Tufted Coquette (Lophornis ornatus) Dutch text English text Vogels in Suriname/Birds in Suriname




Pictures (click on them to enlarge)
Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Fred Pansa,, ecotours
© Fred Pansa,, ecotours

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Fred Pansa,, ecotours
© Fred Pansa,, ecotours

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Colin Bushell
© Colin Bushell

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Martin Reid
female and young © Martin Reid

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Martin Reid
© Martin Reid

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Martin Reid
© Martin Reid

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Martin Reid
© Martin Reid

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Armida Madngisa nature guide
Kabalebo © Armida Madngisa nature guide

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Armida Madngisa nature guide
© Armida Madngisa nature guide

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Michel Giraud-Audine
French Guiana © Michel Giraud-Audine

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Michel Giraud-Audine
French Guiana © Michel Giraud-Audine

Lophornis ornatus, Tufted Coquette, Coqueta Abanico Canela, Tufinho-vermelho by Matthias Fernandez
French Guiana © Matthias Fernandez




Tufted Coquette, a photo of a male with its beautiful crest and bill and, of course, the tufts (plumes) that it gets its name from, made by Colin Bushell in the Brownsberg nature park in Suriname in October 2004. Martin Reid saw at the same spot the first proof of breeding in Suriname in November 2011. The next ones by Michel Giraud-Audine in French Guiane in July 2011 and near Wayabo in April 2013. The female is rufous below, without the tufts and crest.
Fred Pansa made the video of the Tufted Coquette in May 24.



Video (click the link or the 'play'-button to see)
Video recording of a
Tufted Coquette
© ;
   


Distribution




Each small square indicates the observation of at least one (group) of these birds, the medium ones at least four observations on different days and the largest ones ten or more. The color of each square indicates: blue for coastal area, yellow for savanna and red for rainforest.
Not all places in Suriname have been equally often visited by birders, so the distribution of the squares gives an indication of the whereabouts of the birds, but also of the birders. Some places deep in the south have no reported bird observations, by experienced birders, within 60 kilometer.

Abundance in different areas
coastal zone (blue dots on the map) :
northern savannas (yellow dots (in the north)) :
rainforest under 400 m (red dots) :
rainforest above 400 m (red dots) :
Sipaliwini savanna (yellow dots (in the south)) :

A blank is shown if not convincingly reported in the zone.
Data interpreted by Arie Spaans, Otte Ottema and Jan Hein Ribot.



Names
Scientific name: Lophornis ornatus
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae, 35 in Suriname
Dutch: Gekuifde koketkolibrie
English: Tufted Coquette
Sranan ('Surinamese'):
Guyana:
Papiamento:
Spanish (Venezuela): Coqueta Abanico Canela
Portugese (Brazil): Tufinho-vermelho
Arowak:
Carib:
French: Coquette huppe-col


Observations through the year Observations of breeding through the year
The 74 reported observations of this bird in Suriname, mainly for the last 50 years up to 2018, have been grouped by month. More birds on one day are counted as one observation. Of course, if the graph should depict the total number of birds seen, the differences between the months could be much more pronounced. The 1 reported breeding observations of this bird in Suriname. Most observations are about nest with eggs, some about fledglings, or feeding at a nest or the building of a nest.

Of the about 5000 nests and eggs found for all species together, about 1/3 comes from the egg collection of Penard between 1896 and 1905. For some reason most collecting then was done in the first half of each year, so the shown distribution does not necessarily reflect the actual breeding preferences.
The main dry season in Suriname is reckoned to be from half August to the end of November, the main wet season from half April to half August, but the the timing of begin and end does vary from year to year. Around March a second dry season often occurs.


Fatbirder's Top 1000 Birding Websites Last update: September 2024 by Jan Hein Ribot. Please mail your comments, photos to: jhribot ( residing at ) gmail (point!) com.
observations can be uploaded to suriname.observation.org or ebird.org ).