Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16852
Title: Taxonomic review of the rhinocryptid genus Eleoscytalopus (I): Bahia Tapaculo (E. psychopompus) is vocally and morphologically distinct from White-breasted Tapaculo (E. indigoticus)
Authors: Moraes, Leonardo Amaral de
Bornschein, Marcos R.
Gatto, Cassiano Augusto Ferreira Rodrigues
Santos, Sidnei Sampaio dos
Maurício, Giovanni Nachtigall
Keywords: Endangered Species
Morphology
Morphometry
Passerine
Phenotype
Plumage
Taxonomy
Vocalization
Atlantic Forest
Bahia
Rhinocryptidae
Issue Date: 2018
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Auk
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 135, Número 4, Pags. 1009-1019
Abstract: The Bahia Tapaculo (Eleoscytalopus psychopompus) is a rare taxon endemic to a narrow strip of lowland Atlantic Forest in the coast of Bahia, Brazil. Its phenotypic distinction from its sister species, the White-breasted Tapaculo (E. indigoticus), has been considered doubtful because the supposed diagnostic plumage characters were proposed on the basis of only 3 specimens (the type series) and there were no vocal data for the Bahia Tapaculo. Given that it is classified as endangered globally according to IUCN criteria, the definition of the taxonomic status of the Bahia Tapaculo is fundamental for the adoption of effective conservation measures. We conducted analyses of plumage, morphometrics, and vocalizations of both Bahia and White-breasted tapaculos to test for the phenotypic distinction between them. We found that their songs differ significantly in 2 parameters, pace (no overlap) and frequency (slight overlap); and that their calls (both monosyllabic and multisyllabic calls) differ in multiple parameters, including note shape and structure. Plumage color and pattern differ in 4 aspects, including a prominent one, barred vs. unbarred flanks. We found a difference in wing:tail ratio, with no overlap, revealing that these taxa are proportioned differently, with the Bahia Tapaculo tending to have longer wings and shorter tail. These differences, besides the genetic distance and reciprocal monophyly, are of the same or greater magnitude than those found between several sister taxa accepted as biological species in the family Rhinocryptidae, thus supporting biological species status for the Bahia Tapaculo. © 2018 American Ornithological Society.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1642/AUK-18-10.1
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