Grey-fronted dove
The grey-fronted dove is a large New World tropical dove. It is found on Trinidad and in every mainland South American country except Chile.
Taxonomy and systematics
The grey-fronted dove, the grey-headed dove and azuero dove of Central America, the pallid dove of South America, and the Grenada dove of Grenada were at one time thought to be a single species. Even after these were split into individual species, some authors treated pallid dove as a subspecies of grey-fronted dove. Grey-fronted dove, grey-headed dove, and pallid dove are possibly a superspecies.The grey-fronted dove has these six subspecies. The population in Suriname, here included in the nominate L. r. rufaxilla, has been proposed as a seventh subspecies, L. r. hypochroos.
- L. r. pallidipectus Chapman (ornithologist)|Chapman]
- L. r. dubusi Bonaparte
- L. r. rufaxilla Richard & Bernard
- L. r. helmayri Chapman
- L. r. bahiae Hans [von Berlepsch|Berlepsch]
- L. r. reichenbachii Pelzeln
Description
The grey-fronted dove is about long and weighs. Adult males of the nominate subspecies have a grayish to bluish forehead, a bluish gray crown, and a grayish purple nape and hindneck with some iridescence. The yellow or brown eye is surrounded by bare red skin that is itself surrounded by pinkish white feathers. The throat is also pinkish white and the rest of the face buff to pinkish buff. The upperparts are olive-brown with faint bronze or purplish on the mantle. The central tail feathers are also olive-brown and the outer ones blackish with obvious white tips. The breast and sides of the neck are greyish pink shading to white on the belly. The bill is black and the legs and feet red. The adult nominate female is browner than the male, with more of an olive cast to the flanks and green-tinged upperparts. The juvenile is similar to the female but its breast has rust and drab brown bars and the upperparts' feathers show rusty edges. The other subspecies differ somewhat in size and their colors are redder, pinker, or grayer than the nominate.Distribution and habitat
The grey-fronted dove is a resident breeder in South America on Trinidad and east of the Andes from Colombia, Venezuela and the Guyanas south to Paraguay, Uruguay, and northeastern Argentina. The subspecies are found thus:- L. r. pallidipectus, eastern Colombia and probably western Venezuela
- L. r. dubusi, southeastern Colombia to south-central Venezuela, south through eastern Ecuador to eastern Peru, and east into western Brazil
- L. r. rufaxilla, eastern Venezuela, the Guianas, and northern Brazil
- L. r. helmayri, Venezuela's Paria Peninsula and Trinidad
- L. r. bahiae, central Brazil
- L. r. reichenbachii, central and southern Brazil south to northeastern Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay