Southern giant hummingbird
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The southern giant hummingbird (Patagona gigas) is one of two species in the genus Patagona and the second largest hummingbird species, after its close relative the northern giant hummingbird.<ref name=pnas-2024/>
Taxonomy
Template:Further It and the sympatric northern giant hummingbird (P. peruviana) were once considered the same species, i.e., the giant hummingbird, though some researchers have already classified them as different species or subspecies in the past.<ref name=Boucard/><ref name=Areta/> Genomic analysis supports the separation of the two species which shows that they diverged between 2.1 and 3.4 million years ago, in the late Pliocene.<ref name=pnas-2024/> Williamson and colleagues attributed the binomial name Patagona chaski to the northern giant hummingbird in 2024,<ref name="pnas-2024">Template:Cite journal</ref> but this taxon was already described as Patagona peruviana by Adolphe Boucard in 1893, so P. chaski is a junior synonym of P. peruviana.<ref name=Boucard>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=Areta>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Description

Its mass is in the range of Template:Cvt, making it approximately twice as heavy as the next largest hummingbird.<ref name=pnas-2024/> It has a wingspan of Template:Cvt, with a body length of Template:Cvt.<ref name="avibase">Template:Cite web</ref>
The two subspecies are visually distinguishable. P. g. peruviana is yellowish brown overall and has white on the chin and throat, where P. g. gigas is more olive green to brown and lacks white on the chin and throat.<ref name=Oses>Template:Cite book</ref>
Distribution, habitat, and migration

The giant hummingbird is widely distributed throughout the length of the Andes on both the east and west sides.<ref name=pnas-2024/><ref name=Oses /> Its seasonal migration loop is estimated at Template:Cvt over the Central Andean Plateau, involving an altitude change of about Template:Cvt over a three week period.<ref name=pnas-2024/>
It typically inhabits the higher altitude scrubland and forests that line the slopes of the Andes during the summer and then retreats to similar, lower altitude habitats in winter months.<ref name=Vonwehrden>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=Herzog>Template:Cite journal</ref>
The species persists through a large altitude range, with specimens retrieved from sea level up to Template:Cvt.<ref name=Oses /> They have shown to be fairly resilient to urbanisation and agricultural activities; however, the removal of vegetation limits their distribution in dense city areas and industrial zones.<ref name=villegas>Template:Cite journal</ref> The giant hummingbird migrates in summer to the temperate areas of South America, reaching as low as 44° S. Correspondingly, it migrates north to more tropical climates in winter (March–August), though not usually venturing higher than 28° S.<ref name=pnas-2024/><ref name=Oses /><ref name=Ricardo>Template:Cite book</ref>
P. g. peruviana occurs from Ecuador to the southeastern mountains of Peru and P. g. gigas from northern Bolivia and Chile to Argentina. Contact between these previously accepted subspecies<ref name=pnas-2024/> is most likely to occur around the eastern slopes of the north Peruvian Andes.<ref name=Oses />
Cultural significance
The giant hummingbird holds significant value for some of the aboriginal inhabitants of the Andes. The people of Chiloé Island believe that if a woman captures a hummingbird then they will gain great fertility from it.<ref name=Ricardo /> This species is a likely inspiration to the people of the Nazca culture who created the Nazca hummingbird geoglyph.<ref name=Ricardo />
Status
The range of the giant hummingbird is sizable, estimated at Template:Cvt, with total numbers of about 65,000 estimated in Peru.<ref name=pnas-2024/> The species is classified by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as being of Least Concern.<ref name=iucn />