Cobalt-winged parakeet
The cobalt-winged parakeet is a species of bird in subfamily Arinae of the family Psittacidae, the African and New World parrots. It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The International Ornithological Committee and the Clements taxonomy attribute the first description of the cobalt-winged parakeet to August von Pelzeln, dated 1870. Pelzeln called it Sittace cyanoptera and separated it from what is now the orange-chinned parakeet. Peters, in his Check-list of Birds of the World, cited Tommaso Salvadori as the originator, and this citation is used by BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World.The cobalt-winged parakeet has these three subspecies:
- B. c. cyanoptera
- B. c. gustavi Berlepsch, 1889
- B. c. beniensis Gyldenstolpe, 1941
Description
The cobalt-winged parakeet is long and weighs an average of. The species is almost entirely green that is darker on its upperparts. Adults of the nominate subspecies B. c. cyanoptera have a yellowish forehead, an orange chin, and a blue tinge on their crown and nape. Their flight feathers are blue; their central tail feathers are also blue and the rest are green. Immature birds are a duller version of the adult. Subspecies B. c. gustavi has very little blue on its head and a yellow edge on the carpals. B. c. beniensis is paler than the nominate with a similar amount of blue on its head and a yellow carpal edge like gustavi.Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the cobalt-winged parakeet are found thus:- B. c. cyanoptera, the upper Amazon Basin in eastern and southeastern Colombia, southern Venezuela, western Guyana, eastern Ecuador and Peru, northwestern Bolivia, and west-central Brazil
- B. c. gustavi, the upper Huallaga River valley of northern Peru
- B. c. beniensis, northeastern and central Bolivia from Beni to Santa Cruz