SUMMARY
An attempt is made on the basis of anatomical material, to show that the neotropical Honey Creepers (Coerebidae) are an artificial group composed of nectar-adapted warblers and nectar-adapted tanagers that have become convergently similar due to similar diet. Considerable care is taken to select for comparison anatomical characters likely to have been modified but little by such convergence. This precaution is necessitated by the close relationship of the warbler and tanager families due to their apparent common origin from ancestral vireos. Evidence from jaw muscle-pattern and horny palate relief is given special weight because of the constancy of these features in other passerine families studied anatomically. Tanagers and warblers have distinctly different patterns for both characters and it has been found that a clean separation of the Coerebidae into nectar-adapted warblers and nectar-adapted tanagers is possible. This dichotomy is in good agreement with plumage differences, the latter group having tanager plumage, the former, warbler plumage. A functional difference in the manner of feeding on nectar is also in agreement with this division. Such characters as bill shape and tongue specialization overlap convergently and are unreliable. On the basis of this analysis it is concluded that the family Coerebidae should be submerged as an unnatural group, and its genera distributed among the warblers and tanagers. The genera Coereba, Conirostrum and Ateleodacnis could be regarded as a nectar-specialized tribe of the Parulidae--the Coerebini. The genera Diglossa, Cyanerpes, Chlorophanes, Iridophanes, Hemidacnis, Dacnis
nis and Euneornis, and probably also Xenodacnis and Oreomanes, could be regarded as a nectar-specialized tribe of the Thraupidae--the Dacnini.
XTENSIVE efforts of the writer to find a sound anatomical basis for
determining the phylogenetic relationships of passerine families leave it
clear that the hazard of adaptive convergence in bird systematics has been
underestimated. The present analysis of convergence in the neotropical Honey
Creepers (family Coerebidae) offers evidence that this is an artificial group. It
appears to be composed, in fact, of nectar-adapted warblers (Parulidae) and
nectar-adapted tanagers (Thraupidae) that have evolved convergently because
of similarity of diet.
The Convergence Hazard in Taxonomy
Sound systematic work in the higher categories demands sound criteria for
clearly distinguishing between adaptation and phylogeny. The investigator at
this level sees phylogeny ttrough a screen of food and niche adaptations which
often obscure true relationships. Such classic cases of convergence between Old
and New World groups as were recently reviewed by Friedmann (1946) are
obvious and constitute no hazard. But convergence between members of closely
related groups occupying the same range may be such that the most expert
taxonomists are unable to decide the true affinities on the basis of external
characters alone (Beecher, 1950). This is no reflection on the taxonomists, who
have generally been the first to recognize the problem, referring such moot
groups as the Coerebidae to the comparative anatomist for additional evidence.
But internal characters are not necessarily more reliable than external ones
for indicating phylogeny. They are merely additional clues, often of a very
conservative sort, but sometimes capable of adaptive changes as rapid as
those known for any external features. Sclater (1886: 1) long ago observed
that it was "in some instances difficult to distinguish" the Coerebidae from
warblers on the one hand and tanagers on the other. Lucas (1894: 299-309)
made an anatomical survey of several of the most important coerebid genera;
though he considered his findings confusing and inconclusive, they nevertheless
confirmed an opinion many times expressed that the group needed study and
was probably heterogeneous. Ridgway (1902: 377) obviously regarded the
Coerebidae as close to the Parulidae and Thraupidae. He even removed the
The writer is greatly indebted to the United States National Museum, the American
Museum of Natural History, and the Chicago Natural History Museum for lending material.
For use of specimens in their care or for information or advice, he wishes to thank Alexander
Wetmore, Herbert Friedmann, John T. Zimmer, Ernst Mayr, Dean Areadon, Charles O'Brien,
Josselyn Van Tyne, D. Dwight Davis, Emmet R. Blake and Melvyn A. Traylor, Jr.
