Yellow-browed antbird
The yellow-browed antbird, or yellow-browed antwarbler, is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru.
Taxonomy and systematics
The yellow-browed antbird was described by the English zoologist Philip Sclater in 1869 and given its current binomial name Hypocnemis hypoxantha. The specific epithet combines the Ancient Greek hupo meaning "beneath" and xanthos meaning "yellow". The yellow-browed antbird is the only species of genus Hypocnemis that was not formerly a member of the warbling antbird complex, and it might be more closely related to some members of genus Drymophila than to the other Hypocnemis species.The yellow-browed antbird has two subspecies, the nominate H. h. hypoxantha and ''H. h. ochraceiventris''
Description
The yellow-browed antbird is long and weighs. Adult males of the nominate subspecies have a black crown with white spots down its center. They have a bright lemon yellow supercilium and ear coverts, a black line through the eye, and a black malar "moustache". Their upperparts, sides, flanks, and tail are light grayish olive. Their flight feathers are grayish olive with white tips and their wing coverts black with white tips. Their throat and underparts are bright lemon yellow with some black streaks on the side of the breast. Adult females are similar to males but are overall paler and their crown center and wing covert tips are light buff. Subspecies H. h. ochraceiventris is larger than the nominate. It is overall somewhat browner, with paler yellow underparts, more streaking on the breast, and pale ochraceous buff flanks. Both sexes of both subspecies have a brown iris, a black maxilla, and gray legs and feet. Males have a black mandible and females a gray one.Distribution and habitat
The yellow-browed antbird has a disjunct distribution The nominate subspecies has by far the larger range of the two. It is found from the southern Colombian departments of Caquetá, Guaviare, and Vaupés south through eastern Ecuador into northern Peru. There its range extends to the Marañón River in the central north and in the northeast extends south to the Department of Ucayali. Its range extends east from Colombia and northern Peru into western Amazonian Brazil. North of the Amazon the subspecies occurs to the Negro River and south of the Amazon to the Javari and Juruá rivers. Subspecies H. h. ochraceiventris is found in Brazil south of the Amazon from the Tapajós and its tributary Teles Pires rivers east to the Xingu River.The yellow-browed antbird inhabits the understorey to mid-storey of the interior of terra firme forest and mature secondary forest. It is a bird of the lowlands, in elevation reaching only about in Colombia and Ecuador.