Ferruginous pygmy owl
The ferruginous pygmy owl is a small owl that breeds in south-central Arizona and southern Texas in the United States, south through Mexico and Central America, to South America into Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay and Argentina.
In Central America and South America, it is the most widely distributed pygmy owl and is probably one of the most numerous owl species in those areas. It is found in a wide range of semi-open wooded habitats.
Taxonomy
The ferruginous pygmy owl was formally described in 1788 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. He placed it with all the other owls in the genus Strix and coined the binomial name Strix brasiliana. Although not cited directly, Gmelin's description was ultimately based on the "Cabure" that had been described in 1648 by the German naturalist Georg Marcgrave in his Historia Naturalis Brasiliae. The ferruginous pygmy owl is now placed with 28 other small owls in the genus Glaucidium that was introduced in 1826 by the German zoologist Friedrich Boie. The genus name is from Ancient Greek glaukidion meaning "little owl" or "owlet". It is diminutive of glaux meaning "owl".Thirteen subspecies are recognised:G. b. cactorum Van Rossem, 1937 – south Arizona to Sonora to north Nayarit G. b. intermedium Phillips, AR, 1966 – south Nayarit to Oaxaca G. b. ridgwayi Sharpe, 1875 – south Texas to west PanamaG. b. medianum Todd, 1916 – north ColombiaG. b. margaritae Phelps, WH & Phelps, WH Jr, 1951 – Margarita Island G. b. phaloenoides – north, east Venezuela, Trinidad and the GuianasG. b. duidae [Frank Frank Chapman (ornithologist)|Chapman (ornithologist)|Chapman], 1929 – Cerro Duida G. b. olivaceum Chapman, 1939 – Auyán Tepui G. b. ucayalae Chapman, 1929 – AmazoniaG. b. brasilianum – east Brazil to northeast ArgentinaG. b. pallens Brodkorb, 1938 – east Bolivia, west Paraguay and north ArgentinaG. b. stranecki König, C & Wink, 1995 – central Argentina to south UruguayG. b. tucumanum Chapman, 1922 – west Argentina
Trinidad, as well as other localities, have endemic subspecies of the Glaucidium brasilianum owl. Recent genetics work has found substantial differences in ferruginous pygmy owls from different regions and members of the northern ridgwayi group are sometimes considered a separate species, Ridgway's pygmy-owl.