274
William
J. Beecher CONVERGENCE IN THE COEREBIDAE 275
genera Conirostrum and Ateleodacnis to the Parulidae, whence Lucas (1894:
309-310) had earlier removed Certhidea. Both Sclater (1886: 47) and Ridgway
(loc. cit.) placed Glossiptila (Euneornis) in a monotypic subfamily under the
Coerebidae. Hellmayr (1935: 218-331), however, placed all these genera, except
Certhidea, in the Coerebidae without subfamilial distinction. Thus there has
been a difference of opinion as to the status of certain genera, but a consensus
that the family belongs close to the warblers and tanagers.
Convergence in the Coerebidae
It is axiomatic that a family must be erected on a basis of characters com-
mon to the included genera, and the assumption is that these characters will
be fundamental, expressing a common phylogenetic origin. As pointed out by
Mayr (1942: 276) and Simpson (1945: 17), any higher category must be mono-
phyletic. The Coerebidae do not appear to satisfy these requirements.
Examining the characters of the group we find none that really distinguish
it. Some species are brilliant in plumage, others dull. The bill is extremely
variable--long, short, straight, curved, notched, even hooked--and this di-
versity of form extends to the tongue and to the head as a whole. The only
feature common to all members is the adaptive trait of nectar-feeding. This
trait is naturally suspect as a character if the birds involved are to be classified
according to common origin. Lucas (1894), in attempting to determine the
origins of the family, seized principally upon those features most strongly
modified by the nectar-feeding adaptation--bony palate, tongue, and intestine.
Ridgway (1902: 375) erred, however, when he stated that Lucas considered
the Coerebidae "apparently more nearly related to the Australasian family
Meliphagidae (Honey-eaters) than to the American families Mniotiltidae and
Tanagridae .... "What Lucas did say (1894: 309) was that "the Coerebidae
do not form a homogeneous group .... "His principal reference to the Meli-
phagidae (loc. cit.) concerned the tongue of Certhiola, which he believed to
resemble "that of some of the Meliphagidae .... "
Evidence of convergence is to be obtained through a careful study of morph-
ology, especially through study of parts of the animal not likely to be modified
by the selection pressure bringing about convergence. It is well known that dif-
ferent parts of an animal evolve at different rates (Simpson, 1944). The hind
limb is very similar in muscle pattern throughout the order Passeriformes and
seems to have become relatively static after attaining a high leve! of general
efficiency. The syringeal musculature, slightly less conservative, has served to
divide this large order into suborders. But there is evidence (Beecher, 1951)
that the bill and skull are still rapidly evolving in passerines leading the
way in evolution. Having dissected to date nearly a thousand specimens of
oscinine birds in all families (over six hundred species), the writer finds that
the more rapidly-evolving jaw muscle-patterns are clearly different for each
Dec. 195l
276 THE WILSON BULLETIN vo. 63, No. 4
family. When used with the several additional lines of evidence indicated later
in this paper they seem to delineate an evolutionary sequence based on adap-
tation to various food types.
Evidence of Convergence from Jaw Muscle-Patterns
To recognize the family differences in jaw muscle-pattern it is necessary to
distinguish between two basic types of skeletal muscle--pinnate and parallel
(Pfuhl, 1936). In the parallel type all fibers run the full length of the muscle
and exert pull, upon contraction, directly between the points of attachment.
The vireos (V[reonidae) typify this pattern (Fig. 1) with nearly the entire
V1RO ~fi, l.t;!.o9uus'" VIRtONIDAEr
This famity
FIG. 1. Jaw muscle-pattern of Vireo altiloquus broken down into functional groups. In
gaping, M. depressor mandibulae (1) depresses the lower mandible, while M. protractor qua&
rati (2) elevates the upper mandible.
