Clapper rail
The clapper rail is a member of the rail family, Rallidae. The taxonomy for this species is confusing and still being determined. It is a large brown rail that is resident in wetlands along the Atlantic coasts of the eastern United States, eastern Mexico and some Caribbean islands. This species was formerly considered to be conspecific with the mangrove rail.
Taxonomy
The clapper rail was formally described in 1789 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 rails in the genus Rallus and coined the binomial name Rallus crepitans. Gmelin based his description on those by Thomas Pennant and John Latham. The type locality is Long Island, New York. 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 crepitans is Latin meaning "breaking wind" or "resounding".The clapper rail was formerly treated as a subspecies of the mangrove rail. The decision to treat the clapper rail as a separate species was based on the results of a molecular phylogenetic study that was published in 2013. A cladogram based on the 2013 genetic study is as follows:
Eight subspecies of the clapper rail are recognised:
- R. c. crepitans Gmelin, JF, 1789 – coastal Connecticut to northeast North Carolina
- R. c. waynei Brewster, 1899 – coastal southeast USA
- R. c. saturatus Ridgway, 1880 – Gulf Coast from southwest Alabama to northeast Mexico
- R. c. scottii Sennett, 1888 – coastal Florida
- R. c. insularum Brooks, WS, 1920 – Florida Keys
- R. c. coryi Maynard, 1887 – Bahamas
- R. c. caribaeus Ridgway, 1880 – Cuba to Puerto Rico, Lesser Antilles to Antigua and Guadeloupe
- R. c. pallidus Nelson, 1905 – north Yucatán Peninsula, islands off Quintana Roo, Ycacos Lagoon
Description