Birds of the World
 - Mishana Tyrannulet
 - Mishana Tyrannulet
+3
 - Mishana Tyrannulet
Watch
 - Mishana Tyrannulet
Listen

Mishana Tyrannulet Zimmerius villarejoi Scientific name definitions

Jacob Socolar
Version: 1.0 — Published March 4, 2020
Text last updated November 9, 2018

Sign in to see your badges

Originally Appeared in

Full content is available exclusively to Birds of the World subscribers. Sign in Learn more

Introduction

Mishana Tyrannulet is a small flycatcher distinguished from its congeners by the combination of drab head, small size, and red bill. It is restricted to poor-soil habitats of northern Peru, where the two disjunct populations might represent separate species. The population that is restricted to white-sands forest (and similar habitats) in the Nanay and Tigre river basins near Iquitos was one of several spectacular discoveries made in the 1990s by José Álvarez Alonso, who performed the first serious ornithological exploration of white-sands forests in Peru. He named the species for P. Avencio Villarejo, an Augustinian missionary who wrote about the people and nature of Peruvian Amazonia (Alvarez Alonso and Whitney 2001). One additional specimen already existed at the time of the discovery: a single individual collected in 1912 at an uncertain location near Moyobamba, Peru. Subsequent fieldwork revealed a separate, disjunct population inhabiting scrubby forests of the Mayo and Huallaga Valleys in San Martín. This undescribed population is vocally distinct from the nominate, and itself might warrant separate species status (Whitney et al. 2013).

Distribution of the Mishana Tyrannulet - Range Map
Enlarge
  • Year-round
  • Migration
  • Breeding
  • Non-Breeding
Distribution of the Mishana Tyrannulet

Recommended Citation

Socolar, J. (2020). Mishana Tyrannulet (Zimmerius villarejoi), version 1.0. In Birds of the World (T. S. Schulenberg, Editor). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, USA. https://doi.org/10.2173/bow.mistyr1.01
Birds of the World

Partnerships

A global alliance of nature organizations working to document the natural history of all bird species at an unprecedented scale.