White-bearded antshrike
The white-bearded antshrike is a Vulnerable species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is endemic to Argentina and Brazil.
Taxonomy and systematics
The white-bearded antshrike was described by the French ornithologist Frédéric de Lafresnaye in 1850 and given the binomial name Anabates nigro-pectus. It was later moved to its current genus Biatas that was erected by the German ornithologists Jean Cabanis and Ferdinand Heine in 1860 with the white-bearded antshrike as the type species. The name of the genus is from the Ancient Greek biatas meaning "tyrant". Its specific epithet combines the Latin words niger meaning "black" and pectus meaning "breast".The white-bearded antshrike is the only member of its genus and has no subspecies.
Description
The white-bearded antshrike is long. This species exhibits some sexual dimorphism, and both sexes have a crest. Adult males have a black forehead, crown, and upper nape. The black of the crown extends down to the lores and eyes except for a faint white line through the eye. Their chin and the rest of their face are white that becomes pale buff around the lower nape. Their upperparts are reddish yellow-brown and their wings and tail are rufous. Their lower throat and breast are black and the rest of their underparts clay-colored. Females have a rufous-brown crown, a distinct white supercilium, and no black on the throat and breast. Their back, wings, tail, and lower underparts are like the male's.Distribution and habitat
The white-bearded antshrike has a disjunct distribution. It is found intermittently in south-eastern Brazil from Minas Gerais south into northeastern Santa Catarina and in northeastern Argentina's Misiones Province. Though the International Ornithological Committee also includes eastern Paraguay in its range, the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society has no records from that country, and the Clements taxonomy does not include it.The white-bearded antshrike is a bamboo specialist. It primarily inhabits bamboo in evergreen forest and mature secondary forest, and in parts of Brazil is found only in very large stands of Merostachys bamboo. It also occurs in the ecotone between cerrado and secondary forest in Minas Gerais and in Araucaria forest in Paraná, but always in association with bamboo. An extensive survey in Misiones, Argentina, found it only in stands of Guadua trinii bamboo. In all areas it favors the forests' understorey to mid-storey. In elevation it ranges between.