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Species of bird
The common cicadabird (Edolisoma tenuirostre ), also known as the slender-billed cicadabird , is a species of
bird in the family
Campephagidae . It is found in
Australia ,
Indonesia ,
New Guinea , and the
Solomon Islands . Its natural
habitats are
temperate forest and
subtropical or tropical moist lowland forest .
[2] The species is placed in the reinstated genus Edolisoma by most authors.
[3] The common cicadabird was described as a "great speciator" by
Mayr &
Diamond (2001);
[4] and Pedersen et al. (2018)
[3] described how this species rapidly colonized and diversified across the
Indo-Pacific island region and
Australia in the
Pleistocene .
Subspecies
Numerous subspecies have been described; the list below is sorted taxonomically:
[5]
E. t. edithae
Stresseman , 1932 - southern
Sulawesi
E. t. pererratum
Hartert, E. , 1918 -
Tukangbesi Islands , Indonesia
E. t. kalaotuae
Meise , 1929 -
Kalaotoa in the
Selayar Islands , Indonesia
E. t. emancipatum Hartert, E., 1918 -
Banggai Island , Indonesia
E. t. grayi
Salvadori , 1879 -
Morotai to
Bacan in the northern
Maluku Islands , Indonesia
E. t. obiense Salvadori, 1879 -
Obi Islands , Indonesia
E. t. amboiense (
Hartlaub , 1865) -
Buru ,
Ambon ,
Seram , and other
Seram Sea islands, Indonesia
E. t. matthiae
Sibley , 1946 -
Mussau and
Emirau ,
Papua New Guinea
E. t. heinrothi Stresseman, 1922 -
New Britain and
Lolobau , Papua New Guinea
E. t. rooki
Rothschild & Hartert, E., 1914 -
Umboi , Papua New Guinea
E. t. nehrkorni Salvadori, 1890 -
Waigeo ,
western New Guinea
E. t. numforanum (Peters, J.L. &
Mayr , 1960) -
Numfor , western New Guinea
E. t. meyerii Salvadori, 1878 -
Biak , western New Guinea
E. t. aruense
Sharpe , 1878 - southwestern and south-central
New Guinea and the
Aru Islands
E. t. muellerii Salvadori, 1876 - most of New Guinea (aside from the south),
Kofiau &
Misool ,
Long ,
Sakar , and the
D'Entrecasteaux Islands
E. t. tagulanum Hartert, E., 1898 -
Misima and
Tagula , Papua New Guinea
E. t. rostratum Hartert, E., 1898 -
Rossel , Papua New Guinea
E. t. melvillense (
Mathews , 1912) - northern
Australia from northeastern
Western Australia to the
Cape York Peninsula , south to northeast
Queensland
E. t. tenuirostre (
Jardine , 1831) - eastern Australia from east-central Queensland south to southeast
Victoria
The former subspecies E. t. nisorium was found to be of erroneous placement and to actually belong to the
grey-capped cicadabird (E. remotum ), and was thus moved to it by the
International Ornithological Congress in 2022.
[6]
Gallery
Kobble Creek, southeast Queensland
Adult male and juvenile,
Rush Creek , southeast Queensland
Crossroads Reserve, New South Wales
References
^ BirdLife International (2017).
"Edolisoma tenuirostre " .
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species . 2017 : e.T103702470A118729711.
doi :
10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-3.RLTS.T103702470A118729711.en . Retrieved 17 November 2021 .
^ BirdLife International.
^
a
b Pedersen, M.P.; Irestedt, M.; Joseph, L.; Rahbek, C.; Jønsson, K.A. (2018). "Phylogeography of a 'great speciator' (Aves: Edolisoma tenuirostre ) reveals complex dispersal and diversification dynamics across the Indo-Pacific". Journal of Biogeography . 45 (4): 826–837.
doi :
10.1111/jbi.13182 .
hdl :
11250/2593769 .
S2CID
46029743 .
^ Mayr, E.; Diamond, J.M. (2001). The Birds of Northern Melanesia: Speciation, Ecology and Biogeography . New York: Oxford University Press.
ISBN
978-0-19-534966-5 .
^
"Bristlehead, butcherbirds, woodswallows, Mottled Berryhunter, ioras, cuckooshrikes – IOC World Bird List" . Retrieved 2022-06-10 .
^
"Subspecies Updates – IOC World Bird List" . Retrieved 2022-06-10 .
External links
Coracina tenuirostris Edolisoma tenuirostre