Mouse-colored antshrike
The mouse-colored antshrike is a species of 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 mouse-colored antshrike was described by the English ornithologists Philip Sclater and Osbert Salvin in 1868 and given its current binomial name Thamnophilus murinus. It and the plain-winged antshrike are sister species.The mouse-colored antshrike has three subspecies, the nominate T. m. murinus, T. canipennis, and T. cayennensis.
Description
The mouse-colored antshrike is long and weighs. Members of genus Thamnophilus are largish members of the antbird family; all have stout bills with a hook like those of true shrikes. This species exhibits significant sexual dimorphism. Adult males of the nominate subspecies have gray upperparts with a hidden white patch between their scapulars. Their wings are dark yellowish brown that is somewhat rufous in the eastern part of its range; their wing coverts are grayer with buffy white tips. Their tail is brownish black and gray with white feather tips. Their underparts are a paler gray than their upperparts, especially on their throat and belly, and the center of their belly often is white. Adult females have a dull rufous forehead and crown. Their upperparts are olive-brown. Their wings are brown, and like the males' more rufous in the east; their wing coverts and flight feathers have buffy white tips and edges. Their tail is warm brown with thin white tips on the outer feathers. Their underparts are pale gray with an olive tinge on the flanks and a yellowish brown tinge on the breast, sides, and crissum. Both sexes have a gray or brown iris. Males of subspecies T. cayennensis have somewhat more reddish brown wings than the nominate. Males of T. canipennis have gray wings and wing coverts with grayish white tips and edges; both sexes have a gray iris.Distribution and habitat
The nominate subspecies of the mouse-colored antshrike is found from east-central Colombia's Guainía and Vaupés departments east through southern Venezuela, Guyana, and Suriname and through Brazil north of the Amazon from the Negro River as far as northeastern Amazonas state. Subspecies T. cayennensis is found in French Guiana and in northeastern Brazil north of the Amazon in Amapá and Pará states. T. canipennis is found from southeastern Colombia's Amazonas Department south through most of eastern Ecuador into eastern Peru as far south as northwestern Madre de Dios Department and into extreme northern Bolivia. Its range also extends east into western Brazil to the Japurá River and beyond south of the Amazon to the Madeira River.The mouse-colored antshrike primarily inhabits lowland terra firme and white-sand evergreen forest. It favors the forest understorey to mid-storey, usually in the forest interior but also at its edges. In elevation it is found below in Colombia, below in Ecuador, below in Peru, and below in Venezuela and Brazil.