{"title":"卷腹卷腹科卷腹卷腹的声音、分类及对卷腹卷腹亚种的再评价","authors":"M. Robbins, T. A. Parker","doi":"10.2307/40157556","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The St. Lucia Nightjar (Caprimulgus otiosus) exhibits minimal vocal and plumage differentiation from mainland forms of the Rufous Nightjar (C. rufus), and, therefore, we consider otiosus conspecific with rufus. Caprimulgus rufus otiosus appears to be resident on the northeastern section of St. Lucia, Lesser Antilles; specimen records from Venezuela are considered erroneous. We recognize the following described subspecies: otiosus (St. Lucia), minimus (Costa Rica to N. Venezuela), rufus (NW Brazil, S. Venezuela, east through the Guianas, and south to south of the Rio Amazonas), and rutilus (S. Brazil, N. Argentina, E. Bolivia). Resumen. Las vocalizaciones y el plumaje del tapacaminos de Santa Lucia {Caprimulgus otiosus) y de la forma continental C. rufus, son muy parecidas, por lo que se les considera como conespecificos. Caprimulgus rufus otiosus aparentemente es residente de la seccion noreste de Santa Lucia en las Antillas Menores; consideramos que los registros de Venezuela son erroneos. Nosotros reconocemos las siguientes subespecies descritas: otiosus (Santa Lucia), minimus (de Costa Rica al N de Venezuela), rufus (NW Brazil, S Venezuela, E de las Guyanas hasta el lado sur del Rio Amazonas), y rutilus (S Brazil, N Argentina y E Bolivia). In the latest A.O.U. Check-list (1983), the Lesser Antillean form (otiosus) of the wide-ranging Rufous Nightjar (Caprimulgus rufus) was elevated to species status. Previously, the St. Lucia Nightjar (C. otiosus) had been regarded as an isolated subspecies of C. rufus by most authors (Bangs 1911; Cory 1918; Griscom and Greenway 1937; Peters 1940; Bond 1947, 1959, 1977), although Wetmore and Phelps (1953) believed that otiosus deserved specific recognition. The A.O.U. (1983) gave the following rationale for treatment of otiosus as a species, \". . . it seems best to retain C. otiosus as specifically distinct until its status is determined.\" Herein we demonstrate that otiosus shows minimal vocal and plumage differentiation from mainland forms of C. rufus, and is best treated as a subspecies of C. rufus. METHODS AND MATERIALS Study skins were accumulated at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia (ANSP) for plumage color and pattern comparisons. Wing chord and length of central rectrices were taken using dial calipers to the nearest 0.1 mm. All tape recordings of otiosus were made on the windward side of St. Lucia, West Indies on 7 May 1988 and 29 April 1989. Tape recordings were made using a Sony TCM 5000 cassette recorder, with a Sennheiser ME 80 shotgun microphone. Additional recordings were obtained from Hardy et al. (1988). Sonagrams were produced with \"SoundEdit\" of Farallon Computing, Inc., Emeryville, California, and \"Canary\" of the Bioacoustics Research Program at the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York.","PeriodicalId":54665,"journal":{"name":"Ornithological Monographs","volume":"24 1","pages":"601-607"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1997-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.2307/40157556","citationCount":"9","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Voice and Taxonomy of Caprimulgus (rufus) otiosus (Caprimulgidae), with a Reevaluation of Caprimulgus rufus