- Taxonomy
Taxonomy
Introduction
Taxonomy and nomenclature refers to the way biologists classify and name living things (these biological units are called taxa). This process is not static and the way taxa are treated has frequently changed over the years. In ornithology, the division of previously named species into distinct (and sometimes not so distinct) races was a major taxonomic preoccupation in the late 19th Century and early 20th Century. This process resulted in a plethora of subspecies for many species, including the Saker Falcon. Over the years these distinctions have been assessed and re-evaluated, and up to the present day there are dissenting views regarding the classification and naming of many bird taxa. The Saker Falcon is no exception.
BOX 1: |
Species are allocated a scientific name based on the binomial system developed by Carl Linnaeus (example: Saker Falcon = Falco cherrug). |
Subspecies are populations of a species that (i) are distinguishable from other populations and (ii) can be allocated to a geographical region. They are given a trinomial scientific name (e.g., Eastern Saker Falcon = Falco cherrug milvipes). |
Morphs are individual variants within a species that are distinguishable but which are not restricted to a particular geographical region. |
John Edward Gray
(1800 - 1875)
Taxonomic history of the Saker Falcon
John Edward Gray |
BOX 2: |
Taxa originally named as species:
|
Taxa originally named as subspecies:
|
Thomas Caverhill Jerdon |
The Russian revolution of 1917 and the subsequent division between ‘eastern’ and ‘western’ ornithologists has had a long lasting impact on the taxonomy and nomenclature of the Saker Falcon. In Russia Georgiy P. Dementiev reviewed the taxonomic position of the Saker Falcon and in the major work Birds of the Soviet Union (1951), six subspecies were recognised, whilst Hierofalco altaicus was considered to be a subspecies of the Gyrfalcon:
Dementiev's classification
• European Saker Falcon Falco cherrug danubialis
• Common Saker Falcon Falco cherrug cherrug
• Siberian Saker Falcon Falco cherrug saceroides
• Turkestan Saker Facon Falco cherrug coatsi
• Mongolian Saker Falcon Falco cherrug milvipes
• Tibet Saker Falcon Falco cherrug hendersoni
• Altai Gyrfalcon Falco gyrfalcon altaicus
In the west, the American taxonomist Charles Vaurie undertook the mammoth task of reviewing the taxonomy of Palearctic birds, subsequently published in two volumes The Birds of the Palearctic Fauna: a Systematic Reference (1959). In his review of the Falconidae he felt that Dementiev’s subdivision of the Saker falcon into six subspecies was unnecessary because the geographical variation previously described was clearly clinal in nature. However, despite having considered Dementiev’s position regarding altaicus, Vaurie nonetheless retained it as a separate species:
Vaurie's classification
• Saker Falcon Falco cherrug cherrug
• Saker Falcon Falco cherrug milvipes
• Altai Falcon Falco altaicus
With respect to the Altai Falcon, David Ellis (1995) undertook a review of its taxonomic status based on a morphological examination of museum skins. This research revealed a number of discrepancies in the identification and labelling of museum specimens attributed to Altai Falcons but did not elaborate on its taxonomic status. He suggested that the taxa regarded as the Altai Falcon was possibly the result of hybridisation between Gyrfalcons and Saker Falcons, which had been subsequently swamped by backcrosses with the Saker Falcon. However, the evidence to support this supposition was lacking and he acknowledged that the true taxonomic position would require the application of molecular techniques.
A wider morphological review of the Saker Falcon and allied species was undertaken by Christopher Eastham et al (2002). The conclusion of this review was that there was a significant degree of individual variation throughout the global breeding range of the Saker Falcon and that the species showed some clinal variation from the larger, dorsally barred milvipes form in the east to the smaller, dorsally plain brown cherrug form in the west. Eastham also put forward the supposition that the taxa known as altaicus may have been the result of historical, or even continuing, hybridisation between Saker Falcons and Gyrfalcons.
The Gyrfalcon - Richard Sale and Eugene Potapov |
Recently, molecular techniques have been applied to elucidate the phylogeny of the Hierofalcons by Franziska Nittinger and colleagues working at the Museum of Natural History in Vienna and the University of Heidelberg (available here). However, the mitochondrial and nuclear DNA markers used in this study did not reveal any clear differentiation between the established species of Saker Falcon F. cherrug, Gyrfalcon F. rusticolus, Lagger Falcon F. juggar and Lanner Falcon F. biarmicus. Clearly, these taxa are closely related and it was concluded that the observed genetic similarities among these taxa was the result of incomplete lineage sorting from a common ancestor and/or hybridisation events (either historical or current).
Further genetic analysis is required to differentiate these recognised species, such as that described by Dawnay et al (2008) to distinguish Gyrfalcons and Saker Falcons. To date, no genetic sub-structuring has been identified across the global breeding population of the Saker Falcon, and the frequency of mitochondrial DNA haplotypes did not show any obvious correspondence with the west-east cline of the Saker Falcon subspecies divisions of cherrug and milvipes.
Conclusions
Conservation and Research
- Raptor Conservation
- The Peregrine Falcon
- Mauritius Kestrel
- Red Kite Conservation
- New Zealand Falcon Conservation Project
- Migration and Movements of Saker Falcons
- Falcon Genome Project
- Electrocution of Birds of Prey
The Saker Falcon
- The Saker Falcon
- Description
- Taxonomy
- Breeding Distribution
- Breeding Population Estimates
- Wintering Distribution
- Habitat
- Hunting and Diet
- Breeding and Biology
- Migration
- Conservation Status
- Conservation Threats
- Sustainable Harvest
- Conservation overview (HH Sheikh Zayed)
- Captive breeding & research
- Bibliography
- Satellite Tracking
- Reintroduction in Bulgaria
- Reintroduction in Bulgaria
- Mongolian Artificial Nest Project Information
- Mongolian Artificial Nest Project Articles