The combined action of the palatine retractors 3, 4, and 5 draws the upper mandible down-
ward. The palatine retractors are:
3. M. pterygoideus dorsalis (a) anterior; (b) posterior
4. M. pterygoideus ventralis (a) anterior; (b) posterior
5. M. pseudotemporalis profundus
The combined action of the mandibular adductors 6 and 7 draws the lower mandible
upward. The mandibular adductors are:
6. M. pseudotemporalis supeFScialis
7. M. adductor mandibulae (a) externus superficialis; (b) externus mediaIls; (c) externus pro-
fundus; (d) posterior
jaw musculature parallel. The pinnate type is one in which the tendon or raphe
runs the length of the muscle and the short fibers originate from it as the
barbs originate from the shaft of a feather. The warblers show this pattern in
M. pseudotemporalis superficialis (6) and M. adductor mandibulae externus
superficialis (7a) as seen in Figure 2 (Oporornis). Grant (1942: 384) has pointed
out that such a muscle is more efficient, having "a much greater functional
cross section for its bulk."
It has appeared to the writer, on the basis of both skull structure and parallel
Fro. 2. Comparison of jaw muscle-pattern in typical warblers (Parulidae) and tanagers
(Thraupidae) with that of their nectar-adapted forms.
277
Dec. 1951
278 THE WILSON BULLETIN Vol. 63, No. 4
jaw muscle-pattern, that the Vireonidae, like the Old World Monarch fly-
catchers from which it stems, is composed of phylogenetically primitive insect-
eaters (Beecher, unpublished). Distribution patterns suggest that such a type
may have existed even prior to the origin of flowering plants in the Upper
Cretaceous and that all of the nine-primaried American families stem from
ancestral vireos. The lighter, more agile Parulidae appear to have arisen with
pinnate adductors of less mass and greater efficiency--a more adaptable group
of insect-eaters. The heavier Thraupidae--a group adapted to feed on the
abundant fruit of flowering plants--appear to have arisen with somewhat less
pinnate adductors. The Parulidae and Thraupidae are, in fact, to be regarded
as real adaptive branches on the phylogenetic tree, each having arisen in re-
sponse to intense selection pressure on the primitive insect-eaters. The impor-
tance of the huge food supply furnished by the origin of flowering plants in
producing this pressure cannot be over-emphasized. Logically it should come
to bear similarly on warblers and tanagers, independently producing nectar-
adapted and seed-adapted groups with ever-increasing tendency toward pinnate
adductors.
TACI"IYPHONU5 PIRANGA CARPODACU5 TANAG!RP
Fc,. 3. An apparenl shift of muscle fibers from M7b to 316 (from left to right) with
creased adducting power in the cardueline line of tanagers.
To argue the question whether the increase in pinnate musculature is phylo-
genetic or adaptive is academic. It is both, but there is every indication that
such advances in jaw muscle-pattern are conservative enough to have phylo-
genetic value for taxonomic diagnosis at the family level of category. The black-
bird family (Icteridae) which appear to have arisen from the emberizine
finches via the finch-like Cowbird, Molothrus (Beecher, 1951), retains pinnate
adductors despite all the food adaptations and accompanying bill changes for
which its genera are noted. The muscle-patterns of tanagers and warblers differ
from each other and offer a sound basis for taxonomic separation; but, before
presenting evidence of convergence in the Coerebidae, it is necessary to em-
phasize some unusual features of the Thraupidae.
This family, as outlined below, is very large and diverse. Two main lines
are distinguishable, leading almost without disjunction to the finch subfamilies
William
J. Beecher CONVERGENCE IN THE COEREBIDAE 279
Carduelinae and Richmondeninae. On the basis of jaw muscle-pattern these
lines stem from a relatively primitive tanager group comprising Calospiza;
Thraupis and Ramphocelus, of which the large genus Calospiza is considered
by the writer to be the simplest, anatomically, and Ramphocelus the most
advanced. The latter continues the series into the Richmondeninae in the se-
quence Ramphocelus--Hemispingus--Spindalis Saltator--Pitylus--Pheucticus
--Richmondena. This is not necessarily a direct evolutionary sequence, although
it moves in the direction of increasing finch character, especially in the bill
and in the heightened pinnate character of M. adductor mandibulae externus
superficialis (M7a), the latter beginning in Hemispingus and increasing in the
series. There is also good plumage agreement, especially in females, and the
horny palate shows an increased tendency to develop a subsidiary lateral ridge,
additional to the one so prominent in all tanagers (see Calospiza, Fig. 4).
