Baird's flycatcher
{{Short description|Species of bird}}
{{Use American English|date=June 2025}}
{{speciesbox
| name = Baird's flycatcher
| image = Baird‘s Flycatcher.jpg
| image_caption = Roadside between Buenaventura Reserve and Machara, Ecuador
| status = LC
| status_system = IUCN3.1
| genus = Myiodynastes
| species = bairdii
| authority = (Gambel, 1847)
| synonyms = See text
| range_map = Myiodynastes bairdii map.svg
}}
Baird's flycatcher (Myiodynastes bairdii) is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found in Ecuador and Peru.{{cite web |url=https://www.worldbirdnames.org/new/bow/flycatchers/ |title=Tyrant flycatchers |website=IOC World Bird List |version =v 15.1 | editor1-last=Gill | editor1-first=Frank | editor1-link=Frank Gill (ornithologist) | editor2-last=Donsker | editor2-first=David | editor3-last=Rasmussen | editor3-first=Pamela | editor3-link=Pamela Rasmussen |date=March 2025 |access-date=3 March 2025 }}
Taxonomy and systematics
Baird's flycatcher has a complicated taxonomic history. It was originally described as Saurophagus bairdii, placing it with the great kiskadee.{{cite journal | last=Gambel |first=William | date= 1847 |title=Remarks on the Birds observed in Upper California, with descriptions of New Species | journal=Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia | volume=1 | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/35780092 |access-date=June 26, 2025 }} It was later renamed Tyrannus atrifrons, placing it with the kingbirds, then was renamed Myiodynastes atrifrons, and finally in 1883 achieved its present binomial Myiodynastes bairdii. The species' type locality was described as California, a clear error, and a correction to Guayaquil, Ecuador, was proposed in 1926.{{cite journal | last=Chapman |first=Frank M. | date= 1926 |title=A Distribution of Bird-Life in Ecuador | journal=Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History | volume=LV |page=513 | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/63855725 |access-date=June 26, 2025 }}
The English name and specific epithet of Baird's flycatcher honor Spencer Fullerton Baird, a 19th-century naturalist and the first curator and later Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution.
Baird's flycatcher is monotypic.
Description
Baird's flycatcher is about {{convert|23|cm|in|sigfig=2|abbr=on}} long; one female weighed {{convert|45|g|oz|sigfig=2|abbr=on}}. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults have a pale sandy brown to whitish forecrown and sandy brown crown with light gray streaks and a usually hidden yellow patch in the center. They have a wide black "mask" that extends to the dusky ear coverts. Their upperparts are mostly olive-brown with a more rufous rump. Their wings are dusky with wide cinnamon-rufous edges on the coverts and flight feathers. Their tail is mostly rufous with some dusky edges on the outermost feathers. Their throat is whitish with faint thin grayish streaks. Their breast is pale creamy yellow with an ochraceous cast and faint thin grayish streaks. Their belly is unmarked pale creamy yellow. They have a chestnut-brown to gray-brown iris, a black bill with a dusky white base to the mandible, and gray to black legs and feet.Schulenberg, T. S. and T. Johnson (2020). Baird's Flycatcher (Myiodynastes bairdii), version 1.0. In Birds of the World (T. S. Schulenberg, Editor). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, USA. https://doi.org/10.2173/bow.baifly1.01 retrieved June 26, 2025
Distribution and habitat
Baird's flycatcher is found in the lowlands from central Manabí Province in west-central Ecuador south to Peru's Lima Department. It inhabits somewhat dry deciduous forest and woodlands, gallery forest, secondary forest, arid scrublands, and towns. In elevation it ranges from sea level to {{convert|1000|m|ft|abbr=on}} in Ecuador and to {{convert|1200|m|ft|abbr=on}} in Peru.{{cite book | last =Ridgely | first =Robert S. | last2 =Greenfield | first2 =Paul J. | title =The Birds of Ecuador: Field Guide | publisher =Cornell University Press | volume = II| date =2001 | location =Ithaca | pages =529 | isbn =978-0-8014-8721-7 }}{{cite book | last =Schulenberg | first =T.S. | last2 =Stotz | first2 =D.F. | last3 =Lane | first3 =D.F. | last4 =O'Neill | first4 =J.P. | last5 =Parker | first5 =T.A. III | title =Birds of Peru | publisher =Princeton University Press | edition =revised and updated |series=Princeton Field Guides | date =2010 | location =Princeton, NJ | pages =466 |isbn = 978-0691130231 }}
Behavior
=Movement=
=Feeding=
=Breeding=
The breeding season of Baird's flycatcher has not been defined but includes February. Five nests in Ecuador were made from twigs lined with thin plant stems and roots; all were in cavities in human structures. The clutch size is four to five unmarked white eggs. The incubation period, time to fledging, and details of parental care are not known.
{{birdsong|url=https://xeno-canto.org/species/Myiodynastes-bairdii |species=Baird's flycatcher}}
=Vocalization=
The dawn song of Baird's flycatcher has been described as "wrrr-yeeít...wrrr-yeeít..." repeated several times and sometimes "followed by an ascending jumbled phrase". Another description is "a loud, accelerating series of burry notes, until a final rising chatter" rewTCHI! rewTCHI! reTCHIrewTCHIrewTCHI-tip'ti'chip-awee?". Its call is a "single rewTCHI!".
Status
The IUCN has assessed Baird's flycatcher as being of Least Concern. Its population size is not known and is believed to be stable. No immediate threats have been identified. It is considered generally common in both Ecuador and Peru. However, as of 2020 it appears thinly spread south of Peru's central La Libertad Department and its status there is uncertain.
References
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