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MAGENTA-THROATED WOODSTAR Philodice (Calliphlox) bryantae) Male
8.5–9.5cm, female 7.5–8cm. Attractive small hummer of humid foothill forest
and edge, adjacent second growth and clearings. Feed low to high, and can be
territorial at flower patches. Hovering flight rather slow and deliberate, typical-
ly with tail cocked above back, when could be mistaken for a large bee or
sphinx moth. Distinctive, with bold whitish patches at sides of rump, in-
sect-like flight. Cf. smaller Scintillant Hummingbird, which has ‘typical’ quick
flight. SOUNDS: Low cht, sometimes doubled or in short series, and longer
rolled chrrrt. Wings make rather strong low humming in flight. STATUS: Un-
common to fairly common on Pacific slope, mainly 700–1800m; spills over locally to adjacent Caribbean
slope foothills. (Costa Rica to w. Panama.)
RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD Archilochus colubris 8–9cm. Small
migrant hummer of varied open and semi-open habitats, from coastal scrub to
humid forest edge, hedgerows, plantations, weedy fields with flowers. Feeds and
perches low to high, often rather inconspicuously. Adult male distinctive
(gorget often looks dark), note forked blackish tail; female rather plain, but
note white tail tips, white eyespot, black bill, whitish underparts. Imm. male in
fall resembles female, attains adult plumage over winter. SOUNDS: High twangy
tchi, at times doubled; varied twitters in interactions. STATUS: Uncommon to
fairly common Nov–Mar on n. Pacific slope, uncommon to scarce elsewhere,
locally to 1800m; more widespread in migration, Sep–Oct, Feb–Apr. (Breeds N America, winters Mexico
to w. Panama.)
SCINTILLANT HUMMINGBIRD Selasphorus scintilla 6–7cm. Tiny highland
hummer of second growth, overgrown pastures, forest edge, gardens, hedgerows.
Feeding flight quick, often clinging and piercing flower bases; territorial males
perch atop shrubs adjacent to open areas with flowers. Note male gorget color,
mostly orangey tail, cf. slightly larger Volcano Hummingbird. Imm. female has
central pair of tail feathers mostly green, margined rusty; other tail feathers
bright rusty with black subterminal band, cinnamon to whitish tips to outer 3
pairs. In display, male zigzags to 15–20m and swoops in U trajectory, less steep
than Volcano Hummingbird dives. SOUNDS: High, rather soft downslurred chips
when feeding; twitters in interactions. Male wings produce high shrill trill in flight. In dive, male makes
pulsating wing trills plus a stuttering 7–8-syllable clicking at bottom of dive. STATUS: Uncommon to locally
common in highlands, mainly 900–2100m on Pacific slope, ranging and wandering locally to Caribbean
slope; post-breeding movements rarely up to 2500m, mainly Apr–Aug. (Costa Rica to w. Panama.)
VOLCANO HUMMINGBIRD Selasphorus flammula 6.5–7.5cm. Very small
highland hummer of shrubby clearings, second growth, páramo, cloud forest
edge, gardens. Habits similar to Scintillant Hummingbird, which occurs along
side locally. Scintillant has mostly orangey tail, whereas female/imm. Volcano
has central pair of tail feathers green, adjacent pair mostly green, not rusty;
white to buffy tips to outer 3 pairs; male Scintillant has flame gorget. In
display, male Volcano climbs to 20–25m and dives in steep J or U trajectory.
Complex variation, with 3 populations that have been considered species:
Cerise-throated Hummingbird S. [f.] simoni breeding on Poás and Barva
volcanoes; Heliotrope-throated Hummingbird S. [f.] torridus on Irazú and Turrialba volcanoes;
Purple-throated Hummingbird S. [f.] flammula in Talamanca Mts. SOUNDS: Mostly rather quiet. High
thin chips when foraging; high squeaky chippering in interactions. Male song from perch a high,
downslurred whining whistle, tssiiiiiiiiu, about 2.5 secs, repeated. In dive, male produces wing whistle
plus a stuttering 3–4-syllable low clicking at bottom of dive. STATUS: Fairly common to common, above
1800m in Central Mts., above 2000m in Talamanca Mts. Post-breeding movements rarely down to
1200m, mainly Mar–Jul, when different taxa can occur together, with torridus ranging nw. to Poás
volcano. (Costa Rica to w. Panama.)