Home - BIRDs

Saturday, October 11, 2025

Tatama Tapaculo (Scytalopus alvarezlopezi) - 13Aug2024

The Tatama Tapaculo is another Colombian endemic that was only recently described by science.  It was first seen in 1992 but only formally described in 2017.  It inhabits a relatively small range in the Western Andes which is why it is listed as Near Threatened on the IUCN list.




Stiles's Tapaculo (Scytalopus stilesi) - 12Aug2024

This Colombian endemic was only described by science in 2005!  It was previously thrown in with the Ecuadorean Tapaculo complex but close comparison of recorded songs revealed it was in fact a separate species.  Although my photos are not great, they are better than the Wikipedia page photos!  That just exemplifies how difficult it is to photograph tapaculos in general.



Ocellated Tapaculo (Acropternis orthonyx) - 19Aug2024

Tapaculos are notoriously hard to see and if you do they are usually darting in the undergrowth making getting a decent photo agonizingly difficult.   This photo was the best out of about a hundred!  We saw this Ocellated Tapaculo in Colombia.  They range from Venezuela to Peru in the Andes.  They are the largest of the Tapaculos.




Crescent-faced Antpitta (Grallaricula lineifrons) - 19Aug2024

This small and exceedingly cute Antpitta is found in Colombia and Ecuador.  As you can see this is one of the species that comes to feeders and the place we visited in Colombia clearly had this one well trained.  It is one of ten species of small Antpittas in the genus Grallaricula.






Rusty-breasted Antpitta (Grallaricula ferrugineipectus) - 05Aug2019

This is the type of picture that people would get of Antpittas before they started feeding and luring them in for photos.  We actually had these on our first trip to Colombia in the Santa Marta range and then again on my second trip in the eastern cordillera. On both occasions the looks were similar.  They can be found in Colombia and Venezuela.



Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Boyaca Antpitta (Grallaria alticola) - 07Aug2024

The Boyaca Antpitta is super interesting because it is one of very few Antpittas that are not hard to see out in the open without any type luring them out.  They inhabit mostly open Paramo habitat so hiding in the forest is not an option for them.  Their range is restricted to the Eastern Andes at high elevation (9000 to 13000 feet).  They are a Colombian endemic.  We saw ours in the famous Sumapaz National Park.




Equatorial Antpitta (Grallaria saturata) - 19Aug2024

The Equatorial Antpitta is another of the 15 species split out from what was formerly known as the Rufous Antpitta. I think the Equatorial one is the one that most fits the old name of Rufous as it is truly rufous all over whereas some of the others have some other distinguishing mark.  This is one of the most widely ranging of the Rufous complex and can be found in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.  We saw ours in Colombia. 



Muisca Antpitta (Grallaria rufula) - 06Aug2024

The Muisca Antpitta is another of the 15 species that were split from the Rufous Antpitta complex.  This species was split from several nearby species that are separated by mountain ranges or river valleys.  The IUCN classification still considers the overall Rufous grouping so it is listed as Least Concern but if they ever catch up to the new species break-out, it will undoubtedly throw this species into a more perilous category due to habitat loss.  As you can see from this picture, a local in Colombia has trained this bird to come out in the open for pictures by feeding it meal worms or grubs.  


 

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Bicolored Antpitta (Grallaria rufocinerea) - 18Aug2024

The Bicolored Antpitta is one of the 15 species in the Rufous Antpitta complex.  It has a relatively small range in the Colombian and Ecuadorean Andes.  It was previously thought to be a Colombian endemic but a few have been found just over the border in Ecuador.  It is mostly found at elevations above 7000 ft.  


Chestnut-naped Antpitta (Grallaria nuchalis) - 20Aug2024

Here is another of the Antpittas that entrepreneurs in Colombia have established a symbiotic relationship with.  The Antpittas get a reliable source of food with worms and grubs, they get their habitat protected and the locals get money from visiting birders.  Everyone wins.  This one was a good 20 minute hike into the forest so it felt a little more satisfying than the ones we saw on the sides of roads.  Some of the Antpittas have a comical or friendly look to them, but this one was kind of angry looking.  That being said it jumped up into my outstretched hand to take a worm so he wasn't as angry as he looks.  


