Spotted tody-flycatcher
The spotted tody-flycatcher is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found on Trinidad and in every mainland South American country except Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The spotted tody-flycatcher was originally described in 1806 as Todus maculatus.The spotted tody-flycatcher has these five subspecies:
- T. m. amacurense Eisenmann & Phelps, WH Jr, 1971
- T. m. maculatum
- T. m. signatum Sclater, PL & Salvin, 1881
- T. m. diversum Zimmer, JT, 1940
- T. m. annectens Zimmer, JT, 1940
Description
The spotted tody-flycatcher is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies T. m. maculatum have a mostly gray head with a small white spot above the lores and some black and white streaks on the crown. Their back, rump, and uppertail coverts are olive. Their wings are brownish black with yellow edges on the flight feathers and yellowish edges and tips on the coverts; the last sometimes show as pale wing bars. Their tail is brownish black with yellow-white edges on the outer webs of the outer feathers. Their throat and upper breast are white with narrow black streaks. Their belly is mostly yellow with dark olive streaks on the sides. Immatures are very like adults but with thinner and lighter streaks. Subspecies T. m. amacurense and T. m. signatum have sooty-black crowns but are otherwise like the nominate. T. m. diversum and T. m. annectens have the same plumage as the nominate. Both sexes of all subspecies usually have a yellowish orange iris though sometimes gray or brown. They have a black bill with some white on the mandible and pinkish gray legs and feet.Distribution and habitat
The spotted tody-flycatcher is a bird of the Amazon Basin and coastal northern South America. Its range circles but does not include the Guiana Shield. The subspecies are found thus:- T. m. amacurense: Trinidad, northeastern Venezuela from Sucre to Delta Amacuro, and into northern Guyana
- T. m. maculatum: Suriname, French Guiana, and in northeastern Brazil's Amapá, eastern Pará, and northern Maranhão states east of the Xingu River
- T. m. signatum: from southeastern Colombia's Caquetá and Putumayo departments south through eastern Ecuador and eastern Peru into northwestern Bolivia and east from them into the western parts of Amazonas and Rondônia in western Brazil
- T. m. diversum: central Brazil north of the Amazon between the [Rio Rio Negro (Amazon)|Negro (Amazon)|Negro] and Nhamundá rivers and south of the Amazon from the Tefé River east to the Tapajos River
- T. m. annectens: northern Brazil from the Branco River and northeastern Amazonas south to where the Negro meets the Amazon.