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Nuthatch

The nuthatches (/nʌt.hæ/) constitute a genus, Sitta, of small passerine birds belonging to the family Sittidae. Characterised by large heads, short tails, and powerful bills and feet, nuthatches advertise their territory using loud, simple songs. Most species exhibit grey or bluish upperparts and a black eye stripe.

Nuthatches
A Eurasian nuthatch at the Rouge Cloître estate in the Sonian Forest, near Brussels, Belgium
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Sittidae
Lesson, 1828
Genus: Sitta
Linnaeus, 1758
Type species
Sitta europaea
Linnaeus, 1758

Most nuthatches breed in the temperate or montane woodlands of the Northern Hemisphere, although two species have adapted to rocky habitats in the warmer and drier regions of Eurasia. However, the greatest diversity is in Southern Asia, and similarities between the species have made it difficult to identify distinct species. All members of this genus nest in holes or crevices. Most species are non-migratory and live in their habitat year-round, although the North American red-breasted nuthatch migrates to warmer regions during the winter. A few nuthatch species have restricted ranges and face threats from deforestation.

Nuthatches are omnivorous, eating mostly insects, nuts, and seeds. They forage for insects hidden in or under bark by climbing along tree trunks and branches, sometimes upside-down. They forage within their territories when breeding, but they may join mixed feeding flocks at other times.

Their habit of wedging a large food item in a crevice and then hacking at it with their strong bills gives this group its English name.

Taxonomy edit

Certhioidea

Tichodromidae: wallcreeper

Sittidae: nuthatches

Certhiidae: treecreepers

Polioptilidae: gnatcatchers

Troglodytidae: wrens

Relationships among families in the superfamily Certhioidea.[1]

The nuthatch family, Sittidae, was described by René-Primevère Lesson in 1828.[2][3]

Sometimes the wallcreeper (Tichodroma muraria), which is restricted to the mountains of southern Eurasia, is placed in the same family as the nuthatches, but in a separate subfamily "Tichodromadinae", in which case the nuthatches are classified in the subfamily "Sittinae". However, the wallcreeper is more often placed in a separate family, the Tichodromadidae.[4]

The wallcreeper is intermediate in its morphology between the nuthatches and the treecreepers, but its appearance, the texture of its plumage, and the shape and pattern of its tail suggest that it is closer to the former taxon.[5]

The nuthatch vanga of Madagascar (formerly known as the coral-billed nuthatch) and the sittellas from Australia and New Guinea were once placed in the nuthatch family because of similarities in appearance and lifestyle, but they are not closely related. The resemblances arose via convergent evolution to fill an ecological niche.[6]

Sitta

White-cheeked nuthatch (Sitta leucopsis)

Przevalski's nuthatch (Sitta przewalskii)

White-breasted nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis)

Giant nuthatch (Sitta magna)

Beautiful nuthatch (Sitta formosa)

Blue nuthatch (Sitta azurea)

Velvet-fronted nuthatch (Sitta frontalis)

Sulphur-billed nuthatch (Sitta oenochlamys)

Pygmy nuthatch (Sitta pygmaea)

Bahama nuthatch (Sitta insularis)

Brown-headed nuthatch (Sitta pusilla)

Red-breasted nuthatch (Sitta canadensis)

Chinese nuthatch (Sitta villosa)

Corsican nuthatch (Sitta whiteheadi)

Yunnan nuthatch (Sitta yunnanensis)

Krüper's nuthatch (Sitta krueperi)

Algerian nuthatch (Sitta ledanti)

Western rock nuthatch (Sitta neumayer)

Eastern rock nuthatch (Sitta tephronota)

Siberian nuthatch (Sitta arctica)

White-tailed nuthatch (Sitta himalayensis)

White-browed nuthatch (Sitta victoriae)

Eurasian nuthatch (Sitta europaea)

Chestnut-vented nuthatch (Sitta nagaensis)

Kashmir nuthatch (Sitta cashmirensis)

Indian nuthatch (Sitta castanea)

Chestnut-bellied nuthatch (Sitta cinnamoventris)

Burmese nuthatch (Sitta neglecta)

Phylogeny based on a molecular genetic study by Martin Päckert and colleagues published in 2020. The yellow-billed nuthatch (Sitta solangiae) was not sampled.[7]

The nuthatches' closest relatives, other than the wallcreeper, are the treecreepers, and the two (or three) families are sometimes placed in a larger grouping with the wrens and gnatcatchers. This superfamily, the Certhioidea, is proposed on phylogenetic studies using mitochondrial and nuclear DNA, and was created to cover a clade of (four or) five families removed from a larger grouping of passerine birds, the Sylvioidea.[3][8]

Genus name edit

The nuthatches are all in the genus Sitta Linnaeus, 1758,[9] a name derived from σίττη : síttē, Ancient Greek for this bird.[10]

The English term nuthatch refers to the propensity of some species to wedge a large insect or seed in a crack and hack at it with their strong bills.[11]

Species boundaries edit

Species boundaries in the nuthatches are difficult to define. The red-breasted nuthatch, Corsican nuthatch and Chinese nuthatch have breeding ranges separated by thousands of kilometres, but are similar in habitat preference, appearance and song. They were formerly considered to be one species, but are now normally split into three[12] and comprise a superspecies along with the Krüper's and Algerian nuthatch. Unusually for nuthatches, all five species excavate their own nests.[13]

The Eurasian, chestnut-vented, Kashmir and chestnut-bellied nuthatches form another superspecies and replace each other geographically across Asia. They are currently considered to be four separate species, but the south Asian forms were once believed to be a subspecies of the Eurasian nuthatch.[14] A recent change in this taxonomy is a split of the chestnut-bellied nuthatch into three species, namely the Indian nuthatch, Sitta castanea, found south of the Ganges, the Burmese nuthatch, Sitta neglecta, found in southeast Asia, and the chestnut-bellied nuthatch sensu stricto, S. cinnamoventris, which occurs in the Himalayas.[15] Mitochondrial DNA studies have demonstrated that the white-breasted northern subspecies of Eurasian nuthatch, S. (europea) arctica, is distinctive,[16] and also a possible candidate for full species status.[17] This split has been accepted by the British Ornithologists' Union.[18]

A 2006 review of Asian nuthatches suggested that there are still unresolved problems in nuthatch taxonomy and proposed splitting the genus Sitta. This suggestion would move the red- and yellow-billed south Asian species (velvet-fronted, yellow-billed and sulphur-billed nuthatches) to a new genus, create a third genus for the blue nuthatch, and possibly a fourth for the beautiful nuthatch.[17]

The fossil record for this group appears to be restricted to a foot bone of an early Miocene bird from Bavaria which has been identified as an extinct representative of the climbing Certhioidea, a clade comprising the treecreepers, wallcreeper and nuthatches. It has been described as Certhiops rummeli.[19] Two fossil species have been described in the genus Sitta: S. cuvieri Gervais, 1852 and S. senogalliensis Portis, 1888, but they probably do not belong to nuthatches.[20]

Description edit

 
The red-breasted nuthatch is said to have a call like a tin trumpet.

Nuthatches are compact birds with short legs, compressed wings, and square 12-feathered tails. They have long, sturdy, pointed bills and strong toes with long claws. Nuthatches have blue-grey backs (violet-blue in some Asian species, which also have red or yellow bills) and white underparts, which are variably tinted with buff, orange, rufous or lilac. Although head markings vary between species, a long black eye stripe, with contrasting white supercilium, dark forehead and blackish cap is common. The sexes look similar, but may differ in underpart colouration, especially on the rear flanks and under the tail. Juveniles and first-year birds can be almost indistinguishable from adults.[6]

The sizes of nuthatches vary,[6] from the large giant nuthatch, at 195 mm (7.7 in) and 36–47 g (1.3–1.7 oz),[21] to the small brown-headed nuthatch and the pygmy nuthatch, both around 100 mm (3.9 in) in length and about 10 g (0.35 oz).[22]

Nuthatches are very vocal, using an assortment of whistles, trills and calls. Their breeding songs tend to be simple and often identical to their contact calls but longer in duration.[6] The red-breasted nuthatch, which coexists with the black-capped chickadee throughout much of its range, is able to understand the latter species' calls. The chickadee has subtle call variations that communicate information about the size and risk of potential predators. Many birds recognise the simple alarm calls produced by other species, but the red-breasted nuthatch is able to interpret the chickadees' detailed variations and to respond appropriately.[23]

Species edit

The species diversity for Sittidae is greatest in southern Asia (possibly the original home of this family), where about 15 species occur, but it has representatives across much of the Northern Hemisphere.[6] The currently recognised nuthatch species are tabulated below.[24]

