Oreoicidae


Oreoicidae is a newly recognized family of small insectivorous songbirds from New Guinea and Australia, commonly known as the Australo-Papuan bellbirds. The family contains three genera, each containing a single species: Aleadryas, which contains the rufous-naped bellbird; Ornorectes, which contains the piping bellbird; and Oreoica, which contains the crested bellbird.

Taxonomy and systematics

The three species contained in the family have been moved around between different families for fifty years, including the Colluricinclidae, Falcunculidae and Pachycephalidae. A series of studies of the DNA of Australian birds between 2001 and 2006 found strong support for treating the three genera as a new family, which was formally named in 2016.
Within the passerines, the relationship of the Australo-Papuan bellbirds to other bird families has been difficult to establish; they have been thought to be close to a range of families including the cuckoo-shrikes, whistlers, mottled berryhunter, painted berrypeckers, butcherbirds and woodswallows, and Old World orioles.

Taxonomic list

  • Aleadryas
  • *Aleadryas rufinucha, rufous-naped bellbird
  • Ornorectes
  • *Ornorectes cristatus, piping bellbird
  • Oreoica
  • * Oreoica gutturalis, crested bellbird

    Description

The family shares a small number of characteristics. They are small medium to medium-sized songbirds with stout bodies, ranging from in length for the rufous-naped whistler to in the crested pitohui. They also all have semi-erectile crests and shrike-like bills. The plumage is either the same between the sexes or slightly different.

Distribution and habitat

The family occupies a range of habitats. Two species, the rufous-naped bellbird and the piping bellbird, are endemic to New Guinea, whilst the crested bellbird is endemic to Australia. The two New Guinean species are found in rainforest; lowland and hill forest in the piping bellbird, or montane forest and secondary forest in the case of the rufous-naped bellbird. The crested bellbird occupies drier habitats in Australia including dry woodlands and scrublands.

Vocalization

All members of Oreoicidae have melodious piping songs consisting of rhythmically repeating ringing notes of different lengths, typically mostly or all at the same pitch. The bell-like quality of their songs is the source of the common name bellbird, which was first applied to the crested bellbird and more recently to the other two species, once their close relationship to the crested bellbird, and distant relationship to whistlers and other pitohuis, was revealed. The rufous-naped bellbird also makes harsh rasping calls.
One aboriginal name for the crested bellbird is "panpanpanella," an onomatopoeia of its rhythmic song. Early European settlers called the bird "dick-dick-the-devil," another onomatopoeia.
The ornithologist John Gould described the song of the crested bellbird thusly: