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Iago sparrow

The Iago sparrow (Passer iagoensis), also known as the Cape Verde or rufous-backed sparrow, is a passerine bird of the sparrow family Passeridae. It is endemic to the Cape Verde archipelago, in the eastern Atlantic Ocean near western Africa. Females and young birds have brown plumage with black marks above, and a dull grey underside, and are distinguished from other species of sparrow by their large, distinct supercilium. Males have a brighter underside and bold black and chestnut stripes on their head. At 12.5–13 centimetres (4.9–5.1 in) long, it is a smaller sparrow. This bird's vocalisations are mostly variations on its chirp, which differ somewhat between males and females.

Iago sparrow
Male (above) and female (below) on Sal
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Passeridae
Genus: Passer
Species:
P. iagoensis
Binomial name
Passer iagoensis
(Gould, 1838)
Synonyms[2]
  • Pyrgita iagoensis Gould, 1837
  • Passer brancoensis Oustalet, 1883
  • Passer erthrophrys Temminck

The Iago sparrow was once thought to be most closely related to the rufous sparrows, a group of species within the genus Passer which live in similar habitats on continental Africa. Though the Iago sparrow is closest to the rufous sparrows in appearance, it has a number of crucial differences in morphology and behavior, and is separated by thousands of kilometres. It may in fact be more closely related to the house sparrow and Spanish sparrow. In Cape Verde it occurs on all but one island, and on most of them it is quite common. The Iago sparrow occurs in most of the habitats that are available in its range, such as lava plains, rocky hills, and gorges; however, the house sparrow and Spanish sparrow are typically present instead in denser settlements and richer cultivated areas respectively. Because the Iago sparrow is not under any serious threats, it is assessed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List.

Description

The Iago sparrow is a small sparrow, 12.5–13 centimetres (4.9–5.1 in) long, with a wing length of 5.5–6.9 centimetres (2.2–2.7 in).[3] Its plumage is similar to that of the house sparrow, and it similarly is sexually dimorphic. The male has a black or greyish-black crown and eyestripe, a grey nape and a small patch of white on the lower forehead. The sides of its head, especially above the eye, are a rich cinnamon colour. The scapulars are white and brown, while the rest of the upperparts are brown, streaked with black and beige. The cheeks and underparts are pale grey, and the throat and chin are marked with a small black bib. The female is grey-brown, with black-streaked wings and breast, and pale grey underparts. It is very similar to the female house sparrow but has a more apparent pale supercilium (stripe over the eye). The juvenile resembles the adult female, but young males are more chestnut from an early age, with a trace of a black bib on the chin.[3][4] In 1898, ornithologist Boyd Alexander reported that adults begin moulting in early February, and some birds were still in moult by late May.[5][6]

The Iago sparrow's vocalisations include calls, varying between the sexes, elaborations of these called 'songs', and an alarm call. Calls are chirps, somewhat similar to those of other sparrows, the usual version made by males described as a "twangy" cheesp or chew-weep, and that of females described as a "more sibilant" chisk. The song is a long, elaborated series of call notes, and is made by breeding males in their nests. An alarm call like that of other sparrows, transcribed chur-chur-chur, is also used.[6]

Taxonomy

 
Illustration of a male by John Gould

The Iago sparrow was first collected by Charles Darwin during the first stop of the second voyage of HMS Beagle at the island of Santiago (St. Iago).[2] It was described for him in 1837 by zoologist John Gould, in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, and given the name of Pyrgita iagoensis.[7] By the time Gould wrote The Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle with Darwin and three other zoologists in 1841, he had placed the Iago sparrow in the genus Passer, where it remains.[2][4] The genus, among the sparrows of the Old World in the family Passeridae, also contains at least 20 other species, among them the house sparrow and Eurasian tree sparrow.[8]