Species in taxonomic sequence
Common and
binomial names
Image Description Range
(population if known)
White-cheeked nuthatch
(Sitta leucopsis)
  13 cm (5.1 in) long, white cheeks, chin, throat, and underparts, upper parts mostly dark grey. western Himalayas[25]
Przevalski's nuthatch
(Sitta przewalskii)
  13 cm (5.1 in) long, white cheeks, chin, throat, and underparts, upper parts mostly dark grey. southeastern Tibet to western China[26]
Giant nuthatch
(Sitta magna)
  19.5 cm (7.7 in) long, greyish upper parts and whitish underparts. China, Burma, and Thailand.[21]
White-breasted nuthatch
(Sitta carolinensis)
  13–14 cm (5.1–5.5 in) long, the white of the face completely surrounds the eye, face and the underparts are white, upper parts are mostly pale blue-grey. North America from southern Canada to Mexico[27][28]
Beautiful nuthatch
(Sitta formosa)
  16.5 cm (6.5 in) long, black-backed with white streaking, bright blue upper back, rump and shoulders, dull orange underparts and paler face. Northeast India and Burma and locally in southern China and northern Southeast Asia[29]
Blue nuthatch
(Sitta azurea)
  13.5 cm (5.3 in) long, greyish upper parts and whitish underparts. Malaysia, Sumatra and Java[30]
Velvet-fronted nuthatch
(Sitta frontalis)
  12.5 cm (4.9 in) long, violet-blue above, with lavender cheeks, beige underparts and a whitish throat, bill is red, black patch on forehead. India and Sri Lanka through Southeast Asia to Indonesia[31]
Yellow-billed nuthatch
(Sitta solangiae)
  12.5–13.5 cm (4.9–5.3 in) long, white underparts, bluish upper parts, yellow beak. Vietnam and Hainan Island, China[32]
Sulphur-billed nuthatch
(Sitta oenochlamys)
  12.5 cm (4.9 in) long, pinkish underparts, yellow beak, bluish upper parts. Endemic to the Philippines[33]
Pygmy nuthatch
(Sitta pygmaea)
  10 cm (3.9 in) long, grey cap, blue-grey upper parts, whitish underparts, whitish spot on the nape. Western North America from British Columbia to southwest Mexico
(2.3 million)[34]
Brown-headed nuthatch
(Sitta pusilla)
  10.5 cm (4.1 in) long, brown cap with narrow black eye stripe and buff white cheeks, chin, and belly, wings are bluish-grey, small white spot at the nape of the neck. Endemic to the Southeastern United States
(1.5 million)[22]
Bahama nuthatch

(Sitta insularis)

Very similar to brown-headed nuthatch, but has a darker eye stripe, much longer beak, shorter wings, and a different call than it. Endemic to Grand Bahama

(1–49 individuals, potentially extinct)[35]

Yunnan nuthatch
(Sitta yunnanensis)
  12 cm (4.7 in) long, greyish upper parts and whitish underparts. Endemic to southwest China[36]
Algerian nuthatch
(Sitta ledanti)
  13.5 cm (5.3 in) long, blue-grey above, and buff below. Male has a black crown and eye stripe separated by a white supercilium; female has a grey crown and eye stripe. Endemic to northeast Algeria
(Fewer than 1,000 pairs)[37]
Krüper's nuthatch
(Sitta krueperi)
  11.5–12.5 cm (4.5–4.9 in) long, whitish underparts with a reddish throat, mostly grey upper parts. Turkey, Georgia, Russia and on the Greek island of Lesvos.
(80,000–170,000 pairs)[38]
Red-breasted nuthatch
(Sitta canadensis)
  11 cm (4.3 in) long, blue-grey upper parts, with reddish underparts, white face with a black eye stripe, white throat, a straight grey bill and a black crown. Western and northern temperate North America, winters across much of the US and southern Canada
(18 million)[39]
Corsican nuthatch
(Sitta whiteheadi)
  12 cm (4.7 in) long, blue-grey above, and buff below. Male has a black crown and eye stripe separated by a white supercilium; the female has a grey crown and eye stripe. Endemic to Corsica
(c. 2,000 pairs)[40][41]
Chinese nuthatch
(Sitta villosa)
  11.5 cm (4.5 in) long, greyish upper parts and pinkish underparts. China, North Korea, and South Korea[42]
Western rock nuthatch
(Sitta neumayer)
  13.5 cm (5.3 in) long. white throat and underparts shading to buff on the belly. The shade of grey upper parts and the darkness of the eye stripe vary between the three subspecies. The Balkans east through Greece and Turkey to Iran
(130,000)[43]
Eastern rock nuthatch
(Sitta tephronota)
  16–18 cm (6.3–7.1 in) long, greyish upper parts and whitish underparts, pinkish rump. Northern Iraq Kurdistan and western Iran east through Central Asia
(43,000–100,000 in Europe)[44]
Siberian nuthatch
(Sitta arctica)
  15 cm (5.9 in) long, long and thin bill, black eye stripe, blue-grey upper parts, pure white underparts, long claw. Eastern Siberia
White-browed nuthatch
(Sitta victoriae)
  11.5 cm (4.5 in) long, greyish upper parts and mostly whitish underparts. Endemic to Myanmar[45]
White-tailed nuthatch
(Sitta himalayensis)
  12 cm (4.7 in) long, smaller bill than S.  cashmirensis, rufous-orange underparts with unmarked bright rufous undertail-coverts, white on the upper tail coverts is difficult to see in the field. Himalayas from northeast India to southwest China, locally east to Vietnam[46]
Eurasian nuthatch
(Sitta europaea)
  14 cm (5.5 in) long, black eye stripe, blue-grey upper parts, reddish and/or white underparts depending on subspecies. Temperate Eurasia
(10 million)[14]
Chestnut-vented nuthatch
(Sitta nagaensis)
  12.5–14 cm (4.9–5.5 in) long, mostly pale grey upper parts and mostly whitish underparts, dark eye stripe. Northeast India east to northwest Thailand[47]
Kashmir nuthatch
(Sitta cashmirensis)
  14 cm (5.5 in) long, mostly greyish upper parts, reddish underparts with a paler throat and chin. Eastern Afghanistan to western Nepal[48]
Indian nuthatch
(Sitta castanea)
  13 cm (5.1 in) long. Northern and central India[15][49]
Chestnut-bellied nuthatch
(Sitta cinnamoventris)
  13 cm (5.1 in) long, colours vary between the subspecies. Foothills of the Himalayas from northeast India to western Yunnan and Thailand[15][49]
Burmese nuthatch
(Sitta neglecta)
  13 cm (5.1 in) long. Myanmar to Laos, Cambodia and southern Vietnam[15][49]


Distribution and habitat edit

 
Open ponderosa pine woodlands are a habitat for pygmy nuthatch.

Members of the nuthatch family live in most of North America and Europe and throughout Asia down to the Wallace Line. Nuthatches are sparsely represented in Africa; one species lives in a small area of northeastern Algeria[50] and a population of the Eurasian nuthatch subspecies, S. e. hispaniensis, lives in the mountains of Morocco.[51] Most species are resident year-round. The only significant migrant is the red-breasted nuthatch, which winters widely across North America, deserting the northernmost parts of its breeding range in Canada; it has been recorded as a vagrant in Bermuda, Iceland and England.[39]

Most nuthatches are woodland birds and the majority are found in coniferous or other evergreen forests, although each species has a preference for a particular tree type. The strength of the association varies from the Corsican nuthatch, which is closely linked with Corsican pine, to the catholic habitat of the Eurasian nuthatch, which prefers deciduous or mixed woods but breeds in coniferous forests in the north of its extensive range.[51][52] However, the two species of rock nuthatches are not strongly tied to woodlands: they breed on rocky slopes or cliffs, although both move into wooded areas when not breeding.[53][54] In parts of Asia where several species occur in the same geographic region, there is often an altitudinal separation in their preferred habitats.[55][56]

Nuthatches prefer a fairly temperate climate; northern species live near sea level whereas those further south are found in cooler highland habitats. Eurasian and red-breasted nuthatches are lowland birds in the north of their extensive ranges, but breed in the mountains further south; for example, the Eurasian nuthatch, which breeds where the July temperature range is 16–27 °C (61–81 °F), is found near sea level in Northern Europe, but between 1,750 and 1,850 m (5,740 and 6,070 ft) altitude in Morocco.[51] The velvet-fronted nuthatch is the sole member of the family which prefers tropical lowland forests.[31]

Behaviour edit

Nesting, breeding and survival edit

 
Cross-section of a western rock nuthatch nest cavity with a mud wall and tunnel across its entrance

