Hypochlora was described as a separate species by Gould (1870) and so recognized by Cory (1918), as were various forms now considered races of T. furcata of eastern South America that have been shown to intergrade at various points despite sometimes fairly pronounced color differences in males. It differs from other trans-Andean forms of the genus in that the males have a green, rather than violet, abdomen and is geographically isolated in SW Ecuador and NW Peru from other races, which extend S to NW Ecuador W of the Andes. Peters (1945) lumped all cis- and trans-Andean forms of this complex into T. furcata without comment, a treatment followed by Zimmer (1950) and Meyer de Schauensee (1966) as well as Wetmore (1965), who noted that it might be better to split the glittering-crowned trans-Andean forms fron the (mostly) dull-crowned furcata group of E of the Andes. The AOU (1983) split the glittering-crowned transAndean forms as T. colombica, considering this to be a member (with furcata) of a superspecies, as suggested by Wetmore, and this was followed by Sibley & Monroe (1990) and Hilty & Brown (1986). Finally, Escalante & Peterson (1992) split T. fannyi from colombica based exclusively on crown color of males (green vs. purple), and this treatment was followed by Schuchmann (1999) in HBW. In no analysis were females considered in detail.
Finally, Ridgely & Greenfield (2001)
split hypochlora as a separate species from fannyi
based on its green abdomen in males, uniform grey underparts in
females (those of fannyi being described as bicolored,
pale grey anteriorly and dark grey posteriorly) and isolated distribution.
Several things seem worth noting regarding this complex: first,
the violet coloring above and depth of tail fork in males decrease
and the bronzy color of the nape increases S along the Pacific
slope of Colombia into N Ecuador, and the bicolored nature of
the female underparts decreases until in SW Colombia and NW Ecuador
their underparts are nearly uniform, approaching hypochlora.
In all of these forms, females have a blue shoulder, this tendency
accentuating southward and being most pronounced in hypochlora.
In these features, hypochlora seems to represent the endpoint
of trends present in other forms along the Pacific slope (N to
S, fannyi-subtropicalis-verticeps). Only in the abdomen
of males is a distinct jump seen, perhaps not surprising given
the gap in ranges, and I am somewhat hesitant to make a split
based solely on this feature, given the degree of variation in
male plumages throughout this complex and the frequent intergradation
of different-looking cis-Andean forms. My tentative recommendation
is to maintain hypochlora as a race of fannyi/colombica
pending more thorough analyses. (I might mention that birds
intermediate in crown color between colombica and fannyi
have recently been taken in NW Colombia and that female plumages
do not justify splitting these forms, but I will present these
data later when I get them written up, hence will make no recommendation
on this point here). For the present, I recommend (tentatively)
a NO vote on this proposal.
Literature Cited:
Gould 1870, PZSL.
Cory 1918, Catalogue of Birds of the Americas, Part II no. 1.
Peters 1945, Checklist of Birds of the World, vol. 5
ZIMMER, J. 1950d. Studies of Peruvian birds, No. 58. The genera
Chlorostilbon, Thalurania, Hylocharis, and Chrysuronia.
American Museum Novitates 1474: 1-31.
Wetmore 1965, Birds of the Republic of Panamá, vol. 2
Meyer de Schauensee 1966, The Species of Birds of South America
AOU 1983, Checklist of North American Birds, sixth edition
ESCALANTE-PLIEGO, P., AND A. T. PETERSON.
1992. Geographic variation and species limits in Middle American
woodnymphs (Thalurania). Wilson Bull. 104: 205-219.
Sibley & Monroe 1990, Distribution and Taxonomy of Birds of
the World
Ridgely & Greenfield 2001, Birds of Ecuador
===========================
Comments from Remsen: "NO. Additional data must be published to justify this split."
Comments from Pacheco: "NO. Da minha parte, eu prefiro apoiar o
arranjo corroborado por Valdéz-Velásquez (2003)
para este caso, no qual o táxon hypochlora
subordina-se subespecificamente à Thalurania fannyi.
Portanto: Thalurania fannyi hypochlora.
Source: Valdés-Velásquez, A. (2003) Taxonomy, phylogeny,
and biogeography of the Hummingbird Genus Thalurania Gould,
1848 (Aves: Trochilidae). Universität Bonn. Thesis. Disponible on
<http://hss.ulb.uni-bonn.de:90/ulb_bonn/diss_online/math_nat_fak/2003/2003.htm>http://hss.ulb.uni-bonn.de:90/ulb_bonn/diss_online/math_nat_fak/2003/2003.htm
Comments from Jaramillo: "NO Thanks for the reference to Valdés-Velásquez, which corroborates Gary's take on the hypochlora issue."
Comments from Nores: "NO; pienso que el razonamiento de Stiles, especialmente la variación gradual de algunos caracteres de norte a sur, es apropiado para tratar esta propuesta. No obstante, las razones para separar colombica y fannyi de furcata no son mucho más definidas que en este caso. Hasta que no haya un análisis genético de todo el grupo, la separación de las subespecies en especies o la unión de las subespecies en una sola especie, es arbitrario."