Jump to content

Black-eared catbird

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Couiros22 (talk | contribs) at 11:35, 1 November 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Black-eared catbird
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
A. melanotis
Binomial name
Ailuroedus melanotis
GR Gray, 1858
Subspecies

see text

The black-eared catbird (Ailuroedus melanotis) is a species of bowerbird (Ptilonorhynchidae) which can be found in far north Queensland, Australia and the island of New Guinea, including its surrounding islands. They are named after their cat-like wails and black ear spot. It is described by its Latin name: ailur-cat, oidos-singing, melas-black and otus-ear.[1]

Until 2016, A. melanotis was given the english common name of spotted catbird, this name has now been re-assigned to A. maculosus. Martin Irestedt and colleagues examined the black-eared, spotted- and green catbird species complex genetically and found there were seven distinct lineages: the green catbird (A. crassirostris) of eastern Australia and the spotted catbird (A. maculosus) of eastern Queensland being the earliest offshoots, followed by the Huon catbird (A. astigmaticus) and black-capped catbird (A. melanocephalus) of eastern New Guinea, the Arfak catbird (A. arfakianus) of the Bird's Head (Vogelkop) Peninsula, the northern catbird (A. jobiensis) of central-northern New Guinea, and black-eared catbird (A.melanotis) of southwestern New Guinea, Aru Islands and far North Queensland.[2] These latter six species were all formerly subspecies before being split from A. melanotis.

Subspecies

Three subspecies are recognized:[3]

  • A. m. facialisMayr, 1936: found on southern slopes of montane west-central New Guinea
  • A. m. melanotisGray, 1858: found on lowland south-central New Guinea and Aru Islands
  • A. m. joanaeMathews, 1941: found on eastern Cape York Peninsula (northeastern Australia)

References

  1. ^ Lederer, R. and Burr, C. 2014. Latin for Birdwatchers. – Allen & Unwin.
  2. ^ Irestedt, Martin; Batalha-Filho, Henrique; Roselaar, Cees S.; Christidis, Les; Ericson, Per G. P. "Contrasting phylogeographic signatures in two Australo-Papuan bowerbird species complexes (Aves: Ailuroedus)". Zoologica Scripta. doi:10.1111/zsc.12163.
  3. ^ IOC v.6.3