Proposal (#26) to South American Check-list Committee
Elevate Automolus paraensis
to species rank
Effect on South American
CL: this proposal
would split Automolus infuscatus (Olive-backed Foliage-gleaner)
into two species: A. infuscatus and A. paraensis.
Background: To my knowledge, paraensis
has never been considered a full species. It is found in eastern Amazonian
Brazil, south of the Amazon, from R. Madeira east to Maranh‹o. In terms of
plumage and morphology, this form does not stand out, however, from other
subspecies currently included in A. infuscatus.
New information: Zimmer (2002) concluded that paraensis
warranted recognition as a separate species from A. infuscatus
based primarily on vocal characters. He analyzed recordings of about 95
individuals from across the range of A. infuscatus, including all
four described subspecies and including about 30 individual paraensis,
from near-extremes of its distribution. The only weak-point in the sampling is
that only 3 individuals from 1 locality were available for the subspecies badius.
He also examined about 300 specimens from throughout the range of infuscatus,
including good samples from all five component taxa.
The taxon paraensis is diagnosable based on plumage characters, but it
is really no more distinctive than the other taxa in question. In terms of
measurements, the five taxa generally differ significantly from one another in
one or more characters, but none can be diagnosed by any single measurement.
In vocalizations, however, paraensis differs substantially from the
other four in each of the four characters considered (general loud-song type,
note structure, note length, and calls): "paraensis differed
strikingly and consistently in all aspects of its vocal repertoire from all
other subspecies in the complex." In contrast, differences among the other
four were nonexistent or minor, although some consistent but slight call note
differences among some of them. Zimmer noted that that paraensis was
more similar vocally to A. leucophthalmus lammi of NE
Brazil than to any subspecies of A. infuscatus (but that is
another project ).
Recommendation: I recommend a YES on this
proposal. Although sampling could always be improved and playback trials would
be great, in my opinion the vocal differences between paraensis and infuscatus
are greater or better documented than those between roughly 25 other pairs of
ovenbirds currently treated as separate species. It seems to me that the burden
of proof after Zimmer's analysis would fall on those who would continue to
treat paraensis as a subspecies of A. infuscatus.
English name: Zimmer recommended "Para
Foliage-gleaner" for A. paraensis; in the absence of
distinguishing plumage features, this seems fine to me ad appropriate. Zimmer
recommended leaving the English name of infuscatus unchanged
(Olive-backed Foliage-gleaner) rather than concocting a new one to distinguish
it from the older, broader infuscatus; I agree with this, given that
even with paraensis split out, A. infuscatus still
occupies the vast majority of Amazonia.
Lit Cit:
Zimmer, K. J. 2002. Species
limits in Olive-backed Foliage-gleaners. Wilson Bull. 114: 20-37.
Van Remsen, 19 May 2003
==============
Comments from Zimmer: "Obviously a "YES" vote on this one.
Sample sizes even larger after my most recent Brazil trip to Carajas; all
vocalizations of that population consistent with recordings of paraensis
from elsewhere in the range, and completely different from other populations of
infuscatus. "
Comments from Stotz: "If we could only get everybody to publish
such evidence to support splits."