Proposal (#29) to South American Check-list Committee
Remove Euphonia and Chlorophonia
from Incertae Sedis and place as subfamily Euphoniinae in Fringillidae
Effect on South American CL: We currently treat the genera Euphonia and Chlorophonia
as Incertae Sedis within the 9-primaried oscines. This proposal would move them
to Fringillidae, as a subfamily (and therefore also force recognition of
subfamily Carduelinae for the fringillids in South America).
Background: Although Euphonia and Chlorophonia
have always been placed in Thraupidae, several aspects of their biology have
marked them as "weird." The complex, melodious songs of some species
have been noted as superficially "goldfinch-like" and unlike that of
most tanagers The presence of pronounced vocal copying in E. violacea,
E. laniirostris, and E. pectoralis (Snow 1974,
Morton 1976, Remsen 1976, Sick 1997) is unlike any tanager but reminiscent of
several fringillids (e.g., Mundinger 1970, Remsen et al. 1982, Taylor 1979).
The domed nest with side entrance is unlike that of any typical tanager (Isler
and Isler 1987). The vagility of some (e.g., E. chlorotica, C.
cyanea, C. flavirostris) seems unusual for tanagers but
typical of fringillids, as do reports of large single-species flocks in at
least one species, C. flavirostris. The near-vegetarian diet
recalls that of many fringillids, and their stomach "structure" is
bizarre. They feed their young by regurgitation, unlike (?) tanagers but like
many fringillids. None of these features, however, has been accorded any
phylogenetic significance.
New data: Four labs have independently shown that Euphonia
does not belong in Thraupidae but clusters with Fringillidae (Burns 1997, Burns
et al. 2002, Klicka et al. 2000, Sato et al. 2001, and Yuri and Mindell 2002).
My only hesitation is that these results are based mostly on one gene,
cytochrome b. Although Sibley & Ahlquist (1990) retained Euphonia
within their Thraupini, that branch was the deepest in the group, which
also included Piranga, Habia, Coereba, and Sicalis.
Recommendation: I recommend a YES on this one. The AOU Checklist
Committee has unanimously approved a similar proposal by Jim Rising, and
created a subfamily taxon, Euphoniinae, for these two genera within
Fringillidae. Although I would feel more comfortable if some sequence data came
from a nuclear gene, I see no reason other than historical momentum to keep
these two genera in Thraupidae. The additional phenotypic, albeit anecdotal,
data is also consistent with a fringillid connection.
Lit Cit:
BURNS, K. J. 1997. Molecular systematics of tanagers (Thraupinae): Evolution
and biogeography of a diverse radiation of Neotropical birds. Molecular
Phylogenetics and Evolution 8:334-348.
BURNS, K. J., S. J. HACKETT, & N. K.
KLEIN. 2002. Phylogenetic relationships and morphological diversity in Darwin's
finches and their relatives. Evolution 56: 1240-1252.
ISLER, M., AND P. ISLER. 1987. The tanagers,
natural history, distribution, and identification. Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C.
KLICKA, J, K. P. JOHNSON, & S. M.
LANYON. 2000. New World nine-primaried oscine relationships: constructing a
mitochondrial DNA framework. Auk 117: 321-326.
MORTON, E. S. 1976. Vocal mimicry in the
Thick-billed Euphonia. Wilson Bull. 88: 485-487.
MUNDINDER, P. C. 1970. Vocal imitation and
individual recognition of finch calls. Science 168: 480-482.
REMSEN, J. V., JR., K. GARRETT, & R. ERICKSON. 1982. Vocal copying in
Lawrence's and Lesser goldfinches. West. Birds 13: 29-33.
SATO, A., H. TICHY, C. O'HUIGIN, P. R.
GRANT, B. R. GRANT, & J. KLEIN. 2001. On the origin of Darwin's finches.
Mol. Biol. Evol. 18: 299-311.
SIBLEY, C. G., AND J. E. AHLQUIST. 1990.
Phylogeny and classification of birds. Yale Univ. Press, New Haven,
Connecticut.
SICK, H. 1997. Ornitologia Brasileira. Ed.
Nova Fronteira, Rio de Janeiro.
TAYLOR, P. 1979. Interspecific vocal mimicry
by Pine Grosbeaks. Can. Field Nat. 93: 436-437.
YURI, T., & D. P. MINDELL. 2002.
Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Fringillidae, "New World nine-primaried
oscines" (Aves: Passeriformes). Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution
23: 229-243.
Van
Remsen, 5 June 2003
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Comments from Zimmer: "I vote "YES" on this one. The
preponderance of vocal, ecological, morphological and molecular data all
suggest this otherwise."
Comments from Schulenberg: "My vote: "Yes". That said, I don't
see that Burns 1997 or Burns et al. 2002 include any fringillids among their
outgroups. So, these two papers
support the idea that Euphonia and Chlorophonia are not tanagers
(whatever a tanager is), but do not directly address the current proposal. And,
therefore, we are down to three (not four) laboratories that report this
result, not that this matters much.
"Otherwise, I also note that these studies generally compare a euphonia to
a cardueline (although a different species of Euphonia in each case), so
our sampling isn't very deep here. (Yuri and Mindell do a little better in this
regard.) Klicka et al. were cautious in suggesting that their results, for
example, indicate that "Euphonia (and by association Chlorophonia)
represents either a derived cardueline form or a basal, previously unrecognized
radiation within the nine-primaried oscine clade." So, I can approve the
proposal based on current knowledge. But I also wouldn't be surprised if down
the line, after the relationships of Euphonia and Chlorophonia
become the subject of an investigation (and not just a side issue to some other
question), we are asked to vote on recognizing a family Euphonidae, or
something along those lines. Time will tell."
Comments from Stotz: "Tom's suggestion that we might eventually
have a separate Euphoniidae someday is interesting, and could be true. However,
Yuri and Mindell did have stronger taxon sampling relating to this question
(six Fringillid genera) and Euphonia did not end up basal in this group. Since
that paper is based on just mitochondrial DNA, it certainly is not the last
word, but it does suggest that Euphonia and Chlorophonia belong
within Fringillidae proper. Another problem is that based on Yuri and Mindell, Euphonia
and Chlorophonia could cluster within Fringillidae, in which case we'd
have to do away with Euphoniinae. Since the SACC list does not include
subfamilies, I guess we don't need to worry about this. Given that Euphonia
clusters with Fringilla in Yuri and Mindell, I suggest that Euphonia and
Chlorophonia be placed at the start of the of Carduelinae in their
lists."
Comments from Stiles: "YES (the evidence now seems solid enough to
justify this change)>"