The subspecies of the barred antshrike are found thus: •
T. d. intermedius: from
San Luis Potosí and
Tamaulipas in east-central Mexico south on both sides of Central America through Costa Rica and possibly into Panama •
T. d. nesiotes:
Pearl Islands in the
Gulf of Panama •
T. d. eremnus:
Coiba Island off the Pacific coast of western Panama •
T. d. nigricristatus: Panama between eastern
Chiriquí Province and western
Guna Yala (San Blas) •
T. d. albicans: Caribbean slope of northern and western Colombia and south in the
Magdalena Valley •
T. d. nigrescens: north-central Colombia east of the Andes and northwestern Venezuela north of the Andes •
T. d. tobagensis: Tobago •
T. d. doliatus: northeastern Colombia, Venezuela except its northwest but including
Margarita Island, Trinidad,
the Guianas, and northern Amazonian Brazil •
T. d. difficilis: east-central Brazil roughly bounded by eastern
Maranhão, eastern
Mato Grosso,
Goiás, and western
Bahia •
T. d. capistratus: eastern Brazil between
Ceará,
Bahia, and the Atlantic •
T. d. radiatus:
Amazonas Department in southeastern Colombia, northeastern Ecuador, eastern Peru, northern and eastern Bolivia, most of Paraguay, northern and northeastern Argentina, and western and south-central Brazil •
T. d. cadwaladeri:
Tarija Department in southern Bolivia The barred antshrike inhabits a variety of landscapes with some geographical differences. In all areas it favors thick undergrowth rather than higher parts of the habitat and shuns the interior of mature forest. In Mexico, Central America, northern South America, and much of Peru it inhabits scrublands (especially second-growth),
riparian thickets, the edges of dry woodlands and
secondary forest, and even gardens. The exceptions are
T. d. eremnus, which inhabits tropical deciduous forest on Coiba Island,
T. d. tobagensis, which inhabits mature humid forest on Tobago, and
T. d. capistratus, which primarily inhabits
caatinga and
restinga in eastern Brazil. In eastern Colombia the species often occurs on river islands, and in Ecuador, northern Peru, and much of Brazilian Amazonia it occurs almost exclusively on them. In Brazil it also is found on the "mainland" along rivers. In southern Bolivia, Paraguay, and Argentina it adds savanna to the scrub, secondary forest, and riverine belts. In Mexico, Central America, and Colombia it is found from sea level or near it to . In Venezuela it reaches though most records are below ; in Peru it reaches . In Ecuador it is found only below . ==Behavior==