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Cardinal (bird)

Cardinalidae (often referred to as the "cardinal-grosbeaks" or simply the "cardinals") is a family of New World-endemic passerine birds that consists of cardinals, grosbeaks, and buntings. It also includes several birds such as the tanager-like Piranga and the warbler-like Granatellus. As such, membership of this group is not easily defined by a single or even a set of physical characteristics, but instead by molecular work. In general they are medium to large songbirds with stout features, some with large heavy bills.

Members of this group are beloved for their brilliant red, yellow, or blue plumages seen in many of the breeding males in this family. Most species are monogamous breeders that nest in open-cup nests, with many taking turn incubating the nest and taking care of their young. Most are arboreal species though the dickcissel is a ground-dwelling prairie bird.

Conservation-wise most members of this family are considered least concern by the IUCN Red List though a few like the Carrizal seedeater and black-cheeked ant tanager are listed as critically endangered and endangered respectively. Studies on the effects of climate change on species has suggested many more might be threatened with extinction in the near future. However, some species such as the northern cardinal have been expanding their range within the last century.

Field characteristics

 
The male of the blue grosbeak showing the brilliant blue coloration with brown shoulders
 
The female of the blue grosbeak is predominantly brown

The grosbeaks, seedeaters, and cardinals have large bills, while Granatellus and buntings have small bills. The cardinalid tanagers have stout, near pointed bills, with some species of Piranga having serrations along the edge of their upper bills.[1] This bill shape is not always an indicator of relationships, as the various species of blue cardinalid species, like the blue grosbeak and Cyanoloxia grosbeaks are related to the buntings. Similarly the cardinalid tanagers are closer to the cardinals and masked grosbeaks (see more in the systematics section). The head is medium to large in size, with a medium neck length. The body of cardinalids ranges from small to medium with lengths of 4.5 to 11 in (11 to 28 cm). Legs are also short to medium in length. The wings are medium and pointed. Cardinalids have nine visible primary feathers with the tenth primary feather being short in comparison.[2][3][4] The plumages in cardinalids are sexually dichromatic as many males of various species display bright reds, oranges, blues or blacks. In most temperate species males will undergo molting between seasons so that non-breeding males will either resemble the females of their species or in-between the two. These species such as the indigo bunting will exhibit a complex molt cycle where they go through four different stages of plumage coverage within their first year of life. In the spring to summer birds start with juvenile plumage to supplemental plumage, then to a first basic (nonbreeding) plumage in the fall to winter and finally the first alternate (breeding) plumage. Adults will typically have the basic two molt cycle from alternate to basic or partial (late summer or fall) to back again in the spring. Males of tropical species will have the same coloration year-round. Females of all species are either drabber in coloration by comparison, either a lighter coloration of the males, with oranges, greens or yellows. The molting pattern in most cardinalids exhibits delayed plumage maturation, so that often the first- year male birds would be in non-breeding plumage or at an intermediate stage.[2] The molting pattern in cardinalids is divided into two types. A preformative molt is a partial molt where only the body feathers get replaced, but not the wing and tail feathers, which is seen in a lot of temperate and neotropical species. The second type is an eccentric preformative molt when only the outer primary and inner secondaries are replaced. This molt is seen in some species of Cyanoloxia and Passerina.[5][6]

Systematics

Traditionally members of this group were classified as a tribe of the finch family Fringillidae (Cardinalini) characterized by heavy, conical, seed-crushing bills. The group consisted of the genera Pheucticus, Parkerthraustes, Saltator, Spiza, Cyanocompsa, Cyanoloxia, Porphyrospiza, Passerina, Caryothraustes, Periporphyrus, Rhodothraupis, and Cardinalis. The issue that taxonomists had faced, however, was there was no unifying morphological traits that were congruent in various studies.[7] In 2007 a mitochondrial DNA study by Klicka, Burns and Spellman sampling all of the aforementioned genera and 34 of the 42 species found that the genera Parkerthraustes, Saltator, and Porphyrospiza were not members of the cardinal-lineage, but instead are found throughout in the tanager-lineage (Thraupidae). Interestingly enough the genera classified as thraupids at the time, Piranga, Habia, Chlorothraupis, and Amaurospiza, are found to be part of cardinalid radiation. In addition the genus Granatellus, originally classified as a parulid warbler, are also found to be part of Cardinalidae.[8] The authors have found that with this new relationship Cardinalidae can be classified into five subgroups, which have been supported by subsequent studies. The five subclades consists of the Habia lineage (Habia and Chlorothraupis), the “masked” lineage (Piranga, Caryothraustes, Periporphyrus, Rhodothraupis, and Cardinalis), the Granatellus lineage, the “blue” lineage (Cyanocompsa, Amaurospiza, Cyanoloxia, Passerina, and Spiza), and the Pheucticus lineage.[8] These subclades and membership of these genera have been widely supported in subsequent studies.[9][10] In a 2021 paper by Guallar et al. found based on the preformative molting pattern of cardinalids suggested the ancestor of this group was a forest-dwelling bird that dispersed into open habitats on numerous occasions.[6]

