Showing posts with label Passeriformes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Passeriformes. Show all posts

Saturday, June 6, 2026

[Ornithology • 2026] Rhipidura laguceria • A New and Cryptic Fantail Species (Passeriformes: Rhipiduridae) from the Babar Islands, Maluku Province, Indonesia

 
Cheerful Fantail Rhipidura laguceria Eaton & Berryman, 2026  from Babar (left) and 
Cinnamon-tailed Fantail R. fuscorufa P. L. Sclater, 1883  from the Tanimbars (right),  

Photographs: James A. Eaton (both taken in November 2022)

 Abstract  
The Babar Islands, in the Banda Sea, Indonesia, have long been known to host several endemic avian taxa, but only recently have some of these been elevated to species rank. Here we investigate the internal taxonomy of Cinnamon-tailed Fantail Rhipidura fuscorufa P. L. Sclater, 1883, a monotypic passerine found on the Tanimbar Islands (from which it was described) and, 135 km to the west, on the Babar Islands. We compare differences between these populations using 19 specimens and 18 sound recordings, finding that while morphologically they differ subtly (Babar birds are slightly darker above, less extensively cinnamon below), the two have consistently different songs. Moreover, across 132 playback experiments, we find that both populations always ignore allopatric song but typically respond to sympatric song. On the basis that these lines of evidence likely represent barriers to reproduction, we consider the population on the Babar Islands to be taxonomically distinct from that on the Tanimbar Islands. In the absence of an available name, we describe it as a new species.

Photographs of Cinnamon-tailed Fantail Rhipidura fuscorufa from Babar (left) and the Tanimbars (right), both taken in November 2022 (James A. Eaton)

Rhipidura laguceria sp. nov.
  
Diagnosis.—Differs from Tanimbar R. fuscorufa in its consistently darker forehead, crown, nape, mantle and back that are often discernible in the field (pers. obs.); it also has, on average, less extensive buffish on the underparts, being largely confined to the belly (not extending to the lower breast). The most pronounced difference, however, is in the two species' song: R. fuscorufa delivers strophes of 8–18 staccato whistles which randomly change in pitch, while R. laguceria emits a series of 6–8 notes that steadily ascend in pitch (Fig. 4). Birds on each island are unresponsive to allopatric song.

Northern Fantail Rhipidura [rufiventris] hoedti (of Romang, Damar, Leti, Moa and Sermata) and R. [r.] assimilis (Kai Islands)—sometimes recognised specifically as Banda Sea Fantail and Kai Fantail respectively (Eaton et al. 2016, 2021, del Hoyo & Collar 2016)—has an obvious white-streaked grey breast-band, greyer head and upperparts (with a much broader supercilium in assimilis), plain wings lacking extensive cinnamon, much less richly coloured belly (appearing almost whitish in hoedti and pale buff in assimilis) and white (not cinnamon) outertail feathers. They also have very different vocalisations (Eaton et al. 2021).

Etymology.—Because the pleasing song of this taxon is its most distinctive attribute, we name the species for its vocalisations (lagu ceria = Indonesian for ‘cheerful song’). We employ the name as a noun in apposition.

Vernacular names.—While the English names ‘Tanimbar Fantail’ and ‘Babar Fantail’ are ostensibly appropriate for R. fuscorufa s. s. and R. laguceria respectively, the Tanimbar islands host two other sympatric fantail species—Supertramp Fantail R. semicollaris and Long-tailed Fantail R. opistherythra—the second of which is also endemic to the islands. Accordingly, we prefer the English names ‘Trembling Fantail’ for R. fuscorufa and ‘Cheerful Fantail’ for R. laguceria, given that their distinctive vocalisations have led us to propose separating them taxonomically.

Geographic distribution.—Endemic to Babar, Indonesia, and perhaps occurs too on the island's five small satellites, although these have not been explored ornithologically.


James A. Eaton and Alex J. Berryman. 2026. A New and Cryptic Fantail Species from the Babar Islands, Maluku Province, Indonesia. Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club. 146(2); 203-215. DOI: doi.org/10.25226/bboc.v146i2.2026.a6 (3 June 2026) 
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/James-Eaton

[Ornithology • 2022] Zosterops paruhbesar • A distinct New Species of Zosterops White-eye (Passeriformes: Zosteropidae) from the Sulawesi Region, Indonesia


Zosterops paruhbesar 
 Irham, Prawiradilaga, Menner, O'Connell, Kelly, Analuddin, Karya, Meads, Marples & Rheindt, 2022
   
Wangi-wangi White-eye || DOI: doi.org/10.1111/ibi.13148 
photo: James Eaton
  
Abstract
We describe a new species of Zosterops white-eye, which is restricted to Wangi-wangi, a single island of roughly 155 km2 in the Wakatobi Archipelago, Indonesia. Informally known as the Wangi-wangi White-eye, the new species is highly distinct both morphologically and genetically. It is considerably larger in body and bill size compared with other regional Zosterops species. The Wangi-wangi White-eye remains locally common but its habitat is dwindling. Given its minute area of occupancy and the threat from the bird trade, we recommend the IUCN status Endangered.

