- Violet Sabrewing
Taxobox
name = Violet Sabrewing
image_width = 250px
image_caption = Male on feeder
status = LC
status_system = iucn3.1
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Chordata
classis =Aves
ordo =Trochiliformes
familia =Trochilidae
genus = "Campylopterus "
species = "C. hemileucurus"
binomial = "Campylopterus hemileucurus"
binomial_authority = (Deppe,1830 )The Violet Sabrewing, "Campylopterus hemileucurus", is a very large
hummingbird native to southernMexico andCentral America as far south asCosta Rica and westernPanama .It is a species of the understory and edges of mountain forests, especially near streams. The female Violet Sabrewing lays its two white eggs in a relatively large cup nest on a low horizontal branch, usually over a stream.
The Violet Sabrewing is 15 cm long; the male weighs 11.5 g and the female 9.5 g. It is the largest hummingbird found outside of
South America . The adult male is deep violet, with a dark green back and wing coverts. The shafts of the male’s outer primary flight feathers are thickened and flattened to give the distinctive feature which gives thesabrewing s their English and scientific names. The three outer pairs of feathers of the otherwise black tail are white; this gives rise to the scientific species name, "hemileucurus" translating as "half-white tail", but several other sabrewings share the tail pattern, not least theWhite-tailed Sabrewing ofVenezuela andTobago .The female is dark green above and grey below apart from a violet throat; the tail pattern is the same as the male's. Young Violet Sabrewings have buff edges to the feathers and lack any violet, although juvenile males may be dusky green-blue below.
The food of this species is nectar, taken mainly from undergrowth flowers with "
Heliconia s" andbanana s as favourites. The males are less aggressive and territorial at flowers than their size would suggest.The call of the Violet Sabrewing is a sharp twitter, and the song of the male, given at leks of up to ten males, is a high-pitched piercing "cheep tsew cheep tik-tik tsew".
References
* Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
* "A guide to the birds of Costa Rica" by Stiles and Skutch ISBN 0-8014-9600-4
External links
* [http://www.justbirds.org/Costa%20Rica/Violet%20sabrewing.jpgPicture of a male]
* [http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/especie.phtml?idEspecie=3011 Violet Sabrewing videos] on the Internet Bird Collection
* [http://www.bird-stamps.org/cspecies/8604300.htm Stamps] (with RangeMap)
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