Slaty-capped flycatcher
The slaty-capped flycatcher is a small passerine bird in the tyrant flycatcher family. It is found from Costa Rica south to Bolivia and east to Venezuela and Trinidad.
Taxonomy and systematics
The slaty-capped flycatcher's taxonomy is unsettled. The International Ornithological Committee assigns it two subspecies, the nominate L. s. superciliaris and L. s. albiventer. The Clements taxonomy assigns a third, L. s. transandinus, that the IOC includes within the nominate. BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World treats albiventer as a separate species, the white-bellied flycatcher, leaving the slaty-capped as a monotypic species. Several other subspecies have been suggested but not recognized.This article follows the IOC one species, two subspecies model.
Description
The slaty-capped flycatcher is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Both subspecies show much plumage variation within them. Adults of the nominate subspecies have a slaty gray crown. They have white lores, a thin white supercilium, and a wide dusky to black crescent around the back of the otherwise mottled whitish face. Their back and rump are dark olive. Their wings are dusky with yellow-green edges on the flight feathers. Their wing coverts are dusky with whitish or pale yellow to rich cinnamon-buff tips that show as two wing bars. Their tail is dusky olive. Their throat is mottled grayish, their breast yellow with heavy but thin grayish olive streaking, and the rest of their underparts plain pale yellow. They have a medium grayish brown to dark brown iris, a black bill with sometimes a pale orange or pinkish base to the mandible, and dark gray legs and feet. Subspecies L. s. albiventer has grayish olive upperparts, pale yellow wing bars, and whitish to pale yellowish white underparts with gray markings on the breast. It has a pale brown to grayish brown iris, a black bill with sometimes a pinkish base to the mandible, and gray to pale blue-gray legs and feet.Distribution and habitat
The slaty-capped flycatcher has a disjunct distribution. The nominate subspecies is found on the Caribbean and Pacific slopes of Costa Rica and western Panama, in Panama's Darién Province, on Trinidad, in the Venezuelan Coastal Range, in the Serranía del Perijá on the Venezuela-Colombia border, on both the eastern and western slopes of the Andes from western Venezuela through Colombia and Ecuador slightly into Peru, and on the eastern slope in Peru south to Cuzco Department. Subspecies L. s. albiventer is found on the east slope of the Andes from Cuzco south into northern Bolivia as far as western Santa Cruz Department.The slaty-capped flycatcher inhabits humid foothill and montane evergreen forest, secondary forest, and coffee plantations in the upper topical and subtropical zones. In elevation it ranges between in Costa Rica and Panama, between in Venezuela, between in Colombia, between in western Ecuador, between in eastern Ecuador, and between in Peru.