CA LO , PIZA CYAN
LAT'AL
CO_RE-BA OPORORNIS
Fro. 4. Comparison of relief pattern seen in the horny palate of typical warblers (Parulldae)
and tanagers (Thraupidae) with that of their nectar-adapted forms.
Ramphocelus might, because of its apparent close relationship with Tachy-
phonus, be considered a point of origin for the Carduelinae also--a group quite
different in its muscular emphasis. Tachyphonus lies at the base of this line.
The muscle-pattern of the weak-billed T. surinamus is like that of Ramphocelus,
hence also of Calospiza (Fig. 2); but in the heavier-billed T. rufus the orbital
slip of M. adductor mandibulae (M7b) is pinnate (Fig. 3). This appears to be
correlated with increased adducting power, but with still further increase in
the series Tachyphonus--PirangHabia--Tanagra--Chlorophonia--Stephano-
phorus--Carpodacus (Fig. 3) there appears to be a shift in emphasis from M7b
to M6. The series terminates in the tremendous forward advance of the latter
in Carpodacus, which is typical for the Carduelinae as a whole. That this shift
involves a transfer of fibers to M6 is suggested in the sketch of these two mus-
Dec. 1951
280 THE WILSON BULLETIN Vo. 63, No. 4
cles for Tanagra chlorotica (Fig. 3), where transfer seems to be taking place.
The horny palate in this series agrees closely with that of Calospiza (Fig. 4),
and plumage generally supports the thesis of close relationship.
This digression on the complexities of the Thraupidae is necessary. In no
other of the sixty-odd oscinine families do such variations in the muscle-pat-
tern occur. It points up the peculiar fact that the richmondenine finches arise
so uninterruptedly out of the tanagers that ornithologists have had to draw
the dividing line between the two groups arbitrarily. Now we find the cardueline
("Old World") finches arising also without disjunction from another line of
tanagers. Chlorophonia cyanea, with a muscle-pattern like that of Carpodacus,
has a flattened tanager bill. The horny palate of Stephanophorus diadematus, a
form internally almost identical with Carpodacus, has crenulated lateral
ridges like those of the plant cutter Phytotoma--a further adaptation for bud-
eating, so common in the Carduelinae.
Apparently it will be necessary to declare these two groups of tanager-finches
subfamilies of the Thraupidae, maintaining another subfamily for the more
typical tanagers. It would hardly do to extend the Richmondeninae and
Carduelinae to include the two generic series cited above as stemming from
Ramphocelus. Such a grouping would be as arbitrary as the one currently fol-
lowed and the writer contemplates no change other than the including of the
finch groups in the Thraupidae. But it is necessary to recognize that the ana-
tomical modifications terminating in these finch groups have their roots deep
in the typical tanagers, the Thraupinae. For this reason the basic muscle-
pattern for tanagers is regarded by the writer as that found only in Calospiza,
Thraupis and Ramphocelus, though genera not yet dissected by him may be
included later. It is this pattern that the writer uses in his present re-examina-
tion of the Coerebidae.
A survey of the Vireonidae, here considered as ancestral to both the Parulidae
and Thraupidae, reveals a muscle-pattern that is notably non-pinnate. In
Vireo altiloquus and V. olivaceus a suggestion of pinnate character appears in
M. adductor mandibulae externus medialis (M7b in Fig. 1), and this muscle,
along with M7a, c, and M6, becomes fully pinnate in the shrike-like Cyclarhis
and Smaragdolanius. But Vireo griseus and V. fiavifrons lack this suggestion,
as do Hylophilus olivaceus, H. ypoxanthus and H. decurtatus. This muscle is short
and non-pinnate in the basic muscle-pattern for tanagers such as Calospiza but
is always long and pinnate in such warblers as Oporornis (Fig. 2), Setophaga,
Basileuterus, Myioborus, Granatellus, Dendroica, Protonotaria, Geothlypis,
Parula, Seiurus, Mniotilta and Icteria. Thus we see a segregation on the basis
of M7b that is diagnostic of warblers and tanagers.
