Common scale-backed antbird
The common scale-backed antbird is a species of passerine bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The common scale-backed antbird has a complicated taxonomic history. It was described and illustrated by the German ornithologist Jean Cabanis in 1847 and given the binomial name Hypocnemis poecilinotus. The specific epithet is from the Ancient Greek poikilonōtos "with variegated back". It was subsequently included in the genus Hylophylax, but was found to not be closely related to the other species in the genus and then was briefly placed in genus Dichropogon. This name is preoccupied by a genus of asilid flies so the current genus Willisornis was created for it.The common scale-backed antbird has these five subspecies:W. p. poecilinotus W. p. duidae W. p. lepidonota W. p. griseiventris W. p. gutturalis
The plumages of the subspecies differ greatly, leading to speculation that some of them should be recognized as full species. The South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society is seeking a formal proposal to consider the issue.
What are now the two subspecies of the Xingu scale-backed antbird were previously included in W. poecilinotus.
Description
The common scale-backed antbird is long and weighs. Adult males of the nominate subspecies W. p. poecilinotus are mostly gray; their upperparts are darker than their underparts. They have a white patch between the scapulars. Their lower back has white-edged black patches that give it its English name. Their wings and tail are black with white edges and tips on many feathers. Adult females have a reddish yellow-brown crown and face. Their upperparts are mostly olive-brown with buff-edged brownish black patches on the lower back. They also have a white patch between the scapulars. Their flight feathers are blackish brown with reddish brown edges and their tail is dark olive-brown with white spots and a blackish band near the end. Their throat is pale grayish white. Their underparts are gray with a reddish yellow-brown tinge on the flanks.Females of subspecies W. p. duidae have a black lower back and rump with wide white feather edges, a white-spotted black tail, reddish yellow-brown underparts with a cinnamon-rufous center to the belly, and olive-brown tinged flanks. Females of W. p. lepidonota are similar to those of duidae but paler and with a browner crown and a light buff center to the belly. Females of W. p. griseiventris have a rufous-buff face, a plain lower back and rump, a pale gray throat, and gray underparts. Males of W. p. gutturalis have a black throat; females resemble female lepidonota but with a pale olive center to the belly.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the common scale-backed antbird are found thus:W. p. poecilinotus: central and southeastern Venezuela, the Guianas, and northeastern Brazil from Roraima to AmapáW. p. duidae: east-central Colombia, southwestern Venezuela, and northwestern Brazil along the Rio NegroW. p. lepidonota: southeastern Colombia, eastern Ecuador, and northeastern and east-central PeruW. p. griseiventris: south-central and southeastern Peru, northern Bolivia, and southwestern Amazonian Brazil between the rios Juruá and Madeira south into western Mato GrossoW. p. gutturalis: northeastern Peru and western Amazonian Brazil to the Rio JuruáThe common scale-backed antbird primarily inhabits the understorey of humid terra firme evergreen forest. It also occurs in várzea and igapó forest. In elevation it reaches in Brazil, in Venezuela, and in Colombia. In Ecuador it mostly occurs below but does reach. In Peru it occurs locally to but is mostly below.