Penelope
Band-tailed Guan (Penelope argyrotis)
The range of this species is restricted to the Andes of northeast Colombia and western Venezuela, and adjacent mountain ranges of northern Venezuela.
Three subspecies recognised:
P. a. albicauda
P. a. colombiana - photo by
@alexkant
P. a. argyrotis
Bearded Guan (Penelope barbata)
The range of this species is restricted to the western slope of the Andes in southern Ecuador and adjacent northwest Peru.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present within the Zoochat gallery.
Baudo Guan (Penelope ortoni)
The range of this species is restricted to the western coastline of Colombia and immediately-adjacent northwest Ecuador.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present within the Zoochat gallery.
Andean Guan (Penelope montagnii)
The range of this species extends patchily throughout the Andes from northern Colombia and northwest Venezuela to central Bolivia.
Five subspecies are recognised:
P. m. montagnii
P. m. atrogularis
P. m. brooki
P. m. plumosa
P. m. sclateri
No photographs of this species are present within the Zoochat gallery.
Marail Guan (Penelope marail)
The range of this species extends from eastern Venezuela into the Guianas, and south into Brazil north of the Amazon River.
Two subspecies are recognised:
P. m. marail
P. m. jacupeba
No photographs of this species are present within the Zoochat gallery.
Rusty-margined Guan (Penelope superciliaris)
The range of this species extends throughout north-central and eastern Brazil, and south to eastern Bolivia, northeast Argentina, eastern Paraguay and southeast Brazil.
Four subspecies recognised:
P. s. superciliaris - photo by
@gentle lemur
P. s. jacupemba
P. s. alagoensis
P. s. major
Red-faced Guan (Penelope dabbenei)
The range of this species is restricted to a narrow strip of the eastern slope of the Andes in southern Bolivia and northwest Argentina.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present within the Zoochat gallery.
Spix's Guan (Penelope jacquacu)
The range of this species extends throughout much of the upper reaches of the Amazon Basin and adjacent regions of South America east of the Andes, from central Colombia in the west to Suriname and Guyana in the east, and south to central Bolivia in the west and west-central Brazil in the east.
Four subspecies are recognised:
P. j. granti - photo by
@Maguari
P. j. orienticola
P. j. jacquacu - photo by
@zoogiraffe
P. j. speciosa - photo by
@devilfish
Crested Guan (Penelope purpurascens)
The range of this species extends patchily throughout much of Central America, from coastal south Mexico in the north to Panama in the south, and from here west to northern Venezuela and south to western Ecuador and northern Peru.
Three subspecies recognised:
P. p. purpurascens - photo by
@mhale
P. p. aequatorialis - photo by
@ronnienl
P. p. brunnescens
Cauca Guan (Penelope perspicax)
The range of this species is restricted to a small handful of highly fragmented disjunct populations in the Andes of western Colombia.
Monotypic.
Photo by
@alexkant
White-winged Guan (Penelope albipennis)
The range of this species is restricted to a small stretch of northwest Peru.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present within the Zoochat gallery.
Dusky-legged Guan (Penelope obscura)
The range of this species represents a pair of highly-disjunct populations; along the eastern slope of the Andes from central Bolivia to northwest Argentina; and from northeast Argentina and adjacent northern Uruguay and southern Paraguay into southern Brazil.
Three subspecies recognised:
P. o. bronzina - photo by
@devilfish
P. o. obscura
P. o. bridgesi
White-crested Guan (
Penelope pileata)
The range of this species extends throughout much of north-central Brazil south of the Amazon River.
Monotypic.
Photo by
@Daniel Sörensen
Chestnut-bellied Guan (Penelope ochrogaster)
The range of this species represents a highly-fragmented distribution of disjunct populations throughout central Brazil.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present within the Zoochat gallery.
White-browed Guan (Penelope jacucaca)
The range of this species is restricted to interior northeastern Brazil.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present within the Zoochat gallery.
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