We report the first nest of the Smoky Bush Tyrant (Myiotheretes fumigatus) which was found on 11 October 2009 at the Yanayacu Biological Station, Napo Province in Ecuador. The nest was a shallow open cup, 2 m above ground on the side of a dead stump covered in epiphytes. The nest was 12 cm wide by 6.5 cm in height; internally, the cup was 7 cm wide by 4 cm deep and was lined predominantly with scales from the tree-fern (Cyathea spp.), but included a few small sticks and brightly colored feathers. Both eggs were predominantly white with a few small, widely dispersed, dark reddish spots, predominantly around the fattest area. They measured 24.0 × 18 and 23.0 × 17.5 mm, and weighed 3.6 and 3.5 g, respectively. The first fully feathered fledgling left the nest on 2 November and the second on 3 November, for a nestling period of 16–17 days. We noted the presence of a third bird (besides the pair) which remained within the territory through the entire nesting period, at times in close association with the breeding pair.
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1 March 2012
Description of Eggs, Nest, and Parental Care of the Smoky Bush Tyrant (Myiotheretes fumigatus) from Ecuador
Tadeusz Stawarczyk,
Marta Borowiec,
Harold F. Greeney,
Jose T. Simbaña
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