Within its genus, the Iago sparrow has been considered one of the African 'rufous sparrows', a group which also includes species such as the great sparrow (Passer motitensis). These birds were usually treated as distinct species until Reginald Ernest Moreau, writing in the 1962 Check-list of the Birds of the World, lumped the Iago sparrow and the mainland rufous sparrows as the single species Passer motitensis.[2] This taxonomy was followed frequently until J. Denis Summers-Smith, a world authority on sparrows, argued in the 1980s that the Iago sparrow's many differences in morphology and behaviour, and separation from the other rufous sparrows by about 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi), are sufficient grounds for species status.[2][8][9] Studies of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA have since suggested it may be a close relative of the house sparrow and the Spanish sparrow and not the rufous sparrows.[10]

French ornithologist Émile Oustalet described a specimen from Branco as a separate species Passer brancoensis in 1883,[2][11] which was recognised as the subspecies Passer iagoensis brancoensis by W. R. P. Bourne, who claimed to observe differences between Iago sparrows from different islands.[12] According to Bourne, birds of Passer iagoensis iagoensis on more wooded islands in the south are darker and larger, and also behave more like house or Spanish sparrows, competing with them better in human-altered habitats.[12] He later wrote that the variations he saw comprised two clinal trends, of increasing darkness towards the south, and of smaller size further from the continental coast.[13] Charles Vaurie, examining differences in plumage and measurements of specimens in major museums, did not find any significant variation, and neither Vaurie nor Summers-Smith recognised any subspecies.[2][14]

Distribution and habitat

 
A male on Monte Verde, São Vicente

The Iago sparrow is endemic to the archipelago of Cape Verde. It is common on most islands, excluding Fogo (from which it is absent) and Santa Luzia, Branco and Sal (on which it is scarce).[3][15] The Iago sparrow is found commonly in a variety of habitats, including flat lava plains, coastal cliffs, gorges, and the edges of farmland, at altitudes of up to 1,200 metres (3,900 ft). It also occurs in settled areas and gardens, where it may overlap somewhat with the house sparrow, but usually not with the Spanish sparrow. The Spanish sparrow occurs in richer cultivated land with larger trees and villages, restricting the Iago sparrow to more arid cultivated land with smaller trees. In settlements where both the house sparrow and Iago sparrow occur, house sparrows tend to occupy the denser areas, while Iago sparrows are found primarily around trees and open spaces.[16] In agricultural areas the Iago sparrow may do some damage to crops, mostly by eating buds and shoots.[3] The Iago sparrow is highly common within its limited range, though its exact population is not known. Though the size of its range means it may be at risk to unpredicted changes in its environment, it is assessed as Least Concern by the IUCN Red List.[1]

In May 2013 four vagrant Iago sparrows were seen at Hansweert, in the Netherlands, having flown onto a ship as it passed by the island of Raso.[17]

Behaviour

 
A female foraging, on Sal

The Iago sparrow is gregarious while foraging and breeding. Outside of the breeding season, Iago sparrows are always in flocks, which may be of considerable size. It flocks with other birds, even warblers such as the blackcap and the Cape Verde warbler.[18][19] The Iago sparrow is not very shy toward humans, allowing them to approach, even while it is at its nest.[18] Birds on the isolated and uninhabited island of Raso will even perch on human visitors with little fear.[17][20] Because of the scarcity of water to drink in its habitat, it has a strong attraction to sources of water, and large flocks may congregate when humans provide water it can drink. It often is seen dust bathing in small groups, a behavior necessary to keep clean with a paucity of water.[18]

The adult Iago sparrow feeds mainly on the seeds of grass and grain (the main cereal crop grown in Cape Verde is maize), but also on insects and plant shoots. They can do damage to crops by eating young leaves, and like house sparrows will eat the food scraps available near houses. Nestlings, by contrast to adults, are fed almost exclusively on insects, especially caterpillars, flies, and orthopterans.[5][6][21] The Iago sparrow forages mostly on the ground, moving restlessly whilst clinging to the ground like a mouse.[18]