All nuthatches nest in cavities; except for the two species of rock nuthatches, all use tree holes, making a simple cup lined with soft materials on which to rest eggs. In some species the lining consists of small woody objects such as bark flakes and seed husks, while in others it includes the moss, grass, hair and feathers typical of passerine birds.[14][34]

Members of the red-breasted nuthatch superspecies excavate their own tree holes, although most other nuthatches use natural holes or old woodpecker nests. Several species reduce the size of the entrance hole and seal up cracks with mud. The red-breasted nuthatch makes the nest secure by daubing sticky conifer resin globules around the entrance, the male applying the resin outside and the female inside. The resin may deter predators or competitors (the resident birds avoid the resin by diving straight through the entrance hole).[57] The white-breasted nuthatch smears blister beetles around the entrance to its nest, and it has been suggested that the unpleasant smell from the crushed insects deters squirrels, its chief competitor for natural tree cavities.[58]

The western rock nuthatch builds an elaborate flask-shaped nest from mud, dung and hair or feathers, and decorates the nest's exterior and nearby crevices with feathers and insect wings. The nests are located in rock crevices, in caves, under cliff overhangs or on buildings.[43] The eastern rock nuthatch builds a similar but less complex structure across the entrance to a cavity. Its nest can be quite small but may weigh up to 32 kg (70 lb). This species will also nest in river banks or tree holes and will enlarge its nest hole if it the cavity is too small.[44]

 
The great spotted woodpecker is an important predator of Eurasian nuthatch nests.[59]

Nuthatches are monogamous. The female produces eggs that are white with red or yellow markings; the clutch size varies, tending to be larger for northern species. The eggs are incubated for 12 to 18 days by the female alone, or by both parents, depending on the species. The altricial (naked and helpless) chicks take between 21 and 27 days to fledge.[44][54][60][61] Both parents feed the young, and in the case of two American species, brown-headed and pygmy, helper males from the previous brood may assist the parents in feeding.[62][63]

For the few species on which data are available, the average nuthatch lifespan in the wild is between 2 and 3.5 years, although ages of up to 10 years have been recorded.[62][64] The Eurasian nuthatch has an adult annual survival rate of 53%[65] and the male Corsican nuthatch 61.6%.[66] Nuthatches and other small woodland birds share the same predators: accipiters, owls, squirrels and woodpeckers. An American study showed that nuthatch responses to predators may be linked to reproductive strategies. It measured the willingness of males of two species to feed incubating females on the nest when presented with models of a sharp-shinned hawk, which hunts adult nuthatches, or a house wren, which destroys eggs. The white-breasted nuthatch is shorter-lived than the red-breasted nuthatch, but has more young, and was found to respond more strongly to the egg predator, whereas the red-breasted showed greater concern with the hawk. This supports the theory that longer-lived species benefit from adult survival and future breeding opportunities while birds with shorter life spans place more value on the survival of their larger broods.[67]

Cold can be a problem for small birds that do not migrate. Communal roosting in tight huddles can help conserve heat and several nuthatch species employ it—up to 170 pygmy nuthatches have been seen in a single roost. The pygmy nuthatch is able to lower its body temperature when roosting, conserving energy through hypothermia and a lowered metabolic rate.[62]

Feeding edit

 
Eurasian nuthatch prying something out from under the bark of a tree

Nuthatches forage along tree trunks and branches and are members of the same feeding guild as woodpeckers. Unlike woodpeckers and treecreepers, however, they do not use their tails for additional support, relying instead on their strong legs and feet to progress in jerky hops.[61][68] They are able to descend head-first and hang upside-down beneath twigs and branches. Krüper's nuthatch can even stretch downward from an upside-down position to drink water from leaves without touching the ground.[69] Rock nuthatches forage with a similar technique to the woodland species, but seek food on rock faces and sometimes buildings. When breeding, a pair of nuthatches will only feed within their territory, but at other times will associate with passing tits or join mixed-species feeding flocks.[6][60][70]

Insects and other invertebrates are a major portion of the nuthatch diet, especially during the breeding season, when they rely almost exclusively on live prey,[64] but most species also eat seeds during the winter, when invertebrates are less readily available. Larger food items, such as big insects, snails, acorns or seeds may be wedged into cracks and pounded with the bird's strong bill.[6] Unusually for a bird, the brown-headed nuthatch uses a piece of tree bark as a lever to pry up other bark flakes to look for food; the bark tool may then be carried from tree to tree or used to cover a seed cache.[63]

All nuthatches appear to store food, especially seeds, in tree crevices, in the ground, under small stones, or behind bark flakes, and these caches are remembered for as long as 30 days.[14][34][71] Similarly, the rock nuthatches wedge snails into suitable crevices for consumption in times of need.[43][44] European nuthatches have been found to avoid using their caches during benign conditions in order to save them for harsher times.[72]

Conservation status edit

 
White-breasted nuthatch, common in much of North America

Some nuthatches, such as the Eurasian nuthatch and the North American species, have extensive ranges and large populations, and few conservation problems,[73] although locally they may be affected by woodland fragmentation.[59][74] In contrast, some of the more restricted species face severe pressures.

The endangered white-browed nuthatch is found only in the Mount Victoria area of Burma, where forest up to 2,000 m (6,600 ft) above sea level has been almost totally cleared and habitat between 2,000–2,500 m (6,600–8,200 ft) is heavily degraded. Nearly 12,000 people live in the Natma Taung national park which includes Mount Victoria, and their fires and traps add to the pressure on the nuthatch. The population of the white-browed nuthatch, estimated at only a few thousand, is decreasing, and no conservation measures are in place.[75][76] The Algerian nuthatch is found in only four areas of Algeria, and it is possible that the total population does not exceed 1,000 birds. Fire, erosion, and grazing and disturbance by livestock have reduced the quality of the habitat, despite its location in the Taza National Park.[77]

Deforestation has also caused population declines for the vulnerable Yunnan and yellow-billed nuthatches. The Yunnan nuthatch can cope with some tree loss, since it prefers open pine woodland, but although still locally common, it has disappeared from several of the areas in which it was recorded in the early 20th century.[78] The threat to yellow-billed is particularly acute on Hainan, where more than 70% of the woodland has been lost in the past 50 years due to shifting cultivation and the use of wood for fuel during Chinese government re-settlement programmes.[79]

Krüper's nuthatch is threatened by urbanisation and development in and around mature coniferous forests, particularly in the Mediterranean coastal areas where the species was once numerous. A law promoting tourism came into force in Turkey in 2003, further exacerbating the threats to their habitat. The law reduced bureaucracy and made it easier for developers to build tourism facilities and summer houses in the coastal zone where woodland loss is a growing problem for the nuthatch.[80][81]

