COBirders,

 

As per the July 2016 update to the A.O.U. Check-list… Fifty-seventh
Supplement to the American Ornithologists’ Union Check-list of North
American Birds… The Auk: Ornithological Advances 133:544–560…

re: Woodhouse’s Scrub-Jay and California Scrub-Jay

 

22. [p. 446] Aphelocoma woodhouseii is treated as a species separate from A.
californica. Revise the account for A. californica as follows: Change the
English name to California Scrub-Jay. Restrict the Resident part of the
distributional statement to that for the californica group, and change the
Casual part of the statement to: Casual in southwestern British Columbia and
eastern Washington. Replace the existing Notes with the following:
Notes.—Formerly considered conspecific with A. woodhouseii, but treated as
separate on the basis of differences in ecology, morphology, genetics, and
vocalizations; although the two species do interbreed, the hybrid zone is
narrow, and there is evidence for selection against hybrids (Gowen et al.
2014). See notes on A. coerulescens. Following the account for A.
californica, insert the following new species account: Aphelocoma
woodhouseii (Baird). Woodhouse’s Scrub-Jay. Cyanocitta woodhouseii Baird,
1858, in Baird, Cassin, and Lawrence, Rept. Expl. and Surv. R.R. Pac. 9:
584– 585. (central line of Rocky Mountains to table lands of Mexico [¼ Fort
Thorn (ten miles west of Rincon, Dona Ana County), New Mexico].)
Habitat.—Woodland (especially pinyon, juniper, oak associations) and scrub;
also gardens, orchards, riparian woodland, and tropical deciduous forest
(southern Mexico) (Subtropical and Temperate zones, upper Tropical Zone in
southern Mexico). Distribution.—Resident [woodhouseii group] from
southeastern Oregon, southern Idaho, southern Wyoming, western and southern
Colorado, and extreme western Oklahoma south to eastern California (from
White Mountains to Providence Mountains), southern Arizona, in the Mexican
highlands to northeastern Sonora, Jalisco, central Guanajuato, Mexico,
Distrito ´ Federal, and Hidalgo, and east to western and central Texas; and
[sumichrasti group] from Tlaxcala south to Oaxaca (west of the Isthmus of
Tehuantepec), Puebla, and west-central Veracruz. Casual [woodhouseii group]
in southeastern California, southern Manitoba, northern Wyoming, Illinois,
Indiana, central Kansas, and the Texas Panhandle. Notes.—Genetic and
behavioral data (Peterson 1991, 1992; Peterson and Burt 1992; Gowen et al.
2014) suggest that A. sumichrasti (Baird and Ridgway, 1874) [Sumichrast’s
Scrub-Jay] may be a separate species. See Notes under A. californica and A.
coerulescens.

 

Read more here: http://www.aoucospubs.org/doi/pdf/10.1642/AUK-16-77.1

 

Bill Maynard

Colorado Springs 

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