Tachornis squamata (Cassin, 1853) is a animal in the Apodidae family, order Apodiformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Tachornis squamata (Cassin, 1853) (Tachornis squamata (Cassin, 1853))
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Tachornis squamata (Cassin, 1853)

Tachornis squamata (Cassin, 1853)

Tachornis squamata, the fork-tailed palm swift, is a small New World swift with two subspecies found across northern South America and Trinidad and Tobago, associated with palms.

Family
Genus
Tachornis
Order
Apodiformes
Class
Aves

About Tachornis squamata (Cassin, 1853)

The fork-tailed palm swift (scientific name Tachornis squamata (Cassin, 1853)) is about 13 cm (5.1 in) long and weighs 9 to 13.6 g (0.32 to 0.48 oz). It has long narrow wings and a long, deeply forked tail, and males and females look identical. Adults of the nominate subspecies T. s. squamata have blackish brown upperparts with a faint greenish gloss, and pale gray edges on their feathers; the rump is slightly paler than the rest of the upperparts. Their cheeks are grayish brown, and the throat is very pale brownish white with dusky mottling. The rest of their underparts are pale with light brown mottling, which is sparsest in the center of the belly. Their undertail coverts are blackish brown with pale edges. Juveniles look similar to adults, but have a buff tinge on the head and buffy edges to the feathers of their upperparts. Subspecies T. s. semota is darker overall than the nominate subspecies. It has blacker upperparts with less gray on the feather edges. Its underpart feathers are darker with very little pale edging, and the undertail coverts are shining greenish black. The nominate subspecies of fork-tailed palm swift is found in the Amazon Basin, ranging from northern Bolivia, eastern Peru, and eastern Ecuador through eastern Colombia and northwestern Brazil into southern and eastern Venezuela. T. s. semota is found on Trinidad and Tobago, in the Guianas, and in north central, northeastern, and eastern Brazil. The fork-tailed palm swift occurs in a variety of landscapes that all share the presence of palm trees, especially moriche palms. These landscapes include moist and wet savannas, palm swamps, riparian forest, and urban areas. It is a lowland species, with a maximum known elevation of about 1,000 m (3,300 ft).

Photo: (c) Marcelo Maux, all rights reserved, uploaded by Marcelo Maux

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Apodiformes Apodidae Tachornis

More from Apodidae

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

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