Hispaniolan Mango Anthracothorax dominicus Scientific name definitions
- LC Least Concern
- Names (27)
- Monotypic
Revision Notes
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Species names in all available languages
| Language | Common name |
|---|---|
| Afrikaans | Hispaniolakolibrie |
| Bulgarian | Еспаньолско черногърдо колибри |
| Catalan | colibrí mango de la Hispaniola |
| Croatian | hispaniolska smaragdnica |
| Czech | kolibřík hispaniolský |
| Dutch | Hispaniolamango |
| English | Hispaniolan Mango |
| English (AVI) | Hispaniolan Mango |
| English (United States) | Hispaniolan Mango |
| Estonian | antilli sametkoolibri |
| Finnish | antillienhohtokolibri |
| French | Mango doré |
| French (Canada) | Mango doré |
| French (Haiti) | Mango doré |
| German | Dominikanermangokolibri |
| Haitian Creole (Haiti) | Wanga Nègès |
| Norwegian | antillmango |
| Polish | węglik antylski |
| Serbian | Mango-kolibri sa Hispaniole |
| Slovak | jagavička antilská |
| Spanish | Mango Dominicano (dominicus) |
| Spanish (Dominican Republic) | Zumbador Grande de Hispaniola |
| Spanish (Puerto Rico) | Zumbador Dorado de Hispaniola |
| Spanish (Spain) | Mango dominicano |
| Swedish | hispaniolamango |
| Turkish | Espanyola Mangosu |
| Ukrainian | Колібрі-манго антильський |
Revision Notes
Steven G. Mlodinow revised and standardized the account with Clements taxonomy. Audrey Su curated the media. Leo Gilman copy edited the account.
Anthracothorax dominicus (Linnaeus, 1766)
Definitions
- ANTHRACOTHORAX
- dominicensis / dominicus
- Dominicus
The Key to Scientific Names
Legend Overview
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Introduction
The Hispaniolan Mango and Puerto Rican Mango (Anthracothorax aurulentus) were long considered conspecific under the name Antillean Mango. The American Ornithological Society reevaluated the phenotypic differences between these two taxa, and in 2022 elevated them to full species status as they differed from each other to a similar extent as other species in the genus Anthracothorax (1). This conclusion mirrors many other recent taxonomic decisions in the Caribbean (e.g., the split of Icterus dominicensis into four species: the Hispaniolan Oriole (Icterus dominicensis), the Bahama Oriole (Icterus northropi), the Cuban Oriole (Icterus melanopsis), and the Puerto Rican Oriole (Icterus portoricensis); 2).
Sadly, very little is known about the Hispaniolan Mango, which is endemic to Hispaniola and it satellite islands. It appears to be somewhat common through much of the island, occupying a variety of habitats from sea level to 2,600 m, including pine forests, broadleaf forests, arid shrubby hillsides, secondary growth (including in urban settings), and shade-coffee plantations (3, 4, 5, 6, 7). As is true of most hummingbirds, it feeds on flower nectar and small invertebrates. Hopefully, the dearth of information on this species will stimulate much future study.
- Year-round
- Migration
- Breeding
- Non-Breeding