Breeding

The breeding season generally begins in August and September with the onset of the humid season, but the climate during a particular year may change the timing of breeding. On Cima, W. R. P. Bourne observed females remaining in flocks while males began to take up locations on rocky slopes from which they could sing. The breeding season is typically long enough that some pairs may be fledging young before others even start to build a nest; the greatest number of pairs breed when rains come, in October to November. Unmated males attract females by calling out beside a prospective nest site. When approached by a female, the displaying male will increase the intensity of his calls and hop around her while crouching with chestnut rump- and shoulder-feathers exposed. The male begins building the nest, but once a pair is formed both birds of the pair participate in the nest's construction and remain close together.[12][18] Copulation occurs after the nest has been constructed, while the female is dominant in the pair for a time. The male invites the female to copulate by giving the crouching courtship display, and after ignoring and pecking at him initially, the female solicits copulation by crouching herself. When four vagrants were in the Netherlands in May 2013, a male was seen mounting a second male, apparently after the second crouched submissively to resolve a fight between them. This is the only recorded case of homosexual behaviour in sparrows.[22]

Nests are usually built a few metres apart in loose colonies of at most about 10 pairs, although sometimes pairs nest alone. The nest may be built in a range of habitats, and usually is built as a cup in a hole or crevice in a cliff or a wall. They may use suitable human-built structures, such as house eaves and streetlights. The nest is an open structure made of grass, lined with feathers and hairs, packed densely for compactness. Some ornithologists have reported this bird building domed nests in acacia trees, but these records may reflect confusion with the Spanish sparrow.[18] The average clutch contains three to five eggs.[3] Both sexes incubate the eggs and bring food to their young, but females do more. Eggs are incubated for short spells, around 10 minutes, and males incubate for shorter periods and less often. Though the male accompanies the female when she finds food and brings it to their nestlings, he less often brings any himself; once the young fledge and leave the nest the male is more active feeding them.[18]

References

  1. ^ a b BirdLife International (2016). "Passer iagoensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T22718202A94572225. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T22718202A94572225.en. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Summers-Smith 1988, pp. 93–95
  3. ^ a b c d e Clement, Harris & Davis 1993, pp. 455–456
  4. ^ a b Gould 1838, p. 95
  5. ^ a b Alexander, Boyd (1898). "An Ornithological Expedition to the Cape Verde Islands". The Ibis. 7th series. 4: 74–118.
  6. ^ a b c Summers-Smith 1988, p. 100
  7. ^ Gould, J. (1837). "Exhibition of Mr. Darwin's Birds, and description of a New Species of Wagtail (Motacilla leucopsis) from India". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London. V: 77–78.
  8. ^ a b Summers-Smith, J. Denis (2009). "Family Passeridae (Old World Sparrows)". In del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew; Christie, David (eds.). Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 14: Bush-shrikes to Old World Sparrows. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions. ISBN 978-84-96553-50-7.
  9. ^ Summers-Smith, D. (1984). "The Rufous Sparrows of the Cape Verde Islands". Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club. 104 (4): 138–141.
  10. ^ González, Javier; Siow, Melanie; Garcia-del-Rey, Eduardo; Delgado, Guillermo; Wink, Michael (2008). (PDF). Systematics 2008, Göttingen. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 July 2011.
  11. ^ "Description et Énumération des Espèces". Actes de la Société Linnéenne de Bordeaux (in French). 38. 1883.
  12. ^ a b c Bourne, W. R. P. (1955). "The Birds of the Cape Verde Islands". Ibis. 97 (3): 508–556. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1955.tb04981.x.
  13. ^ Bourne, W. R. P. (1957). "Additional Notes on the Birds of the Cape Verde Islands, with Particular Reference to Bulweria mollis and Fregata magnificens". Ibis. 99 (2): 182–190. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1957.tb01945.x.
  14. ^ Vaurie, C. (1958). "The Rufous-backed Sparrows Passer iagoensis of the Cape Verde Islands". Ibis. 100 (2): 275–276. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1958.tb08798.x.
  15. ^ Snow & Perrins 1998
  16. ^ Summers-Smith 1988, pp. 97–98
  17. ^ a b Janse, Wietze (20 May 2013). "Kaapverdische Mus doet even Nederland aan - kades vol met fans!". Dutch Birding (in Dutch).
  18. ^ a b c d e f g Summers-Smith 1988, pp. 98–100
  19. ^ Donald, P. F.; Taylor, R.; de Ponte Machado, M.; Pitta Groz, M. J.; Wells, C. E.; Marlow, T.; Hille, S. M. (2004). "Status of the Cape Verde Cane Warbler Acrocephalus brevipennis on São Nicolau, With Notes On Song, Breeding Behaviour and Threats" (PDF). Malimbus. 26: 34–37.
  20. ^ Spurrell, W. (1988). The Sea Swallow. XXXVII: 16. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  21. ^ Alexander, Boyd (1898). "Further Notes on the Ornithology of the Cape Verde Islands". The Ibis. 7th series. 4: 277–285.
  22. ^ Moeliker, C. W. (2014). (PDF). Dutch Birding. 36: 172–173. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 August 2014.

