About Aratinga leucophthalma (Statius Muller, 1776)
The white-eyed parakeet, Aratinga leucophthalma, is 32 to 35 cm (13 to 14 inches) long, with a 37 to 40 cm (15 to 16 inch) wingspan, and weighs 100 to 218 g (3.5 to 7.7 oz). Males and females have identical plumage. Adults of all subspecies are mostly green, with paler green underparts. They have red flecks on the head and neck. The bend and edge of the wing, plus the outermost lesser underwing coverts, are also red. The outermost greater underwing coverts are yellow. The undersides of the flight feathers and tail are olive. Their eye is orange, surrounded by bare white to yellowish white skin, and the bill is horn colored. Subspecies P. l. callogenys is larger and darker green than the nominate P. l. leucophthalmus. Subspecies P. l. nicefori has a red band on its forehead. Juveniles look similar to adults, but have little to no red on the head and wings. The nominate subspecies of white-eyed parakeet has the widest distribution. It occurs in Trinidad, eastern Venezuela extending east through the Guianas, and south through Brazil into Bolivia, Paraguay, northern Argentina, and Uruguay. Its range in Brazil excludes the upper Amazon Basin and the dry northeastern region of the country. Subspecies P. l. callogenys occurs in southeastern Colombia, extending south through eastern Ecuador into northwestern Peru, and east into the upper and central Amazon Basin south of the Amazon River. P. l. nicefori is only known from the type specimen collected in central Colombia. The white-eyed parakeet lives in a wide range of landscapes, most of which are somewhat open. These landscapes include dense forest edges and nearby savannahs, secondary forests, gallery forests, várzea forests (especially in Ecuador), palm groves, mangroves, and clearings in rainforests. It generally inhabits lowlands, reaching an elevation of 700 m (2,300 ft) in Colombia, 1,100 m (3,600 ft) in Ecuador, and up to 2,500 m (8,200 ft) in Bolivia.