The cardinalids are part of a larger grouping of American endemic songbirds, Emberizoidea, which also includes the aforementioned thraupids and parulids, as well as icterids (New World blackbirds), passerellids (New World sparrows), and several families that contain one or a couple of genera. Several studies have placed cardinalids as either the sister group to Thraupidae,[9] Mitrospingidae (a small family whose genera were formerly classified as thraupids),[11] or the sister to a clade containing thraupids and mitrospingids.[10] At least one study suggested that cardinalids could treated as a subfamily of Thraupidae.[12]

Phylogeny

Phylogeny of the cardinalid genera after Klicka et al. (2007).[8]

Cardinalidae

Chlorothraupis – 4 species (tanagers)

Habia – 5 species (tanagers)

Piranga – 11 species (tanagers)

Cardinalis – 3 species (cardinals + pyrrhuloxia)

Caryothraustes – 2 species (grosbeaks)

Rhodothraupis – crimson-collared grosbeak

Periporphyrus – red-and-black grosbeak

Pheucticus – 6 species (grosbeaks)

Granatellus – 3 species (chats)

Spiza – dickcissel

Passerina – 7 species (buntings and blue grosbeak)

Cyanocompsa – blue bunting

Amaurospiza – 4 species (seedeaters)

Cyanoloxia – 4 species (grossbeaks)

Species list

These 53 species and 14 genera are recognized by the IOC as of January 2023:[13]

Image Genus Living species
  Piranga Vieillot, 1808
  Habia Blyth, 1840
  Chlorothraupis Salvin & Godman, 1883
  Pheucticus L. Reichenbach, 1850
  Granatellus Bonaparte, 1850
  Cardinalis Bonaparte, 1838
  Caryothraustes L. Reichenbach, 1850
  Rhodothraupis Ridgway, 1898
  Periporphyrus L. Reichenbach, 1850
  Amaurospiza Cabanis, 1861
  Spiza Bonaparte, 1824
  Cyanoloxia Bonaparte, 1850
  Cyanocompsa Cabanas, 1861
  Passerina Vieillot, 1816 North American buntings

Natural history

Habitat, distribution and migration

The cardinalids can be found from Canada to northern Argentina and Uruguay, with Central America having the most concentrated amount of species. Species are found year-around in the Central United States and the Eastern United States down to the neotropics. Cardinalids found in the West Indies are non-breeding migrants and those in the Western United States and Canada are breeding migrants.[3] The western tanager is the northernmost species in the family, with their breeding ranges occurring in the southern portions of the Northwest Territories. The northern cardinal has been introduced in Hawaii and Bermuda. They occupy a variety of habitats from forests to grassland and arid scrubland. Most North American cardinalid species migrate south for the winter, whether further south in the continent or extending into the neotropics, except the northern cardinal and pyrrhuloxia which stay year-round. The neotropical species are residential year-round in their range.[2]

Feeding ecology

 
A scarlet tanager foraging in a flowering dogwood tree.

Cardinals, the dickcissel, seedeaters, buntings, and grosbeaks have the thicker, seed-crushing bills that enabled them to feed heavily on fruits and seeds outside of the breeding season (especially in the winter for northern species like the aforementioned dickcissel and northern cardinal). Once their breeding season begins, members of this group will supplement themselves with invertebrate prey, vital when raising their young and refueling their energetic costs of reproduction and other daily activities. The genera Chlorothraupis, Habia, Piranga, and Granatellus have slightly longer and less deep bills, which their diet mostly consists of insects, fruit, nectar and sap, less so on seeds.[4] Cardinalids typically forage alone low level or on the ground, though some like Piranga and grosbeaks will forage high in the tree canopy. Many will come to birdfeeders especially during the winter.[2]

Breeding and reproduction

 
A northern cardinal nest showing the nest structure and key features of their egg in Cardinalidae.

