivia.
Myiozetetes similis SOCIAL FLYCATCHER. Open
woodland, scrubby growth, forest edge, around human habitation, along streams.
Lowlands from Mexico in s Sonora, Sinaloa, w Durango, Zacatecas, se San
Luis Potosí and s Tamaulipas s along both slopes, incl. Yucatán
Pen. and Cancun, to Costa Rica; lowlands to 1500 m of sw Costa Rica, w,c
Panama; w Ecuador, nw Peru; from n,c,e Colombia and Venezuela s, e of Andes,
through e Ecuador,e Peru, n,e Bolivia and Brazil to ne Argentina and Paraguay.
The texensis subspecies group is vocally distinct and sometimes is treated
as a species.
Myiozetetes granadensis GREY-CAPPED FLYCATCHER.
Shrubby areas, open woodland and mangroves, frequently near water.
Lowlands to 1000 m on Caribbean slope of e Honduras and Nicaragua, both
slopes of Costa Rica and Panama and from w,cn,se Colombia and s Venezuela
s, w of Andes, to nw Peru and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador, e Peru and
w Amazonian Brazil to n Bolivia.
Myiozetetes luteiventris DUSKY-CHESTED FLYCATCHER.
Forest edge, treefalls, often near water. Lowlands to 500 m, e of
Andes, from Colombia, s Venezuela and sw Surinam s through n,Amazonian
Brazil to e Peru and n Bolivia.
Legatus leucophaius PIRATIC FLYCATCHER. Forest
edge, open woodland. Lowlands to 1700 m from Mexico in s San Luis
Potosí, Puebla, Veracruz, n Oaxaca, Tabasco, Chiapas and s Quintana
Roo s on Caribbean slope to Nicaragua, both slopes of Costa Rica and Panama
and from Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s, w of Andes, to nw
Ecuador and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador and most of Brazil to c Peru,
n,e Bolivia, Paraguay and n Argentina.
Philohydor lictor LESSER KISKADEE. Edges of
lakes, streams and marshes, mangroves. Lowlands to 500 m from Panama,
n,e Colombia and Venezuela s, e of Andes, through e Ecuador, e Peru and
most of Brazil to n,e Bolivia.
Pitangus sulphuratus GREAT KISKADEE. Open
woodland, savanna, towns, usually near water. Lowlands to 1600 m
from s Texas and Mexico in s Sonora, Sinaloa, Durango, Zacatecas, Nuevo
León s along both slopes, incl. Yucatán Pen. and Cancun,
to Panama and from n,c,e Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s over
most of S. America, e of Andes, to n Argentina. Intro. Bermuda, c
Argentina.
Phelpsia inornata WHITE-BEARDED FLYCATCHER.
Savanna, shrubby areas, swamps, farmlands, often near water. Lowlands to
500 m of wc, n Venezuela.
Subfamily TITYRINAE
Tribe SCHIFFORNITHINI
Schiffornis major GREATER SCHIFFORNIS.
Riverine forest. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes, of s Venezuela, ne Ecuador,
e Peru, e Bolivia and Amazonian Brazil.
Schiffornis turdinus THRUSH-LIKE SCHIFFORNIS.
Forest undergrowth, woodland. Lowlands to 1500 m from Mexico in s
Veracruz, Oaxaca, Tabasco, Chiapas, Campeche and Quintana Roo s on Caribbean
slope to Nicaragua and on both slopes of Costa Rica. and w Panama;
lowlands to 1800 m from c,e Panama, Colombia, Venezuela and Guianas s,
w of Andes, to nw Peru and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador and e Peru to
n,e Bolivia and n,c,e Brazil. Geographic variation in songs and plumage
suggest that more than one species may be involved.
Schiffornis virescens GREENISH SCHIFFORNIS.
Forest, scrub. Lowlands of Brazil, se Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Tribe TITYRINI
Xenopsaris albinucha WHITE-NAPED XENOPSARIS.
Open forest, thickets, riverbanks, reedbeds. Locally in lowlands
to 500 m, e of Andes, of Venezuela, e Brazil, n,e Bolivia, w Paraguay and
n Argentina.
Pachyramphus viridis GREEN-BACKED BECARD.
Forest, edge. Up to ca. 1000 m, of w Guyana, e Venezuela, lower Amazonian
and e,c,se Brazil, e,se Bolivia, Paraguay, n,e Uruguay and n Argentina.
Pachyramphus xanthogenys YELLOW-CHEEKED BECARD.
Montane forest borders and clearings with scattered tall trees. 800-1700
m in the foothills of the Andes in e Ecuador and e Peru. Has been
considered conspecific with P. viridis, but their ranges are widely allopatric
and their habitats and plumages differ. See Ridgely and Tudor (Birds
of S. Amer., 2:675-676).
Pachyramphus versicolor BARRED BECARD. Forest,
edge, scrubby ravines. Mts., 1300-3000 m of Costa Rica and w Panama;
locally in mts., 1600-2900 m, from Colombia and nw Venezuela s through
Andes of nw Ecuador and nw,e Peru to c Bolivia.
Pachyramphus cinnamomeus CINNAMON BECARD.
Forest, edge, woodland. Lowlands to 1300 m from Mexico in n Oaxaca,
Tabasco and n Chiapas s on Caribbean slope to Nicaragua, both slopes of
Costa Rica and Panama and in Colombia, nw Venezuela and nw Ecuador.
