Proposal (387) to South American Classification Committee
Split Poospiza cabanisi from P.
lateralis
Effect on
South American CL:
This proposal would split Poospiza lateralis (Red-rumped Warbling-Finch) into two species, P. lateralis
and P. cabanisi.
Poospiza lateralis lateralis
is known from the mountains of Esprito Santo, Rio de Janeiro, northern So
Paulo, and adjacent parts of Minas Gerais.
Poospiza lateralis cabanisi occurs between Buenos Aires and the southern
portion of So Paulo, including Uruguay and eastern Paraguay.
Poospiza lateralis was originally described by Nordmann (1835) as Fringilla lateralis, based on specimens
from Brazil, and subsequently included in the genus Poospiza by Cabanis (1847).
Poospiza cabanisi Bonaparte (1850) was described based on a
specimen alleged from Paraguay, differing in smaller size and some differences
of color, especially the underparts.
P. cabanisi has been treated as subspecies of P. lateralis in most of the 20th
century (Dabbene 1912, Hellmayr
1938, Paynter 1970, Dickinson 2003).
Hellmayr
(1938) designated Rio de Janeiro as the type locality of northern P. lateralis and Bonpland, Misiones as
the origin of type specimen of southern P.
cabanisi (deposited in Paris Museum).
Ridgely
and Tudor (1989) suggested the possibility that there are two species, P. lateralis and P. cabanisi, because there is no intergradation between them.
From a
viewpoint of the PSC, Assis et al.
(2007) advocated treating P. cabanisi
at the species rank. The analysis of these authors showed that plumage,
morphometrics, and vocalizations of this pair of species differ diagnostically,
with a complete segregation of characters. Important: these two taxa are
allopatric by 300 km.
Recommendation:
Mainly
due to geographical isolation, the stability of the characters of each form and
my personal experience with the involved taxa I recommend a "YES"
vote on accepting this warbling-finch (Assis et al. did not suggest an English name) as (indeed) a biological
species to our list.
Literature Cited:
Assis, C. P., M. A. Raposo & R. Parrini (2007) Validao de Poospiza cabanisi Bonaparte, 1850
(Passeriformes: Emberizidae). Revista
Brasileira de Ornitologia 15(1):103-102.
Bonaparte, C. L. (1850) Conspectus generum avium. Lugduni
Batavorum: E.J. Brill.
Cabanis,
J. (1847) Ornithologische Notizen. Arch. Naturgesch. 13:186-352.
Dabbene,
R. (1912) Contribucin a la ornitologa del Paraguay. Anales del Museo Nacional de Buenos Aires 23: 283-390.
Dickinson,
E. C. (2003). The Howard and Moore Complete Checklist of the Birds of the
World. Princeton, N. J.: Princeton Univ. Press.
Hellmayr,
C. E. (1938) Catalog of birds of the Americas and adjacent islands. Field
Museum of Natural History Publications in Zoology 11: 1-662.
Nordmann,
A. von. (1835). Vogel. In: Erman, A.
(Ed.). Reise um die Erde durch Nord-Asien und die beiden Oceane in den Jahren
1828, 1829 und 1830.Berlin: G. Reimer.
Paynter,
R. A., Jr. (1970) Subfamily Emberizinae. In: Check-list of birds of the
world Vol. 13. Cambridge: Museum of Comparative Zoology.
Ridgely,
R. S. e G. Tudor (1989) The birds of South America: the oscine passerines.
Oxford: Oxford University Press
Jos Fernando Pacheco, January 2009
Comments
from Nores: YES, aunque
slo por las vocalizaciones. Las diferencias de coloracin y medidas pueden
corresponder a subespecies.
Nota: Desde hace bastante tiempo, veo que en algunas
propuestas que intentan elevar subespecies a especies, se seala el hecho de
que las formas sean aloptricas para apoyar la propuesta, siendo que la cosa es
al revs. Las subespecies son casi siempre aloptricas (raramente parptricas),
mientras que las especies, como todos sabemos, pueden ser aloptricas o
simptricas. O sea que cuando dos formas muy similares son aloptricas, como en
el caso de estas Poospiza, lo ms lgico es que por distribucin sean
subespecies. Si hay diferencias en canto o genticas la situacin es otra.
Adems, resulta difcil pensar que pueda haber intergradacin en dos formas
separadas por 300 km. Si estuvieran en contacto la cosa sera diferente. En
caso de aceptarse la propuesta, Ridgely y Tudor proponen el nombre de
Gray-throated Warbling-Finch para P. lateralis y Buff-throated
Warbling-Finch para P. cabanisi que parece bien, aunque Gray-chested
Warbling-Finch y Buff-chested Warbling-Finch, podra ser mejor porque en la
garganta no tienen tan marcado el color, sino que son ms blancuzcas.
Comments
from Zimmer: YES. Morphology, vocal
differences, and range disjunction all support treating these two taxa as
separate species. Furthermore, the
gap between their ranges (in So Paulo state) coincides with the break between
other pairs of closely related taxa that already are or soon will be considered
separate species (e.g. Merulaxis ater
group, Cichlocolaptes leucophrus/holti,
Stephanoxis lalandi/loddigesii, Hylopezus nattereri group, etc.). Most of these other taxon pairs
represent morphologically cryptic species-pairs, whereas the two Poospiza under discussion are very
different looking birds.
Comments from Jaramillo: YES – I am only personally familiar with cabanisi, so I had to look up descriptions of lateralis for comparison as well as photos on the Internet. I was
quite amazed at how different the two are, with lateralis largely lacking a supercilium, having buffy throat, bold
and distinct bay sides that were extensive, grey head and back, lots of white in
the tail, and a distinctive white slash on the folded primaries; quite
different from the birds I am familiar with from farther south (full
supercilium, grey throat and breast, dull cinnamon flanks, weak pale slash on
wings, white restricted to tail corners, grey head contrasting with rufous
– brown back). I could not find songs to compare, but on xeno-canto there
were calls, and lateralis has a very
distinctive sharp call, unlike the weak tseep of cabanisi, in oscines call differences to me are often a better clue
to species level differences than song; at least it suggests to me a long
period of isolation. I am convinced that there are vocal and clear plumage
differences, no evidence of hybridization, and a break in distribution that
matches up to other species level taxa in other groups – all make me
think that this is a good biological species division between these two related
taxa.
Comments from Robbins: YES. Thoroughly
documented.
Comments from Stotz: YES. These are really quite different birds,
both vocally and in plumage. I would favor using Ridgely and Tudors suggested
English names of Buff-throated Warbling-Finch (for lateralis) and Gray-throated Warbling-Finch (for cabanisi).
Comments from Remsen: YES,
but with much less enthusiasm than others. That the plumage and morphometrics are diagnosably different
indicates only that cabanisi is a
valid taxon, not that the rank of that taxon is necessarily species. As Manuel pointed out, that they are
allopatric is nearly irrelevant in the current arguments as to whether cabanisi
should be ranked as a species or subspecies; if they were indeed parapatric or
sympatric, then we would have a test of species rank under the BSC or any
species concept. The modern
operational definition of subspecies is consistent with the ranks original
conceptual definitions, i.e., a subspecies is a diagnosable taxon that has not
diverged to the point associated with species-level differences in the
group. The only data in Assis et al. relevant to that point is the data on
vocalizations, which I would consider sufficient to place the burden-of-proof
on those who would rank cabanisi as a
subspecies of lateralis.
Comments from Stiles: YES, for reasons given by
various members of SACC .