Nearly all cardinalids are monogamous breeders and are highly territorial. Despite being monogamous this is only during the breeding season, and each year the birds might partner up with a different bird. The only exception is the dickcissel which is a polygynous species which nest in dense grasses and sedges. Other non-monogamous species include the lazuli and painted buntings which perform extra-copulation with multiple partners. The family is known for their intense brilliant songs. In some species like the lazuli bunting and indigo bunting the bird learn singing by match-based, meaning that first year breeding males will learn by copying the songs of nearby males, as opposed of learning it while they are in the nest. Even more unusual is the females of a few species, such as the scarlet tanager,[1] northern cardinal, pyrrhuloxia, and black-headed grosbeak, which sing as well. In temperate species the breeding season is occurs annual while in tropical species it is year-around. The breeding seasons is in sync with the abundance of insects. Most species build open-cup nests made of grasses and twigs depending on the species. These nests would be in the trees, often high up in the crown. The nest building is done by both partners or by the female alone. The male and female take turns incubating the nest, often the male would feed the female.[2] In a clutch on average there are 1 to 6 six eggs, with tropical species laying the fewest.[14] Cardinalids produce one to three broods per season. As with other passerines, the young are born altricial and fledged between one and two weeks.[14]

Conservation

 
The black-cheeked ant-tanager is one of the few threatened species of Cardinalidae. Endemic to Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica, this species faces habitat loss.

As of 2021, the IUCN Red List has nearly 82 percent of cardinalids to be least concern. However, there are a handful of species that are of conservation concern. The rose-bellied bunting is an endemic near-threatened species as they are found in a small area of Oaxaca and Chiapas, Mexico; the black-cheeked ant-tanager is another endemic species found in Osa Peninsula in Costa Rica and the carrizal seedeater a critically endangered species found in the spiny bamboo thickets in the understory of deciduous forest in a remote southeastern corner of Venezuela. All of these species are threatened with habitat loss and the confinement within their much smaller range. The IUCN has not yet reevaluate the other species of seedeaters in the genus Amaurospiza.[4]

Despite the vast majority of species being classified as least concern, there has been a growing concern in how the ongoing climate crisis will affect the distribution and migration of many species across the globe. One study led by Dr. Brooke L. Bateman published in July 2020 focused on the risk North American birds will face from climate change and the measures needed to protect them. The first study assessed 604 species from the United States found that if the planet warmed by 3.0 degrees Celsius many species, especially arctic birds, waterbirds, and boreal and western forest birds, will be highly vulnerable to climate change and future conservation efforts will need to be in place.[15] Among the species sampled, the North American species of Piranga and Pheucticus are found to be most climate vulnerable of the cardinalids.[16] These species will either lose some substantial amount of their range or they will migrate up north to escape the sudden change in their habitat.

A possible extinct species is the controversial Townsend's bunting, a supposed enigmatic species related to the dickcissel. The Townsend's bunting is only known from a single type specimen collected from Chester County, Pennsylvania by John Kirk Townsend and described by John James Audubon in 1834. The specimen is housed in the National Museum of Natural History. Genetic work has not been done on this bird, but observation of the plumage has been done. The controversy stems from the uncertainty from authors whether the bird is an extinct species, a rare color-variant of the dickcissel, or a hybrid female dickcissel and male blue grosbeak. If the bird is indeed simply a dickcissel it lacks any of the known field characteristics seen in the species in all life stages and sexes.[17]

