Phoenicopteridae, Bonaparte, 1831

Somenzari, Marina, Amaral, Priscilla Prudente do, Cueto, Víctor R., Guaraldo, André de Camargo, Jahn, Alex E., Lima, Diego Mendes, Lima, Pedro Cerqueira, Lugarini, Camile, Machado, Caio Graco, Martinez, Jaime, Nascimento, João Luiz Xavier do, Pacheco, José Fernando, Paludo, Danielle, Prestes, Nêmora Pauletti, Serafini, Patrícia Pereira, Silveira, Luís Fábio, Sousa, Antônio Emanuel Barreto Alves de, Sousa, Nathália Alves de, Souza, Manuella Andrade de, Telino-Júnior, Wallace Rodrigues & Whitney, Bret Myers, 2018, An overview of migratory birds in Brazil, Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia 58, pp. 1-66 : 35

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11606/1807-0205/2018.58.03

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AE87D9-FFAB-3402-A169-7C758337FEB3

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Phoenicopteridae
status

 

Phoenicopteridae View in CoL

Phoenicoparrus andinus (VAG) View in CoL : occurs in southern Peru, Bolivia, northern Chile, northwestern Argentina and occasionally in southern Brazil ( Grantsau, 2010). Ghizoni-Jr. & Piacentini (2010) suggest that it occurs in Brazil as a result of juvenile dispersal or of storms and that it is more common during winter. In the Canto dos Ganchos beach in Governador Celso Ramos/SC, a small population was detected and then monitored for 27 months (June 2008 to August 2010) and a specimen was collected in July 2009 (MZUSP 84351). There are also many photographs for SC (WikiAves, 2016), a specimen collected at PR ( Scherer-Neto et al., 2011) and records for Lagoa do Peixe National Park/ RS ( Belton, 1994; IBAMA, 1999; De Luca et al., 2006; WikiAves, 2016).This species was first record- ed for the Amazonian region in 2007, when an individual was killed by fishermen in the Amanã Sustainable Development Reserve and donated to the Mamirauá Institute ( Bernadon & Valsecchi, 2014). There do not seem to be breeding colonies in Brazil.

Phoenicoparrus jamesi (VAG) View in CoL : occurs in southern Peru, northern Chile, western Bolivia and northwestern Argentina ( Grantsau, 2010). It is considered vagrant in Brazil, where there is only one published record for Acre (AC) ( Guilherme et al., 2005; MPEG 58950), one photographic record for RS ( Dias & Cardozo, 2014) and another record for Amazonas (AM) (M. Cohn-Haft, in prep.).

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