Grey-rumped swift
The grey-rumped swift or gray-rumped swift is a species of bird in subfamily Apodinae of the swift family Apodidae. It is found in Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama; in every mainland South American country except Chile, French Guiana, Suriname, and Uruguay; in Trinidad and Tobago; and on Grenada.
Taxonomy and systematics
The grey-rumped swift has these seven subspecies:- C. c. phaeopygos Hellmayr, 1906
- C. c. lawrencei Ridgway, 1893
- C. c. schistacea Todd, 1937
- C. c. guianensis Hartert, E.J.O., 1892
- C. c. occidentalis Berlepsch & Taczanowski, 1884
- C. c. sclateri Pelzeln, 1868
- C. c. cinereiventris Sclater, P.L., 1862
Description
The grey-rumped swift is about long and weighs about. It has a protruding head, a short square tail, and wings that bulge in the middle and somewhat hook at the end. The sexes are alike. Adults of the nominate subspecies have mostly glossy black upperparts with a wide gray rump and uppertail coverts. Their underparts are a lighter gray than the rump, though darker on the undertail coverts. Juveniles are essentially the same as adults with the addition of pale fringes to many of the wing feathers.Subspecies C. c. phaeopygos differs from the nominate only by having pale undertail coverts. C. c. lawrencei has slightly darker underparts than the nominate and black undertail coverts that contrast with the belly. C. c. schistacea has darker upperparts than the nominate, with a steely blue gloss, and also deep gray underparts. C. c. guianensis is almost identical to the nominate. C. c. occidentalis and C. c. sclateri have the darkest rumps of all the subspecies and blackish gray bellies.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of grey-rumped swift are found thus:- C. c. phaeopygos, northeastern Honduras and from eastern Nicaragua through Costa Rica into northwestern Panama
- C. c. lawrencei, northern Venezuela, Trinidad, Tobago, and Grenada
- C. c. schistacea, the Andes from western Venezuela's Mérida state into eastern Colombia's Boyacá Department
- C. c. guianensis, eastern Venezuela and western Guyana
- C. c. occidentalis, from western Colombia through western Ecuador into extreme northwestern Peru's Tumbes department
- C. c. sclateri, patchily in southern Venezuela, southern Colombia, northwestern Brazil's upper Amazon basin, eastern Peru, and northwestern Bolivia
- C. c. cinereiventris, southeastern Brazil south from Bahia through eastern Paraguay into Argentina's Misiones Province