Lapwing

Lapwing

Taxobox
name = Lapwings


image_width = 240px
image_caption = Blacksmith Lapwing ("Vanellus armatus")
regnum = Animalia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
subclassis = Neornithes
infraclassis = Neognathae
superordo = Neoaves
ordo = Charadriiformes
subordo = Charadrii
familia = Charadriidae
subfamilia = Vanellinae
subfamilia_authority = Bonaparte, 1842
subdivision_ranks = Genera
subdivision = "Erythrogonys"
"Vanellus"
and see text

Vanellinae are a subfamily of medium-sized wading birds belonging to the family Charadriidae, which also includes the plovers and dotterels. The Vanellinae are collectively called lapwings but also contain the ancient Red-kneed Dotterel. A lapwing can be thought of as a larger plover.

The traditional terms "plover", "lapwing" and "dotterel" were coined long before modern understandings of the relationships between different groups of birds emerged: in consequence, several of the Vanellinae are still often called "plovers", and the reverse also applies, albeit more rarely, to some Charadriinae (the "true" plovers and dotterels).

The collective term for a group of lapwings is a "deceit of lapwings."

ystematics

:"For genera sometimes split from "Vanellus", see there."While authorities are generally agreed that there about 25 species of Vanellinae, classifications within the subfamily remain confused. At one extreme, Peters recognised no less than 20 different generaFact|date=April 2008 for the birds listed in 2 genera here; other workers have gone as far as to group all the "true" lapwings (except the Red-kneed Dotterel) into the single genus, "Vanellus". Current opinion appears to be that a more moderate position is appropriate, but it is not clear which genera to split. The "Handbook of Birds of the World" provisionally lumps all Vanellinae in "Vanellus" except the Red-kneed Dotterel which is in the monotypic "Erythrogonys". Its plesiomorphic habitus reminds of plovers, but details like the missing hallux (hind toe) are like in lapwings: it is still not entirely clear whether it is better considere the basalmost plover or lapwing. [Piersma & Wiersma (1996), Thomas "et al." (2004)]

Many coloration details of the Red-kneed Dotterel also occur here and there among the living members of the main lapwing clade. Its position as the most basal of the living Vanellinae or just immediately outside it thus means that their last common ancestor - or even the last common ancestor of plovers and lapwings - almost certainly was a plover-sized bird with a black crown and breast-band, a white feather patch at the wrist, no hallux, and a lipochromic (probably red) bill with a black tip. Its legs most likely were black or the color of the bill's base.Piersma & Wiersma (1996)]

Evolution

The fossil record of the Vanellinae is scant and mostly of rather recent origin; no Neogene lapwings seem to be known. On the other hand, it appears as if early in their evolutionary history the plovers, lapwings and dotterels must indeed have been almost one and the same, and certainly they are hard to distinguish osteologically even today. Thus, since the Red-kneed Dotterel is so distinct that it might arguably be considered a monotypic subfamily, increasing the reliability of dating its divergence from a selection of true lapwings and plovers would also give a good idea of charadriid wader evolution altogether.

A mid-Oligocene - c.28 mya (million years ago) - fossil from Rupelmonde in Belgium has been assigned to "Vanellus", but even iuf the genus were broadly defined it is entirely unclead if the placement is correct. Its age ties in with the appearance of the first seemingly distinct Charadriinae at about the same time, and with the presence of more basal Charadriidae a few million years earlier. However, the assignment of fragmentary fossils to Charadriinae or Vanellinae is not easy. Thus it is very likely that the charadriid waders originate around the Eocene-Oligocene boundary - roughly 40-30 mya - but nothing more can be said at present. If the Belgian fossil is not a true lapwing, there are actually no Vanellinae fossils known before the Quaternary. [Piersma & Wiersma (1996), Mlíkovský (2002)]

The Early Oligocene fossil "Dolicopterus" [Not "Dolichopterus", "contra" Mlíkovský (2002)] from Ronzon (France) may be such an ancestral member of the Charadriidae or even the Vanellinae, but it has not been studied in recent decades and is in dire need of review. [Mlíkovský (2002)]

Apart from the prehistoric "Vanellus", the extinct lapwing genus "Viator" has been described from fossils. Its remains were found in the tar pits of Talara in Peru and it lived in the Late Pleistocene. Little is known of this rather large lapwing; it may actually belong in "Vanellus". [Campbell (2002)]

Interestingly, the remaining Charadrii are highset and/or chunky birds, even decidedly larger than a lot of the scolopacid waders. The evolutionary trend regarding the Charadriidae - which make up most of the diversity of the Charadrii - thus runs contrary to Cope's Rule.

