Movement The great sapphirewing is mostly sedentary, but locally some move to lower elevations during the
austral winter.
Feeding The great sapphirewing feeds on the nectar of a wide variety of flowering plants, most of which are fairly small though some are larger. In Peru it seems to favor
Tristerix longebracteatus and in the Colombian
páramo Puya clava-herculis. It typically feeds at low to mid-levels of the vegetation, hovering or perching at the outside of the host plant. It usually defends patches of flowers but also forages by
trap-lining, visiting a circuit of feeding sites. In addition to feeding on nectar it captures small
arthropods by gleaning from foliage and by
hawking.
Breeding The great sapphirewing's breeding season is not well defined but includes at least February to May. The only known nest was an oddity, a three-compartment structure of moss lined with soft fibers. When it was discovered, a female sapphirewing was brooding two nestlings in one compartment and another was occupied by a female
tyrian metaltail (
Metallura tyrianthina). The third compartment was empty. The nest was about above ground, suspended from roots below vegetation.
Vocalization The great sapphirewing's vocalizations include "a high, thin, liquid chatter", a "drawn-out piercing high-pitched
zeee", and "[an] agitated
titititirrr". ==Status==