Inventory of the Species and Subspecies of Alaska Birds

Inventory of the Species and Subspecies of Alaska Birds

WESTEP BltlDS Volume 28, Number 2, 1997 INVENTORY OF THE SPECIES AND SUBSPECIES OF ALASKA BIRDS DANIEL D. GIBSON and BRINA KESSEL, Universityof Alaska Museum, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775-6960 The most recent inventory of all of the modern avian taxa known from Alaska has been for many years that of Gabrielsonand Lincoln(1959), who discussed311 speciesand an additional 102 subspecies.Their data and many of their assessmentswere also reflectedin the fifth edition of the AOU Check-list of North American Birds (1957), producedby a committeeof which E C. Lincolnwas a member.In the 41 yearsthat have elapsedsince 1956, when their data collection ended, many additional species and subspecieshave been recordedin Alaska, the validityand limits of numerous taxa have been re-evaluated, and new subspecieshave been described. Some of these new subspecieshave been describedfrom Alaska (Feinstein 1958, Kemsies1961, Webster1983, Rea and Websterin Phillips 1986, Gibsonand Kessel1989, Phillips 1991, Dickermanand Gustarson1996), from adjacent Canada (Browning 1994), or from northeastern Russia (Tomkovich 1986, 1990). Other subspeciesthat affect an assessmentof species here have been describedfrom distant localities (Phillips 1962, Burleigh 1963, Walkinshaw1965, White 1968, Oberholser1974, Delacour and Ripley 1975, Phillips 1981, Dickerman 1986, Jehl 1987a). Our own ongoing efforts to verify the identificationsand associateddata of Alaskavoucher specimens of particularhistorical or distributionalsignifi- cance led to this paper. Because Alaska is a vast, zoogeographically dynamic,and pivotallyimportant interfacebetween the Old World and New World avifaunas,we have compiledthis inventoryto providean up-to-date regional review of the continuing process of learning and proving the distributionsof wild birds--by collectingand careful subsequentmuseum studies(see Phillips 1986:xxxii). For avian systematistsand other ornitholo- gistswho will be interestedin verifyingthe basesfor ornithologicalconclu- sions,we includethe numbersand locationsof Alaska specimenswe deem significant,and we includethe bibliographiclinks betweenhistorical per- spective(AOU 1957, Gabrielsonand Lincoln 1959) and contemporary recommendationsfor treatmentas speciesand subspecies--includingsyn- Western Birds 28:45-95, 1997 45 INVENTORY OF THE SPECIES AND SUBSPECIES OF ALASKA BIRDS onymy at either of these taxonomic levels--for every lower avian taxon currently known from Alaska. Thus, preservedspecimens from Alaska constitutethe foundationof this paper. Institutionalabbreviations identify the ornithologycollections cited in text: AMNH, American Museum of Natural History, New York City; ANSP, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia; BMNH, British Museum Natural History, Tring, Hertfordshire,Great Britain; CAS, CaliforniaAcad- emy of Sciences,San Francisco;CHAS, Chicago Academy of Sciences; CU, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York; DMNH, Denver Museum of Natural History;FMNH, Field Museumof Natural History, Chicago;LACM, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County; MCZ, Museum of Com- parative Zoology, Harvard University;MMNH, James F. Bell Museum of Natural History, University of Minnesota, St. Paul; MVZ, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Universityof California Berkeley; PSM, Universityof Puget Sound, Tacoma,Washington; ROM, Royal Ontario Museum,Toronto; SBCM, San Bernardino County Museum, Redlands, California; SCK, SouthwesternCollege Natural History Museum,Winfield, Kansas;SDNHM, San Diego Natural History Museum;UAM, Universityof Alaska Museum, Fairbanks;UBC, University of British Columbia, Vancouver;UCLA, Univer- sity of CalifomiaLos Angeles;UMMZ, Universityof MichiganMuseum of Zoology,Ann Arbor; USNM, United States National Museum,Washington, DC; UU, Utah Museum of Natural History, Universityof Utah, Salt Lake City; UWBM, University of Washington-BurkeMuseum, Seattle; ZIAS, ZoologicalInstitute, Academy of Sciences,St. Petersburg,Russia. Where italicized(e.g., U$_I•M 999999 or U$_I•M, 1), specimenreferences denote that Gibson has examined these specimenshimself. Many of the specimensexamined have not been discussedor cited in the ornithological literature; the accompanyingcitations, therefore, often do not constitute referencesto every specimenlisted and in some casesrefer to no more than one of them. Subspeciesthat we believeto be valid on the basisof our own studies are identified by an asterisk (•); others we have not assessed independenfiy.We do not attemptto discussin detailall the re-evaluationsof polytypicspecies since the fifth AOU Check-list(1957) and Gabrielsonand Lincoln (1959); where our assessmentdiffers from (either of) theirs, a publishedauthority is cited or it is our own. A