Sometimes considered conspecific with P. castaneus; they are closely related,
but allopatric.
Pachyramphus castaneus CHESTNUT-CROWNED BECARD.
Forest. Lowlands to 1700 m, e of Andes, from se Colombia and n Venezuela
s through e Ecuador, e Peru and Amazonian,e Brazil to n Bolivia, Paraguay
and ne Argentina.
Pachyramphus polychopterus WHITE-WINGED BECARD.
Riverine woodland, forest edge, mangroves. Lowlands and mts. to 2700
m on Caribbean slope of e Guatemala, Belize and Honduras, both slopes of
Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama and from Colombia, Venezuela, Guianas,
Trinidad and Tobago s, e of Andes, through e Ecuador, e Peru, Bolivia and
most of Brazil to Paraguay, Uruguay and n Argentina.
Pachyramphus major GREY-COLLARED BECARD. Woodland.
Lowlands to 2400 m from Mexico in e Sonora, se Sinaloa, w Durango, San
Luis Potosí and Nuevo León s on both slopes of c,s Mexico,
incl. Yucatán Pen.; highlands from Chiapas s to nc Nicaragua.
Sometimes considered conspecific with P. albogriseus. Also see P.
marginatus. These three are closely related and possibly conspecific.
Pachyramphus albogriseus BLACK-AND-WHITE BECARD.
Forest, edge, second-growth woodland. Lowlands to 2700 m, mostly
above 900 m, of Costa Rica and w Panama; from e Colombia and n Venezuela
s through Andes of w,e Ecuador to nw, e Peru. May be conspecific
with major.
Pachyramphus marginatus BLACK-CAPPED BECARD.
Forest, edge. Lowlands to 1000 m, e of Andes, from se Colombia, nc,se
Venezuela and Guianas s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n Bolivia and Amazonian,
e Brazil. Closely related to albogriseus, which may be conspecific
with major.
Pachyramphus surinamus GLOSSY-BACKED BECARD.
Forest. Lowlands of Surinam, French Guiana and ne Brazil.
Pachyramphus rufus CINEREOUS BECARD. Savanna,
open woodland, forest, mangroves. Locally in lowlands to 1500 m of
c Panama; from n,c,ne,se Colombia, n,e Venezuela and Guianas s, e of Andes,
through e Ecuador and ne Peru to Amazonian Brazil, incl. Marajó
and Mexiana is.
Pachyramphus spodiurus SLATY BECARD. Open
woodland, forest. Pacific lowlands from nw Ecuador s to nw Peru.
Pachyramphus aglaiae ROSE-THROATED BECARD.
Open
woodland, forest edge, riparian woodland. Lowlands to 1800 m from
se Arizona, ne Sonora, w Chihuahua, ne Coahuila, Nuevo León and
s Texas s along both slopes, incl. Tres Marías Is., Yucatán
Pen. and Cozumel I., to nw,ne Costa Rica. Related to P. homochrous
and P. minor, less closely to P. validus and P. niger.
Pachyramphus homochrous ONE-COLORED BECARD.
Open woodland, forest edge. Lowlands to 1000 m from c Panama, w,n
Colombia and nw Venezuela s in Pacific lowlands to w Ecuador and nw Peru.
Possibly a race of P. aglaiae.
Pachyramphus minor PINK-THROATED BECARD. Forest
edge, scrub. Lowlands to 1000 m, e of Andes, from se Colombia, s
Venezuela and Guianas s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n,e Bolivia and
Amazonian Brazil.
Pachyramphus niger JAMAICAN BECARD. Forest,
wooded hills. Jamaica.
Pachyramphus validus CRESTED BECARD. Open
woodland, savanna. Lowlands, e of Andes, of c,se Peru, c,se Bolivia,
Paraguay, s,e Brazil and n Argentina.
Tityra cayana BLACK-TAILED TITYRA. Forest,
deciduous woodland, savanna. Lowlands to 1100 m, e of Andes, from
e Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s through e Ecuador, e Peru,
n,e Bolivia and Brazil to Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Tityra semifasciata MASKED TITYRA. Forest,
mostly riverine, edge, open woodland. Lowlands to 1800 m from Mexico
in s Sonora, Sinaloa, Guanajuato, San Luis Potosí and Tamaulipas
s along both slopes, incl. Yucatán Pen., to Panama, incl. Cébaco
and Coiba is., and from Colombia, w,n Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s,
w of Andes, to w Ecuador and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador and c,e Peru
to n,e Bolivia and Amazonian Brazil.
Tityra inquisitor BLACK-CROWNED TITYRA. Humid
forest, open woodland. Lowlands to 1200 m from Mexico in e San Luis
Potosí, Veracruz, e Puebla, n Oaxaca, Chiapas and Yucatán
Pen. s on Gulf-Caribbean slope to Nicaragua, both slopes of Costa Rica
and Panama and from Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s, w of Andes,
to w Ecuador and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador, c,e Peru, n,e Bolivia
and Brazil to Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Includes T. leucura, which is known only from the type from the upper
Rio Madeira of w Brazil; probably only an aberrant individual, not a separate
species.
Subfamily COTINGINAE
Phoenicircus nigricollis BLACK-NECKED RED-COTINGA.