Notes edit

  1. ^ 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. Bibcode:2019PNAS..116.7916O. doi:10.1073/pnas.1813206116. PMC 6475423. PMID 30936315.
  2. ^ Lesson, René (1828). Manuel d'ornithologie, ou description des genres et des principales espèces d'oiseaux (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Roret. p. 360. Lesson used the French Sittées rather than the Latin Sittidae.
  3. ^ a b Cracraft, J.; Barker, F. Keith; Braun, M. J.; Harshman, J.; Dyke, G.; Feinstein, J.; Stanley, S.; Cibois, A.; Schikler, P.; Beresford, P.; García-Moreno, J.; Sorenson, M. D.; Yuri, T.; Mindell. D. P. (2004) "Phylogenetic relationships among modern birds (Neornithes): Toward an avian tree of life." pp. 468–489 in Assembling the tree of life (J. Cracraft and M. J. Donoghue, eds.). Oxford University Press, New York. ISBN 0-19-517234-5
  4. ^ Snow & Perrins (1998) pp. 1408
  5. ^ Vaurie, Charles; Koelz, Walter (November 1950). "Notes on some Asiatic nuthatches and creepers" (PDF). American Museum Novitates (1472): 1–39.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 16–17 "Family Introduction"
  7. ^ Päckert, M.; Bader-Blukott, M.; Künzelmann, B.; Sun, Y.-H.; Hsu, Y.-C.; Kehlmaier, C.; Albrecht, F.; Illera, J.C.; Martens, J. (2020). "A revised phylogeny of nuthatches (Aves, Passeriformes, Sitta) reveals insight in intra- and interspecific diversification patterns in the Palearctic". Vertebrate Zoology. 70 (2): 241–262. doi:10.26049/VZ70-2-2020-10.
  8. ^ Barker, F. Keith (2004). (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 31 (2): 486–504. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2003.08.005. PMID 15062790. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-12.
  9. ^ Linnaeus, C. (1758). Systema naturae per regna tria naturae. Vol. I (10th ed.). Stockholm: Laurentius Salvius. p. 115. Rostrum subcultrato-conicum, rectum, porrectum: integerrimum, mandíbula superiore obtusiuscula. Lingua lacero-emarginata
  10. ^ Brookes, Ian (2006). The Chambers Dictionary (ninth ed.). Edinburgh: Chambers. p. 1417. ISBN 978-0-550-10185-3.
  11. ^ "Nuthatch". Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. Merriam-Webster Online. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
  12. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 12–13 "Species limits"
  13. ^ Pasquet, Eric (January 1998). "Phylogeny of the nuthatches of the Sitta canadensis group and its evolutionary and biogeographic implications". Ibis. 140 (1): 150–156. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1998.tb04553.x.
  14. ^ a b c d Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 109–114 "Eurasian Nuthatch"
  15. ^ a b c d Rasmussen, Pamela C.; Anderton, John C. (2005). Birds of South Asia: The Ripley Guide. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. p. 536. ISBN 978-84-87334-67-2.
  16. ^ Zink, Robert M.; Drovetski, Sergei V.; Rohwer, Sievert (September 2006). (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 40 (3): 679–686. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2005.11.002. PMID 16716603. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-03-04.
  17. ^ a b Dickinson, Edward C. (2006). "Systematic notes on Asian birds. 62. A preliminary review of the Sittidae" (PDF). Zoologische Verhandelingen, Leiden. 80: 225–240.
  18. ^ Sangster, George; Collinson, Martin; Crochet, J. Pierre-André; Knox, Alan G.; Parkin, David T.; Votier, Stephen C. (2012). "Taxonomic recommendations for British birds: eighth report". Ibis. 154 (4): 874–883. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.2012.01273.x.
  19. ^ Manegold, Albrecht (April 2008). "Earliest fossil record of the Certhioidea (treecreepers and allies) from the early Miocene of Germany". Journal of Ornithology. 149 (2): 223–228. doi:10.1007/s10336-007-0263-9. S2CID 11900733.
  20. ^ Jiří Mlíkovský, Cenozoic Birds of the World. Part 1:Europe 2011-05-20 at the Wayback Machine , Prague, Ninox Press, 2002, 407 p., p. 252, 273
  21. ^ a b Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 169–172 "Giant Nuthatch"
  22. ^ a b Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 130–133 "Brown-headed Nuthatch"
  23. ^ Templeton, Christopher N.; Greene, Erick (March 2007). "Nuthatches eavesdrop on variations in heterospecific chickadee mobbing alarm calls". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (13): 5479–5482. Bibcode:2007PNAS..104.5479T. doi:10.1073/pnas.0605183104. PMC 1838489. PMID 17372225.
  24. ^ Gill, Frank; Donsker, David; Rasmussen, Pamela, eds. (2020). "Nuthatches, Wallcreeper, treecreepers, mockingbirds, starlings, oxpeckers". IOC World Bird List Version 10.1. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  25. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 148–150 "White-cheeked Nuthatch"
  26. ^ Rasmussen, P.C., and J.C. Anderton. 2005. Birds of South Asia. The Ripley guide. Volume 2: attributes and status. Smithsonian Institution and Lynx Edicions, Washington D.C. and Barcelona
  27. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 150–155 "White-breasted Nuthatch"
  28. ^ Bull, John and Farrand, John Jr. The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Birds, Eastern Region. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. (1977) pp. 646–647 "White-breasted Nuthatch"
  29. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 172–173 "Beautiful Nuthatch"
  30. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 168–169 "Blue Nuthatch"
  31. ^ a b Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 161–164 "Velvet-fronted Nuthatch"
  32. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 164–165 "Yellow-billed Nuthatch"
  33. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 165–168 "Sulphur-billed Nuthatch"
  34. ^ a b c Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 127–130 "Pygmy Nuthatch"
  35. ^ International), BirdLife International (BirdLife (2020-08-27). "IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: Sitta insularis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 2021-07-14.
  36. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 143–144 "Yunnan Nuthatch"
  37. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 135–138 "Algerian Nuthatch"
  38. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 138–140 "Krüper's Nuthatch"
  39. ^ a b Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 144–148 "Red-breasted Nuthatch"
  40. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 133–135 "Corsican Nuthatch"
  41. ^ Thibault, Jean-Claude; Hacquemand, Didier; Moneglia, Pasquale; Pellegrini, Hervé; Prodon, Roger; Recorbet, Bernard; Seguin, Jean-François; Villard, Pascal (2011). "Distribution and population size of the Corsican Nuthatch Sitta whiteheadi". Bird Conservation International. 21 (2): 199–206. doi:10.1017/S0959270910000468.
  42. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 140–142 "Chinese Nuthatch"
  43. ^ a b c Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 155–158 "Western Rock Nuthatch"
  44. ^ a b c d Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 158–161 "Eastern Rock Nuthatch"
  45. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 125–126 "White-browed Nuthatch"
  46. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 123–125 "White-tailed Nuthatch"
  47. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 114–117 "Chestnut-vented Nuthatch"
  48. ^ Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 117–119 "Kashmir Nuthatch"
  49. ^ a b c Harrap & Quinn (1996) pp. 119–123 "Chestnut-bellied Nuthatch"
  50. ^ Snow & Perrins (1998) pp. 1400–1401 "Algerian Nuthatch"
  51. ^ a b c Snow & Perrins (1998) pp. 1402–1404 "Nuthatch"
  52. ^ Snow & Perrins (1998) pp. 1399–1400 "Corsican nuthatch"
  53. ^ Snow & Perrins (1998) pp. 1404–1406 "Eastern Rock Nuthatch"
  54. ^ a b Snow & Perrins (1998) pp. 1406–1407 "Rock Nuthatch"
  55. ^ Menon, Shaily; Islam, Zafar-Ul; Soberón, Jorge; Peterson, A. Townsend (2008). "Preliminary analysis of the ecology and geography of the Asian nuthatches (Aves: Sittidae)". The Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 120 (4): 692–699. doi:10.1676/07-136.1. S2CID 11556921.
  56. ^ Ripley, S. Dillon (1959). "Character displacement in Indian nuthatches (Sitta)". Postilla. 42: 1–11.
  57. ^ "Red-breasted Nuthatch". Bird Guide. Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
  58. ^ Kilham, Lawrence (January 1971). "Use of in bill-sweeping by White-breasted Nuthatch" (PDF). The Auk. 88 (1): 175–176. doi:10.2307/4083981. JSTOR 4083981.
  59. ^ a b González-Varo, Juan P; López-Bao, José V.; Guitián, José (2008). "Presence and abundance of the Eurasian nuthatch Sitta europaea in relation to the size, isolation and the intensity of management of chestnut woodlands in the NW Iberian Peninsula". Landscape Ecology. 23: 79–89. doi:10.1007/s10980-007-9166-7. S2CID 19446422.
  60. ^ a b Snow & Perrins (1998) p. 1398 "Nuthatch: Family Sittidae"
  61. ^ a b Matthysen, Erik; Löhrl, Hans (2003). "Nuthatches". In Perrins, Christopher (ed.). Firefly Encyclopedia of Birds. Firefly Books. pp. 536–537. ISBN 978-1-55297-777-4.
  62. ^ a b c Kieliszewski, Jordan. "Sitta pygmaea". Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
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  64. ^ a b Roof, Jennifer; Dewey, Tanya. "Sitta carolinensis". Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
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  67. ^ Ghalambor, Cameron K.; Martin, Thomas E. (August 2000). "Parental investment strategies in two species of nuthatch vary with stage-specific predation risk and reproductive effort" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 60 (2): 263–267. doi:10.1006/anbe.2000.1472. PMID 10973729. S2CID 13165711.
  68. ^ Fujita, M.; K. Kawakami; S. Moriguchi & H. Higuchi (2008). "Locomotion of the Eurasian nuthatch on vertical and horizontal substrates". Journal of Zoology. 274 (4): 357–366. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.2007.00395.x.
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  71. ^ Hardling, Roger; Kallander, Hans; Nilsson, Jan-Åke (1997). "Memory for hoarded food: an aviary study of the European Nuthatch" (PDF). The Condor. 99 (2): 526–529. doi:10.2307/1369961. JSTOR 1369961.
  72. ^ Nilsson, Jan-Åke; Persson, Hans Källander Owe (1993). "A prudent hoarder: effects of long-term hoarding in the European nuthatch, Sitta europaea". Behavioral Ecology. 4 (4): 369–373. doi:10.1093/beheco/4.4.369.
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  74. ^ van Langevelde, Frank (2000). "Scale of habitat connectivity and colonization in fragmented nuthatch populations". Ecography. 23 (5): 614–622. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0587.2000.tb00180.x. JSTOR 3683295.
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  77. ^ BirdLife International (2017). "Sitta ledanti". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T22711179A119435091. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-3.RLTS.T22711179A119435091.en. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
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  79. ^ BirdLife International (2018). "Sitta solangiae". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T22711219A132095305. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T22711219A132095305.en. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  80. ^ BirdLife International (2016). "Sitta krueperi". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T22711184A94282660. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T22711184A94282660.en. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  81. ^ (PDF). The Travel Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 February 2009. Retrieved 22 July 2008.

