Red-backed fairywren

Red-backed fairywren
Male
Female at Samsonvale, SE Queensland
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Maluridae
Genus: Malurus
Species: M. melanocephalus
Binomial name
Malurus melanocephalus
(Latham, 1801)
Subspecies
  • M. m. melanocephalus
  • M. m. cruentatus
Red-backed fairywren range
      M. m. melanocephalus;       M. m. cruentatus;       broad hybrid zone

The red-backed fairywren (Malurus melanocephalus) is a species of passerine bird in the family Maluridae. It is endemic to Australia and can be found near rivers and coastal areas along the northern and eastern coastlines from the Kimberley in the northwest to the Hunter Region in New South Wales. The male adopts a striking breeding plumage, with a black head and upperparts and tail, and brightly coloured red back and brown wings. The female has brownish upperparts and paler underparts. The male in eclipse plumage and the juvenile resemble the female. Some males remain in non-breeding plumage while breeding. Two subspecies are recognised; the nominate form melanocephalus of eastern Australia has a longer tail and orange back, and the short-tailed form cruentatus from northern Australia has a redder back.

The red-backed fairywren mainly eats insects, and supplements its diet with seed and small fruit. The preferred habitat is heathland and savannah, particularly where low shrubs and tall grasses provide cover. It can be nomadic in areas where there are frequent bushfires, although pairs or small groups of birds maintain and defend territories year-round in other parts of its range. Groups consist of a socially monogamous pair with one or more helper birds who assist in raising the young. These helpers are progeny that have attained sexual maturity yet remain with the family group for one or more years after fledging. The red-backed fairywren is sexually promiscuous, and each partner may mate with other individuals and even assist in raising the young from such pairings. Older males in breeding plumage are more likely to engage in this behaviour than are those breeding in eclipse plumage. As part of a courtship display, the male wren plucks red petals from flowers and displays them to females.

Taxonomy

The red-backed fairywren was first collected from the vicinity of Port Stephens in New South Wales and described by ornithologist John Latham in 1801 as the black-headed flycatcher (Muscicapa melanocephala); its specific epithet derived from the Ancient Greek melano- 'black' and kephalos 'head'.[2] However, the specimen used by Latham was a male in partial moult, with mixed black and brown plumage and an orange back, and he named it for its black head. A male in full adult plumage was described as Sylvia dorsalis, and the explorers Nicholas Aylward Vigors and Thomas Horsfield gave a third specimen from central Queensland the name Malurus brownii, honouring botanist Robert Brown. John Gould described Malurus cruentatus in 1840 from a short-tailed scarlet-backed specimen collected in Northwestern Australia by Benjamin Bynoe aboard the HMS Beagle on its third voyage. The first three names were synonymised into Malurus melanocephalus by Gould who maintained his form as a separate species. An intermediate form from north Queensland was described as pyrrhonotus. Ornithologist Tom Iredale proposed the common name "elfin-wren" in 1939, however this was not taken up.[3]

Like other fairywrens, the red-backed fairywren is unrelated to the true wren (family Troglodytidae). It was previously classified as a member of the old world flycatcher family Muscicapidae[4][5] and later as a member of the warbler family Sylviidae[6] before being placed in the newly recognised fairywren family Maluridae in 1975.[7] More recently, DNA analysis has shown that the Maluridae family is related to the Meliphagidae (honeyeaters), and the Pardalotidae (pardalotes, scrubwrens, thornbills, gerygones and allies) in the large superfamily Meliphagoidea.[8][9]

Within the Maluridae, it is one of 12 species in its genus, Malurus. It is most closely related to the Australian white-winged fairywren, with which it makes up a phylogenetic clade, with the white-shouldered fairywren of New Guinea as the next closest relative.[10] Termed the bicoloured wrens by ornithologist Richard Schodde, these three species are notable for their lack of head patterns and ear tufts, and one-coloured black or blue plumage with contrasting shoulder or wing colour; they replace each other geographically across northern Australia and New Guinea.[11]

Subspecies

George Mack, ornithologist of the National Museum of Victoria, was the first to classify the three forms melanocephalus, cruentatus and pyrrhonotus as one species,[12] although Richard Schodde reclassified pyrrhonotus as a hybrid from a broad hybrid zone in North Queensland; this area is bounded by the Burdekin, Endeavour and Norman Rivers. Breeding males of intermediate plumage, larger and scarlet-backed, or smaller and orange-backed, as well as forms that resemble one of the two parent subspecies, are all encountered within it.[13] A molecular study published in 2008 focussing on the Cape York population found it was genetically closer to the eastern forest subspecies than to the Top End form. These birds became segregated around 0.27 million years ago, with some gene flow still with eastern birds.[14]

