- Green-breasted Mango
Taxobox
name = Green-breasted Mango
status = LC
status_system = iucn3.1
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Chordata
classis =Aves
unranked_ordo =Cypselomorphae
ordo =Apodiformes
familia =Trochilidae
subfamilia =Trochilinae
genus = "Anthracothorax "
species = "A. prevostii"
binomial = "Anthracothorax prevostii"
binomial_authority = (Lesson,1832 )The Green-breasted Mango ("Anthracothorax prevostii") is a
hummingbird fromtropical America. The scientific name of this bird commemorates the French naturalistFlorent Prévost .Description
Adults of this medium-sized
hummingbird species are 11-12 cm in length. Males average 7.2 g, females , 6.8 g. The longish black bill is slightly decurved. The tail in both sexes has dark central feathers. In adult males, the outer tail feathers are deep magenta to wine purple tipped with black. In females and juvenile males, the outer tail feathers are broadly banded in magenta and iridescent dark blue, with narrow white tips on the outer 3-4 feathers.The adult male has glossy bright green upperparts. His throat and chest have a relatively narrow matte black central area, bordered with blue-green. The flanks are bright green, and the black of the chest tapers onto the belly.
Females and immature males have bronze-green upperparts and largely white underparts with a dark central stripe that changes from black at the chin to blue-green on the throat. Immature birds of both sexes usually show some gray or buff feather edges on the head and wings and are mottled with cinnamon to rusty brown along the edges of the white breast-belly stripe. Immature females have less extensive magenta in the outer tail feathers than adult females or immature males.
The call of the Green-breasted Mango is a high-pitched "tsup", and the song is a buzzing "kazick-kazee-kazick-kazee-kazick-kazee-kazick-kazee".
This species is very similar to the closely related
Black-throated Mango . Although the male Green-breasted Mango has less extensive black on the underparts, this and other plumage differences are not always easy to confirm in the field because the birds appear all-black. The females of the two species can be almost inseparable, although Green-breasted has more extensively coppery upperpart tones than its relative.Distribution and ecology
This species breeds from eastern and southern
Mexico south throughCentral America , including some near-shore islands, toCosta Rica . In western and centralPanama , it is replaced by the possibly conspecificVeraguas Mango "Anthracothorax veraguensis". Disjunct populations occur along the northern coast of South America from extreme northeasternColombia through northernmostVenezuela , in the upperCauca River Valley of southwesternColombia , and on the coastal slope of southwesternEcuador and extreme northwesternPeru .The species is partially migratory, occupying its breeding range in northeastern
Mexico (southwesternTamaulipas and easternSan Luis Potosi to southernVeracruz and extreme westernTabasco ) from late February through September. Other movements are poorly understood, but the wide separation of populations inSouth America suggests a species-wide propensity to travel and/or a more continuous distribution during periods when South America's climate was warmer and drier.Young birds are responsible for the majority of occurrences in the
United States . The first Green-breasted Mango documented north of Mexico was photographed in coastalTexas in September 1988. The species has since become an increasingly frequent vagrant and extremely rare resident in the lowerRio Grande Valley of southernTexas .Only three individuals have been documented in the U.S. outside Texas, all visiting feeders at private homes: a juvenile male in Concord,
North Carolina in November 2000, [ [http://www.surfbirds.com/Rarities/usnov2.html] ] a juvenile male in Beloit,Wisconsin first identified in September 2007, and a juvenile bird, possibly a male, in Dublin, Georgia, in October 2007. [ [http://www.narba.org/index.cfm/act/newsletter.cfm/newsletterid/204/category/Field/MenuGroup/Home.htm] ] [ [http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070922/ap_on_sc/meandering_mango;_ylt=AibPhx.RU_zqDXWKebaVjaWs0NUE] ] [ [http://www.beloitdailynews.com/articles/2007/09/21/news/news03.txt] ] [ [http://www.rrstar.com/news/x1429051683] ] [ [http://www.rrstar.com/homepage/x1649548318] ] Neighbors of the Wisconsin bird's hosts report that the bird had been visiting their feeders since late July. On 05 November 2007, the Beloit Green-breasted Mango was captured to prevent its death from winter weather. Against the advice of hummingbird experts, the bird was transferred from the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center of the Wisconsin Humane Society to theBrookfield Zoo , near Chicago, which elected to confine the bird permanently with five hummingbirds already in its Perching Bird House. [ [http://www.postcrescent.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071108/APC0101/71108040/1004&located=RSS] ] [ [http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-lostbird webnov14,0,1839841.story] ]The species inhabits tropical deciduous forest, open landscapes with scattered large trees, orchards, gardens, and cultivated areas, but its distribution is spotty and often localized.
