- Birds of South Asia. The Ripley Guide
infobox Book |
name = Birds of South Asia. The Ripley Guide
title_orig =
translator =
image_caption =
author =Pamela C. Rasmussen andJohn C. Anderton
illustrator = Anderton and eleven other artists
cover_artist = Anderton
country = U.S.
language = English
series =
genre =
publisher =Smithsonian Institution andLynx Edicions
release_date =2005
media_type = Print (Hardback )
pages =
isbn = 84-87334-67-9 (both vols.)
84-87334-65-2 (vol. 1)
84-87334-66-0 (vol. 2)
preceded_by =
followed_by =:"Birds of South Asia redirects here. For a list of the birds of South Asia see
List of birds of South Asia ."Birds of South Asia. The Ripley Guide" by
Pamela C. Rasmussen andJohn C. Anderton is a two-volumeornithological handbook , covering the birds ofSouth Asia , published in2005 by theSmithsonian Institution andLynx Edicions . The geographical scope of the book coversIndia ,Bangladesh ,Pakistan ,Sri Lanka ,Nepal ,Bhutan ,Maldives , theChagos archipelago andAfghanistan (the latter country had been excluded from previous works covering this region). In total, 1508 species are covered (this figure includes 85 hypothetical and 67 'possible' species, which are given only shorter accounts). Two notable aspects of "Birds of South Asia" are its distribution evidence-base — the book's authors based their distributional information almost completely onmuseum specimen s — and its taxonomic approach, involving a large number of species-level splits.The books
Volume 1 is a
field guide . A nine-page introduction is followed by 180 colour plates, each with an accompanying text page giving brief identification notes, and, for most species, range maps. In addition to the 69 plates by Anderton, eleven other artists contributed, includingIan Lewington andBill Zetterström . Volume 2: Attributes and Status contains more detailed supporting texts for every species. Twelve other authors are listed as having contributed to this volume, includingPer Alström ,Nigel Collar andCraig Robson . This volume opens with an appreciation, written byBruce Beehler , ofS. Dillon Ripley , who initiated the work which led to the book, and after whom it is named. This is followed by a 24-page introduction. The bulk of the book, from pages 41 to 601, consists of individual species accounts; each of these includes sections on identification, occurrence, habits and voice (this latter section accompanied by sonograms for many species). There are ten appendices, including a hypothetical list, a list of rejected species, a summary of taxonomic changes, a glossary, a gazetteer, and a list of institutions holding major collections of South Asian bird specimens.The book's covers are illustrated by montages of South Asian birds, painted by Anderton. Volume 1 features
Crimson-backed Flameback ,Stork-billed Kingfisher ,Indian Eagle-owl ,Black-and-orange Flycatcher andHimalayan Quail on its front cover. Volume 2 features sixlaughingthrush species: Variegated, Bhutan, Grey-sided, Blue-winged, Black-chinned and Assam. The back covers of both volumes feature a painting of Serendib andNicobar Scops-owl s.Taxonomic changes
In preparing the book, the authors undertook a major revision of the taxonomic status of bird forms found in the region; many allopatric forms previously regarded as
conspecific are treated by Rasmussen and Anderton as full species. Many of these had previously been proposed elsewhere, but the book introduced a number of innovations of its own. [Collar & Pilgrim (2008) includes an analysis of Rasmussen & Anderton's proposed changes, indicating which had previously been proposed by other authors, and which are novel.] The majority of these changes, and the overwhelming majority of the novel ones, are among thepasserine s. The following is a list of the groups of taxa which are considered conspecific in the sixth edition of the "Clements Checklist " (Clements 2007), [At the time of Birds of South Asia's publication, "Clements" was the most widely used world bird checklist; the sixth edition was published shortly after Birds of South Asia, and hence is used here as the best work to view the effect of Rasmussen & Anderton's proposals; when compared with earlier regional lists, such as the "Oriental Bird Club checklist " (Inskipp "et". "al". 1996), the effects are greater still.] [Rasmussen & Anderton do not split two pairs of taxa which are treated as separate species in "Clements'" sixth edition, MacQueen's andHoubara Bustard s (vol 2, pp. 148-9), and Carrion andHooded Crow s (vol 2, p. 599).] but split into two or more species in Rasmussen and Anderton's work (volume 2 page references in brackets).Non-passerines
* (p. 53)
Oriental Darter ("Anhinga melanogaster") is treated as amonotypic Asian species, separate from African ("A. rufa") and Australasian ("A. novaehollandiae") Darters. [This treatment had been followed in the first edition of "Peters' Checklist " (Peters 1931) but not by most other 20th Century authors.]
