Stripe-chested antwren
The stripe-chested antwren is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru.
Taxonomy and systematics
The stripe-chested antwren has these four subspecies:- M. l. soderstromi Gyldenstolpe, 1930
- M. l. pseudoaustralis Gyldenstolpe, 1930
- M. l. longicauda Berlepsch & Stolzmann, 1894
- M. l. australis Chapman, 1923
Description
The stripe-chested antwren is long and weighs. It is a smallish bird with a somewhat longer tail than other members of its genus. Adult males have a black and white streaked face and neck. Their crown, back, and rump are black with white or pale gray streaks. Their tail is black with white edges and tips to the feathers. Their wings are black with wide white edges on the coverts and narrower white edges on the flight feathers. Their throat, breast, and belly are white with light black streaks on the breast and flanks. Adult females have buff streaks on the face, head, and upperparts. Their wing coverts have white or buff edges. Their underparts are buff that is much paler on the throat and belly than the breast. The sides of the breast have a small amount of pale gray streaking. The species' iris is dark brown, its maxilla black, dark gray, or bluish gray, its mandible gray to bluish gray, and its legs and feet gray to bluish gray. The plumage differences among the subspecies are subtle and "not entirely clear".Distribution and habitat
The stripe-chested antwren is found in a disjunct distribution along the eastern slope of the Andes. The subspecies are distributed thus:- M. l. soderstromi: southern Colombia's Putumayo Department south and northern Ecuador's Napo Province
- M. l. pseudoaustralis: from southern Ecuador's Morona-Santiago Province south into Peru as far as the Department of Pasco; also separately in Peru's Department of Loreto
- M. l. longicauda: Peru's Department of Junín
- M. l. australis: from Cusco and Madre de Dios departments in southern Peru south into northwestern Bolivia as far as Cochabamba Department