Loten's Sunbird

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Loten's Sunbird
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Nectariniidae
Genus: Cinnyris
Species: C. lotenius
Binomial name
Cinnyris lotenius
(Linnaeus, 1766)

The Loten's Sunbird or Long-billed Sunbird, Cinnyris lotenius (formerly placed in the genus Nectarinia), is one of a group of very small Old World passerine birds which feed largely on nectar.

Sunbirds will also take insects, especially when feeding young. Their flight is fast and direct on their short wings.Most species can take nectar by hovering like a hummingbird, but usually perch to feed most of the time.

Loten's Sunbird, (formerly classied as Nectarinia lotenia), is a fairly common resident breeder in forest and cultivation in India and Sri Lanka. Two eggs are laid in a suspended nest in a tree.

Loten's Sunbirds are small, only 12-13 cm long. They have long down-curved bills and brush-tipped tubular tongues, both adaptations to their nectar feeding.

The adult male is mainly glossy purple with a grey-brown belly. It is similar to Purple Sunbird, but is larger, has a longer sickle-shaped bill, and a different belly colour.

The eclipse male has yellow-grey upperparts, darker than Purple Sunbird, and a yellow breast with a blue central streak extending to the belly. The female has yellow-grey upperparts and yellowish underparts, but lacks Purple's faint supercilium. The call is a sharp chit chit.

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