About Eurypyga helias (Pallas, 1781)
The sunbittern, Eurypyga helias (Pallas, 1781), generally has subdued coloration with fine linear patterns in black, grey, and brown. However, the middle webs of its remiges are vividly colored; when the wings are fully spread, these form bright red, yellow, and black eyespots. Sunbitterns display these eyespots to other sunbitterns during courtship and threat displays, and also use them to startle potential predators. Small differences in feather patterns on the throat and head allow differentiation between adult male and female sunbitterns. Like some other bird species, the sunbittern has powder down. It has a long, pointed bill that is black on the upper mandible, and a short hallux similar to that of shorebirds and rails. The South American lowland subspecies found east of the Andes has mainly brown upperparts, with orange-yellow legs and lower mandible. The other two subspecies are greyer on their upperparts, and their legs and bills are sometimes redder. The sunbittern’s overall range stretches from Guatemala to Brazil. The nominate subspecies, E. h. helias, occurs east of the Andes in lowland tropical South America, from the Orinoco basin through the Amazon basin and Pantanal. The subspecies E. h. meridionalis has a more restricted range, found along the East Andean slope in south-central Peru, in the lower subtropical zone at altitudes between 800–1,830 m (2,620–6,000 ft). The third subspecies, E. h. major, occurs across a range of altitudes from southern Guatemala, through Central America and the Chocó, to western Ecuador. This subspecies may also be present in southern Mexico; it has been traditionally reported from the Atlantic slope of Chiapas, but no specimens are known and there have been no recent records. The species inhabits humid Neotropical forests, typically in areas with an open understory located near rivers, streams, ponds, or lagoons. Sunbitterns are cryptic birds that spread their large wings, which have an eye-like pattern, when they feel threatened.