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The Zoochat Photographic Guide to Parrots

Discussion in 'Wildlife & Nature Conservation' started by Chlidonias, 5 Jul 2021.

  1. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Conuropsis
    One extinct species.


    Carolina Parakeet Conuropsis carolinensis
    Two subspecies: carolinensis and ludovicianus.


    Extinct. Formerly found in the eastern USA, with C. c. carolinensis in the east of the range and the larger and paler subspecies C. c. ludovicianus in the west. Traditionally the distribution is stated as covering the entire eastern USA, although more recent analyses of historical records suggest that the two subspecies' ranges were largely discreet and much smaller than generally given. There is a map of the more-likely distribution given here: We Now Know the Real Range of the Extinct Carolina Parakeet

    The species was common at the time of European arrival to the Americas but, largely due to hunting and deforestation, was scarce by the mid-1800s and entirely eliminated by the early years of the 1900s. The last known individual died at Cincinnati Zoo (USA) in 1918.


    The closest genetic relatives of this species are the Aratinga (including Nandayus) conures, and some taxonomists would place the species in that genus.


    There are very few photos of taxidermy specimens of Carolina Parakeets in the Zoochat galleries, but unfortunately I couldn't locate them in the catalogues of their respective museums to check for which subspecies they might be. So I have just used one of the photos below.


    Photo by @ZooElephantsMan at the Roger Williams Park Museum of Natural History and Planetarium (USA).

    [​IMG]
    Taxidermy Carolina Parakeets - ZooChat
     
    Last edited: 29 Jul 2023
  2. birdsandbats

    birdsandbats Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Aren't the two subspecies supposed to be easily separable by color?
     
  3. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Museum specimens of Carolina Parakeets are between one and two hundred years old, at least. Have a look at any centuries-old animal specimens and see if their colours match those of living animals. Trying to identify subspecies just by colour from photos of old specimens would be pure guesswork.
     
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  4. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Cyanoliseus
    One species.



    Patagonian Conure Cyanoliseus patagonus
    Four subspecies: andinus, bloxami, conlara, patagonus.

    Also known as Burrowing Parrot.


    Mostly restricted to Argentina, although the subspecies bloxami is from central Chile. C. p. andinus is in northwest Argentina; conlara is in central Argentina; and patagonus breeds in southern Argentina but moves north into central Argentina and southern Uruguay in winter.

    The species has been heavily depleted due to trapping for the bird trade and most of the subspecies are now reduced to a few thousand birds. Only C. p. patagonus remains in large numbers in the wild, but most of the population is in one area (El Condor, where a 2011 estimate put the number of active nest burrows at 35,000).

    Two of the subspecies are pictured in the Zoochat galleries (bloxami and patagonus).


    Photo by @Maguari at Biopark Zoo de Doue la Fontaine (France) - subspecies bloxami (Greater Patagonian Conure), showing the colour of the underparts.

    [​IMG]
    Greater Patagonian Conure at Doué-la-Fontaine, 15/06/18 - ZooChat


    Photo by @Maguari at Loro Parque (Canary Islands) - subspecies bloxami, showing the white breast-band which the other subspecies lack.

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    Greater Patagonian Conure at Loro Parque, 08/11/10 - ZooChat


    Photo by @Therabu at Berlin Tierpark (Germany) - subspecies patagonus (Lesser Patagonian Conure).

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    Patagonian Conure (Cyanoliseus patagonus) - ZooChat
     
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  5. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Enicognathus
    Two species.



    Austral Conure Enicognathus ferrugineus
    Two subspecies: ferrugineus and minor.


    Found in southern South America, with ferrugineus in southern Chile and southern Argentina, and minor in central Chile to southwest Argentina.


    All the birds pictured in the Zoochat gallery appear to be the subspecies ferrugineus, which has more extensive red on the abdomen, although I have no idea what the make-up of the captive population in aviculture is.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at Prague Zoo (Czech Republic).

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    Austral parakeets - ZooChat


    Photo by @Vision at Loro Parque (Canary Islands).

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    Austral conure, Enicognathus ferrugineus - ZooChat



    Slender-billed Conure Enicognathus leptorhynchus
    Monotypic.


    Found in Central Chile, and also on Chiloe Island.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at Prague Zoo (Czech Republic).

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    Slender-billed parakeet - ZooChat


    Photo by @Semioptera at Weltvogelpark Walsrode (Germany). Note the long bill in comparison to that of the Austral Conure.

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    Slender-billed Parakeet - ZooChat
     
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  6. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Eupsittula
    Six species, five of which are represented in the Zoochat galleries.

    Previously in Aratinga. The only species not depicted here is the Jamaican Conure E. nana.



    Aztec Conure Eupsittula astec
    Two subspecies: astec and vicinalis. Formerly included as subspecies of the Jamaican (Olive-throated) Conure E. nana.


    Found throughout Central America, with astec distributed from Veracruz (southeastern Mexico) to western Panama, and vicinalis entirely within Mexico from Tamaulipas to Veracruz.


    Photo by @ralph in the wild, Mexico - subspecies astec.

