Buru mountain pigeon
The Buru mountain pigeon, formerly also long-tailed mountain pigeon is a species of bird in the pigeon family Columbidae. It is endemic to Indonesia and inhabits montane forest and disturbed lowland forest on Buru. It was formerly considered to be conspecific with the Seram mountain pigeon. It is a medium-sized pigeon long, and has a blue-grey crown and neck, darker slate-grey upperparts, and a white to pale buff-pink throat and breast that becomes buff-pink towards the belly. The species is slightly sexually dimorphic, with females being smaller and having more dark red on the breast.
The Buru mountain pigeon feeds on fruit. Its breeding season is thought to be from October to December. It is listed as being of least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature on the IUCN Red List due to a sufficiently large range and a stable population. The population is estimated to be 20,000–49,999.
Taxonomy and systematics
The Buru mountain pigeon was described as Columba mada by the German ornithologist Ernst Hartert in 1899 on the basis of specimens from Mount Mada on Buru, Indonesia. In 1900, he stated that if the genus Gymnophaps was to be maintained, it would have to include the Buru mountain pigeon as well, although he preferred keeping both the Papuan and Buru mountain pigeons in Columba. Later, James L. Peters, in his 1937 Check-list of the Birds of the World, placed both of these species in Gymnophaps.The name of the genus, Gymnophaps, is derived from the Ancient Greek words γυμνος, meaning bare, and φαψ, meaning pigeon. The specific epithet mada is from Mount Mada, the species' type locality. Buru mountain pigeon is the official common name designated by the International Ornithologists' Union. Other common names for the species include Mada mountain pigeon and long-tailed mountain-pigeon.
The Buru mountain pigeon is one of four species in the mountain pigeon genus Gymnophaps, which is found in Melanesia and the Maluku Islands. It forms a superspecies with the other species in the genus. Within its family, the genus Gymnophaps is sister to Lopholaimus, and these two together form a clade sister to Hemiphaga. The Seram mountain pigeon was previously considered to be a subspecies of the Buru mountain pigeon, but was split on the basis of differences in appearance in 2007 by Frank Rheindt and Robert Hutchinson. The Buru mountain pigeon is now treated as having no subspecies.