Amerikaans Smelleken
Falco columbarius columbarium ㅤ · Taiga Merlin
Datum | 2 November 2020 |
---|---|
Locatie | Corvo, Azores |
Fotograaf | Peter Stronach |
Bekeken | 4430 × |
Discussie
Max Berlijn
·
18 January 2021 18:47
What is the catch?
George Sangster
·
18 January 2021 19:21, gewijzigd 19 January 2021 00:09
The North American and Palearctic Merlins are possibly different species. Their mtDNA differs considerably (more than e.g. Red-footed and Amur Falcons). See Fuchs et al. (2015) who treated them as different species:Falco columbarius and F. aesalon, respectively. A proper morphological comparison would be very welcome, as would an ID paper.
Fuchs, J, Johnson, JA & Mindell, DP 2015. Rapid diversification of falcons (Aves: Falconidae) due to expansion of open habitats in the Late Miocene. Mol. Phylogen. Evol. 82: 166-182.
Diedert Koppenol
·
18 January 2021 20:29
@Max, a local Chaffinch!
Arnoud B van den Berg
·
18 January 2021 22:38
Er is daar toch nooit een andere chaffinch dan de 'local' moreletti gezien?
Diedert Koppenol
·
19 January 2021 01:10
Zo de waard is. ;) Niet al mijn berichten hebben een dubbele betekenis, Arnoud. 😇 Gewoon, een Vink, dus.
Rubén Barone
·
19 August 2021 13:37
Hi.
Very interesting record and nice photo. Congratulations!
There is a recent publication about the record of a Taiga Merlin in Caithness (Scotland), seen in February 2018:
O'HANLON, N. & R. HUGHES (2021): "Taiga Merlin" in Caithness: new to Britain. British Birds 114: 30-33.
For the moment there are no records of this nearctic taxon in the Canary Islands, the Cape Verdes or Madeira.
Best regards.
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