Don't want to see ads? Sign up...




Species icon
Red-tailed Comet

Sappho sparganurus
(Shaw, G, 1812)
Picaflor Cometa

Family: Trochilidae
Order: Apodiformes
Class: Aves
Phylum / Division: Chordata
Kingdom: Animalia

 Request change
Filters


Synonyms: Sappho sparganura, Trochilus sparganurus.

Subspecies:


Description: Very striking hummingbird, 12 to 19 cm in length depending on tail length, much longer and more showy in males. Male: green belly with light brown undertail coverts and bright green throat. Back and rump reddish-purple; tail very long, deeply forked, bright red with black tips, unmistakable. Female: green back with reddish rump; throat and chest whitish-beige finely spotted with green; white eye spot; reddish tail shorter and forked, without long outer rectrices.

Distribution: Andes from Colombia to northwestern Argentina. In Argentina it occurs in Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca, La Rioja, San Juan, Mendoza, Córdoba, and San Luis; occasionally farther east during winter movements.

Habitat: Yungas and shrubby ravines of northwestern Argentina; also central sierras and high-elevation grasslands. Dry slopes with shrubs, rocky gorges, and semi-arid environments with presence of cacti. Especially between 2,000–5,000 m, but may reach sea level during winter descent. Mainly resident with altitudinal movements; in winter it may move eastward, occasionally reaching as far as Buenos Aires.

Feeding: Feeds mainly on nectar, visiting flowers of shrubs, vines, and cacti, especially in open and montane environments. Shows territorial behavior over flowering plants, actively defending them from other hummingbirds. Supplements its diet with small arthropods (insects and spiders), captured in flight or collected from foliage, providing essential protein.

Behavior: Generally solitary. Males very conspicuous, active, and territorial, often perching in exposed sites from which they monitor flowers and perform chasing flights, and frequently display: they open and move their long tail in flight or while perched, increasing visibility. Flight agile and powerful, with long movements between vegetation patches.

Breeding: Nest cup-shaped, built with mosses and lichens, placed on rocky walls, shrubs, or Polylepis. Clutch of 2 eggs. Incubation about 20 days, carried out by the female. During the breeding season, the male performs display flights in arc or pendulum shape, highlighting the long tail.

Conservation status: Species not threatened at national or international level. It is a common species and adaptable to modified habitats.


Author of this compilation: Diego Carus and María Belén Dri – 03/04/2026




Loading map...




Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 141053
  Adult

La Crucecita
Mendoza
Argentina
02/09/2016
Tomas Widow
Foto
Photography ID: 102542
  Adult

Quebrada de los Berros
Mendoza
Argentina
06/13/2015
Tomas Widow
Foto
Photography ID: 40486
  Juvenile

Godoy Cruz
Mendoza
Argentina
02/24/2014
Tomas Widow



 View all photographs of the species




 Add a photography of this species





Last Vocalizations published




 Add an audio of this species





Last Filmings published




 Add a film of this species





 Reports


 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
41018909/02/2016ArgentinaMendozaLa CrucecitaTomas Widow
29547313/06/2015ArgentinaMendozaQuebrada de los BerrosTomas Widow
11629024/02/2014ArgentinaMendozaPalmares, Godoy CruzTomas Widow
Page 1

 Add a record of this species

Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Red-tailed Comet (Sappho sparganurus) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 19/04/2026.