Cassia crossbill
Cassia crossbill | |
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Male and juvenile in a pine | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Passeriformes |
Family: | Fringillidae |
Subfamily: | Carduelinae |
Genus: | Loxia |
Species: | L. sinesciuris
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Binomial name | |
Loxia sinesciuris Benkman, 2009
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The Cassia crossbill (Loxia sinesciuris) is a
The species was first described in 2009,[3] but only was accepted to be its own species in 2017, when it was found out to be phylogenetically distinct from the red crossbill, and its 10 unique call types.[2][4]
Description
The Cassia crossbill shares many physical features with the red crossbill and all of its different call types.[3] Adult males display a brick red plumage along its crown, breast, and belly, while its flight feathers have a brown colour.[5][6] In contrast, adult females have an overall dull green or olive-yellow colour, with brown flight feathers.[5] Its defining feature, a crossed bill, is a crisscrossed bill used to access the pine cone seeds.[6] However, in relation to the red crossbill call types, the Cassia crossbill has a deeper and thicker bill to crack open the harder pine cones in its habitat.[3][4] Its body mass ranges from 29.2 to 43.9 g, while its wing length 85.0–100.0 mm and bill depth 8.90–10.56 mm.[3]
Habitat and distribution
The Cassia crossbill is found year-round exclusively in the forests of the South Hills and Albion Mountains in South Idaho.[3][7] Compared to its counterpart, the red crossbill, which is a global species, the total area the Cassia crossbill resides in equates to about 67 km2.[3] They are almost exclusively found in mature and old-growth lodgepole pine dominated forests that do not have American red squirrels as their beak is adapted for a specific type of pine cone.[3][7] This has led to a coevolutionary arms race with the lodgepole pine, which explains why they are confined in such a small area.[8] Other Red Crossbill call types, typically call type 2 & 5, are also found in these areas, but seldom breed here due to being poorly adapted to the pine cone structure.[3] Due to their restricted range and habitat, there is a cause for concern for this species survival.[7]
Taxonomy
The Cassia crossbill (Loxia sinesciuris) was first described in 2009 as the South Hills crossbill, but The American Ornithologists' Union (AOU) failed to find consensus on the issue of splitting the species from the red crossbill in 2009.[3][9] The genus “Loxia” means crosswise, while “sinesciuris” means “without squirrel”.[3][4][10] Initially, it was considered one of the Red Crossbills’ 10 call types, which had different vocalizations, bill size and were foraging for different conifer species.[11] The idea of reproductive isolation between call types was suggested, but direct evidence was lacking.[8] In 2007, some analyses found that different call types were genetically different including the South Hills crossbill (call type 9).[8] Furthermore, evidence suggested that the South Hills crossbill was in a coevolutionary arms race with the lodgepole pine, further leading to habitat isolation.[8] In 2016, it was identified as phylogenetically distinct from the other call types.[2] This is an example of sympatric speciation.[2][4] In 2017, the AOU reached a consensus and split the South Hills crossbill from the red crossbill and rename it the Cassia crossbill, because its habitat resided in Cassia County, Idaho.[4]
Behaviour
Diet
The Cassia crossbill will exclusively forage for lodgepole pine cones that are found in the South Hills and
Vocalizations
As mentioned previously, the red crossbill had 10 different call types and the Cassia crossbill was call type 9.[3] The Cassia Crossbill fledgling initially imitates its parents’ flight calls and eventually will modify its call to imitate their mate.[15][16] Compared to the other call types, the Cassia crossbills songs will be more repetitive while using fewer syllables.[3] The individual notes of the song are typically buzzier and will have multiple instances of silence in between call phrases.[3] Their song consists of strained and sharp chip and kip calls.[6] Occasionally when red crossbills forage, there will be overlap between different call types. It is believed that crossbills used the public information of different calls to forage.[16] This eventually led to assortative flocking when crossbills would follow vocalizations that would provide them the easiest route to food.[16] This can be another mechanism to how the Cassia crossbill diverged from the red crossbill.[16]
Reproduction
The Cassia crossbill and the other red crossbill call types will strongly associate with their own call types.[3] Between 2001 and 2006, less than 1% of Cassia crossbills paired with other call types.[8] Compared to the red crossbill call types, which are opportunistic breeders throughout most of the year, the Cassia crossbill will consistently breed from March through July.[8] They tend to build their cup-shaped nests in April, using twigs, grasses and needles.[5][8] Courtship of the crossbills involves the male attracting the female by singing, flying and feeding them with pine seeds.[5] Males will aggressively defend the female from other breeding males after copulation successfully occurs.[5] Females will lay 2–6 eggs and they will incubate the egg for 12–16 days.[5]
Conservation and status
The current total population estimation is ≈5,800 individuals.
References
- ^ "NatureServe Explorer 2.0".
- ^ PMID 27682183.
- ^ S2CID 9166193. Archived from the originalon 2019-04-29. Retrieved 2018-12-01.
- ^ a b c d e "2017 AOS Supplement is Out!". ABA Blog. 6 July 2017. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
- ^ doi:10.2173/bna.256.
- ^ ISBN 978-1-4027-3874-6.
- ^ S2CID 91471270.
- ^ S2CID 23415653.
- ^ "AOU | Committees | NACC | Pending Proposals, 2008". www.aou.org. Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
- ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
- S2CID 4309706.
- ^ JSTOR 2937103.
- ^ S2CID 3903767.
- ^ "Cassia Crossbill Life History, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology". www.allaboutbirds.org. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
- S2CID 11271878.
- ^ PMID 22915674.
- ISBN 978-2-8317-1435-6.
- S2CID 54177131.
- ^ "Nearly Half of the Cassia Crossbill's Population Could Be Lost After Wildfire". Audubon. 2020-10-14. Retrieved 2020-10-26.
External links
- The Cassia Crossbill – Idaho’s New Endemic Species - Multiple pictures of the Cassia crossbill
- Cassia Crossbill Species Account - Vocalization and the distribution of the Cassia crossbill
- Cassia Crossbill - Natural history and vocalizations of multiple red crossbill call types and the Cassia crossbill