    [​IMG]
    Aztec parakeet - ZooChat



    Peach-fronted Conure Eupsittula aurea
    Two subspecies: aurea and major.


    Found across eastern and central South America, from Surinam across Brazil to eastern Bolivia, southeastern Peru and northwest Argentina. Parrots.org, which I tend to use for the subspecies and distributions, says of E. a. major "exact range not known, but recorded from N Paraguay".


    Surprisingly there are only a few photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries, even though it is pretty common in aviculture, and most of the photos are partially-obscured (wire or branches, for example) or otherwise don't show the colours well.


    Photo by @Therabu at Parque das Aves (Brazil).

    [​IMG]
    Peach-fronted Parakeet Eupsittula aurea - ZooChat



    Caatinga or Cactus Conure Eupsittula cactorum
    Two subspecies: cactorum and caixana.


    Endemic to the caatinga of Brazil. E. c. cactorum is confined southern Bahia and northeastern Minas Gerais. E. c. caixana has a distribution from northwest Bahia north to southeast Maranhao.


    Photo by @Maguari at Loro Parque (Canary Islands).

    [​IMG]
    Cactus Conure at Loro Parque, 08/11/10 - ZooChat



    Orange-fronted or Half-Moon Conure Eupsittula canicularis
    Three subspecies: canicularis, clarae and eburnirostrum.


    From the Pacific side of Mexico and Central America: canicularis is the most widespread subspecies, found from Chiapas (Mexico) to Costa Rica; clarae is from western Mexico, from Sinaloa to Colima; and eburnirostrum is from southwest Mexico, from Michoacan to Oaxaca.


    Photo by @Tomek at Weltvogelpark Walsrode (Germany) - subspecies eburnisrotrum.

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    Orange-fronted Conures (Aratinga canicularis eburnirostrum) - ZooChat



    Jamaican or Olive-throated Conure Eupsittula nana
    Monotypic. P. astec was formerly treated as a subspecies.


    Before the split of E. astec from E. nana, the name "Olive-throated Conure" was typically used. Most photos in the Zoochat galleries are labelled under this name but all depict the mainland species E. astec.


    Endemic to Jamaica.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Brown-throated or Yellow-cheeked Conure Eupsittula pertinax
    Fourteen subspecies: aeruginosa, arubensis, chrysogenys, chrysophrys, griseipecta, lehmanni, margaritensis, ocularis, paraensis, pertinax, surinama, tortugensis, venezuelae, xanthogenia.

    Only two of the subspecies are represented in the Zoochat galleries (pertinax and surinama).


    Found mainly in northern South America and on several nearby Caribbean islands (hence the number of subspecies), with one subspecies (ocularis) isolated in Central America: aeruginosa is from northern Colombia across to northwest Venezuela; arubensis is from the island of Aruba; chrysogenys is from northwest Brazil; chrysophrys is from Guyana, Venezuela and northern Brazil; griseipecta is from the Rio Sinu valley in Colombia (but is doubtfully distinct from aeruginosa); lehmanni is from central and eastern Colombia across to southern Venezuela; margaritensis is from the island of Margarita and the Los Frailes Islands off Venezuela; ocularis is from Central America, in Costa Rica and Panama; paraensis is from the Brazilian state of Para; pertinax is native to the island of Curacao, but has also been introduced to the islands of St Thomas and Saba (both in the Virgin Islands); surinama is from Surinam and the Guianas to northeastern Venezuela; tortugensis is from the island of Tortuga; venezuelae is from Venezuela; xanthogenia is from the island of Bonaire.

    This interesting article, with photos and a map, outlines how there are four colour-based groupings which could be separate species: "Yellow-headed" (pertinax and xanthogenia); "Grey-throated" (aeruginosa and griseipecta); "Veraguan" (ocularis); and "Brown-throated" (all the rest of the subspecies).
    Taxonomy of Brown-throated Parakeets – birdfinding.info


    Photo by @devilfish at Loro Parque (Canary Islands) - subspecies pertinax (St Thomas' Conure). The subspecies pertinax and xanthogenia have much more extensive yellow on the head than other subspecies.

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    Brown-throated conure, December 2012 - ZooChat


    Photo by @Zooish at Singapore River Safari / River Wonders (Singapore) - subspecies surinama.

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    River Gems - Suriname Brown-throated Parakeet (Eupsittula pertinax surinama) - ZooChat
     
    Last edited: 26 Nov 2022
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  7. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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  8. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Leptosittaca
    One species.



    Golden-plumed Parakeet Leptosittaca branickii
    Monotypic.


    Found in the mountain forests above 2400m in the Andes, from Colombia and Ecuador to southern Peru.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.
     
    Last edited: 12 Jun 2022
  9. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Ognorhynchus
    One species.



    Yellow-eared Parrot Ognorhynchus icterotis
    Monotypic.


    Found in the mountain forests of northwest Ecuador and western Colombia.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.
     
    Last edited: 12 Jun 2022
  10. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Psittacara
    About twelve living species, nine of which are represented in the Zoochat galleries.

    Previously in the genus Aratinga.

