Greenish puffleg
The greenish puffleg is a species of hummingbird in the "brilliants", tribe Heliantheini in subfamily Lesbiinae. It is found in Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, and Peru.
Taxonomy and systematics
An early author included Haplophaedia in genus Eriocnemis but later work confirmed that they are separate sister genera.The greenish puffleg has six recognized subspecies :
- H. a. floccus Nelson
- H. a. galindoi Wetmore
- H. a. caucensis Simon
- H. a. aureliae Bourcier & Mulsant
- H. a. russata Gould
- H. a. cutucuensis Schuchmann, Weller, & Heynen
Description
The greenish puffleg is long and weighs. Males of the nominate subspecies have green upperparts with a coppery hue on the head and neck. The underparts are duller green with a grayish white scaly appearance. The leg puffs are white on the outside and buff on the inside. The slightly forked tail is blue-black. Females are similar but their underparts are more heavily scaled and their leg puffs entirely white. Juveniles resemble females.Subspecies H. a. caucensis has grass green upperparts with a more intense coppery tinge on the head and rump than the nominate, and also a white patch on the belly. Males of H. a. floccus are similar to caucensis but with paler green underparts and less of a coppery tinge on the upperparts, but in addition bright cinnamon uppertail coverts. The female's foreneck and breast have prominent white scaling. Males of H. a. galindoi are darker green above and below compared to floccus and the scaling of females' underparts is more muted. H. a. russata has a longer bill and brighter copper upperparts than the nominate and its underparts are scaled brown rather than grayish white. H. a. cutucuensis is like the nominate but with much heavier grayish white scaling on the underparts.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the greenish puffleg are found thus:- H. a. floccus, extreme eastern Panama and adjacent northwestern Colombia
- H. a. galindoi, Cerro Pire in extreme eastern Panama
- H. a. caucensis, from southeastern Panama into the Western and Central Andes of Colombia
- H. a. aureliae, Colombia's Eastern Andes and possibly the eastern slope of the Central Andes
- H. a. russata, the eastern slope of the Ecuadorean Andes as far south as Pastaza Province
- H. a. cutucuensis, from the eastern slope of the southern Ecuadorean Andes into Peru to the border of Amazonas and San Martín departments