Russet-throated puffbird
The russet-throated puffbird is a species of near-passerine bird in the family Bucconidae, the puffbirds, nunlets, and nunbirds. It is found in Colombia and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The taxonomy of the russet-throated puffbird is complicated. BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World assigns three subspecies, the nominate H. r. ruficolis, H. r. decolor, and H. r. coloratus. The International Ornithological Committee adds H. r. striaticollis. Like HBW, the Clements taxonomy does not recognize striaticollis; both include it within decolor. But Clements adds H. r. bicinctus and H. r. stoicus, which the other two systems assign to the two-banded puffbird. The South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society recognizes that treating H. bicinctus as a species might be valid but has not received a formal proposal for the split.Description
The russet-throated puffbird is long and weighs. The adult of the nominate subspecies has a dark brown crown with pale brown spots, a reddish spot just over the bill, a white patch around the eye and on the cheek, and a black patch below and behind the white one. The nape has a narrow buffy or white collar. The upperparts are dull brown with grayish mottling while the closed wing is dull brown with buffy "scales". The tail is long and dark brown with thin pale edges to the feathers. The chin is white and the throat and upper breast rich rufous. Under them are a thin white and a wide black band across the chest. The rest of the underparts are reddish buff with black bars or spots on the flanks. The bill is black, the eye yellow to white, and the feet black or dull green.H. r. decolor is paler above than the nominate, its lower breast and belly are whiter, and there is less dark barring on the flanks. H. r. coloratus compared to the nominate has blacker cheeks, a deeper orange throat, and underparts that are a richer orange-buff.
Distribution and habitat
The four subspecies of russet-throated puffbird recognized by the IOC are distributed thus:- H. r. decolor, extreme northeastern Colombia into western Venezuela
- H. r. ruficollis, northern Colombia and western Venezuela
- H. r. striaticollis, northwestern Venezuela's Zulia and Falcón states
- H. r. coloratus, western Venezuela south of Lake Maracaibo