Chaetura
Chaetura is a genus of needletail swifts found in the Americas. Although they resemble swallows, the two are not at all closely related; this is instead a result of convergent evolution. Some members of Chaetura are long-distance migrants, while others are year-round residents.
| Chaetura | |
|---|---|
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| Chimney swift Chaetura pelagica  | |
| Scientific classification  | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Chordata | 
| Class: | Aves | 
| Order: | Apodiformes | 
| Family: | Apodidae | 
| Subfamily: | Apodinae | 
| Genus: | Chaetura Stephens, 1826  | 
| Species | |
| 
 11 living, see text  | |
The genus name is derived from the Greek khaite, for long flowing hair, and oura, for tail, referring to the stiff feathers projecting from the end of the tail.[1]
- Grey-rumped swift – Chaetura cinereiventris
 - Band-rumped swift – Chaetura spinicauda
 - Lesser Antillean swift – Chaetura martinica
 - Costa Rican swift – Chaetura fumosa
 - Pale-rumped swift – Chaetura egregia
 - Chimney swift – Chaetura pelagica
 - Vaux's swift – Chaetura vauxi
 - Chapman's swift – Chaetura chapmani
 - Ashy-tailed swift – Chaetura andrei
 - Sick's swift – Chaetura meridionalis
 - Short-tailed swift – Chaetura brachyura
 
A fossil species, Chaetura baconica, was described from Late Miocene deposits of Hungary.[2]
References
    
- Jobling, James A. (1991). A Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 48. ISBN 0-19-854634-3.
 - Boev, Zlatozar (2000). "The Presence of Apus baranensis Janossy, 1977, (Aves: Apodidae) in the Late Pliocene of Bulgaria". Acta Zoologica Bulgarica. 52 (2): 43–52.
 
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