Taiwan Firecrest

Taiwan Firecrest
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Regulidae
Genus: Regulus
Species: R. goodfellowi
Binomial name
Regulus goodfellowi
Ogilvie-Grant, 1906

The Taiwan Firecrest (Regulus goodfellowi) (火冠戴菊鳥 in Chinese characters), also known as the Flamecrest, is a species of bird in the kinglet family, Regulidae, that is endemic to the mountains of the island of Taiwan.

Contents

Description

The firecrest is a small perching bird, resembling a warbler. Its length is only 9 cm (3.6 in) and weighing about 7 g,[2] making it is the smallest of all Taiwan's endemic bird species, and the smallest and most colourful member of its family in the world.

The top of its head is yellow and orange, with black crown stripes. White feathers encircling the black eye-patches give it the appearance of having two black eyes. The most distinguishing characteristic is the orange-yellow crest on top of the head, for which it is named.[3] Females have the crown stripe pure yellow while males have an orange centre to it. When excited the male erects the crest. The supercilium is very broad and the lores and forehead are whitish.There is a narrow short black malar stripe. The chin is whitish and the throat, ear-coverts and sides of neck are grey. The mantle is green while the rump and flanks are yellow. The centre of the belly is buff. The wings have broad white covert tips forming a wing bar. The tarsi are pinkish. They have a high pitched see-see-see call and the song consists of a series of high notes.[4]

Taxonomy

The kinglets are a small group of birds sometimes included in the Old World warblers, but frequently given family status,[5] especially as recent research showed that, despite superficial similarities, the crests are taxonomically remote from the warblers.[6][7] The names of the family, Regulidae, and its only genus, Regulus, are derived from the Latin regulus, a diminutive of rex, "a king",[8] and refer to the characteristic orange or yellow crests of adult kinglets. The Taiwan Firecrest was formally described by Scottish ornithologist William Ogilvie-Grant in 1906 from the writings of English explorer and ornithologist, Walter Goodfellow, who is commemorated in the binomial name.[9]

The Taiwan Firecrest has sometimes been viewed as a race of Firecrest, but its territorial song resembles those of the Himalayan races of Goldcrest, and genetic data shows that it is closely related to that species, and only distantly to Firecrest.[10] The Flamecrest lineage diverged from that of the Goldcrest 3.0–3.1 mya.[11]

Distribution and habitat

It usually inhabits evergreen trees in coniferous forests over 2,000 m above sea level, though it is commonest above 2,500 m and ranges upward to 3,700 m. Mountains it inhabits include Alishan, Tayuling, Hehuanshan, Yu Shan, and the higher areas of Anmashan. They prefer conifers in which to forage, and are usually found in the forest canopy, but will sometimes venture into lower vegetation.

An analysis of the distribution of Taiwan’s 17 endemic bird species, using data from bird surveys conducted from 1993 to 2004, classified the firecrest as uncommon (along with the Formosan Magpie, Taiwan Bush-warbler, Yellow Tit and Taiwan Barwing). It found that the firecrest occurred in high- and mid-altitude coniferous forests, and in high-altitude broad-leaved mixed forests, mainly at 2000–3600 m above sea level. The sites where it was recorded had an average altitude of about 2550 m, the highest of all the endemic birds. Its habitats had the coldest mean temperature and lowest warmth index of all 17 endemics, as well as the highest annual rainfall for the five uncommon species, though its distribution regarding vegetation and human disturbance was similar to those of the others.[12]

Behaviour

Firecrests are active and restless birds, hopping and fluttering about in the canopy. These lively songbirds are mainly solitary but will move around actively in small, loose flocks of their own species as well as Coal Tits and Eurasian Nuthatches. The flight is weak and whirring. Their breeding biology is poorly known.

Feeding

The firecrest is primarily an insectivore. The birds may be seen feeding on insects and their larvae on the branches and leaf sheathes of trees in coniferous forests, hovering and gleaning from leaf to stem. Weeds and berries may be taken occasionally. A study of the foraging ecology of alpine forest birds on conifers in the Taroko National Park found that, when compared with Eurasian Nuthatches, Coal Tits, Green-backed Tits and Black-throated Tits, Firecrests were the most generalised foragers, utilising almost all of the crown of a tree, rather than specialising in parts of it as with the other species, with which it associates in mixed-species foraging flocks during the non-breeding season.[13]

Voice

Firecrests have fine, shrill and high-pitched calls, zi zi yi. Although noisy at close range, the voice is soft and does not carry far.