Keywords: bill size, body size, IUCN status Endangered, Wangi-wangi Island


 Wangi-wangi white-eye and  Wakatobi white-eye 
photo: Nicola Marples and David Kelly



Zosterops paruhbesar sp. nov.
Wangi-wangi White-eye
Kacamata Wangi-wangi

Etymology: Zosterops paruhbesar exhibits a prominent massive bill unique among white-eyes in the region. The species epithet is based on the word ‘massive bill’ in Bahasa Indonesia (paruh besar) and is used as an inalienable noun in apposition. 

  
Mohammad Irham, Dewi M. Prawiradilaga, Jochen K. Menner, Darren P. O'Connell, David J. Kelly, Kangkuso Analuddin, Adi Karya, Martin Meads, Nicola M. Marples and Frank E. Rheindt. 2022. A distinct New Species of Zosterops white-eye from the Sulawesi Region, Indonesia. Ibis. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/ibi.13148 
  twitter.com/Dar_OConnell/status/1064858735754035200

Saturday, April 11, 2026

[Ornithology • 2026] Phylloscopus tokaraensisDiscovering and Protecting Cryptic Biodiversity: A Case Study of A previously undescribed, Vulnerable Bird Species in Japan


Phylloscopus tokaraensis 
Saitoh, Shipilina, Xia, Zhang, Seki, Olsson & Alström, 2026
 
Tokara Leaf Warbler  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgag037 

Abstract
Despite the escalating biodiversity crisis, many species remain unknown to science and may even disappear unnoticed. This is particularly true for many island populations. We illustrate the problem of detecting overlooked species and its consequences by exploring a rare and geographically restricted migratory songbird. We find that this consists of two—hence even rarer—species: the Japanese endemic Ijima's Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus ijimae from the Izu Islands and the Tokara Leaf Warbler from the Tokara Islands. We describe the latter as a new cryptic species, ie one that is morphologically highly similar to, but genetically distinct from, a known species. The genetic divergence is revealed by analyses of nuclear genome-wide and mitochondrial DNA and supported by differences in vocalizations, while the morphological differences are minimal. We evaluate key conservation genomic indicators, showing that both species show low levels of genetic diversity and signs of a decrease of effective population size. Our genome-wide analysis revealed short runs of homozygosity and a low estimated deleterious load, suggesting limited recent inbreeding and possible purging of harmful alleles—indicators of genetic recovery after past demographic fluctuations. Ijima's Leaf Warbler is already classified as Vulnerable as well as a “Natural Monument” in Japan, and we propose that the Tokara Leaf Warbler should retain this status, with continued focused monitoring. Our study not only highlights the importance of integrating genomics with taxonomy for uncovering cryptic avian diversity but also provides a critical foundation for future conservation efforts.

Tokara Leaf Warbler Nakanoshima Phylloscopus tokaraensis (the same individual as in photo labeled A singing male Tokara Leaf Warbler).
photo: Per Alström, Uppsala University

Tokara Leaf Warbler Nakanoshima 11June2017-1 Per Alstrom. A singing male Tokara Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus tokaraensis on Nakanoshima, Tokara Islands, in June 2017. P.
photo: Per Alström, Uppsala University

One of the Tokara Leaf Warblers Phylloscopus tokaraensis caught on Nakanoshima, Tokara Islands, in June 2017.  


Cryptic populations of P. ijimae are geographically separated by more than 1,000 km and have distinct songs.
A) Global distribution of P. ijimae. Insets provide detailed maps of the Tokara Islands and northern Izu Islands (map source: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (2021). ALOS World 3D-30m DEM, V3.2, January 2021. Distributed by OpenTopography, doi.org/10.5069/G94M92HB. Accessed 2025 March 12). Island names in gray indicate locations where P. ijimae was not observed, while those in black indicate presence.
B, C) Adult male, holotype of Phylloscopus tokaraensis new species, Tokara Leaf Warbler (Yamashina Institute for Ornithology number YIO-76774), Nakanoshima, Tokara Islands, 2017 June 10 (photo: Per Alström; for additional photographs, see Table S18).

 Phylloscopus tokaraensis, sp. nov. 
Tokara Leaf Warbler

Diagnosis: Phylloscopus tokaraensis and P. ijimae are characterized by the uniformly greyish crown, lacking darker or paler stripes; mainly whitish underparts with contrastingly pale yellow undertail-coverts; narrow pale tips to the greater coverts, forming a thin, sometimes very indistinct, pale wing-bar; and pale orange lower mandible. Easily distinguishable from P. coronatus by the uniformly coloured crown; from P. borealis, P. examinandus and P. xanthodryas by the less distinct pale supercilium and narrower and less contrasting dark stripe on the ear-coverts behind the eye, whiter underparts with contrastingly pale yellow undertailcoverts, and pale orange lower mandible (usually prominent dark tip in P. borealis, P. examinandus and P. xanthodryas but rarely entirely orange); and from P. borealoides and P. tenellipes by the greener upperparts, paler crown which does not ...

