New antpitta discovered in Colombia – Probably already extinct
http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/colomboa-antpitta009.html#cr
25/03/2009
14:25:05
Giles’s Antpitta (Grallaria milleri gilesi). Discovered in the Natural History Museum. Credit ProAves
Antpitta
discovered in
London's Natural
History Museum
March
2009. A new
subspecies of
antpitta - a
thrush-sized
ground-living
bird - from near
the Colombian
City of Medellin
has been
discovered among
the one million
bird specimens
at the Natural
History Museum
in London, after
lying
undiscovered in
the collection
for 120 years.
However the new
antpitta is now
feared extinct.
Collected in
1878
The new
bird, called
Giles's Antpitta
(Grallaria
milleri gilesi),
was collected in
September 1878
by the British
ornithologist
Thomas Knight
Salmon, when he
made his last
collection of
bird skins from
the forested
hills
surrounding the
City of Medellin
before his
abrupt death.
Found in
the Natural
History Museum
"There
were no bird
identification
guides in the
late nineteenth
century so
Thomas Salmon
sent the
specimens he'd
collected to be
identified by
scientists in
Britain, where
many were
deposited at the
world's largest
bird collection
here at London's
Natural History
Museum,"
explained the
Museum's head of
bird group Dr
Robert Prŷs-Jones.
"While there
were many new
and exciting
discoveries, one
unusual specimen
of an antpitta
was amazingly
overlooked."
Overlooked for
130 years
The new
antpitta lay
unrecognised in
the Museum's
collection until
2001, when bird
artist Norman
Arlott uncovered
the specimen. He
drew it to the
attention of
both Robert Prŷs-Jones
and Natural
History Museum
scientific
associate Dr
Paul Salaman.
"We immediately
recognized the
specimen was
previously
undescribed"
exclaimed Dr
Paul Salaman,
"yet it seems
inconceivable
that this
distinctive
specimen could
have had been
overlooked for
130 years."
Habitat has
disappeared
Thomas Knight
Salmon
collected the
bird in the
Andean mountains
at Santa Elena,
a neighboring
town to
Colombia's third
largest city,
Medellin.
Formerly
forested, with
their cool
climate and rich
soils these are
prime locations
for coffee
cultivation,
agriculture and
cattle grazing.
Very little of
the original
lush Andean
forests remain
and the region
has very few
protected areas.
Several recent
searches by
Fundación
ProAves
fieldworkers in
the region have
failed to locate
any living
individuals.
"Sadly, the new
subspecies
appears to have
been restricted
to Andean
forests" said Dr
Prŷs-Jones "a
habitat that has
been almost
completely
destroyed around
Medellin and
replaced by
non-native pine
trees and exotic
eucalyptus
trees."
"If we had known
about this
extraordinary
specimen decades
before, it is
possible the
bird could have
been located and
saved, but sadly
it lay
overlooked for
generations and
as a bitter
consequence we
have probably
lost it
forever,"
concluded Dr
Salaman.
Colombia's
national bird
conservation
organization,
Fundación
ProAves,
has received
extensive
support from
British
conservation
philanthropist
and keen birder,
Robert Giles,
who has
supported the
protection of
many threatened
bird species in
Colombia. The
new bird has
been named in
his honour.
The description
of the new bird
is published in
the March 2009
issue of
Bulletin of the
British
Ornithologist's
Club, by three
Fundación
ProAves
Council members
- Robert Prŷs-Jones,
Thomas Donegan,
and Paul Salaman.

