Geophaps

Geophaps
Spinifex pigeon
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Columbiformes
Family: Columbidae
Genus: Geophaps
G.R. Gray, 1842
Species

Spinifex pigeon, Geophaps plumifera

Squatter pigeon, Geophaps scripta

Partridge pigeon, Geophaps smithii

Crested pigeon, Geophaps lophotes

Geophaps is a small genus of doves in the order Columbiformes. Established by George Robert Gray, it contains three extant species:,[1] a fourth species, the Crested pigeon is also placed within the Geophaps genus in some works.[2] The plumage and distribution of Geophaps species suggests that all species within the genus have formed from a common ancestor and that through adaptive radiation they have varied greatly in size, shape and ecology[3]

The name Geophaps is a combination of the Greek words geō meaning "ground" and phaps, meaning "pigeon".[4]

Taxonomy

Pigeons and doves are placed in their taxonomic groups based predominantly on structural characteristics. Pigeons feed their young by regurgitation and suck water while their beak is immersed. Males and females divide incubation duties.[5]

Geophaps pigeons are members of the family Columbidae, who's distribution is spread between three defined areas around the globe: the Americas; Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia; and Asia, Australasia and Oceania. Australia and Oceania are home to almost two-thirds of all living species of Columbidae, which also includes three-quarters of all threatened species globally.[6]

Evolution

Pigeons in the genus Geophaps are believed to have evolved from bird fossils which were found at Riversleigh, north-west Queensland. The fossils were described as a new genus and species of pigeon and are the oldest Columbia fossils to have been found globally. The fossil species has been most closely linked to the Australian bronze wings, including Geophaps species and suggests that pigeons may have evolved in the southern hemisphere. The fossil find indicates that the ancestry of Australian bronzewings goes back to the end of the Paleogene era.[7]

Description

All species of Pigeons and Doves are described as having short necks and legs, and a short, slender bill.[8]

All four species within the Geophaps genus are endemic to Australia and are generally described as Bronzewings. They are closely related to pigeons from the genus Phaps. Geophaps species share partridge-like flight patterns and show no differences in plumage between the sexes. Aside from the Crested pigeon, who roosts and nests arboreally, all members of the genus Geophaps are terrestrial. Geophaps scripta and Geophaps smithii are closely related terrestrial species both with recognisable facial patterns. Geophaps plumifera and Geophaps lophotes both have long, erect crests and are considered reasonably different from G.scripta and G.smithii. G.plumifera and G.lophotes are placed occasionally within their own genera (Ocyphaps lophotes for the Crested pigeon, and Lophophaps plumifera for the Spinifex pigeon).[2]

Common Name Scientific Name Sub-species Size- head to tail. Distribution IUCN Red List Status
Spinifex pigeon Geophaps plumifera / Lophophaps plumifera G.p.plumifera

G.p.leucogaster

G.p.proxima

M-200-208mm

F-206-216mm

Dry parts of inland and Western Australia Least Concern
Crested pigeon Geophaps lophotes / Ocyphaps lophotes G.l.lophotes

G.l.whitlocki

M-325-355mm

F-325-355mm

Australia wide, excluding N.T, TAS, Cape York and Southern Victoria Least Concern
Partridge pigeon Geophaps smithii None M-271-279mm

F-231-251mm

Kimberleys, N.T, Melville Island Vulnerable
Squatter pigeon Geophaps scripta G.s.scripta

G.s.peninsulae

M-262-296mm

F-256-287mm

Eastern Australia from Cape York to N.E NSW. Least Concern

Table 1.1, shows the following information- Common name, scientific name/s, sub-species, size, distribution and IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources) Red List Status,[2][9]

Geophaps scripta Squatter pigeon
Crested pigeon alongside Spinifex pigeon.

Feeding, behaviour and ecology.

Feeding

Geophaps species are ground feeding granivores,[10] with studies finding that seeds make up their diet almost entirely, with a small number of insects found in the crops of Geophaps smithii[11]. While the Spinifex pigeon is found in arid tussock/spinifex grasslands, the spinifex grass seeds have not been found to make up a large portion of their diet.[12]

Breeding

All Geophaps pigeons exhibit a bowing display during courtship. The Spinifex pigeon and Crested pigeon's display is performed with a raising and fanning out of the tail with their folded wings partly opened to display their iridescent wing marks to their potential partner. The other members of the Geophaps genus displays and bows in a very similar manner.[3]

G.scripta has been recorded to have performed its courtship ritual where it stood fully erect on an exposed branch, with plumage slightly fluffed out. The male then bobs up and down rapidly and rhythmically, he displays alone and waits for a female to fly from cover to pair with him.[13] Rainfall and food abundance has been shown to effect breeding cycles[14]

Crested pigeons have been observed to build nests on a platform of branches, with both sexes collecting nest building material. The female builds the nest, lacing thin twigs through the substructure. They are thought to learn to build nests through trial and error.[15]

Parasites

Pigeons and doves are parasitised by two major groups of lice; wing lice and body lice. Most birds are host to both groups, which eat the downy parts of feathers that are close to the body. Body lice have been found to be more likely to be host specific than wing lice, possibly due to their host ecology where terrestrial pigeons feeding on the ground may create an easier transfer of lice and therefore be more likely to carry host specific body lice than arboreal birds.[16]

