New bird found in India is incredibly musical

The bird is named Himalayan forest thrush Zoothera salimalii'. The scientific name honours the Indian ornithologist Salim Ali.

Update: 2016-01-24 18:43 GMT
Himalayan Forest Thrush (Credit: Craig Belsford)

A bird that lives in the forests of northeastern India and sings a very melodic tune is a whole new species, scientists report.

The discovery process began in 2009 when researchers realised that what was considered a single species, the plain-backed thrush Zoothera mollissima, was in fact two different species in northeastern India, says Pamela Rasmussen of the integrative biology department at Michigan State University.

The new bird, described in the current issue of the journal Avian Research, is named Himalayan forest thrush Zoothera salimalii. The scientific name honours the Indian ornithologist Salim Ali. What first caught scientists’ attention was the plain-backed thrush in the coniferous and mixed forest had a rather musical song, but birds found in the same area — but on bare rocky ground above the treeline — had a much harsher, scratchier, unmusical song.

“It was an exciting moment when the penny dropped, and we realised that the two different song types from plain-backed thrushes that we first heard in northeast India in 2009, and which were associated with different habitats at different elevations, were given by two different species,” says lead author Per Alström of Uppsala University in Sweden.

To make the discovery, scientists had to do field observations and a bit of sleuthing with museum specimens. Investigations involving collections in several countries revealed consistent differences in plumage and structure between birds that could be assigned to either of these two species. It was confirmed that the species breeding in the forests of the eastern Himalayas had no name.

“At first we had no idea how or whether they differed morphologically. We were stunned to find that specimens in museums for over 150 years from the same parts of the Himalayas could readily be divided into two groups based on measurements and plumage,” Rasmussen says.

Further analyses of plumage, structure, song, DNA, and ecology from throughout the range of the plain-backed thrush revealed that a third species was present in central China. This was already known but was treated as a subspecies of plain-backed thrush. The scientists called it Sichuan forest thrush. The song of the Sichuan forest thrush was found to be even more musical than the song of the Himalayan forest thrush.

DNA analyses suggested that these three species have been genetically separated for several million years. Genetic data also yielded an additional find: Three museum specimens indicated the presence of yet another unnamed species in China, the Yunnan thrush — but future studies are required to confirm this.

New bird species are rarely discovered nowadays. In the last 15 years, on an average approximately five new species have been discovered annually, mainly in South America. The Himalayan forest thrush is only the fourth new bird species discovered in India since 1949.

What a sweet tone!
What first caught the scientists’ attention was that the plain-backed thrush in the coniferous and mixed forest had a rather musical song, but birds found in the same area — but on bare rocky ground above the treeline — had a much harsher, scratchier, ‘unmusical’ song

Source: www.futurity.org

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