Tyrant flycatcher explained

The tyrant flycatchers (Tyrannidae) are a family of passerine birds which occur throughout North and South America.[1] They are considered the largest family of birds known to exist in the world, with more than 400 species. They are the most diverse avian family in every country in the Americas, except for the United States and Canada. The members vary greatly in shape, patterns, size and colors. Some tyrant flycatchers may superficially resemble the Old World flycatchers, which they are named after but are not closely related to. They are members of suborder Tyranni (suboscines), which do not have the sophisticated vocal capabilities of most other songbirds.[2]

A number of species previously included in this family are now placed in the family Tityridae (see Systematics). Sibley and Alquist in their 1990 bird taxonomy had the genera Mionectes, Leptopogon, Pseudotriccus, Poecilotriccus, Taenotriccus, Hemitriccus, Todirostrum and Corythopis as a separate family Pipromorphidae,[3] but although it is still thought that these genera are basal to most of the family, they are not each other's closest relatives.[3]

Description

Most, but not all, species are rather plain, with various hues of brown, gray and white commonplace, often providing some degree of presumed camouflage. Obvious exceptions include the bright red vermilion flycatcher, blue, black, white and yellow many-colored rush-tyrant and some species of tody-flycatchers or tyrants, which are often yellow, black, white and/or rufous, from the Todirostrum, Hemitriccus and Poecilotriccus genera. Several species have bright yellow underparts, from the ornate flycatcher to the great kiskadee. Some species have erectile crests. Several of the large genera (i.e. Elaenia, Myiarchus or Empidonax) are quite difficult to tell apart in the field due to similar plumage and some are best distinguished by their voices. Behaviorally they can vary from species such as spadebills which are tiny, shy and live in dense forest interiors to kingbirds, which are relatively large, bold, inquisitive and often inhabit open areas near human habitations. As the name implies, a great majority of tyrant flycatchers are almost entirely insectivorous (though not necessarily specialized in flies). Tyrant flycatchers are largely opportunistic feeders and often catch any flying or arboreal insect they encounter. However, food can vary greatly and some (like the large great kiskadee) will eat fruit or small vertebrates (e.g. small frogs). In North America, most species are associated with a "sallying" feeding style, where they fly up to catch an insect directly from their perch and then immediately return to the same perch. Most tropical species, however, do not feed in this fashion and several types prefer to glean insects from leaves and bark. Tropical species are sometimes found in mixed-species foraging flocks, where various types of passerines and other smallish birds are found feeding in proximity.

The smallest family members are the closely related short-tailed pygmy tyrant and black-capped pygmy tyrant from the genus Myiornis (the first species usually being considered marginally smaller on average). These species reach a total length of 6.5– and a weight of 4to. By length, they are the smallest passerines on earth, although some species of Old World warblers apparently rival them in their minuscule mean body masses if not in total length.[4] The minuscule size and very short tail of the Myiornis pygmy tyrants often lend them a resemblance to a tiny ball or insect. The largest tyrant flycatcher is the great shrike-tyrant at 29cm (11inches) and 99.2g. A few species such as the streamer-tailed tyrant, scissor-tailed flycatcher and fork-tailed flycatcher have a larger total length — up to 41cm (16inches) in the fork-tailed flycatcher at least — but this is mainly due to their extremely long tails; the fork-tailed flycatcher has the longest tail feathers of any known bird relative to their size (this being in reference to true tail feathers, not to be confused with elongated tail streamers as seen in some from the Phasianidae family of galliforms).

Habitat and distribution

Species richness of Tyrannidae, when compared to habitat, is highly variable, although most every land habitat in the Americas has at least some of these birds. The habitats of tropical lowland evergreen forest and montane evergreen forest have the highest single site species diversity while many habitats including rivers, palm forest, white sand forest, tropical deciduous forest edge, southern temperate forest, southern temperate forest edge, semi-humid/humid montane scrub, and northern temperate grassland have the lowest single species diversity. The variation between the highest and the lowest is extreme; ninety species can be found in the tropical lowland evergreen forests while the number of species that can be found in the habitats listed above typically are in the single digits. This may be due in part to the fewer niches found in certain areas and therefore fewer places for the species to occupy.

Tyrannidae specialization among habitats is very strong in tropical lowland evergreen forests and montane evergreen forests. These habitat types, therefore, display the greatest specialization. The counts differ by three species (tropical lowland evergreen forests have 49 endemic species and montane evergreen forests have 46 endemic species). It can be assumed that they both have similar levels of specialization.

Regionally, the Atlantic Forest has the highest species richness with the Chocó following closely behind.