Threats to conservation

Columbidae species are amongst the most threatened bird families around the world. Geophaps species' conservation is largely threatened by habitat loss and fragmentation caused predominantly by agriculture and human interference[6] as well as by predation by introduced predators, namely cats.[2]

As arid environments are naturally changing, it is difficult to gauge the extent of change caused by pastoralisation, however, grazing by livestock is considered incompatible with natural succession of ecosystems. Overgrazing by livestock causes alteration and degradation of soil and flora. Very few arid species have been recorded as declining in numbers since European settlement and some species, including the Spinifex pigeon and the Crested pigeon have increased in population size, possibly due to the increase in permanent water sources created for livestock[17]

Species within the Geophaps genus have been named in Aboriginal stories and songs.

The Partridge pigeon (Geophaps smithii) has been listed as a bird species which features as a Morrdjdjanjno song subject. Morrdjdjanjno is a genre of song from the Arnhem Land plateau in the Northern Territory top end, they are sung only by men and passed down as 'open domain' songs. Morrdjdjanjno songs' subjects are discussed in relation to mythological events of religious significance and are believed to bring the singer into contact with the animal being sung about or to increase numbers of certain species.[18]

The Spinifex pigeon and Crested pigeons have been recorded in versions of an Aboriginal Children's story from Central Australia, conveying rich symbolic meanings between the Geophaps species and associations by the Arandic people with 'kurdaitchas' (a person who sets out to kill or harm someone, often in revenge, and who leaves no trace.[19]

References

  1. "ITIS Report: Geophaps". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Gibbs, David; Barnes, Eustace; Cox, John D. (30 July 2010). Pigeons and Doves: a Guide to the Pigeons and Doves of the World. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 329. ISBN 9781873403600.
  3. 1 2 Goodwin, Derek (1966). "The Bowing Display of Pigeons in Reference to Phylogeny". The Auk. American Ornithologists' Union (83). JSTOR 4082982.
  4. Jobling, James A. (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Names. London, UK: Christopher Helm. p. 172. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  5. Gifford, E.W. (1941). "Taxonomy and Habits of Pigeons". The Auk. 58. JSTOR 4079108.
  6. 1 2 Walker, Jonathan S. (July 2007). "Geographical patterns of threat among pigeons and doves (Columbidae)". Oryx. 41. doi:10.1017/s0030605307001016.
  7. Worthy, Trevor, H. (2012). "A phabine pigeon (Aves : Columbidae) from Oligo-Miocene Australia". Emu. 112.
  8. Hickman, C.P. Jr.; Roberts, L.S.; Larson, A.; I'Anson, H. (2004). Integrated Principles of Zoology (twelfth ed.). New York: McGraw Hill. ISBN 0072439408.
  9. "The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, Version 2015-4". Archived from the original on June 27, 2014. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
  10. Franklin, Donald C.; Woinarski, John C.Z.; Noske, Richard A. (July 2000). "Geographical Patterning of Species Richness among Granivorous Birds in Australia". Journal of Biogeography. Wiley. 27. JSTOR 2656284.
  11. Frith, H.J.; Wove, T.O.; Barker, R.D. (1976). "Foods of Eight Species of Columbidae, in the Genera Geopelia, Phaps, Geophaps and Petrophassa.". Division of Wildlife Research, CSIRO. Australian Wildlife Research (3): 159–71.
  12. Frith, H.J; Barker, R.D. (1975). "Food of the Plumed Pigeons, Geophaps plumifera and G.ferruginea.". Division of Wildlife Research. Australian Wildlife Research (2).
  13. Frith, H.J. (1977). "Some Display Postures of Australian Pigeons". IBIS: 119 pp172.
  14. Frith, H.J.; Carpenter, S.M.; Braithwaite, L.W. (1976). "Sexual cycles of pigeons in arid and semiarid Australia". Australian Journal of Zoology. 24: 331–335. doi:10.1071/zo9760331.
  15. Baldwin, Merle (2012). "Nest of the Crested Pigeon [online]". Journal of the Queensland Ornithological Society. 7. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  16. Johnson, Kevin P.; Weckstein, Jason, D.; Bush, Sarah, E.; Clayton, Dale, H. (2011). "The evolution of host specificity in dove body lice.". Parasitology. Cambridge University Press. 138: 1730–1736. doi:10.1017/S0031182010001770.
  17. Curry, P.J.; Hacker, R.B. (1990). "Can Pastoral Grazing Management Satisfy Endorsed Conservation Objectives in Arid Western Australia?". Western Australian Department of Agriculture. Journal of Environmental Management. Academic Press Limited. 30.
  18. Garde, Murray (2007). "Morrdjdjanjno ngan-marnbom story nakka, 'songs that turn me into a story teller': The morrdjdjanjno of western Arnhem Land". University of Melbourne. Australian Aboriginal Studies.
  19. Green, Jennifer; Turpin, Myfany (2013). "If You Go Down to the Soak Today: Symbolism and Structure in an Arandic Children's Story". Anthropological Linguistics: 358–394.
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