Bearded mountaineer
The bearded mountaineer is a species of hummingbird in the "coquettes", tribe Lesbiini of subfamily Lesbiinae. It is endemic to Peru.
Taxonomy and systematics
The ornithologist John Gould described the species in 1869, from a specimen collected by Henry Whitely at Tinta District in Peru, and placed it in its own genus Oreonympha. He recognised a kinship with Oxypogon and Ramphomicron. A study of mitochondrial DNA of hummingbirds shows it to be most closely related to the bearded helmetcrests and the rufous-capped thornbill. The other member of the genus Chalcostigma lay outside the group, suggesting the genus might need revising in the future. In addition, the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society is considering a proposal to merge both Oreonympha and Chalcostigma into Oxypogon.The SACC, the International Ornithological Committee, and the Clements taxonomy recognize two subspecies, the nominate O. n. nobilis and O. n. albolimbata. However, BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World treats these taxa as separate species, the eastern and western mountaineers respectively.
Description
The bearded mountaineer is long including the approximately long bill. It weighs about. Adult males of the nominate subspecies have a deep purplish blue forecrown and crown with a narrow black stripe in the middle. The face is bronzy black with a narrow white band at the back. Its gorget is long and narrow, emerald green under the chin and the rest purplish with a bluish tip. The nape, back, and rump are bronzy to bronzy brown. The tail is long and deeply forked; the feathers are bronzy with increasing amounts of white from the innermost to outermost. The center of the breast is white, the sides of the breast and flanks brownish, and the undertail coverts are bronzy brown. The adult female is similar to the male but duller overall and dingier underneath. Its gorget is smaller and mostly white and the tail less deeply forked. Both sexes have black bills and legs. Juveniles are duller than the adults, with a scaly green crown, a dull brown throat, and a yellow mandible.Males of subspecies O. n. albolimbata has white bands on either side of the crown and its tail is much more coppery. The female has white extending from the same white bands of the crown through the lores to the gorget.
Distribution and habitat
The "eastern" nominate subspecies of bearded mountaineer is found in the departments of Apurímac and Cuzco of south-central Peru, in the drainages of the Urubamba and upper Apurímac rivers. The "western" subspecies O. n. albolimbata is found in Peru's departments of Huancavelica, Ayacucho, and Apurímac, in the drainages of the Mantaro, Pampas, and Chalhuanca rivers.The species inhabits dry Andean valleys characterized by rocky and scrubby hillsides and open woodland. It occurs in a variety of native plant communities but also is regularly found in tree tobacco and Eucalyptus even along roads and in towns. In elevation it ranges from.