Black-crested antshrike

Sakesphorus canadensis

The black-crested antshrike is a passerine bird in the antbird family. It is a resident breeder in tropical South America in Trinidad, Colombia, Venezuela, the Guianas, northern Brazil and northeastern Peru.
Black-crested Antshrike male the "missing" male seen at Camarones near SFF Los Flamencos Black-crested antshrike,Colombia,Geotagged,SFF Los Flamencos,Sakesphorus canadensis,Winter

Appearance

The black-crested antshrike is typically 15.7 cm long, and weighs 24 g. The adult male has a black head, prominent crest, throat and breast, a rufous-brown back, black wings with white feather edges, a short black tail and a white belly.

The female and immature males have a chestnut crest and head with black and white barring on the cheeks, dull brown upperparts, black-streaked buff underparts, and browner wing and tail feathers than the male.
Black-crested antshrike (Sakesphorus canadensis) Laguna Juanacha, Ucayali, Peru. Aug 18, 2023 Black-crested antshrike,Geotagged,Peru,Sakesphorus canadensis,Winter

Behavior

This is a bird of undergrowth in mangrove or other swampy forest and thickets near water. It is usually found as territorial pairs.
Black-crested antshrike (female), Inírida river, Colombia I'm glad I asked our guide for help on this one, as I was completely on the wrong track. Superficially, I figured this to be one of dozens of woodpeckers known to occur in Colombia, yet the bill was off. Confusingly, it's an antshrike, a black-crested even, yet in this case it is the female having the spectacular red crest.  Black-crested antshrike,Colombia,Guainía,Inírida,Sakesphorus canadensis,South America,World

Reproduction

The female lays two purple-lined white eggs in a deep cup nest suspended below a branch or vine. They are incubated by both sexes for 14 days to hatching, the female always brooding at night. The chicks fledge in another 12 days.

Food

The black-crested antshrike feeds on insects and other arthropods gleaned from foliage. It will also take small lizards and berries. It is an inconspicuous species, often first located by its song, an accelerating and ascending series of musical notes "cuew-cuew-cuew-cue-cue-cue-cu-cu-cu-cu", or the call, a snarled "churrrr".

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Status: Least concern
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderPasseriformes
FamilyThamnophilidae
GenusSakesphorus
SpeciesS. canadensis
Photographed in
Colombia
Peru