Galápagos Mockingbirds

Home
The genus Nesomimus
The archipelago and its mockingbirds
Galápagos Mockingbird
Floreana Mockingbird
Española Mockingbird
San Cristóbal Mockingbird
Darwin and mockingbirds
> Mainland relatives
Nesomimus bibliography
Galápagos links
About this site
 

http://oikos.villanova.edu/nesomimus/

Created by Robert L. Curry
Last modified: Wed, Nov 15, 2006
    

Mainland
Relatives

Mimus

Related genus

Tropical Mockingbird, llanos of Venezuela
Tropical Mockingbird, Mimus gilvus, llanos of Venezuela
 

Species in the genus Mimus

Northern MockingbirdM. polyglottosNorth America; México; Caribbean from Bahamas east to Virgin Islands
Tropical MockingbirdM. gilvus northern South America; Central America from Panamá to Isthmus of Tehuántepec, México Caribbean from Trinidad north and west to Virgin Islands
Large-billed (St. Andrew) MockingbirdM. magnirostrisIsla San Andres, Colombia
Considered to be a well differentiated subspecies of M. gilvus by AOU (1998)
   M. polyglottos, M. gilvus, and M. magnirostris appear to represent sibling species
Socorro MockingbirdM. graysoniEndemic to Isla Socorro, Revillagigedos Archipelago, México. Placed formerly in monotypic genus Mimodes but recently shown to be closely related to preceding two species, within Mimus (Barber et al. 2004).
Bahama MockingbirdM. gundlachiiBahamas Bank; islands along Cuba's north shore; southern Jamaica

Bahama Mockingbird, M. gundlachii gundlachii, San Salvador Island, Bahamas
 
Socorro Mockingbird, M. graysoni
Brown-backed MockingbirdM. dorsaliseast-central South America
White-banded MockingbirdM. triuruseast-central South America
   M. dorsalis and M. triurus appear to represent sibling species
Chalk-browed MockingbirdM. saturninussoutheastern South America
Patagonian MockingbirdM. patagonicusPatagonia
   M. saturninus and M. patagonicus appear to represent sibling species
Chilean MockingbirdM. thencaChile
Long-tailed Mockingbird
M. longicaudatuswestern Ecuador, including Isla de la Plata; northern and central Perú west of Andes
    Subspecies
  • M. l. longicaudatus ~ Perú
  • M. l. albogriseus ~ Mainland Ecuador
  • M. l. platensis ~ Isla de la Plata, Ecuador (endemic; largest bill)
   M. thenca and M. longicaudatus appear to represent sibling species

Back to top

Closely related genus

OreoscoptesMonotypic: O. montanus, Sage ThrasherGreat Basin, USA. More closely related to Mimus than to other thrashers (Toxostoma spp.) in available cladistic and DNA-DNA hybridization analyses.

Back to top