Subject: New species (fwd)
Date: Apr 27 08:20:10 1998
From: "D. Victor" - dvictor at u.washington.edu


---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sat, 25 Apr 1998 11:02:03 -0700
From: Scott Ray <scray at wolfenet.com>

New bird discovered in southern Brazil
http://www.cnn.com/EARTH/9804/25/brazil.newbird.ap/


April 25, 1998
Web posted at: 3:35 a.m. EDT (0735 GMT)

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) -- The scientists said its song was unlike any
they had heard before. And when they hung nets to capture the bird, they
found out why -- it was a species unknown to science.

Researchers at the Federal University of Parana said the tiny, gray-black
bird that they captured in 1997 also had a unique habitat: a marshy area
inside the city of Curitiba, 420 miles southwest of Rio de Janeiro.

Marcos Bornschein, Bianca Reinhert and Mauro Pichorim named their new bird,
a member of the Scytalopus genus, the lowland tapaculo. They said its
scientific description and name will be published later this year.

A similar bird lives in the forest only a few miles away from where the
newly discovered bird makes its home, but that bird has a different song
and never wanders to the marshes. Similar birds also live in the Andes
Mountains, more than 2,000 miles westward.

But closer study of the lowland tapaculo determined that 11 factors, from
the shape of its feathers to its bone structure, were unique, Bornschein
said. It measure about 4 inches long and weighs a half-ounce.

Jose Fernando Pacheco, an ornithologist with the Federal University of Rio
de Janeiro, confirmed the finding.

"The song is different and the type of terrain it inhabits is different,"
he said.

The lowland tapaculo is the second new bird species that Bornschein and
Reinhert have discovered.

Their first discovery is called Stymphalornis acupirostris but has no
English name. It also makes its home in the same sort of marshy area where
the lowland tapaculo lives.