Southern nightingale-wren
The southern nightingale-wren, also known as the scaly-breasted wren, is a species of bird in the family Troglodytidae. It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Panama, Peru, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The southern nightingale-wren forms a species pair with the northern nightingale-wren and was in the past considered conspecific with it. It is currently treated as a species in its own right by the International Ornithological Committee and the Clements taxonomy, though under different English names.The southern nightingale-wren has the six subspecies listed below. Subspecies M. m. luscinia is treated by some taxonomists as a separate species. The nominate subspecies M. m. marginatus is also sometimes considered a separate species or even two species divided by the Amazon River.
The southern nightingale-wren's subspecies are:
- M. m. luscinia Salvin
- M. m. corrasus Bangs
- M. m. squamulatus Sclater & Salvin
- M. m. occidentalis Hellmayr
- M. m. taeniatus Salvin
- M. m. marginatus Sclater
Description
The southern nightingale-wren is long; males weigh and females. Adults of the nominate subspecies have a dull gray-brown face and deep chocolate-brown crown and upperparts with a reddish tinge on the rump. They have a very short dark chocolate tail. Their chin, chest, and upper belly are white with some black scalloping on the sides of the chest. The lower flanks and lower belly are dark chocolate. The juvenile is similar with the addition of darkish barring on the crown and back and dark brown feather tips on the underside.M. m. squamulatus is similar to the nominate but has scaly markings on the underparts. M. m. taeniatus also has scaly underparts and a more extensive reddish tinge on the upperparts and blackish barring below. M. m. corrasus is also similar to the nominate, but is a purer white below with narrow dark bars. M. m. occidentalis has a longer and thinner bill, darker upperparts and flanks, and broad dark bars on its abdomen. M. m. luscinias throat is pale gray that becomes brownish gray on the breast and belly.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of southern nightingale-wren are found thus:- M. m. luscinia, central Costa Rica to Panama's eastern Darién Province
- M. m. corrasus, Santa Marta region of northern Colombia
- M. m. squamulatus, northern Colombia except Santa Marta into northern Venezuela
- M. m. occidentalis, western Colombia and northwestern Ecuador
- M. m. taeniatus, western Ecuador
- M. m. marginatus, throughout Amazonia, from Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia to near the mouth of the river in Brazil