Parulidae Wetmore, Friedmann, Lincoln, Miller, Peters, van Rossem, Van Tyne & Zimmer 1947

Parulidae Setophaga ruticilla (MGT): breeds in Alaska, Canada and eastern USA and migrates to Central America, Caribbean and northwestern South America, as well as to southern USA in small numbers (Curson, 2016a). In Brazil, it occurs only in the Amazon: in RR with records between September and Apri...

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Main Authors: Somenzari, Marina, Amaral, Priscilla Prudente do, Cueto, Víctor R., Guaraldo, André de Camargo, Jahn, Alex E., Lima, Diego Mendes, Lima, Pedro Cerqueira, Lugarini, Camile, Machado, Caio Graco, Martinez, Jaime, Nascimento, João Luiz Xavier do, Pacheco, José Fernando, Paludo, Danielle, Prestes, Nêmora Pauletti, Serafini, Patrícia Pereira, Silveira, Luís Fábio, Sousa, Antônio Emanuel Barreto Alves de, Sousa, Nathália Alves de, Souza, Manuella Andrade de, Telino-Júnior, Wallace Rodrigues, Whitney, Bret Myers
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Published: Zenodo 2018
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5234697
https://zenodo.org/record/5234697
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Summary:Parulidae Setophaga ruticilla (MGT): breeds in Alaska, Canada and eastern USA and migrates to Central America, Caribbean and northwestern South America, as well as to southern USA in small numbers (Curson, 2016a). In Brazil, it occurs only in the Amazon: in RR with records between September and April(Stotz et al., 1992; Sick,1997;WikiAves,2016), and in AM with records in January (WikiAves, 2016), April and November (Stotz et al., 1992) and October (MPEG 43351). This species departs from breeding areas in North America between July and September and reaches South America in October, returning from late March on and arriving at the breeding site in April-May (Curson, 2016a). It seems to exhibit higher fidelity to wintering areas in the Neotropics than to breeding areas in the North Temperate Zone, probably because individuals remain in the wintering area during their first year of life (Holmes & Sherry, 1992). Populations from the west of the wintering area originate from the northwest of the breeding areas and populations from the east of the wintering area originate from the east and south of the breeding areas. In general, this species reduces its migration distance by flying mainly along a north-south axis between its breeding and wintering sites (Norris et al., 2006). Setophaga petechia (MGT): occurs from Canada and the USA to northern South America in Colombia, Venezuela and northwestern Brazil. Individuals overwinter from western and southern Mexico to the south through Central America and in northern South America from southern to northern Bolivia and in the Brazilian Amazon (Curson, 2010). In Brazil,records are restricted to the period of September to May in the Amazon region in the states of RR, AP, AM, PA (Stotz et al., 1992; WikiAves, 2016; MPEG). Setophaga striata (MGT): originates from North America overwinters regularly in Amazonian lowlands, and its main wintering site in South America is in the Orinoco and Upper Amazon (Sick, 1997). This species arrives in Brazil between September and October (Sick, 1997) and visits forest edges and conserved forests in Manaus/ AM. In Brazilian amazon records are centered in the period between November and April (Stotz et al., 1992). In southeastern Brazil, it occurs only occasionally (Curson, 2010), with records for RJ from January to May (Sick, 1997). Photographic and museum records confirm the pattern found in the literature: the species is present in RR, AP, AM and PA between October and May, in BA in January, in Distrito Federal (DF) in April, in MG in May, in RJ in February and March, and in SP in March (WikiAves, 2016; MZUSP 103227 [SP; 1969, March]; MPEG), which defines it as a boreal winter migrant. : Published as part of Somenzari, Marina, Amaral, Priscilla Prudente do, Cueto, Víctor R., Guaraldo, André de Camargo, Jahn, Alex E., Lima, Diego Mendes, Lima, Pedro Cerqueira, Lugarini, Camile, Machado, Caio Graco, Martinez, Jaime, Nascimento, João Luiz Xavier do, Pacheco, José Fernando, Paludo, Danielle, Prestes, Nêmora Pauletti, Serafini, Patrícia Pereira, Silveira, Luís Fábio, Sousa, Antônio Emanuel Barreto Alves de, Sousa, Nathália Alves de, Souza, Manuella Andrade de, Telino-Júnior, Wallace Rodrigues & Whitney, Bret Myers, 2018, An overview of migratory birds in Brazil, pp. 1-66 in Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia 58 on pages 21-22, DOI: 10.11606/1807-0205/2018.58.03, http://zenodo.org/record/5234679 : {"references": ["Curson, J. 2016 a. American Redstart (Setophaga ruticilla). In: del Hoyo, J.; Elliott, A.; Sargatal, J.; Christie, D. A. & de Juana, E. (Eds.). Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive. Barcelona, Lynx Edicions. Available at: www. hbw. com / node / 61497. Access in: 19 / 10 / 2016.", "Stotz, D. F.; Bierregaard, R. O.; Con-Haft, M.; Peterman, P.; Smith, J.; Wittaker, A. & Wilson, S. V. 1992. The status of north american migrants in Central Amazonian Brazil. Condor, 94 (3): 608 - 621.", "Sick, H. 1997. Ornitologia brasileira. Edicao revista e ampliada. Rio de Janeiro, Nova Fronteira.", "Holmes, R. T. & Sherry, T. W. 1992. Site fidelity of migratory warblers in temperate breeding and Neotropical wintering areas: implications for population dynamics, habitat selection, and conservation. In: Hagan III, J. M. & Johnston, D. W. (Eds.). Ecology and conservation of Neotropical migrant landbirds. Washington, D. C., Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 563 - 575.", "Norris, D. R.; Marra, P. P.; Bowen, G. J.; Ratcliffe, L. M.; Royle, J. A. & Kyser, T. K. 2006. Migratory connectivity of a widely distributed songbird, the American Redstart (Setophaga ruticilla). In: Boulet, M. & Norris, D. R. (Eds.). Patterns of Migratory Connectivity in Two Nearctic-Neotropical Songbirds: New Insights from Intrinsic Markers. Ornithological Monographs, 61: 14 - 28.", "Curson, J. 2010. Family Parulidae. In: del Hoyo, J.; Elliott, A. & Christie, D. Handbook of the Birds of the World, Vol. 15: Weavers to New World Warblers. Barcelona, Lynx Edicions. p. 666 - 802."]}