Quailfinch
The quailfinch is a species of the estrildid finch. It is found in open grasslands in Africa. They are gregarious seed-eaters with short, thick, red bills. They are very terrestrial, with lark-like feet and claws.
Taxonomy
The quailfinch was formally described in 1817 by the French ornithologist Louis Vieillot based on a specimen collected in Senegal. Vieillot coined the binomial name Fringilla atricollis where the specific epithet is from Latin ater meaning "black" and Modern Latin -collis meaning "-necked" or "-throated". The quailfinch is now the only species placed in the genus Ortygospiza that was introduced in 1850 by Carl Jakob Sundevall. Sundevall created the genus for a single species, Fringilla polyzona Temminck, 1823, which is now treated as a junior synonym of Fringilla atricollis Vieillot, 1817. The genus name Ortygospiza combines the Ancient Greek ορτυξ/ortux, ορτυγος/ortugos meaning "quail" with σπιζα/spiza meaning "finch".Eleven subspecies are recognised:
- atricollis group
- * O. a. atricollis – south Mauritania and Senegal to Chad and Cameroon
- * O. a. ansorgei Ogilvie-Grant, 1910 – Gambia and south Senegal to Togo
- * O. a. ugandae Van Someren, 1921 – south Sudan, Uganda and west Kenya
- fuscocrissa group
- * O. a. fuscocrissa Theodor [von Heuglin|Heuglin], 1863 – Eritrea and Ethiopia
- * O. a. muelleri Zedlitz und Trützschler|Zedlitz], 1911 – south Kenya to Angola, Namibia and south Botswana
- * O. a. smithersi Benson, 1955 – northeast Zambia
- * O. a. pallida Roberts (zoologist)|Roberts], 1932 – north Botswana
- * O. a. digressa Clancey, 1958 – east Zimbabwe, south Mozambique and South Africa
- gabonensis group
- * O. a. gabonensis Lynes, 1914 – Gabon to central DR Congo
- * O. a. fuscata Sclater, WL, 1932 – north Angola, south DR Congo and northwest Zambia
- * O. a. dorsostriata Van Someren, 1921 – east DR Congo and south, west Uganda
- Black-chinned quailfinch, Ortygospiza gabonensis
- African quailfinch, Ortygospiza fuscocrissa
- Black-faced quailfinch, Ortygospiza atricollis
The molecular data would support a two-taxon arrangement with the taxa atricollis and fuscocrissa, but this is not supported by the other data. In conclusion, either gabonensis should be merged back into atricollis, or fuscocrissa should be restored to species status. Gene flow in the "African quailfinch" complex is still ongoing, and the three lineages therein either form a superspecies, or can be considered a single, wide-ranging and very variable species.
The locust finch has sometimes been placed in the genus Ortygospiza. Its relationships are still uncertain as the species was not included in a large molecular phylogenetic study of the Estrildidae that was published in 2020.