Undulated antshrike
The undulated antshrike is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, and Peru.
Taxonomy and systematics
The undulated antshrike was described by the Austrian ornithologist August von Pelzeln in 1868 and given the binomial name Thamnophilus unduliger.The undulated antshrike's taxonomy is unresolved. The South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society, the International Ornithological Committee, and the Clements taxonomy assign it three subspecies, the nominate F. u. unduliger, F. u. diversa, and F. u. pallida. BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World includes a fourth subspecies, F. u. fulva that the other taxonomies recognize as a full species, the fulvous antshrike.
Description
The undulated antshrike is a large dark antbird, long and weighing. The species exhibits significant sexual dimorphism, though both sexes of all subspecies have a crest, a brown to pale yellow iris, a heavy black bill with a hook at the end like true shrikes, and black legs and feet. Adult males of all three subspecies are mostly black with irregular thin white bars everywhere but the throat. Adult females of the nominate subspecies are mostly cinnamon with wavy black bars; their forehead and crest are rufous and black and their tail is black with thin gray bars. Females of subspecies F. u. pallida are paler overall than the nominate and have no bars on their mantle and their underparts. Females of F. u. diversa are intermediate between the other two.Distribution and habitat
The undulated antshrike is a bird of the western Amazon Basin. The nominate subspecies is found in northwestern Brazil along the upper Rio Negro and possibly as far south as the Rio Solimões. Subspecies F. u. diversa is found from eastern Peru south of the rios Amazon and Marañón east into Brazil as far as the Rio Juruá and south into northwestern Bolivia as far as southern La Paz and Beni departments. F. u. pallida is found in Brazil south of the Amazon between the rios Purus and Madeira, and probably south into the eastern part of north-central Bolivia's Pando Department.The undulated antshrike inhabits lowland evergreen forest such as terra firme. It greatly favors dense, viny, vegetation in the understorey, especially at openings such as those formed by fallen trees and along watercourses. In elevation it ranges up to about.