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Maluridae (1 Viewer)

Superb Fairywren

Dudaniec, Schlotfeldt, Bertozzi, Donnellan & Kleindorfer. Genetic and morphological divergence in island and mainland birds: Informing conservation priorities. Biol Conserv: in press. [abstract]
Forthcoming...

Kleindorfer, Evans, Mihailova, Colombelli-Negrel, Hoi, Griggio, Mahr & Robertson (in press). When subspecies matter: resident Superb Fairy-wrens (Malurus cyaneus) distinguish the sex and subspecies of intruder birds. Emu. [abstract]

Ref: Rowley & Russell 2007 (HBW 12).
 
Greig et al

Forthcoming...

Greig, Price & Pruett-Jones (in press). Song evolution in Maluridae: influences of natural and sexual selection on acoustic structure. Emu. [abstract]
 
Thick-billed Grasswren

Christidis, Rheindt, Boles & Norman 2010. Plumage patterns are good indicators of taxonomic diversity, but not of phylogenetic affinities, in Australian grasswrens Amytornis (Aves: Maluridae). Mol Phyl Evol: in press.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/scienc...e1a353b2a1f63a86ea9eeefa41fb5bcd&searchtype=a
Andrew Black, Leo Joseph, Lynn Pedler, Graham Carpenter, 2010. A taxonomic framework for interpreting evolution within the Amytornis textilis-modestus complex of grasswrens. Emu, In Press.
Abstract
Austin, Joseph, Pedler & Black (in press). Uncovering cryptic evolutionary diversity in extant and extinct populations of the southern Australian arid zone Western and Thick-billed Grasswrens (Passeriformes: Maluridae: Amytornis). Conserv Genet. [abstract]

Rowley & Russell 2007 (HBW 12).
 
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Fairywrens

Forthcoming...

Karubian (in press). Female ornamentation in Malurus fairy-wrens: a hidden evolutionary gem for understanding female perspectives on social and sexual selection. Emu. [abstract]

Possibly the most-studied family these days!
 
Fairywrens

Johnson, Price & Pruett-Jones (in press). Different modes of evolution in males and females generate dichromatism in fairy-wrens (Maluridae). Ecol Evol. [abstract] [pdf]
 
Emu 113(3)

Several papers reported earlier in this thread now published...

Maluridae: Insights from a Model System. Emu 113(3).

Buchanan & Cockburn 2013. Fairy-wrens and their relatives (Maluridae) as model organisms in evolutionary ecology: the scientific legacy of Ian Rowley and Eleanor Russell. Emu 113(3): i–vii. [pdf]
 
Grasswrens

Christidis, L., F. E. Rheindt, W. E. Boles & J. A. Norman, 2013. A re-appraisal of species diversity within the Australian grasswrens Amytornis (Aves: Maluridae). Austral. Zoologist 36 (4): in press

Abstract: The Australian grasswrens (Amytornis) comprise a genus of cryptically plumaged species inhabiting the arid regions of southern, western, central, and northern Australia. Isolated, fragmented populations characterise the distributional pattern of several species, whereas others appear to show ecophenotypic clinal variation in plumage patterns. These features have made the species-level taxonomy of the genus a matter of ongoing debate. We undertook qualitative considerations of morphological, biogeographical and ecological features in combination with quantitative DNA distance measures from published studies, to provide a comprehensive species level revision of Amytornis. In addition to the ten species recognised by Schodde and Mason (1999) (housei, textilis, goyderi, purnelli, ballarae, merrotsyi, woodwardi, dorotheae, striatus, barbatus), we also recognise as species the following: modestus, rowleyi, oweni and whitei. These fourteen species are placed into four subgenera: Amytornis, Magnamytis, Maluropsis and Cryptamytis subgen. nov. The latter subgenus is erected for A. merrotsyi. The potential impacts that this new taxonomy will have on the conservation status of the various taxa are canvassed.
 
