Calcariidae

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Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Superfamily:Emberizoidea
Calcariidae
Lapland longspur (Calcarius lapponicus)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Superfamily: Emberizoidea
Family: Calcariidae
Ridgway, 1901
Genera

Calcarius
Plectrophenax
Rhynchophanes

Calcariidae is a small family of passerine birds. It includes longspurs and snow buntings. There are six species in three genera worldwide, found mainly in North America and Eurasia. They are migratory and can live in a variety of habitats including grasslands, prairies, tundra, mountains, and beaches.

Members of Calcariidae range in mass from around 20 grams (0.71 oz) (the chestnut-collared longspur)[1] to around 42 grams (1.5 oz) (McKay's bunting).[2] Species have brown, grey, and white plumage, with dark brown or black irises. The legs of the snow bunting and McKay's bunting are dark gray or black, while legs of other species in the family range from dull pink to brown.

Taxonomy

The birds in Calcariidae were formerly assigned to the family Emberizidae (typically known as buntings in the Old World and sparrows in the New World).[3] A 2008 phylogenetic study by Alström and colleagues confirmed that the members of this family form a clade quite separated from the Emberizidae, with affinities instead with the New World warblers (Parulidae), cardinals (Cardinalidae) or tanagers (Thraupidae), though their exact relationships are unclear.[4] They proposed to place them in the tribe Calcariini,[4] but the International Ornithological Congress has placed them in a separate family in 2010.[3] Timing with the cytochrome b DNA suggests that the Calcariidae diverged from a common ancestor around 4.2–6.2 million years ago, around the beginning of the Pliocene, possibly soon after spread of grasslands in North America as the climate in the late Miocene became drier and cooler.[5]

Genera and species

Three genera—Calcarius (longspurs), Plectrophenax (snow-buntings), and Rhynchophanes—are recognised. Genetic analysis with cytochrome b DNA showed that the thick-billed longspur was most closely related to the two snow bunting species, and the three nested within the genus Calcarius. Smith's and the chestnut-collared longspur were each other's closest relatives (sister taxa).[5] The Lapland longspur likely diverged from an ornatus/pictus ancestor near the beginning of the Pliocene (4.4–6.2 million years ago) and the snow and McKay's buntings diverged within the last 100,000–125,000 years. Though they differ in appearance, Smith's and the collared longspurs likely only diverged around 1.5–2 million years ago, around the start of the Pleistocene.[5]

McKay's bunting is sometimes considered a subspecies of the snow bunting, and instances of the two species hybridizing have been reported.[6] However, a 2007 study by Maley and Winker found substantial differences in the juvenile plumage between the two groups, supporting a species-level division.[7] Other members of Calcariidae known to hybridize with each other are the thick-billed longspur and the chestnut-collared longspur.[8]

ImageGenusLiving species
Calcarius Bechstein, 1802
Plectrophenax Stejneger, 1882
Rhynchophanes Baird, 1858

Distribution and habitat

Behavior

References

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