Avifaunal surveys of the Upper Apurímac River Valley, Ayacucho and Cuzco Departments, Peru: New Distributional Records and Biogeographic, Taxonomic, and Conservation Implications

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Avifaunal surveys of the Upper Apurímac River Valley, Ayacucho and Cuzco Departments, Peru : New Distributional Records and Biogeographic, Taxonomic, and Conservation Implications. / Hosner, Peter A.; Andersen, Michael J.; Robbins, Mark B.; Urbay-Tello, Abraham; Cueto-Aparicio, Luis; Verde-Guerra, Karen; Sánchez-González, Luis A.; Navarro-Sigüenza, Adolfo G.; Boyd, Roger L.; Núñez, Jano; Tiravanti, Jorge; Combe, Mariela; Owens, Hannah L.; Townsend Peterson, A.

In: Wilson Journal of Ornithology, Vol. 127, No. 4, 01.12.2015, p. 563-581.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hosner, PA, Andersen, MJ, Robbins, MB, Urbay-Tello, A, Cueto-Aparicio, L, Verde-Guerra, K, Sánchez-González, LA, Navarro-Sigüenza, AG, Boyd, RL, Núñez, J, Tiravanti, J, Combe, M, Owens, HL & Townsend Peterson, A 2015, 'Avifaunal surveys of the Upper Apurímac River Valley, Ayacucho and Cuzco Departments, Peru: New Distributional Records and Biogeographic, Taxonomic, and Conservation Implications', Wilson Journal of Ornithology, vol. 127, no. 4, pp. 563-581. https://doi.org/10.1676/14-178.1

APA

Hosner, P. A., Andersen, M. J., Robbins, M. B., Urbay-Tello, A., Cueto-Aparicio, L., Verde-Guerra, K., Sánchez-González, L. A., Navarro-Sigüenza, A. G., Boyd, R. L., Núñez, J., Tiravanti, J., Combe, M., Owens, H. L., & Townsend Peterson, A. (2015). Avifaunal surveys of the Upper Apurímac River Valley, Ayacucho and Cuzco Departments, Peru: New Distributional Records and Biogeographic, Taxonomic, and Conservation Implications. Wilson Journal of Ornithology, 127(4), 563-581. https://doi.org/10.1676/14-178.1

Vancouver

Hosner PA, Andersen MJ, Robbins MB, Urbay-Tello A, Cueto-Aparicio L, Verde-Guerra K et al. Avifaunal surveys of the Upper Apurímac River Valley, Ayacucho and Cuzco Departments, Peru: New Distributional Records and Biogeographic, Taxonomic, and Conservation Implications. Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 2015 Dec 1;127(4):563-581. https://doi.org/10.1676/14-178.1

Author

Hosner, Peter A. ; Andersen, Michael J. ; Robbins, Mark B. ; Urbay-Tello, Abraham ; Cueto-Aparicio, Luis ; Verde-Guerra, Karen ; Sánchez-González, Luis A. ; Navarro-Sigüenza, Adolfo G. ; Boyd, Roger L. ; Núñez, Jano ; Tiravanti, Jorge ; Combe, Mariela ; Owens, Hannah L. ; Townsend Peterson, A. / Avifaunal surveys of the Upper Apurímac River Valley, Ayacucho and Cuzco Departments, Peru : New Distributional Records and Biogeographic, Taxonomic, and Conservation Implications. In: Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 2015 ; Vol. 127, No. 4. pp. 563-581.

Bibtex

@article{1b4db13d63404b5da9d8c8f91bd9739c,
title = "Avifaunal surveys of the Upper Apur{\'i}mac River Valley, Ayacucho and Cuzco Departments, Peru: New Distributional Records and Biogeographic, Taxonomic, and Conservation Implications",
abstract = "The sliver of humid tropical and montane forest on the east slope of the Andes in Ayacucho Department ranks among the least surveyed sectors of the Peruvian Andes. This mountainous region, along with adjacent Apur{\'i}mac Department and western Cuzco Department, comprise the Apur{\'i}mac River Valley, a putative biogeographic barrier. Hence, understanding avian distributions in the vicinity of the Apur{\'i}mac River Valley is fundamental to understanding faunal turnover across it. Here, we report results of recent avifaunal surveys (2008-2012) from five sites in the Apur{\'i}mac Valley region. We report 35 bird species previously undocumented in Ayacucho, six of which represent range extensions, including records of the endemic Black-spectacled Brush-Finch (Atlapetes melanopsis), Marcapata Spinetail (Cranioleuca marcapatae), and Chestnut-breasted Mountain-Finch (Poospiza caesar); the remaining records filled perceived range gaps. Specimen evidence suggests little phenotypic introgression between differentiated forms across the region, except for apparent introgression zones in Superciliaried Hemispingus (Hemispingus superciliaris) and Mountain Cacique (Cacicus chrysonotus); these observations uphold the idea that the Apur{\'i}mac River Valley functions to isolate bird populations. Specimens of two Grallaria sp. and one Scytalopus sp. may represent new taxa, two of which appear to be endemic to Ayacucho (the third extends into adjacent Jun{\'i}n Department). More generally, montane forest bird species richness and avian endemism in eastern Ayacucho are similar to those of Cuzco and Pasco departments; previous assessments that considered Ayacucho as an area of reduced diversity were misled by sparse sampling effort.",
keywords = "Andes, cryptic species, diversity, elevation gradient, endemism, range extension",
author = "Hosner, {Peter A.} and Andersen, {Michael J.} and Robbins, {Mark B.} and Abraham Urbay-Tello and Luis Cueto-Aparicio and Karen Verde-Guerra and S{\'a}nchez-Gonz{\'a}lez, {Luis A.} and Navarro-Sig{\"u}enza, {Adolfo G.} and Boyd, {Roger L.} and Jano N{\'u}{\~n}ez and Jorge Tiravanti and Mariela Combe and Owens, {Hannah L.} and {Townsend Peterson}, A.",
year = "2015",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1676/14-178.1",
language = "English",
volume = "127",
pages = "563--581",
journal = "Wilson Journal of Ornithology",
issn = "1559-4491",
publisher = "Wilson Ornithological Society",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Avifaunal surveys of the Upper Apurímac River Valley, Ayacucho and Cuzco Departments, Peru

