Tropical royal flycatcher
The tropical royal flycatcher is a passerine bird that most taxonomic systems place in family Onychorhynchidae. It is found in Mexico, south through most of Central America, and in every mainland South American country except Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy
The tropical royal flycatcher was formally described in 1776 by the German zoologist Philipp Statius Müller under the binomial name Muscicapa coronata. Müller based his account on a hand-colored illustration of the "Tyran hupé de Cayenne" that had been engraved by François-Nicolas Martinet. The specific epithet is from Latin coronatus meaning "crowned". The tropical royal flycatcher is now placed together with Atlantic royal flycatcher in the genus Onychorhynchus that was introduced in 1810 by the German naturalist Gotthelf Fischer von Waldheim.After a complicated history, the International Ornithological Committee and the Clements taxonomy placed the tropical royal flycatcher and the Atlantic royal flycatcher in family Onychorhynchidae.
However, the tropical royal flycatcher's taxonomy remains unsettled. The North and South American Classification Committees of the American Ornithological Society combine the tropical and Atlantic royal flycatchers as the widespread royal flycatcher. Like the IOC and Clements the AOS places O. coronatus in family Onychorhynchidae, and the three systems include other species in that family. BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World treats the tropical and Atlantic royal flycatchers as four species and retains them in family Tityridae where the IOC and Clements had earlier placed them.
The IOC and Clements recognize these five subspecies of the tropical royal flycatcher:O. c. castelnaui Deville, 1849O. c. coronatus O. c. mexicanus O. c. fraterculus Bangs, 1902O. c. occidentalis
Subspecies O. c. mexicanus and O. c. occidentalis have sometimes been treated as separate species.
Description
The tropical royal flycatcher is approximately long and weighs. It has an erectile fan-shaped crest. In the nominate subspecies O. c. coronatus it is red with blue tips in the male and yellow or orange in the female. The sexes' plumages are otherwise alike. Adults have a broken buffy eye ring and a faint buffy streak on the cheek. Their upperparts are dark brown with narrow black and buffy bars on the lower back. Their rump and tail are cinnamon-rufous that is browner towards the end of the tail. Their wings are dark brown with small buff spots on the tips of the coverts and tertials. Their throat is whitish, their breast warm buff with narrow black bars, and their belly plain warm buff. Their iris is various shades of brown, their maxilla dark brown to blackish, their mandible horn to yellowish or orange, and their legs and feet dull yellow or orangish.Subspecies O. c. castelnaui is very like the nominate, though slightly smaller and with less barring on the back. O. c. mexicanus is the largest subspecies. Its upperparts are not as dark as the nominate's, its tail more rufous, its chin and throat white, and its breast has less barring. O. c. fraterculus is slightly smaller than mexicanus, with a paler cinnamon rump and tail and even less barring on the breast. O. c. occidentalis is about the same size as fraterculus. It is mostly bright buffy brown, with a pale tawny tail and an unmarked breast. The male's crest is more red than the nominate's orange, with black tips.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the tropical royal flycatcher are found thus:O. c. castelnaui: east of the Andes in western Amazonia, from southeastern Colombia and Venezuela's Amazonas state south through Ecuador into Peru and northern Bolivia and east in Brazil to the Rio Negro and Rio TapajósO. c. coronatus: southern and eastern Venezuela, the Guianas, and in Brazil east of the Rio Negro and Rio TapajósO. c. mexicanus: southeastern Mexico to PanamaO. c. fraterculus: northern Colombia and northwestern VenezuelaO. c. occidentalis: western Ecuador discontinuously from Esmeraldas Province to El Oro Province and slightly into Peru's Department of TumbesThe tropical royal flycatcher inhabits humid lowlands, both primary evergreen and second growth forests. It is a bird of the lower levels and midstory, often along streams and in seasonally flooded várzea forest. In elevation it ranges from sea level to in much of Central America and Colombia though lower in Costa Rica. In Brazil it occurs below, in eastern Ecuador below, and in western Ecuador below.