Velvet-fronted grackle
The velvet-fronted grackle is a species of bird in the family Icteridae, monotypic within the genus Lampropsar. It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, and Venezuela where its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical swamps and heavily degraded former forest.
Taxonomy
The velvet-fronted grackle was formally described in 1824 as Icterus tanagrinus by the German naturalist Johann Baptist von Spix. The specific epithet is Modern Latin meaning "tanager-like", from the genus Tanagra that had been introduced by Carl Linnaeus in 1764. The type locality was designated by the Brazilian zoologist Olivério Pinto in 1944 as the left bank of the Amazon River at Itacoatiara in the Brazilian state of Amazonas.The velvet-fronted grackle is now the only species placed in the genus Lampropsar that was introduced in 1847 by the German ornithologist Jean Cabanis. In 1848 he placed a single taxon in the genus, Lampropsa guianensis Cabanis. This is the type species. It is now considered as a subspecies of the velvet-fronted grackle. The genus name combines the Ancient Greek λαμπρος/lampros meaning "brilliant" with ψαρ/psar, ψαρος/psaros meaning "starling".
Five subspecies are recognised:L. t. guianensis Cabanis, JL, 1849 – tropical northern Venezuela to northwestern Guyana and far northern Brazil L. t. tanagrinus – southeastern Colombia to eastern Ecuador, northern Peru, and western Amazonian Brazil L. t. macropterus Gyldenstolpe, NCGF, 1945 – western Brazil L. t. violaceus Hellmayr, CE, 1906 – western Brazil L. t. boliviensis Gyldenstolpe, NCGF, 1941 – northern Bolivia
The species was the subject of a combined genetic and morphometric study by Eduardo Schultz and collaborators that was published in 2025. The results suggested that the velvet-fronted grackle should be split into three species:Lampropsar tanagrinus that is found in the floodplain of the western and central Amazon basin. The subspecies L. t. macropterus Gyldenstolpe, NCGF, 1945, is synonymized with this taxon.Lampropsar guianensis Cabanis, JL, 1849, that is found in the Orinoco basin of Venezuela and Colombia.Lampropsar violaceus Hellmayr, CE, 1906, that is found in the floodplain of the basin formed by the Beni, Mamoré and Guaporé Rivers mostly in northern Bolivia. The subspecies L. t. boliviensis Gyldenstolpe, 1941, is synonymized with this taxon.