Lepidothrix serena) ye una especie d'ave de la familia Pipridae, que s'atopa nel norte de Brasil, Guayana francesa, Guyana y Surinam.[1]
Vive nel estratu inferior del monte de tierra firme, en terrenes accidentaos.[2]
Mide aprosimao 8,7 cm de llargor. Presenta dimorfismu sexual. El machu ye negru, cola frente blanca y brillosa; nel centru del pechu tien una enllordia color anaranxáu a mariellu azufrao y el banduyu ye mariellu; la parte baxa del llombu ye azul. La fema ye verde claru brillante nel envés, cola cabeza azulada, el gargüelu y el pechu verde oliva y el banduyu amarellentáu.[2]
Aliméntase de frutos.[2]
Lepidothrix serena) ye una especie d'ave de la familia Pipridae, que s'atopa nel norte de Brasil, Guayana francesa, Guyana y Surinam.
Aderyn a rhywogaeth o adar yw Manacin talcenwyn (sy'n enw gwrywaidd; enw lluosog: manacinod talcenwyn) a adnabyddir hefyd gyda'i enw gwyddonol Pipra serena; yr enw Saesneg arno yw White-fronted manakin. Mae'n perthyn i deulu'r Manacinod (Lladin: Pipridae) sydd yn urdd y Passeriformes.[1]
Talfyrir yr enw Lladin yn aml yn P. serena, sef enw'r rhywogaeth.[2] Mae'r rhywogaeth hon i'w chanfod yn Ne America.
Mae'r manacin talcenwyn yn perthyn i deulu'r Manacinod (Lladin: Pipridae). Dyma rai o aelodau eraill y teulu:
Rhestr Wicidata:
rhywogaeth enw tacson delwedd Manacin barfwyn Manacus manacus Manacin cefnlas Chiroxiphia pareola Manacin helmog Antilophia galeata Manacin talcenwyn Lepidothrix serena Manacin y tepwi Lepidothrix suavissima Teyrnfanacin corunfelyn Neopelma chrysocephalum Teyrnfanacin gwelw Neopelma pallescens Teyrnfanacin torfelyn Neopelma sulphureiventer Teyrnfanacin Wied Neopelma aurifronsAderyn a rhywogaeth o adar yw Manacin talcenwyn (sy'n enw gwrywaidd; enw lluosog: manacinod talcenwyn) a adnabyddir hefyd gyda'i enw gwyddonol Pipra serena; yr enw Saesneg arno yw White-fronted manakin. Mae'n perthyn i deulu'r Manacinod (Lladin: Pipridae) sydd yn urdd y Passeriformes.
Talfyrir yr enw Lladin yn aml yn P. serena, sef enw'r rhywogaeth. Mae'r rhywogaeth hon i'w chanfod yn Ne America.
The white-fronted manakin (Lepidothrix serena) is a species of bird in the family Pipridae, the manakins. It is native to French Guiana, Guyana, Suriname and northeastern Brazil where it inhabits subtropical and tropical moist lowland forest. The male is mainly black, with a blue rump, yellow belly patches and a conspicuous patch of white feathers extending forwards from its forehead. The female is gray and black with a pale yellow belly and white eye ring. This is a fairly common species with a wide range, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has rated its conservation status as being of "least concern".
In 1760 the French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson included a description of the white-fronted manakin in his Ornithologie based on a specimen collected from Cayenne in French Guiana. He used the French name Le manakin à front blanc and the Latin Manacus alba fronte.[2] Although Brisson coined Latin names, these do not conform to the binomial system and are not recognised by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature.[3] When in 1766 the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the twelfth edition, he added 240 species that had been previously described by Brisson.[3] One of these was the white-fronted manakin. Linnaeus included a brief description, coined the binomial name Pipra serena and cited Brisson's work.[4] The specific name serena is from the Latin serenus "bright", "fair", "serene".[5] This species is now placed in the genus Lepidothrix was introduced by the French naturalist Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1854.[6] The species is monotypic.[7]
It is a deep black bird, and is named for its conspicuous bright-white forehead-patch feathers that extend forward beyond the bill's base; the female does not have the patch. Besides the black body and white forehead, a distinctive light blue, narrow patch of feathers covers the lower back-upper rump; a further distinctive color of this bird are bright sulphur-yellow breast patches. The bird has black legs, and dark eyes. The species is dimorphic with the female's colors being grayish and black with the sulphur-yellow belly; she has a white eye-ring.
It is found in the Atlantic coastal Guianas and the eastern Guiana Shield of Surname and French Guiana; also regions of Guyana and the northeastern Amazon states of Brazil. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forest.
The range of the white-fronted manakin is in the eastern Guianas, (only southeast border region of Guyana in the center-west of range), and the northeastern Amazon Basin; specifically, the eastern half of its range is all of Brazil's northeastern state of Amapá, with Amapá's south-flowing Jari River the centerline of its range. The range approaches the Amazon River but avoids the Amazon River corridor by about 100 km; further upstream its range is on the Amazon River, its north bank for 500 km, starting at the Rio Negro confluence and downriver past the confluence of the Madeira River. This portion of the range covers nearly all of the northern part of Pará state, north of the Amazon River. The species is not found south of the Amazon River into the southeast Amazon Basin.
