Bertoni's Antbird vs Black-faced Antbird
Drymophila rubricollis comparado con Myrmoborus myotherinus
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Atributo | Bertoni's Antbird | Black-faced Antbird |
|---|---|---|
| Nombre científico | Drymophila rubricollis | Myrmoborus myotherinus |
| Orden | Passeriformes | Passeriformes |
| Familia | Thamnophilidae | Thamnophilidae |
| Estado de conservación | Least Concern | Least Concern |
| Longitud | — | — |
| Envergadura | 10,6 cm (4.2 in) | 12,4 cm (4.9 in) |
| Peso | 10,0 g (0.35 oz) | 19,099999999999998 g (0.67 oz) |
| Dieta | -- | -- |
| Tamaño de la puesta | -- | 1-2 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Habitat Comparison
Estado de conservación
Bertoni's Antbird
Black-faced Antbird
About These Birds
Bertoni's Antbird
Bertoni's Antbird is a small antbird of the Atlantic Forest in southeastern Brazil and northeastern Argentina. It has a distinctive rufous throat and chest in males, with streaked brown and black upperparts. It forages in dense forest undergrowth near bamboo stands, feeding on insects flushed from leaf litter.
Black-faced Antbird
The Black-faced Antbird is a compact, sexually dimorphic bird; males have slate-gray plumage with a bold black face and bib, while females show rufous-brown coloring with whitish underparts. It inhabits dense tropical lowland and foothill forests from Colombia and Venezuela south through Amazonia to Bolivia and Brazil. It follows army ant swarms to capture the small invertebrates they flush, foraging in undergrowth near the forest floor.