Macho adulto © Peter Hawrylyshyn eBird S65225102 Macaulay Library ML 213452051
Fêmea © Joshua Brown
Macho adulto © Bradley Hacker 🦜
Fêmea © Anonymous
Macho adulto © David Hollie
+ 2
Macho adulto © Alan Van Norman

talamanca hummingbird Eugenes spectabilis

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Identificação

FORNECIDA POR MERLIN

Very large for a hummingbird; size alone separates from many other species. Distinctive in range. Males are green overall; head appears black until it hits the light and reveals an iridescent purple crown and turquoise throat. Females duller with fuzzy mottled appearance on grayish underparts and some greenish on sides. Note the large white spot behind the eye that trails into a messy eyeline. Females have a longer and slightly more decurved bill than males. Used to be called Magnificent Hummingbird, but recently split into Rivoli’s Hummingbird (from southwest U.S. to Nicaragua) and Talamanca Hummingbird (found in mossy cloud forest in Costa Rica and Panama). Fairly common; visits hummingbird feeders.

FORNECIDA POR MERLIN