Red-crowned ant tanager
The red-crowned ant tanager is a medium-sized passerine bird from tropical America. It is the only species now placed in the genus Habia. This species was long placed with the tanagers, but it is actually closer to the cardinals.
Taxonomy
The red-crowned ant tanager was formally described in 1817 by the French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot. He placed it in the genus Saltator and coined the binomial name Saltator rubicus. He specified the locality as Paraguay. The specific epithet is from Medieval Latin rubicus meaning "reddish". The red-crowned ant tanager is now the only species placed in the genus Habia that was introduced in 1840 by Edward Blyth. The genus name is a word used for various finches and tanagers in the Guarani language of Paraguay.There are 17 recognised subspecies:H. r. holobrunnea Griscom, 1930 – east MexicoH. r. rosea – southwest MexicoH. r. affinis – south Oaxaca H. r. nelsoni – Yucatán Peninsula H. r. rubicoides – central south, south Mexico to Honduras and El SalvadorH. r. vinacea – west Costa Rica and PanamaH. r. alfaroana – northwest Costa RicaH. r. perijana Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1957 – north Colombia and northwest VenezuelaH. r. coccinea – central north Colombia and west VenezuelaH. r. crissalis Parkes, 1969 – northeast VenezuelaH. r. rubra – TrinidadH. r. mesopotamia Parkes, 1969 – east VenezuelaH. r. rhodinolaema – east Colombia, east Ecuador, northeast Peru and northwest BrazilH. r. peruviana – east Peru, west Brazil and north BoliviaH. r. hesterna Griscom & Greenway, 1937 – central BrazilH. r. bahiae Hellmayr, 1936 – east BrazilH. r. rubica – east Paraguay, southeast Brazil and northeast Argentina
Description
The red-crowned ant tanagers is long and weighs or . The adult male of the nominate subspecies is dull reddish brown with a brighter red throat and breast. The black-bordered scarlet crown stripe is raised when the bird is excited. The female is yellowish brown with a yellow throat and yellow-buff crown stripe.It is a shy but noisy bird. Its call is a rattle followed by a musical pee-pee-pee.