Grey-capped flycatcher
The grey-capped flycatcher is a passerine bird, a member of the large tyrant flycatcher family Tyrannidae. It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The grey-capped flycatcher has three subspecies, the nominate M. g. granadensis, M. g. occidentalis, and M. g. obscurior. At least one author has suggested that M. g. occidentalis should be merged into the nominate.Description
The grey-capped flycatcher is long and weighs. The sexes have almost the same plumage. Adult males of the nominate subspecies have a gray crown and nape with a mostly hidden orange-yellow to reddish orange patch in the center of the crown. Females sometimes have a smaller patch or none at all. Adults of both sexes have a white forehead that extends as a thin supercilium to just past the eye. They have dusky lores and ear coverts. Their upperparts are mostly olive-green with dusky to dark olive uppertail coverts that have paler edges. Their wings are dusky grayish brown with pale olive-green lesser coverts and olive edges on all the coverts. Their remiges are dusky grayish brown with light yellowish olive or cinnamon edges. Their tail is dusky grayish brown with pale olive edges on the feathers. Their chin and throat are white to yellowish white and their underparts are bright yellow with a slight olive tinge on the sides of the breast. Juveniles have a grayish olive tinge on the crown and nape and little or no orange on the crown. Compared to adults they have lighter tawny brown or cinnamon edges on the wing coverts, wider, more tawny, edges on the tail feathers, and slightly paler underparts. Subspecies M. g. occidentalis is slightly smaller than the nominate but otherwise the same. M. g. obscurior is larger and somewhat darker than the nominate. All subspecies have a pale brownish gray iris, a stubby black bill, and black legs and feet.The grey-capped flycatcher is similar to its congener the social flycatcher, which has a stronger black and white head pattern.
Distribution and habitat
The grey-capped flycatcher has a disjunct distribution. The nominate subspecies is found on the Caribbean slope of eastern Honduras and Nicaragua south on the Caribbean and Pacific slopes through Costa Rica to central Panama. Subspecies M. g. occidentalis is found from Darién Province in eastern Panama and west of the Andes south through northern and western Colombia into northwestern Ecuador to northern Manabí Province. M. g. obscurior is found apart from the other two subspecies. It ranges from the lower Magdalena River valley in Colombia south though eastern Ecuador and eastern Peru into northern Bolivia and from the east side of Colombia's Eastern Andes into southeastern Venezuela's Amazonas and western Bolívar states and in western Brazil's northern Roraima, western Amazonas, and Rondônia states.The grey-capped flycatcher inhabits a variety of humid landscapes in the tropical and lower subtropical zones, most of which are somewhat open. These include the edges and shrubby clearings of evergreen forest, secondary forest, gallery forest, and agricultural areas with scattered trees. It often occurs near areas of standing water. In elevation it ranges mostly from sea level to overall but reaches in Honduras. It reaches in Costa Rica, in Colombia and Ecuador, in Peru, only in Venezuela, and in Brazil.