Catharus mirabilis Nelson 1912
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad031 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8328695 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A087D8-8369-FFCC-B288-4FE62114F930 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Catharus mirabilis Nelson 1912 |
status |
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Catharus mirabilis Nelson 1912
Pirre nightingale-thrush
( Fig. 13 View Figure 13 )
Catharus fuscater mirabilis Nelson 1912: 24 View in CoL ; Deignan 1961: 430; Ridgley and Gwynne 1989: 352; Phillips 1991: 112; Clement 2000: 299 (in part); Collar 2005: 700; Halley 2020; Halley 2021.
Catharus fuscater fuscater Hellmayr 1934: 465 View in CoL .
Catharus fuscater Meyer de Schauensee 1964: 317 View in CoL (in part); Robbins et al. 1985.
Type material
Monotypic species. USNM 232933 About USNM (holotype), study skin, adult male, collected by E.A. Goldman (original no. 15534) at 1585 m elevation on Cerro Pirre , Darién, Panama, near the head of the Río Limón, on April 18 1912 (see: Deignan 1961: 430) . Nelson (1912) also listed the following specimens, which are paratypes (N = 11): USNM 232600 About USNM , 232927–232932 About USNM , 232934–232936 About USNM . The type series was examined by M. R.H. on 23 October 2013 .
Geographic range
Endemic to Cerro Pirre, Darién province, Panama, where it is fairly common on the eastern slope from 1000 to 1500 m (Robbins et al. 1985) .
Adult specimens examined
Catharus mirabilis (N = 14): Panama: Darién (10 males, four females): Cerro Pirre: USNM 232927–232933 About USNM , 232936 About USNM , ANSP 131889 About ANSP , 131890 About ANSP (males), USNM 232600 About USNM , 232934 About USNM , 232935 About USNM , ANSP 131891 About ANSP (females) .
Audio recordings examined
Catharus mirabilis (N = 15): Panama: Darién: Cerro Pirre : ML 25790 , 25807 , 25814 , 25835 , 25872 , 60762 , 105199 , 286837 , 286854 , 286865 , XC 10493, 220586–220588, 361694 .
Diagnosis
Genetics: In both phylogenetic reconstructions, samples of C. mirabilis formed a clade that was sister to C. arcanus sp. nov. (mean uncorrected p -distance = 0.04 ± <0.01). In the UCE tree, these taxa were reciprocally monophyletic and formed a clade that was sister to all South American taxa. ABGD and ASAP analyses of ND2 data both identified C. mirabilis and C. arcanus sp. nov. as independent genetic clusters. The estimated divergence time between these sister-taxa was 1.3 Mya (95% HPD = 0. 9–1.7).
Morphology: Study skins of C. mirabilis were darker, and in adult females showed more contrast between the mantle and crown, than C. arcanus sp. nov ( Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ). Study skins of C. mirabilis and C. arcanus sp. nov. were ventrally paler than C. hellmayri specimens collected the same year ( Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ). As mentioned previously, the ventral surface of C. mirabilis is ‘distinctly yellowish … on the under parts of the head, neck, and body’ (Nelson 1912), similar to C. arcanus sp. nov. and (to a lesser extent) C. hellmayri . This rapidly fading character distinguishes these three taxa from the South American taxa.
Voice: Catharus mirabilis was distinguished from all other taxa by the combination of a Type 1 punctuation call structure ( Fig. 9 View Figure 9 ) and ‘widely spaced’ contact call structure ( Fig. 10 View Figure 10 ). Our dataset lacked recordings of blurred calls from C. mirabilis . Too few recordings were available to determine whether C. mirabilis and C. arcanus sp. nov. are divergent in song. Of the three triadic contours (ACB, CAB, CBA) detected in C. mirabilis , none were shared with C. arcanus sp. nov.. Of the three tetradic contours (BADC, CDAB, DCAB) detected in C. mirabilis , only one (CDAB) was detected in C. arcanus sp. nov. ( Fig. 12 View Figure 12 ).
Comments
According to published descriptions, the eggs of C. mirabilis (‘very pale greenish white, spotted lightly with dots of cinnamon-brown, which are grouped to form a faintlyindicated cap on the summit of the blunt end’, Wetmore et al. 1984: 157) are patterned differently than the eggs of C. hellmayri (‘pale blue, thickly speckled and dotted and blotched over the entire surface with light chestnut-rufous’, Carriker 1910: 748). Egg colour and pattern have been used previously to distinguish morphologically similar Catharus species (e.g. C. occidentalis and C. ffantzii ; Phillips 1969). More research is needed.
Etymology
The proposed English name refers to Cerro Pirre, where C. mirabilis is endemic.
R |
Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Genus |
Catharus mirabilis Nelson 1912
Halley, Maưhew R., Catanach, Therese A., Klicka, John & Weckstein, Jason D. 2023 |
Catharus fuscater mirabilis
Collar NJ 2005: 700 |
Clement P 2000: 299 |
Deignan HG 1961: 430 |
Catharus fuscater fuscater
Hellmayr CE 1934: 465 |