[:en]Bird Green-breasted Mango[:es]Ave Manguito Pechiverde[:]

Green-breasted Mango

The Green-breasted Mango (Anthracothorax prevostii) is found from northeast Mexico to northwest Peru, and in islands of west Caribbean. Its place is in savannas, coffee plantations, and other semi-open areas with scattered tall trees; also in edges of gallery forest, mangroves, and tall second growth. Adults are 12 cm (4 inches) in height and 7.5 g in weight.

Bronzy-green above, with purplish-bronze central retrices, and magenta lateral retrices, edged with black. Center of throat and breast are black. Crissum purplish, and feet and bill black. Visits flowers of trees, especially legumes and lianas.

[:en]Bird Green Thorntail[:es]Ave Colicerda Verde[:]

Green Thorntail

The Green Thorntail (Dicosura conversii) ranges from Costa Rica to west Ecuador. Its natural place is in treetops of forest canopy and edges, and shrubs along edges and hedgerows. Matures are 10 cm (4 inches) in height and 3 g in weight.

This small bird is above dark green, and below glittering green with center of breast bright blue. Upper-tail coverts black, and tipped with green. Bill and feet black. It hawks tiny flies and wasps, and pollinates flowers of trees and epiphytes.

[:en]Bird Yellow-thighed Finch[:es]Ave Saltón de Muslos Amarillos[:]

Yellow-thighed Finch

The Yellow-thighed Finch, Pselliophorus tibialis, is a passerine bird which is endemic to the highlands of Costa Rica and western Panama. Despite its name, it is not a true finch, but rather a member of the large Emberizidae family, which also includes buntings, American sparrows, juncos and towhees.

This is a common bird in wet mountain forests, second growth, bamboo clumps, scrubby pasture and bushy clearings from 1700 m altitude to the timberline. When not breeding, it can descend to 1200 m on the Caribbean slopes.

The nest, built by the female, is a bulky cup of plant material hidden in coarse grasses, bamboo or a thickly-foliaged tree 0.7-4.6 m above the ground. The female lays two brown-blotched white or pale blue eggs, which she incubates for 12-14 days.

The Yellow-thighed Finch is a long-tailed species, 18.5 cm long and weighing 31 g. The adult is mainly dark grey, becoming black on the crown, throat, wings and tail, and with an olive tinge to the belly and breast. The bright yellow thighs contrast with the otherwise drab plumage, and give this species its English and scientific names. Young birds have duller, sootier plumage with a brown tone to the underparts, and olive-brown thighs.

The Yellow-thighed Finch has a heavy metallic tchuk call, and pairs have a twittering tinkling greeting. The male’s song consists of high dry notes, tee tididee dee wink wink, or similar phrases.

The Yellow-thighed Finch feeds at all levels from the treetops to the ground, taking insects and spiders and many berries. It will also squeeze nectar from flowers. It is seen in pairs, family groups or in mixed-species feeding flocks with other small birds such as warblers. It can be very approachable.

Rufous-crested Coquette

The Rufous-crested Coquette (Lophornis delattrei) inhabits from Costa Rica to north Colombia and east Bolivia. Lives in forest canopy. Its measures are 7 cm (2 inches) in height and 2.8 g in weight.

Its crown and long shaggy crest are rufous. Rest of upperparts bronzy-green. Lower rump and upper tail-coverts are purplish-bronze. Throat glittering green and rest of underparts are dark bronzy-green mixed with dull-rufous. Crissum cinnamon-rufous. Bill dull colar-red, tipped with dusky, and feet dusky. This little animal feeds on small flowers.

[:en]Bird Black-crested Coquette[:es]Ave Coqueta Crestinegra[:]

Black-crested Coquette

The Black-crested Coquette (Lophornis helenae) is found from south Mexico to Costa Rica. It lives high in forest canopy, coming lower, and sometimes to shrub level, at edges, gaps, semi-open, and brushy hedgerows. Adults are 7 cm (2 inches) heights and 2.8 g weights.

Crown and gorget glittering green, and lower throat black. Above is bronzy-green, and its lower rump is blackish. Breast-band bronzy, and belly white spotted with bronze. Bill red with black tip, and feet blackish. Visits mostly small, typically insect-pollinated flowers on mass-flowering trees and epiphytes.