Curve-winged sabrewing
The curve-winged sabrewing is a species of hummingbird in the "emeralds", tribe Trochilini of subfamily Trochilinae. It is endemic to Mexico.
Taxonomy and systematics
The curve-winged sabrewing's taxonomic history is complex. It was formerly placed in genus Campylopterus. A molecular phylogenetic study published in 2014 found that the genus Campylopterus was polyphyletic. In the revised classification to create monophyletic genera, the curve-winged sabrewing was moved to the resurrected genus Pampa by some taxonomic systems. BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World retained the species in Campylopterus.The relation of the curve-winged sabrewing to other species and the number and identities of its subspecies also differ among taxonomic systems. HBW is the most conservative: It treats the curve-winged sabrewing as one of three subspecies of grey-breasted sabrewing. The second is C. c. excellens, which some other systems treat as a subspecies of curve-winged. The third is C. c. pampa, which some other systems treat as the full species wedge-tailed sabrewing. The Clements taxonomy calls P. curvipennis the wedge-tailed sabrewing with subspecies P. c. curvipennis and P. c. pampa. These two systems were last updated in 2021. In mid-2022 the North American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society and the International Ornithological Committee adopted the name curve-winged sabrewing for P. curvipennis and merged the former long-tailed sabrewing into it as a subspecies. They treat P. pampa as the separate species wedge-tailed sabrewing. The two-subspecies model for P. curvipennis was actually a return to the mid-twentieth century treatment of some authors.
This article follows the two-subspecies IOC taxonomic model.
Description
The curve-winged sabrewing is a large hummingbird with a long, wedge-shaped tail. The nominate subspecies P. c. curvipennis is long. The male's tail is about long and the female's. Adult males have a dull metallic violet blue to greenish blue crown, metallic green to bronze green upperparts, and bluish green uppertail coverts. Their tail feathers are mostly dull metallic bluish green that becomes purplish black at the ends. The outermost pair have dusky to brownish gray outer webs. Much of their face is dull grayish white to gray, with a white spot behind the eye. Their underparts are dull grayish white. Adult females are very similar to the male. However, their crown is dull blue rather than violet- to greenish blue. Their two outermost pairs of tail feathers have wide dull gray or whitish tips, and much of the outer web of the outermost pair is brownish gray. Immature birds are similar to the adult female, with a duller crown whose feathers have buff tips, a pale cinnamon wash to the underparts, and a buff wash on the outer tail feathers.Subspecies P. c. excellens is long. Males weigh an average of and females. The male's tail is about long and the female's. Both sexes have a slightly decurved black bill. Males have a bright metallic violet crown and the rest of their upperparts are deep metallic green. Much of their face is brownish gray with a white spot behind the eye. Their underparts are grayish white darkening to dull grayish undertail coverts. Their tail is dull metallic green with blackish violet tips to the feathers. The female's crown is duller and its tail feathers have white, not dark violet, tips.