Groove-billed toucanet
The groove-billed toucanet is a near-passerine bird in the toucan family Ramphastidae. It is found in Colombia and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The groove-billed toucanet was originally described in the genus Pteroglossus. The International Ornithological Committee, the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society, and the Clements taxonomy recognize these three subspecies:A. s. calorhynchus was formerly treated as a separate species, "yellow-billed toucanet", by most taxonomists but was merged into the groove-billed toucanet starting in 2012. BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World retains it as a species.
Subspecies A. s. erythrognathus might warrant consideration as a separate species because its voice is different from that of the other two subspecies.
Description
The groove-billed toucanet is long and weighs. Its grooved culmen and mandible give it its English name. In the nominate subspecies and A. s. erythrognathus, most of the bill is wine-red to brown-red with a diagonal black stripe on the mandible. The nominate's bill also has a vertical white stripe at its base. In A. s. calorhynchus the bill is mostly yellow with a reduced amount of black, some orange-red at the base of the mandible, and a white stripe like the nominate's. All subspecies are overall mostly green, with the underparts being lighter and the undertail coverts yellower. The nominate subspecies has a white throat, some gold-bronze on the face, and bare blue skin around the brownish eye. A. s. erythrognathus has essentially the same plumage but with less gold-bronze on the face. A. s. calorhynchus also has similar plumage to the nominate but is larger than it and A. s. erythrognathus.Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of groove-billed toucanet are found thus:A. s. sulcatus, northern Venezuela between Falcón and Miranda statesA. s. erythrognathus, mountains of northeastern VenezuelaA. s. calorhynchus, Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta and Serranía del Perijá in northeastern Colombia and eastward to Lara in northwestern VenezuelaThe species primarily inhabits humid montane forest but is also found in semi-open landscapes like secondary forest, forest edges and nearby isolated trees, and gardens. It shuns large open areas. In elevation it mostly ranges between but occurs as low as sea level and as high as about.