Humid forest. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes in se Colombia, sw Venezuela,
e Ecuador, ne Peru and Amazonian Brazil.
Phoenicircus carnifex GUIANAN RED-COTINGA.
Humid Forest. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes in se Venezuela, Guianas
and n, Amazonian Brazil. The relationships and sympatry of P. carnifex
and P. nigricollis along Rio Tapajós in Amazonian Brazil are uncertain;
despite marginal sympatry they are treated here as allospecies.
Laniisoma elegans SHRIKE-LIKE COTINGA. Humid
forest. Locally in foothills, 300-1800 m, along a narrow belt of
the Andes, mostly e slope of ne Colombia, nw Venezuela, e Ecuador, e Peru
and cw Bolivia; se Brazil. The Andean buckleyi group may be a separate
species.
Phibalura flavirostris SWALLOW-TAILED COTINGA.
Forest. Locally in cw Bolivia; se Brazil, ne Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Tijuca atra BLACK-AND-GOLD COTINGA. Forest.
Coastal mts. of se Brazil.
Tijuca condita GREY-WINGED COTINGA. Forest.
Mts. of se Brazil.
Carpornis cucullatus HOODED BERRYEATER. Woodland,
forest. Se Brazil.
Carpornis melanocephalus BLACK-HEADED BERRYEATER.
Forest. Coastal se Brazil.
Doliornis sclateri BAY-VENTED COTINGA. Open
forest and timberline elfin woods. Andes, 2700-3500 m, of c Peru
and Colombia (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club 114(2)).
Doliornis remseni CHESTNUT-BELLIED COTINGA. New species:
Robbins et al. 1994. Auk 111:1-7. Woods, esp. Escallonia myrtilloides.
Presently known from three localities along the E. Cordillera of the Andes,
3100-3650 m, from ne Ecuador to extreme n Peru.
Ampelion rubrocristata RED-CRESTED COTINGA.
Forest edge, woodland. Mts., 2200-3700 m, from Colombia, w Venezuela
s through Andes of Ecuador and Peru to wc Bolivia.
Ampelion rufaxilla CHESTNUT-CRESTED COTINGA.
Forest. Locally in Andes, 1350-2700 m, of e,c Colombia, e Peru and
cw Bolivia.
Phytotoma raimondii PERUVIAN PLANTCUTTER. Arid
woodland, scrub. Arid coastal region of nw Peru.
Phytotoma rutila WHITE-TIPPED PLANTCUTTER.
Woodland edge, scrub. Bolivia, w Paraguay, sw Uruguay and nc Argentina
e to Buenos Aires. Closely related to P. raimondii.
Phytotoma rara RUFOUS-TAILED PLANTCUTTER.
Woodland, farmlands. Lowlands to 2100 m of c,s Chile and cs Argentina.
Zaratornis stresemanni WHITE-CHEEKED COTINGA.
Associated with mistletoe in Polylepis woodland surrounded by shrubbery
and grassland. Mts., 2700-4250 m, of wc Peru.
Pipreola riefferii GREEN-AND-BLACK FRUITEATER.
Forest. Mts., 1200-2750 m, from Colombia and w,n Venezuela s through
Andes of w,e Ecuador to e Peru; e slope of Andes, 2100-2300 m, of c Peru.
P. r. tallmanorum may be specifically distinct (O'Neill and Parker 1981.
Bull. Brit. Orn. Club 101:294-299).
Pipreola intermedia BAND-TAILED FRUITEATER.
Forest. Andes, 2300-3050 m of n,c Peru and w,c Bolivia, generally
occurring at higher elevations than P. riefferii. Related to P. riefferii,
with which it is marginally sympatric.
Pipreola arcuata BARRED FRUITEATER. Forest.
Mts., 900-3450 m, from Colombia and w Venezuela s through Andes of w,e
Ecuador and e Peru to wc Bolivia.
Pipreola aureopectus GOLDEN-BREASTED FRUITEATER.
Forest. Foothills and mts., 300-2600 m, of Colombia and nw,nc Venezuela.
This and the following three species are often treated as conspecific,
but differences and lack of intergradation suggest allospecies status.
Pipreola jucunda ORANGE-BREASTED FRUITEATER.
Forest. Andes, 1600-2300 m of se Colombia and nw Ecuador.
Pipreola lubomirskii BLACK-CHESTED FRUITEATER.
Forest. Andes, 1600-2300 m, of se Colombia, e Ecuador and ne Peru.
Pipreola pulchra MASKED FRUITEATER. Forest.
Andes, 1800-2100 m, of e Peru.
Pipreola chlorolepidota FIERY-THROATED FRUITEATER.
Forest. Andes, 1200-2600 m of se Colombia, e Ecuador and e Peru.
Pipreola frontalis SCARLET-BREASTED FRUITEATER.
Forest. Andes, 1200-2600 m of se Ecuador and ne Peru; e Peru and
c Bolivia. Closely related to P. chlorolepidota but altitudinally
separated.
Pipreola formosa HANDSOME FRUITEATER. Humid
forest. Mts., 800-2200 m of n Venezuela.
Pipreola whitelyi RED-BANDED FRUITEATER. Forest.
Pantepui, 1200-2600 m of se Venezuela and w Guyana.