Works cited

  • Clarke, Tony; Orgill, Chris; Dudley, Tony (2006). A Field Guide to the Birds of the Atlantic Islands. London: Christopher Helm. ISBN 978-0-7136-6023-4.
  • Clement, Peter; Harris, Alan; Davis, John (1993). Finches and Sparrows: an Identification Guide. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-03424-9.
  • Gould, John (1838). Darwin, Charles (ed.). The Zoology of the H.M.S. Beagle, under the command of Captain Robert Fitzroy, R. N., during the years 1832 to 1836. Part III: Birds. London: Smith, Elder, and Company.
  • Snow, D. W.; Perrins, C. M. (1998). The Birds of the Western Palearctic. Vol. 2 (Concise ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-854099-1.
  • Summers-Smith, J. Denis (1988). The Sparrows. illustrated by Robert Gillmor. Calton, Staffs, England: T. & A. D. Poyser. ISBN 978-0-85661-048-6.
  • Williamson, M.H. (1996). Technology in the Third Millennium. Volume 15: Biological Invasions. Springer. ISBN 978-0-412-59190-7.

External links

  • Media related to the Iago Sparrow at the Internet Bird Collection
  • media from ARKive  

iago, sparrow, passer, iagoensis, also, known, cape, verde, rufous, backed, sparrow, passerine, bird, sparrow, family, passeridae, endemic, cape, verde, archipelago, eastern, atlantic, ocean, near, western, africa, females, young, birds, have, brown, plumage, . The Iago sparrow Passer iagoensis also known as the Cape Verde or rufous backed sparrow is a passerine bird of the sparrow family Passeridae It is endemic to the Cape Verde archipelago in the eastern Atlantic Ocean near western Africa Females and young birds have brown plumage with black marks above and a dull grey underside and are distinguished from other species of sparrow by their large distinct supercilium Males have a brighter underside and bold black and chestnut stripes on their head At 12 5 13 centimetres 4 9 5 1 in long it is a smaller sparrow This bird s vocalisations are mostly variations on its chirp which differ somewhat between males and females Iago sparrowMale above and female below on SalConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily PasseridaeGenus PasserSpecies P iagoensisBinomial namePasser iagoensis Gould 1838 Synonyms 2 Pyrgita iagoensis Gould 1837 Passer brancoensis Oustalet 1883 Passer erthrophrys TemminckThe Iago sparrow was once thought to be most closely related to the rufous sparrows a group of species within the genus Passer which live in similar habitats on continental Africa Though the Iago sparrow is closest to the rufous sparrows in appearance it has a number of crucial differences in morphology and behavior and is separated by thousands of kilometres It may in fact be more closely related to the house sparrow and Spanish sparrow In Cape Verde it occurs on all but one island and on most of them it is quite common The Iago sparrow occurs in most of the habitats that are available in its range such as lava plains rocky hills and gorges however the house sparrow and Spanish sparrow are typically present instead in denser settlements and richer cultivated areas respectively Because the Iago sparrow is not under any serious threats it is assessed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Breeding 5 References 5 1 Works cited 6 External linksDescription EditThe Iago sparrow is a small sparrow 12 5 13 centimetres 4 9 5 1 in long with a wing length of 5 5 6 9 centimetres 2 2 2 7 in 3 Its plumage is similar to that of the house sparrow and it similarly is sexually dimorphic The male has a black or greyish black crown and eyestripe a grey nape and a small patch of white on the lower forehead The sides of its head especially above the eye are a rich cinnamon colour The scapulars are white and brown while the rest of the upperparts are brown streaked with black and beige The cheeks and underparts are pale grey and the throat and chin are marked with a small black bib The female is grey brown with black streaked wings and breast and pale grey underparts It is very similar to the female house sparrow but has a more apparent pale supercilium stripe over the eye The juvenile resembles the adult female but young males are more chestnut