Crossbills |

Red (Common) Crossbill
|
Scientific classification |
Kingdom: |
Animalia
|
Phylum: |
Chordata
|
Class: |
Aves
|
Order: |
Passeriformes
|
Family: |
Fringillidae
|
Genus: |
Loxia (but see "Systematics
and evolution" below)
Linnaeus,
1758 |
|
Species |
Loxia pytyopsittacus
Loxia scotia
Loxia curvirostra
Loxia leucoptera
Loxia megaplaga |
The crossbills are birds in the
finch family
Fringillidae. The three to five (or possibly many more)
species are all currently classified in the genus
Loxia, but see below. These birds are characterised
by the mandibles crossing at their tips, which gives the
group its
English name.
These are specialist feeders on
conifer cones, and the unusual bill shape is an
adaptation to assist the extraction of the seeds from the
cone. These are birds typically found in higher northern
hemisphere latitudes, where their food sources grows. They
will erupt out of the breeding range when the cone crop
fails.
Crossbills breed very early in the year, often in winter
months, to take advantage of maximum cone supplies.
Adult males tend to be red or orange in colour, and
females green or yellow, but there is much variation.
Feeding behavior
The different species are each adapted to specialising in
feeding on different conifer species, with the bill shape
optimised for opening that species of conifer. This is
achieved by inserting the bill between the conifer cone
scales and twisting the lower mandible towards the side to
which it crosses, enabling the bird to extract the seed at
the bottom of the scale with its tongue.
The mechanism by which the bill-crossing (which usually,
but not always occurs in an 1:1 frequency of left-crossing
or right-crossing morphs) is developed and what determines
the direction has hitherto withstood all attempts to resolve
it.
It is very probable that there is a genetic basis
underlying the phenomenon (young birds whose bills are still
straight will give a cone-opening behavior if their bills
are gently pressed, and the crossing develops before the
birds are fledged and feeding independently), but at least
in the Red Crossbill (the only species which has been
somewhat thoroughly researched regarding this question)
there is no straightforward mechanism of
heritability.
While the direction of crossing seems to be the result of
at least 3 genetic factors working together in a case of
epistasis and most probably autosomal, it is not clear
whether the 1:1 frequency of both morphs in most cases is
the result of genetics or environmental selection:
populations that feed on cones without removing or twisting
them will likely show a 1:1 morph distribution no matter
what the genetic basis may be, as the fitness of each morph is inversely proportional to its
frequency in the population due to the fact that such birds
can only access the cone with the lower mandible tip
pointing towards it to successfully extract seeds, and thus
a too high number of birds of one morph will result in the
food availability for each bird decreasing (Edelaar et al,
2005).
They can utilise other conifers to their preferred, and
often need to do so when their preferred species has a crop
failure, but are less efficient in their feeding (not enough
to prevent survival, but probably enough to reduce breeding
success).
Systematics and evolution
Analysis of
mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence data (Arnaiz-Villena et
al., 2001) indicates that the crossbills and redpolls share
a common ancestor and only diverging during the Tortonian
(c. 8 mya, Late Miocene). They suggest that the crossbills
might be included in the genus Carduelis, but given that the
adaptations of the crossbills represent a unique
evolutionary path, it seems more appropriate to split up the
genus Carduelis as it was already done during most of the
20th century.
The species of crossbills are difficult to separate, and
care is needed even with Two-barred/Hispaniolan Crossbill,
the easiest. The other species are identified by subtle
differences in head shape and bill size, and are the subject
of much taxonomic speculation, with some scientists
suggesting that the previously held assumption that the
Parrot and Scottish Crossbills and possibly the Hispaniolan
and Two-barred Crossbill are conspecific.
The identification problem is least severe in North
America, where only Red and White-winged occur, and
(possibly) worst in the Scottish Highlands, where three 'species' breed, and
Two-barred is also a possible vagrant.
Work on vocalisation in North America suggest that there
are eight or nine discrete populations of Red Crossbill in
that continent alone, which do not interbreed and are (like
the named species) adapted to specialise on different
conifer species.
Few ornithologists yet seem inclined to give these forms
species status though. Preliminary investigations in
Europe and Asia suggest an equal, if not greater, complexity, with
several different call types identified; these call types as
different from each other as from the named species Scottish
and Parrot Crossbills - suggesting either that they are
valid species, or else that the Scottish and Parrot may not
be.
Species and their preferred food sources are:
-
Parrot Crossbill, Loxia pytyopsittacus
-
Scots pine Pinus sylvestris
-
Scottish Crossbill, Loxia scotica (often
treated as a race of Parrot Crossbill)
-
Scots pine Pinus sylvestris and
Larch Larix species (particularly
plantations of L. decidua)
-
Red Crossbill or Common Crossbill, Loxia
curvirostra
-
Spruce Picea species; some populations (distinct
species?) on various Pine Pinus species and (in
western North America) Douglas-fir
-
Two-barred Crossbill or White-winged Crossbill,
Loxia leucoptera
-
Larch Larix species, particularly L.
sibirica, L. gmelinii, L. laricina and (in North
America) also
Hemlock Tsuga
-
Hispaniolan Crossbill, Loxia megaplaga
(previously treated as a race of Two-barred Crossbill)
-
Hispaniolan Pine Pinus occidentalis
References
- Arnaiz-Villena, A.; Guillén, J.;
Ruiz-del-Valle, V.; Lowy, E.; Zamora, J.; Varela, P.;
Stefani, D. & Allende, L. M. (2001): Phylogeography of
crossbills, bullfinches, grosbeaks, and rosefinches.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 58:
1159–1166. [http://chopo.pntic.mec.es/~biolmol/publicaciones/crossbills
- Edelaar, Pim; Postma, Erik; Knops, Peter &
Phillips, Ron (2005): No Support of a Genetic Basis of
Mandible Crossing Direction in Crossbills (Loxia
spp.).
Auk, 122(4): 1123-1129.
PDF fulltext
External links