List of species in taxonomic order

Genus "Vanellus"
* Northern Lapwing, "Vanellus vanellus"
* White-headed Plover, "Vanellus albiceps"
* Southern Lapwing, "Vanellus chilensis"
* Grey-headed Lapwing, "Vanellus cinereus"
* Crowned Lapwing, "Vanellus coronatus"
* Long-toed Lapwing, "Vanellus crassirostris"
* River Lapwing or Spur-winged Lapwing, "Vanellus duvaucelii"
* Red-wattled Lapwing, "Vanellus indicus"
* Masked Lapwing, "Vanellus miles"
* Spur-winged Lapwing or Spur-winged Plover, "Vanellus spinosus"
* Banded Lapwing, "Vanellus tricolor"
* Blacksmith Lapwing, "Vanellus armatus"
* Black-headed Lapwing, "Vanellus tectus"
* Yellow-wattled Lapwing, "Vanellus malabaricus"
* Senegal Lapwing, "Vanellus lugubris"
* Black-winged Lapwing, "Vanellus melanopterus"
* African Wattled Lapwing, "Vanellus senegallus"
* Spot-breasted Lapwing, "Vanellus melanocephalus"
* Brown-chested Lapwing, "Vanellus superciliosus"
* Javanese Wattled Lapwing, "Vanellus macropterus"
* Sociable Lapwing, "Vanellus gregarius"
* White-tailed Lapwing, "Vanellus leucurus"
* Pied Lapwing, "Vanellus cayanus"
* Andean Lapwing, "Vanellus resplendens"

Genus "Erythrogonys"
* Red-kneed Dotterel, "Erythrogonys cinctus"

Footnotes

References

* (2002): A new species of Late Pleistocene lapwing from Rancho La Brea, California [English with Spanish abstract] . "Condor" 104: 170-174. DOI:10.1650/0010-5422(2002)104 [0170:ANSOLP] 2.0.CO;2 [http://www.jstor.org/pss/1370353 HTML abstract and first page image]
* (2002): "Cenozoic Birds of the World, Part 1: Europe". Ninox Press, Prague. ISBN 80-901105-3-8 [http://www.nm.cz/download/JML-18-2002-CBE.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (1996): Family Charadriidae (Plovers). "In:" aut|del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew & Sargatal, Jordi (eds.): "Handbook of Birds of the World" (Volume 3: Hoatzin to Auks): 384-443, plates 35-39. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. ISBN 84-87334-20-2
* (2004): A supertree approach to shorebird phylogeny. "BMC Evol. Biol." 4: 28. doi|10.1186/1471-2148-4-28 [http://www.pubmedcentral.org/picrender.fcgi?artid=515296&blobtype=pdf PDF fulltext] [http://www.pubmedcentral.org/articlerender.fcgi?artid=515296#supplementary-material-sec Supplementary Material]

External links

* [http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/familia.phtml?idFamilia=60 Lapwing videos] on the Internet Bird Collection
* [http://gallery.new-ecopsychology.org/en/lapwing.htm Lapwing Hatchlings video] From Gallery of Living Nature.


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Synonyms:
(Tringa vanellus or Vanellus cristatus)


Look at other dictionaries:

  • Lapwing — Lap wing , n. [OE. lapwynke, leepwynke, AS. hle[ a]pewince; hle[ a]pan to leap, jump + (prob.) a word akin to AS. wincian to wink, E. wink, AS. wancol wavering; cf. G. wanken to stagger, waver. See {Leap}, and {Wink}.] (Zo[ o]l.) A small European …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • lapwing — M.E. lappewinke (late 14c.), lapwyngis (early 15c.), folk etymology alteration of O.E. hleapewince, probably lit. leaper winker, from hleapan to leap + wince totter, waver, move rapidly, related to wincian to wink. Said to be so called from the… …   Etymology dictionary

  • lapwing — ► NOUN ▪ a large crested plover with a dark green back, black and white head and underparts, and a loud call. ORIGIN Old English, from words meaning «to leap» and «move from side to side» (because of the way it flies) …   English terms dictionary

  • lapwing — [lap′wiŋ΄] n. [ME lapwinge, altered (by folk etym., by assoc. with lappe, LAP1 & wing, WING) < OE hleapewince < hleapan, to LEAP + wince < wincian (see WINK): prob. so called from its irregular flight] any of a genus (Vanellus) of black… …   English World dictionary

  • lapwing — /lap wing /, n. 1. a large Old World plover, Vanellus vanellus, having a long, slender, upcurved crest, an erratic, flapping flight, and a shrill cry. 2. any of several similar, related plovers. [bef. 1050; ME, var. (by assoc. with WING) of… …   Universalium

  • lapwing — /ˈlæpwɪŋ/ (say lapwing) noun 1. Also, northern lapwing. a common wading bird, Vanellus vanellus, of Europe, northern Africa and parts of the Middle East, having green wings and a long crest. 2. any of various other birds of the genus Vanellus,… …  

  • lapwing — UK [ˈlæpˌwɪŋ] / US noun [countable] Word forms lapwing : singular lapwing plural lapwings a small European bird with dark feathers, a white breast, and raised feathers on its head. A lapwing is sometimes called a peewit …   English dictionary

  • lapwing — [OE] The present day form of the word lapwing is due to the notion that it describes the way the bird’s wings overlap in flight, but in fact although it did originally refer to the way the bird flies, it has no etymological connection with lap or …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • lapwing — [OE] The present day form of the word lapwing is due to the notion that it describes the way the bird’s wings overlap in flight, but in fact although it did originally refer to the way the bird flies, it has no etymological connection with lap or …   Word origins

  • lapwing — noun /ˈlæpwɪŋ/ a) Any of several medium sized wading birds belonging to the subfamily Vanellinae of the family Charadriidae. This lapwing runs away with the shell on his head. b) A silly man …   Wiktionary

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