* (p. 58)Cattle Egret ("Bubulcus ibis") is split into two species:Western Cattle Egret ("B. ibis sensu stricto") andEastern Cattle Egret ("B. coromandus") [McAllan & Bruce (1988) had previously adopted this treatment, but the two taxa had been regarded as conspecific by almost all other recent authors.]
* (p. 60)Black-backed Bittern ("Ixobrychus dubius") is split fromLittle Bittern ("I. minutus") [The fifth edition of "Clements' checklist " (Clements 2000) treated these two taxa as distinct species, but they were lumped in the sixth edition]
* (pp. 68-9) Whistling ("Cygnus columbianus") and Bewick's ("C. bewickii") Swans are regarded as separate species [A treatment previously proposed in the "Conspectus of the ornithological fauna of the USSR " (Stepanyan 1990), but not adopted widely in Europe or North America.]
* (pp. 74-5)Spot-billed Duck ("Anas poecilorhyncha") is split into two species,Indian Spot-billed Duck ("A. poecilorhyncha sensu stricto") andChinese Spot-billed Duck ("A. zonorhyncha") [Sympatric occurrence of the two putative species in the breeding season without interbreeding was first documented by Carey & Melville 1996.]
* (pp. 101-2)Common Buzzard ("Buteo buteo ") is split into two or three species: [Rasmussen and Anderton made a firm decision to split Himalayan Buzzard; they describe Japanese Buzzard as "probably specifically distinct".] Common Buzzard ("B. buteo sensu stricto"),Himalayan Buzzard ("B. burmanicus") andJapanese Buzzard ("B. (buteo) japonicus")
* (pp. 108-9) Changeable ("Spizaetus limnaeetus") and Crested ("S. cirrhatus") Hawk-eagles are treated as separate species [A treatment previously proposed by Fleming "et". "al". 1984]
* (pp. 141-2)Eastern Water Rail ("Rallus indicus") is split from (European) Water Rail ("R. aquaticus")
* (pp. 154-5) Kentish ("Charadrius alexandrinus") and Snowy ("C. nivosus") Plovers are treated as separate species
* (pp. 181-2)Indian Stone-curlew ("Burhinus indicus") is split fromEurasian Stone-curlew ("B. oedicnemus")
* (pp. 211-2)Emerald Dove ("Chalcophaps indica") is split into two species: Emerald Dove ("Chalcophaps indica sensu stricto") and an Australasian species "C. longirostris"
* (pp. 212-4)Pompadour Green-pigeon ("Treron pompadora") is split into four to six species: [Rasmussen & Anderton treat three South Asian taxa ("affinis", "pompadora" & "chloropterus") as monotypic species, separate from the remainder of the "Pompadour Green-pigeon" complex (the name "phayrei" having priority for this group); this treatment is in line with Hussain (1958). They also state that two extralimital taxa ("axillaris" & "aromaticus") are probably also better treated as separate species.]Ceylon Green-pigeon "T. pompadora sensu stricto",Grey-fronted Green-pigeon "T. affinis",Ashy-headed Green-pigeon "T. phayrei",Andaman Green-pigeon "T. chloropterus" from South Asia, and possible fifth and sixth species, "T. (phayrei) axillaris" and "T. (phayrei) aromaticus" fromThe Philippines andBuru in theMoluccas respectively.
* (p. 217)Nicobar Imperial-pigeon ("Ducula nicobarica") is split fromGreen Imperial-pigeon ("D. aenea")
* (p. 233)Andaman Barn-owl ("Tyto deroepstorffi") is split fromBarn Owl ("T. alba") [König "et". "al". (1999) had earlier proposed this split.]
