| Description | 
 | 
Pyrocephalus nanus (Darwin's flycatcher) Nederlands: Afbeelding van Darwins tiran (Pyrocephalus nanus)
 English: origninal illustration of Darwin's flycatcher (Pyrocephalus nanus)
 Date	1839
 Source	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/40300066#page/83/mode/1up
 Author	Gould, J., 1839. The Zoology of the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, under the command of Captain Fitzroy, R.N., during the years 1832-1836. Edited and superintended by Charles Darwin. Part 3 Birds. Smith, Elder & Co. London. 1841. 156 pp., 50 tt
 Author	John Gould  (1804–1881)
 Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pyrocephalus_nanus.jpg
 
 
 Darwin's flycatcher or little vermilion flycatcher (Pyrocephalus nanus) is a species of flycatcher, closely related to the vermilion flycatcher. It is endemic to the Galápagos Islands. The same threats that led to the San Cristóbal flycatcher's extinction, including invasive species such as rats, threaten the Darwin's flycatcher today. Populations exist on the islands of Santa Cruz, Fernandina, Rabida and Isabela. It lives in humid forests and shrubland and has an average lifespan of five years. A 2016 study on the vermilion flycatcher elevated several of the subspecies to the rank of species, including Darwin's flycatcher, and the now extinct San Cristόbal flycatcher.
 
 Order:	Passeriformes
 Family:	Tyrannidae
 Genus:	Pyrocephalus
 Species:	Pyrocephalus nanus (Gould, 1839)
 Synonyms
  Pyrocephalus carolensis Ridgway, 1894
 Pyrocephalus intercedens Ridgway, 1894
 Pyrocephalus abingdoni Ridgway, 1894
 Pyrocephalus nanus nanus Snodgrass & Heller, 1904
 Pyrocephalus nanus abingdoni Snodgrass & Heller, 1904
 Pyrocephalus rubinus nanus (Gould, 1839)  
 |