Red satinbird
The red satinbird, commonly known as antenna satinbird or crested cnemophilus and formerly known as the sickle-crested bird-of-paradise, is a subspecies of bird in the family Cnemophilidae. It was formerly placed in the bird-of-paradise family Paradisaeidae until genetic work proved it was unrelated to those birds. It is found in the Bird's Tail Peninsula, Papua New Guinea.
Taxonomy
The red satinbird was formally described in 1948 by the English ornithologist Tom Iredale. He considered the bird to be a subspecies of the crested satinbird and coined the trinomial name Cnemophilus macgregorii sanguineus.The generic epithet cnemophilus, means "mountain/slope-lover" and the subspecies epithet sanguineus means "bloody", referring to the males' bright reddish-orange to orange upperparts.
Description
The male red satinbird sports bright, orange to reddish-orange upperparts, tail and most of the head is of the same color as well. The cheeks, chin and everything below is a blackish to black color. The feature that granted their former name, sickle-crested bird-of-paradise, is the small group of fine, brownish-purple crest plumes that are usually obscure in the head/crown feathers and is usually raised during displays. The female is plain olive brownish above and light brownish below. Like other members of the family, they have weak feet and an extremely wide gape; the mouth is pinkish in color, and the bill is light grayish.They make harsh rasping calls and also some bell-like ringing sounds; some clicking and creaking calls have been recorded as well.