- Striated Antbird
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Striated Antbird Conservation status Scientific classification Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Aves Order: Passeriformes Family: Thamnophilidae Genus: Drymophila Species: D. devillei Binomial name Drymophila devillei
(Ménégaux & Hellmayr, 1906)The Striated Antbird (Drymophila devillei) is a species of bird in the Thamnophilidae family, the antbirds. It is found in the western and south-central Amazon in South America. As presently defined, it has two subspecies: the nominate subspecies in the west, and D. d. subochracea in the south-central Amazon. The latter is sometimes known as the Xingu Antbird, but this leads to confusion with Willisornis vidua.
Contents
Overview
Systematics
Range in Amazon South America
The Striated Antbird has one large continuous range in the Amazon Basin's southwest as well as the south-central area in the countries of southeastern Peru, northwestern Bolivia and Brazil. The range is bifurcated in Bolivia, with the northwestern birds in the headwater river basins of the Madeira River of Brazil's Amazonas state, and the eastern Bolivian birds in the headwaters of the Guapore River, the Bolivian-Brazilian border river flowing westward into the Madeira. An extension of the western Bolivian range reaches southeastward into central Bolivia.
A disjunct population of the Striated Antbird, is in a strip, 100 km wide by 400 km in northern Ecuador, and extreme southwestern Colombia.
The southern tributary rivers to the Amazon that are in the species' range are the Madeira River and the Purus and Jurua Rivers to the west. The eastward limit of the range is the Tapajós and its headwaters bordering the Cerrado's northwest limits.
See also
- Drymophila Genera range write-up
References
- BirdLife International 2004. Drymophila devillei. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 25 July 2007.
External links
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