    There is at least one extinct Caribbean species from the genus, the Puerto Rican Conure Psittacara maugei which was last recorded in 1892. Another Caribbean species, the Guadeloupe Conure Psittacara labati may be a valid species but is known only from written accounts from the 1700s and is generally treated as hypothetical.


    The number of species in this genus is a bit fluid, as several of them are variably treated as being either full species or just as subspecies of others. As with other such cases in this thread, here I am taking a splitty approach in order to cover all the bases.

    The three species not depicted in the Zoochat galleries are the Socorro Conure P. brevipes, Green Conure P. holochlorus, and Wagler's Conure P. wagleri. The photos in the galleries which are labelled as being Wagler's Conures appear to all show Cordilleran Conures (which are a split from Wagler's).



    Socorro Conure Psittacara brevipes
    Monotypic.

    Has also been treated as a subspecies of P. holochlorus.


    Endemic to Socorro Island off western Mexico.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Hispaniolan Conure Psittacara chloropterus
    Monotypic.

    The Puerto Rican Conure Psittacara maugei (extinct c.1892) is either treated as a subspecies of P. chloropterus or as a separate species.


    Endemic to the Caribbean island of Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic), but also introduced to Guadeloupe and Puerto Rico.


    Photo by @toto98 in the wild, Dominican Republic.

    [​IMG]
    Hispaniolan parakeet (Psittacara chloropterus) - ZooChat



    Red-masked Conure Psittacara erythrogenys
    Monotypic.


    Found in western Ecuador and Peru. Also introduced to the USA and Grand Cayman Island in the Greater Antilles.


    Photo by @Parrotsandrew at Sewerby Zoo (UK). The amount of red on the head is extremely variable in this species.

    [​IMG]
    Red-masked Conure, 14th August 2014 - ZooChat



    Cuban Conure Psittacara euops
    Monotypic.


    Endemic to Cuba.


    Photo by @gentle lemur at Birdworld (UK).

    [​IMG]
    Cuban conure 1981 - ZooChat



    Finsch's Conure Psittacara finschi
    Monotypic.


    Found in Central America from Nicaragua to Panama.


    Photo by @Maguari at Loro Parque (Canary Islands).

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    Finsch's Conure at Loro Parque, 08/11/10 - ZooChat



    Cordilleran Conure Psittacara frontatus
    Two subspecies: frontatus and minor.

    Formerly treated as subspecies of P. wagleri.


    Found in Ecuador and Peru.


    Photo by @twilighter at Prague Zoo (Czech Republic) - subspecies frontatus.

    [​IMG]
    Cordilleran Parakeet - ZooChat



    Green Conure Psittacara holochlorus
    Two subspecies: brewsteri and holochlorus.

    Formerly P. brevipes, P. rubritorquis and P. strenuus were also treated as a subspecies.


    Possibly endemic to Mexico (following the split of P. rubritorquis and P. strenuus, which reach further south into Central America). P. h. brewsteri is from northwest Mexico; P. h. holochlorus is from eastern Mexico. The nominate subspecies is also found in southeast Texas (USA), and there is dispute as to whether this is a natural population or an introduced one.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries, surprisingly.



    White-eyed Conure Psittacara leucophthalmus
    Four subspecies: callogenys, leucophthalmus, nicefori, propinquus.


    Found throughout most of South America. P. l. callogenys is from upper Amazonia, in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Brazil; leucophthalmus has the widest range, found throughout most of the northeast and east of the continent, from Colombia and Venzuela south to Uruguay and Argentina; nicefori is known from one specimen collected in Colombia (possibly invalid); propinquus is from southeast Brazil to northwest Argentina.


    Photo by @David Matos Mendes at RioZoo (Brazil).

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    White-eyed conure - BioParque do Rio - ZooChat


    Photo by @Therabu in the wild, Brazil - subspecies leucophthalmus.

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    White-eyed Parakeet (Psittacara leucophthalmus) - ZooChat



    Mitred Conure Psittacara mitratus
    Two subspecies: alticola and mitratus.


    P. m. alticola is from the Cuzuco region in central Peru. P. m. mitratus is found from central Peru to Argentina, and has also been introduced to the USA.


    Photo by @Maguari at Bioparc Zoo de Doue la Fontaine (France).

    [​IMG]
    Great South American Aviary at Doué-la-Fontaine, 15/06/18 - ZooChat



    Red-throated Conure Psittacara rubritorquis
    Monotypic.

    Has also been treated as a subspecies of P. holochlorus.


    Found in northern Central America, from Guatemala to Nicaragua.


    Photo by @Sicarius of a privately-owned bird.

    [​IMG]
    https://www.zoochat.com/community/media/red-throated-parakeet-psittacara-rubritorquis.688629/



    Pacific or Nicaraguan Green Conure Psittacara strenuus
    Monotypic.

    Has also been treated as a subspecies of P. holochlorus.


    Found from southern Mexico to Guatemala and Nicaragua.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird market in the Netherlands.

    [​IMG]
    Pacific or Nicaraguan conure - Psittacara strenuus - ZooChat



    Scarlet-fronted or Wagler's Conure Psittacara wagleri
    Two subspecies: transilis and wagleri.