Cryptic populations of P. ijimae are geographically separated by more than 1,000 km and have distinct songs. A) Global distribution of P. ijimae. Insets provide detailed maps of the Tokara Islands and northern Izu Islands (map source: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (2021). ALOS World 3D-30m DEM, V3.2, January 2021. Distributed by OpenTopography, doi.org/10.5069/G94M92HB. Accessed 2025 March 12). Island names in gray indicate locations where P. ijimae was not observed, while those in black indicate presence. B, C) Adult male, holotype of new species, Tokara Leaf Warbler (Yamashina Institute for Ornithology number YIO-76774), Nakanoshima, Tokara Islands, 2017 June 10 (photo: Per Alström; for additional photographs, see Table S18).
Examples of single song strophes of type I songs from Tokara (D–G) and Izu (I–L), with a plot of the two PCs from a PCA based on 12 variables (H). Examples of single strophes of type II songs from Tokara (M and N) and Izu (O and P) (recordings: D: ML647192043; E: ML647191975; F: ML647192039; G: ML 647191951; M: 647192011; N: 647191965; all by P.A.; I: by T. Kabaya; J: ML647192103, by T.S.; K: XC749104; L: XC749102; O: XC749102), K, L, O by Geoff Carey; P: ML647356514, by Haruo Kuroda.

 
Takema Saitoh, Daria Shipilina, Canwei Xia, Lijun Zhang, Shin-Ichi Seki, Urban Olsson and Per Alström. 2026. Discovering and Protecting Cryptic Biodiversity: A Case Study of A previously Undescribed, Vulnerable Bird Species in Japan. PNAS Nexus. 5(3); pgag037. DOI: doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgag037 [17 March 2026]

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

[Ornithology • 2026] Hylophilus moxensis • A New Species of Greenlet (Vireonidae, Hylophilus poicilotis/amaurocephalus group) from Bolivia

 

 Hylophilus moxensis
van Els, Montenegro-Avila, Avalos, T. Wijpkema & J.T. Wijpkema, 2026


ABSTRACT
 We assess the relationships of an undescribed taxon of Hylophilus (Aves, Passeriformes, Vireonidae) greenlet to the group containing Rufous-crowned Hylophilus poicilotis Temminck, 1822 and Grey-eyed Greenlet H. amaurocephalus Nordmann, 1835, two morphologically very similar species with a turbulent taxonomic past, using a mitochondrial (NADH2) and three nuclear genes (MUSK, ACO1, SPIN1). We recovered the two named species as sister taxa, having diverged ca. 3.5 mya, and both are distinct at each locus and with the combined multilocus dataset, confirming their previous recognition as species. By comparison, we found the isolated population from Beni, Bolivia, is sister to the branch containing both H. poicilotis and H. amaurocephalus. The Beni population is diagnostically distinct from similar H. amaurocephalus by the lack of black streaks or brown patch on the auriculars, and from H. poicilotis by the lack of black patch on the auriculars. Based on this combination of phylogenetic and morphological evidence, we describe this population of greenlet as a species separate from the other two. We compare vocalizations in the three species: the species from Beni has calls with harmonics as in female calls of H. amaurocephalus, but appears to have a distinct song with V-shaped notes. The newly-described Hylophilus is a resident endemic to marshland scrub in the semi-open landscape of the seasonally inundated savannas of Beni in central Bolivia, separated geographically by about 2000 km from its sister species.

KEYWORDS: Beni savannas, Llanos de Moxos, avifauna, Hylophilus, greenlet, phylogenetics. 

Beni Greenlet Hylophilus moxensis sp. nov. in habitat near San Ramón, Beni, Bolivia, 10 January 2024 (Tini Wijpkema). Notice the pale brownish grey auriculars, combined with dark lores, dark base of commissure, rufous on the entire crown and frons, and dark irides.

Hylophilus moxensis sp. nov.

