Pardalotidae | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scientific classification | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||
Pardalotinae Dasyornithinae Acanthizinae |
The large and diverse passerine bird family Pardalotidae includes the pardalotes, scrubwrens, thornbills, gerygones and allies. The family originated in Australasia and now includes about 70 species in 15 or 16 genera. Nearly all are confined to Australia (48 species) or New Guinea (about 20 species, including 6 found in both Australia and New Guinea). Only the gerygones extend further afield, with representatives in South-east Asia, New Zealand, and islands of the South Pacific.
All members are small to medium in size—some are very small—the majority are drab, inconspicuous, and often difficult to identify. All are mainly insectivorous, have 10 primaries (the tenth is vestigial in the pardalotes) and 9 secondaries (most having a vestigal tenth secondary).
One species, the Lord Howe Gerygone Gerygone insularis, is extinct; and 25 taxa in 17 species are considered endangered, three of them critically so. The primary threats are land clearing, overgrazing, degradation and fragmentation of habitat, and changing fire regimes.
The taxonomy of the Pardalotidae is complex and its classification has changed a great deal over the years. Recent microbiological work has made it clear that it is part of the Australasian corvid lineage, and it is most closely related to the honeyeaters and the fairy-wrens, all three families being regarded as part of the superfamily Meliphagoidea. (The Pardalotidae form the second-largest family of birds in Australasia, after the honeyeaters.)
At various times the Pardalotidae have been classified as Old World warblers, Old World babblers, and Old World flycatchers. The pardalotes themselves have been placed alone in their own family and grouped with the flowerpeckers. DNA studies suggest that the pardalotes may diverge sufficienty from the others in the group to justify regarding them as a separate family, in which case the remaining genera would be placed in the family Acanthizidae.
Species of Pardalotidae (part of the super-family Meliphagoidea)
- Subfamily
Pardalotinae: pardalotes
- Spotted Pardalote, Pardalotus punctatus
Forty-spotted Pardalote, Pardalotus quadragintus
Red-browed Pardalote, Pardalotus rubricatus
Striated Pardalote, Pardalotus striatus
- Spotted Pardalote, Pardalotus punctatus
- Subfamily
Dasyornithinae
- Eastern Bristlebird, Dasyornis brachypterus
Rufous Bristlebird, Dasyornis broadbenti
Western Bristlebird, Dasyornis longirostris
Pilotbird, Pcynoptilus floccosus
- Eastern Bristlebird, Dasyornis brachypterus
- Subfamily
Acanthizinae
- Rockwarbler, Origma solitaria
Fernwren, Oreoscopus gutturalis
Yellow-throated Scrubwren, Sericornis citreogularis
White-browed Scrubwren, Sericornis frontalis
Tasmanian Scrubwren, Sericornis humilis
Atherton Scrubwren, Sericornis keri
Large-billed Scrubwren, Sericornis magnirostris
Tropical Scrubwren, Sericornis beccarii
Scrubtit, Acanthornis magnus
Chestnut-rumped Heathwren, Hylacola pyrrhopygia
Shy Heathwren or Shy Hylacola, Hylacola cauta
Striated Fieldwren, Calamanthus fuliginosus
Rufous Fieldwren, Calamanthus campestris
Redthroat, Pyrrholaemus brunneus
Speckled Warbler, Chthonicola sagittata
Weebill, Smicrornis brevirostris
Brown Gerygone, Gerygone mouki
Grey Warbler, Gerygone igata
Chatham Island Warbler, Gerygone albofrontata
Norfolk Island Gerygone, Gerygone modesta
Dusky Gerygone, Gerygone tenebrosa
Mangrove Gerygone, Gerygone levigaster
Western Gerygone, Gerygone fusca
Lord Howe Gerygone, Gerygone insularis Conservation status: Extinct (c.1930)
Large-billed Gerygone, Gerygone magnirostris
Green-backed Gerygone, Gerygone chloronotus
Fairy Gerygone, Gerygone palpebrosa
White-throated Gerygone, Gerygone olivacea
Mountain Thornbill, Acanthiza katherina
Brown Thornbill, Acanthiza pusilla
Inland Thornbill, Acanthiza apicalis
Tasmanian Thornbill, Acanthiza ewingii
Chestnut-rumped Thornbill, Acanthiza uropygialis
Slaty-backed Thornbill, Acanthiza robustirostris
Western Thornbill, Acanthiza inornata
Buff-rumped Thornbill, Acanthiza reguloides
Slender-billed Thornbill, Acanthiza iredalei
Yellow-rumped Thornbill, Acanthiza chrysorrhoa
Yellow Thornbill, Acanthiza nana
Striated Thornbill, Acanthiza lineata
Southern Whiteface, Aphelocephala leucopsis
Chestnut-breasted Whiteface, Aphelocephala pectoralis
Banded Whiteface, Aphelocephala nigricincta
- Rockwarbler, Origma solitaria
Further reading
- PJ Higgins & JM Peter (Eds.), Handbook of Australian, New Zealand & Antarctic Birds, Volume 6: Pardalotes to shrike-thrushes. Oxford, Melbourne, 2002: ISBN 0-19-553762-9