Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Plain capped starthroat

Heliomaster constantii

Description:

This is a large-sized hummingbird. It is 11–12 cm long, and weighs approximately 7-8 g. Adults are colored predominantly metallic bronze on their upper-parts, tail, back and crown. The bird has a dark eye-stripe with a white stripe above and below. The starthroat also has a white patch on the rump. The throat patch, or gorget, is a metallic violet-red. The breast and underparts are a grayish white. The bill is straight, long and very slender. It is darkly colored. The female is slightly less colorful than the male.

Habitat:

The breeding habitat occurs in various habitats of western Mexico, (the Sierra Madre Occidentals), to southern Costa Rica. It has occasionally been recorded in south-easternmost Arizona of the United States, the Madrean sky islands of the Sierra Madre ranges. In the U.S. the bird is usually seen between mid-June and mid-Sept, in the Chiracahua and Huachuca Mountains of Arizona. It is not present in the U.S. every year. Most recently it has been seen at Tucson's Agua Caliente Park in June 2007, at California Gulch (Arizona) in June 2008 and at Patagonia (Arizona) in September 2010. These birds feed on nectar from flowers and flowering trees using a long extensible tongue or catch insects on the wing.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

ClaudiaGalindo
Spotted by
ClaudiaGalindo

Nayarit, Mexico

Spotted on Jun 13, 2015
Submitted on Jul 7, 2015

Related Spottings

Stripe-breasted Starthroat Plain-capped Starthroat ruby-throated humming bird Plain-capped Starthroat

Nearby Spottings

Plain capped starthroat Red tipped sea goddess Broad billed hummingbird Cinnamon hummingbird
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team