Southern nutcracker
The southern nutcracker is a passerine bird in the crow family Corvidae. It was formerly considered to be conspecific with the northern nutcracker and the Kashmir nutcracker under the English name "spotted nutcracker".
Taxonomy
The southern nutcracker was formally described in 1831 by the Irish zoologist Nicholas Vigors under the binomial name Nucifraga hemispila. He specified the type locality as just "the Himalayas"; however, research into Vigors' travels has been able to restrict the locality to the Shimla and Almora districts of northern India. The genus name Nucifraga is the Latin name given to the northern nutcracker by the English naturalist William Turner in 1544, as a translation of the German name Nussbrecher meaning "nut-breaker". The specific epithet hemispila combines the Ancient Greek ἡμι-/hēmi- meaning "half-" or "small" with σπιλος/spilos meaning "stain" or "spot". The southern nutcracker was formerly considered to be conspecific with the spotted nutcracker, that now renamed in its revised narrower ciscumscription as northern nutcracker. It is here treated as a separate species based on differences in morphology and vocalisation, as well molecular genetic analysis.Four subspecies are accepted:
- N. h. hemispila Vigors, 1831 – northwest, central Himalayas
- N. h. macella Thayer & Bangs, 1909 – east Himalayas to central and southern China and northern Myanmar
- N. h. interdicta Kleinschmidt & Weigold, 1922 – northern China
- N. h. owstoni Ingram, C, 1910 – Taiwan
Description