Bronze-tailed Plumeleteer
A species of Plumeleteers Scientific name : Chalybura urochrysia Genus : Plumeleteers
Bronze-tailed Plumeleteer, A species of Plumeleteers
Botanical name: Chalybura urochrysia
Genus: Plumeleteers
Content
Description General Info
Photo By Michael Woodruff , used under CC-BY-SA-2.0 /Cropped and compressed from original
Description
The bronze-tailed plumeleteer (Chalybura urochrysia) is a large hummingbird resident in Central America and South America from eastern Honduras to northwestern Ecuador. The birds inhabit forests and have a preference for edges, gaps and secondary growth. It occurs in the Caribbean lowlands, typically up to an elevation of 700 metres. The red-footed plumeleteer is the Costa Rican subspecies C. u. melanorrhoa and has a black, not bronze, tail. The nest is a deep cup of plant fibres less than 1.5 metres high in a small shrub. The female alone incubates the two white eggs. The bronze-tailed plumeleteer is 11 cm long and weighs 6 g (female) or 7 g (male). The male has bronze-green upperparts, glittering green underparts, a dusky lower belly and a bronzed or purple-black tail depending on subspecies. The female has bronze-green upperparts, grey underparts, including the lower belly, green speckling on the flanks and grey corners to the dusky bronze tail. Both sexes have pink or red feet. Young birds resemble the adult, but have buff feather tips to the head, neck and rump feathers. The red-footed plumeleteer has a high metallic chip call, and the male's song is a soft ter-pleeleeleelee ter-pleeleeleelee ter-pleeleeleelee ter-pleee. This hummingbird is aggressive, territorial, and usually dominant. The male will defend large clumps of Heliconia and other large flowers.
Size
12 cm
Feeding Habits
Bronze-tailed Plumeleteer primarily feeds on nectar from large herbs, shrubs, and epiphytes in forest mid-layers and understorey. It exhibits flycatching behavior for arthropods, notably flies, tiny wasps, ants, homopterans, and spiders, supplementing its diet. Unique feeding includes foraging at forest edges and gaps.
Habitat
The bronze-tailed Plumeleteer dwells primarily in the understory and middle strata of humid forests, as well as at the edges of these forests. This species favors environments with tall secondary growth and semi-open habitats, which include cacao and banana plantations, as well as shaded gardens. While it can be found from sea level up to elevations of 700 meters in some regions and 900 meters in others, the bronze-tailed Plumeleteer tends to avoid more open areas.
Dite type
Nectivorous
General Info
Species Status
Not globally threatened.
Photo By Michael Woodruff , used under CC-BY-SA-2.0 /Cropped and compressed from original
Scientific Classification
Phylum
Chordates Class
Birds Order
Swifts and hummingbirds Family
Hummingbirds Genus
Plumeleteers Species
Bronze-tailed Plumeleteer