
SAPPHIRONIA GOUDOTI.
Green-breasted Sapphironia.
Trochilm Goudoti, Bourc. in Rev. Zool. 1843, p. 100.— lb . Ann. Sci. Phys. &c. de Lyon,
1843, p. 47.
Saucerottia goudoti, Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av., p. 77, Saucerottia, sp. 6.
Pohjtmm Goudoti, Gray and Mitch. Gen. o f Birds, vol. i. p. 108, Polgtmus, sp. 68.
Chalybura Goudotii, Reichenb. Auf. der Col., p. 10.
Hylocharis goudoti, Bonap. Rev. e t Mag. de Zool. 1854, p. 255.— Sclat. in Proc. o f Zool. Soc.,
p a rt xxv. p. 17.
As will be seen on reference to the accompanying Plate, the Sapphironia Goudoti is a very elegantly formed
bird, and its colouring is not less worthy of admiration, its throat, breast, and under surface being clothed
with glittering metallic green. It will be noticed also, that in this instance I have departed from my general
rule in not figuring the female; this omission is due to my not possessing a specimen to figure from: neither
have I been able to see an example of this sex in any other collection, which is the more strange, since the
male is very commonly met with ; indeed, it is one of the birds sent in the greatest numbers from Bogota.
That the female will differ from the opposite sex, and bear a general resemblance to the female of Sapphironia
cceruleogularis, there can be little doubt. It not unfrequently happens that we receive numerous male examples
of a species for years before a single female is transmitted, but sometimes the contrary occurs;
indeed, even in their native country, one sex appears to be often found in numbers, to the exclusion of the
other. This may account for our not having yet received the female of the present species; at the same
time, it is, doubtless, the less attractive colouring of the female which prevents examples of that sex being
skinned by the Indians, who are the principal collectors and preservers in the neighbourhood of Bogota.
M. Bourcier has named this species in honour of M. Goudot, who, by his researches in New Grenada,
and the collections he obtained there, has done so much to promote the cause of natural science.
I trust that the single figure in the accompanying Plate will sufficiently illustrate this pretty bird, and that
it will bear out what I have said as to the elegance of its form and the beauty of its colouring.
All the upper surface grass-green; under surface glittering green ; wings purplish brown; tail-coverts
bronzy green; tail purplish black, slightly washed with bronze; under tail-coverts green, narrowly fringed
with white in some specimens, broadly fringed with white in others, and in others again these feathers are
white, with a streak only of green down the centre ; upper mandible and tip of the lower black, the basal
two-thirds of the latter apparently flesh-colour.
The figure is of the natural size. The plant is the Tropeeolum umbellatum.