Ampelioides tschudii SCALED FRUITEATER. Forest.
Mts., 650-2700 m, from Colombia and w Venezuela s through Andes of w,e
Ecuador and e Peru to cw Bolivia.
Iodopleura pipra BUFF-THROATED PURPLETUFT.
Forest edge, scrub. Known from two specimens reportedly from "Guyana",
and se Brazil in Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro, se São Paulo,
probably Minas Gerais.
Iodopleura isabellae WHITE-BROWED PURPLETUFT.
Forest, edge. Lowlands to 500 m of Andes from se Colombia and extreme
s Venezuela s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n Bolivia and Amazonaian
Brazil. May be conspecific with I. fusca.
Iodopleura fusca DUSKY PURPLETUFT. Forest,
edge. Locally in lowlands to 500 m of se Venezuela and Guianas.
Possibly a race of I. isabellae.
Calyptura cristata KINGLET CALYPTURA. Forest.
Se Brazil in Espírito Santo and mts. in Rio de Janeiro. Possibly
extinct, not observed since the late 1800's.
Lipaugus subalaris GREY-TAILED PIHA. Forest.
Andes, 1200-1500 m, of se Colombia, e Ecuador and n,c Peru.
Lipaugus cryptolophus OLIVACEOUS PIHA. Forest.
Andes, 900-2600 m of Colombia, nw,e Ecuador and e Peru.
Lipaugus fuscocinereus DUSKY PIHA. Forest.
Locally in Andes, 1350-3500 m, in Colombia, Ecuador and nw Peru.
Lipaugus uropygialis SCIMITAR-WINGED PIHA.
Forest. Andes, 1350-2600 m, of extreme se Peru and wc Bolivia.
This species has been placed in Lipaugus as a probable allospecies of L.
fuscocinereus (Remsen, et al. 1982. Le Gerfaut 77:72-82).
Lipaugus vociferans SCREAMING PIHA. Forest,
savanna, often near water. Lowlands to 1500 m, e of Andes, from e
Colombia, e,s Venezuela and Guianas s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n,e
Bolivia and Amazonian, e Brazil.
Lipaugus unirufus RUFOUS PIHA. Humid forest,
edge, second-growth woodland. Lowlands to 1000 m from Mexico in s
Veracruz, n Oaxaca, Tabasco and Chiapas s on Caribbean slope to Nicaragua,
both slopes of Costa Rica and Panama, w,n Colombia and w Ecuador.
Lipaugus lanioides CINNAMON-VENTED PIHA. Forest.
Mts. of se Brazil.
Lipaugus streptophorus ROSE-COLLARED PIHA.
Forest. Pantepui, 1000-2600 m, of se Venezuela, w Guyana and adj.
n Brazil.
Porphyrolaema porphyrolaema PURPLE-THROATED COTINGA.
Riverine forest. Lowlands to 1000 m, e of Andes, of se Colombia,
e Ecuador, ne,se Peru and w, Amazonian Brazil.
Cotinga amabilis LOVELY COTINGA. Humid forest,
edge, second-growth woodland. Lowlands from Mexico in s Veracruz,
n Oaxaca and n Chiapas s on Caribbean slope to Costa Rica. This and
the following five species replace each other geographically and are sometimes
treated as a single species. There is no objective way to resolve
their status, but they are more closely related to each other than to C.
cayana; the degrees of morphological difference among males suggest that
isolating mechanisms might be involved in potential zones of contact; treatment
as allospecies seems appropriate.
Cotinga ridgwayi TURQUOISE COTINGA. Humid forest,
second growth, open woodland. Lowlands to 1850 m of sw Costa Rica
and extreme w Panama.
Cotinga nattererii BLUE COTINGA. Humid forest,
edge, second growth woodland. Lowlands to 1000 m of c,e Panama, w,n
Colombia, sw Venezuela and nw Ecuador.
Cotinga maynana PLUM-THROATED COTINGA. Riverine
forest. Lowlands to 1000 m, e of Andes, of se Colombia, e Ecuador,
e Peru, n Bolivia and w Amazonian Brazil.
Cotinga cotinga PURPLE-BREASTED COTINGA. Humid
forest. Lowlands to 750 m, e of Andes, of s Venezuela, Guianas and
Amazonian, c Brazil.
Cotinga maculata BANDED COTINGA. Humid forest.
Lowlands of se Brazil.
Cotinga cayana SPANGLED COTINGA. Forest, savanna,
open woodland. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes, from e Colombia,sw,e,s
Venezuela and Guianas s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n Bolivia and Amazonian
Brazil.
Xipholena punicea POMPADOUR COTINGA. Forest.
Lowlands to 1300 m, e of Andes, of e Colombia, sw,e,s Venezuela, Guianas,
e Ecuador, and n, Amazonian Brazil. The three species of Xipholena
are closely related but do not interbreed where in contact.
Xipholena lamellipennis WHITE-TAILED COTINGA.
Forest, palms. Lowlands of e Brazil.
Xipholena atropurpurea WHITE-WINGED COTINGA.
Forest. Lowlands of coastal e Brazil. Nearing extinction due
to habitat destruction.
Carpodectes nitidus SNOWY COTINGA. Humid forest,
edge, second growth, scrub. Caribbean lowlands to 1000 m from n Honduras
s to extreme w Panama. Sometimes considered conspecific with C. antoniae
and C. hopkei.