Warblers differ from the basic tanagers in having a far more pinnate muscle-
pattern, this in spite of the fact that they have much more slender bills and
much lighter muscle mass. The pattern seen in Oporornis is typical. Pinnate
muscles are M. depressor mandibulae (M1), M. pseudotemporalis superficialis
William
J.2Be1/2cher CONVERGENCE IN THE COEREBIDAE 281
(M6), and three slips of M. adductor mandibulae, viz., externus superficialis
(M7a), externus medialis (M7b), and externus profundus (M7c). In the basic
tanagers only M6 and M7c are pinnate. M. depressor mandibulae (M1) is always
more highly developed in warblers than in tanagers (Fig. 2).
It was at first puzzling to find both tanager and warbler muscle-patterns
appearing in different members of the family Coerebidae. The jaw muscle-
pattern of Coereba fiaveola (Fig. 2) corresponds perfectly, in fact, with that of
Oporornis formosus, a typical warbler, while that of Cyanerpes cyaneus corre-
sponds perfectly with that of Calospiza arthus, a typical tanager. It is true
that Coereba and Cyanerpes, in adaptation to nectar-feeding, have an enlarged
palatine salivary gland which causes the insertion of M. plerygoideus ventralis
posterior (M4b) to split into two slips. Even here, however, the manner of the
musde's division is different: in Coereba it is split laterally and posteriorly--
in Cyanerpes, laterally and medially. That this is not simply coincidental is
borne out by the fact that, wherever this muscle is split by an enlarged palatine
gland in coerebid genera, the disposal of the divided slips is either as in Coereba
or as in Cyanerpes. Intermediate arrangements do not occur.
On the basis of muscle-pattern, then, it would appear that Coereba is nothing
but a nectar-adapted warbler, and Cyanerpes a nectar-adapted tanager. The
differences in muscle-pattern and -arrangement may be interpreted as the
slightly different ways of achieving the same adaptation by two slightly
different, converging stocks. Confidence in this interpretation is encouraged
by the fact that a complete and sharp dichotomy of the Coerebidae is possible
on the basis of the above differences. Those members which appear to be
warblers are Coereba, Conirostrum and Ateleodacnis. Those which appear to
be tanagers are Cyanerpes, Chlorophanes, Iridophanes, Diglossa, ttemidacnis,
Dacnis and Euneornis.
Evidence of Convergence from Plumage Pattern
The writer has not examined Xenodacnis or Oreomanes, but he presumes them
to be nectar-adapted tanagers. Such a presumption is plausible because the
suggested dichotomy of coerebid genera is supported by plumage differences.
Coereba, Coniroslrum and Aleleodacnis have a warbler type of plumage, the
other genera a tanager type of plumage, most of them with the same iridescent
blues and greens observable in Calospiza, a few tending toward the plumbeous
blues of Thraupis. The bizarre bill of Diglossa and unique tongue of Euneornis
might cast doubt on this simple picture but the division is supported by muscle-
pattern and the relief pattern of the horny palate. Moreover, there is no reason
to think either that a single warbler genus and a single tanager genus gave
rise to nectar-adapted warblers and tanagers, or that the nectar-adapted forms
are all equally adapted to the same flowers. As will be shown beyond, the
adaptation has apparently occurred in far-removed cases (ttylophilus poici-
lotis is a nectar-adapted vireo that escaped inclusion in the Coerebidae) and
Dec. 195i
282 THE WILSON BULLETIN Vo. 63, No. 4
it is partially achieved in warblers and tanagers never included in the
Coerebidae.
