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・ Black-tailed skimmer
・ Black-tailed tityra
・ Black-tailed trainbearer
・ Black-tailed tree rat
・ Black-tailed treecreeper
・ Black-tailed trogon
・ Black-thighed falconet
・ Black-thighed grosbeak
・ Black-thighed puffleg
・ Black-throated accentor
・ Black-throated antbird
・ Black-throated antshrike
・ Black-throated apalis
・ Black-throated babbler
・ Black-throated barbet
Black-throated blue warbler
・ Black-throated brilliant
・ Black-throated bushtit
・ Black-throated canary
・ Black-throated coucal
・ Black-throated euphonia
・ Black-throated finch
・ Black-throated flowerpiercer
・ Black-throated gray warbler
・ Black-throated green warbler
・ Black-throated grosbeak
・ Black-throated hermit
・ Black-throated honeyeater
・ Black-throated huet-huet
・ Black-throated jay


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Black-throated blue warbler : ウィキペディア英語版
Black-throated blue warbler

The black-throated blue warbler (''Setophaga caerulescens'') is a small passerine bird of the New World warbler family. Its breeding ranges are located in the interior of deciduous and mixed coniferous forests in eastern North America. Over the cooler months, it migrates to islands in the Caribbean and Central America. It is a very rarely found in western Europe, where it is considered to be a non-indigenous species. The black-throated blue warbler is sexually dimorphic; the adult male has a black face and cheeks, deep blue upperparts and white underparts, while the adult female is olive-brown above and light yellow below.
Predominantly insectivorous, the black-throated blue warbler supplements its diet with berries and seeds in winter. It builds its nests in thick shrubs and the closeness of its nesting sites to the ground make it a favored species for the study of warbler behavior in the wild. The black-throated blue warbler defends its territory against other birds of the same species for both nesting and winter habitats. As the black-throated blue warbler requires large, unbroken forest areas for nesting, its numbers are declining.
==Taxonomy and phylogeny==
The German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin described the black-throated blue warbler in 1789. Its species name is the Latin adjective ''caerulescens'' meaning "turning blue".
The black-throated blue warbler is one of the New World warblers or wood-warblers in the family Parulidae. This species was originally placed under the genus ''Dendroica''. It was recently adjusted to be a member of genus ''Setophaga'' along with all other members of the genus ''Dendroica'', based on the findings from a recent phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial DNA and nuclear DNA in 2010. The old genus ''Dendroica'' was then deleted. Within the genus, it appears to have no particularly close relatives.〔
The species breeds in North America and winters in the Caribbean. Some studies have observed significant differences in terms of migratory behavior and plumage color between northern and southern populations within the breeding range. The northern population mainly winters in the western Caribbean (Cuba and Jamaica) while the southern population usually spends the winter on eastern islands (Hispaniola and Puerto Rico). Moreover, males in the southern population have darker plumage than those in the northern population. These differences have led biologists to consider them as separate subspecies. However, a recent study in the United States reveals no significant genetic differentiation between northern (samples from Michigan, New Hampshire and New York states) and southern populations (sample from North Carolina). The study results actually show a recent population expansion from a single glacial refugium, therefore the current populations are homogeneous in terms of genetics. The differentiation that is observed between the northern and southern populations should have occurred quite recently.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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