Mangrove rail
The mangrove rail is a species of bird in subfamily Rallinae of family Rallidae, the rails, gallinules, and coots. It is found in Central and South America.
Taxonomy and systematics
The mangrove rail was described by the French polymath Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon in 1781 in his Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux from a specimen obtained in French Guiana. The bird was also illustrated in a hand-colored plate engraved by François-Nicolas Martinet in the Planches Enluminées D'Histoire Naturelle which was produced under the supervision of Edme-Louis Daubenton to accompany Buffon's text. Neither the plate caption nor Buffon's description included a scientific name but in 1783 the Dutch naturalist Pieter Boddaert coined the binomial name Rallus longirostris in his catalogue of the Planches Enluminées. The genus Rallus had been erected in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae. The specific epithet longirostris combines the Latin longus meaning "long" and -rostris meaning "-billed".The mangrove rail was formerly considered to be conspecific with what are now the Aztec rail, Ridgway's rail, the king rail, and the clapper rail, and more recently as conspecific with Ridgeway's and king rails. Worldwide taxonomic systems now agree that each of the five is a separate species based on a 2013 study that described their different genetics and morphologies. Many systems treat it as most closely related to Ridgway's rail.
Eight subspecies of mangrove rail are recognized:
- R. l. phelpsi Wetmore, 1941
- R. l. dillonripleyi Phelps Jr.|Phelps Jr.] & Aveledo, 1987
- R. l. margaritae Zimmer & Phelps, 1944
- R. l. pelodramus Oberholser, 1937
- R. l. longirostris Boddaert, 1783
- R. l. crassirostris Lawrence, 1871
- R. l. cypereti Taczanowski, 1878
- R. l. berryorum J.M. Maley, J.E. McCormack, W.L.E. Tsai, E.M. Schwab, J. Van Dort, R.C. Roselvy, & M.D. Carling, 2016
Description
The mangrove rail is about long and weighs. It has a long, slender, and slightly decurved bill with a brownish maxilla and an orange-yellow mandible. Its legs are light orange-red. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies R. l. longirostris have dull gray-brown upperparts with darker centers to the feathers. They have a white loral streak on their pale gray face, a whitish throat, tawny buff neck and breast with a white center to the belly, and black and white bars on the flanks. Juveniles are similar to adults but are darker and duller.Subspecies R. l. phelpsi has a darker crown and upperparts and paler underparts than the nominate. R. l. margaritae is the darkest subspecies; it is smaller than the nominate and has bolder bars on the flanks. R. l. pelodramus is similar in size to margaritae but paler. The dark markings on the upperparts of R. l. cypereti are lighter than those of the nominate and the dark flank bars are also lighter.
Distribution and habitat
The mangrove rail is found discontinuously on the Pacific coast of Central America and the Pacific, Caribbean, and Atlantic coasts of South America. It inhabits coastal mangrove swamps and brackish and salt marshes. The subspecies are distributed thus:- R. l. phelpsi Wetmore, 1941 – northeastern Colombia's La Guajira Department into northwestern Venezuela as far as Miranda state
- R. l. dillonripleyi Phelps Jr & Aveledo, 1987 – northeastern Venezuela's Sucre state
- R. l. margaritae Zimmer, JT & Phelps, 1944 – Margarita Island off the Venezuelan coast
- R. l. pelodramus Oberholser, 1937 – Trinidad
- R. l. longirostris Boddaert, 1783 – Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana
- R. l. crassirostris Lawrence, 1871 – Brazil from the Amazon estuary south to Santa Catarina state
- R. l. cypereti Taczanowski, 1878 – from Nariño Department in southwestern Colombia through Ecuador into Peru's Department of Tumbes
- R. l. berryorum Maley et al., 2016 - El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua. The population in northwestern Costa Rica is believed to also belong to this subspecies.