Regarding the reliability of plumage as an indicator of relationship, studies
of the American orioles (Beecher, 1950) show that species are not generally
under strong selection.pressure to change plumage pattern once this pattern
has reached a state of adaptive adjustment to the environment. If the environ-
ment changes greatly, plumage tends to evolve rapidly in re-adjustment.
Applying this to the present group, there appears to be no reason why tanagers
taking up nectar-feeding should change the plumage facies drastically. Since
they have not, despite structural changes in the head region accompanying
diet specialization, changed their environmental niche, there is no reason for
expecting this plumage to change much. The same applies to nectar-special-
ized warblers: they may logically be expected to retain warbler plumage
patterns. Only when change in feeding habit requires change in habitat, as in
the derivation of buntings (Emberizinae) from the Parulidae, may rapid and
drastic plumage changes be expected.
Evidence of Convergence from the Horny Palate
Sushkin (1927: 3) was impressed with the value of the relief pattern of the
horny palate in diagnosing large groups. This character, not to be confused
with the bony palate as seen in cleaned skulls, is apparent in the roof of the
upper mandible of bird skins prepared with the bill open or in alcoholic speci-
mens. As shown in Figure 4, there are three distinct ridges on the horny palate
of both warblers and tanagers, and the differential emphasis on these in the
two groups permits separation of their convergent representatives in the Coe-
rebidae. In tanagers and their nectar-adapted forms the lateral ridges are
strongly emphasized and continuous to the back of the tomium, whereas in
warblers and their nectar-adapted forms they are little emphasized and die
out posteriorly. The palate, posterior to the central ri:tge, is flat and virtually
without relief in tanagers, vaulted and sculptured in warblers. These features,
especially the condition of the lateral ridges, are diagnostic of warblers and
tanagers and support the same dichotomy of coerebid genera as has been
indicated above by muscle-pattern and plumage.
Evidence of Convergence from the Tongue
If more than one warbler genus and more than one tanager genus evolve
nectar-adapted forms, and if these in turn are specialized for particular flower
types rather than for all flowers, convergent overlap of bills and tongues is to
be anticipated. It is clear that diagnostic distinctions in external bill structure
do not occur among the warblers and tanagers feeding on nectar, even though
the horny palate and muscle-pattern have in each case passed through this
adaptation without loss of their basic characters. In the tongue, which varies
considerably even among closely related species of warblers, we should expect
William
j. Beether CONVERGENCE IN THE COEREBIDAE 283
least of all to find conservatism, particularly if there are special adaptations
for special kinds of flowers. Here, in fact, we find the least satisfactory means
for distinguishing between nectar-adapted warblers and nectar-adapted tan-
agers because basic distinctions are apparently obliterated by convergent
"overlap" of these too-plastic characters.
In general the Hawaiian Drepanididae, 2 which are almost certainly of tan-
ager origin (Beecher, unpublished), have progressed farther in tongue modifi-
cation than any coerebid genus. As Lucas (1894: 306) has observed, the tongues
of Himatione, Hemignathus and Vestiaria are perfectly tubular, the fimbriated
edges actually overlapping. If the bifid tongues of Cyanerpes and Dacnis con-
tinued to curl, instead of simply forming a highly fimbriated half-curl, the
result would be the twin tubes of the Diglossa tongue, and this tends to draw
all nectar-adapted tanagers together. But there is apparently no sound basis
for completely separating the nectar-adapted warblers with their bifid tongues
from this broad and variable pattern. It is, however, noteworthy that the
whipped out tongue of Coereba is remarkably similar to that of the oriole
I-I A3/4IAI L.N I I W'I"' Vcs\a coms ~ DRPANIDID/ '
Mike Cus bull
emized for zm
Fro. 5. Jaw muscle-pattern of Vestiaria coccinea of the Drepani(lidae, showing similarity
to Calospiza and Cyanerpes despite development of M1 and M2 for gaping.
