Yellow-margined flatbill
The yellow-margined flatbill or Zimmer's flatbill is a species of bird in the tyrant flycatcher family Tyrannidae. It is found in every mainland South American country except Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Taxonomy and systematics
The yellow-margined flatbill has a complicated taxonomic history. It was originally described as Rhynchocyclus assimilis. In the early twentieth century it was treated as a subspecies of the yellow-olive flatbill but was separated by most authors starting in about 1940. As of 2025 it has eight subspecies. However, what is now the yellow-winged flatbill was previously a ninth subspecies. It was separated starting in 2016 but the process continued until 2024. Confusingly, for a time T. flavotectus was called the yellow-margined flatbill.The eight subspecies of the yellow-margined flatbill are:
- T. a. neglectus Zimmer, JT, 1939
- T. a. examinatus
- T. a. obscuriceps Zimmer, JT, 1939
- T. a. clarus Zimmer, JT, 1939
- T. a. assimilis
- T. a. sucunduri Whitney, Schunck, MA Rêgo & Silveira, 2013
- T. a. paraensis Zimmer, JT, 1939
- T. a. calamae Zimmer, JT, 1939
Description
The yellow-margined flatbill is long and weighs. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies T. a. assimilis have a mostly olive-tinged gray head with a thin white broken eye-ring. Their back, rump, and uppertail coverts are olive-green. Their wings are dusky with yellow edges on the greater coverts and remiges that appear as a pale speculum and a faint wing bar on the closed wing. Their tail is dusky. Their throat is pale gray, their breast and flanks pale olive, and their belly pale yellow. Juveniles have less gray on their head than adults with wider but more diffuse ochraceous edges on the wing feathers. All subspecies have an olive to dark brown iris, a wide flat bill with a black maxilla and a pale brownish to horn mandible, and gray legs and feet.The other subspecies of the yellow-margined flatbill differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- T. a. neglectus: olive crown and dull olive breast
- T. a. examinatus: similar to neglectus with a duller olive breast
- T. a. obscuriceps: olive crown with a very faint gray wash
- T. a. clarus: similar to obscuriceps with more gray in the crown and a brighter yellow belly
- T. a. sucunduri: darker and more lead-gray crown and slightly darker green back than nominate
- T. a. paraensis: olive crown with minimal gray
- T. a. calamae: similar to obscuriceps with a darker crown
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the yellow-margined flatbill are found thus:- T. a. neglectus: from Vichada to Vaupés departments in eastern Colombia into southwestern Venezuela's Amazonas and northern Bolívar states and to the Negro River in northwestern Brazil
- T. a. examinatus: from eastern and southern Bolívar in Venezuela east through the Guianas and northeastern Brazil north of the Amazon to the Atlantic in Pará and Amapá
- T. a. obscuriceps: from Meta Department in central Colombia south through eastern Ecuador into northeastern Peru's Department of Loreto north of the Amazon
- T. a. clarus: eastern Peru between the Marañón River in Amazonas Department and northern Puno Department
- T. a. assimilis: central Brazil from central Amazonas state east to the Tapajós River in western Pará
- T. a. sucunduri: central Amazonian Brazil from the Canumã River and its headwater Sucunduri River east to the lower Tapajós
- T. a. paraensis: northeastern Brazil from eastern Pará and northwestern Maranhão states south to northern Mato Grosso
- T. a. calamae: southeastern Amazonas, Rondônia, and northern Mato Grosso states in southwestern Brazil and into northern Bolivia