References

  1. ^ a b Wells, A. C.; Wells, J. V. (2001). "Tanagers". In Sibley, D.; Elphick, C.; Dunning, J. B. Jr. (eds.). The Sibley Guide to Bird Life & Behavior. New York City: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. pp. 512–515. ISBN 1400043867.
  2. ^ a b c d e Thompson, C. W. (2001). "Cardinals and Allies". In Sibley, D.; Elphick, C.; Dunning, J. B. Jr. (eds.). The Sibley Guide to Bird Life & Behavior. New York City: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. pp. 536–541. ISBN 1400043867.
  3. ^ a b Dunne, P.; Karlson, K. T. (2021). Bird Families of North America. Location: Mariner Books. pp. 1–288. ISBN 978-0358164074.
  4. ^ a b c Winkler, D. W.; Billerman, S. M.; Lovette, I. J. (4 March 2020). "Cardinals and Allies (Cardinalidae), version 1.0". Birds of the World. doi:10.2173/bow.cardin1.01. S2CID 216193779. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  5. ^ Guallar, S.; Rueda-Hernández, R.; Pyle, P. (2020). "Preformative molt in Neotropical Cardinalidae". Ornithology Research. 28 (4): 250–257. doi:10.1007/s43388-020-00024-z. hdl:2072/377740. S2CID 228930759.
  6. ^ a b Guallar, S.; Rueda-Hernández, R.; Pyle, P. (2021). "Evolution of the preformative molt in Cardinalidae correlates with transitions from forest to open habitats". The Auk. 138 (1). doi:10.1093/ornithology/ukaa070.
  7. ^ Hellack, J. J.; Schnell, G. D. (1977). "Phenetic analysis of the subfamily Cardinalinae using external and skeletal characters". The Wilson Bulletin. 89 (1): 130–148. JSTOR 4160878.
  8. ^ a b c Klicka, J.; Burns, K.; Spellman, G. M. (2007). "Defining a monophyletic Cardinalini: a molecular perspective". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 45 (3): 1014–1032. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2007.07.006. PMID 17920298.
  9. ^ a b Barker, F. K.; Burns, K. J.; Klicka, J.; Lanyon, S. M.; Lanyon, I. J. (2014). "New insights into New World biogeography: An integrated view from the phylogeny of blackbirds, cardinals, sparrows, tanagers, warblers, and allies". The Auk: Ornithological Advances. 132 (2): 333–348. doi:10.1642/AUK-14-110.1. S2CID 53058340.
  10. ^ a b Oliveros, C.H.; et al. (2019). "Earth history and the passerine superradiation". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. 116 (16): 7916–7925. doi:10.1073/pnas.1813206116. PMC 6475423. PMID 30936315.
  11. ^ Barker, F. Keith; Burns, Kevin J.; Klicka, John; Lanyon, Scott M.; Lovette, Irby J. (2013). "Going to extremes: contrasting rates of diversification in a recent radiation of New World passerine birds". Systematic Biology. 62 (2): 298–320. doi:10.1093/sysbio/sys094. PMID 23229025.
  12. ^ Selvatti, A. P.; Gonzaga, L. P.; de Moraes Russo, C. A. (2015). "A Paleogene origin for crown passerines and the diversification of the Oscines in the New World". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 88: 1–15. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2015.03.018. PMID 25837731.
  13. ^ Gill, Frank; Donsker, David; Rasmussen, Pamela, eds. (January 2023). "Cardinals, grosbeaks and (tanager) allies". IOC World Bird List Version 13.1. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  14. ^ a b Dittman, D. L.; Cardiff, C. W. (2009). "Grosbeaks and Allies". In Harris, T. (ed.). National Geographic Complete Birds of the World. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic. pp. 362–363. ISBN 9781426204036.
  15. ^ Bateman, B. L.; Wilsey, C.; Taylor, L.; Wu, J.; LeBaron, G. S.; Langham, G. (2020). "North American birds require mitigation and adaptation to reduce vulnerability to climate change". Conservation Science and Practice. 2 (8). doi:10.1111/csp2.242. S2CID 225453243.
  16. ^ Waters, H. (10 October 2019). "The Future for Birds". Audubon. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  17. ^ Hume, J. P. (2017). Extinct Birds. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 1–560. ISBN 9781472937469.

External links

  • Cardinalidae videos, photos and sounds on the Internet Bird Collection
  • Cardinalidae sounds on xeno-canto.org
  • on petinfospot.com
  • Northern cardinal, including sound and video clips, on Cornell Lab of Ornithology

