Berylline hummingbird
The berylline hummingbird is a species of hummingbird in the "emeralds", tribe Trochilini of subfamily Trochilinae. It is found in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and the United States.
Taxonomy and systematics
The berylline hummingbird was formerly placed in the genus Amazilia. A molecular phylogenetic study published in 2014 found that the genus Amazilia was polyphyletic. In the revised classification to create monophyletic genera, the berylline hummingbird was moved by most taxonomic systems to the resurrected genus Saucerottia. However, BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World retains it in Amazilia.The berylline hummingbird has these five subspecies:
- S. b. viola
- S. b. beryllina
- S. b. lichtensteini
- S. b. sumichrasti
- ''S. b. devillei''
Description
The berylline hummingbird is long. Males weigh about and females about. The bills of males of all subspecies have a black maxilla and a pinkish mandible with a black outer half. Adult males of the nominate subspecies S. b. beryllina have a bronze-green to coppery head, back and rump. Their uppertail coverts and tail are coppery to rufous. The bases of their primaries and secondaries are chestnut and show as a patch on the closed wing. Their underparts are glittering golden green. Adult nominate females are very similar to males, but with a paler and more grayish throat and belly. Their bills are entirely black. Juveniles are similar to females but with a grayish cinnamon belly.Subspecies S. b. viola has a grayish tinge on its back and rump, a fawn to cinnamon belly, and dark violet uppertail coverts and tail. S. b. lichtensteini is overall a lighter green than the nominate and its tail is silvery. S. b. sumichrasti males have duller green plumage than the nominate and a purplish gloss to the tail. Females' central tail feathers have a silvery to purple cast. S. b. devillei has more bronze on the back and rump than the nominate and a purplish to bronzy chestnut tail.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of berylline hummingbird are found thus:- S. b. viola, in western Mexico from Sonora to Michoacán and Guerrero and rarely to the southwestern US.
- S. b. beryllina, central Mexico from México state south into Veracruz and Oaxaca
- S. b. lichtensteini, western Chiapas in southern Mexico
- S. b. sumichrasti, extreme southeastern Oaxaca and northern and central Chiapas in southern Mexico
- S. b. devillei, discontinuously from the other subspecies in southern Guatemala and through El Salvador into central Honduras.