Movement The northern white-fringed antwren is believed to be a year-round resident throughout its range.
Feeding The northern white-fringed antwren feeds on a wide variety of insects and spiders. It typically forages singly, in pairs, or in family groups, and sometimes temporarily as part of a
mixed-species feeding flock. It usually forages from the ground to about above it, but as high as in
gallery and deciduous forest. It forages actively in dense vegetation, taking most prey by gleaning from live leaves, vines, branches, and stems. It sometimes makes short jumps from a perch to reach the underside of leaves and makes short sallies from a perch to capture moths in flight.
Breeding The northern white-fringed antwren's breeding season varies geographically, spanning April to October in northern Colombia, May to September in north-central Venezuela, and April to August on Tobago. Its nest is a cup woven from grass stems and thin plant fibers suspended in a branch fork, typically above the ground; both sexes build it. The usual clutch size is two eggs, which are creamy or grayish white with variable markings of lilac to deep purple. The incubation period, time to fledging, and details of parental care are not known.
Vocalization The northern white-fringed antwren has several vocalizations. The "monotone song" is a "single soft
pup or
chup note". It is repeated up to 25 times but is sometimes made only two to five times. The "trilled song" is a "mellow overslurred whistle followed by a fast flat-pitched soft trill:
puuh-didididididi". It also makes a "somewhat complex underslurred note sounding disyllabic:
churet or
chuweet". There are some minor geographic variations. Both sexes sing, typically when hidden in foliage, and mostly from before dawn into the morning. ==Status==