cardinal, bird, cardinalidae, often, referred, cardinal, grosbeaks, simply, cardinals, family, world, endemic, passerine, birds, that, consists, cardinals, grosbeaks, buntings, also, includes, several, birds, such, tanager, like, piranga, warbler, like, granat. Cardinalidae often referred to as the cardinal grosbeaks or simply the cardinals is a family of New World endemic passerine birds that consists of cardinals grosbeaks and buntings It also includes several birds such as the tanager like Piranga and the warbler like Granatellus As such membership of this group is not easily defined by a single or even a set of physical characteristics but instead by molecular work In general they are medium to large songbirds with stout features some with large heavy bills CardinalidsTemporal range Miocene Holocene 12 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NMale breeding dickcissel Spiza americana Male northern cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesSuperfamily EmberizoideaFamily CardinalidaeRidgway 1901Type speciesLoxia cardinalisLinnaeus 1758GeneraHabiaChlorothraupisPirangaCardinalisCaryothraustesRhodothraupisPeriporphyrusPheucticusGranatellusSpizaAmaurospizaCyanoloxiaCyanocompsaPasserinaMembers of this group are beloved for their brilliant red yellow or blue plumages seen in many of the breeding males in this family Most species are monogamous breeders that nest in open cup nests with many taking turn incubating the nest and taking care of their young Most are arboreal species though the dickcissel is a ground dwelling prairie bird Conservation wise most members of this family are considered least concern by the IUCN Red List though a few like the Carrizal seedeater and black cheeked ant tanager are listed as critically endangered and endangered respectively Studies on the effects of climate change on species has suggested many more might be threatened with extinction in the near future However some species such as the northern cardinal have been expanding their range within the last century Contents 1 Field characteristics 2 Systematics 2 1 Phylogeny 2 2 Species list 3 Natural history 3 1 Habitat distribution and migration 3 2 Feeding ecology 3 3 Breeding and reproduction 4 Conservation 5 References 6 External linksField characteristics Edit The male of the blue grosbeak showing the brilliant blue coloration with brown shoulders The female of the blue grosbeak is predominantly brown The grosbeaks seedeaters and cardinals have large bills while Granatellus and buntings have small bills The cardinalid tanagers have stout near pointed bills with some species of Piranga having serrations along the edge of their upper bills 1 This bill shape is not always an indicator of relationships as the various species of blue cardinalid species like the blue grosbeak and Cyanoloxia grosbeaks are related to the buntings Similarly the cardinalid tanagers are closer to the cardinals and masked grosbeaks see more in the systematics section The head is medium to large in size with a medium neck length The body of cardinalids ranges from small to medium with lengths of 4 5 to 11 in 11 to 28 cm Legs are also short to medium in length The wings are medium and pointed Cardinalids have nine visible primary feathers with the tenth primary feather being short in comparison 2 3 4 The plumages in cardinalids are sexually dichromatic as many males of various species display bright reds oranges blues or blacks In most temperate species males will undergo molting between seasons so that non breeding males will either resemble the females of their species or in between the two These species such as the indigo bunting will exhibit a complex molt cycle where they go through four different stages of plumage coverage within their first year of life In the spring to summer birds start with juvenile plumage to supplemental plumage then to a first basic nonbreeding plumage in the fall to winter and finally the first alternate breeding plumage Adults will typically have the basic two molt cycle from alternate to basic or partial late summer or fall to back again in the spring Males of tropical species will have the same coloration year round Females of all species are either drabber in coloration by comparison either a lighter coloration of the males with oranges greens or yellows The molting pattern in most cardinalids exhibits delayed plumage maturation so that often the first year male birds would be in non breeding plumage or at an intermediate stage 2 The molting pattern in cardinalids is divided into two types A preformative molt is a partial molt where only the body feathers get replaced but not the wing and tail feathers which is seen in a lot of temperate and neotropical species The second type is an eccentric preformative molt when only the outer primary and inner secondaries are replaced This molt is seen in some species of Cyanoloxia and Passerina 5 6 Systematics EditTraditionally members of this group were classified as a tribe of the finch family Fringillidae Cardinalini characterized by heavy conical seed crushing bills The group consisted of the genera Pheucticus Parkerthraustes Saltator Spiza Cyanocompsa Cyanoloxia