LEUCIPPUS CHIONOGASTER. 



White-breasted Leucippus. 



Trochilus leucogaster, Tschudi, Consp. Av., no. 209. 



Lampomis chionog aster, Tschudi, Faun. Per., p. 247. pi. 22. fig. 2. 



Polytmus chionogaster, Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. i. p. 108, Polytmus, sp. 49 



Leucippus turneri, Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av.,p. 73, Leucippus, sp. 2. 



Thaumatias leucogaster, Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av., p. 78, Thaumatias, sp. 6. 



Trochilus Turnerii, Bourc. Rev. Zool. 1846, p. 313, 



Trochilus ( ?) hypoleucus, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., part xiv. p. 90. 



Polytmus hypoleucus, Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. i. p. 108, Polytmus, sp. 56. 

 Thaumantias chionogaster, Bonap. Rev. et Mag. de Zool. 1854, p. 255. 

 Leucippus Turneri, Reichenb. Aufz. der Colibris, p. 11. 



If this bird had been one of the most beautiful, instead of one of the plainest and most modestly attired 

 species of the family, it could scarcely have received a greater degree of attention than has been bestowed 

 upon it by the various naturalists interested in this group of birds ; for, although a comparatively recent 

 discovery, it has received no less than four specific appellations, and been placed in more than as many 

 genera. Dr. Tschudi, its first describer, originally gave it the name of leucogaster, but that name having 

 been previously employed for another member of the family, he proposed chionogaster in lieu of it; which 

 term having the priority, is necessarily the one adopted. 



The native countries of this now very common bird are Northern Peru and Bolivia, over which it is 

 widely dispersed. That its range in Bolivia extends to the distant Province of Charcas, is evidenced by 

 the circumstance of my having received numerous examples from the neighbourhood of Chuquisaca. 

 Mr. Bridges found it in abundance in the Valley of Cochabamba, where, he states, it feeds on insects and 

 pollen, obtained from the flowers of the Lemon during the blossoming season of that tree : Humming Birds, 

 however, by no means confine themselves to any particular tree or shrub, but pay their devoirs to each alike, 

 as they successively come into flower ; the blossoms of the thorny rock-loving Cactus yielding its 

 contributions, as well as the fragrant Lemon and the numerous trees indigenous to the country in which the 

 bird is found. 



The general colouring of the body is alike in all, but some of my specimens have the tail-feathers 

 uniform dull gren, while in others, like those of Leucippus fallaoc, they are tipped with white: is the latter 

 state characteristic of the female ? or is it due to youth or maturity ? In some specimens the white 

 tipping is more extensive than in others. Possibly these differences may be indicative of two distinct 

 species ; but, in the absence of more conclusive evidence, I shall for the present consider them as identical. 

 I must not omit to mention that, through the kindness of M. Louis Coulon of Neufchatel, I have been 

 favoured with the loan of Dr. Tschudi's original specimen, on examining which I find the basal portion 

 of the tail-feathers white, and not the tips ; and similar specimens are contained in my own collection ; 

 it is evident, therefore, that the colouring of the tail is by no means constant. 



Head, upper surface, wing-coverts and flanks bronzy green ; throat and all the under surface white ; wings 

 purplish brown ; central tail-feathers bronzy green*; lateral feathers dull bronzy brown on their outer webs, 

 the shafts and inner webs white, clouded with bronzy brown in the centre ; bill black ; base of the lower 

 mandible paler. 



The figures are of the natural size. The plant is the Echinocactus cinnabarinus. 



