The bananaquit (Coereba flaveola) is a species of
passerinebird in the tanager family
Thraupidae. Before the development of molecular genetics in the 21st century, its relationship to other species was uncertain and it was either placed with the buntings and
New World sparrows in the family
Emberizidae, with New World warblers in the family
Parulidae or its own
monotypic family Coerebidae. This small, active
nectarivore is found in warmer parts of the
Americas and is generally common.
Its name is derived from its yellow color and the English word quit, which refers to small
passerines of tropical America; cf.
grassquit,
orangequit.[2]
Taxonomy
The bananaquit was
formally described by
Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758
10th edition of Systema Naturae as Certhia flaveola.[3] Linnaeus based his description on the "black and yellow bird" described by
John Ray and
Hans Sloane,[4][5] and the "Black and Yellow Creeper" described and illustrated by
George Edwards in 1751.[6] The bananaquit was reclassified as the only member of the
genusCoereba by
Louis Pierre Vieillot in 1809.[7] The genus name is of uncertain origin but may be from a
Tupi name Güirá for a small black and yellow bird. The specific epithet flaveolus is a diminutive of the
Latinflavus meaning "golden" or "yellow".[8]
Before the development of techniques to sequence DNA, the relationship of the bananaquit to other species was uncertain. It was variously placed with the New World warblers in the family
Parulidae,[9] with the buntings and
New World sparrows in the family
Emberizidae,[10] or in its own
monotypic family Coerebidae.[11] Based on the results of
molecular phylogenetic studies, the bananaquit is now placed in the tanager family
Thraupidae and belongs with
Darwin's finches to the subfamily Coerebinae.[12][13][14]
C. f. gorgonaeThayer & Bangs, 1905:
Gorgona I. (off western Colombia)
C. f. intermedia (
Salvadori & Festa, 1899): southwestern Colombia, western
Ecuador and northern
Peru east to southern Venezuela and western Brazil
C. f. bolivariZimmer & Phelps, 1946: eastern Venezuela
C. f. guianensis (Cabanis, 1850): southeastern Venezuela to
Guyana
C. f. roraimae Chapman, 1929:
tepui regions of southeastern Venezuela, southwestern Guyana and northern Brazil
C. f. pacifica Lowe, 1912: eastern Peru
C. f. magnirostris (
Taczanowski, 1880): northern Peru
C. f. dispar Zimmer, 1942: north central Peru to western
Bolivia
C. f. chloropyga (Cabanis, 1850): east central Peru to central Bolivia and east to eastern Brazil, northern
Uruguay, northeastern
Argentina and
Paraguay
C. f. alleni Lowe, 1912: eastern Bolivia to central Brazil
The bananaquit is a small bird, although there is some degree of size variation across the various subspecies. Length can range from 4 to 5 in (10 to 13 cm).[18][19] Weight ranges from 5.5 to 19 g (0.19 to 0.67 oz).[20][21]
Most subspecies of the bananaquit have dark grey (almost black) upperparts, black crowns and sides of the head, a prominent white eyestripe, grey throat, white vent, and yellow chest, belly, and rump.
Coloration is heavily influenced by
melanocortin 1 receptor variation.[22]
The sexes are alike, but juveniles are duller and often have partially yellow eyebrows and throat.
In the subspecies bahamensis and caboti from the Bahamas and
Cozumel, respectively, the throat and upper chest are white or very pale grey,[23][24] while ferryi from
La Tortuga Island has a white forehead.[25] The subspecies laurae, lowii, and melanornis from small islands off the coast of northern
Venezuela are overall blackish,[25] while the subspecies aterrima and atrata from
Grenada and
Saint Vincent have two plumage
morphs, one "normal" and another blackish.[23] The pink
gape is usually very prominent in the subspecies from islands in the
Caribbean Sea.
The tongue is paddle-shaped, with an extremely long paddle section.[26]
Distribution and habitat
It is resident in tropical South America north to southern Mexico and the
Caribbean. It is found throughout the West Indies, except for
Cuba.[23] Birds from the Bahamas are rare visitors to
Florida.[27]
It occurs in a wide range of open to semi-open habitats, including gardens and parks, but it is rare or absent in deserts, dense forests (e.g. large parts of the
Amazon rainforest), and at altitudes above 2,000 m (6,600 ft).[25]
Bananaquit nests are known to be used by frog species, such as the
Common coquí.[28]
Behaviour and ecology
The bananaquit has a slender, curved bill, adapted to taking
nectar from
flowers, including
mistletoes.[29]Nectivory is probably an independent innovation in Coereba.[26] Since then C. flaveola's tongue shape has shown
convergent evolution with other birds feeding on the same flowers, and its source flowers have shown convergence to accommodate its tongue.[26] It sometimes pierces flowers from the side, taking the nectar without
pollinating the plant - known as
nectar robbing.[27][30] It also feeds on fruits - including mistletoe fruits, other
berries, and ripe
bananas (hence the common name and bananivora for the Hispaniolan subspecies).[29][31][32][33] It has been observed taking fruits' sweet juices by puncturing fruit with its beak and it will also eat small insects (such as
ants and
flies), their larvae, and other small arthropods (such as
spiders) on occasion.[34] While feeding, the bananaquit must always perch, as it cannot hover like a
hummingbird.[31]
The bananaquit is known for its ability to adjust remarkably to human environments. It often visits gardens and may become very tame. Its nickname, the sugar bird, comes from its affinity for bowls or bird feeders stocked with granular sugar, a common method of attracting these birds.[31] The bananaquit builds a spherical lined nest with a side entrance hole, laying up to three eggs, which are incubated solely by the female.[35] It may also build its nest in human-made objects, such as lampshades and garden
trellises. The birds breed all year regardless of season and build new nests throughout the year.[31]
Monteiro Pereira, José Felipe (2008). Aves e Pássaros Comuns do Rio de Janeiro [Common Birds of Rio de Janeiro] (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro: Technical Books.
ISBN978-85-61368-00-5.
De Boer, Bart A. (1993). Our Birds. Willemstad: Stichting Dierenbescherming Curaçao.
ISBN978-99904-0-077-9.
Raffaele, Herbert; Wiley, James; Garrido, Orlando; Keith, Allan; Raffaele, Janis (1998). A Guide to the Birds of the West Indies. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
ISBN978-0-691-08736-8.
Restall, R. L.; Rodner, C.; Lentino, M. (2006). Birds of Northern South America – An Identification Guide. London: Christopher Helm.
ISBN0-7136-7242-0.
Seutin, G; Klein, N. K.; Ricklefs, R. E.; Bermingham, E. (1994). "Historical biogeography of the bananaquit (Coereba flaveola) in the Caribbean region: a mitochondrial DNA assessment". Evolution. 48 (4): 1041–1061.
doi:
10.2307/2410365.
JSTOR2410365.
PMID28564451.
Vieillot, Louis Pierre (1809). Histoire naturelle des oiseaux de l'Amérique septentrionale [Natural History of the Birds of Northern America] (in French). Paris: Desray.
Further reading
Skutch, Alexander F. (1962).
Life Histories of Central American Birds(PDF). Pacific Coast Avifauna, Number 31. Berkeley, California: Cooper Ornithological Society. pp. 404–420.