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Species of bird
The aberrant bush warbler (Horornis flavolivaceus ) is a
species in the bush warbler
family ,
Cettiidae . It was formerly included in the "
Old World warbler " assemblage.
It is found in central and southern
China , and the northern extremes of
Myanmar and
Vietnam .
[2] It occurs in the countries of
Bhutan ,
China ,
India ,
Indonesia ,
Laos ,
Malaysia ,
Myanmar ,
Nepal ,
Philippines ,
Thailand ,
Timor-Leste and
Vietnam
[1] and also may occur in northeastern and southeastern
Bangladesh .
[3]
Taxonomy
The aberrant bush warbler was
formally described in 1845 by the English zoologist
Edward Blyth based on a specimen collected in Nepal. He placed the species in the genus Neornis and coined the
binomial name Neornis flavolivacea .
[4]
[5] The specific epithet flavolivaceus combines the
Latin flavus meaning "yellow" with the
Modern Latin olivaceus meaning "olive-green".
[6] The aberrant bush warbler is now placed in the genus
Horornis that was introduced in 1845 by
Brian Hodgson .
[7]
Thirteen
subspecies are recognised:
[7]
H. f. flavolivaceus (
Blyth , 1845) – central, east Himalayas
H. f. stresemanni (
Koelz , 1954) – southwest Assam (northeast India)
H. f. weberi (
Mayr , 1941) – southeast Assam (northeast India) and west Myanmar
H. f. intricatus (
Hartert, EJO , 1909) – north, east Myanmar to south China
H. f. oblitus (Mayr, 1941) – north Indochina
H. f. sepiarius (
Kloss , 1931) – montane north
Sumatra
H. f. flaviventris (
Salvadori , 1879) – montane central, south
Sumatra
H. f. vulcanius (Blyth, 1870) – montane
Java ,
Bali ,
Lombok and
Sumbawa (west
Lesser Sunda Islands )
H. f. kolichisi (Johnstone, RE & Darnell, 1997) – montane
Alor Island (east
Lesser Sunda Islands )
H. f. everetti (Hartert, EJO, 1898) – montane
Timor and
Wetar (east
Lesser Sunda Islands )
H. f. banksi (
Chasen , 1935) – montane northwest
Borneo
H. f. oreophilus (
Sharpe , 1888) – montane northeast
Borneo
H. f. palawanus (
Ripley &
Rabor , 1962) – montane
Palawan (southwest Philippines)
The last eight subspecies in the above list have sometimes been considered as a separate species, the Sunda bush warbler Horornis vulcanius .
[7]
[8]
References
^
a
b BirdLife International (2017).
"Horornis flavolivaceus " .
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species . 2017 : e.T105295705A111180465.
doi :
10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-1.RLTS.T105295705A111180465.en . Retrieved 6 September 2021 .
^ John Ramsay MacKinnon; Karen Phillipps; Fen-qi He (2000).
A field guide to the birds of China . Oxford University Press. p.
10 .
ISBN
978-0198549406 . Aberrant Bush-warbler.
^
"Aberrant Bush Warbler - Horornis flavolivaceus" . Les oiseaux .
^
Blyth, Edward (1845).
"Notices and descriptions of various new or little known species of birds (continued)" . Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal . 14, Part 2 (164): 546–602 [590].
^
Mayr, Ernst ; Cottrell, G. William, eds. (1986).
Check-List of Birds of the World . Vol. 11. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Museum of Comparative Zoology. p. 14.
^ Jobling, James A. (2010).
The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names . London: Christopher Helm. p. 162.
ISBN
978-1-4081-2501-4 .
^
a
b
c
Gill, Frank ; Donsker, David;
Rasmussen, Pamela , eds. (January 2023).
"Cupwings, crombecs, bush warblers, Streaked Scrub Warbler, yellow flycatchers, hylias" . IOC World Bird List Version 13.1 . International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 12 February 2023 .
^ Limparungpatthanakij, W.L.; Clement, P.; Kirwan, G.M. (2022). Billerman, S.M. (ed.). "Aberrant Bush Warbler (Horornis flavolivaceus ), version 2.1". Birds of the World . Ithaca, NY, USA: Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
doi :
10.2173/bow.abbwar1.02.1 .