Variable antshrike
The variable antshrike is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The variable antshrike was described by the French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot in 1816 and given its current binomial name Thamnophilus caerulescens.Major taxonomic systems assign these eight subspecies to the variable antshrike:
- T. c. melanchrous Sclater, PL & Salvin, 1876
- T. c. aspersiventer d'Orbigny & Lafresnaye, 1837
- T. c. dinellii Berlepsch, 1906
- T. c. paraguayensis Hellmayr, 1904
- T. c. gilvigaster Pelzeln, 1868
- T. c. caerulescens Vieillot, 1816
- T. c. ochraceiventer Snethlage, E, 1928
- T. c. cearensis
[Image:Thamnophilus caerulescens-2.jpg|thumb|150px|left|Female T. c. caerulescens from São Paulo, Brazil]
Description
The variable antshrike, as its common name suggests, is arguably the species of antbird with the most variable plumage. It is long and weighs. Members of genus Thamnophilus are largish members of the antbird family; all have stout bills with a hook like those of true shrikes. This species exhibits significant sexual dimorphism as well as the differences among subspecies. Adult males of the nominate subspecies T. c. caerulescens have a black crown and nape and a gray face. Their upperparts are dark gray with some black on the lower back and a white patch between the scapulars. Their outer scapulars are black with white edges, their wing coverts black with white spots, and their flight feathers blackish brown with pale brown and white edges. Their tail is brownish black with white tips on the feathers. Their underparts are gray with a somewhat lighter belly, and often have faint scalloping. Adult females have an olive-brown crown. Their upperparts are mostly olive-brown with a tinge of clay color and yellow-brown edges on the uppertail coverts. They have little or no white between the scapulars. Their wing coverts are very dark brown with white edges on their tips and their flight feathers are dark brown with clay edges. Their tail feathers are dark brown with small white tips. Their throat and upper breast are ochraceous-gray and the rest of their underparts cinnamon-tawny with an olive tinge on the lower breast and sides. Subadults resemble adult females but are more buffy.The other subspecies of the variable antshrike differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- T. c. melanchrous: Males are mostly black with some gray mixed on the rump, belly, and crissum, white edges on their primaries, and small white spots on their tail feathers. Females have an olive-gray forehead and nape and a black crown, very small spots on their wing coverts, and cinnamon-tawny belly and crissum.
- T. c. aspersiventer: Both sexes are similar to melanchrous. In addition males have black and white scallops on their belly and crissum and larger white spots on their tail. Females have a dark olive-gray crown with blackish spots.
- T. c. dinellii: Males' underparts vary from mostly cinnamon to cinnamon only on the crissum with a blackish throat and breast. Females have ochraceous gray crown and upperparts, yellow-brown flight feathers, light gray throat and upper breast with a faint yellow tinge, and pale cinnamon belly and crissum.
- T. c. paraguayensis: Both sexes are paler than the nominate. Males have white or buff-tinged white belly and crissum. Females have an olive-gray crown, olive-gray wing coverts with white tips and in some areas blackish spots, and white underparts with variable intensity of a yellowish brown tinge.
- T. c. gilvigaster: Males have clay-colored edges to their flight feathers, gray throat, breast, and upper belly, and gray lower belly and crissum with a cinnamon-tawny wash. Females are yellowish gray from their throat to upper belly and cinnamon-tawny lower belly and crissum.
- T. c. ochraceiventer: Males have a clay tinge to their upperparts and flight feathers, a gray throat, and grayish ochraceous underparts. Females have a black crown with some olive-gray on the forehead.
- T. c. cearensis: Males are similar to the nominate but with a lighter black crown and upperparts. Females have a rufous crown, ochraceous olive-brown wing coverts, a clay tinge on their tail, and a pale ochraceous throat.
Distribution and habitat
The variable antshrike has a disjunct distribution, with subspecies T. c. cearensis being separate from the large contiguous range of the others. The subspecies are found thus:- T. c. melanchrous: eastern slope of the Andes of Peru from south of the Marañón River in Amazonas Department south to northern Puno Department
- T. c. aspersiventer: southeastern Puno in Peru into west-central Bolivia north of the Andes to Santa Cruz Department
- T. c. dinellii: south and east of the Bolivian Andes from Santa Cruz south and into northwestern Argentina south to northern Córdoba Province and east to Formosa Province
- T. c. paraguayensis: eastern Santa Cruz in Bolivia, northwestern and north-central Paraguay, and Mato Grosso do Sul in Brazil
- T. c. gilvigaster: northeastern Argentina east of the Paraná River, southeastern Brazil from São Paulo state south, and most of Uruguay
- T. c. caerulescens: southeastern Paraguay, Misiones Province in Argentina, and southeastern Brazil between southeastern Bahia and western Paraná states
- T. c. ochraceiventer: east-central Brazil in southern Tocantins, Goiás, and south-central Bahia
- T. c. cearensis: Ceará, Pernambuco, Alagoas states in northeastern Brazil
Behavior
Movement
There is evidence that some migration occurs in the southernmost part of the variable antshrike's range; it is presumed to be a year-round resident elsewhere.Feeding
The variable antshrike's diet has not been detailed but is mostly insects and other arthropods; small amounts of seeds and fruits are also eaten. It usually forages singly and in pairs, mostly in the understorey to mid-storey between of the ground though sometimes as high as. It often feeds in more open areas than many other antshrikes, though it also feeds in dense tangles of bamboo and vines. It hops and creeps through vegetation, gleaning prey from leaves, stems, vines, and branches by reaching and lunging from a perch. It has been observed dropping to pick prey from the surface of leaf litter. While foraging, it is regularly seen "dipping" its tail and flicking its wings. It often joins mixed-species feeding flocks and has been observed following army ant swarms.Image:Thamnophilus caerulescens.jpg|thumb|150px|right|male T. c. melanochrous; illustration by Joseph Smit, 1876