Porphyrospiza Passerina Caryothraustes Periporphyrus Rhodothraupis and Cardinalis The issue that taxonomists had faced however was there was no unifying morphological traits that were congruent in various studies 7 In 2007 a mitochondrial DNA study by Klicka Burns and Spellman sampling all of the aforementioned genera and 34 of the 42 species found that the genera Parkerthraustes Saltator and Porphyrospiza were not members of the cardinal lineage but instead are found throughout in the tanager lineage Thraupidae Interestingly enough the genera classified as thraupids at the time Piranga Habia Chlorothraupis and Amaurospiza are found to be part of cardinalid radiation In addition the genus Granatellus originally classified as a parulid warbler are also found to be part of Cardinalidae 8 The authors have found that with this new relationship Cardinalidae can be classified into five subgroups which have been supported by subsequent studies The five subclades consists of the Habia lineage Habia and Chlorothraupis the masked lineage Piranga Caryothraustes Periporphyrus Rhodothraupis and Cardinalis the Granatellus lineage the blue lineage Cyanocompsa Amaurospiza Cyanoloxia Passerina and Spiza and the Pheucticus lineage 8 These subclades and membership of these genera have been widely supported in subsequent studies 9 10 In a 2021 paper by Guallar et al found based on the preformative molting pattern of cardinalids suggested the ancestor of this group was a forest dwelling bird that dispersed into open habitats on numerous occasions 6 The cardinalids are part of a larger grouping of American endemic songbirds Emberizoidea which also includes the aforementioned thraupids and parulids as well as icterids New World blackbirds passerellids New World sparrows and several families that contain one or a couple of genera Several studies have placed cardinalids as either the sister group to Thraupidae 9 Mitrospingidae a small family whose genera were formerly classified as thraupids 11 or the sister to a clade containing thraupids and mitrospingids 10 At least one study suggested that cardinalids could treated as a subfamily of Thraupidae 12 Phylogeny Edit Phylogeny of the cardinalid genera after Klicka et al 2007 8 Cardinalidae Chlorothraupis 4 species tanagers Habia 5 species tanagers Piranga 11 species tanagers Cardinalis 3 species cardinals pyrrhuloxia Caryothraustes 2 species grosbeaks Rhodothraupis crimson collared grosbeakPeriporphyrus red and black grosbeakPheucticus 6 species grosbeaks Granatellus 3 species chats Spiza dickcisselPasserina 7 species buntings and blue grosbeak Cyanocompsa blue buntingAmaurospiza 4 species seedeaters Cyanoloxia 4 species grossbeaks Species list Edit These 53 species and 14 genera are recognized by the IOC as of January 2023 13 Image Genus Living species Piranga Vieillot 1808 Flame colored tanager Piranga bidentata Tooth billed tanager Piranga lutea Red tanager Piranga flava Hepatic tanager Piranga flava Summer tanager Piranga rubra Rose throated tanager Piranga roseogularis Scarlet tanager Piranga olivacea Western tanager Piranga ludoviciana White winged tanager Piranga leucoptera Red headed tanager Piranga erythrocephala Red hooded tanager Piranga rubriceps Habia Blyth 1840 Red crowned ant tanager Habia rubica Red throated ant tanager Habia fuscicauda Black cheeked ant tanager Habia atrimaxillaris Sooty ant tanager Habia gutturalis Crested ant tanager Habia cristata Chlorothraupis Salvin amp Godman 1883 Carmiol s tanager Chlorothraupis carmioli Olive tanager Chlorothraupis frenata Lemon spectacled tanager Chlorothraupis olivacea Ochre breasted tanager Chlorothraupis stolzmanni Pheucticus L Reichenbach 1850 Yellow grosbeak Pheucticus chrysopeplus Black thighed grosbeak Pheucticus tibialis Golden grosbeak Pheucticus chrysogaster Black backed grosbeak Pheucticus aureoventris Rose breasted grosbeak Pheucticus ludovicianus Black headed grosbeak Pheucticus melanocephalus Granatellus Bonaparte 1850 Red breasted chat Granatellus venustus Grey throated chat Granatellus sallaei Rose breasted chat Granatellus pelzelni Cardinalis Bonaparte 1838 Northern cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis Vermilion cardinal Cardinalis phoeniceus Pyrrhuloxia Cardinalis sinuatus Caryothraustes L Reichenbach 1850 Black faced grosbeak Caryothraustes poliogaster Yellow green grosbeak Caryothraustes canadensis Rhodothraupis Ridgway 1898 Crimson collared grosbeak Rhodothraupis celaeno Periporphyrus L Reichenbach 1850 Red and black grosbeak Periporphyrus erythromelas Amaurospiza Cabanis 1861 Cabanis s seedeater Amaurospiza concolor Ecuadorian seedeater Amaurospiza aequatorialis Blackish blue seedeater Amaurospiza moesta Carrizal seedeater Amaurospiza carrizalensis Spiza Bonaparte 1824 Dickcissel Spiza americana Cyanoloxia Bonaparte 1850 Glaucous blue grosbeak Cyanoloxia glaucocaerulea Blue black grosbeak Cyanoloxia cyanoides Amazonian grosbeak Cyanoloxia rothschildii Ultramarine grosbeak Cyanoloxia brissonii Cyanocompsa Cabanas 1861 Blue bunting Cyanocompsa parellina Passerina Vieillot 1816 North American buntings Blue grosbeak Passerina caerulea Indigo bunting Passerina cyanea Lazuli bunting Passerina