T2 - New Distributional Records and Biogeographic, Taxonomic, and Conservation Implications

AU - Hosner, Peter A.

AU - Andersen, Michael J.

AU - Robbins, Mark B.

AU - Urbay-Tello, Abraham

AU - Cueto-Aparicio, Luis

AU - Verde-Guerra, Karen

AU - Sánchez-González, Luis A.

AU - Navarro-Sigüenza, Adolfo G.

AU - Boyd, Roger L.

AU - Núñez, Jano

AU - Tiravanti, Jorge

AU - Combe, Mariela

AU - Owens, Hannah L.

AU - Townsend Peterson, A.

PY - 2015/12/1

Y1 - 2015/12/1

N2 - The sliver of humid tropical and montane forest on the east slope of the Andes in Ayacucho Department ranks among the least surveyed sectors of the Peruvian Andes. This mountainous region, along with adjacent Apurímac Department and western Cuzco Department, comprise the Apurímac River Valley, a putative biogeographic barrier. Hence, understanding avian distributions in the vicinity of the Apurímac River Valley is fundamental to understanding faunal turnover across it. Here, we report results of recent avifaunal surveys (2008-2012) from five sites in the Apurímac Valley region. We report 35 bird species previously undocumented in Ayacucho, six of which represent range extensions, including records of the endemic Black-spectacled Brush-Finch (Atlapetes melanopsis), Marcapata Spinetail (Cranioleuca marcapatae), and Chestnut-breasted Mountain-Finch (Poospiza caesar); the remaining records filled perceived range gaps. Specimen evidence suggests little phenotypic introgression between differentiated forms across the region, except for apparent introgression zones in Superciliaried Hemispingus (Hemispingus superciliaris) and Mountain Cacique (Cacicus chrysonotus); these observations uphold the idea that the Apurímac River Valley functions to isolate bird populations. Specimens of two Grallaria sp. and one Scytalopus sp. may represent new taxa, two of which appear to be endemic to Ayacucho (the third extends into adjacent Junín Department). More generally, montane forest bird species richness and avian endemism in eastern Ayacucho are similar to those of Cuzco and Pasco departments; previous assessments that considered Ayacucho as an area of reduced diversity were misled by sparse sampling effort.

AB - The sliver of humid tropical and montane forest on the east slope of the Andes in Ayacucho Department ranks among the least surveyed sectors of the Peruvian Andes. This mountainous region, along with adjacent Apurímac Department and western Cuzco Department, comprise the Apurímac River Valley, a putative biogeographic barrier. Hence, understanding avian distributions in the vicinity of the Apurímac River Valley is fundamental to understanding faunal turnover across it. Here, we report results of recent avifaunal surveys (2008-2012) from five sites in the Apurímac Valley region. We report 35 bird species previously undocumented in Ayacucho, six of which represent range extensions, including records of the endemic Black-spectacled Brush-Finch (Atlapetes melanopsis), Marcapata Spinetail (Cranioleuca marcapatae), and Chestnut-breasted Mountain-Finch (Poospiza caesar); the remaining records filled perceived range gaps. Specimen evidence suggests little phenotypic introgression between differentiated forms across the region, except for apparent introgression zones in Superciliaried Hemispingus (Hemispingus superciliaris) and Mountain Cacique (Cacicus chrysonotus); these observations uphold the idea that the Apurímac River Valley functions to isolate bird populations. Specimens of two Grallaria sp. and one Scytalopus sp. may represent new taxa, two of which appear to be endemic to Ayacucho (the third extends into adjacent Junín Department). More generally, montane forest bird species richness and avian endemism in eastern Ayacucho are similar to those of Cuzco and Pasco departments; previous assessments that considered Ayacucho as an area of reduced diversity were misled by sparse sampling effort.

KW - Andes

KW - cryptic species

KW - diversity

KW - elevation gradient

KW - endemism

KW - range extension

U2 - 10.1676/14-178.1

DO - 10.1676/14-178.1

M3 - Review

AN - SCOPUS:84954155919

VL - 127

SP - 563

EP - 581

JO - Wilson Journal of Ornithology

JF - Wilson Journal of Ornithology

SN - 1559-4491

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 217562248