Bananivorus cucullalus (Beecher, 1950). Both are believed to arise from the
warbler phyletic line, the emberizine finches being ancestral to the blackbirds
(Icteridae), so this is apparently a case of common stock accomplishing the
same adaptation twice in about the same way. The tongue of Euneornis is
unique and, without histological sections, it is not even quite clear how it
functions. But the bird is a tanager on the basis of jaw muscles and horny
palate, and probably closely related to Loxigilla, which it resembles in these
features and even in plumage pattern. Both genera occur in Jamaica, to which
Euneornis is restricted, and it is possible that the finch Loxigilla arose from
this tanager. Plumage change might not be expected since Gosse (1847) states
that both inhabit the same niche (forest) there.
2 Spelled also Drepaniidae and Drepanidae. See review of Amadon's "The Hawaiian
Honeycreepers (Aves, Drepaniidae)" in this issue of the Bulletin, and also the comments of
Ernst Mayr (1943. Condor, 45: 46) on the matter.--Editors.
Dec. 1951
284 THE WILSON BULLETIN Vol. 63. No. 4
Evidence of Convergence from the Bill 3/4otch
The bill notch is so widespread in passefines that one is forced to conclude
that this is a general adaptation for grasping slippery prey and, therefore, not
likely to persist in flower probers. In vireos the bill is strongly notched, its
shrike-like cast reaching full expression in the tribe Cyclarhini. In tanagers,
which may well have arisen from ancestral vireos, the bill is also strongly
notched, becoming shrike-like in Lanio. But in the warblers, also apparently
evolved from vireos, it is weakly notched or un-notched. In Coereba, Coni4
rostrum and A teleodacnis, here regarded as nectar-adapted warblers, the bill
is warbler-like and in the nectar-adapted tanagers--Dacnis, Chlorophanes,
Cyanerpes, Hemidacnis and Euneornis--the bill is tanager-like, generally. But
in some of the latter it is doubtfully notched and there is so much individual
variation that one cannot safely say a particular genus is notched or not.
Again we find adaptive overlap of too-plastic characters, susceptible to
obliteration by the suspected convergence, and it is plain that the bill-notch
cannot be used to segregate warblers and tanagers in the Coerebidae. In sup-
port of the view that the notch easily disappears in nectar-adapted tanagers
we have the evidence that it has done so in some species of the nectar-adapted
vireo, tJylophilus.
I)ISCIJSSION
Is submergence of the family Coerebidae and the assignment of its genera
among the warblers and tanagers justified? Here it should be appreciated that
--if both warblers and tanagers arose from vireos--the two families would no
sooner have established distinctions through evolutionary divergence than
they would, through adaptive convergence, have begun to lose them. The
differences to be looked for will not, therefore, be very dramatic and convergent
obliteration may be expected especially in the very plastic bill and tongue
which fall strongly under selection pressure in nectar-feeding.
The considerable within-the-genus differences of tongues in both the Paru-
lidae and Thraupidae (Gardner, 1925) and of tongues and bills in the Icteridae
(Beecher, 1950; 1951) suggest the unreliability of these characters. On the
other hand, the constancy of the jaw muscle-pattern in the Icteridae, despite
great modification of bill and tongue among the genera, and the conservatism
of the pattern of the horny palate, inspire confidence. The latter characters
have not only permitted the linking of tanagers to richmondenine and car-
dueline finches but also of warblers to emberizine finches and the latter to the
Icteridae. This is not the place to detail these relationships, but characters
capable of retaining their essential features through such adaptive trans-
formations of skull and bill can be used with assurance in the present problem.
It is these highly dependable characters of jaw muscle-pattern and horny
palate relief that accomplish the division of the genera of the Coerebidae among
William
J. Beechef CONVERGENCE IN THE COEREBIDAE 285
the warblers and tanagers--and this in good agreement with plumage pattern.
The variable bill and tongue characters overlap adaptively. It is therefore
concluded that, in view of the relatively meager diagnostic differences expected
in convergent genera arising from groups as closely related as warblers and
tanagers, the evidence is sufficient to justify submerging the family Coere-
bidae.