References edit

  • Harrap, Simon; Quinn, David (1996). Tits, Nuthatches and Treecreepers. Christopher Helm. ISBN 978-0-7136-3964-3.
  • Snow, David; Perrins, Christopher M., eds. (1998). The Birds of the Western Palearctic (BWP) (concise (2 volume) ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-854099-1.

External links edit

nuthatch, sitta, redirects, here, ancient, capital, sittacene, sittace, nuthatches, constitute, genus, sitta, small, passerine, birds, belonging, family, sittidae, characterised, large, heads, short, tails, powerful, bills, feet, nuthatches, advertise, their, . Sitta redirects here For the ancient capital of Sittacene see Sittace The nuthatches n ʌ t h ae tʃ constitute a genus Sitta of small passerine birds belonging to the family Sittidae Characterised by large heads short tails and powerful bills and feet nuthatches advertise their territory using loud simple songs Most species exhibit grey or bluish upperparts and a black eye stripe Nuthatches A Eurasian nuthatch at the Rouge Cloitre estate in the Sonian Forest near Brussels Belgium Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Passeriformes Family SittidaeLesson 1828 Genus SittaLinnaeus 1758 Type species Sitta europaeaLinnaeus 1758 Most nuthatches breed in the temperate or montane woodlands of the Northern Hemisphere although two species have adapted to rocky habitats in the warmer and drier regions of Eurasia However the greatest diversity is in Southern Asia and similarities between the species have made it difficult to identify distinct species All members of this genus nest in holes or crevices Most species are non migratory and live in their habitat year round although the North American red breasted nuthatch migrates to warmer regions during the winter A few nuthatch species have restricted ranges and face threats from deforestation Nuthatches are omnivorous eating mostly insects nuts and seeds They forage for insects hidden in or under bark by climbing along tree trunks and branches sometimes upside down They forage within their territories when breeding but they may join mixed feeding flocks at other times Their habit of wedging a large food item in a crevice and then hacking at it with their strong bills gives this group its English name Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Genus name 1 2 Species boundaries 2 Description 3 Species 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Behaviour 5 1 Nesting breeding and survival 5 2 Feeding 6 Conservation status 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksTaxonomy editCerthioidea Tichodromidae wallcreeper Sittidae nuthatches Certhiidae treecreepers Polioptilidae gnatcatchers Troglodytidae wrens Relationships among families in the superfamily Certhioidea 1 The nuthatch family Sittidae was described by Rene Primevere Lesson in 1828 2 3 Sometimes the wallcreeper Tichodroma muraria which is restricted to the mountains of southern Eurasia is placed in the same family as the nuthatches but in a separate subfamily Tichodromadinae in which case the nuthatches are classified in the subfamily Sittinae However the wallcreeper is more often placed in a separate family the Tichodromadidae 4 The wallcreeper is intermediate in its morphology between the nuthatches and the treecreepers but its appearance the texture of its plumage and the shape and pattern of its tail suggest that it is closer to the former taxon 5 The nuthatch vanga of Madagascar formerly known as the coral billed nuthatch and the sittellas from Australia and New Guinea were once placed in the nuthatch family because of similarities in appearance and lifestyle but they are not closely related The resemblances arose via convergent evolution to fill an ecological niche 6 Sitta White cheeked nuthatch Sitta leucopsis Przevalski s nuthatch Sitta przewalskii White breasted nuthatch Sitta carolinensis Giant nuthatch Sitta magna Beautiful nuthatch Sitta formosa Blue nuthatch Sitta azurea Velvet fronted nuthatch Sitta frontalis Sulphur billed nuthatch Sitta oenochlamys Pygmy nuthatch Sitta pygmaea Bahama nuthatch Sitta insularis Brown headed nuthatch Sitta pusilla Red breasted nuthatch Sitta canadensis Chinese nuthatch Sitta villosa Corsican nuthatch Sitta whiteheadi Yunnan nuthatch Sitta yunnanensis Kruper s nuthatch Sitta krueperi Algerian nuthatch Sitta ledanti Western rock nuthatch Sitta neumayer Eastern rock nuthatch Sitta tephronota Siberian nuthatch Sitta arctica White tailed nuthatch Sitta himalayensis White browed nuthatch Sitta victoriae Eurasian nuthatch Sitta europaea Chestnut vented nuthatch Sitta nagaensis Kashmir nuthatch Sitta cashmirensis Indian nuthatch Sitta castanea Chestnut bellied nuthatch Sitta cinnamoventris Burmese nuthatch Sitta neglecta Phylogeny based on a molecular genetic study by Martin Packert and colleagues published in 2020 The yellow billed nuthatch Sitta solangiae was not sampled 7 The nuthatches closest relatives other than the wallcreeper are the treecreepers and the two or three families are sometimes placed in a larger grouping with the wrens and gnatcatchers This superfamily the Certhioidea is proposed on phylogenetic studies using mitochondrial and nuclear DNA and was created to cover a clade of four or five families removed from a larger grouping of passerine birds the Sylvioidea 3 8 Genus name edit The nuthatches are all in the genus Sitta Linnaeus 1758 9 a name derived from sitth sitte Ancient Greek for this bird 10 The English term nuthatch refers to the propensity of some species to wedge a large insect or seed in a crack and hack at it with their strong bills 11 Species boundaries edit Species boundaries in the nuthatches are difficult to define The red breasted nuthatch Corsican nuthatch and Chinese nuthatch have breeding ranges separated by thousands of kilometres but are similar in habitat preference appearance and song They were formerly considered to be one species but are now normally split into three 12 and comprise a superspecies along with the Kruper s and Algerian nuthatch Unusually for nuthatches all five species excavate their own nests 13 The Eurasian chestnut vented Kashmir and chestnut bellied nuthatches form another superspecies and replace each other geographically across Asia They are currently considered to be four separate species but the south Asian forms were once believed to be a subspecies of the Eurasian nuthatch 14 A recent change in this taxonomy is a split of the chestnut bellied nuthatch into three species namely the Indian nuthatch Sitta castanea found south of the Ganges the Burmese nuthatch Sitta neglecta found in southeast Asia and the chestnut bellied nuthatch sensu stricto S cinnamoventris which occurs in the Himalayas 15 Mitochondrial DNA studies have demonstrated that the white breasted northern subspecies of Eurasian nuthatch S europea arctica is distinctive 16 and also a possible candidate for full species status 17 This split has been accepted by the British Ornithologists Union 18 A 2006 review of Asian nuthatches suggested that there are still unresolved problems in nuthatch taxonomy and proposed splitting the genus Sitta This suggestion would move the red and yellow billed south Asian species velvet fronted yellow billed and sulphur billed nuthatches to a new genus create a third genus for the blue nuthatch and possibly a fourth for the beautiful nuthatch 17 The fossil record for this group appears to be restricted to a foot bone of an early Miocene bird from Bavaria which has been identified as an extinct representative of the climbing Certhioidea a clade comprising the treecreepers wallcreeper and nuthatches It has been described as Certhiops rummeli 19 Two fossil species have been described in the genus Sitta S cuvieri Gervais 1852 and S senogalliensis Portis 1888 but they probably do not belong to nuthatches 20 Description edit nbsp The red breasted nuthatch is said to have a call like a tin trumpet Nuthatches are compact birds with short legs compressed wings and square 12 feathered tails They have long sturdy pointed bills and strong toes with long claws Nuthatches have blue grey backs violet blue in some Asian species which also have red or yellow bills and white underparts which are variably tinted with buff orange rufous or lilac Although head markings vary between species a long black eye stripe with contrasting white supercilium dark forehead and blackish cap is common The sexes look similar but may differ in underpart colouration especially on the rear flanks and under the tail Juveniles and first year birds can be almost indistinguishable from adults 6 The sizes of nuthatches vary 6 from the large giant nuthatch at 195 mm 7 7 in and 36 47 g 1 3 1 7 oz 21 to the small brown headed nuthatch and the pygmy nuthatch both around 100 mm 3 9 in in length and about 10 g 0 35 oz 22 Nuthatches are very vocal using an assortment of whistles trills and calls Their breeding songs tend to be simple and often identical to their contact calls but longer in duration 6 The red breasted nuthatch which coexists with the black capped chickadee throughout much of its range is able to understand the latter species calls The chickadee has subtle call variations that communicate information about the size and risk of potential predators Many birds recognise the simple alarm calls produced by other species but the red breasted nuthatch is able to interpret the chickadees detailed variations and to respond appropriately 23 Species editThe species diversity