    P. w. transilis is from the coastal mountains of northeastern Venezuela; and wagleri from the mountains of northwestern Venezuela to western Colombia.


    There do not appear to be any photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries. The larger Cordilleran Conure P. frontatus was formerly treated as a subspecies of P. wagleri, so all the photos on Zoochat labelled as Wagler's are actually of that other species (as far as I could tell). They can be told apart by the Cordilleran Conure having red on the bend of the wing, whereas in Wagler's Conure this is green.
     
    Last edited: 21 Oct 2023
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  11. birdsandbats

    birdsandbats Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Especially surprising considering the large introduced population in the USA. I'll bet someone has a photo.
     
  12. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Pyrrhura
    This is a really messy genus with anywhere from 15 to 30 or more species being recognised, depending on splits. There are 30 species listed below (utilising lots of splits), of which 18 are represented by photos from the Zoochat galleries.


    Most of the splits in this genus have been made from the White-eared Conure P. leucotis and the Painted Conure P. picta (often called the "leucotis-picta complex"). Most species are now monotypic because so many subspecies have been split off as full species.

    A diagram is shown on this link comparing the appearance all the leucotis and picta taxa: https://www.researchgate.net/figure...of-the-Pyrrhura-picta-leucotis_fig4_317081358


    A few of the species in this genus are common avicultural subjects - some even with colour mutations, notably in the Maroon-bellied Conure P. frontalis and Green-cheeked Conure P. molinae - but others are not kept in captivity at all or are very rare. Most of the depicted species have only a few photos in the Zoochat galleries.


    Below is the basic list of species (alphabetically), with notes on which are splits from other species. The species marked with an asterisk have photos in the galleries.


    White-necked or White-breasted Conure Pyrrhura albipectus

    Santarem or Hellmayr's Conure Pyrrhura amazonum – a split from P. picta (and also including the former Madeira Conure Pyrrhura snethlageae)

    Todd's or Perija Conure Pyrrhura caeruleiceps – a split from P. picta

    Flame-winged or Brown-breasted Conure Pyrrhura calliptera

    *Ochre-marked Conure Pyrrhura cruentata

    Blaze-winged Conure Pyrrhura devillei – a split from P. frontalis

    Fiery-shouldered Conure Pyrrhura egregia

    Azuero Conure Pyrrhura eisenmanni – a split from P. picta

    *Venezuelan or Emma's Conure Pyrrhura emma – a split from P. leucotis

    *Maroon-bellied Conure Pyrrhura frontalis

    *Grey-breasted Conure Pyrrhura griseipectus – a split from P. leucotis

    *Red-eared Conure Pyrrhura hoematotis

    *Sulphur-winged Conure Pyrrhura hoffmanni

    *Pearly Conure Pyrrhura lepida

    *White-eared Conure Pyrrhura leucotis

    Bonaparte's or Deville's Conure Pyrrhura lucianii – a split from P. picta

    *Maroon-tailed or Black-tailed Conure Pyrrhura melanura

    *Green-cheeked Conure Pyrrhura molinae

    El Oro Conure Pyrrhura orcesi

    *Choco Conure Pyrrhura pacifica – a split from P. melanura

    *Garlepp's Conure Pyrrhura parvifrons – a split from P. roseifrons (which was itself a split from P. picta)

    *Crimson-bellied Conure Pyrrhura perlata

    Wavy-breasted Conure Pyrrhura peruviana – a split from P. roseifrons (which was itself a split from P. picta)

    *Pfrimer's or Maroon-faced Conure Pyrrhura pfrimeri – a split from P. leucotis

    *Painted Conure Pyrrhura picta

    *Rose-headed or Rose-crowned Conure Pyrrhura rhodocephala

    *Rose-fronted Conure Pyrrhura roseifrons – a split from P. picta

    *Black-capped or Rock Conure Pyrrhura rupicola

    Sinu Conure Pyrrhura subandina – a split from P. picta

    Santa Marta Conure Pyrrhura viridicata
     
    Last edited: 7 Apr 2024
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  13. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    White-necked or White-breasted Conure Pyrrhura albipectus
    Monotypic.


    From southeastern Ecuador and northern Peru, in the forests of the eastern slopes of the Andes.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Santarem or Hellmayr's Conure Pyrrhura amazonum

    Taxonomy variable from being considered monotypic to having two or three subspecies. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. picta. The subspecies P. a. amazonum and P. a. microtera are now generally considered synonyms (making the species monotypic). However the Madeira Conure P. snethlageae, described in 2002, was later found to have already been described in 1924 as P. pallescens, and is genetically close enough that it should probably be considered a subspecies of P. amazonum. The Madeira Conure had two subspecies (P. s. lucida and P. s. snethlageae), which would then be tranferred to P. amazonum as P. a. lucida and P. a. pallescens respectively.


    Found mostly within Brazil, with P. a. amazonum from eastern Amazonia in northern Brazil, P. a. pallescens (i.e. P. s. snethlageae) from the Madeira River basin in southwest Brazil and northern Bolivia, and P. a. lucida (i.e. P. snethlageae lucida) in the Mato Grosso.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Todd's or Perija Conure Pyrrhura caeruleiceps
    Two subspecies, caeruleiceps and pantchenkoi. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. picta.


