New information on the vocalizations and behavior of populations of the Rufous Cacholote (Pseudoseisura cristata), combined with a morphometric analysis of museum specimens, reveal that it actually consists of two biological species: a form that is restricted to the arid caatinga region of northeastern Brazil (P. cristata), and a wider-ranging form (P. unirufa) that occupies seasonally flooded savannas and deciduous woodlands in northern and eastern Bolivia, northern Paraguay, and southwestern Brazil. Long considered a subspecies of P. cristata, P. unirufa is shown to be morphologically, vocally, and ecologically distinct from allopatrically distributed populations of P. cristata. Reciprocal playback experiments of tape-recorded vocalizations indicate that neither form responds to the other's vocalizations. The two species may also differ in their breeding systems and social structures. P. cristata is shown to be a cooperative breeder, with nonbreeding helpers assisting in territorial defense, nest-building, and care of nestlings. No evidence of cooperative breeding was found in P. unirufa.
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1 May 2000
THE RUFOUS CACHOLOTE (FURNARIIDAE: PSEUDOSEISURA) IS TWO SPECIES
Kevin J. Zimmer,
Andrew Whittaker
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The Condor
Vol. 102 • No. 2
May 2000
Vol. 102 • No. 2
May 2000
cooperative breeder
duets
Furnariidae
Pseudoseisura cristata
Pseudoseisura unirufa
species limits
vocalizations