* (p. 235)Ceylon Bay-owl ("Phodilus assimilis") is split fromOriental Bay-owl ("Ph. badius")
* (p. 244)Himalayan Wood-owl ("Strix nivicola") is split fromTawny Owl ("S. aluco")
* (p. 248)Hume's Hawk-owl ("Ninox obscura") is split fromBrown Hawk-owl ("N. scutulata")
* (p. 278)Crimson-fronted Barbet ("Megalaima rubricapillus") is split into two species,Malabar Barbet ("M. malabarica") andCeylon Small Barbet ("M. rubricapillus sensu stricto") [A treatment previously proposed in Wijesinghe (1994)]
* (p. 290)Crimson-backed Flameback ("Chrysocolaptes stricklandi") is split fromGreater Flameback ("C. lucidus")Passerines
* (p. 310)
Grey-throated Sand-martin ("Riparia chinensis") is split fromBrown-throated Sand-martin ("R. paludicola")
* (p. 311)Pale Crag-martin ("Ptyonoprogne obsoleta") is split fromRock Martin ("P. fuligula")
* (p. 312)Hill Swallow ("Hirundo domicola") is split fromPacific Swallow ("H. tahitica")
* (p. 313)Ceylon Swallow ("Hirundo hyperythra") is split fromRed-rumped Swallow ("H. daurica")
* (p. 323)Andaman Cuckooshrike ("Coracina dobsoni") is split fromBar-bellied Cuckooshrike ("C. striata")
* (p. 326)Jerdon's Minivet "Pericrocotus albifrons" is split fromWhite-bellied Minivet ("P. erythropygius")
* (pp. 327-8)Orange Minivet ("Pericrocotus flammeus") andScarlet Minivet ("P. speciosus") are regarded as separate species
* (p. 330)Malabar Woodshrike ("Tephrodornis sylvicola") is split fromLarge Woodshrike ("T. gularis")
* (pp. 331-2)Ceylon Woodshrike ("Tephrodornis affinis") is split fromCommon Woodshrike ("T. pondicerianus")
* (p. 336)Andaman Bulbul ("Pycnonotus fuscoflavescens") is split fromBlack-headed Bulbul ("P. atriceps")
* (pp. 336-7)Black-crested Bulbul ("Pycnonotus melanicterus") is split into five species: [The same conclusions were contemporaneously reached in the "Handbook of the Birds of the World " (Fishpool and Tobias 2005).]Black-crested Bulbul "sensu stricto" ("P. flaviventris"),Black-capped Bulbul ("P. melanicterus sensu stricto"),Flame-throated Bulbul ("P. gularis"),Ruby-throated Bulbul ("P. dispar") andBornean Bulbul ("P. montis")
* (p. 344)Square-tailed Black Bulbul ("Hypsipetes ganeesa") is split fromBlack Bulbul ("H. madagascariensis")
* (p. 348)Jerdon's Leafbird ("Chloropsis jerdoni") is split fromBlue-winged Leafbird ("C. cochinchinensis") [A treatment previously proposed in Wells "et". "al". (2003)]
* (p. 349)Isabelline Shrike ("Lanius isabellinus") is split into two species,Daurian Shrike ("L. isabellinus sensu stricto") andTurkestan Shrike ("L. phoenicuroides") [An arrangement previously proposed by Kryukov (1995). Rasmussen & Anderton use the names Isabelline and Rufous Shrikes for Daurian and Turkestan Shrikes respectively.]
