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Swifts

Swifts are a family of highly aerial birds known as Apodidae, which reside within the Apodiformes order alongside hummingbirds. They resemble swallows due to convergent evolution, as both hunt insects on the fly, but they are not closely related. Swifts have small, weak legs, which led to them sometimes being depicted without feet historically. Their classification is complex, with some fossil evidence suggesting they appeared during the Eocene period. There are about 100 species of swifts, which are known for their high speeds, with the white-throated needletail reaching up to 169 km/h. They have elongated wingtip bones and the ability to rotate their wings from the base, which aids in their maneuverability and efficiency in flight. Swiftlets have evolved a form of echolocation to navigate dark caves. These birds are found worldwide except in the extremes of the polar, desert, and some oceanic islands, and migratory swifts travel from temperate regions to the tropics in winter. Their nests, often attached to vertical surfaces with saliva or located in wall cavities, are unique—some are used in the traditional bird's nest soup. Swifts are insectivores, hunting mid-flight, and their breeding and development patterns are more similar to seabirds than passerines. While no swift species has been recorded as extinct since 1600, some are considered endangered or vulnerable due to factors including habitat loss and overharvesting of their nests by humans for culinary purposes.

Regions

American Black Swift

Cypseloides niger

Andean Swift

Aeronautes andecolus

Ashy-tailed Swift

Chaetura andrei

Band-rumped Swift

Chaetura spinicaudus

Biscutate Swift

Streptoprocne biscutata

Chapman's Swift

Chaetura chapmani

Chestnut-collared Swift

Streptoprocne rutila
A photo of a Chimney Swift (Chaetura pelagica)

Chimney Swift

Chaetura pelagica

Great Dusky Swift

Cypseloides senex

Grey-rumped Swift

Chaetura cinereiventris

Lesser Swallow-tailed Swift

Panyptila cayennensis

Neotropical Palm Swift

Tachornis squamata

Pale-rumped Swift

Chaetura egregia

Pygmy Palm Swift

Tachornis furcata

Rothschild's Swift

Cypseloides rothschildi

Short-tailed Swift

Chaetura brachyura

Sick's Swift

Chaetura meridionalis

Sooty Swift

Cypseloides fumigatus

Spot-fronted Swift

Cypseloides cherriei
A photo of a Swift (Apus apus)

Swift

Apus apus

Tepui Swift

Streptoprocne phelpsi

Vaux's Swift

Chaetura vauxi

White-chested Swift

Cypseloides lemosi

White-chinned Swift

Cypseloides cryptus

White-collared Swift

Streptoprocne zonaris

White-tipped Swift

Aeronautes montivagus
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