discussionof status,distribution, and abundanceis beyondthe scope of this paper, but "one record"denotes the only Alaska record known to us; "one specimen,"on the other hand, denotesthat additionalAlaska records exist that are not specimen-substantiated.Nomenclature and limits of avian families,phylogenetic sequence, and Englishnames follow the most recent AOU Check-list of _l•orth American Birds (sixth ed., 1983, and supple- ments). Braces specify type localities.In the case of polytypicspecies, the Englishname for the speciesis given only after the first subspecies.Multiple subspeciesare listed chronologically--exceptthose of the Rock Ptarmigan, Winter Wren, and Fox and Song sparrows,which are arrangedfrom west to east--and briefly characterized.Bracketed subspecies are inferences:they have not been substantiatedby specimenin Alaska. The six biogeographic regionsof Alaska (Figure1: SE, SC, SW, C, W, and N Alaska--Kesseland Gibson 1978) are capitalized. 46 INVENTORY OF THE SPECIES AND SUBSPECIES OF ALASKA BIRDS Twenty-fivespecies are includedfor which no Alaska specimenevidence exists;one (Veery) has been substantiatedby archivedaudio recording,the rest by readily identifiable archived or published photographs.We state where these substantiatingmaterials are archivedor published,but note that such photographs,while they serve to documentthe simple fact of occur- rence, provide no biologicalmaterial for study.Species attributedto Alaska on the basis of unsubstantiatedsight (or sound)reports alone, including12 publishedin the formal ornithologicalliterature [Puffinus creatopus, Pink- looted Shearwater; P. carneipes, Flesh-looted Shearwater; P. bulleri, Buller's Shearwater; P. puffinus Manx Shearwater (all Kessel and Gibson 1978); Egretta thula, Snowy Egret (Nelson 1958); Branta leucopsis, Barnacle Goose (Palmer 1976a); Catoptrophorus semipalmatus, Willet (Van Velzen 1963); Phalaenoptilus nuttallii, Common Poorwill (Yocom 1963); $tellula calliope, Calliope Hummingbird (Willett 1921a); Ficedula mugimaki, Mugimaki Flycatcher (AOU 1987); Icteria virens, Yellow- breasted Chat; Pheucticus ludovicianus, Rose-breasted Grosbeak (both Yocom 1963)], are not discussedfurther. No avian species introducedby humans into Alaska has developeda self-sustaining,wild population (one, Columba livia, the Rock Dove, persistslocally as a commensalof man). Thus constituted, this 1996 inventory comprises 448 species and an additional 110 subspeciesof birds known from Alaska. GAVlIDAE Gavia $tellata (Pontoppidan, 1763) {Denmark}. Red-throatedLoon. Gayla arctica viridigulari$*Dwight, 1918 {Gizhiga,Sea of Okhotsk}.Arctic Loon. At least 13 specimens(DNINH, 5; CHAS, 4; USNNI, 2; NICZ, 1; UARI, /--see Preble and McAtee 1923, Bailey 1948). Figure 1. The six biogeographicregions of Alaska. 47 INVENTORY OF THE SPECIES AND SUBSPECIES OF ALASKA BIRDS Gayla pacifica (Lawrence,1858) {San Diego, California}. PacificLoon. Maintained as a subspeciesof G. arctica for many years (from AOU 1931); restoredto full species rank by AOU (1985), following studies in Asia (see Kishchinski1980). Specimens DMNH 25415 (Bailey 1953) and DMNH 26769 (Bailey 1956), publishedas examplesof G. a. viridigularis,have been reidentifiedas G. pacifica (A. A. Kishchinski,A. R. Phillips--on specimen labels). Gavia imrner (B 'rOnnich,1764) {Faeroe Islands}. Common Loon. Gavia adamsii (G. R. Gray, 1859) {Alaska}. Yellow-billedLoon. PODICIPEDIDAE Podilyrnbus podiceps [podiceps (Linnaeus, 1758) {South Carolina}]. Pied-billed Grebe. Multiple records (no specimen; UAM photos)--see Kessel and Gibson (1978). Podiceps auritus cornutus (Gmelin, 1789) {Hudson Bay}. Horned Grebe. Podiceps grisegena holboellii Reinhardt, 1853 {southern Greenland}. Red-necked Grebe. Aechmophorusoccidentalis occidentalis(Lawrence, 1858) {Fort Steilacoom,Wash- ington}. Western Grebe. Dickerman (1986) describedsubspecies and relegated northern birds to this form. At least three specimens (UAM, 2; LACM, /--see Willett 1923, Kessel and Gibson 1978). DIOMEDEIDAE Diomedea albatrus Pallas,1769 {Bering Sea, off Kamchatka).Short-tailed Albatross. Diomedea nigripesAudubon, 1839 {PacificOcean at 30ø 44' N, 146ø W}. Black- looted Albatross. Diomedea imrnutabilis Rothschild,1893 (Laysan Island, Hawaii}. Laysan Alba- tross. PROCELLARIIDAE Fulmarus glacialis rodgersiiCassin, 1862 {North PacificOcean}. Northern Fulmar. Includesglupischa Stejneger, 1884 {CommanderIslands}, accordingto Hellmayr and Conover (1948a). Pterodroma inexpectata {Forster,1844) {Antarctic Ocean}. Mottled Petrel. Includes fisheri (Ridgway, 1883) {Kodiak Island, Alaska}, according to Hellmayr and Conover (1948a). At least five specimens(USNM, 4; UWBM, 1--see Murie 1959, Deignan 1961). We did not locate those reportedby Bent (1912) or Willett (1914). Pterodroma cookif (G. R. Gray, 1843) {New Zealand}. Cook's Petrel. Monotypic (Jouaninand

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