The western flycatcher was recognized as a single species until 1989, when the
American Ornithologists' Union split it into two different species: the
Pacific-slope flycatcher (
E. difficilis) of coastal western North America and parts of the western Rocky Mountains, and the
Cordilleran flycatcher (
E. occidentalis) of the interior Rocky Mountains, with both species wintering in Mexico. Both species looked virtually identical to one another, with the split being based on differing breeding habitats and apparent differences in songs and calls. The split was recognized until 2023, when the American Ornithologists' Union and
International Ornithological Congress again lumped both species due to a lack of consistent vocal, genetic, morphological differences and extensive hybridization across much of their range.
Subspecies There are five subspecies recognized: •
E. d. difficilis, from southeastern Alaska south to the Sierra San Pedro Mártir of Baja California, Mexico •
E. d. insulicola, the Channel Islands of southern California •
E. d. cineritius, mountains of southern Baja California Sur, Mexico •
E. d. hellmayri, Breeds in the interior Rockies from Canada south to northern Mexico, winters in central and southern Mexico •
E. d. occidentalis, the Sierra Madre del Sur of Guerrero and southern Oaxaca, Mexico The latter two subspecies were previously thought to comprise the "Cordilleran flycatcher". == Description ==