for Sittidae is greatest in southern Asia possibly the original home of this family where about 15 species occur but it has representatives across much of the Northern Hemisphere 6 The currently recognised nuthatch species are tabulated below 24 Species in taxonomic sequence Common andbinomial names Image Description Range population if known White cheeked nuthatch Sitta leucopsis nbsp 13 cm 5 1 in long white cheeks chin throat and underparts upper parts mostly dark grey western Himalayas 25 Przevalski s nuthatch Sitta przewalskii nbsp 13 cm 5 1 in long white cheeks chin throat and underparts upper parts mostly dark grey southeastern Tibet to western China 26 Giant nuthatch Sitta magna nbsp 19 5 cm 7 7 in long greyish upper parts and whitish underparts China Burma and Thailand 21 White breasted nuthatch Sitta carolinensis nbsp 13 14 cm 5 1 5 5 in long the white of the face completely surrounds the eye face and the underparts are white upper parts are mostly pale blue grey North America from southern Canada to Mexico 27 28 Beautiful nuthatch Sitta formosa nbsp 16 5 cm 6 5 in long black backed with white streaking bright blue upper back rump and shoulders dull orange underparts and paler face Northeast India and Burma and locally in southern China and northern Southeast Asia 29 Blue nuthatch Sitta azurea nbsp 13 5 cm 5 3 in long greyish upper parts and whitish underparts Malaysia Sumatra and Java 30 Velvet fronted nuthatch Sitta frontalis nbsp 12 5 cm 4 9 in long violet blue above with lavender cheeks beige underparts and a whitish throat bill is red black patch on forehead India and Sri Lanka through Southeast Asia to Indonesia 31 Yellow billed nuthatch Sitta solangiae nbsp 12 5 13 5 cm 4 9 5 3 in long white underparts bluish upper parts yellow beak Vietnam and Hainan Island China 32 Sulphur billed nuthatch Sitta oenochlamys nbsp 12 5 cm 4 9 in long pinkish underparts yellow beak bluish upper parts Endemic to the Philippines 33 Pygmy nuthatch Sitta pygmaea nbsp 10 cm 3 9 in long grey cap blue grey upper parts whitish underparts whitish spot on the nape Western North America from British Columbia to southwest Mexico 2 3 million 34 Brown headed nuthatch Sitta pusilla nbsp 10 5 cm 4 1 in long brown cap with narrow black eye stripe and buff white cheeks chin and belly wings are bluish grey small white spot at the nape of the neck Endemic to the Southeastern United States 1 5 million 22 Bahama nuthatch Sitta insularis Very similar to brown headed nuthatch but has a darker eye stripe much longer beak shorter wings and a different call than it Endemic to Grand Bahama 1 49 individuals potentially extinct 35 Yunnan nuthatch Sitta yunnanensis nbsp 12 cm 4 7 in long greyish upper parts and whitish underparts Endemic to southwest China 36 Algerian nuthatch Sitta ledanti nbsp 13 5 cm 5 3 in long blue grey above and buff below Male has a black crown and eye stripe separated by a white supercilium female has a grey crown and eye stripe Endemic to northeast Algeria Fewer than 1 000 pairs 37 Kruper s nuthatch Sitta krueperi nbsp 11 5 12 5 cm 4 5 4 9 in long whitish underparts with a reddish throat mostly grey upper parts Turkey Georgia Russia and on the Greek island of Lesvos 80 000 170 000 pairs 38 Red breasted nuthatch Sitta canadensis nbsp 11 cm 4 3 in long blue grey upper parts with reddish underparts white face with a black eye stripe white throat a straight grey bill and a black crown Western and northern temperate North America winters across much of the US and southern Canada 18 million 39 Corsican nuthatch Sitta whiteheadi nbsp 12 cm 4 7 in long blue grey above and buff below Male has a black crown and eye stripe separated by a white supercilium the female has a grey crown and eye stripe Endemic to Corsica c 2 000 pairs 40 41 Chinese nuthatch Sitta villosa nbsp 11 5 cm 4 5 in long greyish upper parts and pinkish underparts China North Korea and South Korea 42 Western rock nuthatch Sitta neumayer nbsp 13 5 cm 5 3 in long white throat and underparts shading to buff on the belly The shade of grey upper parts and the darkness of the eye stripe vary between the three subspecies The Balkans east through Greece and Turkey to Iran 130 000 43 Eastern rock nuthatch Sitta tephronota nbsp 16 18 cm 6 3 7 1 in long greyish upper parts and whitish underparts pinkish rump Northern Iraq Kurdistan and western Iran east through Central Asia 43 000 100 000 in Europe 44 Siberian nuthatch Sitta arctica nbsp 15 cm 5 9 in long long and thin bill black eye stripe blue grey upper parts pure white underparts long claw Eastern Siberia White browed nuthatch Sitta victoriae nbsp 11 5 cm 4 5 in long greyish upper parts and mostly whitish underparts Endemic to Myanmar 45 White tailed nuthatch Sitta himalayensis nbsp 12 cm 4 7 in long smaller bill than S cashmirensis rufous orange underparts with unmarked bright rufous undertail coverts white on the upper tail coverts is difficult to see in the field Himalayas from northeast India to southwest China locally east to Vietnam 46 Eurasian nuthatch Sitta europaea nbsp 14 cm 5 5 in long black eye stripe blue grey upper parts reddish and or white underparts depending on subspecies Temperate Eurasia 10 million 14 Chestnut vented nuthatch Sitta nagaensis nbsp 12 5 14 cm 4 9 5 5 in long mostly pale grey upper parts and mostly whitish underparts dark eye stripe Northeast India east to northwest Thailand 47 Kashmir nuthatch Sitta cashmirensis nbsp 14 cm 5 5 in long mostly greyish upper parts reddish underparts with a paler throat and chin Eastern Afghanistan to western Nepal 48 Indian nuthatch Sitta castanea nbsp 13 cm 5 1 in long Northern and central India 15 49 Chestnut bellied nuthatch Sitta cinnamoventris nbsp 13 cm 5 1 in long colours vary between the subspecies Foothills of the Himalayas from northeast India to western Yunnan and Thailand 15 49 Burmese nuthatch Sitta neglecta nbsp 13 cm 5 1 in long Myanmar to Laos Cambodia and southern Vietnam 15 49 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Open ponderosa pine woodlands are a habitat for pygmy nuthatch Members of the nuthatch family live in most of North America and Europe and throughout Asia down to the Wallace Line Nuthatches are sparsely represented in Africa one species lives in a small area of northeastern Algeria 50 and a population of the Eurasian nuthatch subspecies S e hispaniensis lives in the mountains of Morocco 51 Most species are resident year round The only significant migrant is the red breasted nuthatch which winters widely across North America deserting the northernmost parts of its breeding range in Canada it has been recorded as a vagrant in Bermuda Iceland and England 39 Most nuthatches are woodland birds and the majority are found in coniferous or other evergreen forests although each species has a preference for a particular tree type The strength of the association varies from the Corsican nuthatch which is closely linked with Corsican pine to the catholic habitat of the Eurasian nuthatch which prefers deciduous or mixed woods but breeds in coniferous forests in the north of its extensive range 51 52 However the two species of rock nuthatches are not strongly tied to woodlands they breed on rocky slopes or cliffs although both move into wooded areas when not breeding 53 54 In parts of Asia where several species occur in the same geographic region there is often an altitudinal separation in their preferred habitats 55 56 Nuthatches prefer a fairly temperate climate northern species live near sea level whereas those further south are found in cooler highland habitats Eurasian and red breasted nuthatches are lowland birds in the north of their extensive ranges but breed in the mountains further south for example the Eurasian nuthatch which breeds where the July temperature range is 16 27 C 61 81 F is found near sea level in Northern Europe but between 1 750 and 1 850 m 5 740 and 6 070 ft altitude in Morocco 51 The velvet fronted nuthatch is the sole member of the family which prefers tropical lowland forests 31 Behaviour editNesting breeding and survival edit nbsp Cross section of a western rock nuthatch nest cavity with a mud wall and tunnel across its entrance All nuthatches nest in cavities except for the two species of rock nuthatches all use tree holes making a simple cup lined with soft materials on which to rest eggs In some species the lining consists of small woody objects such as bark flakes and seed husks while in others it includes the moss grass hair and feathers typical of passerine birds 14 34 Members of the red breasted nuthatch superspecies excavate their own tree holes although most other nuthatches use natural holes or old woodpecker nests Several species reduce the size of the entrance hole and seal up cracks with mud The red breasted nuthatch makes the nest secure by daubing sticky conifer resin globules around the entrance the male applying the resin outside and the female inside The resin may deter predators or competitors the resident birds avoid the resin by diving straight through the entrance hole 57 The white breasted nuthatch smears blister beetles around the entrance to its nest and it has been suggested that the unpleasant smell from the crushed insects deters squirrels its chief competitor for natural tree cavities 58 The western rock nuthatch builds an elaborate flask shaped nest from mud dung and hair or feathers and decorates the nest s exterior and nearby crevices with feathers and insect wings The nests are located in rock