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Tyrant flycatcher
 

Tyrant flycatchers
Yellowish flycatcher,
Empidonax flavescens
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Parvorder: Tyrannida
Family: Tyrannidae
Vigors, 1825
Type genus
Tyrannus
Genera

Some 100, see text

Distribution of tyrant flycatchers

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 6.5–7 cm (2.6–2.8 in) and a weight of 4 to 5 g (0.14 to 0.18 oz). 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 29 cm (11 in) and 99.2 grams (0.219 pounds). A few species such as the streamer-tailed tyrant, scissor-tailed flycatcher and fork-tailed flycatcher have a larger total length — up to 41 cm (16 in) 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).[5]

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.[6] 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.[7]

Systematics

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.

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Tyrant_flycatcher
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Hladanie1.

Old World flycatcher
Flycatcher (disambiguation)
File:Empidonax flavescens-cropped version.jpg
Yellowish flycatcher
Taxonomy (biology)
Template:Taxonomy/Tyrannidae
Eukaryote
Animal
Chordate
Bird
Passerine
Tyrannida
Nicholas Aylward Vigors
Type genus
Tyrannus
File:Tyrannen.png
Family (biology)
Passerine
North America
South America
Species richness
Americas
United States
Canada
Old World flycatcher
Tyranni
Songbird
Tityridae
Basal (phylogenetics)
Camouflage
Vermilion flycatcher
Many-colored rush-tyrant
Rufous
Todirostrum
Hemitriccus
Poecilotriccus
Ornate flycatcher
Great kiskadee
Crest (feathers)
Elaenia
Myiarchus
Empidonax
Spadebill
Kingbird
Insectivore
Flies
Great kiskadee
Frog
North America
Hawking (birds)
Gleaning (birds)
Mixed-species foraging flock
Short-tailed pygmy tyrant
Black-capped pygmy tyrant
Myiornis
Old World warbler
Great shrike-tyrant
Streamer-tailed tyrant
Scissor-tailed flycatcher
Fork-tailed flycatcher
Phasianidae
Species richness
Habitat (ecology)
Grassland
Ecological niche
Specialization (biology)
Atlantic Forest
Species richness
El Chocó
Northern beardless tyrannulet
Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918
BirdLife International
IUCN
Minas Gerais tyrannulet
Kaempfer's tody-tyrant
Critically endangered
Endemic
Endangered
Vulnerable species
Genus
List of tyrant flycatcher species
Tityra
Pachyramphus
Laniocera
Xenopsaris
Tityridae
South American Classification Committee
File:Piprites pileata - Black-capped Piprites (Male) 01.JPG
Piprites
Wing-barred piprites
Grey-headed piprites
Black-capped piprites
File:PIOLHINHO (Phyllomyias fasciatus).jpg
Phyllomyias
Planalto tyrannulet
Yungas tyrannulet
Rough-legged tyrannulet
White-fronted tyrannulet
Greenish tyrannulet
Reiser's tyrannulet
Urich's tyrannulet
Sclater's tyrannulet
Grey-capped tyrannulet
Sooty-headed tyrannulet
Plumbeous-crowned tyrannulet
Black-capped tyrannulet
Ashy-headed tyrannulet
Tawny-rumped tyrannulet
File:Tyrannulus elatus Tiranuelo coronado Yellow-crowned Tyrannulet (6515681957).jpg
Tyrannulus
Tyrannulus elatus
File:Myiopagis cotta 1.jpg
Myiopagis
Gray-headed elaenia
Choco elaenia
Amazonian elaenia
Jamaican elaenia
Yellow-crowned elaenia
Forest elaenia
Foothill elaenia
Pacific elaenia
Greenish elaenia
File:Elaenia spectabilis-Large Elaenia.JPG
Elaenia
Yellow-bellied elaenia
Caribbean elaenia
Large elaenia
Noronha elaenia
White-crested elaenia
Chilean elaenia
Small-billed elaenia
Olivaceous elaenia
Slaty elaenia
Mottle-backed elaenia
Brownish elaenia
Plain-crested elaenia
Lesser elaenia
Coopmans's elaenia
Rufous-crowned elaenia
Mountain elaenia
Highland elaenia
Small-headed elaenia
Great elaenia
Sierran elaenia
Tepui elaenia
Greater Antillean elaenia
File:Brown-capped Tyrannulet (Ornithion brunneicapillus) (8079747729).jpg
Ornithion
Brown-capped tyrannulet
White-lored tyrannulet
Yellow-bellied tyrannulet
File:Camptostoma obsoletum obsoletum - Southern beardless tyrannulet.jpg
Camptostoma
Northern beardless tyrannulet
Southern beardless tyrannulet
File:Suiriri suiriri - Suiriri flycatcher Argentina.jpg
Suiriri
Suiriri suiriri
File:Mecocerculus hellmayri - Buff-banded tyrannulet.jpg
