Abstract

he Turquoise Tanager Tangara mexicana is largely distributed in northern South America, and has been considered a polytypic species comprising four or five subspecies. Our study on plumage coloration of 175 specimens, from localities covering the entire species’ range, revealed the existence of two variable characters: color of underparts and color of lesser upper-wing coverts. Seven morphotypes were found that combine the different states presented by these two characters. Two morphotypes were very distinct, representing two of the most easily diagnosable subspecies (T. m. mexicana, having yellowish white underparts and a contrasting turquoise green humeral patch; and T. m. boliviana, having bright yellow underparts and the blue of lesser upper- wing coverts similar to that of the sides of head, throat, breast and rump). The other morphotypes (including those representing subspecies T. m. media, T. m. vieilloti and T. m. lateralis) are shared by birds with character states that are intermediate between those found in T. m. mexicana and T. m. boliviana, thus representing a polymorphic population ranging widely across central Amazonia, from northern Venezuela and Trinidad to the south of the lower Amazon. This large area may be considered as a hybrid zone of considerable phenotypic instability, more evident especially in the region between the lower Rio Madeira and east of the Tocantins in the Belem area. Based on the General Lineage Species Concept two species could be recognized based on plumage: T. mexicana, restricted to the Guyana center of endemism, and T. boliviana, which is widely distributed in western Amazonia and the eastern foothills of the Andes, an area corresponding to the centers of endemism Napo and Inambari. The taxonomic validity of T. lateralis is once more challenged.

Highlights

  • Comprising about fifty species, Tangara is one of the richest genera of birds and one of the most representative of Neotropical birds (Peters 1970, Sibley 1996, Clements 2007, SACC 2015, Hilty 2011, Barker et al 2013). Sedano & Burns (2010) produced a large phylogeny of tanagers based on mitochondrial genes, which lumps many morphologically distinctive groups into a few genera

  • After the larger and paler White-bellied Tanager Tangara brasiliensis (Linnaeus, 1766) from southeastern Brazil had been treated as a separate species by Hellmayr (1936), it was considered a subspecies of T. mexicana (Zimmer 1943, Pinto 1944), but it has been accepted as a valid and independent species again (Piacentini et al 2015)

  • We examined 101 specimens of T. mexicana housed at the Museu Nacional do Rio de Janeiro (MNRJ), Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi (MPEG), and Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo (MZUSP) (Appendix I)

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Summary

Introduction

Comprising about fifty species, Tangara is one of the richest genera of birds and one of the most representative of Neotropical birds (Peters 1970, Sibley 1996, Clements 2007, SACC 2015, Hilty 2011, Barker et al 2013). Sedano & Burns (2010) produced a large phylogeny of tanagers based on mitochondrial genes, which lumps many morphologically distinctive groups into a few genera. Five subspecies of the Turquoise Tanager Tangara mexicana (Linnaeus, 1766) have been proposed (Hellmayr 1936, Isler & Isler 1987, Hilty 2011). After the larger and paler White-bellied Tanager Tangara brasiliensis (Linnaeus, 1766) from southeastern Brazil had been treated as a separate species by Hellmayr (1936), it was considered a subspecies of T. mexicana (Zimmer 1943, Pinto 1944), but it has been accepted as a valid and independent species again (Piacentini et al 2015). Tangara m. lateralis Todd, 1922, from southern Amazon (Todd 1922), was considered indistinct from T. m. boliviana by Hellmayr (1936) and treated as a hybrid between T. m. mexicana and T. m

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