Tepui toucanet
The tepui toucanet or Whitely's toucanet is a near-passerine bird in the toucan family Ramphastidae. It is found in Brazil, Guyana, Suriname, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The tepui toucanet and what is now the chestnut-tipped toucanet were for a time considered conspecific. They were separated by major taxonomic systems beginning in 2011.The tepui toucanet has three subspecies:A. w. duidae - Chapman, 1929
Description
The tepui toucanet is long and weighs. Its bill is deep red and black with a vertical white line at its base and grooves on the maxilla. The sexes are alike. Their plumage is generally green, with a white throat, yellow-green undertail coverts, and some blue beneath the eye. The nominate subspecies has short dull rufous tips on the tail feathers. Subspecies A. w. duidae is larger than the nominate and larger rufous tail tips. A. w. osgoodi is smaller than the nominate, has no rufous on the tail, and has less blue beneath the eye.Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of tepui toucanet are found thus:A. w. duidae, Venezuela's Amazonas and western Bolívar states and adjacent northern BrazilA. w. whitelianus, southeastern Bolívar state in southern Venezuela and northwestern GuyanaA. w. osgoodi, Serra do Acari in southern Guyana and the Wilhelmina Mountains and Tafelberg in SurinameUndocumented sight records in French Guiana lead the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society to treat the species as hypothetical in that country.
In southern Venezuela and nearby Brazil the tepui toucanet inhabits moist subtropical montane cloudforest on tepuis. In eastern Venezuela and the Guianas it inhabits hilly tropical forest. In elevation it typically occurs between. However, it has been recorded at on Venezuela's Cerro Roraima and as low as in Guyana and in Suriname.