    Found only in the Sierra de Perija, on the border between Venzuela and Colombia.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Flame-winged or Brown-breasted Conure Pyrrhura calliptera
    Monotypic.


    Endemic to Colombia, where it is restricted to a relatively small area in the mountain forests of the eastern slope of the Andes.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Ochre-marked Conure Pyrrhura cruentata
    Monotypic.


    Endemic to southeastern Brazil.


    Photo by @NRJMelvinT at Jardin des Plantes (France).

    [​IMG]
    Ochre-marked parakeet (Pyrrhura cruentata) - ZooChat



    Blaze-winged Conure Pyrrhura devillei
    Monotypic. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. frontalis, from which it differs mainly in having red on the bend of the wing and on the underwing.


    Found from southeast Bolivia to the Mato Grosso of Brazil.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Fiery-shouldered Conure Pyrrhura egregia
    Two subspecies, egregia and obscura.


    From the highland forests of western Guyana, northern Brazil and southern Venezuela (egregia); and southeastern Venezuela (obscura).


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Azuero Conure Pyrrhura eisenmanni
    Monotypic. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. picta.


    Endemic to the Azuero Peninsula in central Panama.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Venezuelan or Emma's Conure Pyrrhura emma
    Two subspecies, auricularis and emma. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. leucotis.


    Endemic to the mountain forests of Venezuela, with auricularis in the northeast, and emma in the north.


    The photos in the galleries mostly look like the nominate P. e. emma (with white eye-ring), but there is at least one with a grey eye-ring which is characteristic of the subspecies auricularis.


    Photo by @Daniel Sörensen at Weltvogelpark Walsrode (Germany) - subspecies auricularis?

    [​IMG]
    Venezuelan parakeet (Pyrrhura emma) - ZooChat


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands - subspecies emma?

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    Emma white-eared parakeet - ZooChat



    Maroon-bellied Conure Pyrrhura frontalis
    Two subspecies, chiripepe and frontalis. A third subspecies, kriegi is now generally considered synonymous with the nominate frontalis.


    Found in southern Paraguay, northern Argentina, Uruguay and southeastern Brazil, with chiripepe in the south/west of the range and frontalis to the north/east (entirely within Brazil).

    The main visual distinction between the two subspecies is in the colouration of the tail. The Blaze-winged Conure Pyrrhura devillei, which has traditionally been treated as subspecies, has red on the bend of the wing which chiripepe and frontalis lack.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands - subspecies chiripepe.

    [​IMG]
    Maroon-bellied parakeet - Pyrrhura frontalis chiripepe - ZooChat


    Photo by @vogelcommando at De Evenaar-Etten-Leur (Netherlands) - subspecies frontalis.

    [​IMG]
    Green-cheeked conures - ZooChat
     
    Last edited: 18 Mar 2023
  14. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Grey-breasted Conure Pyrrhura griseipectus
    Monotypic. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. leucotis.


    Endemic to northeastern Brazil.


    Photo by @Tomek at Paradise Park (UK).

    [​IMG]
    Grey-breasted Conure (Pyrrhura griseipectus), October 2015 - ZooChat



    Red-eared or Blood-eared Conure Pyrrhura hoematotis
    Two subspecies, hoematotis and immarginata.


    Endemic to Venezuela, with hoematotis in the Coastal Cordillera mountains of the north, and immarginata recorded only from Cubiro in the north.


    Photo by @Sicarius at Loro Parque (Canary Islands) - subspecies hoematotis.

    [​IMG]
    Blood-eared parakeet (Pyrrhura hoematotis hoematotis) - ZooChat



    Sulphur-winged Conure Pyrrhura hoffmanni
    Two subspecies, gaudens and hoffmanni.


    From the mountain forests of southern Central America, with gaudens in western Panama and hoffmanni in southern Costa Rica.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands - subspecies gaudens. The yellow of the wings is mostly hidden in this photo.

    [​IMG]
    Chiriqui conure (Pyrrhura hoffmanni gaudens) - ZooChat


    Pearly Conure Pyrrhura lepida
    Two or three subspecies: anerythra, coerulescens, lepida. The subspecies coerulescens may be considered synonymous with lepida, although it differs in colouration.

    Note 1: there has been some historical confusion over scientific names, with the Pearly Conure formerly being called P. perlata (with subspecies anerythra, coerulescens, lepida and perlata), and the Crimson-bellied Conure being called P. rhodogaster. In the 1980s it was shown that the original 1824 description of perlata was actually of juvenile Crimson-bellied Conures and as that name had priority over rhodogaster (1864) this became the scientific name of the Crimson-bellied Conure, and the Pearly Conure then gained the next available name which was P. lepida (given in 1832).

    Note 2: the subspecies anerythra has also been proposed as being a full species separate from P. lepida.


    Endemic to Brazil: anerythra is from east Para; coerulescens is from east and central Maranhao; and lepida is from northeast Para to northwest Maranhao.


