{"title":"斯洛文尼亚首次发现Scopoli 's Shearwater Calonectris diomedea","authors":"J. Hanžel","doi":"10.1515/acro-2016-0014","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Scopoli's Shearwater Calonectris diomedea breeds in the Mediterranean (BirdLife International 2016a), with isolated cases of breeding recorded on the French Atlantic coast (Mays et al. 2006). Following a recent reassessment at its largest colony (Zembra Island, Tunisia), the global population is estimated at 141,000–223,000 breeding pairs (Defos du Rau et al. 2015, BirdLife International 2016a). Based on limited data, the population appears to be in slight decline, 2% over three generations, but is still evaluated as “Least Concern” (Carboneras et al. 2013, BirdLife International 2016a). The majority of the population leaves the Mediterranean to winter in the Atlantic Ocean, mainly in three areas: the Benguela and Agulhas Currents, the Brazilian Current and the Canary Current (Ristow et al. 2000, Camphuysen & van der Meer 2001, González-Solís et al. 2007, Péron et al. 2012). The autumn passage to the Atlantic takes place between mid-October and late-November, spring passage in the reverse direction between late February and early April (Ramos et al. 2009). Until recently Scopoli's Shearwater, first described by Joannes Antonius Scopoli in 1769, was considered the nominotypical subspecies of the polytypic Cory's Shearwater, together with Calonectris (diomedea) borealis which breeds mainly in the Atlantic Ocean. Field characters to differentiate the two subspecies were described by Gutiérrez (1998) and the split first proposed by Sangster et al. (1999) based on differences in molecular data, morphology and vocalization. The decision was not universally accepted at the time, but is now more widely adopted (Sangster et al. 2012, BirdLife International 2016a). Because Scopoli was based in Carniola for a significant part of his professional life, his species descriptions are of particular interest for Slovenian ornithologists. The species is named Procellaria diomedea (Scopoli 1769) and Scopoli refers to Linnaeus's “Diomedea (exulans)” (Linnaeus 1766) and Jonston's “Diomedea” (Jonstonus 1650). He proceeds to briefly describe the species without giving","PeriodicalId":53560,"journal":{"name":"Acrocephalus","volume":"37 1","pages":"227 - 230"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"First record of Scopoli’s Shearwater Calonectris diomedea in Slovenia\",\"authors\":\"J. 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The autumn passage to the Atlantic takes place between mid-October and late-November, spring passage in the reverse direction between late February and early April (Ramos et al. 2009). Until recently Scopoli's Shearwater, first described by Joannes Antonius Scopoli in 1769, was considered the nominotypical subspecies of the polytypic Cory's Shearwater, together with Calonectris (diomedea) borealis which breeds mainly in the Atlantic Ocean. Field characters to differentiate the two subspecies were described by Gutiérrez (1998) and the split first proposed by Sangster et al. (1999) based on differences in molecular data, morphology and vocalization. The decision was not universally accepted at the time, but is now more widely adopted (Sangster et al. 2012, BirdLife International 2016a). Because Scopoli was based in Carniola for a significant part of his professional life, his species descriptions are of particular interest for Slovenian ornithologists. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
Scopoli's Shearwater Calonectris diomedea在地中海繁殖(国际BirdLife International 2016a),在法国大西洋沿岸有繁殖的孤立案例记录(Mays et al. 2006)。在最近对其最大的种群(突尼斯Zembra岛)进行重新评估后,全球种群数量估计为141,000-223,000对繁殖对(Defos du Rau et al. 2015, BirdLife International 2016a)。根据有限的数据,种群数量似乎略有下降,在三代内下降2%,但仍被评估为“最不关注”(Carboneras et al. 2013, BirdLife International 2016a)。大多数种群离开地中海到大西洋过冬,主要分布在三个区域:本格拉和阿古拉斯海流、巴西海流和加那利海流(Ristow et al. 2000, Camphuysen & van der Meer 2001, González-Solís et al. 2007, p等人2012)。到大西洋的秋季通道发生在10月中旬到11月下旬之间,春季通道发生在2月下旬到4月初之间(Ramos et al. 2009)。直到最近,由Joannes Antonius Scopoli于1769年首次描述的Scopoli's Shearwater被认为是多型Cory's Shearwater的命名典型亚种,与主要在大西洋繁殖的Calonectris (diomedea) borealis一起。gutisamurez(1998)描述了区分两个亚种的田间性状,Sangster等人(1999)基于分子数据、形态和发声的差异首次提出了区分。这一决定在当时并没有被普遍接受,但现在被更广泛地采用(Sangster et al. 2012, BirdLife International 2016a)。因为Scopoli在卡尼奥拉度过了他职业生涯的重要部分,所以他的物种描述对斯洛文尼亚的鸟类学家特别感兴趣。该物种被命名为Procellaria diomedea (Scopoli 1769), Scopoli指的是林奈的“diomedea (exulans)”(林奈1766)和琼斯顿的“diomedea”(Jonstonus 1650)。他接着简要地描述了这个物种,但没有给出答案
First record of Scopoli’s Shearwater Calonectris diomedea in Slovenia
Scopoli's Shearwater Calonectris diomedea breeds in the Mediterranean (BirdLife International 2016a), with isolated cases of breeding recorded on the French Atlantic coast (Mays et al. 2006). Following a recent reassessment at its largest colony (Zembra Island, Tunisia), the global population is estimated at 141,000–223,000 breeding pairs (Defos du Rau et al. 2015, BirdLife International 2016a). Based on limited data, the population appears to be in slight decline, 2% over three generations, but is still evaluated as “Least Concern” (Carboneras et al. 2013, BirdLife International 2016a). The majority of the population leaves the Mediterranean to winter in the Atlantic Ocean, mainly in three areas: the Benguela and Agulhas Currents, the Brazilian Current and the Canary Current (Ristow et al. 2000, Camphuysen & van der Meer 2001, González-Solís et al. 2007, Péron et al. 2012). The autumn passage to the Atlantic takes place between mid-October and late-November, spring passage in the reverse direction between late February and early April (Ramos et al. 2009). Until recently Scopoli's Shearwater, first described by Joannes Antonius Scopoli in 1769, was considered the nominotypical subspecies of the polytypic Cory's Shearwater, together with Calonectris (diomedea) borealis which breeds mainly in the Atlantic Ocean. Field characters to differentiate the two subspecies were described by Gutiérrez (1998) and the split first proposed by Sangster et al. (1999) based on differences in molecular data, morphology and vocalization. The decision was not universally accepted at the time, but is now more widely adopted (Sangster et al. 2012, BirdLife International 2016a). Because Scopoli was based in Carniola for a significant part of his professional life, his species descriptions are of particular interest for Slovenian ornithologists. The species is named Procellaria diomedea (Scopoli 1769) and Scopoli refers to Linnaeus's “Diomedea (exulans)” (Linnaeus 1766) and Jonston's “Diomedea” (Jonstonus 1650). He proceeds to briefly describe the species without giving