Latta, Steven C., Andrea K. Townsend, and Irby J. Lovette 2010. The origins of the recently discovered Hispaniolan Olive-throated Parakeet: A phylogeographic perspective on a conservation conundrum. Caribbean Journal of Science, 46 (2/3): 143-149.
E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: The Olive-throated Parakeet (Aratinga nana) occurs on the eastern slope of Middle America and the island of Jamaica. A resident population has been recently discovered in remote areas of Hispaniola, where it might represent an overlooked relict population or a recent introduction. If the Hispaniolan population of A. nana is native, then it would merit conservation attention. Conversely, if the Hispaniolan population is a recent non-natural introduction, the potential for competitive interactions with the threatened endemic Hispaniolan Parakeet, Aratinga chloroptera, should be assessed. To explore the origins of the Hispaniolan A. nana population, we sequenced the mitochondrially encoded ND2 gene from individuals from five mainland populations of A. nana vicinalis and A. nana astec, as well as the Jamaican A. nana nana and the Hispaniolan A. nana (subspecies unknown). Mitochondrial variation was highly structured into well differentiated island and mainland clades separated by close to 2% nucleotide divergence, but within each group there was very low ND2 haplotype variation. These results suggest that the Jamaican and Hispaniolan populations are evolutionarily distinct from the mainland populations, and they add support to the hypothesis that the Hispaniolan A. nana population results from a recent, human-mediated introduction.
Podsiadlowski, L., Gamauf, A., Töpfer, T., Revising the phylogenetic position of the extinct Mascarene Parrot Mascarinus mascarin (Linnaeus 1771) (Aves: Psittaciformes: Psittacidae), Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution (2016), doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2016.12.022
[abstract]
''Taxonomically we suggest to reexamine the delimitation of the genera Mascarinus, Tanygnathus and Psittacula to each other, probably resulting in merging all three to a single genus Psittacula''
ICZN. 2017. Opinion 2383 (Case 3640) — Touit G.R. Gray, 1855 and Prosopeia Bonaparte, 1854 (Aves, Psittacidae): usage of names conserved. Bull. Zool. Nomenclature 73:150-151.Schodde, Bock, Watling & Pacheco 2013. Case 3640 Touit G.R. Gray, 1855 and Prosopeia Bonaparte, 1854 (Aves, PSITTACIDAE): proposed conservation of usage. BZN 70(4): 245–248. [abstract]
Van Remsen today on NEOORN (rightly, I'm afraid):Thomas Arndt, Michael Wink. Molecular systematics, taxonomy and distribution of the Pyrrhura picta–leucotis complex. The Open Ornithology Journal, 2017, 10.
As I have already mentioned to some colleagues, be aware that none of the new names presented in the paper is valid! The journal is published online only, therefore the new names should have been registered at Zoobank and the corresponding urn code should appear in the PDF.
V.
not sure if it's been mentioned here or not:
Martínez-Gómez, J.E., Matías-Ferrer, N. & Escalante-Pliego, P. Phylogeny and taxonomy of the Socorro parakeet (Psittacara holochlorus brevipes): recent speciation with minor morphological differentiation. J Ornithol (2017). doi:10.1007/s10336-017-1465-4
[abstract]