Plain-winged antwren
The plain-winged antwren is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Venezuela, and possibly Suriname.
Taxonomy and systematics
The plain-winged antwren has these four subspecies:- M. b. behni Berlepsch & Leverkühn, 1890
- M. b. yavii Zimmer, JT & Phelps, WH, 1948
- M. b. inornata Sclater, PL, 1890
- M. b. camanii Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1952
The plain-winged antwren's specific epithet honors Wilhelm Friedrich Georg Behn.
Description
The plain-winged antwren is long; one female weighed. It is a smallish bird with a short tail. Adult males of the nominate subspecies M. b. behni are almost entirely gray, with lighter underparts than upperparts. Their chin and the center of their throat and upper breast are black. Adult females have olivaceous brown upperparts with a grayish tinge on the crown and nape and a somewhat duskier tail. Their wings are olivaceous brown. Their throat is whitish and the rest of their underparts olive-buff.Males of subspecies M. b. yavii are darker than the nominate. Females have dark olive-buff flanks and crissum. Males of subspecies M. b. camanii are intermediate between the nominate and yavii. Females have somewhat less brown underparts than the nominate. Subspecies M. b. inornata is larger than the nominate. Males are darker with a wider black area on the throat. Females have rufescent brown upperparts and an olivaceous brown crissum.
Distribution and habitat
The plain-winged antwren has a highly disjunct distribution. The subspecies are found thus:- M. b. behni: Serranía de la Macarena in south-central Colombia's Meta Department and locally and patchily in eastern Ecuador between Sucumbíos Province and Zamora-Chinchipe Province
- M. b. yavii: northwestern Bolívar, Venezuela, and separate from there Venezuela's Amazonas state and adjoining extreme northern Amazonas state in Brazil
- M. b. inornata: southeastern Bolívar in Venezuela, extreme northern Roraima in Brazil, and the Pacaraima Mountains in Guyana
- M. b. camanii: Cerro Camani, a tepui in Venezuela's Amazonas state
The plain-winged antwren inhabits the understorey to mid-storey of foothill and lower montane evergreen forest. In Ecuador it appears to favor damp ravines with stands of Guadua bamboo. In Venezuela and Brazil it ranges between elevations of, in Colombia between, and in Ecuador mostly between.