• Welcome to BirdForum, the internet's largest birding community with thousands of members from all over the world. The forums are dedicated to wild birds, birding, binoculars and equipment and all that goes with it.

    Please register for an account to take part in the discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.
ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

Arremon (1 Viewer)

Peter Kovalik

Well-known member
Slovakia
Molecules, ecology, morphology, and songs in concert: how many species is Arremon torquatus (Aves: Emberizidae)?
CARLOS DANIEL CADENA and ANDRÉS M. CUERVO

ABSTRACT
The acceptance of the generalized or unified concept of species (i.e. that species are segments of population lineages) implies that an important task for systematists is to focus on identifying lineages and on testing hypotheses about the acquisition of properties such as phenotypic diagnosability, reciprocal monophyly, or mechanisms of reproductive isolation. However, delimiting species objectively remains one of the most challenging problems faced by biologists. In the present study, we begin to tackle the thorny issue of species delimitation in a complicated group of Neotropical passerine birds (the Arremon torquatus complex, Emberizidae) in which sets of characters vary substantially across space, but do not obviously vary in a concerted fashion. To earlier discussions of species limits in the group, we add a historical perspective offered by a recent molecular phylogeny, present quantitative analyses of morphological and vocal variation, and incorporate ecological niche models as a new tool that aids species delimitation by highlighting cases of ecological distinctiveness and cases where populations appear to be in independent evolutionary trajectories, despite being connected by environments unlikely to represent barriers to gene flow. We demonstrate that at least one pair of taxa (and likely another) currently treated as conspecific are, in fact, distinct lineages that merit species status under essentially any species criterion. However, other pairwise comparisons are not as straightforward owing to nonconcordant patterns of variation in different traits and to the impossibility of distinguishing which characters are causes and which are consequences of reproductive (and evolutionary) isolation. After considering several alternatives, we propose a provisional classification of the complex recognizing eight tentative species-level taxa. Although this classification is likely to change as more detailed work is conducted, it provides a better foundation for studying the biology of these birds and helps to better describe their diversity, which is obscured when all taxa are subsumed into a single species name. The present study highlights several outstanding challenges, both practical and conceptual, for future studies. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 99, 152–176.

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/123218439/abstract
 
After considering several alternatives, we propose a provisional classification of the complex recognizing eight tentative species-level taxa.

A. costaricensis : Costa Rica and w Panama;

A. atricapillus (including tacarcunae) : c & e Panama and the Colombian Andes;

A. basilicus : Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, n Colombia;

A. perijanus : Serranía del Perijá, ne Colombia and nw Venezuela;

A. assimilis (including larensis, nigrifrons, and poliophrys) : Andes of Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador and most of Peru;

A. torquatus (including fimbriatus and borelli) : Andes of extreme s Peru, Bolivia and Argentina;

A. phaeopleurus : Cordillera de la Costa, n Venezuela;

A. phygas : Cordillera de la Costa Oriental, ne Venezuela.
 
Common names

In our recently published Colombia field guide (McMullan et al. 2010) and checklist, following an email exchange with Daniel Cadena, we used the following for Colombian populations, which make up half of those treated in the paper:

Arremon atricapillus (subspecies atricapillus and tacarcunae) (lower slopes of all three Andean Andes and mountains of Panamá). Black-headed Brush-Finch / Gorrión-Montés Cabecinegro

Arremon basilicus (Santa Marta mountains) (ENDEMIC) Colombian Brush-Finch / Gorrión-Montés Colombiano. (N.b. “Santa Marta Brush-Finch is used for Atlapetes melanocephalus)

Arremon perijanus (Perijá mountains) (NEARENDEMIC) Phelps’ Brush-Finch / Gorrion-Montés de Phelps. (N.b. “Perija Brush-Finch” is already used for Atlapetes nigrifrons)

Arremon assimilis (subspecies assimils and larensis) (widespread from Venezuela through Colombia and Ecuador south to Peru). Stripe-headed
Brush-Finch / Gorrión-Montés Listado.

("torquatus" may lay claim to the latter vernacular name also; or a new name may be needed for it).

See this paper for details of this and other changes in the Colombian checklist (splits, lumps, assessment of species in region):

http://www.proaves.org/IMG/pdf/Checklist_revision_2010_Con_Colombiana_13.pdf
 
Thanks Thomas

Seems odd that a SACC proposal would would advocate splitting up a taxa without even a suggestion of common names to be used...
 
Common names

Seems odd that a SACC proposal would would advocate splitting up a taxa without even a suggestion of common names to be used...
Well, it's not the first time, eg the recent proposal to split Cinclodes fuscus:
http://www.museum.lsu.edu/~Remsen/SACCprop415.html

There's some logic to agreeing the taxonomic treatment before agonising over common names. [And anyway, SACC policy is that non-English-first committee members always abstain from voting on English names - although they can still propose them.]

Richard
 
CADENA, C. D., CHEVIRON, Z. A. and FUNK, W. C. (2011), Testing the molecular and evolutionary causes of a ‘leapfrog’ pattern of geographical variation in coloration. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 24: 402–414.
Abstract
 
A new proposal to SACC (487) means that 468 has passed, and they are now asking for a vote on 7 new English names :eek!::-O

Niels
 
Last edited:
Adolfo G. Navarro-Sigüenza, Martha A. García-Hernández and A. Townsend Peterson, 2013. A new species of Brush-Finch (Arremon; Emberizidae) from western Mexico. The Wilson Journal of Ornithology, Sep 2013 : Volume 125 Issue 3, pg(s) 443–453.

Abstract:
A new highland species of chestnut-capped Arremon brush-finch is described from the Sierra Madre del Sur of central Guerrero. This form, although indistinguishable in external phenotype from adjacent populations to the east in Oaxaca, is dramatically differentiated in mitochondrial DNA sequence characters, and quite unexpectedly is the sister lineage to the very distinct (phenotype and genotype), central-Mexican-endemic A. virenticeps. Nuclear sequence differentiation in the new lineage is more subtle than in mitochondrial DNA, but is on par with that in the well-marked A. virenticeps. The new species is thus distinct from its sister lineage in genotype and phenotype, and clearly distinct from all other forms in genotype; however, it has retained an ancestral external phenotype similar to other members of the broader A. brunneinucha complex.
 
That sounds pretty "cryptic" !

Indeed:
Arremon kuehnerii is closely similar in all phenotypic respects to A. b. suttoni, and in fact we perceive no means of distinguishing it, save for molecular analyses or consideration of geographic range

They're using just mitochondrial sequences as diagnosable characters now |8.|
I don't see much chance of it being accepted by the NACC.
 
Warning! This thread is more than 3 years ago old.
It's likely that no further discussion is required, in which case we recommend starting a new thread. If however you feel your response is required you can still do so.

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top