* (pp. 358-9)White's Thrush ("Zoothera aurea"),Nilgiri Thrush ("Z. neilgherriensis") andCeylon Scaly Thrush ("Z. imbricata") are split fromScaly Thrush ("Z. dauma")
* (pp. 363-4)Common Blackbird ("Turdus merula") is split into three or four species: [Rasmussen and Anderton made firm decisions to split Tibetan Blackbird, and the "simillimus" group of southern races as Indian Blackbird; in the case of "mandarinus", they stated that this taxon probably deserved species status. In addition, they suggested that within the "simillimus" group, theSri Lanka n race "kinnisii" is also probably better treated as a separate species. The "simillimus" group had previously been treated as a full species in Henry (1971). However this treatment had not gained widespread acceptance: both "Birds of the Western Palearctic " (Cramp 1988) and the "Oriental Bird Club checklist " (Inskipp "et". "al". 1996) had retained these forms within Common Blackbird. Clement & Hathway (2000) had suggested that "mandarinus" and "maximus" probably deserved to be treated together as a separate species; again the OBC checklist had treated these as conspecific with Common Blackbird. ] Common Blackbird ("T. merula") "sensu stricto",Tibetan Blackbird ("T. maximus"),Indian Blackbird ("T. simillimus") andChinese Blackbird ("T. (merula) mandarinus")
* (pp. 365-6)Red-throated Thrush ("Turdus ruficollis") andBlack-throated Thrush ("T. atrogularis") are treated as separate species [The same conclusions were contemporaneously reached in the "Handbook of the Birds of the World " (Collar, 2005)]
* (p. 372)Nicobar Jungle-flycatcher ("Rhinomyias nicobaricus") is split fromBrown-chested Jungle-flycatcher ("R. brunneatus")
* (p. 385)Large Blue Flycatcher ("Cyornis magnirostris") is split fromHill Blue Flycatcher ("C. banyumas")
* (p. 393)Himalayan Red-flanked Bush-robin ("Tarsiger rufilatus") is split fromRed-flanked Bluetail ("T. cyanurus")
* (p. 396)Andaman Shama ("Copsychus albiventris") is split fromWhite-rumped Shama ("C. malabaricus")
* (p. 400)White-bellied Blue Robin ("Myiomela albiventris") is split fromNilgiri Blue Robin ("M. major")
* (p. 407)Red-tailed Wheatear "Oenanthe chrysopygia" is split fromRufous-tailed Wheatear ("Oe. xanthoprymna") [A treatment previously recommended by Ivanov (1941), Panov (1999) and by the Taxonomic Advisory Committee of the Association of European Rarities Committees (AERC TAC 2003); the "Collins Bird Guide " (Svensson "et". "al". 1999) had also suggested that these two taxa may be separate species]
* (pp. 415-6)Bhutan Laughingthrush ("Trochalopteron imbricatum") is split fromStreaked Laughingthrush ("T. lineatum")
* (pp. 417-8)Assam Laughingthrush ("Trochalopteron chrysopterum") is split fromRed-headed Laughingthrush ("T. erythrocephalum")
* (p. 433)Long-billed Wren-babbler ("Rimator malacoptilus") is regarded as amonotypic species, separate from the two southeast Asian taxa "R. albostriatus" and "R. pasquieri"
* (p. 435-6)Long-tailed Wren-babbler ("Spelaeornis chocolatinus") is split into three species,Grey-bellied Wren-babbler ("S. reptatus"),Chin Hills Wren-babbler ("S. oatesi") andNaga Wren-babbler ("S. chocolatinus sensu stricto")
* (p. 438)Cachar Wedge-billed Babbler ("Sphenocichla roberti") is split fromWedge-billed Babbler ("S. humei")
* (pp. 443-4)Afghan Babbler ("Turdoides huttoni") is split fromCommon Babbler ("T. caudata")
* (p. 449)Indian White-hooded Babbler ("Gampsorhynchus rufulus") is split fromWhite-hooded Babbler ("G. torquatus")
* (p. 454)Manipur Fulvetta ("Alcippe manipurensis") is split fromStreak-throated Fulvetta , ("A. cinereiceps")
* (p. 471)Hill Prinia ("Prinia superciliaris") is split fromBlack-throated Prinia ("P. atrogularis")
* (p. 483)Hume's Bush-warbler ("Cettia brunnescens") is split fromYellowish-bellied Bush-warbler ("C. acanthizoides")
* (p. 485)Baikal Bush-warbler ("Bradypterus davidi") is split fromSpotted Bush-warbler ("B. thoracicus")
* (p. 503)Green Warbler ("Phylloscopus nitidus") andTwo-barred Warbler ("Ph. plumbeitarsus") are both split fromGreenish Warbler ("Ph. trochiloides") [The treatment of "nitidus" as a full species is, however, described as "equivocal".]