amoena Varied bunting Passerina versicolor Painted bunting Passerina ciris Rose bellied bunting Passerina rositae Orange breasted bunting Passerina leclancheriiNatural history EditHabitat distribution and migration Edit The cardinalids can be found from Canada to northern Argentina and Uruguay with Central America having the most concentrated amount of species Species are found year around in the Central United States and the Eastern United States down to the neotropics Cardinalids found in the West Indies are non breeding migrants and those in the Western United States and Canada are breeding migrants 3 The western tanager is the northernmost species in the family with their breeding ranges occurring in the southern portions of the Northwest Territories The northern cardinal has been introduced in Hawaii and Bermuda They occupy a variety of habitats from forests to grassland and arid scrubland Most North American cardinalid species migrate south for the winter whether further south in the continent or extending into the neotropics except the northern cardinal and pyrrhuloxia which stay year round The neotropical species are residential year round in their range 2 Feeding ecology Edit A scarlet tanager foraging in a flowering dogwood tree Cardinals the dickcissel seedeaters buntings and grosbeaks have the thicker seed crushing bills that enabled them to feed heavily on fruits and seeds outside of the breeding season especially in the winter for northern species like the aforementioned dickcissel and northern cardinal Once their breeding season begins members of this group will supplement themselves with invertebrate prey vital when raising their young and refueling their energetic costs of reproduction and other daily activities The genera Chlorothraupis Habia Piranga and Granatellus have slightly longer and less deep bills which their diet mostly consists of insects fruit nectar and sap less so on seeds 4 Cardinalids typically forage alone low level or on the ground though some like Piranga and grosbeaks will forage high in the tree canopy Many will come to birdfeeders especially during the winter 2 Breeding and reproduction Edit A northern cardinal nest showing the nest structure and key features of their egg in Cardinalidae Nearly all cardinalids are monogamous breeders and are highly territorial Despite being monogamous this is only during the breeding season and each year the birds might partner up with a different bird The only exception is the dickcissel which is a polygynous species which nest in dense grasses and sedges Other non monogamous species include the lazuli and painted buntings which perform extra copulation with multiple partners The family is known for their intense brilliant songs In some species like the lazuli bunting and indigo bunting the bird learn singing by match based meaning that first year breeding males will learn by copying the songs of nearby males as opposed of learning it while they are in the nest Even more unusual is the females of a few species such as the scarlet tanager 1 northern cardinal pyrrhuloxia and black headed grosbeak which sing as well In temperate species the breeding season is occurs annual while in tropical species it is year around The breeding seasons is in sync with the abundance of insects Most species build open cup nests made of grasses and twigs depending on the species These nests would be in the trees often high up in the crown The nest building is done by both partners or by the female alone The male and female take turns incubating the nest often the male would feed the female 2 In a clutch on average there are 1 to 6 six eggs with tropical species laying the fewest 14 Cardinalids produce one to three broods per season As with other passerines the young are born altricial and fledged between one and two weeks 14 Conservation Edit The black cheeked ant tanager is one of the few threatened species of Cardinalidae Endemic to Osa Peninsula Costa Rica this species faces habitat loss As of 2021 the IUCN Red List has nearly 82 percent of cardinalids to be least concern However there are a handful of species that are of conservation concern The rose bellied bunting is an endemic near threatened species as they are found in a small area of Oaxaca and Chiapas Mexico the black cheeked ant tanager is another endemic species found in Osa Peninsula in Costa Rica and the carrizal seedeater a critically endangered species found in the spiny bamboo thickets in the understory of deciduous forest in a remote southeastern corner of Venezuela All of these species are threatened with habitat loss and the confinement within their much smaller range The IUCN has not yet reevaluate the other species of seedeaters in the genus Amaurospiza 4 Despite the vast majority of species being classified as least concern there has been a growing concern in how the ongoing climate crisis will affect the distribution and migration of many species across the globe One study led by Dr Brooke L Bateman published in July 2020 focused on the risk North American birds will face from climate change and the measures needed to protect them The first study assessed 604 species from the United