    Photo by @Vision at Loro Parque (Canary Islands) - subspecies lepida.

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    Pearly conure, Pyrrhura lepida lepida - ZooChat


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands - subspecies coerulescens.

    [​IMG]
    Miritaba pearly conure - Pyrrhura perlata coerulescens - ZooChat



    White-eared Conure Pyrrhura leucotis
    Monotypic. Formerly with four or five subspecies, which have all been split off into separate species.


    Endemic to eastern Brazil.


    Photo by @devilfish at Palmitos Park (Canary Islands).

    [​IMG]
    White-eared parakeet - ZooChat



    Bonaparte's or Deville's Conure Pyrrhura lucianii
    Monotypic. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. picta.


    Endemic to the Brazilian state of Amazonas.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Maroon-tailed or Black-tailed Conure Pyrrhura melanura
    Four subspecies: berlepschi, chapmani, melanura, souancei. The Choco Conure P. pacifica was formerly treated as a subspecies. Some authors would also split off chapmani and souancei as separate species.


    P. m. berlepschi is from southeastern Ecuador and eastern Peru; chapmani is from central Colombia; melanura is from the Upper Amazon basin; and souancei is from southern Colombia and eastern Ecuador.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands.

    [​IMG]
    Maroon-tailed ( Black-tailed ) conures - Pyrrhura melanura - ZooChat


    Green-cheeked Conure Pyrrhura molinae
    Six subspecies: australis, flavoptera, molinae, phoenicura, restricta, sordida.


    Found mostly in Bolivia and southern Brazil: australis is from southern Bolivia and northwest Argentina; flavoptera is from northern Bolivia; molinae is from the highlands of east Bolivia; phoenicura is from southern Brazil and northeast Bolivia; restricta is from the Santa Cruz area of eastern Bolivia; and sordida is from southern Brazil and northwest Paraguay.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at Vogelpark Avifauna (Netherlands). Note the red tail, which is the easiest way to distinguish this species from the similar Maroon-bellied Conure P. frontalis; other clear differences are the dark crown and blue nape (both green in P. frontalis). Both species have a maroon patch on the belly, although that cannot be seen in this photo.

    [​IMG]
    Green-cheeked conure - ZooChat



    El Oro Conure Pyrrhura orcesi
    Monotypic.


    Endemic to southwest Ecuador.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Choco Conure Pyrrhura pacifica
    Monotypic. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. melanura.


    Found on the western slopes of the Andes in southwest Colombia and northwest Ecuador.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands.

    [​IMG]
    Maroon-tailed parakeet - Pyrrhura melanura pacifica - ZooChat



    Garlepp's Conure Pyrrhura parvifrons
    Monotypic. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. roseifrons (which was itself formerly treated as a subspecies of P. picta).


    Endemic to northern Peru.


    Photo by @devilfish in the wild, Peru.

    [​IMG]
    Garlepp's parakeets, Peruvian Amazon, May 2016 - ZooChat
     
    Last edited: 7 Apr 2024
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  15. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Location:
    New Zealand
    Crimson-bellied Conure Pyrrhura perlata
    Monotypic.

    Note: formerly went under the scientific name Pyrrhura rhodogaster, which is a junior synonym - the name perlata was given in 1824 to juvenile birds (and thought to be a form of Pearly Conure), whereas adult birds were not described until 1864 under the name rhodogaster). The confusion over nomenclature was not sorted out until the 1980s.


    Found in central South America, from central Brazil to eastern Bolivia.


    Photo by @Therabu at Weltvogelpark Walsrode (Germany).

    [​IMG]
    Crimson-bellied Conure Pyrrhura perlata - ZooChat



    Wavy-breasted Conure Pyrrhura peruviana
    Two subspecies, dilutissima and peruviana. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. roseifrons (which was itself formerly treated as a subspecies of P. picta).


    Found in Ecuador and Peru: dilutissima is from the Apurimac Valley in south-central Peru, and peruviana is from the Andean foothills in southeastern Ecuador and northern Peru.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Pfrimer's or Maroon-faced Conure Pyrrhura pfrimeri
    Monotypic. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. leucotis.


    Endemic to a very small area of caatinga in east-central Brazil.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands.

    [​IMG]
    Pfrimer's marroon-faced parakeet - ZooChat



    Painted Conure Pyrrhura picta
    Monotypic. Formerly with multiple subspecies (at least ten), which have all been split off into separate species.


    Found in northern South America, from southeastern Venezuela to the Guianas and northern Amazonia (Brazil).


    Photo by @LaughingDove at Suan Palm Farm Nok (Thailand).

    [​IMG]
    Painted Conure - ZooChat



    Rose-headed or Rose-crowned Conure Pyrrhura rhodocephala
    Monotypic.


    Endemic to the Cordillera de Merida in Venezuela.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands. Note the distinctive white feathers in the wing.

    [​IMG]
    Rose-headed parakeet - ZooChat



    Rose-fronted Conure Pyrrhura roseifrons
    Monotypic (following the further splitting of P. parvifrons and P. peruviana). Traditionally all had also been treated as subspecies of P. picta.