Mecocerculus
White-throated tyrannulet
White-tailed tyrannulet
Buff-banded tyrannulet
Rufous-winged tyrannulet
Sulphur-bellied tyrannulet
White-banded tyrannulet
File:Tufted Tit-Tyrant.jpg
Anairetes
Ash-breasted tit-tyrant
Black-crested tit-tyrant
Pied-crested tit-tyrant
Yellow-billed tit-tyrant
Juan Fernández tit-tyrant
Tufted tit-tyrant
File:Anairetes agilis.jpg
Uromyias
Agile tit-tyrant
Unstreaked tit-tyrant
File:Serpophaga subcristata -Piraju, Sao Paulo, Brazil-8.jpg
Serpophaga
Torrent tyrannulet
River tyrannulet
Sooty tyrannulet
White-crested tyrannulet
Straneck's tyrannulet
File:Phaeomyias murina1.jpg
Nesotriccus
Southern mouse-colored tyrannulet
Northern mouse-colored tyrannulet
Cocos tyrannulet
Tumbesian tyrannulet
Maranon tyrannulet
File:Capsiempis flaveola -Costa Rica-8 (1).jpg
Capsiempis
File:Polystictus superciliaris - Grey-backed Tachuri.JPG
Polystictus (bird)
Bearded tachuri
Grey-backed tachuri
File:Pseudocolopteryx dinelliana - Dinelli's doradito.jpg
Pseudocolopteryx
Crested doradito
Subtropical doradito
Dinelli's doradito
Warbling doradito
Ticking doradito
File:Pseudotriccus ruficeps -NBII Image Gallery-a00198.jpg
Pseudotriccus
Bronze-olive pygmy tyrant
Rufous-headed pygmy tyrant
Hazel-fronted pygmy tyrant
File:Corythopis delalandi -Piraju, Sao Paulo, Brazil-8.jpg
Corythopis
Ringed antpipit
Southern antpipit
File:Rufous-sided Pygmy-tyrant Euscarthmus rufomarginatus.jpg
Euscarthmus
Fulvous-crowned scrub tyrant
Fulvous-faced scrub tyrant
Rufous-sided scrub tyrant
File:Pseudelaenia leucospodia - Gray-and-white Tyrannulet (cropped).jpg
Pseudelaenia
Grey-and-white tyrannulet
File:Stigmatura budytoides - Greater wagtail tyrant.JPG
Stigmatura
Lesser wagtail-tyrant
Bahia wagtail-tyrant
Greater wagtail-tyrant
File:Golden-faced Tyrannulet - Colombia S4E9917.jpg
Zimmerius
Guatemalan tyrannulet
Mistletoe tyrannulet
Spectacled tyrannulet
Venezuelan tyrannulet
Bolivian tyrannulet
Red-billed tyrannulet
Mishana tyrannulet
Chico's tyrannulet
Slender-footed tyrannulet
Guianan tyrannulet
Golden-faced tyrannulet
Coopmans's tyrannulet
Choco tyrannulet
Loja tyrannulet
Peruvian tyrannulet
File:Phylloscartes poecilotis (Atrapamoscas variegado) - Flickr - Alejandro Bayer (1).jpg
Pogonotriccus
Variegated bristle tyrant
Chapman's bristle tyrant
Marble-faced bristle tyrant
Spectacled bristle tyrant
Venezuelan bristle tyrant
Antioquia bristle tyrant
Southern bristle tyrant
São Paulo bristle tyrant
Serra do Mar bristle tyrant
File:Cinnamon-faced Tyrannulet - Manu NP - Perù 7710 (16666057107).jpg
Phylloscartes
Mottle-cheeked tyrannulet
Alagoas tyrannulet
Restinga tyrannulet
Bahia tyrannulet
Panama tyrannulet
Olive-green tyrannulet
Ecuadorian tyrannulet
Black-fronted tyrannulet
Rufous-browed tyrannulet
Rufous-lored tyrannulet
Cinnamon-faced tyrannulet
Minas Gerais tyrannulet
Oustalet's tyrannulet
Bay-ringed tyrannulet
File:Mionectes rufiventris.jpg
Mionectes
Streak-necked flycatcher
Olive-striped flycatcher
Olive-streaked flycatcher
Ochre-bellied flycatcher
McConnell's flycatcher
Sierra de Lema flycatcher
Grey-hooded flycatcher
File:Leptopogon amaurocephalus -Piraju, Sao Paulo, Brazil-8.jpg
Leptopogon
Rufous-breasted flycatcher
Inca flycatcher
Sepia-capped flycatcher
Slaty-capped flycatcher
File:Suiriri islerorum - Chapada Flycatcher.JPG
Guyramemua
Guyramemua affine
File:Sublegatus modestus - Southern scrub flycatcher.JPG
Sublegatus
Northern scrub flycatcher
Southern scrub flycatcher
Amazonian scrub flycatcher
File:Inezia subflava - Amazonian inezia, Anavilhanas National Park, Novo Airão, Amazonas, Brazil.jpg
Inezia (bird genus)
Slender-billed inezia
Plain inezia
Amazonian inezia
Pale-tipped inezia
File:Myiophobus fasciatus 54670465.jpg
Myiophobus
Olive-chested flycatcher
Flavescent flycatcher
Unadorned flycatcher
Orange-crested flycatcher
Roraiman flycatcher
Bran-colored flycatcher
Mouse-gray flycatcher
Rufescent flycatcher
File:Myiophobus pulcher (Atrapamoscas musguero) - Flickr - Alejandro Bayer.jpg
Nephelomyias
Orange-banded flycatcher
Ochraceous-breasted flycatcher
Handsome flycatcher
File:Ornate Flycatcher - South Ecuador S4E0633.jpg
Myiotriccus
Myiotriccus ornatus
File:Tachuris rubrigastra - Many-coloured rush-tyrant.JPG
Updating...x




