Movement The black-crested antshrike is presumed to be a year-round resident throughout its range.
Feeding The black-crested antshrike feeds on a wide variety of insects and other
arthropods and also includes small lizards and fruit in its diet. It forages singly or in pairs and sometimes joins
mixed-species feeding flocks, and typically feeds from the ground up to about above it. It hops through dense vegetation, gleaning prey from leaves, stems, vines, and branches by reaching and sometimes making short upward jumps from a perch. It has been observed dropping to the ground to capture prey.
Breeding The black-crested antshrike's breeding season varies geographically. In much of Colombia and Venezuela it spans from June to September, in Guyana March to May, in French Guyana December to July, on Trinidad May to July, and in Suriname at any time of year. The breeding season is undefined in Brazil and Peru. Its nest is a cup woven variously from grass and other plant and fungal fibers, and typically suspended in a branch fork. The usual clutch is two eggs. In Suriname one study noted an incubation period of 14 days. Both sexes brood and feed nestlings during the day; only the female broods them at night. The incubation period elsewhere, the time to fledging, and other details of parental care are not known.
Vocalization The primary song of most black-crested anshrike subspecies is "a series of c. 10–15 notes, initially flat with complaining quality, then rising in pitch while accelerating rapidly". That of
S. c. pulchellus is similar "but overall slower-paced and lower-pitched, while final 2–3 snarling notes drop further in pitch". Calls apparently do not vary across the species' range. They include "a complex downslurred note that sounds as if squeezed out", "abrupt 'chup' notes repeated often", and a "rattle call introduced by a long clear note". ==Status==