Willis's antbird
Willis's antbird, also known as the laeta antbird, is a species of bird in subfamily Thamnophilinae of family Thamnophilidae, the "typical antbirds". It is found in Brazil and Guyana.
Taxonomy and systematics
Willis's antbird was described by the American ornithologist W. E. Clyde Todd in 1920 as a subspecies of the dusky antbird and given the trinomial name Cercomacra tyrannina laeta. A 1997 study found that Willis's antbird differed from the dusky antbird in both plumage and voice and as a result, Willis's antbird was promoted to species status. The 1997 paper suggested its English name to commemorate the American ornithologist Edwin O'Neill Willis.A molecular phylogenetic study published in 2014 found that Cercomacra was polyphyletic. The genus was split to create two monophyletic genera, and six species including Willis's antbird were moved to the newly erected genus Cercomacroides.
Willis's antbird has three subspecies, the nominate C. l. laeta, C. l. waimiri, and C. l. sabinoi.
Description
Willis's antbird is long and weighs. Males of the nominate subspecies are almost entirely gray, with somewhat lighter underparts than upperparts. They have a white patch between their scapulars and narrow white tips on their wing coverts and outer tail feathers. Females have olive-gray upperparts and ear coverts, browner wings and tail, and cinnamon edges on their wing coverts. They have a very small white interscapular patch. Their throat and underparts are tawny-buff with an olive tinge to their flanks. Males of subspecies C. l. waimiri are a darker gray than the nominate and do not have white tips on the tail feathers. Females have orange-cinnamon ear coverts and dark gray wing coverts with wide cinnamon-brown edges. Males of subspecies C. l. sabinoi are like nominate males; females have pale cinnamon underparts.Distribution and habitat
Willis's antbird has a disjunct distribution; the subspecies' ranges are significantly separated from each other. Subspecies C. l. waimiri is the westernmost. It is found in north-central Amazonian Brazil where eastern Roraima, northeastern Amazonas, and northwestern Pará meet and also into southern Guyana. The nominate subspecies is found in southeastern Amazonian Brazil, in eastern Pará and western Maranhão. Subspecies C. l. sabinoi is found in the coastal eastern Brazilian states of Pernambuco and Alagoas.In general, Willis's antbird inhabits the understorey at the edges of evergreen forest and also mature secondary forest, usually near water. The nominate subspecies favors the edges of várzea and forest along small streams. Subspecies C. l. waimiri favors campina woodlands on white sand soil, especially along streams and in swampy areas. C. l. sabinoi favors the edges of secondary forest and densely vegetated openings in the forest interior such as those made by fallen trees. It is less tied to water features than the other two subspecies. In elevation C. l. sabinoi reaches ; the other two subspecies reach only.