Pachycephala is a genus of birds native to Oceania and Southeast Asia. They are commonly known as typical whistlers. Older guidebooks may refer to them as thickheads, a literal translation of the genus name, which is derived from Ancient Greek ( pakhús), meaning "thick", and ( kephalḗ), meaning "head". This lineage originated in Australo-Papua and later colonized the
Indonesian and Philippine archipelagos to the west and the Pacific archipelagos to the east.[Jønsson, K.A. et al. (2014) Evidence of taxon cycles in an Indo-Pacific passerine bird radiation (Aves: Pachycephala). Proc. R. Soc. B.]
Taxonomy
The genus
Pachycephala was introduced in 1825 by the Irish zoologist Nicholas Vigors with the Australian golden whistler as the
type species.
The name is derived from
Ancient Greek (
pakhús), meaning "thick", and (
kephalḗ), meaning "head".
The genus contains 53 species:
-
Olive whistler, Pachycephala olivacea
-
Red-lored whistler, Pachycephala rufogularis
-
Gilbert's whistler, Pachycephala inornata
-
Mangrove whistler, Pachycephala cinerea
-
Green-backed whistler, Pachycephala albiventris
-
White-vented whistler, Pachycephala homeyeri
-
Island whistler, Pachycephala phaionota
-
Biak whistler, Pachycephala melanorhyncha
-
Rusty whistler, Pachycephala hyperythra
-
Brown-backed whistler, Pachycephala modesta
-
Yellow-bellied whistler, Pachycephala philippinensis
-
Sulphur-vented whistler, Pachycephala sulfuriventer
-
Bornean whistler, Pachycephala hypoxantha
-
Vogelkop whistler, Pachycephala meyeri
-
Grey whistler, Pachycephala simplex
-
Fawn-breasted whistler, Pachycephala orpheus
-
Sclater's whistler, Pachycephala soror
-
Tenggara whistler, Pachycephala calliope (formerly P. fulvotincta and formerly rusty-breasted whistler)
-
Selayar whistler, Pachycephala teysmanni (split from P. calliope)
-
Yellow-throated whistler, Pachycephala macrorhyncha
-
Baliem whistler, Pachycephala balim
-
Black-chinned whistler, Pachycephala mentalis
-
Australian golden whistler, Pachycephala pectoralis
-
Western whistler, Pachycephala fuliginosa
-
Bismarck whistler, Pachycephala citreogaster
-
Oriole whistler, Pachycephala orioloides
-
Louisiade whistler, Pachycephala collaris
-
Rennell whistler, Pachycephala feminina
-
Melanesian whistler, Pachycephala chlorura
-
New Caledonian whistler, Pachycephala caledonica
-
White-throated Fiji whistler, Pachycephala vitiensis (formerly Fiji whistler before split)
-
Yellow-throated Fiji whistler, Pachycephala graeffii (split from P. vitiensis)
-
Nendo whistler, Pachycephala ornata (split from P. vanikorensis)
-
Utupua whistler, Pachycephala utupuae (split from P. vanikorensis)
-
Vanikoro whistler, Pachycephala vanikorensis (formerly Temotu whistler before splits)
-
Tongan whistler, Pachycephala jacquinoti
-
Mangrove golden whistler, Pachycephala melanura
-
Samoan whistler, Pachycephala flavifrons
-
Hooded whistler, Pachycephala implicata
-
Bougainville whistler, Pachycephala richardsi
-
Bare-throated whistler, Pachycephala nudigula
-
Lorentz's whistler, Pachycephala lorentzi
-
Regent whistler, Pachycephala schlegelii
-
Golden-backed whistler, Pachycephala aurea
-
Rufous whistler, Pachycephala rufiventris
-
Black-headed whistler, Pachycephala monacha
-
White-bellied whistler, Pachycephala leucogastra
-
Babar whistler, Pachycephala sharpei (split from P. macrorhyncha)
-
Wallacean whistler, Pachycephala arctitorquis
-
Drab whistler, Pachycephala griseonota
-
Cinnamon-breasted whistler, Pachycephala johni
-
White-breasted whistler, Pachycephala lanioides
-
Morningbird, Pachycephala tenebrosa
Former species
Formerly, some authorities also considered the following species (or subspecies) as species within the genus
Pachycephala:
-
Maroon-backed whistler (as Pachycephala raveni)
-
Little shrikethrush (fortis) (as Pachycephala fortis)
An unidentified Pachycephala whistler was heard on May 14, 1994 at 1,000 meters ASL south of the summit of Camiguin in the Philippines, where the genus was not previously known to occur. It might have been an undescribed taxon, or simply a vagrant of a known species.[Balete, Danilo S.; Tabaranza, Blas R. Jr. & Heaney, Lawrence R. (2006) An Annotated Checklist of the Birds of Camiguin Island, Philippines. Fieldiana Zool. New Series 106: 58–72.]