Amytornis (s.) oweni

Christidis, L., F. E. Rheindt, W. E. Boles & J. A. Norman, 2013. A re-appraisal of species diversity within the Australian grasswrens Amytornis (Aves: Maluridae). Austral. Zoologist 36 (4): in press

..we also recognise as species the following: modestus, rowleyi, oweni and whitei....

What a surprise! Amytornis (striatus) oweni is not recognized by actual IOC and Clements checklists.
IBC/HBW:
...Proposed race oweni (described from C Western Australia) considered to fall within range of variation of nominate...
 
In Howard & Moore, ed. 3, and Christidis & Boles, 2008, Amytornis textilis is called the Thick-billed Grasswren. Perhaps A. modestus should be the Plain or Modest Grasswren?
 
Western Grasswren and Thick-billed Grasswren are long established common names for those two taxa when treated as separate species. I just had a look in my 1926 RAOU checklist and those were the common names given back then.

Interestingly we finally seem to be reverting to recognition of all of the species recognised in 1926; A. whitei was listed as Rufous Grasswren back then.
 
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Western Grasswren and Thick-billed Grasswren are long established common names for those two taxa when treated as separate species. I just had a look in my 1926 RAOU checklist and those were the common names given back then.

Interestingly we finally seem to be reverting to recognition of all of the species recognised in 1926; A. whitei was listed as Rufous Grasswren back then.

Murray,
What else might we expect from the 1926 list?
MJB
 
Grasswrens

Black, Jansen, van der Mije & Fisher 2014. On the identification and provenance of some early specimens of grasswrens (Maluridae: Amytornis) and their significance for taxonomy and nomenclature. Bull BOC 134(1): 52–61.
SUMMARY.—The identity and provenance of four 19th-century Amytornis grasswren specimens in the Naturalis Biodiversity Center (Leiden) collection are reviewed. Three identified as Thick-billed Grasswren Amytornis modestus inexpectatus enable a revised diagnosis for the extinct subspecies from New South Wales. One of these and one Striated Grasswren A. striatus were acquired from John Gould in, or soon after, December 1840. The other two came via the Frank dealership in 1858 and 1873, but are probably also from Gould's collections. Leiden's A. striatus specimen and another in Philadelphia are identified as paralectotypes of Dasyornis [=Amytornis] striatus Gould, 1840. Evidence is presented that Gould's brother-in-law, Charles Coxen, collected both A. modestus and A. striatus, including type material of the latter, before Gould visited Australia in 1838.
 
Grasswrens

Christidis, L., F. E. Rheindt, W. E. Boles & J. A. Norman, 2013. A re-appraisal of species diversity within the Australian grasswrens Amytornis (Aves: Maluridae). Austral. Zoologist 36 (4): in press

Abstract: The Australian grasswrens (Amytornis) comprise a genus of cryptically plumaged species inhabiting the arid regions of southern, western, central, and northern Australia. Isolated, fragmented populations characterise the distributional pattern of several species, whereas others appear to show ecophenotypic clinal variation in plumage patterns. These features have made the species-level taxonomy of the genus a matter of ongoing debate. We undertook qualitative considerations of morphological, biogeographical and ecological features in combination with quantitative DNA distance measures from published studies, to provide a comprehensive species level revision of Amytornis. In addition to the ten species recognised by Schodde and Mason (1999) (housei, textilis, goyderi, purnelli, ballarae, merrotsyi, woodwardi, dorotheae, striatus, barbatus), we also recognise as species the following: modestus, rowleyi, oweni and whitei. These fourteen species are placed into four subgenera: Amytornis, Magnamytis, Maluropsis and Cryptamytis subgen. nov. The latter subgenus is erected for A. merrotsyi. The potential impacts that this new taxonomy will have on the conservation status of the various taxa are canvassed.

Does anyone have a pdf or link to this reference that they would be willing to share? Thanks
 

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