 
P. van Els, M. Montenegro-Avila, N.A. Avalos, T. Wijpkema & J.T. Wijpkema. 2026. A New Species of Greenlet from Bolivia in the Hylophilus poicilotis/amaurocephalus group (Vireonidae). Avian Systematics. 3; 17-37. (1 January 2026) 

Sunday, December 7, 2025

[Ornithology • 2025] Ptilorrhoa urrissia • A New Species of Jewel-babbler (Passeriformes: Cinclosomatidae: Ptilorrhoa) from the Southern Fold Mountains of Papua New Guinea


Ptilorrhoa urrissia
Woxvold, Gamui, Legra, Yama, Koane & Tulai, 2025

Hooded Jewel-babbler  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.1111/ibi.70016

Abstract
Based on distinctive morphological and vocal characters we describe a new species of jewel-babbler (genus Ptilorrhoa) from the forested karst of the Southern Fold Mountains in Papua New Guinea. The description is based on camera trap data and is presented in accordance with ICZN Declaration 45. The new species is currently known only from the type locality at the top of Iagifu Ridge (1335–1400 m above sea level), a limestone anticline isolated from the main body of New Guinea's central cordillera, where it is uncommon. Given the importance of competitive exclusion in determining Ptilorrhoa distributions, and the near ubiquitous occurrence of congeners, we speculate that Iagifu Ridge may support part of a highly fragmented population that occupies isolated low mountains that do not support Ptilorrhoa leucosticta of higher elevations. Potentially suitable sites may be restricted to the area between Mt Bosavi and Mt Karimui in southern Papua New Guinea.

Keywords: camera trap, ICZN Declaration 45, New Guinea, taxonomy

Camera trap images of the holotype and two paratype Ptilorrhoa urrissia, taken during a 3-month sampling period in a high-density array covering 0.5 ha (see Methods). The holotype (a–c, marked ‘h’ in (a)) and one paratype (a and d, marked ‘p’ in (a)), putative adult female and juvenile with female-type plumage, respectively, were photographed together on 1 January 2020; the images shown are part of a sequence of 20 photographs taken over a period of 87 s. The putative adult male paratype (e) was photographed less than 40 m away on 8 March 2020.

Other Ptilorrhoa urrissia images (a–e), at least some of which may represent the holotype and paratypes. (a, b) Putative adult male and female, respectively, photographed in a single sequence (27 s apart) on 8 February 2020. (c) Male photographed on 15 January 2020. (d) Video still of male delivering the call shown in Figure 6a,b.
(e) Male (background) and probable juvenile with female-type plumage photographed on 1 January 2020, less than 40 m distance from and 2 h before the holotype sequence shown in Figure 3a–d.
(f) Female Ptilorrhoa castanonota shown for size comparison; images (e) and (f) were taken on the same camera 56 min apart.

Ptilorrhoa urrissia, sp. nov.
Hooded Jewel-babbler

Diagnosis: Table 1 compares in detail the morphological features of adult P. urrissia with those of its congeners – P. geislerorum and the locally occurring subspecies of P. caerulescens, P. castanonota and P. leucosticta. Figure 5 shows examples of the compared taxa.

Etymology: The name ‘urrissia’ is a noun in apposition. ‘Uri urrissia’ (= ‘mount urrissia’) is the Namo Me (also known as Fasu) language name applied to Iagifu Ridge by the local Fasol clan landowners.
 
Ptilorrhoa urrissia habitat on Iagifu Ridge. (Iain Woxvold.)


Iain A. Woxvold, Banak G. Gamui, Leo Legra, Samson Yama, Bonny Koane and Salape Tulai. 2025. A New Species of Jewel-babbler (Cinclosomatidae: Ptilorrhoa) from the Southern Fold Mountains of Papua New Guinea. Ibis. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/ibi.70016 [26 November 2025] 


Tuesday, November 11, 2025

[PaleoOrnithology • 2025] Consoravis turdirostris • A New Species of Morsoravidae sheds light on Beak and Limb Morphology in stem Passerines


Consoravis turdirostris
Ksepka, Bertelli, Balanoff & Grande, 2025


ABSTRACT
Morsoravidae is a small clade of probable stem passerines known from the Eocene of Europe and North America. Here, we report an articulated skeleton of a new species of Morsoravidae from the Green River Formation of Wyoming. In contrast to Morsoravis sedilis and Pumiliornis tessellatus, in which the nares appear to have been schizorhinal, the nares of the Consoravis turdirostris gen. et sp. nov. are ovoid and do not extend caudally beyond the nasofrontal hinge. In addition, the processus retroarticularis is much shorter in Consoravis than in Morsoravis. The humerus is similar to that of extant passerines, with a short shaft, short crista deltopectoralis, well-developed tuberculum supracondylare dorsale, and strongly projected processus flexorius. However, the more distal wing elements differ from those of crown passerines in that the olecranon is blunt and the carpometacarpus has a weakly developed processus extensorius. Although fully zygodactyl stem passerines are now well-documented, Consoravis and Sororavis exhibit a semi-zygodactyl foot, in which the trochlea of the fourth metatarsal bears a wing-like flange but lacks a fully developed trochlea accessoria. The unspecialized beak, modest wing length, and relatively short leg together suggest arboreal habits and a generalized diet of invertebrates and fruit for Consoravis, in contrast to more specialized diets of the nectivorous Pumiliornis and the rhynchokinetic, possibly probe-feeding Morsoravis. Phylogenetic analyses support the monophyly of Morsoravidae and weakly support the placement of this clade as sister to all other passerines. These analyses also support the identification of the Oligocene Jamna szybiaki as a stem passerine and the paraphyly of Zygodactylidae.


