Ochre-faced tody-flycatcher
The ochre-faced tody-flycatcher is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The ochre-faced tody-flycatcher was originally described in 1846 as Todirostrum plumbeiceps. For a time in the early twentieth century it was assigned to genus Euscarthmornis and then returned to Todirostrum. Following a 1988 publication, taxonomic systems moved plumbeiceps and several other species from Todirostrum to genus Poecilotriccus. By the early twenty-first century genus Poecilotriccus had species called both "tody-tyrant" and "tody-flycatcher" so taxonomic systems began renaming the "tyrants" to "flycatcher". The ochre-faced and the ruddy tody-flycatcher form a superspecies.The ochre-faced tody-flycatcher has these four subspecies:
- P. p. obscurus
- P. p. viridiceps
- P. p. plumbeiceps
- ''P. p. cinereipectus''
Description
The ochre-faced tody-flycatcher is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies P. p. plumbeiceps have a buffish cinnamon forehead and a gray crown. Their face is mostly buffish cinnamon with dusky ear coverts. Their back, rump, and uppertail coverts are dark olive. Their wings are dusky with ochraceous edges on the flight feathers and tips on the coverts; the latter show as two wing bars. Their tail is dark olive. Their throat is a slightly paler buffish cinnamon than the face. Their breast and belly are grayish white. Subspecies P. p. viridiceps has an olive tinge on the crown and a grayer breast than the nominate. P. p. obscurus resembles viridiceps but is darker overall. P. p. cinereipectus has a grayer breast than the nominate. All subspecies have a brown iris, a dark grayish bill, and dark grayish legs and feet.Distribution and habitat
The ochre-faced tody-flycatcher has a disjunct distribution. The subspecies are found thus:- P. p. obscurus: eastern slope of the Andes from Cuzco Department in southeastern Peru south into Bolivia as far as Santa Cruz Department
- P. p. viridiceps: eastern slope of the Andes from Chuquisaca Department in southern Bolivia south into northwestern Argentina as far as Salta Province
- P. p. plumbeiceps: eastern Paraguay, Misiones and Corrientes provinces in northeastern Argentina, southeastern Brazil from (Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo states south through Rio Grande do Sul, and extreme northeastern Uruguay
- P. p. cinereipectus: northeastern and east-central Brazil from Pernambuco south to southeastern Minas Gerais and Espírito Santo
The ochre-faced tody-flycatcher inhabits the edges of humid forest and also dense undergrowth in secondary forest. It favors areas with dense vine tangles, Chusquea bamboo, Pteridium bracken, and shrubs.