Description of the song of the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the Zoothera dauma species complex

Abstract Background Taxonomic treatment of the Zoothera dauma species complex is highly variable and has been hampered by the absence of song recordings for the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis). Methods I obtained two recordings of the song of neigherriensis from southern Indian. He...

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Main Author: Jason T. Weir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-08-01
Series:Avian Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40657-018-0121-x
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spelling doaj-89612a9f24814262add19e9bb9150f5f2020-11-24T21:51:18ZengBMCAvian Research2053-71662018-08-01911710.1186/s40657-018-0121-xDescription of the song of the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the Zoothera dauma species complexJason T. Weir0Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of TorontoAbstract Background Taxonomic treatment of the Zoothera dauma species complex is highly variable and has been hampered by the absence of song recordings for the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis). Methods I obtained two recordings of the song of neigherriensis from southern Indian. Here I publish sonograms and analyze song recordings for all but one currently described taxon from the Eurasian portion of the geographic range of this species complex. Principal component analyses were used to investigate song differences between taxa. Results The song of neigherriensis is a highly complex series of strophes remarkably similar to the song of the insular Zoothera major. Vocal analyses across the complex indicate four key groups of taxa differentiated in their songs: (1) simple flat whistled songs which include the northern aurea, toratugumi and the undescribed Taiwan population; (2) eastern populations of dauma (reported here for the first time) which sing like northern birds but with much broader bandwidth, (3) strongly down-slurred, thin whistles of tropical resident imbricata of Sri Lanka and horsfieldi of Indonesia, and (4) highly complex songs of Himalayan dauma, neilgherriensis and major. Conclusions Zoothera dauma is unlikely to represent a single species given the simple singing populations from its eastern range and highly complex song from the Himalayan portion of its range. neilgherriensis should either be transferred from Zoothera aurea, where it is currently classified as a subspecies, and be placed as a subspecies within Z. dauma from the Himalayas or it should be recognized as a distinct species. Given the small number of songs available for analyses, I suggest the former course until it can be clearly demonstrated that neilgherriensis and Himalayan dauma are vocally distinct.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40657-018-0121-xNilgiri ThrushneilgherriensisZoothera daumaSongTaxonomy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jason T. Weir
spellingShingle Jason T. Weir
Description of the song of the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the Zoothera dauma species complex
Avian Research
Nilgiri Thrush
neilgherriensis
Zoothera dauma
Song
Taxonomy
author_facet Jason T. Weir
author_sort Jason T. Weir
title Description of the song of the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the Zoothera dauma species complex
title_short Description of the song of the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the Zoothera dauma species complex
title_full Description of the song of the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the Zoothera dauma species complex
title_fullStr Description of the song of the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the Zoothera dauma species complex
title_full_unstemmed Description of the song of the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the Zoothera dauma species complex
title_sort description of the song of the nilgiri thrush (zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis) and song differentiation across the zoothera dauma species complex
publisher BMC
series Avian Research
issn 2053-7166
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Abstract Background Taxonomic treatment of the Zoothera dauma species complex is highly variable and has been hampered by the absence of song recordings for the Nilgiri Thrush (Zoothera [aurea] neilgherriensis). Methods I obtained two recordings of the song of neigherriensis from southern Indian. Here I publish sonograms and analyze song recordings for all but one currently described taxon from the Eurasian portion of the geographic range of this species complex. Principal component analyses were used to investigate song differences between taxa. Results The song of neigherriensis is a highly complex series of strophes remarkably similar to the song of the insular Zoothera major. Vocal analyses across the complex indicate four key groups of taxa differentiated in their songs: (1) simple flat whistled songs which include the northern aurea, toratugumi and the undescribed Taiwan population; (2) eastern populations of dauma (reported here for the first time) which sing like northern birds but with much broader bandwidth, (3) strongly down-slurred, thin whistles of tropical resident imbricata of Sri Lanka and horsfieldi of Indonesia, and (4) highly complex songs of Himalayan dauma, neilgherriensis and major. Conclusions Zoothera dauma is unlikely to represent a single species given the simple singing populations from its eastern range and highly complex song from the Himalayan portion of its range. neilgherriensis should either be transferred from Zoothera aurea, where it is currently classified as a subspecies, and be placed as a subspecies within Z. dauma from the Himalayas or it should be recognized as a distinct species. Given the small number of songs available for analyses, I suggest the former course until it can be clearly demonstrated that neilgherriensis and Himalayan dauma are vocally distinct.
topic Nilgiri Thrush
neilgherriensis
Zoothera dauma
Song
Taxonomy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40657-018-0121-x
work_keys_str_mv AT jasontweir descriptionofthesongofthenilgirithrushzootheraaureaneilgherriensisandsongdifferentiationacrossthezootheradaumaspeciescomplex
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