Two subspecies are recognised:

Evolutionary history

Ornithologist Richard Schodde has proposed the ancestors of the two subspecies were separated during the last glacial period in the Pleistocene around 12,000 years ago. Aridity had pushed the grasslands preferred by the wren to the north, and with subsequent wetter warmer conditions it once again spread southwards and met the eastern form in northern Queensland and intermediate forms arose.[13] The distribution of the three bi-coloured fairywren species indicates their ancestors lived across New Guinea and northern Australia in a period when sea levels were lower and the two regions were joined by a land bridge. Populations became separated as sea levels rose, and New Guinea birds evolved into the white-shouldered fairywren, and Australian forms into the red-backed fairywren and the arid-adapted white-winged fairywren.[17]

Description

The smallest member of the genus Malurus, the red-backed fairywren measures 11.5 cm (4 12 in) and weighs between 5–10 g (0.18–0.35 oz), averaging around 8 g (0.28 oz). The 6 cm (2 14 in) long tail is black in the breeding male, and brown in eclipse males, females and juvenile birds.[15] Averaging 8.6 mm (0.3 in), the bill is relatively long, narrow and pointed and wider at the base.[18] Wider than it is deep, the bill is similar in shape to those of other birds that feed by probing for or picking insects off their environs.[19]

Like other fairywrens, the red-backed fairywren is notable for its marked sexual dimorphism; the male adopts full breeding plumage by the fourth year, later than all other fairywrens apart from its relative the white-winged fairywren.[20] The male in breeding plumage has a black head and body with striking red back and brown wings. At other times it has a brown upper body and white underparts. Some, mainly younger, males do remain in eclipse plumage while breeding.[21] The female looks remarkably similar with a buff brown body and a yellowish spot under the eye.[22] The female of this species differs from those of other fairy wren species in that it lacks a blue tint in the tail.[23] Geographically, it follows Gloger's rule; female birds have whiter bellies and paler brown upperparts inland in sunnier climates.[13] Juveniles of both sexes look very similar to females.[24]

Vocalizations

The typical song used by the red-backed fairywren to advertise its territory is similar to that of other fairy wrens, namely a reel made up of an introductory note followed by repeated short segments of song, starting weak and soft and ending high and shrill with several syllables. The call is mostly made by the male during mating season.[25][26] Birds will communicate with one another while foraging with a soft ssst, barely audible further than 10–15 m (33–49 ft) away. The alarm call is a high-pitched zit.[15]

Distribution and habitat

Imperata cylindrica,
a preferred habitat

The red-backed fairywren is endemic to Australia and can be seen along rivers and the coast from Cape Keraudren in northern Western Australia through the Kimberleys, Arnhem Land and the Gulf Country and into Cape York, with the Selwyn Range and upper reaches of the Flinders River as a southern limit. It is also found on the nearby offshore islands Groote Eylandt, Sir Edmund Pellew, Fraser, Melville and Bathurst Islands. It then occurs all the way down the east coast east of the Great Dividing Range to the Hunter River in New South Wales,[27] preferring wet, grassy tropical or sub-tropical areas, with tall grasses such as bladygrass (Imperata cylindrica), species of Sorghum, and Eulalia. It is not a true migrant, although it may be locally nomadic due to the changes in vegetation, and may leave its territory after the breeding season.[24] The species will retreat to fire-resistant cover at times of fire.[28]

The red-backed fairywren avoids arid habitats, and is replaced to the south of its range by the white-winged fairywren.[29]

Behaviour

The red-backed fairywren is diurnal, and becomes active at dawn and again, in bursts, throughout the day. When not foraging, birds often shelter together. They roost side-by-side in dense cover as well and engage in mutual preening.[30] The usual form of locomotion is hopping, with both feet leaving the ground and landing simultaneously. However, a bird may run when performing the rodent-run display.[31] Its balance is assisted by a relatively long tail, which is usually held upright and is rarely still. The short, rounded wings provide good initial lift and are useful for short flights, though not for extended jaunts.[32] Birds generally fly in a series of undulations for a maximum of 20 or 30 m (66 or 98 ft)[28]

In dry tall grasslands in monsoonal areas, the change in vegetation may be so great due to either fires or wet season growth that birds may be more nomadic and change territories more than other fairywrens.[28] They form more stable territories elsewhere, such as in coastal areas.[28] Cooperative breeding is less common with this species than with other fairywrens; helper birds have been sporadically reported, but the red-backed fairywren has been little studied.[33]

Both the male and female adult red-backed fairywren may utilise the rodent-run display to distract predators from nests with young birds. The head, neck and tail are lowered, the wings are held out and the feathers are fluffed as the bird runs rapidly and voices a continuous alarm call.[34]

