Pine flycatcher
The pine flycatcher is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found in Guatemala and Mexico. It has also been recorded as a vagrant to Arizona in the U.S.A.
Taxonomy and systematics
The pine flycatcher has these five subspecies:- E. a. pulverius Brewster, 1889
- E. a. trepidus Nelson, 1901
- E. a. affinis
- E. a. bairdi Sclater, PL, 1858
- E. a. vigensis Phillips, AR, 1942
Description
The pine flycatcher is long and weighs about. The sexes are alike. Adults of the nominate subspecies E. a. affinis have pale grayish lores and a whitish tear-shaped eye-ring that becomes a point behind the eye on an otherwise olive to grayish olive head. Their upperparts are also olive to grayish olive. Their tail is dusky. Their wings are mostly dusky, with whitish to buff tips on the coverts that show as two wing bars. The wing's secondaries and tertials have pale yellow edges. Their throat is pale grayish yellow and their underparts pale yellow with a gray or grayish olive wash across the breast. They have a dark iris, a black maxilla, an orange-yellow mandible, and blackish legs and feet. Juveniles have buffy wing bars.The other subspecies of the pine flycatcher differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- E. a. pulverius: grayest back and breast of all subspecies
- E. a. trepidus: dark olive crown contrasting with lighter olive of back
- E. a. bairdi: slightly greener upperparts and slightly yellower underparts than others
- E. a. vigensis: duller than nominate but otherwise the same
Distribution and habitat
The pine flycatcher has a disjunct distribution. The subspecies are found thus:- E. a. pulverius: northwestern Mexico from southeastern Sonora and southwestern Chihuahua south to Jalisco
- E. a. trepidus: southeastern Coahuila to southwestern Tamaulipas in northeastern Mexico
- E. a. affinis: central Mexico from Michoacán south to Puebla
- E. a. bairdi: from Guerrero, Oaxaca, and Chiapas in southern Mexico into western Guatemala
- E. a. vigensis: west-central Veracruz in southeastern Mexico
The pine flycatcher inhabits pine savanna and the interior, edges, and openings of semi-arid to humid pine-oak forest. In elevation it overall ranges between but between in Guatemala.