Wing-barred piprites
The wing-barred piprites is a species of bird in subfamily Pipritinae of family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found in every mainland South American country except Chile and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The wing-barred piprites shares genus Piprites with the grey-headed piprites and the black-capped piprites. The grey-headed and wing-barred piprites form a superspecies.The wing-barred piprites has these seven subspecies:
- P. c. antioquiae Chapman (ornithologist)|Chapman], 1924
- P. c. perijana Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1949
- P. c. tschudii
- P. c. chlorion
- P. c. grisescens Novaes, 1964
- P. c. boliviana Chapman, 1924
- ''P. c. chloris''
Description
The wing-barred piprites is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies P. c. chloris have a golden forehead, an olive-green crown, and a slightly gray olive-green nape. They have golden lores and a bold yellow eyering. Their upperparts and tail are olive-green with paler green edges on the tail feathers. Their wings are olive-green with paler green edges on the flight feathers and large creamy to white ends on the wing coverts that show as bars on the closed wing. Their underparts are yellow with an olive cast on the breast.The other subspecies of the wing-barred piprites differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- P. c. antioquiae: brighter green upperparts than nominate with less gray on the nape and clearer, brighter, yellow underparts with less olive
- P. c. perijana: brighter olive upperparts than nominate, with gray nape and sides of the neck and wide yellowish white tips on the tail feathers
- P. c. tschudii: brighter olive upperparts than nominate, with gray nape and sides of the neck
- P. c. chlorion: yellow throat, light grayish underparts with whiter belly than nominate and yellowish undertail coverts
- P. c. grisescens: grayer overall than nominate
- P. c. boliviana: like chlorion with yellower breast and vent and a gray band across the belly
Distribution and habitat
The wing-barred piprites has a disjunct distribution; the range of P. c. chloris is separate from all the others'. The subspecies are found thus:- P. c. antioquiae: northern end of Colombia's Central Andes and the middle Magdalena River Valley
- P. c. perijana: Serranía del Perijá on the Colombia-Venezuela border and eastern Andes in Venezuela's Táchira state
- P. c. tschudii: Guainía Department in extreme eastern Colombia, southern Amazonas state in extreme southern Venezuela, western and central Amazonian Brazil to the Negro (Amazon)|Negro] and lower Juruá rivers, and south through eastern Ecuador to Junín Department in Peru
- P. c. chlorion: Venezuelan Coastal Range, from eastern Venezuela's Amazonas and Bolívar states south into eastern Colombia and east through the Guianas and northern Brazil from the lower Negro and lower Madeira rivers to the Atlantic
- P. c. grisescens: eastern Pará and Maranhão states in northeastern Brazil
- P. c. boliviana: southwestern Amazonian Brazil between the upper Juruá and upper Madeira rivers; northern and eastern Bolivia; population in southeastern Peru might be this subspecies
- P. c. chloris: eastern Brazil from southern Mato Grosso do Sul east to São Paulo state and south to northern Rio Grande do Sul, eastern Paraguay, and Argentina's Misiones Province; intermittently along the Brazilian coast from Pernambuco to Santa Catarina