The Roraiman nightjar (Setopagis whitelyi) is a species of nightjar in the family Caprimulgidae. It is found in Brazil, Guyana, and Venezuela.[1]
The Roraiman nightjar was described as Anstrotomus whitelyi and was later lumped into genus Caprimulgus.[2] Between the early 2010s and 2024 taxonomic systems placed it in genus Setopagis.[1] [3] [4] [5] However, based on a study published in 2023, in late 2024 the Clements taxonomy and the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society moved it to the newly created monotypic genus Tepuiornis.[3] [6] [7]
The Roraiman nightjar has no subspecies.[1]
The Roraiman nightjar is 21to long. Males weigh 30to and females 45to. The male's upperparts are blackish brown with cinnamon and grayish spots. The tail feathers are dark brown; the outermost three pairs have faint but broad pale buff bars and two pairs have large white spots at their tips. The wings are mostly dark brown with a thin white bar near the end and white spots near the body. The chin and upper throat are dark brown, the lower throat white, the breast dark brown with pale buff bars, and the belly and flanks pale buff with brown bars. The female is more brownish than blackish, the wing spots and bars are smaller and buffy instead of white, and the white spots on the tail are smaller.[2]
The Roraiman nightjar is found in the tepui region at the junction of southeastern Venezuela, southwestern Guyana, and northernmost Brazil. It inhabits open areas such as savanna, clearings, and the edges of forest. In elevation it ranges between 1280and in Venezuela but has been recorded as low as 850m (2,790feet) in Guyana.[2]
The Roraiman nightjar is nocturnal. Little is known about its foraging behavior, whether it forages by sallying from the ground or a low perch and/or during continuous flight.[2]
The Roraiman nightjar's breeding biology is unknown. It is assumed to lay one or two eggs directly on the ground like other nightjars.[2]
The Roraiman nightjar's song is "a burry hreeer, rising then falling in pitch, and repeated at intervals of 1-2 seconds."[2]
The IUCN originally in 1988 assessed the Roraiman nightjar as Near Threatened and since 2004 as being of Least Concern. Its population size is unknown and is believed to be decreasing. The primary threat is habitat modification either intentional or by fire; the tepui vegetation when damaged does not regrow but is replaced by vegetation less suitable for the nightjar.