from an early age with a trace of a black bib on the chin 3 4 In 1898 ornithologist Boyd Alexander reported that adults begin moulting in early February and some birds were still in moult by late May 5 6 The Iago sparrow s vocalisations include calls varying between the sexes elaborations of these called songs and an alarm call Calls are chirps somewhat similar to those of other sparrows the usual version made by males described as a twangy cheesp or chew weep and that of females described as a more sibilant chisk The song is a long elaborated series of call notes and is made by breeding males in their nests An alarm call like that of other sparrows transcribed chur chur chur is also used 6 Taxonomy Edit Illustration of a male by John GouldThe Iago sparrow was first collected by Charles Darwin during the first stop of the second voyage of HMS Beagle at the island of Santiago St Iago 2 It was described for him in 1837 by zoologist John Gould in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London and given the name of Pyrgita iagoensis 7 By the time Gould wrote The Zoology of the Voyage of H M S Beagle with Darwin and three other zoologists in 1841 he had placed the Iago sparrow in the genus Passer where it remains 2 4 The genus among the sparrows of the Old World in the family Passeridae also contains at least 20 other species among them the house sparrow and Eurasian tree sparrow 8 Within its genus the Iago sparrow has been considered one of the African rufous sparrows a group which also includes species such as the great sparrow Passer motitensis These birds were usually treated as distinct species until Reginald Ernest Moreau writing in the 1962 Check list of the Birds of the World lumped the Iago sparrow and the mainland rufous sparrows as the single species Passer motitensis 2 This taxonomy was followed frequently until J Denis Summers Smith a world authority on sparrows argued in the 1980s that the Iago sparrow s many differences in morphology and behaviour and separation from the other rufous sparrows by about 5 000 kilometres 3 100 mi are sufficient grounds for species status 2 8 9 Studies of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA have since suggested it may be a close relative of the house sparrow and the Spanish sparrow and not the rufous sparrows 10 French ornithologist Emile Oustalet described a specimen from Branco as a separate species Passer brancoensis in 1883 2 11 which was recognised as the subspecies Passer iagoensis brancoensis by W R P Bourne who claimed to observe differences between Iago sparrows from different islands 12 According to Bourne birds of Passer iagoensis iagoensis on more wooded islands in the south are darker and larger and also behave more like house or Spanish sparrows competing with them better in human altered habitats 12 He later wrote that the variations he saw comprised two clinal trends of increasing darkness towards the south and of smaller size further from the continental coast 13 Charles Vaurie examining differences in plumage and measurements of specimens in major museums did not find any significant variation and neither Vaurie nor Summers Smith recognised any subspecies 2 14 Distribution and habitat Edit A male on Monte Verde Sao VicenteThe Iago sparrow is endemic to the archipelago of Cape Verde It is common on most islands excluding Fogo from which it is absent and Santa Luzia Branco and Sal on which it is scarce 3 15 The Iago sparrow is found commonly in a variety of habitats including flat lava plains coastal cliffs gorges and the edges of farmland at altitudes of up to 1 200 metres 3 900 ft It also occurs in settled areas and gardens where it may overlap somewhat with the house sparrow but usually not with the Spanish sparrow The Spanish sparrow occurs in richer cultivated land with larger trees and villages restricting the Iago sparrow to more arid cultivated land with smaller trees In settlements where both the house sparrow and Iago sparrow occur house sparrows tend to occupy the denser areas while Iago sparrows are found primarily around trees and open spaces 16 In agricultural areas the Iago sparrow may do some damage to crops