Consoravis turdirostris gen. et sp. nov. 


Daniel T. Ksepka, Sara Bertelli, Amy M. Balanoff and Lance Grande. 2025. A New Species of Morsoravidae sheds light on Beak and Limb Morphology in stem Passerines. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 45(1);  e2514121. DOI: doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2025.2514121  [03 Jul 2025]


Thursday, October 9, 2025

[Ornithology • 2025] Birds of a feather: Comprehensive Plumage Colour Analysis for A Revised Subspecies Classification of the Chestnut-winged Babbler Cyanoderma erythropterum species complex


Map of Southeast Asia showing type localities (large flag markers) and collection localities of museum specimens (small circles) for the various taxa described under Cyanoderma erythropterum and C. bicolor.
 
in Teo, Sin, Nieves et Rheindt, 2025. 
Images of Babblers modified from Eaton et al. (2016).
 
ABSTRACT
Quantitative analysis of colouration is an essential tool for subspecies delimitation but has always posed a challenge in avian taxonomy. In this study on the Chestnut-winged Babbler (Cyanoderma erythropterum) species complex from tropical Southeast Asia, we made use of colour measurements taken with digital cameras and applied two methodologies—(1) the 75% subspecies rule on quantitative colourimetric variables, and (2) the CIEDE2000 colour distance method to generate phylograms, which has probably never been applied in taxonomy before. Given its large number of described subspecies, many of which have been synonymised in modern taxonomies, the species complex serves as an appropriate model to test subspecies validity. Our data indicate that one synonymised subspecies (C. e. apega), from the islands of Bangka and Belitung, requires re-instalment and recognition, whereas one widely recognised subspecies (C. e. fulviventre), from the Banyak Islands, should be synonymised. Our approach also allowed us to redraw geographic subspecies boundaries. Our work indicates that current subspecies taxonomies of many poorly known tropical species may remain error-ridden and highlights the importance and viability of large-scale taxonomic revisions targeting avian subspecies globally while incorporating quantitative colourimetric approaches.

Keywords: Chestnut-winged Babbler, Colour distance, Subspecies boundaries, Subspecies rule, Taxonomy

Map of Southeast Asia showing type localities (large flag markers) and collection localities of museum specimens (small circles) for the various taxa described under Cyanoderma erythropterum and C. bicolor.
Flag markers are positioned precisely at type localities except in the case of C. e. pyrrhophaeum, whose type locality is ill-defined as ‘Sumatra’. Subspecies that are widely synonymised are shown with the same colour (both in font and type locality flag) as the taxon under which they are usually subsumed. Underlined names refer to subspecies that have widely been accepted prior to this study. Red dots indicate the localities of specimens from the Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum (Singapore), while light-blue dots indicate the localities of specimens from other museums. Black stippled lines represent subspecies boundaries widely followed prior to this study, while yellow stippled lines represent revised subspecies boundaries proposed in this study. The dark-grey shaded area in Borneo reflects remaining uncertainty around the boundary between C. b. bicolor and C. b. rufum.
Images of babblers modified from Eaton et al. (2016).

Conclusions: 
Our results validate the current synonymisation of neocarum and sordidum with erythropterum, and of pellum with pyrrhophaeum. Our data also show that a widely recognised subspecies, fulviventre from the Banyak Islands, is indistinct in plumage and should be synonymised with pyrrhophaeum. Subspecies apega from the Bangka and Belitung islands is widely synonymised in modern taxonomies, but emerged as distinct in its crown colouration, exhibiting a pattern that would render it intermediate between C. erythropterum and C. bicolor. We advocate a resurrection of this subspecies, and confirm its placement within C. erythropterum on the basis of vocal data. Our examination of specimens indicates that the subspecies boundary between rufum and bicolor is much further south than widely assumed, although we do not rule out the possibility that rufum may form part of a cline of crown colour across Borneo.

The following is our proposed subspecies taxonomy for the Chestnut-winged Babbler (Cyanoderma erythropterum) complex:
● Cyanoderma erythropterum (Blyth, 1842): 
Chestnut-winged Babbler

○ C. e. erythropterum (Blyth, 1842) – Type locality: Singapore
■ Range: Thai-Malay Peninsula, Singapore, Riau Islands, Natuna Islands
■ Synonyms: sordidum Baker, 1917; neocarum Oberholser, 1932

○ C. e. pyrrhophaeum (Hartlaub, 1844) – Type locality: “Malacca and Sumatra” (here restricted to Sumatra, as Malacca was a trading hub)
■ Range: Sumatra, Batu and Banyak Islands
■ Synonyms: pellum Oberholser, 1912; eripellum Oberholser, 1922; fulviventre Richmond, 1903
■ Main diagnosis: Grey breast darker than erythropterum