    Found in western Amazonia, from northern Peru south to northern Bolivia and western Brazil.


    Photo by @Daniel Sörensen at Weltvogelpark Walsrode (Germany).

    [​IMG]
    Rose-fronted parakeet (Pyrrhura roseifrons) - ZooChat



    Black-capped or Rock Conure Pyrrhura rupicola
    Two subspecies, rupicola and sandiae.


    P. r. rupicola is from east-central Peru, and P. r. sandiae is from southeast Peru to northern Bolivia and western Amazonia (Brazil).


    Photo by @Goura at Jurong Bird Park (Singapore) - subspecies rupicola.

    [​IMG]
    Black-capped conure - ZooChat


    Photo by @vogelcommando at a bird show in the Netherlands - subspecies sandiae.

    [​IMG]
    Black-capped conure - Subspecies sandiae - ZooChat



    Sinu Conure Pyrrhura subandina
    Monotypic. Traditionally has been treated as a subspecies of P. picta.


    Possibly endemic to the Sinu Valley in northern Colombia. It has not been recorded since 1949, "despite extensive searches" according to the IUCN, and may be extinct.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.



    Santa Marta Conure Pyrrhura viridicata
    Monotypic.


    Endemic to a small area in northern Colombia.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.
     
    Last edited: 27 Jun 2022
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  16. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

    Joined:
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    Posts:
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    Location:
    New Zealand
    Rhynchopsitta
    Two living species.


    There is also an extinct species from the late Pleistocene of Mexico, around 25,000 to 12,000 years ago, Rhynchopsitta phillipsi. The parrots of this genus feed primarily on pine seeds, and so it is theorised that the extinction of R. phillipsi may have been due to it specialising on some species of pine which became extinct in the changing climate during the end of the last Ice Age. The current restricted distribution of the extant Maroon-fronted Parrot is also thought to be relictual due to changes in forest composition at that time. The cave deposits in which R. phillipsi were found also contained bones from both of the extant Rhynchopsitta species.



    Thick-billed Parrot Rhynchopsitta pachyrhyncha
    Monotypic.


    Found in the mountain pine forests of northwestern and central Mexico, mainly within the Sierra Madre Occidental, and formerly (until the 1930s) also occurring naturally in the southern USA. Reintroductions have taken place in southern Arizona (USA) but were unsuccessful to date.


    Photo by @Julio C Castro at San Diego Zoo Safari Park (USA).

    [​IMG]
    Thick Billed Parrot - ZooChat


    Photo by @gentle lemur at Exmoor Zoo (UK), showing the underwing colour.

    [​IMG]
    Thick-billed parrot - ZooChat



    Maroon-fronted Parrot Rhynchopsitta terrisi
    Monotypic.


    The Maroon-fronted Parrot was originally described as a species distinct from R. pachyrhyncha, but has since wavered between that position and being just a distinctive subspecies. Currently it is treated as a full species. It is considerably larger than R. pachyrhyncha and has different behavioural patterns, notably in breeding. The two taxa can also be easily distinguished osteologically (i.e. from skeletal material). Conversely they are very close genetically.


    Endemic to the mountain pine forests of northeastern Mexico, where it occupies a restricted range in the Sierra Madre Oriental.


    There are currently only three photos in the Zoochat galleries. Notice the colour of the head compared to the bright red cap of the Thick-billed Parrot.


    Photo by @devilfish at Loro Parque (Canary Islands).

    [​IMG]
    Maroon-fronted parrots, December 2012 - ZooChat


    Photo by @Jakub at Loro Parque (Canary Islands).

    [​IMG]
    Maroon-fronted parrot - August 2018 (breeding station La Vera) - ZooChat
     
    Last edited: 23 Feb 2024
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  17. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

    Joined:
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    Posts:
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    Location:
    New Zealand
    Thectocercus
    One species.

    Previously in the genus Aratinga, and sometimes also placed in Psittacara.



    Blue-crowned Conure Thectocercus acuticaudatus
    Five subspecies: acuticaudatus, haemorrhous, koenigi, neoxena, neumanni.


    Distributed across most of South America, and also introduced to parts of the USA. T. a. acuticaudatus is from eastern Bolivia and neighbouring Brazil, south to Argentina; haemorrhous is from northeast Brazil; koenigi is from northeast Colombia and northern Venezuela; neoxena is from Margarita Island off Venezuela; and neumanni is from the highlands of Bolivia.


    There are surprisingly few photos on Zoochat of this species. Zooterliste treats most of its listings as being "non-subspecific". Physically the ones present in photos on Zoochat look like the nominate race acuticaudatus.


    Photo by @Chlidonias at Landon Creek Bird Sanctuary (New Zealand).

    [​IMG]
    blue-crowned conure (Aratinga acuticaudata) - ZooChat


    Photo by @Zooish at Singapore River Safari / River Wonders (Singapore).

    [​IMG] River Gems - Southern Blue-crowned Parakeet (Thectocercus acuticaudatus acuticaudatus) - ZooChat
     
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  18. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Location:
    New Zealand
    Deroptyus
    One species.

