Cinnamon becard
The cinnamon becard is a passerine bird in the family Tityridae, the tityras, becards, and allies. It is found in Mexico, in every Central American country except El Salvador, and in Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The genus Pachyramphus has variously been assigned to the tyrant flycatcher family Tyrannidae and the cotinga family Cotingidae. Several early twenty-first century studies confirmed the placement of Pachyramphus in Tityridae and taxonomic systems made the reassignment. In 1998 the American Ornithological Society was unsure where to place the genus and listed its members as incertae sedis but in 2011 moved them to Tityridae. In 1998 the American Ornithological Society was unsure where to place the genus and listed its members as incertae sedis but in 2011 moved them to Tityridae.The cinnamon becard and the chestnut-crowned becard are sister species and form a superspecies.
The cinnamon becard has these four subspecies:
- P. c. fulvidior Griscom, 1932
- P. c. cinnamomeus Lawrence, 1861
- P. c. magdalenae Chapman, 1914
- P. c. badius Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1955
Description
The cinnamon becard is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies P. c. cinnamomeus have a deep rufous crown, dusky lores, a pale buff line above the lores, and ochraceous tawny cheeks. Their upperparts are mostly rufous or chestnut-rufous to rufous-tawny. Their wings are rufous that is darker and duskier on the primary coverts. Their tail is rufous. Their underparts are ochraceous tawny to cinnamon-buff or to tawny-buff that is paler on the throat and belly and has a rufous tinge across the breast. Subspecies P. c. fulvidior is more richly colored than the nominate. P. c. magdalenae has underparts that are more whitish than the nominate's and with a cinnamon wash. P. c. badius is similar to magdaleneae but slightly darker. All subspecies have a dark iris, a blackish bill with often a paler grayish mandible, and dark gray legs and feet.Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the cinnamon becard are found thus:- P. c. fulvidior: from southeastern Veracruz and northeastern Oaxaca in southeastern Mexico south through central and southern Belize, northern Guatemala, and the Caribbean slopes of Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica into western Panama; on the Pacific slope from Costa Rica's Puntarenas Province south into western Panama
- P. c. cinnamomeus: from Darién Province in eastern Panama south into northwestern Colombia; south in Colombia's Eastern Andes regularly to Meta Department and at least occasionally further south; south through western Colombia and through western Ecuador almost to Peru.
- P. c. magdalenae: northern Colombia's Magdalena River valley and from northern Sucre Department east into western Venezuela's Zulia, Táchira, and Mérida states
- P. c. badius: western Venezuela on the east slope of the Andes in Táchira