○ C. e. apega Oberholser, 1922 – Type locality: Tanjong Tedong, Bangka Island
■ Range: Bangka Island and Belitung Island
■ Main diagnosis: Incomplete chestnut crown with front half being slate grey unlike complete chestnut crown in erythropterum and pyrrhophaeum


● Cyanoderma bicolor (Blyth, 1865): 
Bicoloured Babbler

 C. b. bicolor (Blyth, 1865) – Type locality: Labuan (Malaysian Borneo)
■ Range: Northern and central Borneo, Banggi Island

 C. b. rufum (Chasen & Kloss, 1927) – Type locality: Sampit, south coast of Kalimantan
■ Range: Southern Borneo, likely found only across the Central Kalimantan Depression
■ Main diagnosis: Rufous colouration extending to the nape, and even to some extent to the crown, unlike the grey colouration observed in bicolor


Shen Han Teo, Yong Chee Keita Sin, Mayjean Marie Ines Nieves and Frank E. Rheindt. 2025. Birds of a feather: Comprehensive Plumage Colour Analysis for A Revised Subspecies Classification of the Chestnut-winged Babbler (Cyanoderma erythropterum) species complex. Avian Research. In Press, 100307. DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.avrs.2025.100307  [4 October 2025]

[Ornithology • 2024] Integrative Revision of Species Limits in the Genus Schiffornis (Passeriformes: Tityridae) reveals Cryptic Diversity in the Neotropics


Plumage colour differences between taxa of the Schiffornis turdina complex and S. virescens.
Individuals (A), (B), and (C) illustrate the range of plumage colour variation in turdina, olivaceawallaciicracraftiintercedens, and amazonum. These taxa do not differ diagnostically from each other in plumage colour and together they encompass a wide range of variation, the extremes of which are illustrated herein...
(D) represents steinbachi; (E) represents stenorhyncha; (F) represents veraepacis
(G) represents rosenbergi; (H) represents aenea; (I) represents virescens 
in Lima, Bocalini et Silveira, 2024. 
 Illustrations by Eduardo Brettas.

Abstract
Accurate species delimitation is essential for many biological subdisciplines. Nonetheless, current species diversity remains incompletely documented even in well-studied groups such as birds. Here, we take an integrative approach to examine species limits in the genus Schiffornis, a widespread group of dull-plumaged, whistle-voiced suboscine passerines of Neotropical humid-forest understory, currently considered to comprise seven species. We measured geographic variation in song, morphology, and mitochondrial and genome-wide nuclear markers to resolve the taxonomy of the genus. We show that Schiffornis comprises 13 separately evolving population lineages, of which most qualify as species taxa under all species definitions. These include a cryptic new species, several species splits, and the resurrection of a morphologically undifferentiated, but vocally and genetically distinct, taxon that was synonymized nearly a century ago in the Schiffornis turdina complex. We also found several hitherto unnoticed contact zones between diverging lineages and a leapfrog pattern of geographic song variation in the S. turdina complex, and we highlight potential avenues of further research of this genus.

Amazonia, Atlantic Forest, birds, leapfrog pattern of geographic variation, new species, sibling species, suboscine song, taxonomy


 Plumage colour differences between taxa of the Schiffornis turdina complex and S. virescens.
Individuals (A), (B), and (C) illustrate the range of plumage colour variation in turdina, olivaceawallaciicracraftiintercedens, and amazonum. These taxa do not differ diagnostically from each other in plumage colour and together they encompass a wide range of variation, the extremes of which are illustrated herein (see Morphological variation and Supporting Information, Fig. S6 for more details).
Individual (D) represents steinbachi. It differs from the previous taxa in having a more extensive rufous area on the breast, and a usually darker belly and undertail coverts. Individual (E) represents stenorhyncha, which differs from all other taxa of the S. turdina complex in having a rufous back and a strongly contrasted chest and belly. Individual (F) represents veraepacis. Its green is the most vibrant in the S. turdina complex.
Individual (G) represents rosenbergi, which is more olivaceous, less yellowish, than veraepacis. Individual (H) represents aenea, the darkest species. Individual (I) represents virescens, which differs from all other congeners by its vibrant green plumage and more delicate bill.
Illustrations by Eduardo Brettas.


Rafael Dantas Lima, Fernanda Bocalini and Luís Fábio Silveira. 2024. Integrative Revision of Species Limits in the Genus Schiffornis (Aves: Tityridae) reveals Cryptic Diversity in the Neotropics. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 200(4); 1048–1079. DOI: doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad108 [28 September 2023] 


Thursday, March 6, 2025

[Ornithology • 2025] Myzomela babarensis • A Taxonomic Revision of Banda Myzomela Myzomela boiei (S. Müller 1843), including the Description of A New Species from Babar Island, Indonesia


