Cacholote

Genus of birds From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The cacholotes are four species of relatively large, heavy-billed furnariids in the genus Pseudoseisura. They are found in shrubby habitats in the South American countries of Brazil, Bolivia, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay. They are essentially brown (ranging from deep rufous to pale gray-brown depending on species), and all are crested to some extent.

Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
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Taxonomy

The genus Pseudoseisura was introduced in 1853 by the German naturalist Ludwig Reichenbach to accommodate the white-throated cacholote.[1][2] The name combines the Ancient Greek pseudos meaning "false" and seisoura, a bird mentioned by the Greek lexicologist Hesychius of Alexandria and believed to be a wagtail Motacilla.[3][citation needed]

Species

The genus contains four extant species:[4]

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ImageScientific nameCommon nameDistribution
Pseudoseisura cristataCaatinga cacholoteCaatinga in north-eastern Brazil.
Pseudoseisura unirufaGrey-crested cacholotePantanal-region in Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia
Pseudoseisura lophotesBrown cacholotenorthern Argentina, western Paraguay and Uruguay; also in southeastern Bolivia and Rio Grande do Sul
Pseudoseisura gutturalisWhite-throated cacholoteArgentina (Patagonia and the northwest).
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The allopatric Caatinga and gray-crested cacholotes were formerly considered conspecific under the name rufous cacholote (Pseudoseisura cristata).[5]

Fossil species:


References

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