Oriental dollarbird
The Oriental dollarbird is a bird of the roller family, so named because of the distinctive pale blue or white, coin-shaped spots on its wings. It can be found from Australia to Korea, Japan and India.
Taxonomy
The Oriental dollarbird was formally described by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1766 in the twelfth edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial name Coracias orientalis. Linnaeus based his description on "Le Rollier des Indes" that had been described and illustrated by the French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760. The type locality is the island of Java in Indonesia. The Oriental dollarbird is now placed in the genus Eurystomus that was introduced in 1816 by the French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot.A molecular phylogenetic study published in 2018 found that the azure dollarbird was nested in a clade containing subspecies of the Oriental dollarbird. Formerly, some authorities have also considered the broad-billed roller and the azure dollarbird to have been subspecies of the oriental dollarbird. The generic name derives from Ancient Greek eurustomos 'wide-mouthed' and the specific epithet is Latin orientalis 'eastern'. Alternate names for the oriental dollarbird include the Asian dollarbird, dark roller, dollar roller, dollarbird, eastern broad-billed roller and oriental broad-billed roller.
Ten subspecies are recognized:E. o. cyanocollis – Vieillot, 1819: Found from the Himalayas through China to south-eastern Siberia, Korea and JapanE. o. orientalis – (Linnaeus, 1766): Found from the southern Himalayas to Indochina, the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java, Borneo and the PhilippinesE. o. laetior – Sharpe, 1890: Found in south-western IndiaE. o. gigas – Stresemann, 1913: Found on southern Andaman IslandsE. o. irisi – Deraniyagala, 1951: Found in Sri LankaE. o. oberholseri – Junge, 1936: Found on Simeulue Australian roller – : Originally described as a separate species in the genus Coracias. Found on the Lesser Sunda Islands, northern and eastern AustraliaE. o. waigiouensis – Elliot, DG, 1871: Originally described as a separate species. Found on New Guinea, western Papuan islands, D'Entrecasteaux Islands and the Louisiade ArchipelagoE. o. crassirostris – Sclater, PL, 1869: Originally described as a separate species. Found in the Bismarck ArchipelagoE. o. solomonensis – Sharpe, 1890: Originally described as a separate species. Found in the Solomon Islands