References

  1. ^ "BirdLife International Species factsheet: Regulus goodfellowi ". BirdLife International. http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/speciesfactsheet.php?id=7168. Retrieved 8 November 2010. 
  2. ^ Ding, Tzung-Su, Hsiao-Wei Yuan, Shu Geng, Yao-Sung Lin and Pei-Fen Lee (2005). "Energy flux, body size and density in relation to bird species richness along an elevational gradient in Taiwan". Global Ecology and Biogeography 14: 299–306. doi:10.1111/j.1466-822x.2005.00159.x. http://:www.aseanbiodiversity.info/Abstract/51010220.pdf. 
  3. ^ Ogilvie-Grant, W R (1906). "125th meeting, 20th June 1906". Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club 16: 122. http://www.archive.org/stream/bulletinofb1620190507brit#page/n147/mode/1up. 
  4. ^ Brazil, Mark (2009). Birds of East Asia. London: Christopher Helm. p. 388. 
  5. ^ Monroe, Burt L. (February 1992). "The new DNA-DNA avian classification: What's it all about?". British Birds 85 (2): 53–61. 
  6. ^ Barker, F Keith; Barrowclough, George F; Groth, Jeff G (2002). "A phylogenetic hypothesis for passerine birds: taxonomic and biogeographic implications of an analysis of nuclear DNA sequence data". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 269 (1488): 295–308. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1883. PMC 1690884. PMID 11839199. http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/269/1488/295.full.pdf. 
  7. ^ Spicer, Greg S; Dunipace, Leslie (2004). "Molecular phylogeny of songbirds (Passerifor-mes) inferred from mitochondrial 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequences". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 30: 325–335. doi:10.1016/S1055-7903(03)00193-3. PMID 14715224. http://online.sfsu.edu/~gs/spicer/pages/spicerpdf/spicerdunipace04.pdf. 
  8. ^ Brookes, Ian (editor-in-chief) (2006). The Chambers Dictionary, ninth edition. Edinburgh: Chambers. pp. 223, 735, 1277. ISBN 0550101853. 
  9. ^ Ogilvie-Grant, W E (October 1912). "XXXII.—Further Notes on the Birds of the Island of Formosa". Ibis 54 (4): 643–657. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1912.tb05312.x. http://www.archive.org/stream/ibis961912190712brit#page/646/mode/2up. 
  10. ^ Päckert, Martin; Martens, Jochen; Severinghaus, Lucia Liu (2008). "The Taiwan Firecrest (Regulus goodfellowi) belongs to the Goldcrest assemblage (Regulus regulus s. l.): evidence from mitochondrial DNA and the territorial song of the Regulidae" (PDF). Journal of Ornithology 150 (1): 205–220. doi:10.1007/s10336-008-0335-5. http://www.springerlink.com/content/vk47812401430l68/fulltext.pdf. 
  11. ^ Päckert, Martin; Martens, Jochen; Sun, Yue-Hua; Tietze, Dieter Thomas (2009). "Phylogeography and the evolutionary time-scale of passerine radiations in the Sino-Himalayan region (Aves: Passeriformes)". In Hartmann, Matthias; Weipert, Jörg (editors). Biodiversität und Naturausstattung im Himalaya/Biodiversity and natural heritage of the Himalaya III. Erfurt: Verein der Freunde & Förderer des Naturkundemuseums Erfurt. pp. 71–80. ISBN 9783000271175. http://www.staff.uni-mainz.de/tietze/pub/1056.pdf. 
  12. ^ Ko Chia-Ying, Lin Ruey-Shing, and Lee Pei-Fen (2010). "Macrohabitat Characteristics and Distribution Hotspots of Endemic Bird Species in Taiwan". Taiwania 55 (3): 216–227. http://tai2.ntu.edu.tw/taiwania/pdf/tai.2010.55.3.216.pdf. 
  13. ^ Chen Chao-Chieh & Wang Ying (2008). "Spatial Use of Conifers by Five Alpine Forest Birds in Taroko National Park, Taiwan". 特有生物研究 10 (2): 1–12. http://tesri.coa.gov.tw/files/tesri_protect/176/08791261_pdf.pdf.