Thick-billed Fox Sparrow

Thick-billed Fox Sparrow

Taxobox
name = Thick-billed Fox Sparrow
status = NE
regnum = Animalia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo = Passeriformes
familia = Emberizidae
genus = "Passerella"
species = "P. (iliaca) megarhyncha"
trinomial = "Passerella iliaca megarhyncha""' group
trinomial_authority = Baird, 1858
range_

range_map_width = 256px
range_map_caption = Breeding ranges of the four Fox Sparrow groups
subdivision_ranks = Subspecies
subdivision = 5-6, see article text

The Thick-billed Fox Sparrow ("Passerella (iliaca) megarhyncha") group are the peculiarly large-billed Sierra Nevadan taxa in the genus "Passerella". It is currently classified as a "subspecies group" [Not defined by the ICZN] within the Fox Sparrow pending wider-spread acceptance of its species status.

These birds were long considered members of the Slate-colored Fox Sparrow group due to morphological characteristics (Swarth 1920), but according to mtDNA cytochrome "b" sequence and haplotype data (Zink 1994), it forms a recognizable clade. Research on suspected (Rising & Beadle 1996) hybridization and considering additional DNA sequence data led to confirmation of their distinctiveness (Zink & Kessen 1999); this group appears to be most closely related to the Sooty and/or Slate-colored Fox Sparrows (Zink 1996, Zink & Weckstein 2003).

Thick-billed Fox Sparrows are almost identical in plumage to Slate-colored Fox Sparrows but have a more extensive blue-gray hood and a less rusty tail. The most striking feature of this bird is its enormous beak which can appear to be three times as large as that of the markedly small-billed Slate-colored Fox Sparrows [Etymology: "megarhyncha", "large-billed", from Ancient Greek "mega"-, "great" + "rhynchos", "beak".] A Thick-billed Fox Sparrow's beak also differs in color from that of the Slate-colored. Although the culmens of both groups are grayish brown, Slate-coloreds have yellow lower mandibles instead of the steel blue of the Thick-billeds' (Rising & Beadle 1996).

ubspecies

The "megarhyncha" complex breeds in mountains from southern Oregon to southern California east to the Sierra Nevada and shows little geographic variation. It interbreeds with the Slate-colored complex along a narrow contact zone from southern Oregon to western Nevada (Rising & Beadle 1996) but as noted above, gene flow is quite limited. Sibley (2000) indicates that this group has the most diagnostic call note, "a high, flat squeak (sic) "teep" like California Towhee".

* "megarhyncha" Baird, 1858::Breeds from Onion Mountains and Robinson's Butte (SW Oregon) south through inland N California to Kearsarge Pass (Inyo County), as well as the western flank of the Sierra Nevada in Mono County. Winters in C and S California and adjacent Mexico.(Weckstein "et al." 2002):More large-billed, duller, and grayer than "schistacea" Slate-colored Fox Sparrows; intermediate between the very large long-tailed "stephensi" and the more "schistacea"-like "monoensis" of this group; intergrades with former.(Weckstein "et al." 2002)

* "stephensi" Anthony, 1895::Breeds in areas of the S Sierra Nevada such as Fresno and Tulare Counties, Mount Pinos and San Gabriel, San Bernardino, and San Jacinto Mountains, California, to the Sierra San Mártir, N Baja California. In winter, migrates to lower elevations but generally does not migrate long distances.(Weckstein "et al." 2002):The largest, most massive-billed and longest-tailed fox sparrow; also very grey in coloration (Swarth 1920). Intergrades with "megarhyncha" (Weckstein "et al." 2002).

* "monoensis" Grinnell & Storer, 1917::Breeds on the eastern flank of the Sierra Nevada in Mono County, California, and in the Walker River Range in adjacent Mineral County, Nevada. Winters from inland central California coastwards and south into Mexico.(Weckstein "et al." 2002):Somewhat intermediate between "megarhyncha" and "schistacea" Slate-colored Fox Sparrows, with a paler, ashy grey back.(Weckstein "et al." 2002)

* "brevicauda" Mailliard, 1918::Breeds in the Mendocino Range of California, from the Yolla Bolly Mountains south to Snow Mountain and Sanhedrin Mountains. Migrates coastwards and south in winter.(Weckstein "et al." 2002):Similar to "stephensi", but recognizable by more rusty tinge to brownish areas and the conspicuously shorter tail (Weckstein "et al." 2002).

* "fulva" Swarth, 1918::Mountaineous regions from C Oregon east of Cascades Range (Steens Mountain, Sisters and Keeno Mountains) to Modoc and Lassen Counties, California. Winters in southwesternmost California and adjacent Mexico.:A browner version of "monoensis"; in winter range, distinguished from "olivacea" Slate-colored Fox Sparrows by decidedly ruddy brown and larger bill (Weckstein "et al." 2002).

* "mariposae" Swarth, 1918::Breeding in a limited area in California between the headwaters of the Little Shasta River (Siskiyou County) to Yosemite National Park and Kearsarge Pass. Winter range undocumented (Weckstein "et al." 2002) due to lack of distinctiveness but probably same as "megarhyncha" and "monoensis".:Probably nothing more than intergrades between "megarhyncha" and "monoensis"; nowadays usually synonymized with the former (Rising & Beadle 1996).

References

* Rising, Jim D. & Beadle, David (1996): "A Guide to the Identification and Natural History of the Sparrows of the United States and Canada". Academic Press, San Diego. ISBN 0-12-588971-2

* Sibley, David Allen (2000): "The Sibley Guide to Birds". Alfred A. Knopf, New York. ISBN 0-679-45122-6

* Swarth H. W. (1920): Revision of the avian genus "Passerella" with special reference to the distribution and migration of the races in California. "University of California Publications in Zoology 21: 75–224.

* Weckstein, J. D.; Kroodsma, D. E. & Faucett, R. C. (2002): Fox Sparrow ("Passerella iliaca"). "In:" Poole, A. & Gill, F. (eds.): "The Birds of North America" 715. Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA & American Ornithologists' Union, Washington, D.C. Online version, retrieved 2006-11-27. DOI|10.2173/bna.715 (requires subscription)

* Zink, R. M. (1994): The Geography of Mitochondrial DNA Variation, Population Structure, hybridization, and Species Limits in the Fox Sparrow ("Passerella iliaca"). "Evolution" 48(1): 96-111. DOI|10.2307/2410006 (HTML abstract, first page image)

* Zink, Robert M. & Kessen, A. E. (1999): Species Limits in the Fox Sparrow. "Birding" 31: 508-517.

* Zink, Robert M. & Weckstein, Jason D. (2003): Recent evolutionary history of the Fox Sparrows (Genus: "Passerella"). "Auk" 120(2): 522–527. [Article in English with Spanish abstract] DOI: 10.1642/0004-8038(2003)120 [0522:REHOTF] 2.0.CO;2 [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3793/is_200304/ai_n9166839 HTML fulltext] (without images)

Footnotes


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