Psittacara
About twelve living species, nine of which are represented in the Zoochat galleries.
Previously in the genus
Aratinga.
There is at least one extinct Caribbean species from the genus, the
Puerto Rican Conure Psittacara maugei which was last recorded in 1892. Another Caribbean species, the
Guadeloupe Conure Psittacara labati may be a valid species but is known only from written accounts from the 1700s and is generally treated as hypothetical.
The number of species in this genus is a bit fluid, as several of them are variably treated as being either full species or just as subspecies of others. As with other such cases in this thread, here I am taking a splitty approach in order to cover all the bases.
The three species not depicted in the Zoochat galleries are the Socorro Conure
P. brevipes, Green Conure
P. holochlorus, and Wagler's Conure
P. wagleri. The photos in the galleries which are labelled as being Wagler's Conures appear to all show Cordilleran Conures (which are a split from Wagler's).
Socorro Conure Psittacara brevipes
Monotypic.
Has also been treated as a subspecies of
P. holochlorus.
Endemic to Socorro Island off western Mexico.
There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries.
Hispaniolan Conure Psittacara chloropterus
Monotypic.
The Puerto Rican Conure
Psittacara maugei (extinct c.1892) is either treated as a subspecies of
P. chloropterus or as a separate species.
Endemic to the Caribbean island of Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic), but also introduced to Guadeloupe and Puerto Rico.
Photo by
@toto98 in the wild, Dominican Republic.
Hispaniolan parakeet (Psittacara chloropterus) - ZooChat
Red-masked Conure Psittacara erythrogenys
Monotypic.
Found in western Ecuador and Peru. Also introduced to the USA and Grand Cayman Island in the Greater Antilles.
Photo by
@Parrotsandrew at Sewerby Zoo (UK). The amount of red on the head is extremely variable in this species.
Red-masked Conure, 14th August 2014 - ZooChat
Cuban Conure Psittacara euops
Monotypic.
Endemic to Cuba.
Photo by
@gentle lemur at Birdworld (UK).
Cuban conure 1981 - ZooChat
Finsch's Conure Psittacara finschi
Monotypic.
Found in Central America from Nicaragua to Panama.
Photo by
@Maguari at Loro Parque (Canary Islands).
Finsch's Conure at Loro Parque, 08/11/10 - ZooChat
Cordilleran Conure Psittacara frontatus
Two subspecies:
frontatus and
minor.
Formerly treated as subspecies of
P. wagleri.
Found in Ecuador and Peru.
Photo by
@twilighter at Prague Zoo (Czech Republic) - subspecies
frontatus.
Cordilleran Parakeet - ZooChat
Photo by
@Sicarius at Loro Parque (Canary Islands) - subspecies
minor.
Lesser cordilleran parakeet (Psittacara frontatus minor) - ZooChat
Green Conure Psittacara holochlorus
Two subspecies:
brewsteri and
holochlorus.
Formerly
P. brevipes,
P. rubritorquis and
P. strenuus were also treated as a subspecies.
Possibly endemic to Mexico (following the split of
P. rubritorquis and
P. strenuus, which reach further south into Central America).
P. h. brewsteri is from northwest Mexico;
P. h. holochlorus is from eastern Mexico. The nominate subspecies is also found in southeast Texas (USA), and there is dispute as to whether this is a natural population or an introduced one.
There are no photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries, surprisingly.
White-eyed Conure Psittacara leucophthalmus
Four subspecies:
callogenys, leucophthalmus, nicefori, propinquus.
Found throughout most of South America.
P. l. callogenys is from upper Amazonia, in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Brazil;
leucophthalmus has the widest range, found throughout most of the northeast and east of the continent, from Colombia and Venzuela south to Uruguay and Argentina;
nicefori is known from one specimen collected in Colombia (possibly invalid);
propinquus is from southeast Brazil to northwest Argentina.
Photo by
@David Matos Mendes at RioZoo (Brazil).
White-eyed conure - BioParque do Rio - ZooChat
Photo by
@Therabu in the wild, Brazil - subspecies
leucophthalmus.
White-eyed Parakeet (Psittacara leucophthalmus) - ZooChat
Mitred Conure Psittacara mitratus
Two to four subspecies:
alticola, chlorogenys, mitratus,
tucumanus.
P. m. alticola is from the Cuzuco region in central Peru.
P. m. chlorogenys is from the eastern slope of the Peruvian Andes.
P. m. mitratus is found from central Peru through Bolivia to Argentina.
P. m. tucumanus is from Cordoba and Tucuman (Argentina). Because different authors recognise different subspecies, these distributions depend on which source you consult (e.g. the nominate
mitratus will have either a smaller or wider range if other subspecies are split or lumped with it).
The species has also become established in the USA via escaped pets.
Photo by
@Daniel Sörensen at Parrot Zoo (Czech Republic)- labeled as subspecies
mitratus.
Bolivian mitred conure (Psittacara mitratus mitratus) - Parrot Zoo Bošovice - ZooChat
Photo by
@Sicarius at a private collection - labeled as subspecies
tucumanus.
Tucumán mitred parakeet (Psittacara mitratus tucumanus) - ZooChat
Red-throated Conure Psittacara rubritorquis
Monotypic.
Has also been treated as a subspecies of
P. holochlorus.
Found in northern Central America, from Guatemala to Nicaragua.
Photo by
@Sicarius of a privately-owned bird.
Red-throated parakeet (Psittacara rubritorquis) - ZooChat
Photo by
@Daniel Sörensen at Parrot Zoo (Czech Republic).
Red-throated parakeet (Psittacara rubritorquis) - Parrot Zoo Bošovice - ZooChat
Pacific or Nicaraguan Green Conure Psittacara strenuus
Monotypic.
Has also been treated as a subspecies of
P. holochlorus.
Found from southern Mexico to Guatemala and Nicaragua.
Photo by
@vogelcommando at a bird market in the Netherlands.
Pacific or Nicaraguan conure - Psittacara strenuus - ZooChat
Scarlet-fronted or Wagler's Conure Psittacara wagleri
Two subspecies:
transilis and
wagleri.
P. w. transilis is from the coastal mountains of northeastern Venezuela; and
wagleri from the mountains of northwestern Venezuela to western Colombia.
There do not appear to be any photos of this species in the Zoochat galleries. The larger Cordilleran Conure
P. frontatus was formerly treated as a subspecies of
P. wagleri, so all the photos on Zoochat labelled as Wagler's are actually of that other species (as far as I could tell). They can be told apart by the Cordilleran Conure having red on the bend of the wing, whereas in Wagler's Conure this is green.