* (p. 529)Indian Yellow Tit ("Parus aplonotus") is split fromBlack-lored Yellow Tit ("P. xanthogenys")
* (p. 536)Chestnut-bellied Nuthatch ("Sitta castanea") is split into two or three species:Chestnut-bellied Nuthatch "sensu stricto" ("S. cinnamoventris"),Indian Nuthatch ("S. castanea sensu stricto") and a possible third species in south-east Asia "S. (castanea) neglecta" [The "neglecta" group is not formally split, but "is likely to comprise a third species".]
* (pp. 537-8)Przewalsky's Nuthatch ("Sitta przewalskii") is split fromWhite-cheeked Nuthatch ("S. leucopsis")
* (p. 545)Plain Flowerpecker ("Dicaeum concolor"), split into three species:Andaman Flowerpecker "D. virescens", Plain Flowerpecker sensu stricto ("D. minullum") andNilgiri Flowerpecker ("D. concolor sensu stricto")
* (p. 547)Van Hasselt's Sunbird ("Leptocoma brasiliana") is split fromPurple-throated Sunbird ("L. sperata")
* (p.554)House Bunting ("Emberiza sahari") andStriolated Bunting ("E. striolata") are regarded as separate species [This treatment is in line with that proposed by the Taxonomic Advisory Committee of the Association of European Rarities Committees in 2003 (AERC TAC 2003); it had previously been anticipated, though not adopted, in the "Collins Bird Guide " (Svensson "et". "al". 1999)]
* (p. 566)Sharpe's Rosefinch ("Carpodacus verreauxii") is split fromSpot-winged Rosefinch ("C. rodopeplus")
* (p. 566)Blyth's Rosefinch ("Carpodacus grandis") is split fromRed-mantled Rosefinch ("C. rhodochlamys")
* (p. 567)Spotted Great Rosefinch ("Carpodacus severtzovi") is split fromCaucasian Great Rosefinch ("C. rubicilla")
* (p. 581)Malabar White-headed Starling ("Sturnia blythii") is split fromGrey-headed Starling ("S. malabarica")
* (p. 586)Indian Golden Oriole ("Oriolus kundoo") is split fromEuropean Golden Oriole ("O. oriolus")
* (p. 593)Ceylon Crested Drongo ("Dicrurus lophorinus") is split fromGreater Racket-tailed Drongo ("D. paradiseus")
* (pp. 596-7)Larger-spotted Nutcracker ("Nucifraga multipunctata") is split fromSpotted Nutcracker ("N. caryocatactes") [A treatment earlier proposed tentatively by Madge & Burn (1994)]New South Asian endemic birds
:"See also
Endemic birds of the Indian Subcontinent andEndemic birds of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands The taxonomic changes proposed increase the number of
South Asia n endemic bird species, and the numbers ofrestricted-range endemic bird species in several of South Asia'sEndemic Bird Area s. Using the taxonomic arrangements in "Birds of South Asia", the following species are additionalSouth Asia n endemics: [Compared against those listed in Clements' sixth edition (2007)]Ceylon Bay-owl ,Hill Swallow , White-bellied andOrange Minivet s,Square-tailed Black Bulbul ,Jerdon's Leafbird ,Indian Blackbird ,Large Blue Flycatcher , [Endemic as a breeder; winters in south-east Asia]Common Babbler and Indian andWhite-cheeked Nuthatch es; the following are additionalIndia n endemics:Crested Hawk-eagle ,Grey-fronted Green-pigeon ,Malabar Barbet ,Malabar Woodshrike ,Flame-throated Bulbul ,Nilgiri Thrush ,White-bellied Blue Robin ,Naga Wren-babbler ,Indian Yellow Tit ,Nilgiri Flowerpecker andMalabar White-headed Starling ; the following are newSri Lanka n endemics:Ceylon Green-pigeon ,Ceylon Small Barbet ,Crimson-backed Flameback ,Ceylon Swallow ,Ceylon Woodshrike ,Black-capped Bulbul ,Ceylon Scaly Thrush andCeylon Crested Drongo ; and the following are additional endemics in the Andaman/Nicobar islands:Nicobar Imperial-pigeon ,Andaman Barn-owl ,Hume's Hawk-owl ,Andaman Cuckooshrike ,Andaman Bulbul ,Nicobar Jungle-flycatcher ,Andaman Shama andAndaman Flowerpecker .Footnotes
