The avifauna of Biak Island, Papua, Indonesia with comments on status, conservation, natural history and taxonomy
Author
Bishop, K. David
text
Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club
2023
2023-03-06
143
1
3
62
journal article
298463
10.25226/bboc.v143i1.2023.a2
6028cf6b-e944-40d1-b774-7caa1c970409
2513-9894
11642130
805136AB-F3FE-4C77-85AC-E37423156B6D
LARGE-BILLED GERYGONE
Gerygone magnirostris
#
Range
G. m.
hypoxantha
Biak, Supiori
;
G. m. affinis
Yapen.
Taxonomy
Although
Salvadori (1878)
could not attribute the
two types
in Leiden Museum to any species known to him,
Mayr & Meyer de Schauensee (1939)
emphatically listed
hypoxantha
as a subspecies of
magnirostris
based on Ripley’s
two specimens
. Mayr also described the immature, which is likely to be the source for the confusing reports of ‘another’
Gerygone
on Biak (see
Gibbs 1993
). Treatment as a distinctive subspecies of
G. magnirostris
was subsequently followed by
Rand & Gilliard (1967)
and Beehler & Pratt (2016). The latter noted that SvB and KDB who are familiar with the species’ song had advocated treating
hypoxantha
subspecifically. Conversely del
Hoyo & Collar (2016)
and
Gregory (2017
,
2020
) treated this taxon as a full species but without a detailed assessment other than to note its taxonomy is unstable and that it has ‘clear yellow in plumage and is confined to a long-isolated island.’
Status
Biak endemic subspecies. Infrequently encountered by collectors as evidenced by just
four specimens
: von Rosenberg (
Salvadori 1878
) obtained the
two syntypes
and Ripley (
Mayr & Meyer de Schauensee 1939
) collected two more, the only examples he encountered. Although infrequently observed by previous visitors, increasing familiarity with its vocalisations coupled with the possibility of it being an endemic species has resulted in numerous records since
c
.2006 between mid July and early November (eBird).
Voice
The song of Biak birds fits well with the general description of the species’ geographically variable song: ‘a lilting, repetitive, musical, typical gerygone-sequence’ (
Pratt & Beehler 2015
,
Gregory 2017
), resembling closely that of Australian
G. m. cairnsensis
(Beehler & Pratt 2016).