White-plumed antbird
The white-plumed antbird is a small species of insectivorous bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy
The first formal description of the white-plumed antbird was by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1766 in the twelfth edition of his Systema Naturae. He introduced the binomial name Pipra albifrons.The white-plumed antbird has two subspecies, the nominate P. a. albifrons and P. a. peruvianus. Some taxonomists have separated a third subspecies, P. a. brevibarba, from peruvianus but this treatment has found little acceptance. It shares genus Pithys with the white-masked antbird. Pithys and Phaenostictus are sister genera, and the two may be distinguished by smaller length and weight, shorter tails, and louder songs in Pithys than Phaenostictus.
Description
The white-plumed antbird is and weighs. The species is monomorphic, meaning both sexes look the same. Adults of both subspecies have the eponymous white tufts on their forehead and chin. Their crown and the rest of their face are black; the nominate subspecies has a white stripe over and behind the eye. Their upperparts and wings are gray. Their nape, tail, and underparts are rufous-chestnut with a gray tinge on the flanks. Their feet and tarsus are bright orange. Their bill is about long and wide, indicative of its insect food source. Juvenile birds do not have the white plumes, postocular streak, and rufous-chestnut "collar" of adults, and their upperparts are browner and underparts grayer.The white-plumed antbird uses a complex basic molt strategy, meaning that the juvenile performs a preliminary molt before it molts into its characteristic adult feathers. This first molt occurs soon after they begin to feed themselves. As adults, they perform at most one molt a year and plumage remains unchanging. A complete wing molt is quite variable, slow and irregular, especially in breeding birds. The molt takes approximately 301 days to complete, thus there can only be a single annual molt. molts may not occur annually and can start at any time of year.
Distribution and habitat
The nominate subspecies of the white-plumed antbird is found in the southern Venezuelan states of Bolívar and Amazonas, east through the Guianas, and in Brazil east of the Rio Negro and north of the Amazon to the Atlantic in Amapá state. Subspecies P. a. peruvianus is found from extreme western Venezuela south through eastern Colombia, Brazil west of the Rio Negro, and eastern Ecuador into northern and central Peru. In Peru it occurs north of the Amazon and Maranon rivers and along the base of the Andes south to the Department of Ayacucho. The species inhabits the understorey of terra firme evergreen forest in the lowlands and foothills and also adjacent mature secondary forest. It occurs in higher abundance in forests with high canopies, high vegetation complexity, and many plant species. In elevation it occurs up to in Brazil, to on Cerro Duida in Venezuela, and to in Colombia and Ecuador. They show higher survival in the eastern Amazon rainforest than in the western.Each pair occupies a home range exceeding in order to ensure that swarms of army ants to follow to food can be found at all times. The species generally shuns open landscapes and will not cross rivers. They have, however, been found crossing roads to get from one patch of forest to another.
Behavior
White-plumed antbirds are very persistent in holding on to territories and may remain even in case of conflict with other individuals, if enough food sources are available. They are generally solitary outside of the breeding season and will tend to follow individual ant swarms through the forest.Like other antbirds, they perform anting, which is the process of brushing small insects through their wing and tail feathers. It is still unknown whether the main function of this process is to ease irritation during molting, kill mites, or detoxify distasteful insects.