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:Smaller and paler than ''sibiricus'', banding below pale and indistinct. Some white on primary bases only.
:Smaller and paler than ''sibiricus'', banding below pale and indistinct. Some white on primary bases only.
* '''''Lanius borealis mollis''''' – Russian [[Altai Mountains]], north western Mongolia
* '''''Lanius borealis mollis''''' – Russian [[Altai Mountains]], north western Mongolia
[[File:NoShrikeSM.jpg|thumb|right|''L. e. borealis'' wintering in [[Scarborough Marsh]] ([[Cumberland County, Maine]], United States)]]
[[File:NoShrikeSM.jpg|thumb|right|Northern shrike wintering in [[Scarborough Marsh]] ([[Cumberland County, Maine]], United States)]]
:Browner than ''sibiricus'' above, banding below well-developed. Little white on primary bases.
:Browner than ''sibiricus'' above, banding below well-developed. Little white on primary bases.
* '''''Lanius borealis funereus''''' – [[Tian Shan]] and western China
* '''''Lanius borealis funereus''''' – [[Tian Shan]] and western China

Revision as of 19:38, 28 July 2017

Northern shrike
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
L. borealis
Binomial name
Lanius borealis
Vieillot, 1808
Subspecies

6 sspp, see text

The northern shrike (Lanius borealis) is a large songbird species in the shrike family (Laniidae) native to North America and Siberia. Long considered a subspecies of the great grey shrike, it was classified as a distinct species in 2017. Four subspecies are recognised.

The northern shrike was first described by Vieillot in 1808. In the 19th century, North American ornithologists considered as a distinct species from the great grey shrike, while European authorities held them to be the same species. Alden H. Miller investigated differences between the Siberian and Alaskan populations in 1930 and could find no consistent differences, hence he recommended the sinking of the two into Lanius excubitor.[1]

In a 2010 study of mitochondrial DNA, Olsson and colleagues found that the northern shrike was most closely related to the southern grey shrike (Lanius meridionalis), and the two formed a clade along with the Chinese grey shrike and loggerhead shrike.[2]

Subspecies

East Eurasian group

  • Lanius borealis sibiricus – eastern Siberia to northern Mongolia
Browner above than excubitor, distinct but delicate banding below. Some white on primary bases only.
Smaller and paler than sibiricus, banding below pale and indistinct. Some white on primary bases only.
Northern shrike wintering in Scarborough Marsh (Cumberland County, Maine, United States)
Browner than sibiricus above, banding below well-developed. Little white on primary bases.
  • Lanius borealis funereusTian Shan and western China
Large; quite dark and brownish, below bluish-grey with almost black banding. Little white on primary bases.

North American group

Similar to excubitor, but darker with faint barring below. John James Audubon called this subspecies the great American shrike in his book Birds of America.
Larger and paler than borealis, paralleling homeyeri compared to excubitor.

References

  1. ^ Miller, Alden H. (1930). "The Status of Lanius borealis as a Species" (PDF). Condor. 32: 163–64.
  2. ^ Olsson, Urban; Alström, Per; Svensson, Lars; Aliabadian, Mansour; Sundberg, Per (2010). "The Lanius excubitor (Aves, Passeriformes) conundrum—Taxonomic dilemma when molecular and non-molecular data tell different stories" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 55 (2): 347–357.