Hypsipetes

Genus of birds From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hypsipetes is a genus of bulbuls, songbirds in the family Pycnonotidae. Most of its species occur in tropical forests around the Indian Ocean. But while the genus is quite diverse in the Madagascar region at the western end of its range it does not reach the African mainland.

Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Quick facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Hypsipetes
Black bulbul
(Hypsipetes leucocephalus psaroides)
Kullu district, Himachal Pradesh (India)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Pycnonotidae
Genus: Hypsipetes
Vigors, 1831
Type species
Hypsipetes psaroides
(black bulbul)
Vigors, 1831
Species

see text

Synonyms
  • Ixocincla Blyth, 1845
  • Anepsia Reichenbach, 1850 (non Gistel, 1848: preoccupied)
  • Haringtonia Mathews & Iredale, 1917
Close

Most Hypsipetes bulbuls are dark greyish birds with orange or red bills and feet. The feathers on top of the head are slightly elongated and usually black, and can be erected to form a short and wispy crest.

Taxonomy and systematics

The genus Hypsipetes was introduced in 1831 by the Irish zoologist Nicholas Aylward Vigors with Hypsipetes psaroides as the type species.[1] This taxon is now a subspecies of the black bulbul Hypsipetes leucocephalus psaroides.[2][3] The genus name combines the Ancient Greek hupsi meaning "high" with petēs meaning "-flyer".[4]

Species

The genus contains 26 species:[3]

Extinct species

Former species

Some authorities, either presently or formerly, recognize several additional species as belonging to the genus Hypsipetes including:

Notes

  1. Three species formerly assigned to Thapsinillas were moved to Hypsipetes after molecular phylogenetic analysis found Hypsipetes affinis embedded in the Hypsipetes clade.[5][3]
  2. A species formerly placed in the monotypoc genus Cerasophila was moved to Hypsipetes after molecular phylogenetic analysis found embedded in the Hypsipetes clade.[5][3]

References

Sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI