Serra antwren
The serra antwren is a species of small insectivorous bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is endemic to southeastern Brazil.
Taxonomy and systematics
The serra antwren has these three subspecies according to worldwide taxonomic systems:F. s. serrana F. s. interposita Gonzaga & Pacheco, 1990F. s. littoralis Gonzaga & Pacheco, 1990Subspecies F. s. littoralis was originally described as a subspecies of the serra antwren but was later separated as a species, the "restinga antwren". A study published in 2011 showed little or no vocal differences among serrana, interposita, and littoralis and only minor morphological differences between interposita and littoralis. The worldwide taxonomic systems therefore restored littoralis to subspecies status. The South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society retains the serra and restinga antwrens as separate species but is urgently seeking a formal proposal to combine them.
Description
Antwrens in the genus Formicivora have comparatively long tails, and the males are unusual in having underparts that are darker than the upperparts. The serra antwren is long and weighs. Adult males of the nominate subspecies F. s. serrana have a white supercilium that extends down the neck, along the side of the breast, and widens and grays on the flanks. Their crown and upperparts are rufous-brown with white edges on the outer scapulars and a hidden white patch between them. Their wings are brownish black with white tips on the coverts, blackish bases on the flight feathers, and cinnamon-brown edges on the tertials. Their tail is black with white feather tips that increase in size from the central to the outer feathers. Their face, throat, and underparts are black with white underwing coverts. Adult females have a wide black band through the eye and their underparts are entirely creamy white.Males of subspecies F. s. interposita and F. s. littoralis differ significantly from nominate males. Males of F. s. interposita have very dark brown to black upperparts, with a narrow and broken white supercilium, very small white tips on the wing coverts, and no white on the underparts. Males of F. s. littoralis also have very dark brown to black upperparts, with little or no supercilium, almost no white on the tail, no white on the underparts, and smaller white tips on the flight feathers than either of the other two subspecies. Females of subspecies F. s. interposita and F. s. littoralis are almost identical to each other. They differ only slightly from the female F. s. serrana by having pale buff underparts.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the serra antwren are found thus:F. s. serrana: eastern Minas Gerais to central Espírito Santo F. s. interposita: Paraíba do Sul valley in far southeastern Minas Gerais and northwestern Rio de Janeiro stateF. s. littoralis: separately from the other two subspecies in coastal Rio de Janeiro state including nearshore islandsA 2011 survey collected individuals of F. s. serrana in northern Espírito Santo, extending that subspecies' range some farther north than previously known. Whether these birds represent a separate population or are part of a somewhat continuous distribution wherever suitable habitat exists is unclear.
Subspecies F. s. serrana and F. s. interposita inhabit the understorey at the edges of semi-humid evergreen forest, secondary woodland, and drier scrublands. F. s. serrana especially favors stunted forest on poor rocky soils up to above sea level. F. s. interposita especially favors secondary woodland near the Paraíba do Sul and in nearby foothills; it reaches only in elevation. Both subspecies have colonized Eucalyptus plantations in Minas Gerais. Subspecies F. s. littoralis occurs only in restinga, a biome on the sandy coastal plain characterized by dense scrub, cacti, and bromeliads.