Handsome flycatcher
The handsome flycatcher is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and possibly Bolivia.
Taxonomy and systematics
The handsome flycatcher was originally described as Myiobius pulcher. It was later moved to genus Myiophobus. A study published in 2009 determined that the handsome flycatcher and two other species did not belong there so the genus Nephelomyias was created for them in 2010.The handsome flycatcher has three subspecies, the nominate N. p. pulcher, N. p. bellus, and N. p. oblitus.
Description
The handsome flycatcher is long. The sexes very similar. Adult males of the nominate subspecies have an olive gray crown with a partly hidden orange-rufous patch in the middle. Both sexes have a white spot above the lores and a white broken eye-ring on an otherwise olive gray face. Their nape is olive gray and their back and rump are olive. Their wings are dusky with ochre and white edges on the flight feathers and wide pale ochre tips on the wing coverts; the latter show as two wing bars. Their rather short tail is dusky. Their throat and breast are dull ochre-yellow and their belly paler yellow. Adult females have a duller and smaller crown patch or none at all. Subspecies N. p. bellus is slightly larger than the nominate and has darker grayish green upperparts, deeper ochre wing bars, and a deep ochre band across the breast. N. p. oblitus is similar to the nominate but with a darker crown and some buffy edges on the flight feathers. All subspecies have a dark iris, gray legs and feet, and a small bill with a black maxilla and an orange-yellow mandible.Distribution and habitat
The handsome flycatcher has a disjunct distribution. The nominate subspecies is found on the western slope of the Andes from Valle del Cauca Department in western Colombia south into northwestern Ecuador as far as Cotopaxi Province. Subspecies N. p. bellus has two separate ranges though possibly the species also occurs between them. One is in Colombia's Central and Eastern Andes and south on the eastern Andean slope into northeastern Ecuador as far as Pichincha Province. The other is from Zamora-Chinchipe Province in far southeastern Ecuador and slightly into northern Peru's Cajamarca Department. N. p. oblitus is found on the eastern slope of the Peruvian Andes in Cuzco and Puno departments. In addition, undocumented records of this subspecies in Bolivia lead the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society to call it hypothetical in that country.The handsome flycatcher inhabits the interior and edges of humid subtropical forest both primary and secondary. In elevation it ranges between in Colombia, between in Ecuador, between in northern Peru, and between in southern Peru.