Status and conservation

The northern beardless tyrannulet (Camptostoma imberbe) is protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918.[5] This species is common south of the US border. The situation for a number of other species from South and Central America is far more problematic. In 2007, BirdLife International (and consequently IUCN) considered two species, the Minas Gerais tyrannulet and Kaempfer's tody-tyrant critically endangered. Both are endemic to Brazil. Additionally, seven species were considered endangered and eighteen species vulnerable.[6]

Systematics

The family's name is derived from an early description of the eastern kingbird as "the tyrant" by naturalist Mark Catesby in the 1730s. Carl Linnaeus adopted that name for the entire family Tyrannidae, because he admired Catesby's work.[7]

The family contains 447 species divided into 104 genera.[8] A full list, sortable by common and binomial names, is at list of tyrant flycatcher species. Species in the genera Tityra, Pachyramphus, Laniocera and Xenopsaris were formerly placed in this family, but evidence suggested they belong in their own family, the Tityridae,[9] where they are now placed by SACC.

Image Genus Species
Piprites
Phyllomyias
Tyrannulus
Myiopagis
Elaenia
Ornithion
Camptostoma
Suiriri
Mecocerculus
Anairetes
Uromyias
Serpophaga
Nesotriccus
Capsiempis
Polystictus
Pseudocolopteryx
Pseudotriccus
Corythopis
Euscarthmus
Pseudelaenia
Stigmatura
Zimmerius
Pogonotriccus
Phylloscartes
Mionectes
Leptopogon
Guyramemua
Sublegatus
Inezia
Myiophobus
Nephelomyias
Myiotriccus
Tachuris
Culicivora
Hemitriccus
Myiornis
Oncostoma
Lophotriccus
Atalotriccus
Poecilotriccus
Taeniotriccus
Todirostrum – typical tody-flycatchers
Cnipodectes
Rhynchocyclus
Tolmomyias
Calyptura
Platyrinchus
Neopipo
Pyrrhomyias
Hirundinea
Lathrotriccus
Aphanotriccus
Cnemotriccus
Xenotriccus
Sayornis – phoebes
Mitrephanes
Contopus
Empidonax
Pyrocephalus
Ochthornis
Satrapa
Syrtidicola
Muscisaxicola – ground tyrants
Lessonia
Hymenops
Knipolegus
Cnemarchus
Xolmis
Pyrope
Nengetus
Neoxolmis
Myiotheretes
Agriornis – shrike-tyrants
Gubernetes
Muscipipra
Fluvicola
Arundinicola
Heteroxolmis
Alectrurus
Tumbezia
Silvicultrix
Ochthoeca
Colorhamphus
Colonia
Muscigralla
Machetornis
Legatus
Phelpsia
Myiozetetes
Pitangus
Philohydor
Conopias
Myiodynastes
Megarynchus
Tyrannopsis
Empidonomus
Griseotyrannus
Tyrannus
Rhytipterna
Sirystes
Casiornis
Myiarchus
Ramphotrigon
Attila

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tyrant flycatchers « IOC World Bird List. 2020-10-02. www.worldbirdnames.org. 2020-04-24. https://web.archive.org/web/20200424141908/https://www.worldbirdnames.org/bow/flycatchers/. live.
  2. del Hoyo, J. Elliott, A. & Christie, D. (editors). (2004) Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 9: Cotingas to Pipits and Wagtails. Lynx Edicions.
  3. Rheindt . F.E. . Norman . J.A. . Christidis . L. . 2008 . Phylogenetic relationships of tyrant-flycatchers (Aves: Tyrannidae), with an emphasis on the elaeniine assemblage . Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution . 46 . 1 . 88–101 . 10.1016/j.ympev.2007.09.011 . 18042406 . 2012-08-05 . 2014-12-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141210022843/http://www.bio-nica.info/biblioteca/Rheindt2007Aves.pdf . live .
  4. CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses, 2nd Edition by John B. Dunning Jr. (Editor). CRC Press (2008), .
  5. http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/RegulationsPolicies/mbta/MBTANDX.HTML "List of Migratory Bird Species Protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act as of December 2, 2013"
  6. BirdLife International (2007). Species factsheets. Accessed 12 December 2007 available online
  7. Web site: Naturally curious: Tyrant flycatchers have enjoyed their name since 1700s. Arizona Daily Star. 11 July 2024.
  8. Web site: Gill . Frank . Frank Gill (ornithologist) . Donsker . David . Rasmussen . Pamela . Pamela C. Rasmussen . December 2023 . Tyrant flycatchers . IOC World Bird List Version 14.1 . International Ornithologists' Union . 12 January 2024 .
  9. http://www.museum.lsu.edu/~Remsen/SACCprop313.htm Adopt the Family Tityridae