    This genus and Pionites (caiques) form a separate genetic group from the other members of the Arini tribe.



    Hawk-headed or Red-Fan Parrot Deroptyus accipitrinus
    Two subspecies: accipitrinus and fuscifrons.


    Found across northern South America, with accipitrinus being found north of the Amazon River and fuscifrons to the south of the Amazon River. The subspecies are easily distinguished by the colouration of the head feathers, as can be seen in the photos used below.


    Photo by @Michal Sloviak at Zoo Bojnice (Slovakia) - subspecies accipitrinus.

    [​IMG]
    Red-fan Parrot - ZooChat


    Photo by @Maguari at Jardim Zoologico de Lisboa (Portugal) - subspecies fuscifrons.

    [​IMG]
    Southern Hawk-headed Parrot at Lisbon Zoo, 24/05/11 - ZooChat


    Photo by @devilfish at Palmitos Park (Canary Islands) - subspecies fuscifrons, showing the raised crest.

    [​IMG]
    Southern red-fan parrot - ZooChat
     
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  19. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    Location:
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    Pionites
    Two to four species, three of which are represented in the Zoochat galleries.

    Typically there has just been two species recognised in this genus, the Black-headed Caique Pionites melanocephalus and the Yellow-headed or White-bellied Caique Pionites leucogaster. In recent years all the subspecies of the latter (leucogaster, xanthomerius, xanthurus) have been split into three full species, although this is not followed by all authorities.

    Note that there is some variance in how the specific names are spelled in different sources, for example melanocephalus versus melanocephala.



    Green-thighed Caique Pionites leucogaster
    Monotypic, although the taxa xanthomerius and xanthurus have normally been treated as subspecies.


    Found in northern Brazil, south of the Amazon River, as far west as the lower Rio Madeira.


    Photo by @ThylacineAlive at Zoo Ostrava (Czech Republic) - adult and juvenile. This is the only photo I could find in the galleries which shows this species - several other photos labelled as being "Green-thighed Parrots" are actually of the yellow-thighed P. xanthomerius. Of the three yellow-headed Pionites species, this is the only one with green thighs which makes it very easy to identify.

    [​IMG]
    Green-Thighed Caiques - ZooChat



    Black-headed Caique Pionites melanocephalus
    Two subspecies: melanocephalus and pallidus.


    Found in northern South America, with melanocephalus from northern Brazil west to Colombia; and pallidus from southeast Colombia to Ecuador and northeastern Peru.


    Photo by @vogelcommando at Omnium Goes (Netherlands) - subspecies melanocephalus.

    [​IMG]
    Black-headed parrot - ZooChat


    Photo by @Giant Eland at Bioparque la Reserva (Colombia) - subspecies pallidus. Note the cheeks and thighs are yellow rather than orange.

    [​IMG]
    Black-headed caique (Pionites melanocephalus) - ZooChat


    Photo by @ronnienl in the wild, Ecuador - subspecies pallidus. This the only wild photo of Pionites in the Zoochat galleries.

    [​IMG]
    Black-headed parrot - ZooChat



    Yellow-thighed or Black-legged Caique Pionites xanthomerius
    Monotypic. Has more usually been treated as a subspecies of P. leucogaster.


    From western Amazonas, in northern Brazil to eastern Peru and northern Bolivia.


    Photo by @Tomek at BirdWorld (UK). Note the green tail, which is the easiest way to distinguish this species from the very similar P. xanthurus (which has a yellow tail, as well as having pink feet).

    [​IMG]
    Yellow-thighed Caique (Pionites leucogaster xanthomeria) - ZooChat


    Photo by @alexkant at Nordsjaellands Fuglepark & Zoo (Denmark) - adult and juvenile.

    [​IMG]
    White-bellied caique/ Pionites leucogaster xanthomeria - ZooChat



    Yellow-tailed Caique Pionites xanthurus
    Monotypic. Has more usually been treated as a subspecies of P. leucogaster.


    Found in northern Brazil from the Rio Madeira catchment west to the Rio Jurua.


    There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries. There is one photo labelled as showing this species, taken at the Parrot Zoo (now the Lincolnshire Wildlife Park) in the UK, but this is in error. The birds shown in the photo are Yellow-thighed Caiques P. xanthomerius - the tail is not visible in the photo but P. xanthurus have pink feet. The listing currently on Zootierliste for this collection having kept P. xanthurus appears to be directly due to this photo.
    IMG_24653 - ZooChat
     
  20. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

    Joined:
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    Location:
    New Zealand
    Tribe Androglossini


    Alipiopsitta (Yellow-faced Amazon; previously in Amazona or Salvatoria)

    Amazona (amazon parrots: about 30 to 35 species)

    Brotogeris (eight species)

    Hapalopsittaca (four species)

    Graydidascalus (Short-tailed Parrot)

    Myiopsitta (Quaker or Monk Parakeet: one or two species)

    Pionopsitta (Pileated Parrot)

    Pionus (8 species)

    Pyrilia (7 species; previously in Pionopsitta).

    Triclaria (Blue-bellied Parrot)
     
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