Skuas, Gulls, Terns and Skimmers Family STERNIDAE Bonaparte

Skuas, Gulls, Terns and Skimmers Family STERNIDAE Bonaparte

Text extracted from Gill B.J.; Bell, B.D.; Chambers, G.K.; Medway, D.G.; Palma, R.L.; Scofield, R.P.; Tennyson, A.J.D.; Worthy, T.H. 2010. Checklist of the birds of New Zealand, Norfolk and Macquarie Islands, and the Ross Dependency, Antarctica. 4th edition. Wellington, Te Papa Press and Ornithological Society of New Zealand. Pages 191, 223, 230 & 237. Order CHARADRIIFORMES: Waders, Gulls and Terns The family sequence of Christidis & Boles (1994), who adopted that of Sibley et al. (1988) and Sibley & Monroe (1990), is followed here. Suborder LARI: Skuas, Gulls, Terns and Skimmers Condon (1975) and Checklist Committee (1990) recognised three subfamilies within the Laridae (Larinae, Sterninae and Megalopterinae) but this division has not been widely adopted. We follow Gochfeld & Burger (1996) in recognising gulls in one family (Laridae) and terns and noddies in another (Sternidae). The sequence of species for Stercorariidae and Laridae follows Peters (1934) and for Sternidae follows Bridge et al. (2005). Family STERNIDAE Bonaparte: Terns and Noddies Sterninae Bonaparte, 1838: Geogr. Comp. List. Birds: 61 – Type genus Sterna Linnaeus, 1758. Most recommendations from a new study of tern and noddy relationships, based on mtDNA (Bridge et al. 2005), have already been adopted by the Taxonomic Subcommittee of the British Ornithologists’ Union Records Committee (Sangster et al. 2005) and the American Ornithologists’ Union Committee on Classification and Nomenclature (Banks, R.C. et al. 2006). This follows many years of disagreement about the generic classification of terns for which 3–12 genera have recently been used (see Bridge et al. 2005). The genera and their sequence recommended by Bridge et al. (2005) are accepted here, with the exception that we place the crested tern in Sterna rather than Thalasseus, because the evidence for the latter association is weaker (Sangster et al. 2005). Genus Gelochelidon Brehm Gelochelidon Brehm, 1830: Isis von Oken, Heft 23: col. 994 – Type species (by monotypy) Gelochelidon meridionalis Brehm = Gelochelidon nilotica (Gmelin). Gelochelidon nilotica (Gmelin) Gull-billed Tern Sterna nilotica Gmelin, 1789: Syst. Nat., 13th edition 1(2): 606 – Egypt. Gelochelidon nilotica macrotarsa; Checklist Committee 1970, Annot. Checklist Birds N.Z.: 54. (Gould, 1837). Gelochelidon nilotica (Gmelin); Checklist Committee 1990, Checklist Birds N.Z.: 163. Almost cosmopolitan, breeding across the temperate Northern Hemisphere and in Australia; migratory and nomadic. First recorded in New Zealand near Invercargill, where two overwintered in 1955 (McKenzie 1955). Now numerous sight records from coastal estuaries and marshes, occasionally in small flocks, e.g. eight in 1975–76 and six in 1976–77, Manukau Harbour (Falla et al. 1981), and six on 17 Nov. 2001, Kaipara Harbour (Riegen 2003). Six or seven subspecies recognised (Gochfeld & Burger 1996, Higgins & Davies 1996). The subspecies in New Zealand was assumed to be the Australian-breeding G. n. macrotarsa (Gould, 1837) by McKenzie (1955), but it could also be the Asian migrant G. n. affinis (Horsfield, 1821) (see Rogers & van de Kam 2004, Rogers et al. 2005). .

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