Bicolored antbird
The bicolored antbird is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama.
Taxonomy and systematics
What is now the bicolored antbird was originally described as Myrmeciza leucaspis and included what is now the white-cheeked antbird. The current bicolored antbird was described as a separate taxon by the American amateur ornithologist George Newbold Lawrence in 1863 and given the binomial name Pithys bicolor. The two were split into separate species based on the results of a genetic study published in 2007 that found that the white-cheeked antbird was more similar to the rufous-throated antbird than it was to the bicolored antbird. These three antbirds are the only members of genus Gymnopithys.The bicolored antbird has these five subspecies:G. b. olivascens G. b. bicolor G. b. daguae Hellmayr, 1906G. b. aequatorialis G. b. ruficeps Salvin & Godman, 1892
[Image:Bicolored Antbird RWD.jpg|thumb|left|Soberania National Park, Panama]
Description
The bicolored antbird is long and weighs. The sexes are the same. Adults of the nominate subspecies G. b. bicolor have a brownish chestnut crown and nape. They have bare blue-gray skin around the eye, a gray forehead, a broad gray band behind the eye, and black cheeks. Their back, rump, wings, and tail are brownish chestnut. Their throat and breast are white with a brown band from their cheek along their flanks.Subspecies G. b. olivascens of the bicolored antbird is much like the nominate but is dull brown behind the eye rather than gray. G. b. daguae is like a darker olivascens. G. b. aequatorialis is darker still, with a rufous forehead and blacker sides. G. b. ruficeps has a brighter rufous forehead and crown than aequatorialis, is blacker behind the eye, and has a darker reddish back and redder sides.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the bicolored antbird are found thus:G. b. olivascens: Caribbean slope of Honduras and Nicaragua through Costa Rica on the Caribbean and Pacific slopes into western PanamaG. b. bicolor: central and easterm Panama into the Pacific slope of northwestern Colombia's Chocó DepartmentG. b. daguae: Pacific slope of western Colombia from Chocó south to Cauca DepartmentG. b. aequatorialis: Pacific slope of extreme southwestern Colombia into western Ecuador as far as Azuay ProvinceG. b. ruficeps: Andes of northern Colombia between Antioquia and Cesar departments and south in the Magdalena Valley to Boyacá DepartmentThe bicolored antbird primarily inhabits lowland and foothill terra firme evergreen forest and nearby mature secondary forest. It almost entirely remains in the forest undergrowth. In elevation it reaches in parts of Central America though only in Costa Rica and in Panama. In Colombia it occurs below and in Ecuador below.