This seems entirely reasonable. Nectar-feeding has been acquired inde-
pendently in many American passerine groups: vireos, warblers, tanagers,
blackbirds and even finches--not to mention derived groups like the geospizids
of the Galpagos and the drepanidids of the Hawaiian Islands. Various de-
grees of adaptive modification for the trait are seen, not only in the bills and
tongues but also in relative development of jaw muscles. In fact two distinct
mechanical adaptations may be distinguished in the nectar-feeders of the
Thraupidae and Parulidae and this may be regarded as an additional diagnostic
difference.
The nectar-adapted warblers are "gapers" (Beecher, 1950; 1951). As noted
for Coereba in Figure 2, M. depressor mandibulae (M1) is highly developed in
both Conirostrum and Ateleodacnis. The bill is apparently plunged into a flower
closed, then opened forcefully to spread the flower parts and permit the tongue
to reach the nectar--or possibly a hole is pecked in the side of a flower and
enlarged in this manner. Functionally it is the same adaptation noted in the
Icteridae and in the Old World Sturnidae, with a lever-like posterior extension
of the mandible. In Figure 2 Coereba is compared with Opcrornis, which shows
the same adaptation, though not all warblers are gapers in this degree.
The Neotropical nectar-adapted tanagers are non-gapers. In none of them
is M1 more highly developed than in Cyanerpes (Fig. 2), and it is apparent that
these species simply insert the bill into flowers and sip nectar. Diglossa has
been observed by Moller (1931: 292) to tear a hole in the side of a tubular
corolla with its short, hooked bill to get at the nectar it could not otherwise
reach.
However, the tanager stock apparently can produce gapers. In the nectar-
adapted drepanidids, Vestiaria coccinea (Fig. 5), ttimatione virens, and ttemig-
natbus lucidus, the origins of protractors M1 and M2 are greatly expanded for
gaping in tubular corollas, and the adductors M6 and M7 are greatly reduced.
Otherwise these birds are very similar to Calospiza or Cyanerpes. That the
drepanidids have a tanager origin is supported also by the identity of muscle-
patterns in the Hawaiian finch, Psitlirostra cantans, and the cardueline finch,
Carpodacus mexicanus. This may be interpreted as two independent origins
of nearly identical finches from a common tanager ancestor.
As for Spodiornis rusticus, Wetmore and Phelps (19a,9: 378) observed that
"the form of the tail and of the tongue suggest affinities with the Coerebidae,
... the family in which P. L. Sclater originally described Spodiornis." The
palate of Spodiornis suggests relationships with primitive emberizine finches
Dec. 1951
286 THE WILSON BULLETIN Vol. 63, o. 4
like Phrygilus, however, and this may be one of those rare compromises--an
intermediate between nectar-adapted warbler and emberizine finch. The highly
angulated commissure of nectar-feeders, correlated with forward vision, is
thought to pre-adapt them for seed-cracking before the bill becomes too long.
This paper has concerned itself with the submergence of the family Coere-
bidae as an unnatural category and the re-assignment of its genera among the
warblers and tanagers. Some ornithologists will wish to retain this family
name for some part of the group. There appears to be no valid reason for so
doing, though the nectar-adapted warblers might be known as the tribe Coere-
bini and the nectar-adapted tanagers as the tribe Dacnini.
But nectar-feeding in the American nine-primaried assemblage should not
be over-emphasized. Numerous references to the sucking of fruit and flower
juices by warblers and tanagers never included in the Coerebidae could be
cited. In the present state of our knowledge it would be difficult to know which
ones to include in these tribes--unless we settle upon the genera dealt with
above for the time being. Nectar-feeding is a general trait of the Thraupidae,
Parulidae, Vireonidae, Icteridae, and even the polyphletic "Fringillidae." No
useful purpose is served by giving it too much recognition in the classification
of these higher categories.
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CHICAGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSELrlVI