
PINAROLiEMA BUCKLEYI, Gould.
Buckley’s Mountain Humming-bird.
PinarolcBma Buchleyi, Gould, Ann. & Mag. o f N at. Hist. ser. 5, vol. v. p. 4 8 9 (June 1880).
A s in g l e specimen only of this species has as yet been obtained. This is in such ragged plumage that its
markings can only be determined with difficulty. The specimen was moulting when it was shot; and
much o f the colour has faded from the old feathers. The tail and the throat, however, are pretty perfect;
and these parts, together with a few new feathers, are tinted so as to indicate sufficiently clearly
the colour o f the plumage of the perfect bird. Any Trochilidist would be instantly convinced of the
fact that this specimen belongs to a new species of Humming-bird in a bad state of plumage; and it
rests with future travellers to discover others in perfect plumage where this individual was procured.
Some Trochilidists believe the specimen to be a female, others a male ; my own opinion is that it is the
latter; but the bird is in moult, and probably very much altered. Mr. Buckley, whose name it bears, was
the discoverer o f this bird; he killed it at Misqui, in Bolivia, the height of the spot where it was found
being 10,000 feet above the sea.
When the male of this bird is clean-mantled, I think, judging by the tail and throat and the spots o f purple
alternating with the old brown feathers in places throughout the upper surface, it will prove to be a finer
bird than it now appears.
I regret I have no information to give respecting its actions, habits, and mode of feeding; but, from its
long wings and little feet, I judge that the present bird is a good dyer, and perhaps depends for its food
upon insects caught in the air rather than taken from flowers in the usual way.
I regret I have nothing more to add to the little already published, which runs as follows : j g The general
appearance o f this bird reminds me of L am pm h ; but it has an extremely long wing. In the latter respect
it resembles Oreotrochilm ; but it differs from that genus in its strongly curved and lengthened bill and m
Its very broad tail-feathers, while Its extremely small feet seem peculiar to the genus." So much refers to
form ; in what follows, colour and admeasurements are attended to. , • ,
“ Brown, with a purplish gloss on the back ; the upper tail-coverts and tail-feathers brown, glossed with
purple and having a subtermmal band of steel-blue; under surface of body brown, slightly washed with
metallic green ; the throat lighter brown, the feathers edged with paler brown, giving a scaly appearance;
vent and under tail coverts white, the latter washed with brown.
“ Total length 4-6 inches, culmen 1-05, wing 2*95, tail 1*85, tarsus 0-15.
“Habitat. Misqui, Bolivia, 10,000 feet.”