- Broad-billed Sapayoa
__NOTOC__Taxobox
name = Broad-billed Sapayoa
status = LC
status_system = iucn3.1
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Chordata
classis =Aves
ordo =Passeriformes
subordo =Tyranni
familia = see text
genus = "Sapayoa"
genus_authority = Hartert, 1903
species = "S. aenigma"
binomial = "Sapayoa aenigma"
binomial_authority = Hartert, 1903The Broad-billed Sapayoa (or simply Sapayoa), "Sapayoa aenigma", is a
suboscine passerine found in lowlandrainforest s inPanama and northwestSouth America . As the epithet "aenigma" ("theenigma ") implies, its relationships have long been elusive. It is easy to overlook, but appears to be common in a wide range and is not considered threatened by theIUCN [BLI (2004)] .The Sapayoa is a small, olive-colored bird, somewhat paler below and with a yellowish throat. Its
habitus resembles a bigger, longer-tailed, broader-billed femalemanakin . It is rare to uncommon in the forest understory, favoring ravines and small streamsRidgely & Tudor (1994): p.689, plate 46.] . It is usually seen in pairs or mixed-species flocks. It spends long periods perching, then sallies up to pick fruit or catch insects, on foliage or in mid air, with its flat, wide bill in a way reminiscent offlatbill s. Other aspects of its biology as late as 2003 were still unknown [Kemp & Sherley (2003)] .It has always been considered a
monotypic genus "Sapayoa" and historically regarded as a New World suboscine; in particular, it was assigned to the manakin family (Pipridae ). However, thespecies was listed as "incertae sedis " (position uncertain) in theSibley-Ahlquist taxonomy , because"preliminary DNA-DNA hybridization comparisons [...] indicate that this species is either a relative of the Old World
Eurylaimidae or a sister group of all otherTyrannida , as suggested by earlier biochemical studies [...] In any event, it is not a close relative of manakins or any other recent tyrannoid. [Sibley & Ahlquist (1990)] "More recent research suggests that it is not a New World suboscine at all, but an Old World suboscine. In 2004, it was shown that the Sapoyoa is an outlier to the New World suboscines [Chesser (2004)] . In an earleri analysis based on
nDNA myoglobin intron 2 andGAPDH intron 11 sequence data, the authors found the Sapayoa"as a deep branch in the group of
broadbill s and pittas of the Old World tropicsFjeldså "et al." (2003)] ."Accordingly, the Sapayoa would be the last surviving New World species of a lineage that evolved in
Australia-New Guinea whenGondwana was in the process of splitting apart. The Sapayoa's ancestors are hypothesized to have reached South America via theWestern Antarctica Peninsula.Nowadays, the Sapoyoa is sometimes placed in the family
Eurylaimidae with the broadbills [E.g. Banks "et al." (2008)] . Others tentatively place the Sapayoa in theasity family Philepittidae [Kemp & Sherley (2003), though it is not clear whether Kemp and Sherley or Perrins acutally include the Broad-billed Sapayoa "in" the Philepittidae.] otherwise found only inMadagascar and sometimes included in the broadbill family.However, the divergence between the broadbills and the Sapayoa found in the 2003 study is only slightly less deep than that between the Sapayoa and the pittas. It is even possible though unlikely that the present species is actually closer to the pittas than to the broadbills. Consequently, it is suggested to place the Sapayoa in its own
monotypic family Sapayoidae [E.g. Irestedt "et al." (2006)] , as is done here.ee also
*
Monito del Monte Footnotes
References
*|year=2004|id=49751|title=Sapayoa aenigma|downloaded=12 May 2006
* (2008): Forty-ninth supplement to the American Ornithologists' Union "Check-list of North American Birds". "The Auk" 125(3): 758–768. doi|10.1525.auk/2008.9708 [http://aou.org/checklist/suppl/AOU_checklist_suppl_49.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2004): Molecular systematics of New World suboscine birds. "Mol. Phylogenet. Evol." 32(1): 11-24. doi|10.1016/j.ympev.2003.11.015 [http://www.nmnh.si.edu/vert/birds/pdf/rtc5.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2003): "Sapayoa aenigma": a New World representative of 'Old World suboscines'. "Proc. R. Soc. B" 270(Supplement 2): 238-241. doi|10.1098/rsbl.2003.0075 [http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.uk/content/pex3axvgv57p32ac/fulltext.pdf PDF fulltext] [http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.uk/content/pex3axvgv57p32ac/archive1.pdf Electronic supplement]
* (2006): Nuclear DNA from old collections of avian study skins reveals the evolutionary history of the Old World suboscines (Aves: Passeriformes). "Zool. Scripta" 35(6): 567-580. doi|10.1111/j.1463-6409.2006.00249.x [http://www.nrm.se/download/18.72ab64ef10e51a5c8f4800047/Irestedt+et+al+OW+suboscines.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2003): Asities. "In:" aut|Perrins, Christopher (ed.): "Firefly Encyclopedia of Birds": 421. Firefly Books. ISBN 1-55297-777-3
* (1994): "The Birds of South America" (Volume 2: The suboscine passerines). University of Texas Press, Austin. ISBN 0-292-77063-4
* (1990): "Distribution and taxonomy of the birds of the world: A Study in Molecular Evolution". Yale University Press, New Haven, CT. ISBN 0-300-04969-2External links
* [http://montereybay.com/creagrus/sapayoa.html Don Roberson's Bird Families of the World]
* [http://www.bsc-eoc.org/avibase/avibase.jsp?pg=checklist®ion=cam&list=sibleymonroe&synlang=DE&lang=EN Avibase The World Bird Database]
* [http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/species/index.html?action=SpcHTMDetails.asp&sid=4043&m=0 BirdLife Species Factsheet]
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