Rusty-winged antwren
The rusty-winged antwren is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Panama, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The rusty-winged antwren's taxonomy is unsettled. Before 2020 the American Ornithological Society, the International Ornithological Committee, and the Clements taxonomy treated it and what is now the rufous-margined antwren as a single species, the rufous-winged antwren with the binomial H. rufimarginatus.These systems assigned it four subspecies:
- H. r. exiguus Nelson, 1912
- H. r. frater Sclater, PL & Salvin, 1880
- H. r. scapularis
- H. r. rufimarginatus
However, by 2018 BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World had split the rufous-winged antwren into the "northern rufous-winged antwren" and the "southern rufous-winged antwren". As of early 2024 HBW retains that treatment.
This article follows the majority two-subspecies model.
Description
The rusty-winged antwren is long and weighs about. Adult males of the nominate subspecies H. f. frater have a black crown and nape, a wide white supercilium, a black stripe through the eye, and black and white striped ear coverts. Their upperparts are ashy gray with scattered black spots and streaks and a black patch between the scapulars. Their wing coverts are black with wide white tips; most of their flight feathers are blackish with dark cinnamon red outer webs and their tertiaries are blackish with white outer edges. Their tail feathers are black with white tips whose extent increases from the central pair to the almost entirely white outermost. Their throat is white and their underparts are pale yellowish. Adult females have a rich chestnut-rufous crown, a buffy chestnut tinge to their supercilium, brownish olive-gray upperparts, and more white on the tail than males. Their underparts are a stronger yellow than the male's and sometimes have a pale buff wash on the sides of the breast. Their wings are like the male's. Both sexes have a dark gray to brownish iris, a black maxilla, a light gray mandible with a darker tip, and gray to olive-gray legs and feet. Subspecies H. f. exiguus is somewhat smaller than the nominate. Males have nearly pure black upperparts and deep amber edges on the flight feathers. Females have olive-gray upperparts.Distribution and habitat
Both subspecies of the rusty-winged antwren have disjunct distributions. Subspecies H. f. exiguus has the smaller and more westerly range of the two. It is found in Panama from eastern Panamá Province through Darién Province into northwestern Colombia's Córdoba and Bolívar departments. A separate population is found very locally in western Ecuador. The nominate subspecies H. f. frater is found from Colombia's Eastern Andes south through eastern Ecuador and Peru into northern Bolivia, east from Colombia through Venezuela and southern Guyana into Suriname, and northeast from Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia across Amazonian Brazil south of the Amazon to western Maranhão. A separate population is found coastally in northeastern Brazil's Paraíba, Pernambuco, and Alagoas states.The rusty-winged antwren inhabits the interior and edges of lowland and foothill evergreen forest of several types including terra firme and gallery forest. It typically is found from the forest's mid-storey to its subcanopy and favors dense vine tangles. In Panama it is found up to about of elevation, in Brazil, Venezuela, and the Guianas to, in Colombia to, and in Peru to. In western Ecuador it occurs below and in eastern Ecuador mostly between.