Carpodectes antoniae YELLOW-BILLED COTINGA.
Mangroves, riverine forest. Pacific lowlands to 750 m of sw Costa
Rica and extreme w Panama.
Carpodectes hopkei BLACK-TIPPED COTINGA. Humid
forest, edge, scrub. Lowlands to 1500 m of e Panama, w Colombia and
nw Ecuador.
Conioptilon mcilhennyi BLACK-FACED COTINGA.
Humid forest. Lowlands of se Peru.
Gymnoderus foetidus BARE-NECKED FRUITCROW.
Riverine forest, edge, second growth. Lowlands, e of Andes, from
e Colombia, s Venezuela and Guianas s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n,e
Bolivia and n, Amazonian Brazil.
Haematoderus militaris CRIMSON FRUITCROW.
Forest. Locally in lowlands of Guianas and e Amazonian Brazil.
Querula purpurata PURPLE-THROATED FRUITCROW.
Forest, edge, second-growth woodland. Lowlands to 1200 m on Caribbean slope
of Costa Rica and Panama, incl. Pacific lowlands from Canal Zone e, and
from w,c,se Colombia, s Venezuela and Guianas s, w of Andes, to nw Ecuador
and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador and e Peru to n Bolivia and n, Amazonian
Brazil.
Pyroderus scutatus RED-RUFFED FRUITCROW. Humid
forest, savanna. Mts., 1200-2900 m, of Colombia, Venezuela and Guyana
s through w Ecuador to e,c Peru; lowlands of se Brazil, se Paraguay and
ne Argentina. P. s. occidentalis may be a separate species.
Cephalopterus glabricollis BARE-NECKED UMBRELLABIRD.
Humid forest. Highlands, 800-2000 m, of Costa Rica and w Panama,
descending to lowlands in nonbreeding season.
Cephalopterus penduliger LONG-WATTLED UMBRELLABIRD.
Humid forest. Andes, 700-1800 m, of sw Colombia and w Ecuador.
Cephalopterus ornatus AMAZONIAN UMBRELLABIRD.
Humid forest. Foothills to 1200 m, e of Andes, from e Colombia, s
Venezuela and Guyana s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n,e Bolivia and
n, Amazonian Brazil. The three umbrellabirds may be conspecific,
but they are allopatric and here treated as allospecies.
Perissocephalus tricolor CAPUCHINBIRD. Forest.
Lowlands to 1400 m of s Venezuela, Guianas and n Amazonian Brazil.
Procnias tricarunculata THREE-WATTLED BELLBIRD.
Humid forest. Highlands, 1000-3000 m of e Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa
Rica and w Panama, in nonbreeding season descending to lowlands and ranging
e to Canal Zone.
Procnias alba WHITE BELLBIRD. Humid forest.
Lowlands to 1100 m, e of Andes, of se Venezuela, Guianas and, perhaps as
a vagrant, nw,c Brazil.
Procnias averano BEARDED BELLBIRD. Humid forest,
edge, second growth. Locally in lowlands to 1600 m, e of Andes, in
extreme ne Colombia, n,se Venezuela, Trinidad, sw Guyana and nw,e Brazil.
Procnias nudicollis BARE-THROATED BELLBIRD.
Forest. Se Brazil, se Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Rupicola rupicola GUIANAN COCK-OF-THE-ROCK.
Forest, second growth, usually near rock outcroppings. Lowlands to
2000 m, e of Andes, of Colombia, s Venezuela, Guianas and n Amazonian Brazil.
Rupicola peruviana ANDEAN COCK-OF-THE-ROCK.
Humid forest, generally in steep ravines near streams. Andes, 500-2400
m, from Colombia and nw Venezuela s through nw,e Ecuador and Peru to wc
Bolivia. R. p. sanguinolenta may be a separate species.
Oxyruncus cristatus SHARPBILL. Humid forest,
edge. Locally in highlands, 700-1500 m, of nw,c Costa Rica, w,e Panama;
Pantepui of s Venezuela and Guyana; e Peru, wc Bolivia, Amazonian, se Brazil,
s Paraguay. Descends to lowlands in nonbreeding season. Often
treated in a monotypic family or as a tyrannine, but DNA-DNA hybridization
data show it to be a cotingine.
Subfamily PIPRINAE
Pipra aureola CRIMSON-HOODED MANAKIN. Forest,
swampy woodland. Lowlands to 1200 m, e of Andes, of e Venezuela,
Guianas and ne, Amazonian Brazil.
Pipra fasciicauda BAND-TAILED MANAKIN. Forest,
especially riverine. Lowlands, e of Andes, of e Peru, n,e Bolivia,
s Amazonian,sc Brazil, e Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Pipra filicauda WIRE-TAILED MANAKIN. Forest,
especially riverine. Lowlands to 1000 m, e of Andes, of e Colombia,
nc,nw,s Venezuela, e Ecuador, ne Peru and w Amazonian Brazil. Often
placed in the monotypic genus Teleonema but here considered an allospecies
of the P. aureola complex despite slight overlap in w Amazonia.
