Dear John, I am a little surprised. I watched wagtails with clear yellow often in Thailand and followed Robson's guide to whether M. flava (Yellow Wagtail) or M. Cinerea (Grey Wagtail). I was convinced that they were usually Grey Wagtails cause of the grey on the back. Robson maps show that both species are found in all the country. eBird however shows no obs of M. flava in Thailand.
But eBird shows indeed M. tschutschensis (Eastern Yellow Wagtail) (
https://ebird.org/species/eaywag/) and a map with many obs but also Motacilla tschutschensis macronyx (Eastern Yellow Wagtail subspecies) in addition and a map with less obs in Thailand (
https://ebird.org/species/weywag9). Who is right, Robson or eBird? The name Yellow Wagtail is confusing since that should be whether Eastern or Western. And eBird shows that most of them is not macronyx but just M. tschutschensis. Robson does not mention any of these. How could Robson show a map with M. flava obs in all Thailand then?
When I look better at eBird's pics it seems that the Manchurian has some white in the supercilium, is that correct? Tnx for advice
The taxonomy of yellow wagtails is slightly confusing.
Eastern and Western Yellow Wagtails were previously combined into one species, Yellow Wagtail
Motacilla flava, with many subspecies. If your Robson guide dates to this time, it will only show Yellow Wagtail.
Most checklists now treat Eastern Yellow Wagtail
M. tschutschensis as a separate species, with three subspecies:
tschutschensis,
macronyx and
taivana. All three of these subspecies should occur in Thailand. The other subspecies are treated in most checklists as being part of Western Yellow Wagtail
M. flava, including the subspecies
thunbergi. Subspecies
thunbergi (Western) is essentially identical to subspecies
macronyx (Eastern), so in my earlier reply I said that it was one of these two subspecies, but I couldn't be sure which one. But it is probably
macronyx - I don't think
thunbergi or any other Western Yellow Wagtail subspecies occurs regularly in Thailand (but I'm not based in Thailand, so I am not familiar with local status).
As you've mentioned some authorities (eg the Dutch Birding checklist) consider there to be more species in this complex, including a separate species for
M. thunbergi.
Note that most checklists do not treat subspecies
angarensis and
plexa as being valid subspecies - these are usually considered to represent variation in either
macronyx or
thunbergi, or an intergrade between these and another taxon. As you mentioned, some
macronyx (Manchurian) do have a small white spot in the supercilium, but this is not consistent and is probably just individual variation.
The maps in eBird can be set up show either Eastern Yellow Wagtail (this approach includes all subspecies and any birds for which the observer didn't report the subspecies) or only subspecies
macronyx (this approach includes only those records that the observer reported as this subspecies, so will always show fewer records than the other approach).
I hope this clarifies slightly. I know it is a very confusing situation!