Bronzy inca
The bronzy inca is a species of hummingbird in the "brilliants", tribe Heliantheini in subfamily Lesbiinae. It is found in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The bronzy inca and most other members of genus Coeligena were at one time placed in genus Helianthea but have been in their current placement since the mid-1900s. The species has these six subspecies:C. c. ferruginea – west, central ColombiaC. c. columbiana – east, central Colombia and northwest VenezuelaC. c. coeligena – north VenezuelaC. c. zuliana Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1953 – Serranía del Perijá C. c. obscura – south Colombia, Ecuador and PeruC. c. boliviana – central, southeast BoliviaDescription
The bronzy inca is about long. Males weigh about and females about. Males have a long, straight, black bill, often with some yellow at the base of the mandible; the female's bill is also straight and black but somewhat longer. The species is the drabbest member of genus Coeligena, some others of which are rather dramatically plumaged.Adult males of the nominate subspecies are mostly dark bronzy brown with a maroon sheen above; the lower back is greenish. They have a white spot behind the eye. Their throat and chest have white spots and dusky gray streaks, and the rest of the underparts are reddish brown. The forked tail is bronze. Adult nominate females are essentially the same as males but for bill length and a less forked tail, and juveniles resemble the adult female.
Subspecies C. c. zuliana is slightly more greenish and less bronzy than the nominate. C. c. columbiana is smaller than the nominate and has more of an olive shade. C. c. ferruginea is similar to the nominate but with less white on the throat and a tawny wash to the underparts. C. c. obscura is the darkest subspecies, with a blackish back and a grayish, not white, throat. C. c. boliviana has dark green spots on the crown and a bronzy blackish purple tail.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of bronzy inca are distributed thus:- C. c. ferruginea, Colombia's Central and Western Andes
- C. c. columbiana, Andes from northwestern Venezuela's Lara state south into Colombia's Eastern Andes to Huila Department
- C. c. coeligena, northern Venezuela from Falcón east to Miranda
- C. c. zuliana, Serranía del Perijá of northern Colombia and northwestern Venezuela
- C. c. obscura, east slope of the Andes from Colombia's Nariño Department south through Ecuador and Peru
- C. c. boliviana, east slope of the Andes of central and southeastern Bolivia