Pipra mentalis RED-CAPPED MANAKIN. Humid forest
undergrowth, edge, second growth. Lowlands to 1100 m from Mexico
in s Veracruz, n Oaxaca, Tabasco, Chiapas and Yucatán Pen., s on
Caribbean slope to e Nicaragua, both slopes of Costa Rica and Panama and
in w Colombia and nw Ecuador.
Pipra erythrocephala GOLDEN-HEADED MANAKIN.
Humid forest undergrowth, edge, second growth. Lowlands to 2000 m
from e Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Guianas s through e Ecuador
to ne Peru and Amazonian Brazil. Sometimes considered conspecific
with P. rubrocapilla, but they are sympatric in ne Peru along Río
Ucayali and lower Río Huallaga.
Pipra rubrocapilla RED-HEADED MANAKIN. Humid
forest, edge. Lowlands, e of Andes, of e Peru, n Bolivia and s Amazonian
Brazil.
Pipra chloromeros ROUND-TAILED MANAKIN. Humid
forest. Lowlands to 1400 m, e of Andes, in e Peru and n,e Bolivia.
Pipra cornuta SCARLET-HORNED MANAKIN. Humid
forest. Pantepui, 500-1800 m, of s Venezuela, w Guyana and n Brazil.
Pipra pipra WHITE-CROWNED MANAKIN. Undergrowth
of forest and savanna. Mts., 800-1500 m of Costa Rica and w,c Panama;
lowlands to 1600 m from Colombia, nw,e,s Venezuela and Guianas s to e Ecuador,
e Peru and Amazonian,n,e Brazil. Geographic variation in vocalizations
suggests that more than one species is involved.
Lepidothrix: The species
of Lepidothrix were formerly included in Pipra. Prum (1994.
Condor 96:692-702 and earlier papers cited therein) provided evidence supporting
the recognition of Lepidothrix for the following eight species.
Lepidothrix coronata BLUE-CROWNED MANAKIN.
Humid forest, dense second growth woodland. Lowlands to 1400 m of
sw,se Costa Rica, Panama, w,nc Colombia and nw Ecuador; lowlands to 1200
m, e of Andes, from se Colombia and s Venezuela s through e Ecuador to
c Peru and extreme w Amazonian Brazil; c Peru, n Bolivia and w Amazonian
Brazil.
Lepidothrix serena WHITE-FRONTED MANAKIN.
Humid forest, edge. Lowlands to 1000 m in the Acary Mts. along the
s border between Guyana and Surinam to interior of Surinam and French Guiana
s in Brazil to near Manaus and s Amapá near the mouth of the Amazon
River; probably more widely distributed in w,s Surinam and n Pará,
Brazil between Manaus and Amapá.
Lepidothrix suavissima ORANGE-BELLIED MANAKIN (=TEPUI
MANAKIN of Sibley and Monroe 1990; see Ridgely and Tudor, Birds of S. Amer.,
2:721). Humid forest, edge. Lowlands and slopes of Pantepui,
500-1800 m, of s Venezuela, w,c,e Guyana and nw Brazil in Roraima adjacent
to the s tip of Venezuela. L. suavissima has been recognized as a
species distinct from L. serena; they differ in vocalizations, plumage,
ecology and syringeal structure (Prum, R. 1994. Condor 96:692-702).
Lepidothrix iris OPAL-CROWNED MANAKIN. Humid
forest. Lowlands of se Amazonian Brazil; does not overlap with L.
vilasboasi or L. nattereri.
Lepidothrix vilasboasi GOLDEN-CROWNED MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Known only from the Rio Cururú, a tributary
of the upper Rio Tapajós in sw Pará, c Amazonian Brazil.
Threatened by deforestation. Pipra obscura is now believed to be
based on a female or immature male of vilasboasi.
Lepidothrix nattereri SNOW-CAPPED MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Lowlands in extreme ne Bolivia and s Amazonian Brazil;
does not overlap with L. coronata, L. vilasboasi or L. iris.
Lepidothrix isidorei BLUE-RUMPED MANAKIN. Humid
forest. Andean foothills, 500-100 m, e of Andes, of e Colombia, e
Ecuador and e Peru. Most closely related to coeruleocapilla.
Sympatric with coronata, suavissima, serena, iris, vilasboasi and nattereri
where ranges overlap.
Lepidothrix coeruleocapilla CERULEAN-CAPPED MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Andes, 1200-1500 m of c,e Peru.
Antilophia galeata HELMETED MANAKIN. Swampy
forest, second growth. Tableland of c,s Brazil and ne Paraguay.
Chiroxiphia linearis LONG-TAILED MANAKIN. Forest
edge, undergrowth, second growth, woodland. Pacific lowlands to 1500
m from s Mexico in Oaxaca s to nw Costa Rica.
This and the following two species are sometimes regarded as conspecific.
Chiroxiphia lanceolata LANCE-TAILED MANAKIN.
Forest edge, undergrowth, second growth, woodland. Lowlands to 1700
m of sw Costa Rica, Panama, incl. Coiba and Cébaco is., n Colombia
and n Venezuela, incl. Margarita I.
Chiroxiphia pareola BLUE-BACKED MANAKIN. Forest
edge, undergrowth, second growth, woodland. Lowlands to 750 m, e
of Andes, from se Colombia, e Venezuela, Tobago and Guianas s through e
Ecuador and e Peru to n Bolivia and Amazonian,e Brazil.
