White-necked jacobin
The white-necked jacobin is a medium-sized hummingbird that ranges from Mexico south through Central America and northern South America into Brazil, Peru, and Bolivia. It is also found in Trinidad and Tobago. Its other common names include great jacobin and collared hummingbird.
Taxonomy
In 1743, English naturalist George Edwards included a picture and a description of the white-necked jacobin in his A Natural History of Uncommon Birds. He used the English name "white-belly'd huming bird". Edwards based his etching on a specimen owned by the Duke of Richmond that had been collected in Suriname. When in 1758, Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the 10th edition, he placed the white-necked jacobin with the other hummingbirds in the genus Trochilus. Linnaeus included a brief description, coined the binomial name Trochilus mellivorus, and cited Edwards' work. The specific epithet combines the Latin mel and -vorus, meaning "honey eating". The type locality is Suriname. The white-necked jacobin is now placed in the genus Florisuga that was introduced in 1850 by Charles Bonaparte.Subspecies
Two subspecies are recognised:| Subspecies | Male | Female |
| F. m. mellivora Linnaeus | ||
| F. m. flabellifera Gould * |
- Sometimes referred to as ''F. m. tobagensis''
Description
Distribution and habitat
The nominate subspecies of white-necked jacobin, F. m. mellivora, is found from southern Veracruz and northern Oaxaca, Mexico, through southern Belize, northern Guatemala, eastern Honduras and Nicaragua, eastern and western Costa Rica, and Panama into South America. In that continent, it is found in much of Colombia and Ecuador, eastern Peru, northern Bolivia, most of Venezuela, the Guianas, the northwestern half of Brazil, and the island of Trinidad. F. m. flabellifera is found only on the island of Tobago. The nominate has been recorded as a vagrant in Argentina and on the islands of Aruba and Curaçao.The white-necked jacobin inhabits the canopy and edges of humid forest and also semiopen landscapes such as tall secondary forest, gallery forest, and coffee and cacao plantations. It is usually seen high in trees, but comes lower at edges and in clearings. In elevation, it usually ranges from sea level to about, but rarely has also been seen as high as.
Behavior
The white-necked jacobin's movement pattern is not well understood. It apparently moves seasonally as flower abundance changes, but details are lacking.It feeds on nectar at the flowers of tall trees, epiphytes, shrubs, and Heliconia plants. Several may feed in one tree and are aggressive to each other, but they are otherwise seldom territorial. Both sexes hawk small insects, mostly by hovering, darting, or sallying from perches.
This species breeds in the dry to early wet seasons, which vary across their range. The nest is a shallow cup of plant down and cobweb placed on the upper surface of a leaf where another leaf provides a "roof". It is typically above ground and sometimes near a stream. Males display and chase in the canopy and along edges during the breeding season. Females use a fluttering flight to distract predators.
The white-necked jacobin is not highly vocal. Its song is "a long series of high-pitched, single notes, repeated at rate around 0.7–1.0 notes/second 'tseee....tseee....tseee....tseee....'." Calls include "a short 'tsik', a longer, high-pitched 'sweet', and a descending 'swee-swee-swee-swee' in antagonistic interactions."