Band-tailed antbird
The band-tailed antbird is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, and Peru.
Taxonomy and systematics
The band-tailed antbird was described by the Austrian ornithologist August von Pelzeln in 1868 and given the binomial name Hypocnemis maculicauda.; it was later transferred to genus Hypocnemoides. It shares that genus with the black-chinned antbird. However, some authors have said that the "easons for treatment of Hypocnemoides maculicauda as a separate species from H. melanopogon are weak".The band-tailed antbird is monotypic. One ornithologist proposed that the eastern population be treated as a subspecies H. m. orientalis but later work discounted that treatment.
Description
The band-tailed antbird is about long and weighs. Adult males have leaden gray upperparts with a large but usually hidden white patch between their scapulars. Their tail is slate gray with wide white feather tips. Their flight feathers are leaden gray with lighter gray edges and their wing coverts are black with gray and white edges. Their throat is black. Their underparts are mostly a paler gray than their upperparts and with a white belly. Adult females have the same leaden upperparts as males. Their throat and most of their underparts are white. Their breast feathers have gray edges. Their sides are gray and the sides of their breast and belly have a very slight buff tinge. Both sexes have a gray iris and blue-gray legs and feet. Males have a black bill; females have a black maxilla and a gray mandible.Distribution and habitat
Most sources place the band-tailed antbird in the Amazon Basin from eastern Peru east through northern Bolivia and central Brazil to the Atlantic, all south of the Amazon River. However, the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society includes Colombia in the species' range on the basis of a 2020 publication. Xeno-canto has a single song recording from 2022 in extreme southern Colombia.The band-tailed antbird inhabits lowland evergreen forest, almost always in várzea forest along larger rivers, along smaller watercourses, and along the edges of lakes. It favors low vegetation that overhangs water.