Proposal (#379) to South American Classification
Committee
Recognize Trogon
chionurus as a separate species from Trogon
viridis (2)
Effect on SACC: This would treat an existing species, Trogon viridis, into two species.
Background: Our current SACC note is as follows:
2. Ridgely & Greenfield (2001) considered the
subspecies chionurus of the Choc—
region to be a separate species from Trogon viridis;
followed by Hilty (2003); SACC proposal to
recognize this split did not pass because of insufficient published data.
Genetic data (DaCosta & Klicka 2008) suggest that chionurus is more closely related to T. bairdii than either are to Amazonian T. viridis. Proposal needed. Sibley & Monroe (1990) considered Trogon viridis to form a superspecies
with Central American T. bairdii, and
suggested that they might be conspecific. Proposal needed.
See SACC proposal 49 for a summary
of previous arguments pro and con.
A one-sentence summary of the previous arguments might be although chionurus differs from viridis in voice and plumage, the vocal
differences have not been adequately quantified or documented (in fact,
published descriptions are contradictory). You can here samples of both at Xeno-Canto – I am
impressed with the differences in rhythm: chionurus
and viridis
(but I also hear lots of variability – browse Trogon
viridis.
New information: DaCosta & Klicka (2008)
published a gene-based phylogeny of the genus that included samples of bairdii (2), viridis from Amazonia (12), and chionurus
from W. Ecuador and Panama (2).
They sampled 1 mitochondrial gene, ND2, and 1041 base pairs, of which
557 were phylogenetically informative.
They found strong support (99% maximum likelihood bootstrap, 100%
Bayesian support) for the sister relationship between chionurus and bairdii, as
well as strong support for Amazonian viridis
as the sister to these two.
See Prop. 378
for tree.
Analysis and Recommendation: With genetic support from only a single, mitochondrial gene
as the basis for the relationship, one could argue that the tree is only a gene
tree, not a species tree, or that the bairdii-chionurus relationship is due to
incomplete lineage-sorting, or even that hybridization between bairdii and chionurus produces the result. Nonetheless, combined with the qualitative vocal data, I
think that published evidence is sufficient for a change in species limits, so
I tentatively recommend a YES.
Literature Cited:
DaCOSTA, J. M., AND J. KLICKA. 2008. The Great American
Interchange in birds: a phylogenetic perspective with the genus Trogon. Molecular Ecology 17: 1328-1343.
Note on English names: Ridgely & Greenfield (2001) coined ÒWestern White-tailed
TrogonÓ for chionurus and ÒAmazonian
White-tailed TrogonÓ for viridis, and
this was followed by Hilty (2003) and Gill & Wright (2006). I think that represents a degree of establishment
that justifies starting with them as Òstatus quoÓ if the proposal passes. However, Cory (1919) restricted
White-tailed to chionurus and called viridis ÒGreen-backed.Ó These are actually very nice
names. ÒChionurusÓ means
Òsnow-tailedÓ, and the larger amount of white in the tail of chionurus is one of the differences
between the two taxa; and there is also the nice parallel between the English
and scientific names.
ÒGreen-backedÓ also points to another major plumage difference between
the two (blue back in chionurus) and
is also reflected, somewhat, in the scientific name viridis. Also, those
long compound names are fairly unpopular, despite their ability to imply
relationships. And in this case,
with bairdii likely the sister to chionurus, they are actually misleading
as to relationships. Finally,
ÒWesternÓ and ÒAmazonianÓ are fairly insipid and not entirely accurate because
a highly disjunct population of viridis
is found in the Atlantic Forest region. Therefore, I propose we use these shorter,
more accurate, more venerable names as the status quo (therefore requiring a
proposal the longer compound names could be instituted by proposal), but IÕd
like to take a poll of our English-first members to see if they like this.
Additional Note on English names (added 6 May 09): Frank Gill pointed out to me that the
illustrations in Ridgely & Gwynne (1989), Ridgely & Greenfield (2001),
and HBW show chionurus as having a
bright green back. This is
evidently an error. Our recent
specimens from Panama have unambiguously violet-blue backs, as illustrated
correctly by Restall et al. (2006).
Wetmore (1968) indicated that some individuals may have green in the
center of the back, but I cannot find any evidence for all-green backs.
Van Remsen, November 2008
Comments from Zimmer: ÒYES. Vocal distinctions between these two
have been noted for some time, and there are plenty of qualitative descriptions
out there, as well as published and internet-searchable examples of recordings. These agree well with the DaCosta &
Klicka genetic data, which places chionurus
as closer to bairdii, a relationship
that would have been predicted on vocal and morphological characters
alone. I think VanÕs suggestions
regarding English names (ÒWhite-tailedÓ reserved for chionurus, and ÒGreen-backedÓ for viridis) are excellent.Ó
Comments
from Robbins: ÒYES, again web-based vocal data support the Klicka et al.
genetic conclusions. I fully support VanÕs English name suggestions.Ó
Comments from Stiles: ÒYES, for reasons stated by Van
and Kevin. I also prefer the
English names suggested by Van – I dislike three-word monsters,
hyphenated or not, if simpler alternatives are available.Ó
Comments
from Nores: ÒYES. Los datos morfol—gicos, genŽticos y de vocalizaciones
indican que chionurus es una especie
diferente de T. viridis. Sin embargo,
me parece poco probable que estŽ m‡s cerca de T. bairdii que de T. viridis.
Pienso que debe tratarse de un problema relacionado con haber usado un solo gen
mitocondrial, como ha sido destacado por Van. Como en Xeno-Canto no hay
vocalizaciones de T. bairdii no pude
comparar con las otras especies.Ó
Comments from Stotz: ÒYES. I favor Van's English names.Ó
Comments from Jaramillo: ÒYES – Song,
morphology and genetics all line up to clarify the relationship here. Kudos to
Van for suggesting some simple names, rather than multi-word monsters, so yes
Green-backed and White-tailed work well!
Comments from Pacheco: "YES. Os dados dispon’veis bem corroboram a proposta.Ó