Chiroxiphia boliviana YUNGAS MANAKIN. Forest
edge, undergrowth, second growth. Andean foothills of se Peru and
c,se Bolivia. Differs from C. pareola in morphology, vocalizations
and display (Parker and Remsen 1987. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club 167:94-107).
Chiroxiphia caudata SWALLOW-TAILED MANAKIN or BLUE
MANAKIN. Forest. Lowlands of se Brazil, s Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Masius chrysopterus GOLDEN-WINGED MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Andes, 600-2300 m of Colombia, nw Venezuela, Ecuador
and n Peru.
Ilicura militaris PIN-TAILED MANAKIN. Forest,
scrub. Lowlands of se Brazil.
Corapipo gutturalis WHITE-THROATED MANAKIN.
Forest. Lower slopes of Pantepui, 250-1100 m, of s Venezuela, Guianas
and n Brazil.
Corapipo altera WHITE-RUFFED MANAKIN. Humid
forest undergrowth, edge, second-growth woodland. Lowlands to 2400
m from se Honduras to Panama and nw Colombia.
Often considered conspecific with C. leucorrhoa but differs
in morphology and vocalizations.
Corapipo leucorrhoa WHITE-BIBBED MANAKIN. Humid
forest undergrowth, edge, second-growth woodland. Locally in lowlands
to 1500 m of sw,c,ne Colombia and nw Venezuela. C. l. altera may
be a separate species.
Manacus candei WHITE-COLLARED MANAKIN. Humid
forest undergrowth, edge, dense second growth, thickets. Lowlands
to 1000 m from Mexico in s Veracruz, n Oaxaca, Tabasco, Chiapas, s Campeche
and s Quintana Roo s on Caribbean slope to e Costa Rica. The relationships
of the members of this genus are unclear.
They replace each other geographically and hybridize at points of contact,
viz., M. manacus x M. vitellinus in n Colombia and M. vitellinus x M. candei
in nw Panama. All could be considered conspecific, but because hybridization
and backcrossing are limited in zones of contact, treatment as four allospecies
seems appropriate.
Manacus aurantiacus ORANGE-COLLARED MANAKIN.
Humid forest undergrowth, edge, dense second-growth woodland. Lowlands
to 1100 m of Pacific slope of sw Costa Rica and w Panama; lowlands to 1200
m of w,nc Colombia and nw Ecuador.
Manacus vitellinus GOLDEN-COLLARED MANAKIN.
Humid forest undergrowth, edge, dense second-growth woodland. Lowlands
of Panama, incl. Bastimentos and Escudo de Veraguas is., and nw,nc Colombia.
Includes M. v. cerritus, a variable population of nw Panama
that sometimes is treated as a separate species or as a hybrid/intergrade
between M. candei and M. aurantiacus.
Manacus manacus WHITE-BEARDED MANAKIN. Forest
undergrowth, edge, open woodland. Lowlands to 1900 m, w of Andes,
of w Ecuador and nw Peru; from n,e Colombia, Venezuela (locally) and Trinidad
s through e Ecuador, ne Peru, n Bolivia and Amazonian, se Brazil to e Paraguay
and ne Argentina.
Machaeropterus pyrocephalus FIERY-CAPPED MANAKIN.
Humid forest, dense second growth. Locally in lowlands to 500 m of
s Venezuela, e Peru, n Bolivia and ne,c Brazil.
Machaeropterus regulus STRIPED MANAKIN. Humid
forest. Lowlands to 1500 m of Colombia, nw,s Venezuela, e Ecuador,
ne Peru, and w Amazonian, e Brazil. M. r. striolatus may be a separate
species.
Machaeropterus deliciosus CLUB-WINGED MANAKIN.
Humid mossy forest, second-growth woodland. Andean slopes, 400-1900
m, from cw Colombia s to nw Ecuador.
Xenopipo atronitens BLACK MANAKIN. Thickets
in savanna, woodland. Lowlands to 1200 m, e of Andes, of se Colombia,
s Venezuela, extreme se Peru, ne Bolivia and Amazonian Brazil.
Chloropipo unicolor JET MANAKIN. Humid forest.
Mts., 1200-2600 m, of e Ecuador and n,c Peru.
Chloropipo uniformis OLIVE MANAKIN. Humid
forest. Pantepui, 800-2100 m, of s Venezuela, w Guiana and adj. n
Brazil.
Chloropipo holochlora GREEN MANAKIN. Humid
forest undergrowth. Lowlands to 1300 m of e Panama, w Colombia, e
Ecuador and e Peru. The isolated race litae may be a separate species.
Chloropipo flavicapilla YELLOW-HEADED MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Mts., 1200-2400 m, of Colombia.
Neopipo cinnamomea CINNAMON TYRANT-MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes, from se Colombia, s
Venezuela and Guianas s through e Ecuador to e Peru and Amazonian, ne Brazil.
Heterocercus flavivertex YELLOW-CRESTED MANAKIN.
Humid forest, second growth. Lowlands to 300 m, e of Andes, in e
Colombia, s Venezuela and n Amazonian Brazil. H. linteatus and H.
aurantiivertex are sometimes considered conspecific with H. flavivertex.
Heterocercus aurantiivertex ORANGE-CRESTED MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Lowlands of e Ecuador and ne Peru.