Myzomela babarensis
 Berryman, Spencer, Sharma & Eaton, 2025
 
Babar Myzomela  |  DOI: 10.25226/bboc.v145i1.2025.a4 

Abstract
Banda Myzomela Myzomela boiei (S. Müller 1843) is a small honeyeater distributed in two subspecies across three island groups in Maluku Province, Indonesia: M. b. boiei on the Banda Islands, and c.350 km to the south, M. b. annabellae on the Tanimbar Islands and Babar. We compare data from 28 museum specimens and 21 sound recordings, and report the results of 152 playback experiments, to investigate the taxonomy of these three populations. Compared to M. b. annabellae, M. b. boiei has a c.10% longer wing, bill and tarsus, more extensive black breast-band, duskier posterior underparts, and a highly divergent song; in playback experiments, M. b. boiei proved unresponsive to recordings of M. b. annabellae. However, the songs of M. b. annabellae on the Tanimbars and Babar are also highly divergent, with populations on both islands unresponsive to the song of the other. Birds on Babar are also slightly larger than annabellae on the Tanimbars (with a c.10% longer tail) and may have more scarlet on the back. We consider the vocal differences between the three populations to be highly indicative of reproductive isolation and recommend they be treated as three independent species under a modern interpretation of the Biological Species Concept. Because no nomen is available for the Babar population, we name it as a new species.

Distribution of Banda Myzomela Myzomela boiei taxa in relation to the Banda Sea Islands mentioned in the text.


Photographs of the three populations of Myzomela boiei s. s.
(a) M. b. boiei, Banda Neira, 8 December 2023 (Andrew J. Spencer);
(b) M. b. annabellae, Tanimbar (Yamdena), 11 November 2024 (James A. Eaton); and
(c) Myzomela babarensis M. b. annabellae, Babar, 6 November 2024 (James A. Eaton)

Myzomela babarensis M. b. annabellae, Babar,
6 November 2024
  photo by James A. Eaton 

Myzomela babarensis sp. nov.

Diagnosis.—Compared to M. boiei sensu stricto, male M. babarensis differs in having a much narrower black breast-band that is confined to the upper breast (vs. extending onto the lower breast in M. b. boiei; Figs. 3–4). The lower underparts (especially the vent and flanks) of M. boiei are dusky, but consistently much paler cream-white in the nine specimens of M. babarensis examined. In plumage, females of the two populations appear to be identical. M. boiei s. s. is larger in wing, bill and tarsus length (Table 1) than M. babarensis. Morphologically, M. babarensis is similar to M. annabellae (restricted here to the Tanimbar Islands) and only very subtly identifiable. Male M. babarensis has a larger wing, bill and tail with no overlap (Table 1 and Fig. 2), and the available specimens (n = 5 for M. annabellae) appear to consistently have more extensive scarlet-red on the upperparts, especially on the uppertail-coverts. Female plumages appear inseparable. All three species differ radically in song (Table 2, Fig. 5 and accompanying descriptions) and playback experiments show them to be unresponsive to one another's song. ...
 
Etymology.—The species is named babarensis for the island of Babar, to which it is endemic. We propose the English name ‘Babar Myzomela’ (and ‘Tanimbar Myzomela’ for M. annabellae s. s.).

 
Alex J. Berryman, Andrew J. Spencer, Puja Sharma and James A. Eaton. 2025. A Taxonomic Revision of Banda Myzomela Myzomela boiei (S. Müller 1843), including the Description of A New Species from Babar Island, Indonesia.  Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club. 145(1); 35-48. DOI: 10.25226/bboc.v145i1.2025.a4 [5 March 2025] 

 

Saturday, June 22, 2024

[Ornithology • 2024] Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae • A New Antshrike (Aves: Thamnophilidae) endemic to the Caatinga and the Role of Climate Oscillations and Drainage Shift in Shaping Cryptic Diversity of Neotropical Seasonal Dry Forests


 male [back] and female [front] individuals of Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae
Cerqueira, Gonçalves, Quaresma, Silva, Pichorim & Aleixo, 2024

 Illustration by Eduardo Brettas


[Pattern 1] Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae
Cerqueira, Gonçalves, Quaresma, Silva, Pichorim & Aleixo, 2024
 
[Pattern 2] Sakesphoroides cristatus (Wied, 1831)

 
Abstract
The Caatinga is the largest patch of Seasonal Dry Tropical Forest in the Neotropics, located in northeastern Brazil and characterized mainly by deciduous vegetation and extreme rainfall seasonality. It has historically been treated as a biologically impoverished domain, but recent studies uncovered new diversification patterns and several new taxa of frogs, mammals, insects, and fishes. Here we employed a dense sampling regime to evaluate whether the São Francisco River (SFR) would have promoted genetic diversification and fixed phenotypic differences and how Quaternary climatic oscillations shaped distribution and population sizes in a Caatinga endemic species, the Silvery-cheeked Antshrike (Sakesphoroides cristatus). We adopted an integrative approach using multilocus genetic, plumage, vocal data, and ecological niche modelling (ENM) to characterize evolutionary units and niche suitability in past scenarios. We recovered strong genetic structure across the SFR that was congruent with plumage and vocal variation, revealing a yet undescribed species named herein as Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae, sp. nov.. The splitting time estimated between the newly described species and S. cristatus is consistent with the establishment of the modern course of SFR, with a more recent course shift apparently promoting the secondary contact between the two species in the Raso da Catarina region. After their split, both species experienced increases in population sizes and range sizes at similar times during the Last Glacial Maximum. We expect other Caatinga avian endemic lineages to show similar patterns of genetic differentiation across the SFR that were enhanced by Quaternary climatic oscillations.

