This small, white-bellied, obvious types has the most significant submission of any South American kingbird. Monotypic. Length 7.8–9.2" (20–23 cm).
Identification Adult: dark-colored go combinations to standing grey back; middle title spot deviates from red to yellow-colored. Dark grey wings; small bright edgings to upperwing coverts and secondaries. Black longest tail with obvious bright terminal group. Light underparts; grey areas on factors of chest, paler grey rinse across middle of chest. Substantially grey underwing coverts. Juvenile: usually identical but paler gray darkish upperparts comparison with blackish mask; bright longest tail guidelines smaller.
Similar Species People in reasonably fresh plumage are essentially unique. Immatures and used parents, both of which can have somewhat paler or browner upperparts and reduced bright longest tail guidelines, can be superficially just like grey or thick-billeds but would still be overall lesser and lesser charged. Premature fork-taileds are also superficially identical but have more head-back comparison, a longer longest tail, and a white center of chest.
Voice Call: Single or wide range of zeer, dzeet, or trilled paperwork. Beginning song: a sequence of complicated paperwork and trills, which are recurring over and over, t’t’tzeer, t’t’tzeer, t’tzeetzeetzee.
Status and Syndication Common. Breeding: open areas in a wide range of environments that have trees and shrubs or bushes for home sites. Migration: diurnal migrant, often seen in reduce flocks; at least some trans-Gulf activity. In early spring, mid-March–mid-June, mountains mid-April–mid-May; in western side mid-May-June. In fall, overdue July–mid-October, mountains mid-August–early July.; mostly gone by end of July, unusual after beginning July. Winter: Lower The united states, mainly american Amazonia (eastern Ecuador and Peru, american Brazil), but also satisfied as far southern area and china as south Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, southern Lower america, and Guyana. Vagrant: unusual during migration to Hawaiian seacoast, northern western states, Bermuda, Bahamas, Cuba; recreational to Ak, southern Yukon, Hudson Bay, middle Quebec, canada,, Newfoundland, Greenland.
Population Generally stable; relatively understanding of human disruptions.
Identification Adult: dark-colored go combinations to standing grey back; middle title spot deviates from red to yellow-colored. Dark grey wings; small bright edgings to upperwing coverts and secondaries. Black longest tail with obvious bright terminal group. Light underparts; grey areas on factors of chest, paler grey rinse across middle of chest. Substantially grey underwing coverts. Juvenile: usually identical but paler gray darkish upperparts comparison with blackish mask; bright longest tail guidelines smaller.
Similar Species People in reasonably fresh plumage are essentially unique. Immatures and used parents, both of which can have somewhat paler or browner upperparts and reduced bright longest tail guidelines, can be superficially just like grey or thick-billeds but would still be overall lesser and lesser charged. Premature fork-taileds are also superficially identical but have more head-back comparison, a longer longest tail, and a white center of chest.
Voice Call: Single or wide range of zeer, dzeet, or trilled paperwork. Beginning song: a sequence of complicated paperwork and trills, which are recurring over and over, t’t’tzeer, t’t’tzeer, t’tzeetzeetzee.
Status and Syndication Common. Breeding: open areas in a wide range of environments that have trees and shrubs or bushes for home sites. Migration: diurnal migrant, often seen in reduce flocks; at least some trans-Gulf activity. In early spring, mid-March–mid-June, mountains mid-April–mid-May; in western side mid-May-June. In fall, overdue July–mid-October, mountains mid-August–early July.; mostly gone by end of July, unusual after beginning July. Winter: Lower The united states, mainly american Amazonia (eastern Ecuador and Peru, american Brazil), but also satisfied as far southern area and china as south Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, southern Lower america, and Guyana. Vagrant: unusual during migration to Hawaiian seacoast, northern western states, Bermuda, Bahamas, Cuba; recreational to Ak, southern Yukon, Hudson Bay, middle Quebec, canada,, Newfoundland, Greenland.
Population Generally stable; relatively understanding of human disruptions.
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