Like all
hummingbirds , it feeds oninsects and otherinvertebrates andnectar . Prey is often taken in mid-air but may also be gleaned from vegetation or stolen fromspider webs (a behavior known askleptoparasitism ). Favorite nectar sources include the flowers of large trees such as "Inga ", "Erythrina ", and "Ceiba " orkapok .The female Green-breasted Mango lays two white eggs in a tiny cup nest on a high, thin, and usually bare, branch. The exterior of the nest is camouflaged with chips of
lichen and other plant fragments. Incubation by the female is 16 to 17 days, and the nestling period last another 24.At a Green-breasted Mango nest on
San Andrés Island (Caribbean ), it was noted that the tree was beset with "Pseudomyrmex " stingingant s. This was also noted at a Black-throated Mango nest inCuyabeno Faunistic Reserve , Ecuador. It is likely that the ants would deter predators, but it is not known whether the birds deliberately select such trees for nesting. [Greeney & Merino M. (2006)]Conservation status
The Green-breasted Mango has been evaluated by the
World Conservation Union , a.k.a. International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) and categorized as a species ofLeast Concern .The species is not currently protected in the U.S. under the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act . Proposed revisions to the act, published in theFederal Register on August 24, 2006, [ [http://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/EPA-SPECIES/2006/August/Day-24/e7001.htm] ] would extend protection to this and 85 other species of accidental or casual occurrence in theUnited States ,Puerto Rico , or theU.S. Virgin Islands . The revisions had not been approved as of November 2007, which allowed the capture and permanent captivity of the Wisconsin Green-breasted Mango to proceed without federal approval.References
* Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
* (1999): "Handbook of the Birds of the World Volume 5: Barn-owls to Hummingbirds".Lynx Edicions , Barcelona. ISBN 84-87334-25-3
* (2006): Notes on breeding birds from the Cuyabeno Faunistic Reserve in northeastern Ecuador. "Boletín de la Sociedad Antioqueña de Ornitología" 16(2): 46-57. [http://www.sao.org.co/publicaciones/boletinsao/07-Greeney&Merino.BreedingCuyabenoBirds.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2003): "Birds of Venezuela". Christopher Helm, London. ISBN 0-7136-6418-5
* (1976): "A Guide to the Birds of Panama".Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey. ISBN 0-691-08174-3
* (2001): "A Field Guide to Hummingbirds of North America".Peterson Field Guide Series ,Houghton Mifflin Co. , Boston. ISBN 0-618-02496-4External links
* [http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/especie.phtml?idEspecie=3027 Green-breasted Mango videos] on the Internet Bird Collection
* [http://vireo.acnatsci.org/species_image.php?species=Anthracothorax+prevostii Green-breasted Mango] ; [http://www.natureserve.org/infonatura/servlet/InfoNatura?sourceTemplate=Ltabular_report.wmt&loadTemplate=Ldetail_report.wmt&selectedReport=&summaryView=Ltabular_report.wmt&elKey=105112&paging=home&save=true&startIndex=1&nextStartIndex=1&reset=false&offPageSelectedElKey=105112&offPageSelectedElType=species&offPageYesNo=true&selectedIndexes=105112 RangeMaps & Article] InfoNatura NatureServe
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