Cuban vireo
The Cuban vireo is a species of bird in the family Vireonidae, the vireos, greenlets, and shrike-babblers. It is endemic to Cuba.
Taxonomy and systematics
The Cuban vireo was originally described in 1850 as Vireo gundlachii, its current binomial. At the time it had several local names including "Petit-bobo", "Juanchiví", and "Ojone". Its specific epithet honors Cuban zoologist Juan Gundlach. Some authors have treated it as a subspecies of the white-eyed vireo.The Cuban vireo's further taxonomy is unsettled. The IOC, AviList, and BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World assign it these four subspecies:
- V. g. magnus Garrido, 1971
- V. g. sanfelipensis Garrido, 1973
- V. g. gundlachii Lembeye, 1850
- V. g. orientalis Todd, 1916
This article follows the four-subspecies model.
Description
The Cuban vireo is about long and weighs about. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies V. g. gundlachii have an olive-gray crown, nape, and ear coverts. They have a yellow or creamy white patch from lores through the eye and a grayish yellow area from the bill to the ear coverts. Their upperparts are olive-gray. Their wing coverts are brownish gray with small whitish or pale grayish tips that form two faint wing bars. Their flight feathers are brownish gray; the primaries and secondaries have pale yellowish edges on the outer webs. Their tail is brownish gray. Their throat and breast are yellowish, their belly and vent a paler yellowish, their sides a grayer yellowish, and their undertail coverts yellow gray. They have a brown or reddish brown iris, a gray-brown maxilla, a paler mandible, and lead gray legs and feet. Juveniles are overall duller than adults.Subspecies V. g. magnus is larger than the nominate, with longer wings and tail, a less olivaceous back, and paler yellow underparts. V. g. sanfelipensis has a whitish chin and throat and paler underparts than the nominate. V. g. orientalis has grayer upperparts and paler underparts than the nominate.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the Cuban vireo are found thus:- V. g. magnus: Cayo Cantiles, east of Isla [de la Juventud]
- V. g. sanfelipensis: Cayo Real, in the Cayos de San Felipe west of Isla de la Juventud
- V. g. gundlachii: Cuba except for the southeast
- V. g. orientalis" southeastern Cuba