Thick-billed vireo
The thick-billed vireo is a species of bird in the family Vireonidae, the vireos, greenlets, and shrike-babblers. It is found on many islands of the West Indies and as an occasional vagrant to south Florida in the United States.
Taxonomy and systematics
The thick-billed vireo was originally described in 1859 as Lanivireo crassirostris.The thick-billed vireo has these five subspecies:
- V. c. crassirostris
- V. c. stalagmium Buden, 1985
- V. c. tortugae Richmond, 1917
- V. c. cubensis Kirkconnell & Garrido, 2000
- V. c. alleni Cory, 1886
In the early twentieth century V. c. crassirostris had been treated as two subspecies; they were later merged.
Description
The thick-billed vireo is long and weighs about. The sexes have the same plumage. Adults of the nominate subspecies V. c. crassirostris have a mostly grayish olive to brownish olive crown, face, and nape with blackish lores, a pale yellow stripe above the lores, and a pale to darker yellow eye-ring that sometimes is incomplete. Their upperparts are grayish olive to brownish olive with a more olive-green rump and uppertail coverts. Their wing coverts are dusky grayish brown with wide white tips that form two prominent wing bars. Their flight feathers are dusky grayish brown; the primaries have off-white edges, the secondaries have pale olive edges, and the tertials have white edges. Their tail is dusky grayish brown. Their underparts are pale grayish buffy to light yellowish buff or yellow. The other subspecies of the thick-billed vireo differ very little from the nominate. All subspecies have a dark iris, a dusky horn maxilla, a pale horn mandible, and bluish gray legs and feet.Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of the thick-billed vireo are found thus:- V. c. crassirostris: the Bahamas
- V. c. stalagmium: the Turks and Caicos Islands
- V. c. tortugae: Île de la Tortue off northern Haiti
- V. c. cubensis: Cayo Coco and Cayo Paredón Grande off northern Cuba
- V. c. alleni: the Cayman Islands
The thick-billed vireo inhabits deciduous woodlands, scrublands, and mangroves.