Yellow-crowned amazon
The yellow-crowned amazon or yellow-crowned parrot is a species of parrot native to tropical South America, Panama and Trinidad and Tobago in the Caribbean. The taxonomy is highly complex and the yellow-headed and yellow-naped amazon are sometimes considered subspecies of the yellow-crowned amazon. Except in the taxonomic section, the following deals only with the nominate group.They are found in the Amazon basin.
Taxonomy
The yellow-crowned amazon was formally described in 1788 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. He placed it with all the other parrots in the genus Psittacus and coined the binomial name Psittacus ochrocephalus. Gmelin specified the type locality as "America", but this was restricted to Venezuela in 1902. The yellow-crowned amazon is now one of around thirty species of parrot placed in the genus Amazona that was introduced by the French naturalist René Lesson in 1830. The genus name is a Latinized version of the name Amazone given to these parrot in the 18th century by the Comte de Buffon, who believed they were native to Amazonian jungles. The specific ochrocephala combines the Ancient Greek ōkhros meaning "pale yellow" with -kephalos meaning "-headed".Four subspecies are recognised:
- A. o. panamensis – west Panama and northwest Colombia
- A. o. ochrocephala – east Colombia and Venezuela through the Guianas and north Brazil
- A. o. xantholaema Berlepsch, 1913 – island of Marajó
- A. o. nattereri – south Colombia to east Peru, north Bolivia and west Brazil
The members of this complex are known to hybridize in captivity and recent phylogenetic analysis of DNA did not support the split into the three "traditional" biological species, but did reveal three clades, which potentially could be split into three phylogenetic species: a Mexican and Central American species, a species of northern South America, and a species from the southern Amazon basin. The Central American clade can potentially be split further, with panamensis and tresmariae recognized as two monotypic species. The members of the clade from the southern Amazon basin should arguably be included as subspecies of the blue-fronted amazon, as they are closer to each other than to the northern clades. Disregarding these problems, the following taxa are part of the Amazona ochrocephala complex as traditionally delimited:
- nominate group :
- * Amazona o. ochrocephala: East-central and southeastern Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana and the northern and eastern Amazon basin in Brazil.
- * Amazona o. xantholaema: Marajó Island, in the Amazon River delta of northeastern Brazil.
- * Amazona o. nattereri: Far southeastern Colombia, eastern Ecuador, eastern Peru, northern Bolivia and the southwestern Amazon basin of Brazil ; often included in A. o. ochrocephala.
- * Amazona o. panamensis: Western Panama to northwestern Colombia; sometimes called the Panama amazon
- auropalliata group :
- * Amazona a./o. auropalliata: Southern Mexico to northwestern Costa Rica.
- * Amazona a./o. parvipes: The Mosquito Coast in eastern Honduras and northeastern Nicaragua.
- * Amazona a./o. caribaea: The Bay Islands, Honduras.
- oratrix group :
- * Amazona o./o. oratrix: The Pacific and Gulf slopes of Mexico; also, a population in Stuttgart exists.
- * Amazona o./o. tresmariae: The Tres Marías Islands, off west-central Mexico.
- * Amazona o./o. belizensis: Belize.
- * Amazona o./o. hondurensis: The Sula Valley in northern Honduras.
Description
Subspecies in the nominate group have a total length of 33–38 cm. As most other amazon parrots, it has a short squarish tail and primarily green plumage. It has dark blue tips to the secondaries and primaries and a red wing speculum, carpal edge and base of the outer tail feathers. The red and dark blue sections are often difficult to see when the bird is perched, while the red base of the outer tail feathers only infrequently can be seen under normal viewing conditions in the wild. The amount of yellow to the head varies, with the nominate, nattereri and panamensis having yellow restricted to the crown-region, while the subspecies xantholaema has most of the head yellow. All have a white eye-ring. They have a dark bill with a large horn or reddish spot on the upper mandible, except panamensis, which has a horn-colored beak. Males and females do not differ in plumage. Except for the wing speculum, juveniles have little yellow and red to the plumage.Distribution and habitat
The yellow-crowned amazon is found in the Amazon basin and Guianas, with additional populations in northwestern South America and Panama. It has been introduced to Grand Cayman.It is a bird of tropical forests, woodlands, mangroves, and savannas and may also be found on cultivated land and suburban areas. In the southern part of its range, it is rarely found far from the Amazon rainforest. It is mainly a lowland bird, but has locally been recorded up to 800 m along on the eastern slopes of the Andes. Introduced–and apparently breeding–populations have been reported in Puerto Rico.
A wild colony of around 60 animals has been living in Stuttgart, Germany, since the mid-1980s.