crevices in caves under cliff overhangs or on buildings 43 The eastern rock nuthatch builds a similar but less complex structure across the entrance to a cavity Its nest can be quite small but may weigh up to 32 kg 70 lb This species will also nest in river banks or tree holes and will enlarge its nest hole if it the cavity is too small 44 nbsp The great spotted woodpecker is an important predator of Eurasian nuthatch nests 59 Nuthatches are monogamous The female produces eggs that are white with red or yellow markings the clutch size varies tending to be larger for northern species The eggs are incubated for 12 to 18 days by the female alone or by both parents depending on the species The altricial naked and helpless chicks take between 21 and 27 days to fledge 44 54 60 61 Both parents feed the young and in the case of two American species brown headed and pygmy helper males from the previous brood may assist the parents in feeding 62 63 For the few species on which data are available the average nuthatch lifespan in the wild is between 2 and 3 5 years although ages of up to 10 years have been recorded 62 64 The Eurasian nuthatch has an adult annual survival rate of 53 65 and the male Corsican nuthatch 61 6 66 Nuthatches and other small woodland birds share the same predators accipiters owls squirrels and woodpeckers An American study showed that nuthatch responses to predators may be linked to reproductive strategies It measured the willingness of males of two species to feed incubating females on the nest when presented with models of a sharp shinned hawk which hunts adult nuthatches or a house wren which destroys eggs The white breasted nuthatch is shorter lived than the red breasted nuthatch but has more young and was found to respond more strongly to the egg predator whereas the red breasted showed greater concern with the hawk This supports the theory that longer lived species benefit from adult survival and future breeding opportunities while birds with shorter life spans place more value on the survival of their larger broods 67 Cold can be a problem for small birds that do not migrate Communal roosting in tight huddles can help conserve heat and several nuthatch species employ it up to 170 pygmy nuthatches have been seen in a single roost The pygmy nuthatch is able to lower its body temperature when roosting conserving energy through hypothermia and a lowered metabolic rate 62 Feeding edit nbsp Eurasian nuthatch prying something out from under the bark of a tree Nuthatches forage along tree trunks and branches and are members of the same feeding guild as woodpeckers Unlike woodpeckers and treecreepers however they do not use their tails for additional support relying instead on their strong legs and feet to progress in jerky hops 61 68 They are able to descend head first and hang upside down beneath twigs and branches Kruper s nuthatch can even stretch downward from an upside down position to drink water from leaves without touching the ground 69 Rock nuthatches forage with a similar technique to the woodland species but seek food on rock faces and sometimes buildings When breeding a pair of nuthatches will only feed within their territory but at other times will associate with passing tits or join mixed species feeding flocks 6 60 70 Insects and other invertebrates are a major portion of the nuthatch diet especially during the breeding season when they rely almost exclusively on live prey 64 but most species also eat seeds during the winter when invertebrates are less readily available Larger food items such as big insects snails acorns or seeds may be wedged into cracks and pounded with the bird s strong bill 6 Unusually for a bird the brown headed nuthatch uses a piece of tree bark as a lever to pry up other bark flakes to look for food the bark tool may then be carried from tree to tree or used to cover a seed cache 63 All nuthatches appear to store food especially seeds in tree crevices in the ground under small stones or behind bark flakes and these caches are remembered for as long as 30 days 14 34 71 Similarly the rock nuthatches wedge snails into suitable crevices for consumption in times of need 43 44 European nuthatches have been found to avoid using their caches during benign conditions in order to save them for harsher times 72 Conservation status edit nbsp White breasted nuthatch common in much of North America Some nuthatches such as the Eurasian nuthatch and the North American species have extensive ranges and large populations and few conservation problems 73 although locally they may be affected by woodland fragmentation 59 74 In contrast some of the more restricted species face severe pressures The endangered white browed nuthatch is found only in the Mount Victoria area of Burma where forest up to 2 000 m 6 600 ft above sea level has been almost totally cleared and habitat between 2 000 2 500 m 6 600 8 200 ft is heavily degraded Nearly 12 000 people live in the Natma Taung national park which includes Mount Victoria and their fires and traps add to the pressure on the nuthatch The population of the white browed nuthatch estimated at only a few thousand is decreasing and no conservation measures are in place 75 76 The Algerian nuthatch is found in only four areas of Algeria and it is possible that the total population does not exceed 1 000 birds Fire erosion and grazing and disturbance by livestock have reduced the quality of the habitat despite its location in the Taza National Park 77 Deforestation has also caused population declines for the vulnerable Yunnan and yellow billed nuthatches The Yunnan nuthatch can cope with some tree loss since it prefers open pine woodland but although still locally common it has disappeared from several of the areas in which it was recorded in the early 20th century 78 The threat to yellow billed is particularly acute on Hainan where more than 70 of the woodland has been lost in the past 50 years due to shifting cultivation and the use of wood for fuel during Chinese government re settlement programmes 79 Kruper s nuthatch is threatened by urbanisation and development in and around mature coniferous forests particularly in the Mediterranean coastal areas where the species was once numerous A law promoting tourism came into force in Turkey in 2003 further exacerbating the threats to their habitat The law reduced bureaucracy and made it easier for developers to build tourism facilities and summer houses in the coastal zone where woodland loss is a growing problem for the nuthatch 80 81 Notes edit 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 Bibcode 2019PNAS 116 7916O doi 10 1073 pnas 1813206116 PMC 6475423 PMID 30936315 Lesson Rene 1828 Manuel d ornithologie ou description des genres et des principales especes d oiseaux in French Vol 1 Paris Roret p 360 Lesson used the French Sittees rather than the Latin Sittidae a b Cracraft J Barker F Keith Braun M J Harshman J Dyke G Feinstein J Stanley S Cibois A Schikler P Beresford P Garcia Moreno J Sorenson M D Yuri T Mindell D P 2004 Phylogenetic relationships among modern birds Neornithes Toward an avian tree of life pp 468 489 in Assembling the tree of life J Cracraft and M J Donoghue eds Oxford University Press New York ISBN 0 19 517234 5 Snow amp Perrins 1998 pp 1408 Vaurie Charles Koelz Walter November 1950 Notes on some Asiatic nuthatches and creepers PDF American Museum Novitates 1472 1 39 a b c d e f g Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 16 17 Family Introduction Packert M Bader Blukott M Kunzelmann B Sun Y H Hsu Y C Kehlmaier C Albrecht F Illera J C Martens J 2020 A revised phylogeny of nuthatches Aves Passeriformes Sitta reveals insight in intra and interspecific diversification patterns in the Palearctic Vertebrate Zoology 70 2 241 262 doi 10 26049 VZ70 2 2020 10 Barker F Keith 2004 Monophyly and relationships of wrens Aves Troglodytidae a congruence analysis of heterogeneous mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 31 2 486 504 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2003 08 005 PMID 15062790 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 04 12 Linnaeus C 1758 Systema naturae per regna tria naturae Vol I 10th ed Stockholm Laurentius Salvius p 115 Rostrum subcultrato conicum rectum porrectum integerrimum mandibula superiore obtusiuscula Lingua lacero emarginata Brookes Ian 2006 The Chambers Dictionary ninth ed Edinburgh Chambers p 1417 ISBN 978 0 550 10185 3 Nuthatch Merriam Webster Online Dictionary Merriam Webster Online Retrieved 2008 06 24 Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 12 13 Species limits Pasquet Eric January 1998 Phylogeny of the nuthatches of the Sitta canadensis group and its evolutionary and biogeographic implications Ibis 140 1 150 156 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1998 tb04553 x a b c d Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 109 114 Eurasian Nuthatch a b c d Rasmussen Pamela C Anderton John C 2005 Birds of South Asia The Ripley Guide Lynx Edicions Barcelona p 536 ISBN 978 84 87334 67 2 Zink Robert M Drovetski Sergei V Rohwer Sievert September 2006 Selective neutrality of mitochondrial ND2 sequences phylogeography and species limits in Sitta europaea PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 40 3 679 686 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2005 11 002 PMID 16716603 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 03 04 a b Dickinson Edward C 2006 Systematic notes on Asian