Heterocercus linteatus FLAME-CRESTED MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Lowlands of ne Peru, w,c Amazonian Brazil and extreme
ne Bolivia.
Neopelma chrysocephalum SAFFRON-CRESTED TYRANT-MANAKIN.
Forest, open savanna. Lowlands to 750 m of se Colombia, s Venezuela,
Guianas and nw Brazil. Sometimes treated as a race of N. aurifrons.
Neopelma sulphureiventer SULPHUR-BELLIED TYRANT-MANAKIN.
Forest undergrowth, mostly bamboo. Lowlands, e of Andes, in e Peru,
n,e Bolivia and w Brazil.
Neopelma pallescens PALE-BELLIED TYRANT-MANAKIN.
Savanna, dense low woodland. Lowlands of e,c Brazil and ne Bolivia.
Neopelma aurifrons WIED'S TYRANT-MANAKIN.
Forest. Lowlands of e Brazil.
Tyranneutes stolzmanni DWARF TYRANT-MANAKIN.
Humid forest. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes, from se Colombia and
s Venezuela s through e Ecuador and e Peru to n Bolivia and Amazonian Brazil.
Tyranneutes virescens TINY TYRANT-MANAKIN.
Forest. Lowlands to 500 m of se Venezuela, Guyana, Surinam and Brazil.
Piprites pileatus BLACK-CAPPED PIPRITES. Forest,
edge, woodland. Lowlands of coastal se Brazil and ne Argentina.
Biochemical data suggest that Piprites is not piprine.
Piprites griseiceps GREY-HEADED PIPRITES.
Humid forest, dense second-growth woodland. Caribbean lowlands to
900 m of e Guatemala, e Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica.
Piprites chloris WING-BARRED PIPRITES. Humid
forest. Lowlands to 2400 m of n,c,se Colombia, Venezuela and Guianas
s, w of Andes, to nw Ecuador and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador, e,c Peru
and Brazil to n,e Bolivia, Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Family THAMNOPHILIDAE
Cymbilaimus lineatus FASCIATED ANTSHRIKE. Humid
forest undergrowth, second growth, thickets. Lowlands to 1300 m on
Caribbean slope of se Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica, both slopes of
Panama and from Colombia, w,s Venezuela and Guianas s, e of Andes, through
e Ecuador and e Peru to n Bolivia and Amazonian,n Brazil.
Cymbilaimus sanctaemariae BAMBOO ANTSHRIKE.
Bamboo thickets. Lowlands to 1200 m of se Peru, w Amazonian Brazil
and n Bolivia. Usually considered a race of C. lineatus, but they
are sympatric and distinct.
Hypoedaleus guttatus SPOT-BACKED ANTSHRIKE.
Forest, bamboo. E,se Brazil, e Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Batara cinerea GIANT ANTSHRIKE. Forest undergrowth,
bamboo. E,se Bolivia, nw,ne Argentina, Paraguay and se Brazil.
Mackenziaena severa TUFTED ANTSHRIKE. Forest
undergrowth. Se Brazil, e Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Mackenziaena leachii LARGE-TAILED ANTSHRIKE.
Forest undergrowth, bamboo. Se Brazil, e Paraguay and ne Argentina.
Frederickena viridis BLACK-THROATED ANTSHRIKE.
Humid forest, savanna. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes, in s Venezuela,
Guianas and n Brazil, n of Amazon River.
Frederickena unduligera UNDULATED ANTSHRIKE.
Humid forest undergrowth. Lowlands to 500 m, e of Andes, of se Colombia,
e Ecuador, e Peru, n Bolivia and w Amazonian Brazil.
Taraba major GREAT ANTSHRIKE. Humid forest
undergrowth, swampy forest, edge, humid thickets, bamboo, dense grassy
areas, dry forest. Lowlands to 2200 m from Mexico in Veracruz, n
Oaxaca, Tabasco and Chiapas s along Caribbean slope to Nicaragua, both
slopes of Costa Rica and Panama and from Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad
and Guianas s, w of Andes, to nw Peru and, e of Andes, through e Ecuador,
e Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay and Brazil to Uruguay and n Argentina.
Sakesphorus canadensis BLACK-CRESTED ANTSHRIKE. Open
forest, savanna, mangroves, brush, farmlands, arid cactus. Lowlands
to 500 m of n,e Colombia, Venezuela, Guianas, ne Peru and nw Amazonian
Brazil.
Sakesphorus cristatus SILVERY-CHEEKED ANTSHRIKE.
Savanna, caatinga. E Brazil.
Sakesphorus bernardi COLLARED ANTSHRIKE.
Arid scrub. Lowlands of w Ecuador and nw,nc Peru.
Sakesphorus melanonotus BLACK-BACKED ANTSHRIKE.
Thick scrub, semi-arid country. Lowlands to 500 m of ne Colombia
and w, n Venezuela.
Sakesphorus melanothorax BAND-TAILED ANTSHRIKE.
Forest undergrowth. Locally in lowlands of sw Surinam, French Guiana
and Amazonian Brazil.
Sakesphorus luctuosus GLOSSY ANTSHRIKE. Riparian
thickets. Amazonian, c Brazil.
Biatas nigropectus WHITE-BEARDED ANTSHRIKE.
Forest undergrowth. Se Brazil and ne Argentina.
|