Jump to content

Black-capped parakeet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Couiros22 (talk | contribs) at 10:39, 5 October 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Black-capped parakeet
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Superfamily:
Family:
Subfamily:
Tribe:
Genus:
Species:
P. rupicola
Binomial name
Pyrrhura rupicola
(Tschudi, 1844)

The black-capped parakeet (Pyrrhura rupicola), also known as the black-capped conure or rock conure in aviculture, is a parrot native to the south-western Amazon Basin and adjacent east Andean slopes in Peru, Bolivia and Brazil. It has a total length of approximately 25 cm, is mostly green with a dark brown-black cap, whitish scaly neck and breast, red wing coverts (upper, not lower - along leading edge) and a black beak. The breast feathers are dark with light tips, rather than the opposite.

It lives in humid forests, ranging from the Amazonian lowlands up to an altitude of 2000 m on the east Andean slopes. While its habitat is being disturbed, parts of its range are within protected areas (e.g., in Manú National Park), and it remains widespread and locally fairly common. Flock size is 20 to 30 birds but smaller in breeding season.

Subspecies

There may be two subspecies. If so, they would be:

  • P. r. rupicola: Central Peru.
  • P. r. sandiae: South-eastern Peru, northern Bolivia and south-western Brazil. Narrower pale edges on breast and neck feathers, absent on hind neck. Often called the Sandia conure in aviculture.

In the past, some speculated that it might be conspecific with the green-cheeked parakeet. This was based on an apparent black-capped–green-cheeked hybrid found in Puno, Peru, though the identification of this individual (or at least its provenance) must be considered questionable, as beyond the range of the green-cheeked parakeet, which has never been recorded in Peru.

References

  • Juniper, Tony, and Mike Parr; illustrated by Kim Franklin. 1998. Parrots: A Guide to Parrots of the World. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07453-0.
  • Schulenberg, T., D. Stotz, D. Lane, J. O'Neill, & T. Parker III. 2007. Birds of Peru. Christopher Helm Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7136-8673-9