2013
DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3734.2.8
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Nomenclatural issues in ornithology: the incredible controversy on the identity of a long overlooked Brazilian bird

Abstract: The identity of Scytalopus speluncae (Ménétriés, 1835) (Aves: Passeriformes: Rhinocryptidae), a tapaculo from southeastern Brazil, has been the matter of debate during the last eight years. A group of ornithologists considers that the nomen Scytalopus speluncae should be attributed to a species endemic to coastal mountains of southeastern Brazil, whereas another group considers it a species from the drier environments of another mountain belt in Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil. Both research groups disagree … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Shortly thereafter, 3 new species were described: S. notorius (Raposo et al 2006), S. diamantinensis (Diamantina Tapaculo; Bornschein et al 2007), and S. petrophilus (Rock Tapaculo; Whitney et al 2010). The first of these was soon relegated to a junior synonym of S. speluncae by , a position followed by Fjeldså (2013) and strongly endorsed by the South American Classification Committee (Remsen et al 2013;contra Raposo et al 2012, Nemésio et al 2013. Therefore, within~12 yr, the Brazilian Scytalopus, collectively known as the S. speluncae group (Maurício 2005, Raposo et al 2006, jumped from 2 to 6 accepted species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Shortly thereafter, 3 new species were described: S. notorius (Raposo et al 2006), S. diamantinensis (Diamantina Tapaculo; Bornschein et al 2007), and S. petrophilus (Rock Tapaculo; Whitney et al 2010). The first of these was soon relegated to a junior synonym of S. speluncae by , a position followed by Fjeldså (2013) and strongly endorsed by the South American Classification Committee (Remsen et al 2013;contra Raposo et al 2012, Nemésio et al 2013. Therefore, within~12 yr, the Brazilian Scytalopus, collectively known as the S. speluncae group (Maurício 2005, Raposo et al 2006, jumped from 2 to 6 accepted species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both live under different climatic conditions as cross-projections of population-specific SDMs show (Lozana-Jaramillo et al 2014). In addition, SDMs were applied for recently described taxa; a prominent example is different members of the Neotropical tapaculos (Rhinocryptidae) (Avendaño and Donagan 2015;Nemésio et al 2013).…”
Section: Assisting Taxonomymentioning
confidence: 99%