The contiguous range in the Guianas, in the east encompasses all of French Guiana, and in the center country of Suriname, divides the country diagonally, being found in the southeast parts bordering French Guiana. Some disjunct locale areas of Guyana besides the southeast continuous range occur in Guyana's southwest at the headwaters of the Essequibo River and the Guiana Shield.
This bird has a very wide range, is fairly common and is presumed to have a large total population. The population trend is thought to be stable and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has rated the bird's conservation status as being of "least concern".[1]
The white-fronted manakin (Lepidothrix serena) is a species of bird in the family Pipridae, the manakins. It is native to French Guiana, Guyana, Suriname and northeastern Brazil where it inhabits subtropical and tropical moist lowland forest. The male is mainly black, with a blue rump, yellow belly patches and a conspicuous patch of white feathers extending forwards from its forehead. The female is gray and black with a pale yellow belly and white eye ring. This is a fairly common species with a wide range, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has rated its conservation status as being of "least concern".
El saltarín frentiblanco[4] (Lepidothrix serena), también denominado saltarín de frente blanca,[3] es una especie de ave paseriforme de la familia Pipridae perteneciente al género Lepidothrix. Es nativa del noreste de América del Sur.
Se distribuye en el extremo sureste de Guyana, Surinam, Guayana francesa y norte de Brasil al norte del río Amazonas (bajo río Negro hacia el este hasta Amapá).[5]
Esta especie es considerada bastante común en su hábitat natural: el sotobosque de selvas húmedas de baja altitud, por debajo de los 500 metros.[6]
Mide aproximadamente 8,7 cm de longitud. Presenta dimorfismo sexual. El macho es negro, con la frente blanca y brillante; en el centro del pecho tiene una mancha color anaranjado a amarillo azufrado y el vientre es amarillo; la parte baja de la espalda es azul. La hembra es verde claro brillante en el dorso, con la cabeza azulada, la garganta y el pecho verde oliva y el vientre amarillento.[7]
Se alimenta de frutos.[7]
La especie L. serena fue descrita por primera vez por el naturalista sueco Carolus Linnaeus en 1766 bajo el nombre científico Pipra serena; su localidad tipo es «Crique Ipoucin, río Approuague, Guayana francesa».[5]
El nombre genérico femenino «Lepidothrix» se compone de las palabras del griego «λεπις lepis, λεπιδος lepidos»: escama, floco, y «θριξ thrix, τριχος trikhos»: cabello;[8] y el nombre de la especie «serena», proviene del latín «serenus»: brillante, justo, sereno.[9]
Se asemeja y está estrechamente emparentado con el saltarín ventrinaranja Lepidothrix suavissima, por lo que ambos fueron anteriormente considerados conespecíficos, pero difieren marcadamente en la vocalización y en la anatomía de la siringe, y también en las características del plumaje del macho. Es monotípica.[5]
El saltarín frentiblanco (Lepidothrix serena), también denominado saltarín de frente blanca, es una especie de ave paseriforme de la familia Pipridae perteneciente al género Lepidothrix. Es nativa del noreste de América del Sur.
Lepidothrix serena Lepidothrix generoko animalia da. Hegaztien barruko Cotingidae familian sailkatua dago.
Lepidothrix serena Lepidothrix generoko animalia da. Hegaztien barruko Cotingidae familian sailkatua dago.
De witvoorhoofdmanakin (Lepidothrix serena; synoniem: Pipra serena) is een zangvogel uit de familie Pipridae (manakins).
Deze soort komt voor in zuidoostelijk Guyana, Suriname, Frans-Guyana en amazonisch noordelijk Brazilië.
De witvoorhoofdmanakin (Lepidothrix serena; synoniem: Pipra serena) is een zangvogel uit de familie Pipridae (manakins).
Lepidothrix serena é uma espécie de ave da família Pipridae.
Pode ser encontrada nos seguintes países: Brasil, Guiana Francesa, Guiana e Suriname.[1]
Os seus habitats naturais são: florestas subtropicais ou tropicais húmidas de baixa altitude.[1]
Lepidothrix serena é uma espécie de ave da família Pipridae.
Pode ser encontrada nos seguintes países: Brasil, Guiana Francesa, Guiana e Suriname.
Os seus habitats naturais são: florestas subtropicais ou tropicais húmidas de baixa altitude.
Vitpannad manakin[2] (Lepidothrix serena) är en fågel i familjen manakiner inom ordningen tättingar.[3] Den förekommer i sydöstra Guyana, Surinam, Franska Guyana och norra Amazonområdet i Brasilien.[3] IUCN kategoriserar arten som livskraftig.[1]
Vitpannad manakin (Lepidothrix serena) är en fågel i familjen manakiner inom ordningen tättingar. Den förekommer i sydöstra Guyana, Surinam, Franska Guyana och norra Amazonområdet i Brasilien. IUCN kategoriserar arten som livskraftig.
Lepidothrix serena là một loài chim trong họ Pipridae.[1]