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Image Genus Species
Piprites Cabanis, 1847
Phyllomyias Cabanis & Heine, 1859
Tyrannulus Vieillot, 1816
Myiopagis Salvin & Godman, 1888
Elaenia Sundevall, 1836
Ornithion Hartlaub, 1853
Camptostoma P.L. Sclater, 1857
Suiriri d'Orbigny, 1840
Mecocerculus P.L. Sclater, 1862
Anairetes Reichenbach, 1850
Uromyias Hellmayr, 1927
Serpophaga Gould, 1839
Nesotriccus Townsend, CH, 1895
Capsiempis Cabanis & Heine, 1859
  • Yellow tyrannulet, Capsiempis flaveola
Polystictus Reichenbach, 1850
Pseudocolopteryx Lillo, 1905
Pseudotriccus Taczanowski & Berlepsch, 1885
Corythopis Sundevall, 1836
Euscarthmus Wied-Neuwied, 1831
Pseudelaenia W. Lanyon, 1988
Stigmatura Sclater & Salvin, 1866
Zimmerius Traylor, 1977
Pogonotriccus Cabanis & Heine, 1859
Phylloscartes Cabanis & Heine, 1859
Mionectes Cabanis, 1844
Leptopogon Cabanis, 1844
Guyramemua Lopes et al., 2017
Sublegatus Sclater & Salvin, 1868
Inezia Cherrie, 1909
Myiophobus Reichenbach, 1850
Nephelomyias (Ohlson, Fjeldsa and Ericson, 2009)
Myiotriccus Ridgway, 1905
Tachuris Lafresnaye, 1836
Culicivora Swainson, 1827
Hemitriccus Cabanis & Heine, 1859
Myiornis Bertoni, A.W., 1901
Oncostoma P.L. Sclater, 1862
Lophotriccus Berlepsch, 1884
Atalotriccus Ridgway, 1905
Poecilotriccus Berlepsch, 1884
Taeniotriccus Berlepsch & Hartert, 1902
Todirostrum – typical tody-flycatchers Lesson, 1831
Cnipodectes P.L. Sclater & Salvin, 1873
Rhynchocyclus Cabanis & Heine, 1859
Tolmomyias Hellmayr, 1927
Calyptura Swainson, 1832
Platyrinchus Desmarest, 1805
Neopipo Sclater & Salvin, 1869
Pyrrhomyias Cabanis & Heine, 1859
HirundineaOrbigny & Lafresnaye, 1837
Lathrotriccus Lanyon,W & Lanyon,S, 1986
Aphanotriccus Ridgway, 1905
Cnemotriccus Hellmayr, 1927