Myrmothera

Myrmothera is a genus of birds belonging to the antpitta family Grallariidae that are found in Middle and South America.

Taxonomy
The genus was established in 1816 by the French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot. The type species was subsequently designated by Philip Sclater in 1890 as the thrush-like antpitta.

The genus contains 6 species:
 * White-lored antpitta (Myrmothera fulviventris) (formerly in Hylopezus)
 * Amazonian antpitta (Myrmothera berlepschi) (formerly in Hylopezus)
 * Thicket antpitta (Myrmothera dives) (formerly in Hylopezus)
 * Tepui antpitta (Myrmothera simplex)
 * Thrush-like antpitta (Myrmothera campanisona)
 * Tapajos antpitta (Myrmothera subcanescens)

Some other taxonomies, including those followed by the Integrated Taxonomic Information System and Handbook of Birds of the World, consider the Tapajos antpitta to be a subspecies of the thrush-like antpitta. Based on DNA analysis, the genus is considered to be a sister taxon to the genus Hylopezus. The name Myrmothera is a compound word created from the Greek words murmos, meaning "ant" and -theras, meaning "hunter" (from therao, meaning "to hunt).