Feeding

Like other fairywrens, the red-backed fairywren is predominantly insectivorous; they eat a wide variety of insects, including beetles such as weevils, leaf-, jewel-, flea- and ground-beetles, bugs, grasshoppers, moths, wasps and cicadas. Insect larvae and eggs are eaten as well as spiders. Seeds and other plant material make up only a very small proportion of its diet.[35] It can be found hunting for insects in leaf litter, shrubbery and on the edges of bodies of water, mostly in the morning and late afternoon. Adults of both sexes as well as helper birds feed the young.[24]

Courtship and breeding

During the mating season, the male moults its brown feathers and displays a fiery red plumage. It may fluff its red back and shoulder feathers out so they cover part of the wings in a puffball-display. It will fly about and confront another male to repel it, or to assert dominance over a female.[33][36] It also picks red petals and sometimes red seeds and presents them to other birds. 90% of the time, the male presents to a female in what appears to be a courtship ritual. The other 10% of the time, it presents to another male in an act of apparent aggression.[37]

Over half the red-backed fairywrens in an area can be found in pairs during the mating season. This is apparently a defence against the resource-limited nature of the environment. It is more difficult to maintain a larger interdependent group during dry spells, so the birds try to stay in pairs or smaller groups, which include adults that help parents look after young.[38] Paternity tests have shown that an older male with bright plumage has much more success in the mating season and can mate with more than one female. Accordingly, it has higher sperm storage and makes more mating overtures towards females. A male with browner and less bright plumage or a younger male with bright plumage has a much lower success rate than a bright, older male for mating.[39] Further, an unpaired male serves as a helper to a mated pair in feeding and care of young. When the male pairs his bill darkens, and this happens within three weeks. This is much easier to control than plumage, as moulting takes time and is controlled by seasonality. The bill is vascular and much easier to change in response to the pairings.[40]

The mating season lasts from August to February, and coincides with the arrival of the rainy season in northern Australia. The female does the bulk of the nest building, although the male does assist; this is unusual for the genus Malurus.[36] Concealed in grass tussocks or low shrubs, the spherical nest is constructed of dried grasses and usually lined with smaller, finer grasses and hair.[41] Nests examined in southeast Queensland tended to be larger and untidier than those in northern Australia; the former measured 1215 cm high by 912 cm wide and bore a partly covered 36 cm diameter entrance,[42] whereas the latter average around 1013 cm in height by 68 cm wide with a 24 cm entrance.[36] Construction takes around one week, and there may be an interval of up to another seven days before eggs are laid.[36] The eggs produced are white with reddish-brown spots in clutches of three to four,[41] and measure 14.517 x 1013 mm; those of subspecies melanocephalus are a little larger than those of cruentatus.[36] The eggs are incubated for two weeks by the female alone. The nestlings are hidden under cover for one week after hatching. The juveniles depend on parents and helpers for approximately one month. They learn to fly between 1112 days after hatching. Broods hatched earlier in the season will help to raise the broods hatched later on. They will stay as a clutch group for the season after hatching.[24]

Predators and threats

Adults and their young may be preyed upon by mammals such as the feral cat (Felis catus) and red fox (Vulpes vulpes), as well as rodent species,[24] and native predatory birds, such as the Australian magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen), butcherbird species (Cracticus spp.), blue-winged kookaburra (Dacelo leachii), crows and ravens (Corvus spp.), and shrike-thrushes (Colluricincla spp.), and reptiles such as goannas (Varanus spp.).[43]