mostly by eating buds and shoots 3 The Iago sparrow is highly common within its limited range though its exact population is not known Though the size of its range means it may be at risk to unpredicted changes in its environment it is assessed as Least Concern by the IUCN Red List 1 In May 2013 four vagrant Iago sparrows were seen at Hansweert in the Netherlands having flown onto a ship as it passed by the island of Raso 17 Behaviour Edit A female foraging on SalThe Iago sparrow is gregarious while foraging and breeding Outside of the breeding season Iago sparrows are always in flocks which may be of considerable size It flocks with other birds even warblers such as the blackcap and the Cape Verde warbler 18 19 The Iago sparrow is not very shy toward humans allowing them to approach even while it is at its nest 18 Birds on the isolated and uninhabited island of Raso will even perch on human visitors with little fear 17 20 Because of the scarcity of water to drink in its habitat it has a strong attraction to sources of water and large flocks may congregate when humans provide water it can drink It often is seen dust bathing in small groups a behavior necessary to keep clean with a paucity of water 18 The adult Iago sparrow feeds mainly on the seeds of grass and grain the main cereal crop grown in Cape Verde is maize but also on insects and plant shoots They can do damage to crops by eating young leaves and like house sparrows will eat the food scraps available near houses Nestlings by contrast to adults are fed almost exclusively on insects especially caterpillars flies and orthopterans 5 6 21 The Iago sparrow forages mostly on the ground moving restlessly whilst clinging to the ground like a mouse 18 Breeding Edit The breeding season generally begins in August and September with the onset of the humid season but the climate during a particular year may change the timing of breeding On Cima W R P Bourne observed females remaining in flocks while males began to take up locations on rocky slopes from which they could sing The breeding season is typically long enough that some pairs may be fledging young before others even start to build a nest the greatest number of pairs breed when rains come in October to November Unmated males attract females by calling out beside a prospective nest site When approached by a female the displaying male will increase the intensity of his calls and hop around her while crouching with chestnut rump and shoulder feathers exposed The male begins building the nest but once a pair is formed both birds of the pair participate in the nest s construction and remain close together 12 18 Copulation occurs after the nest has been constructed while the female is dominant in the pair for a time The male invites the female to copulate by giving the crouching courtship display and after ignoring and pecking at him initially the female solicits copulation by crouching herself When four vagrants were in the Netherlands in May 2013 a male was seen mounting a second male apparently after the second crouched submissively to resolve a fight between them This is the only recorded case of homosexual behaviour in sparrows 22 Nests are usually built a few metres apart in loose colonies of at most about 10 pairs although sometimes pairs nest alone The nest may be built in a range of habitats and usually is built as a cup in a hole or crevice in a cliff or a wall They may use suitable human built structures such as house eaves and streetlights The nest is an open structure made of grass lined with feathers and hairs packed densely for compactness Some ornithologists have reported this bird building domed nests in acacia trees but these records may reflect confusion with the Spanish sparrow 18 The average clutch contains three to five eggs 3 Both sexes incubate the eggs and bring food to their young but females do more Eggs are incubated for short spells around 10 minutes and males incubate for shorter periods and less often Though the male accompanies the female when she finds food and brings it to their nestlings he less often brings any himself once the young fledge and leave the nest the male is more