Is there a particular paper dealing with Elanidae specifically?
I'd noted the early divergence but hesitated to apply it to my own list without some justification in terms of biology, behaviour, morphology etc.
Surely"Family Recurvirostridae (avocettes et échasses)
Subfamily Himantopodinae
Subfamily Recurvirostrinae
Family Ibidorhynchidae (bec-d'ibis)
Family Haematopodidae (huitriers)"
Am I the only one who combines all of these into one 'weird plover' family?
Haha, good!Surely
Thanks! looks like I need to do some updating of my taxonomy!Suggested by Sun & al. (2017)
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(PDF) Rapid and recent diversification patterns in Anseriformes birds: Inferred from molecular phylogeny and diversification analyses
PDF | The Anseriformes is a well-known and widely distributed bird order, with more than 150 species in the world. This paper aims to revise the... | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGatewww.researchgate.net
Yeah this is also a novel one for me, although they have been recognized as subfamilies"Family Rhynchotidae (nothures)
Family Tinamidae (tinamous)"
First I've seen this but i believe there is a deep divergence and an ecological separation into "open-country tinamous" and "forest tinamous".
Someone can answer to my question please?🤣🤣Someone knows the divergence time between the Surniinae and the Striginae. The guy of the website estimate that around 30 mya, it's very deep
DittoThanks! looks like I need to do some updating of my taxonomy!
Here is the extremism of the extremism 🤣🤣🤣"Family Fringillidae (pinsons)
Family Euphoniidae (organistes)
Family Carduelidae (chardonnerets, tarins, roselins, bec-croisés, verdiers, serins, gros-becs, bouvreuils
Subfamily Coccothraustinae
Subfamily Pyrrhulinae
Subfamily Carduelinae"
Not sure I can forgive this dismemberment of my beloved "true finches".😁
But it does bring them more in line with the treatment of all the other 9-primaried oscines.
There's some symmetry in that.
Your first list is the closest to mine, the only major differences i could see is my recognition of Scleruridae, Dendrocolaptidae, Nestoridae, and lumping Pluvialidae in with Charadriidae (more recent phylogenies seem to unite them as a monophyletic group) and Herpetotheridae in with Falconidae. More differences at the subfamily level, but this might be less to do with differences in opinion as me needing to do more research on groups I am less familiar with. I am sure this will inspire me to re-examine some things, and there are a few groups that feel a bit borderline and I keep elevating and lumping depending upon my mood.In this PDF, I give 2 classifications of living birds. The first is classical (or almost), the second is more rational but less extreme than previously published.
This is what Boyd says about the Pluvialidae.Your first list is the closest to mine, the only major differences i could see is my recognition of Scleruridae, Dendrocolaptidae, Nestoridae, and lumping Pluvialidae in with Charadriidae (more recent phylogenies seem to unite them as a monophyletic group) and Herpetotheridae in with Falconidae. More differences at the subfamily level, but this might be less to do with differences in opinion as me needing to do more research on groups I am less familiar with. I am sure this will inspire me to re-examine some things, and there are a few groups that feel a bit borderline and I keep elevating and lumping depending upon my mood.
Shouldn't we be using a order name that begins with the same stem as a family name?Order LIMICOLIFORMES
I noticed Boyd uses Limicoli as suborder name instead of ScolopaciShouldn't we be using a order name that begins with the same stem as a family name?
He also has Plataleiformes which only includes Threskiornithidae, so it's definitely not a rule to use the same stemThe term Scolopaci (Strauch 1978?) seems to be the current fashion. However, Limicoli has a lot of priority and a long history of use (often as Limicolae).
But based on Platalea, a real genus. Which is not really the case with Limicoli.🧐He also has Plataleiformes which only includes Threskiornithidae, so it's definitely not a rule to use the same stem