Geographic distribution of diagnostic plumage characters in Sakesphoroides cristatus females. Green and blue circles represent diagnostic patterns numbered 1 and 2, respectively, recovered from plumage analyses using study skins and digital photographs (see text for details). The dark-blue line represents the modern course of the São Francisco River (SFR), with the red dashed lines representing the estimated position of abandoned meanders of a Late Pleistocene paleocourse of the SFR. The colour gradient represents altitudinal variation.
Credit photos: Rocílio Ribeiro Rocha (pattern 1) and Oberdan Nunes (pattern 2).

...
Once we defined S. cristatus as the applicable name for clade 2 and no taxon name is available for clade 1 birds, herein we describe the latter group as a new species:


 male [back] and female [front] individuals of Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae 
Illustration by Eduardo Brettas, from Cerqueira et al., 2024)



Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae, sp. nov. Cerqueira, Gonçalves, Quaresma, Silva, Pichorim & Aleixo

Northern Silvery-cheeked Antshrike (English).
Choca-do-nordeste-de-cauda-barrada (Portuguese).

 Diagnosis: 
Morphology: The new species is assigned to the genus Sakesphoroides based on its morphological diagnostic characters as described by Grantsau (2010), and its sister relationship to Sakesphoroides cristatus.

Males of Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae are similar in plumage to Sakesphoroides cristatus, but females differ from the former by distinct crown, back, and tail colours, (Table 1). Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae has an overall lighter (Amber) colour rather than Chestnut as S. cristatus. The back is olive brown in S. niedeguidonae, whereas that of S. cristatus is Cinnamon-Brown. The overall tail colour in S. niedeguidonae is darker than in S. cristatus, with the most conspicuous difference being the black and white barring, replaced in S. cristatus only by discreet dull brown and rufous bars and complete absence of white barring (Figure S1).

Voice: The loudsong of S. niedeguidonae is slightly similar in general pattern to that of S. cristatus, but differs conspicuously by the shape of the first notes. While the loudsong of S. niedeguidonae has initial notes with an ascending–descending pattern of frequency modulation, looking visually like an inverted ‘U’ letter on sound spectrograms, that of S. cristatus has initial ascending notes reaching quickly a high frequency (~2300 Hz) and then descending to the maximum amplitude and continuing to descend further to a lower frequency (~580 Hz), which confers to it a sigmoid shape on spectrograms (Figure 2). Additionally, the loudsong of S. niedeguidonae differs from that of S. cristatus by a significantly greater number of notes, longer overall duration, and slower pace in total song (see Table 3). Female recordings present noticeable higher pitched songs than males (ML579640291; Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds, Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Ithaca).

Etymology: 
It is our pleasure to name this species in honour of Niède Guidon, a Brazilian archaeologist who in 1970's explored the largest and oldest concentration of prehistoric sites in the Americas. Niède's efforts helped to create the Serra da Capivara National Park in Piauí state, where her research found evidence of artefacts that have provoked a re-evaluation of the traditional theories about human settlement in the Americas. Moreover, she is a symbol of power and persistence in preserving the Caatinga environment not just for archaeological purposes but also considering biodiversity and local human communities, highlighting the Caatinga as a singular place in the world, which has inspired us every day.

The English name (Northern Silvery-cheeked Antshrike) is a reference to its range in the Caatinga domain and the sister taxon S. cristatus (now called Southern Silvery-cheeked Antshrike). The Portuguese name (Choca-do-nordeste-de-cauda-barrada) highlights the main plumage feature in females distinguishing the new species from S. cristatus (Choca-do-nordeste in Portuguese). Both names maintain in its composition the name used in S. cristatus for an easy reference to their close phylogenetic relationship.



Pablo Cerqueira, Gabriela R. Gonçalves, Tânia F. Quaresma, Marcelo Silva, Mauro Pichorim and Alexandre Aleixo. 2024. A New Antshrike (Aves: Thamnophilidae) endemic to the Caatinga and the Role of Climate Oscillations and Drainage Shift in Shaping Cryptic Diversity of Neotropical Seasonal Dry Forests. Zoologica Scripta. DOI: 10.1111/zsc.12672

Nova espécie de ave da Caatinga é descoberta e tem origem em variações históricas do São Francisco
https://abori.com.br/ambiente/aves-da-caatinga-mudancas-climaticas-nova-especie/