Bronze-tailed plumeleteer
The bronze-tailed plumeleteer is a species of hummingbird in the "emeralds", tribe Trochilini of subfamily Trochilinae. It is found in Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Panama.
Taxonomy
The bronze-tailed plumeleteer was formally described and illustrated in 1861 by the English ornithologist John Gould based on a specimen that had been supplied by the Polish collector Józef Warszewicz. Gould coined the binomial name Hypuroptila urochrysia but mistakenly gave the [type type locality (biology)|locality (biology)|locality] as the "neighbourhood of Panama". The locality has been redesignated as western Columbia. The bronze-tailed plumeleteer is now placed with the white-vented plumeleteer in the genus Chalybura that was introduced in 1854 by Ludwig Reichenbach. The genus name combines the Ancient Greek χαλυψ/khalups, χαλυβος/khalubos meaning "steel" with ουρα/oura meaning "tail". The specific epithet combines the Ancient Greek ουρα/oura meaning "tail" with χρυσεος/khruseos meaning "golden".Three subspecies are recognised:C. u. melanorrhoa Salvin, 1865 – Nicaragua and Costa RicaC. u. isaurae – east, west Panama and northwest ColombiaC. u. urochrysia – southeast Panama, central north, west Colombia to northwest Ecuador
Most taxonomic systems assign three subspecies to the bronze-tailed plumeleteer, the nominate C. u. urochrysia, C. u. melanorrhoa, and C. u. isaurae. However, BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World adds C. u. intermedia, which the others treat as a subspecies of the white-vented plumeleteer. Subspecies melanorrhoa and isaurae have at times been suggested as separate species.
Description
The bronze-tailed plumeleteer is long. Males weigh about and females about. Both sexes of all subspecies have a black maxilla and tip of the mandible; the rest of the mandible is dull pink to dark red. Males of the nominate subspecies have metallic green upperparts and glittering green underparts, with long fluffy white undertail coverts. Their tails are bronze-green. Females are also metallic green above but gray below with green flecks on the side. Their undertail coverts are grayish white and their outer tail feathers tipped with gray. Immature birds resemble the adults with buffy to cinnamon fringing on the feathers of the crown, nape, and rump.Males of subspecies C. u. melanorrhoa have darker green upperparts than the nominate, with purplish bronze uppertail coverts. Their underparts are darker with a dusky bronze belly and shorter, sooty blackish, undertail coverts. Their tail is purplish black. Females are a darker gray below than the nominate and have more green flecking. Males of subspecies C. u. isaurae have a blue throat and breast, a bluish green belly, and a brighter bronze tail than the nominate. Females have pale gray underparts with little or no green flecks.