Subspecies\",\"authors\":\"M. Robbins, T. A. Parker\",\"doi\":\"10.2307/40157556\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The St. Lucia Nightjar (Caprimulgus otiosus) exhibits minimal vocal and plumage differentiation from mainland forms of the Rufous Nightjar (C. rufus), and, therefore, we consider otiosus conspecific with rufus. Caprimulgus rufus otiosus appears to be resident on the northeastern section of St. Lucia, Lesser Antilles; specimen records from Venezuela are considered erroneous. We recognize the following described subspecies: otiosus (St. Lucia), minimus (Costa Rica to N. Venezuela), rufus (NW Brazil, S. Venezuela, east through the Guianas, and south to south of the Rio Amazonas), and rutilus (S. Brazil, N. Argentina, E. Bolivia). Resumen. Las vocalizaciones y el plumaje del tapacaminos de Santa Lucia {Caprimulgus otiosus) y de la forma continental C. rufus, son muy parecidas, por lo que se les considera como conespecificos. Caprimulgus rufus otiosus aparentemente es residente de la seccion noreste de Santa Lucia en las Antillas Menores; consideramos que los registros de Venezuela son erroneos. Nosotros reconocemos las siguientes subespecies descritas: otiosus (Santa Lucia), minimus (de Costa Rica al N de Venezuela), rufus (NW Brazil, S Venezuela, E de las Guyanas hasta el lado sur del Rio Amazonas), y rutilus (S Brazil, N Argentina y E Bolivia). In the latest A.O.U. Check-list (1983), the Lesser Antillean form (otiosus) of the wide-ranging Rufous Nightjar (Caprimulgus rufus) was elevated to species status. Previously, the St. Lucia Nightjar (C. otiosus) had been regarded as an isolated subspecies of C. rufus by most authors (Bangs 1911; Cory 1918; Griscom and Greenway 1937; Peters 1940; Bond 1947, 1959, 1977), although Wetmore and Phelps (1953) believed that otiosus deserved specific recognition. The A.O.U. (1983) gave the following rationale for treatment of otiosus as a species, \\\". . . it seems best to retain C. otiosus as specifically distinct until its status is determined.\\\" Herein we demonstrate that otiosus shows minimal vocal and plumage differentiation from mainland forms of C. rufus, and is best treated as a subspecies of C. rufus. METHODS AND MATERIALS Study skins were accumulated at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia (ANSP) for plumage color and pattern comparisons. Wing chord and length of central rectrices were taken using dial calipers to the nearest 0.1 mm. All tape recordings of otiosus were made on the windward side of St. Lucia, West Indies on 7 May 1988 and 29 April 1989. Tape recordings were made using a Sony TCM 5000 cassette recorder, with a Sennheiser ME 80 shotgun microphone. Additional recordings were obtained from Hardy et al. (1988). 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引用次数: 9
摘要
圣卢西亚夜雀(Caprimulgus otiosus)与大陆红夜雀(c.r ufus)的声音和羽毛差异最小,因此,我们认为红夜雀与鲁弗斯是同一物种。小安的列斯群岛的圣卢西亚东北部似乎居住着卡普里莫古斯。来自委内瑞拉的标本记录被认为是错误的。我们认识到以下描述的亚种:otiosus(圣卢西亚),minimus(哥斯达黎加至委内瑞拉北部),rufus(巴西西北部,委内瑞拉南部,东至圭亚那,亚马孙河以南)和rutilus(巴西南部,阿根廷北部,玻利维亚东部)。Resumen。拉斯维加斯vocalizaciones y el plumaje del tapacaminos de Santa Lucia {Caprimulgus otiosus) y de la形式c。鲁弗斯大陆,儿子非常parecidas,运动,se les推崇科莫conespecificos。在安提拉斯群岛的圣卢西亚地区,卡普勒斯·鲁弗斯·奥提乌斯的住所;考虑到委内瑞拉的登记和错误。鹦鹉螺(Nosotros reconocemos):鹦鹉螺(圣卢西亚),鹦鹉螺(哥斯达黎加和委内瑞拉北部),鹦鹉螺(巴西西北部,委内瑞拉南部,圭亚那东部),鹦鹉螺(巴西南部,阿根廷北部和玻利维亚东部)。在最新的A.O.U.检查清单(1983)中,分布广泛的红夜雀(Caprimulgus rufus)的小安的列斯形式(otiosus)被提升为物种地位。以前,大多数作者认为圣卢西亚夜莺(C. otiosus)是C. rufus的一个分离亚种(Bangs 1911;科里1918;Griscom和Greenway 1937;彼得斯1940;Bond(1947, 1959, 1977),尽管Wetmore和Phelps(1953)认为otiosus应该得到特别的认可。A.O.U.(1983)给出了以下作为物种处理的基本原理:“……在确定其地位之前,最好保留C. otiosus的特殊地位。”在这里,我们证明了otiosus与大陆形式的C. rufus有最小的声音和羽毛差异,最好将其视为C. rufus的亚种。方法与材料:收集美国费城自然科学院(ANSP)的研究皮肤,进行羽毛颜色和花纹对比。用刻度卡尺测量翼弦和中心脊的长度,精确到0.1毫米。所有otiosus的录音都是1988年5月7日和1989年4月29日在西印度群岛圣卢西亚的迎风面录制的。录音使用索尼TCM 5000盒式录音机,使用Sennheiser ME 80霰弹枪麦克风。Hardy等人(1988)提供了其他录音。声波图是由加利福尼亚州埃默里维尔的法拉隆计算公司的“SoundEdit”和纽约州伊萨卡市康奈尔鸟类学实验室生物声学研究项目的“Canary”制作的。