Santa Marta Antpitta (Grallaria bangsi) - 03Aug2019

The Santa Marta Antpitta is a Colombian endemic that is vulnerable per IUCN classification.  It is only found in a very small range in the Santa Marta mountains of northeast Colombia.  The genus Galleria includes 47 species!  Many of them are very shy birds that have been increasingly accessed by innovative locals spending time to cultivate a relationship with the birds. They sometimes have to work over years to get the birds to come in for pictures reliably but it pays off because the offspring of those birds are learning to trust these local entrepreneurs which creates a lasting model for conservation, local employment and happy visiting birders.  



Sunday, October 5, 2025

Chestnut-crowned Antpitta (Grallaria ruficapilla) - 18Aug2024

I suppose I couldn't have asked for better photo ops on this Antpitta.  On my second trip to Colombia, we made many stops to various locations where the locals have trained the Antpittas to come for worms or grubs.  These normally secretive birds have become accustomed to being the subject of many photos from visiting birders from all over the globe.  This particular bird almost seemed to enjoy the limelight.  This species is found up and down the Andes from Peru to Venezuela.



 

Rufous Gnateater (Conopophaga lineata) - 09Aug2022

The Rufous Gnateater is a denizen of the Atlantic Forest in southeastern Brazil and some of the neighboring countries (Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina).  There are nine other species in the gnat eater genus of Conopophaga.  We had ours in the one day we were near the coast in Sao Paulo before we set off for the Pantanal.




Saturday, October 4, 2025

White-bellied Antbird (Myrmeciza longipes) - 11Aug2024

The White-bellied Antbird is usually quite shy, like most antbirds.  We got lucky with this one on my last trip to Colombia.  This species ranges across southern Central America and northern South America.



Band-tailed Antbird (Hypocnemoides maculicauda) - 17Aug2022

The Band-tailed Antbird is found throughout the Amazon basin in Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia and Peru but it does spill over into neighboring areas outside the basin.  We saw ours in the Pantanal in Brazil.  It is one of two birds in the genus Hypocnemoides.  It stays close to water.





Thursday, October 2, 2025

Western Fire-eye (Pyriglena maura) - 14Aug2022

There are 5 species of Fire-eye in the genus Pyriglena and apparently this one has a fairly large range in South America but I only ever saw one in Chapada dos Guimaraes just north of the Pantanal in Brazil.  The Wiki entry on this species says it is "fairly common but uncommon" whatever that means!  I can testify to the uncommon part of that statement.  IUCN does not classify this species because it follows another taxonomy which has this species lumped in with some others to form the White-backed Fire-eye.  Generally there is very little known about it.




Mato Grosso Antbird (Cercomacra melanaria) - 22Aug2022

This Antbird has two populations, one completely in Bolivia and the other that straddles Brazil and a tiny portion of Paraguay.  We saw ours on our trip through the Pantanal in Brazil.  We heard them several times and caught some glimpses but for the most part we gave up on getting good looks until this one showed up.  This is the male, the female looking more interesting in my opinion.  

Parker's antbird (Cercomacroides parkeri) - 13Aug2024

Parker's Antbird is a Colombian endemic with limited range across all three of the central Andean cordilleras.  It is one of 6 birds in the Cercomacroides genus. It has a status of Least Concern based on its wide range within Colombia, but it probably is not safe considering habitat loss.  Like most Antbirds, the male and female have different coloration.  I was lucky enough to see and photograph both although I can certainly improve on these photos.

Male

Female

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Streak-headed Antbird (Drymophila striaticeps) - 20Aug2024

As is typical with many Antbirds, these are difficult to see let alone photograph so I was pleased to get this photo.  This species inhabits higher elevation forests in the Andes from Colombia all the way down to Bolivia.  The only reason I got this photo was because we were waiting in the same spot for an Antpitta to show and this gal was the bonus bird.  The females are buff colored in the areas that are white on a male.



Santa Marta Antbird (Drymophila hellmayri) - 02Aug2019

Normally I would not generate a post for a species with such a poor photo, but this is a Near Threatened endemic bird in a very restricted range and it is difficult to get eyes on.  The genus Drymophila contains 11 species of Antbird.   This one only lives in a very small area in the Santa Marta mountains of Colombia's northeast.  I hope to go back and meet this bird again.



Rusty-backed Antwren (Formicivora rufa) - 11&16Aug2022

Now here is an Antwren species that is not afraid to come out into the open!  I have good pics of the male and female.  They are distributed across much of the middle of South America in many different habitats but mostly scrublands and gallery forests.