Rufous-breasted wren
The rufous-breasted wren is a small songbird of the family Troglodytidae. It is found in Colombia,
Costa Rica, Panama, Trinidad and Tobago, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The rufous-breasted wren was formerly placed in the genus Thryothorus which in the old, broad sense was a motley assemblage of similar-looking wrens. Since being moved into genus Pheugopedius it has at times been treated as conspecific with speckle-breasted wren and spot-breasted wren. They do form a superspecies.The rufous-breasted wren has seven subspecies:
- P. r. hyperythrus Salvin & Godman
- P. r. tobagensis Hellmayr
- P. r. rutilus Vieillot
- P. r. intensus Todd
- P. r. laetus Bangs
- P. r. interior Todd
- P. r. hypospodius Salvin & Godman
Description
Adult rufous-breasted wrens of the nominate subspecies are long and weigh. Their crowns and upperparts are warm brown; their tail is gray-brown with heavy dark brown bars. They have a white supercilium with a black edge above it. Their face and throat are speckled black and white. The chest is bright chestnut. The rest of the underparts a duller chestnut with a grayish white center to the belly. Juveniles are duller than the adults and the facial markings are less distinct. The facial pattern and rufous breast are unique in the genus.P. r. hyperythrus is similar to the nominate with the addition of blackish spots on the chest. P. r. laetus also has blackish spots but its underparts are colored richer than those of hyperythrus. P. r. hypospodius compared to the nominate is more reddish on the crown and back and its chest is more tawny and the flanks duller. P. r. interiors underparts are pale ochre and its flanks pale olive brown. P. r. intensus is more richly colored than the nominate and often has some spotting. P. r. tobagensis bill is heavier than the nominate's; it also has longer wings and a duller chest.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of rufous-breasted wren are found thus:- P. r. hyperythrus, Pacific slope of Costa Rica and western Panama
- P. r. tobagensis, Tobago
- P. r. rutilus, the Coastal Range of northern Venezuela, both slopes of the Andes of northwestern Venezuela, and Trinidad
- P. r. intensus, southwestern Venezuela's Táchira state
- P. r. laetus, far northern Colombia and adjacent northern Venezuela
- P. r. interior, western slope of Colombia's Eastern Andes
- P. r. hypospodius, eastern slope of Colombia's Eastern Andes