Voice and Taxonomy of Caprimulgus (rufus) otiosus (Caprimulgidae), with a Reevaluation of Caprimulgus rufus Subspecies
The St. Lucia Nightjar (Caprimulgus otiosus) exhibits minimal vocal and plumage differentiation from mainland forms of the Rufous Nightjar (C. rufus), and, therefore, we consider otiosus conspecific with rufus. Caprimulgus rufus otiosus appears to be resident on the northeastern section of St. Lucia, Lesser Antilles; specimen records from Venezuela are considered erroneous. We recognize the following described subspecies: otiosus (St. Lucia), minimus (Costa Rica to N. Venezuela), rufus (NW Brazil, S. Venezuela, east through the Guianas, and south to south of the Rio Amazonas), and rutilus (S. Brazil, N. Argentina, E. Bolivia). Resumen. Las vocalizaciones y el plumaje del tapacaminos de Santa Lucia {Caprimulgus otiosus) y de la forma continental C. rufus, son muy parecidas, por lo que se les considera como conespecificos. Caprimulgus rufus otiosus aparentemente es residente de la seccion noreste de Santa Lucia en las Antillas Menores; consideramos que los registros de Venezuela son erroneos. Nosotros reconocemos las siguientes subespecies descritas: otiosus (Santa Lucia), minimus (de Costa Rica al N de Venezuela), rufus (NW Brazil, S Venezuela, E de las Guyanas hasta el lado sur del Rio Amazonas), y rutilus (S Brazil, N Argentina y E Bolivia). In the latest A.O.U. Check-list (1983), the Lesser Antillean form (otiosus) of the wide-ranging Rufous Nightjar (Caprimulgus rufus) was elevated to species status. Previously, the St. Lucia Nightjar (C. otiosus) had been regarded as an isolated subspecies of C. rufus by most authors (Bangs 1911; Cory 1918; Griscom and Greenway 1937; Peters 1940; Bond 1947, 1959, 1977), although Wetmore and Phelps (1953) believed that otiosus deserved specific recognition. The A.O.U. (1983) gave the following rationale for treatment of otiosus as a species, ". . . it seems best to retain C. otiosus as specifically distinct until its status is determined." Herein we demonstrate that otiosus shows minimal vocal and plumage differentiation from mainland forms of C. rufus, and is best treated as a subspecies of C. rufus. METHODS AND MATERIALS Study skins were accumulated at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia (ANSP) for plumage color and pattern comparisons. Wing chord and length of central rectrices were taken using dial calipers to the nearest 0.1 mm. All tape recordings of otiosus were made on the windward side of St. Lucia, West Indies on 7 May 1988 and 29 April 1989. Tape recordings were made using a Sony TCM 5000 cassette recorder, with a Sennheiser ME 80 shotgun microphone. Additional recordings were obtained from Hardy et al. (1988). Sonagrams were produced with "SoundEdit" of Farallon Computing, Inc., Emeryville, California, and "Canary" of the Bioacoustics Research Program at the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York.