References
* AERC TAC (2003) " [http://www.aerc.eu/DOCS/AERCTAC.pdf AERC TAC's Taxonomic Recommendations, 1st December 2003] " Taxonomic Advisory Committee of the Association of European Rarities Committees
* Carey, G. J. and D. S. Melville (1996) Spot-billed Ducks in Hong Kong "Hong Kong Bird Report 1995" 224-30
* Collar, Nigel J. (2005) Family Turdidae (Thrushes), pages 514-619 in J. del Hoyo, A. Elliott, and D. Christie "Handbook of the Birds of the World , Volume 10: Cuckoo-shrikes to Thrushes" ISBN 84-87334-72-5
* Collar, Nigel J. and J. D. Pilgrim (2008) Taxonomic Update: Species-level changes proposed for Asian birds, 2005-2006 "BirdingASIA 8:14-30"
* Clement, P and R. Hathway (2000) "Thrushes"Helm Identification Guides ISBN 0-7136-3940-7
*Clements, James F. (2000) "" (5th edition) ISBN 1-873403-93-3
*Clements, James F. (2007) "The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World " (6th edition) ISBN 978-0-8014-4501-9
* Cramp, S. (1988) "Birds of the Western Palearctic " Volume 5: Tyrant Flycatchers to Thrushes ISBN 0198575084
* Fishpool, L. D. C. and J. A. Tobias (2005) Family Pycnonotidae (bulbuls) pages 124-250 in J. del Hoyo, A. Elliott, A. and D. A. Christie "Handbook of the Birds of the World , Volume 10: Cuckoo-shrikes to Thrushes" ISBN 84-87334-72-5
* Fleming, Robert L., Sr., Robert L. Fleming Jr. and Lain Singh Bangdel (1984) "Birds of Nepal, with reference to Kashmir and Sikkim" (3rd edition) ISBN 8187138122
* Henry, G. M. (1971) "A guide to the birds of Ceylon"
* Hussain, K. Z. (1958) Subdivisions and zoogeography of the genus "Treron" (green fruit-pigeons) "Ibis" 101:249-250
* Ivanov, A.I. (1941) "Oenanthe chrysopygia" de Fil. I "O. xanthoprymna" Hempr. & Ehrenb. "Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR" 3: 381–384.
* König, Claus, Friedhelm Weick & Jan-Hendrik Becking (1999) "Owls - A Guide to the Owls of the World"Helm Identification Guides ISBN 1-873403-74-7
* Kryukov, A. P. (1995) Systematics of small Palearctic shrikes of the "cristatus" group. "Proceedings of the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology " 6:22-25
*Madge, Steve and Hilary Burn (1994) "Crows and Jays"Helm Identification Guides ISBN 0-7136-3999-7
* McAllan, I. A. W. and M. D. Bruce (1988) "The birds of New South Wales, a working list" ISBN 0958751609
* Panov, E.N. (1999) "Kamenki Palearktiki. Ekologiya, povedenie, evolyutsiya" ("The Wheatears of the Palearctic. Ecology, Behaviour, Evolution").
* Peters, J. L. (1931) "Check-list of Birds of the World " volume 1
*Rasmussen, Pamela C. andJohn C. Anderton (2005) "Birds of South Asia. The Ripley Guide" ISBN 84-87334-67-9
* Stepanyan, L. S. (1990) "Conspectus of the ornithological fauna of the USSR " ISBN 5-02-005300-7
* Svensson, Lars,Peter J. Grant ,Killian Mullarney andDan Zetterström (1999) "Collins Bird Guide " ISBN 0-00-219728-6
* Wells, D. R., E. C. Dickinson and R. W. R. J. Dekker (2003) A preliminary review of the Chloropseidae and Irenidae "Zoologische Verhandelingen " 344: 25-32
* Wijesinghe, D. P. (1994) "Checklist of the Birds of Sri Lanka". Ceylon Bird Club, Colombo.
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