States found that if the planet warmed by 3 0 degrees Celsius many species especially arctic birds waterbirds and boreal and western forest birds will be highly vulnerable to climate change and future conservation efforts will need to be in place 15 Among the species sampled the North American species of Piranga and Pheucticus are found to be most climate vulnerable of the cardinalids 16 These species will either lose some substantial amount of their range or they will migrate up north to escape the sudden change in their habitat A possible extinct species is the controversial Townsend s bunting a supposed enigmatic species related to the dickcissel The Townsend s bunting is only known from a single type specimen collected from Chester County Pennsylvania by John Kirk Townsend and described by John James Audubon in 1834 The specimen is housed in the National Museum of Natural History Genetic work has not been done on this bird but observation of the plumage has been done The controversy stems from the uncertainty from authors whether the bird is an extinct species a rare color variant of the dickcissel or a hybrid female dickcissel and male blue grosbeak If the bird is indeed simply a dickcissel it lacks any of the known field characteristics seen in the species in all life stages and sexes 17 References Edit a b Wells A C Wells J V 2001 Tanagers In Sibley D Elphick C Dunning J B Jr eds The Sibley Guide to Bird Life amp Behavior New York City Alfred A Knopf Inc pp 512 515 ISBN 1400043867 a b c d e Thompson C W 2001 Cardinals and Allies In Sibley D Elphick C Dunning J B Jr eds The Sibley Guide to Bird Life amp Behavior New York City Alfred A Knopf Inc pp 536 541 ISBN 1400043867 a b Dunne P Karlson K T 2021 Bird Families of North America Location Mariner Books pp 1 288 ISBN 978 0358164074 a b c Winkler D W Billerman S M Lovette I J 4 March 2020 Cardinals and Allies Cardinalidae version 1 0 Birds of the World doi 10 2173 bow cardin1 01 S2CID 216193779 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Guallar S Rueda Hernandez R Pyle P 2020 Preformative molt in Neotropical Cardinalidae Ornithology Research 28 4 250 257 doi 10 1007 s43388 020 00024 z hdl 2072 377740 S2CID 228930759 a b Guallar S Rueda Hernandez R Pyle P 2021 Evolution of the preformative molt in Cardinalidae correlates with transitions from forest to open habitats The Auk 138 1 doi 10 1093 ornithology ukaa070 Hellack J J Schnell G D 1977 Phenetic analysis of the subfamily Cardinalinae using external and skeletal characters The Wilson Bulletin 89 1 130 148 JSTOR 4160878 a b c Klicka J Burns K Spellman G M 2007 Defining a monophyletic Cardinalini a molecular perspective Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 45 3 1014 1032 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2007 07 006 PMID 17920298 a b Barker F K Burns K J Klicka J Lanyon S M Lanyon I J 2014 New insights into New World biogeography An integrated view from the phylogeny of blackbirds cardinals sparrows tanagers warblers and allies The Auk Ornithological Advances 132 2 333 348 doi 10 1642 AUK 14 110 1 S2CID 53058340 a b Oliveros C H et al 2019 Earth history and the passerine superradiation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States 116 16 7916 7925 doi 10 1073 pnas 1813206116 PMC 6475423 PMID 30936315 Barker F Keith Burns Kevin J Klicka John Lanyon Scott M Lovette Irby J 2013 Going to extremes contrasting rates of diversification in a recent radiation of New World passerine birds Systematic Biology 62 2 298 320 doi 10 1093 sysbio sys094 PMID 23229025 Selvatti A P Gonzaga L P de Moraes Russo C A 2015 A Paleogene origin for crown passerines and the diversification of the Oscines in the New World Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 88 1 15 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2015 03 018 PMID 25837731 Gill Frank Donsker David Rasmussen Pamela eds January 2023 Cardinals grosbeaks and tanager allies IOC World Bird List Version 13 1 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 25 February 2023 a b Dittman D L Cardiff C W 2009 Grosbeaks and Allies In Harris T ed National Geographic Complete Birds of the World Washington D C National Geographic pp 362 363 ISBN 9781426204036 Bateman B L Wilsey C Taylor L Wu J LeBaron G S Langham G 2020 North American birds require mitigation and adaptation to reduce vulnerability to climate change Conservation Science and Practice 2 8 doi 10 1111 csp2 242 S2CID 225453243 Waters H 10 October 2019 The Future for Birds Audubon Retrieved 7 January 2022 Hume J P 2017 Extinct Birds London Bloomsbury Publishing pp 1 560 ISBN 9781472937469 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to the cardinal family Wikispecies has information related to Cardinalidae Cardinalidae videos photos and sounds on the Internet Bird Collection Cardinalidae sounds on xeno canto org Northern cardinal bird information on petinfospot com Northern cardinal including sound and video clips on Cornell Lab of Ornithology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cardinal bird amp oldid 1142278335, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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