Northern scrub flycatcher
The northern scrub flycatcher is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found in Aruba, Bonaire, Colombia, Costa Rica, Curaçao, French Guiana, Guyana, Panama, Suriname, Trinidad, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
What are now the northern scrub flycatcher, Amazonian scrub flycatcher, and southern scrub flycatcher were previously members of the single species named scrub flycatcher with the binomial S. modestus. The further taxonomy of the three scrub flycatchers has not been fully resolved.As of late 2024, the northern scrub flycatcher was assigned these six subspecies:
- S. a. arenarum
- S. a. atrirostris
- S. a. glaber Sclater, PL & Salvin, 1868
- S. a. tortugensis Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1946
- S. a. pallens Zimmer, JT, 1941
- S. a. orinocensis Zimmer, JT, 1941
Description
The northern scrub flycatcher is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies S. a. arenarum have a grayish brown crown that sometimes erects as a shaggy crest. Their face is mostly whitish to pale gray with a whitish supercilium, a dark line through the eye, and a darker gray to the back of the ear coverts. Their back and rump are grayish brown. Their wings are dusky gray with paler grayish to whitish edges on the flight feathers and tips of the wing coverts; the latter show as two wing bars. Their tail is dusky with white tips on the feathers. Their chin is whitish, their throat and breast pale gray, and their belly medium yellow; their breast and belly are sharply demarcated. All subspecies have a dark brown iris, a stubby black bill, and gray legs and feet. Juveniles resemble adults.The other subspecies of the northern scrub flycatcher differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- S. a. glaber: larger than nominate with darker, olive-brown, upperparts and duller whitish to buff wing bars
- S. a. atrirostris: paler gray-brown upperparts, a duller white throat, and paler gray breast and flanks than nominate
- S. a. pallens: slightly smaller and paler gray above than atrirostris with a whiter throat and breast
- S. a. tortugensis: throat even whiter than palens; otherwise the same
- S. a. orinocensis: smallest and palest subspecies
Distribution and habitat
The northern scrub flycatcher has a disjunct distribution. The subspecies are found thus:- S. a. arenarum: around the Gulf of Nicoya in northwestern Costa Rica and Golfo Dulce in southwestern Costa Rica; intermittently along Pacific slope of Panama to western Darién Province; Coiba Island and the Pearl Islands off western Panama
- S. a. atrirostris: northern Colombia from Sucre and Bolívar departments to La Guajira Department
- S. a. glaber: northern Venezuela from Zulia east to Sucre; Venezuela's Margarita and Patos Islands and Los Roques Archipelago; Trinidad and adjoining islets; coastal Guyana, French Guiana, and Suriname
- S. a. tortugensis: Venezuela's La Tortuga Island
- S. a. pallens: Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao
- S. a. orinocensis: valley of the Orinoco River from eastern Meta Department in Colombia east into western Venezuela and intermittently beyond to northern Bolívar state