Tyrant-flycatchers (Tyrannidae)
Tropical Kingbird (Tyrannus melancholicus) - HBW 9, p. 419
French: Tyran mélancolique
German: Trauerkönigstyrann
Spanish: Tirano Melancólico
Other common names: Heine’s Kingbird (“T. apolites”)
Taxonomy: Tyrannus melancholicus Vieillot, 1819, Paraguay.
Closest relatives of genus may be Empidonomus and Tyrannopsis; recent molecular-sequence data indicate present genus is monophyletic and sister-group to clade that includes Empidonomus and Griseotyrannus; two main clades within genus, loosely corresponding to “tropical species assemblage” and combination of “W” & “E” species groups of earlier authors, but with some exceptions. Present species formerly treated as conspecific with T. couchii owing to limited hybridization in Mexico (S Veracruz, Atlantic slope of N Oaxaca), and possibly intergra.. View all taxonomy...
Closest relatives of genus may be Empidonomus and Tyrannopsis; recent molecular-sequence data indicate present genus is monophyletic and sister-group to clade that includes Empidonomus and Griseotyrannus; two main clades within genus, loosely corresponding to “tropical species assemblage” and combination of “W” & “E” species groups of earlier authors, but with some exceptions. Present species formerly treated as conspecific with T. couchii owing to limited hybridization in Mexico (S Veracruz, Atlantic slope of N Oaxaca), and possibly intergrades with it, but differs significantly in voice. Furthermore, recent molecular data indicate that these two are not each other’s closest relatives, but that present species is sister to T. dominicensis, with both nested within an expanded “tropical assemblage” as sister-group to an unresolved clade consisting of T. albogularis, T. couchii and T. savana. In addition, a possible hybrid “T. apolites” between present species and Empidonomus varius described from Rio de Janeiro area of SE Brazil. Geographical variation over the species’ enormous range very inadequately known, and current taxonomy potentially erroneous; race satrapa apparently intergrades with nominate. Three subspecies currently recognized.
Subspecies and Distribution:
- satrapa (Cabanis & Heine, 1859) - extreme SW USA (SE Arizona, SW New Mexico, S Texas) and W & E Mexico (both slopes S from Sonora, Tamaulipas and S San Luis Potosí to SE Veracruz and E Oaxaca; also Yucatán Peninsula) S to Panama, N Colombia and much of N Venezuela (mostly N of R Orinoco, also along S bank in NW Bolívar); also Trinidad, Tobago, Grenada and Netherlands Antilles.
- melancholicus Vieillot, 1819 - throughout tropical South America (except N Colombia, N Venezuela and NE Brazil) S to WC Peru (Lima) and, E of Andes, to SE Bolivia and C Argentina (S to Neuquén and NC Río Negro).
- despotes (M. H. K. Lichtenstein, 1823) - NE Brazil (Amapá, Maranhão and Ceará S to Bahia).
- Least Concern Enlarge map
- 4 A young bird ... Colombia, Jul 2010 Pere Sugranyes
- 4 A bird in a tr... Panama, Nov 2010 Juan Sanabria
- 4 Good views of ... Panama, Nov 2010 Juan Sanabria
- 4 A bird perched... Colombia, Jul 2011 Pere Sugranyes
- 4 A bird flycatc... Peru, Jul 2005 Josep del Hoyo
- 3.9 A bird feeding... Colombia, Feb 2007 Josep del Hoyo
- 3.9 Adult French Gui..., Jun 2008 Patrick Ingremeau
- 3.9 Foraging along... Brazil, Jun 2010 Ian Barker
- 3.9 Alert bird on ... Trinidad a..., Dec 2009 David Lingard
- 3.9 This bird was ... Panama, May 2010 Dannie Polley
- 3.8 Adult Argentina, Oct 2012 Luca Boscain
- 3.8 Vista de perfi... Colombia, Jul 2012 Daniel Avendaño
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Calls from a pair. Locality Pousada Rio Azul, Pará State, Brazil
(ssp melancholicus)
Bradley Davis 9 October 2007 3 years ago 3 -
Bird singing on top of high tree. Locality Instituto Butantan, São Paulo City, São Paulo State, Brazil
Antonio Silveira 8 December 2012 23 weeks ago 0 -
Bird singing in a open area. Locality Intervales State Park, São Paulo State, Brazil
Antonio Silveira 1 December 1999 41 weeks ago 0