active feeding them 18 References Edit a b BirdLife International 2016 Passer iagoensis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22718202A94572225 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22718202A94572225 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 a b c d e f g Summers Smith 1988 pp 93 95 a b c d e Clement Harris amp Davis 1993 pp 455 456 a b Gould 1838 p 95 a b Alexander Boyd 1898 An Ornithological Expedition to the Cape Verde Islands The Ibis 7th series 4 74 118 a b c Summers Smith 1988 p 100 Gould J 1837 Exhibition of Mr Darwin s Birds and description of a New Species of Wagtail Motacilla leucopsis from India Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London V 77 78 a b Summers Smith J Denis 2009 Family Passeridae Old World Sparrows In del Hoyo Josep Elliott Andrew Christie David eds Handbook of the Birds of the World Volume 14 Bush shrikes to Old World Sparrows Barcelona Lynx Edicions ISBN 978 84 96553 50 7 Summers Smith D 1984 The Rufous Sparrows of the Cape Verde Islands Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 104 4 138 141 Gonzalez Javier Siow Melanie Garcia del Rey Eduardo Delgado Guillermo Wink Michael 2008 Phylogenetic relationships of the Cape Verde Sparrow based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA PDF Systematics 2008 Gottingen Archived from the original PDF on 7 July 2011 Description et Enumeration des Especes Actes de la Societe Linneenne de Bordeaux in French 38 1883 a b c Bourne W R P 1955 The Birds of the Cape Verde Islands Ibis 97 3 508 556 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1955 tb04981 x Bourne W R P 1957 Additional Notes on the Birds of the Cape Verde Islands with Particular Reference to Bulweria mollis and Fregata magnificens Ibis 99 2 182 190 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1957 tb01945 x Vaurie C 1958 The Rufous backed Sparrows Passer iagoensis of the Cape Verde Islands Ibis 100 2 275 276 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1958 tb08798 x Snow amp Perrins 1998 Summers Smith 1988 pp 97 98 a b Janse Wietze 20 May 2013 Kaapverdische Mus doet even Nederland aan kades vol met fans Dutch Birding in Dutch a b c d e f g Summers Smith 1988 pp 98 100 Donald P F Taylor R de Ponte Machado M Pitta Groz M J Wells C E Marlow T Hille S M 2004 Status of the Cape Verde Cane Warbler Acrocephalus brevipennis on Sao Nicolau With Notes On Song Breeding Behaviour and Threats PDF Malimbus 26 34 37 Spurrell W 1988 The Sea Swallow XXXVII 16 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Alexander Boyd 1898 Further Notes on the Ornithology of the Cape Verde Islands The Ibis 7th series 4 277 285 Moeliker C W 2014 Homosexual mounting of Iago Sparrows after ship assisted arrival in the Netherlands PDF Dutch Birding 36 172 173 Archived from the original PDF on 22 August 2014 Works cited Edit Clarke Tony Orgill Chris Dudley Tony 2006 A Field Guide to the Birds of the Atlantic Islands London Christopher Helm ISBN 978 0 7136 6023 4 Clement Peter Harris Alan Davis John 1993 Finches and Sparrows an Identification Guide Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 03424 9 Gould John 1838 Darwin Charles ed The Zoology of the H M S Beagle under the command of Captain Robert Fitzroy R N during the years 1832 to 1836 Part III Birds London Smith Elder and Company Snow D W Perrins C M 1998 The Birds of the Western Palearctic Vol 2 Concise ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 854099 1 Summers Smith J Denis 1988 The Sparrows illustrated by Robert Gillmor Calton Staffs England T amp A D Poyser ISBN 978 0 85661 048 6 Williamson M H 1996 Technology in the Third Millennium Volume 15 Biological Invasions Springer ISBN 978 0 412 59190 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Passer iagoensis category Wikispecies has information related to Passer iagoensis Media related to the Iago Sparrow at the Internet Bird Collection iago sparrow passer iagoensis Iago sparrow media from ARKive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iago sparrow amp oldid 1168628250, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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