Arremon schlegeli Bonaparte, 1850 is a animal in the Passerellidae family, order Passeriformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Arremon schlegeli Bonaparte, 1850 (Arremon schlegeli Bonaparte, 1850)
🦋 Animalia

Arremon schlegeli Bonaparte, 1850

Arremon schlegeli Bonaparte, 1850

Arremon schlegeli (golden-winged sparrow) is a Neotropical sparrow with three recognized subspecies distributed across Colombia and Venezuela.

Family
Genus
Arremon
Order
Passeriformes
Class
Aves

About Arremon schlegeli Bonaparte, 1850

The golden-winged sparrow, scientifically named Arremon schlegeli Bonaparte, 1850, can be identified by its black head, long yellow bill, gray upperparts, and a green patch on its back. It is the only sparrow within its range that has a fully black head. Its eyes are either brown or black; adult birds have yellow bills, while juvenile birds have black bills. For male golden-winged sparrows, the face, malar region, and chin are black, with a white throat, gray nape, and green on the back. Female golden-winged sparrows have buffier underparts than males. On average, this species measures 150 mm in total length. Females weigh approximately 23 grams, and males weigh approximately 32 grams. The golden-winged sparrow lives in terrestrial ecosystems, including subtropical or tropical dry forests, subtropical or tropical shrubland, and subtropical or tropical heavily degraded former forest (both artificial and terrestrial). It also inhabits woodlands and dry areas from lowlands up to 1400 meters in elevation, where it resides in forests, second-growth areas, thickets, ravines, and hillsides. To date, three subspecies of Arremon schlegeli have been recognized. A. s. schlegeli is found along the Caribbean coasts of Colombia and Venezuela. A. s. fratruelis occurs in Serranía de Macuira on the Guajira Peninsula of northern Colombia. The third subspecies, A. s. canidorsum, lives in the northern Colombian Andes, specifically on the west slope of the eastern Andes in Colombia’s Magdalena Valley. A. s. fratruelis is larger and has a longer bill than A. s. schlegeli. A. s. canidorsum has gray upperparts and white underparts, and lacks the green patch on the back that is seen in the other two subspecies.

Photo: (c) Ad Konings, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Ad Konings · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Passeriformes Passerellidae Arremon

More from Passerellidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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