Rufous-headed pygmy tyrant
The rufous-headed pygmy tyrant is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru with at least one record in Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The rufous-headed pygmy tyrant was originally described as "Musicapa ruficeps". It was later moved to the monotypic genus Caenotriccus which in the middle of the twentieth century was merged into Pseudotriccus.The rufous-headed pygmy tyrant has no subspecies. However, the population in central Peru is treated by some authors as subspecies P. r. haplopteryx, and populations further south are suspected to be a separate species.
Description
The rufous-headed pygmy tyrant is about long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults have an entirely bright orange-rufous head and throat. Their upperparts are dark olive and their tail dull chestnut. Their wings are dark dusky with wide dull chestnut edges; the wings appear fully chestnut. The central Peruvian population has browner wings. Their breast and flanks are grayish olive and the center of their belly and their undertail coverts creamy yellow. Both sexes have a dark brown iris, a black maxilla, a mostly yellowish mandible, and gray legs and feet. Juveniles are mostly dark olive, with a brownish olive head, rufous-brown wings, and a whitish chin.Distribution and habitat
The rufous-headed pygmy tyrant has a disjunct distribution. In Colombia it is found in parts of all three Andean ranges. In Ecuador it continues from Colombia on the western Andean slope south into Pichincha Province and separately further south between Guayas and El Oro provinces. It also occurs on the eastern Andean slope for essentially the whole length of Ecuador into Peru. Its range continues through Peru on the eastern slope and into Bolivia as far as Cochabamba Department. There is a single audio recording from 1986 in Apure, Venezuela, almost on the Colombian border.The species inhabits humid montane forest and cloudforest in the temperate and subtropical zones, where it favors vine thickets and the forest borders. In elevation it occurs mostly between in Colombia, mostly between in Ecuador, and between in Peru.