birds 62 A preliminary review of the Sittidae PDF Zoologische Verhandelingen Leiden 80 225 240 Sangster George Collinson Martin Crochet J Pierre Andre Knox Alan G Parkin David T Votier Stephen C 2012 Taxonomic recommendations for British birds eighth report Ibis 154 4 874 883 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 2012 01273 x Manegold Albrecht April 2008 Earliest fossil record of the Certhioidea treecreepers and allies from the early Miocene of Germany Journal of Ornithology 149 2 223 228 doi 10 1007 s10336 007 0263 9 S2CID 11900733 Jiri Mlikovsky Cenozoic Birds of the World Part 1 Europe Archived 2011 05 20 at the Wayback Machine Prague Ninox Press 2002 407 p p 252 273 a b Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 169 172 Giant Nuthatch a b Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 130 133 Brown headed Nuthatch Templeton Christopher N Greene Erick March 2007 Nuthatches eavesdrop on variations in heterospecific chickadee mobbing alarm calls Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 13 5479 5482 Bibcode 2007PNAS 104 5479T doi 10 1073 pnas 0605183104 PMC 1838489 PMID 17372225 Gill Frank Donsker David Rasmussen Pamela eds 2020 Nuthatches Wallcreeper treecreepers mockingbirds starlings oxpeckers IOC World Bird List Version 10 1 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 15 June 2020 Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 148 150 White cheeked Nuthatch Rasmussen P C and J C Anderton 2005 Birds of South Asia The Ripley guide Volume 2 attributes and status Smithsonian Institution and Lynx Edicions Washington D C and Barcelona Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 150 155 White breasted Nuthatch Bull John and Farrand John Jr The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Birds Eastern Region Alfred A Knopf Inc 1977 pp 646 647 White breasted Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 172 173 Beautiful Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 168 169 Blue Nuthatch a b Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 161 164 Velvet fronted Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 164 165 Yellow billed Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 165 168 Sulphur billed Nuthatch a b c Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 127 130 Pygmy Nuthatch International BirdLife International BirdLife 2020 08 27 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Sitta insularis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Retrieved 2021 07 14 Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 143 144 Yunnan Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 135 138 Algerian Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 138 140 Kruper s Nuthatch a b Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 144 148 Red breasted Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 133 135 Corsican Nuthatch Thibault Jean Claude Hacquemand Didier Moneglia Pasquale Pellegrini Herve Prodon Roger Recorbet Bernard Seguin Jean Francois Villard Pascal 2011 Distribution and population size of the Corsican Nuthatch Sitta whiteheadi Bird Conservation International 21 2 199 206 doi 10 1017 S0959270910000468 Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 140 142 Chinese Nuthatch a b c Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 155 158 Western Rock Nuthatch a b c d Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 158 161 Eastern Rock Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 125 126 White browed Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 123 125 White tailed Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 114 117 Chestnut vented Nuthatch Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 117 119 Kashmir Nuthatch a b c Harrap amp Quinn 1996 pp 119 123 Chestnut bellied Nuthatch Snow amp Perrins 1998 pp 1400 1401 Algerian Nuthatch a b c Snow amp Perrins 1998 pp 1402 1404 Nuthatch Snow amp Perrins 1998 pp 1399 1400 Corsican nuthatch Snow amp Perrins 1998 pp 1404 1406 Eastern Rock Nuthatch a b Snow amp Perrins 1998 pp 1406 1407 Rock Nuthatch Menon Shaily Islam Zafar Ul Soberon Jorge Peterson A Townsend 2008 Preliminary analysis of the ecology and geography of the Asian nuthatches Aves Sittidae The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 120 4 692 699 doi 10 1676 07 136 1 S2CID 11556921 Ripley S Dillon 1959 Character displacement in Indian nuthatches Sitta Postilla 42 1 11 Red breasted Nuthatch Bird Guide Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology Retrieved 2008 06 20 Kilham Lawrence January 1971 Use of in bill sweeping by White breasted Nuthatch PDF The Auk 88 1 175 176 doi 10 2307 4083981 JSTOR 4083981 a b Gonzalez Varo Juan P Lopez Bao Jose V Guitian Jose 2008 Presence and abundance of the Eurasian nuthatch Sitta europaea in relation to the size isolation and the intensity of management of chestnut woodlands in the NW Iberian Peninsula Landscape Ecology 23 79 89 doi 10 1007 s10980 007 9166 7 S2CID 19446422 a b Snow amp Perrins 1998 p 1398 Nuthatch Family Sittidae a b Matthysen Erik Lohrl Hans 2003 Nuthatches In Perrins Christopher ed Firefly Encyclopedia of Birds Firefly Books pp 536 537 ISBN 978 1 55297 777 4 a b c Kieliszewski Jordan Sitta pygmaea Animal Diversity Web University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Retrieved 2008 06 21 a b Brown headed Nuthatch Bird Guide Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology Retrieved 2008 06 21 a b Roof Jennifer Dewey Tanya Sitta carolinensis Animal Diversity Web University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Retrieved 2008 06 21 Nuthatch Sitta europaea Linnaeus 1758 BTO Birdfacts British Trust for Ornithology Retrieved 2008 12 01 Thibault Jean Claude Jenouvrier Stephanie 2006 Annual survival rates of adult male Corsican nuthatches Sitta whiteheadi PDF Ringing amp Migration 23 2 85 88 doi 10 1080 03078698 2006 9674349 S2CID 85182636 Ghalambor Cameron K Martin Thomas E August 2000 Parental investment strategies in two species of nuthatch vary with stage specific predation risk and reproductive effort PDF Animal Behaviour 60 2 263 267 doi 10 1006 anbe 2000 1472 PMID 10973729 S2CID 13165711 Fujita M K Kawakami S Moriguchi amp H Higuchi 2008 Locomotion of the Eurasian nuthatch on vertical and horizontal substrates Journal of Zoology 274 4 357 366 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 2007 00395 x Albayrak Tamer Erdogan Ali 2005 Observations on some behaviours of Kruper s Nuthatch Sitta krueperi a little known West Palaearctic bird PDF Turkish Journal of Zoology 29 177 181 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 02 25 Retrieved 2008 06 27 Robson Craig 2004 A Field Guide to the Birds of Thailand New Holland Press p 204 ISBN 978 1 84330 921 5 Hardling Roger Kallander Hans Nilsson Jan Ake 1997 Memory for hoarded food an aviary study of the European Nuthatch PDF The Condor 99 2 526 529 doi 10 2307 1369961 JSTOR 1369961 Nilsson Jan Ake Persson Hans Kallander Owe 1993 A prudent hoarder effects of long term hoarding in the European nuthatch Sitta europaea Behavioral Ecology 4 4 369 373 doi 10 1093 beheco 4 4 369 Sitta Species Search Results BirdLife International Retrieved 2008 06 21 van Langevelde Frank 2000 Scale of habitat connectivity and colonization in fragmented nuthatch populations Ecography 23 5 614 622 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0587 2000 tb00180 x JSTOR 3683295 BirdLife International 2016 Sitta victoriae IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22711167A94281752 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22711167A94281752 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 Thet Zaw Naing 2003 Ecology of the White browed Nuthatch Sitta victoriae in Natmataung National Park Myanmar with notes on other significant species PDF Forktail 19 57 62 BirdLife International 2017 Sitta ledanti IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T22711179A119435091 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T22711179A119435091 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 BirdLife International 2017 Sitta yunnanensis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T22711192A116898695 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T22711192A116898695 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 BirdLife International 2018 Sitta solangiae IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T22711219A132095305 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T22711219A132095305 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 BirdLife International 2016 Sitta krueperi IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22711184A94282660 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22711184A94282660 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 Turkey briefing notes on tourism policy and institutional framework PDF The Travel Foundation Archived from the original PDF on 25 February 2009 Retrieved 22 July 2008 References editHarrap Simon Quinn David 1996 Tits Nuthatches and Treecreepers Christopher Helm ISBN 978 0 7136 3964 3 Snow David Perrins Christopher M eds 1998 The Birds of the Western Palearctic BWP concise 2 volume ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 854099 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sitta Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nuthatch amp oldid 1216608711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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