Birds of Panama

    PASSERIFORMES: Tyrannidae (Tyrant Flycatchers, Calyptura)  
Genus: Contopus (6 species, 16 worldwide)


Northern Tropical Pewee
Northern Tropical Pewee (Contopus bogotensis brachytarsus)
Arenal, Costa Rica  
   
Photograph by Tom Friedel   © All Rights Reserved.

Non-migratory. Sometimes with a yellower belly and darker crest than Eastern Wood Pewee or Western Wood Pewee.

Olive-sided Flycatcher
Olive-sided Flycatcher (Contopus cooperi) Near Threatened
Huila, Colombia  
   
Photograph by Tom Friedel   © All Rights Reserved.

Also called Olive-sided Pewee. Migrates from the boreal pine forests, and disperses widely in tropical America. Perches in the open, often high. Slightly larger than the other pewee species (compare to Rusty-margined Flycatcher).
From front.

Dark Pewee
Dark Pewee (Contopus lugubris)
Monserrat, Coronado, Costa Rica  
   
Photograph by Jorge Obando Gutierrez   © Copyrighted, All Rights Reserved.


Ochraceous Pewee
Ochraceous Pewee (Contopus ochraceus)
San Gerardo de Dota, Costa Rica  
   
Photograph by Jorge Obando Gutierrez   © Copyrighted, All Rights Reserved.


Western Wood Pewee
Western Wood Pewee (Contopus sordidulus)
Bahia Solano, Choco, Colombia  
   
Photograph by Tom Friedel   © All Rights Reserved.

Northern migrant. Very difficult to differentiate from the Eastern Wood Pewee when ranges overlap. Supposedly more greyish, and with less of an orange/pink lower mandible.

Eastern Wood Pewee
Eastern Wood Pewee (Contopus virens)
Isla San Andres, Colombia  
   
Photograph by Tom Friedel   © All Rights Reserved.

Northern migrant. Very difficult to differentiate from the Western Wood Pewee when ranges overlap. Usually perched out in the open, sometimes in the canopy and sometimes less than a meter above ground. May allow a close approach.


© Tom Friedel - All Rights Reserved, except for images and data otherwise noted.       Colombia       Panama       Ecuador       Costa Rica       Mexico
Experimental sites:       Peru       Venezuela       The World       Brazil       Bolivia
Really Experimental sites:       Guyana       Cuba