Sapphire-rumped parrotlet
The sapphire-rumped parrotlet is a species of bird in subfamily Arinae of the family Psittacidae, the African and New World parrots. It is found in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The sapphire-rumped parrotlet was described in 1781 by the English ornithologist John Latham under the English name "purple-tailed parakeet". Latham's specimen had come from Cayenne in French Guiana. When in 1788 the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin revised and expanded Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae, he included the sapphire-rumped parrotlet with a short description, coined the binomial name Psittacus purpuratus, and cited Latham's work. The sapphire-rumped parrotlet is now placed with seven other parrotlets in the genus Touit that was introduced in 1855 by the English zoologist George Robert Gray. The genus name is derived from the extinct Tupi language that was spoken by native people in Brazil: Tuí eté means "really little parrot". The specific epithet purpuratus is Latin meaning "clad in purple".Two subspecies are recognized, the nominate T. p. purpuratus and T. p. viridiceps.
Description
The sapphire-rumped parrotlet is long and weighs. Its body is mostly green, darker above than below, and with a blue lower back and rump. The nominate subspecies' forehead and crown are olive brown and those of T. p. viridiceps are green; both have a white eye ring. The species has dusky brown scapulars that appear as a "V" when the wings are folded; females' are paler than males'. Their carpal bar is violet blue. The male's central tail feathers are green and the others red with blackish tips; female's add a green band near the tip. Immatures resemble females but are duller overall and have an olive rump.Distribution and habitat
The nominate subspecies of the sapphire-rumped parrotlet is found across northern South America from Cerro Duida in Venezuela through the Guianas and northern Amazonian Brazil to the Atlantic in the state of Maranhão. Subspecies T. p. viridiceps is found from Cerro Duida east into northwestern Brazil to the upper Rio Negro and west and south through southeastern Colombia, eastern Ecuador, and northeastern Peru.In the tepui region where Venezuela, Guyana, and Brazil meet, the sapphire-rumped parrotlet inhabits evergreen montane forest up to about. Elsewhere it occurs in lowland rainforest favoring várzea, but also savanna, remaining woodlots in otherwise cleared landscapes, and isolated mountains in the Guianan lowlands. In Brazil it locally reaches.