The sapayoa or broad-billed sapayoa is a suboscinepasserine found in lowland rainforests in Panama and north-western South America. As the epithet aenigma implies, its relationships have long been elusive. It is easy to overlook, but appears to be common in a wide range and is not considered threatened by the IUCN.
"preliminary DNA-DNA hybridization comparisons... indicate that this species is either a relative of the Old WorldEurylaimidae or a sister group of all other Tyrannida, as suggested by earlier biochemical studies.... In any event, it is not a close relative of manakins or any other recent tyrannoid."
More recent research suggests that it is not a New World suboscine at all, but an Old World suboscine. In 2004, it was shown that the sapayoa is an outlier to the New World suboscines. In an earlier analysis based on nDNAmyoglobinintron 2 and GAPDH intron 11sequence data, the authors found the sapayoa
"as a deep branch in the group of broadbills and pittas of the Old World tropics."
Accordingly, the sapayoa would be the last surviving New World species of a lineage that evolved in Australia-New Guinea when Gondwana was in the process of splitting apart. The sapayoa's ancestors are hypothesized to have reached South America via the Western Antarctica Peninsula. Nowadays, the sapoyoa is sometimes placed in the family Eurylaimidae with the broadbills. Others tentatively place the sapayoa in the asity family Philepittidae otherwise found only in Madagascar and sometimes included in the broadbill family. However, the divergence between the broadbills and the sapayoa found in the 2003 study is only slightly less deep than that between the sapayoa and the pittas. It is even possible, though unlikely, that the present species is actually closer to the pittas than to the broadbills. Consequently, it is now placed in its own monotypic family, Sapayoidae.
Description
The sapayoa is a small, olive-colored bird, somewhat paler below and with a yellowish throat. Its habitus resembles a bigger, longer-tailed, broader-billed female manakin. It is rare to uncommon in the forest understory, favoring ravines and small streams. It is usually seen in pairs or mixed-species flocks. It spends long periods perching, then sallies up to pick fruit or catch insects, on foliage or in mid air, with its flat, wide bill in a way reminiscent of flatbills. The sapayoa builds a nest suspended from a branch usually above a stream. It is a pear shapedstructure with the larger end at the top and fibres hanging beneath. The entrance is at the side.