Footnotes

  1. BirdLife International (2012). "Malurus melanocephalus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2013.2. International Union for Conservation of Nature. Retrieved 26 November 2013.
  2. Liddell, Henry George and Robert Scott (1980). A Greek-English Lexicon (Abridged Edition). United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-910207-4.
  3. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World:Fairywrens and Grasswrens), p. 3
  4. Sharpe, Richard Bowdler (1879). Catalogue of the Passeriformes, or perching birds, in the collection of the British museum. Cichlomorphae, part 1. London: Trustees of the British Museum.
  5. Sharpe, Richard Bowdler (1883). Catalogue of the Passeriformes, or perching birds, in the collection of the British museum. Cichlomorphae, part 4. London: Trustees of the British Museum.
  6. Sharpe, Richard Bowdler (1903). A handlist of the genera and species of birds. Volume 4. London: British Museum.
  7. Schodde, Richard (1975). Interim List of Australian Songbirds: passerines. Melbourne: RAOU. OCLC 3546788.
  8. Barker, FK; Barrowclough, GF; Groth, JG (2002). "A phylogenetic hypothesis for passerine birds; Taxonomic and biogeographic implications of an analysis of nuclear DNA sequence data". Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B 269: 295308. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1883. PMC 1690884. PMID 11839199.
  9. Barker, FK; Cibois, A; Schikler, P; Feinstein, J; Cracraft, J (2004). "Phylogeny and diversification of the largest avian radiation" (PDF). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 101 (30): 1104045. doi:10.1073/pnas.0401892101. PMC 503738. PMID 15263073. Retrieved 2007-10-12.
  10. Christidis, L; Schodde, R (1997). "Relationships within the Australo-Papuan Fairy-wrens (Aves: Malurinae): an evaluation of the utility of allozyme data". Australian Journal of Zoology 45 (2): 11329. doi:10.1071/ZO96068.
  11. Schodde R (The fairy-wrens: a monograph of the Maluridae), p. 31
  12. Mack, G (1934). "A revision of the genus Malurus". Memoirs of the National Museum of Victoria 8: 10025.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Schodde (The fairy-wrens: a monograph of the Maluridae), p. 107
  14. Lee, JY; Edwards, SV (2008). "Divergence Across Australia's Carpentarian Barrier: Statistical Phylogeography of the Red-Backed Fairy Wren (Malurus melanocephalus)". Evolution 62 (12): 3117–34. doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.2008.00543.x. PMID 19087188.
  15. 1 2 3 Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 182
  16. Simpson, DP (1979). Cassell's Latin Dictionary (5 ed.). London: Cassell Ltd. ISBN 0-304-52257-0.
  17. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 31
  18. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 33
  19. Wooller, RD (1984). "Bill size and shape in honeyeaters and other small insectivorous birds in Western Australia". Australian Journal of Zoology 32: 65762. doi:10.1071/ZO9840657.
  20. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 181
  21. Webster, MS; Varian, CW; Karubian, J (2008). "Plumage color and reproduction in the red-backed fairy-wren: Why be a dull breeder?". Behavioral Ecology 19 (3): 51724. doi:10.1093/beheco/arn015.
  22. MacDonald, JD (1973). Birds of Australia. Sydney: AH & AW Reed. p. 312. ISBN 0-589-07117-3.
  23. Slater P (1974). A Field Guide to Australian Birds, Volume 2: Passerines. Sydney: Rigby Ltd. p. 124. ISBN 0-85179-813-6.
  24. 1 2 3 4 5 Higgins, PJ; Peter, JM; Steele, WK(eds.) (2001). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds, Vol. 5: Tyrant-flycatchers to Chats. Oxford University Press: Oxford Univ. Press. pp. 161–70. ISBN 0-19-553258-9.
  25. Morcombe, M (2000). Field Guide to Australian Birds. Queensland: Steve Parish Publishing. p. 224. ISBN 1-876282-10-X.
  26. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 64
  27. Schodde (The fairy-wrens: a monograph of the Maluridae), p. 100
  28. 1 2 3 4 Schodde (The fairy-wrens: a monograph of the Maluridae), p. 105
  29. Rowley & Russell (Bird Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 179
  30. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 65
  31. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 42
  32. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 41
  33. 1 2 Rowley & Russell (Families of the World:Fairywrens and Grasswrens), p. 183
  34. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World:Fairywrens and Grasswrens), p. 184
  35. Schodde (The fairy-wrens: a monograph of the Maluridae), p. 10506
  36. 1 2 3 4 5 Schodde (The fairy-wrens: a monograph of the Maluridae), p. 106
  37. Karubian, Jordan; Alvarado, Allison (2003). "Testing the function of petal-carrying in the Red-backed Fairy-wren (Malurus melanocephalus)". Emu 103 (1): 8792. doi:10.1071/MU01063.
  38. Chan K, Augusteyn JD (2003). "Relationship Between Bird-Unit Size and Territory Quality in Three Species of Fairy Wren with Overlapping Territories". Ecological Research 18 (1): 7380. doi:10.1046/j.1440-1703.2003.00534.x.
  39. Karubian J (2002). "Costs and Benefits of Variable Breeding Plumage in Red-Backed Fairy Wrens". Evolution 56 (8): 167382. doi:10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb01479.x. PMID 12353760.
  40. Karubian J (2008). "Changes in Breeding Status are Associated with Rapid Bill Darkening in the Male Red-Backed Fairy-wrens". Journal of Avian Biology 39 (1): 8186. doi:10.1111/j.0908-8857.2008.04161.x.
  41. 1 2 Cayley, NW (1959). What Bird is That?. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. p. 204. ISBN 0-207-15285-3.
  42. Favaloro N (1931). "Notes on a Trip to the McPherson Range, South-eastern Queensland". Emu 31: 4859. doi:10.1071/MU931048.
  43. Rowley & Russell (Families of the World: Fairy-wrens and Grasswrens), p. 121

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