List of birds explained
See also: List of birds by common name, Lists of birds by region and List of bird genera.
This article lists living orders and families of birds. The links below should then lead to family accounts and hence to individual species.
The passerines (perching birds) alone account for well over 5,000 species. In total there are about 10,000 species of birds described worldwide, though one estimate of the real number places it at almost twice that.[1]
Taxonomy is very fluid in the age of DNA analysis, so comments are made where appropriate, and all numbers are approximate. In particular see Sibley-Ahlquist taxonomy for a very different classification.
Phylogeny
Cladogram of modern bird relationships based on Jarvis, E.D. et al. (2014)[2] with some clade names after Yuri, T. et al. (2013).[3]
The Palaeognathae or "old jaws" is one of the two superorders recognized within the taxonomic class Aves and consist of the ratites and tinamous. The ratites are mostly large and long-legged, flightless birds, lacking a keeled sternum. Traditionally, all the ratites were place in the order Struthioniformes. However, recent genetic analysis has found that the group is not monophyletic, as it is paraphyletic with respect to the tinamous, so the ostriches are classified as the only members of the order Struthioniformes and other ratites placed in other orders.[4] [5]
Africa; 2 species
South America; 2 species
- Family †Opisthodactylidae
- Family Rheidae: rheas
Australasia; 4 species
Australasia; 5 species
Madagascar
Order †Dinornithiformes
New Zealand
South America; 45 species
Nearly all living birds belong to the subclass Neognathae or "new jaws". With their keeled sternum (breastbone), unlike the ratites, they are known as carinatae.
Order Galliformes
Worldwide; 250 species
- Family †Sylviornithidae
- Suborder Megapodii
- Suborder Craci
- Suborder Phasiani
Worldwide; 150 species
Worldwide; 19 species
Worldwide; 6 species
Order Columbiformes
Worldwide; 300 species
- Family Columbidae: pigeons and doves
Africa, Europe, Asia; 16 species
Madagascar; 3 species
Worldwide; 97 species
South America; 1 species
Americas; 7 species
Asia and Australasia; 14 species
Australasia; 10 species
Worldwide; 478 species
Worldwide; 150 species
Africa; 23 species
Order Otidiformes
Africa and Eurasia; 27 species
- Family Otididae: bustards
Superorder Gruae
South America; 1 species
Worldwide; 164 species
- Suborder Grui: cranes and allies
- Suborder Ralli: rails and allies
Worldwide; 350 species
- Suborder Charadrii
- Infraorder Chionida: thick-knees and allies
- Infraorder Charadriida: plover-like waders
- Suborder Scolopaci
- Suborder Lari
Neotropics and New Caledonia; 2 species
Oceanic; 3 species
North America, Eurasia; 5 species
Order Sphenisciformes
Antarctic and southern waters; 17 species
- Family Spheniscidae: penguins
Order Procellariiformes
Pan-oceanic; 120 species
Worldwide; 19 species
Worldwide; 59 species
- Suborder Fregatae
- Family Fregatidae: frigatebirds
- Suborder Sulae
Worldwide; 108 species
- Suborder Threskiornithes
- Suborder Pelecani
- Suborder Ardeae
Worldwide; 260 species
- Suborder Cathartae
- Suborder Accipitres
- Family Sagittariidae: secretarybird
- Family Pandionidae: osprey
- Family Accipitridae: hawks, eagles, buzzards, harriers, kites and Old World vultures
Worldwide; 250 species
Sub-Saharan Africa; 6 species
Madagascar; 1 species
Sub-Saharan Africa, Americas, Asia; 35 species
Old World, New Guinea; 64 species
- Superfamily Buceroidea
- Family Bucerotidae: hornbills
- Superfamily Upupoidea
Worldwide; 144 species
- Suborder Meropi
- Suborder Coracii
- Suborder Alcedines
Worldwide except Australasia; 400 species
- Suborder Galbuli
- Suborder Pici
South America; 2 species
Worldwide; 60 species
Pan-tropical, southern temperate zones; 330 species
- Superfamily Strigopoidea
- Superfamily Cacatuoidea
- Family Cacatuidae: cockatoos and cockatiel
- Superfamily Psittacoidea
Worldwide; 6,500 species
- Suborder Acanthisitti
- Suborder Tyranni: suboscines
- Suborder Passeri: oscines
- Infraorder Menurides
- Infraorder Climacterides
- Family Ptilonorhynchidae: bowerbirds
- Family Climacteridae: Australasian treecreepers
- Infraorder Meliphagides
- Infraorder Orthonychides
- Infraorder Corvides
- Superfamily Cinclosomatoidea
- Superfamily Campephagoidea
- Superfamily Mohouoidea
- Superfamily Neosittoidea
- Family Neosittidae: sittellas
- Superfamily Orioloidea
- Superfamily Malaconotoidea
- Superfamily Corvoidea
- Infraorder Passerides
- Parvorder Melanocharitida
- Parvorder Cnemophilida
- Parvorder Petroicida
- Parvorder Eupetida
- Parvorder Sylviida
- Parvorder Muscicapida
- Superorder Reguloidea
- Superfamily Bombycilloidea
- Superfamily Certhioidea
- Superfamily Muscicapoidea
- Parvorder Passerida
See also
Notes and References
- Barrowclough . GF . Cracraft . J . Klicka . J . Zink . RM . 2016 . How Many Kinds of Birds Are There and Why Does It Matter? . PLOS ONE . 11 . 11. e0166307 . 10.1371/journal.pone.0166307 . 27880775 . 5120813 . 2016PLoSO..1166307B . free .
- Jarvis . E.D. . etal . 2014 . Whole-genome analyses resolve early branches in the tree of life of modern birds . Science . 346 . 6215. 1320–1331 . 10.1126/science.1253451 . 25504713 . 4405904. 2014Sci...346.1320J .
- Yuri . T.. 2013 . Parsimony and Model-Based Analyses of Indels in Avian Nuclear Genes Reveal Congruent and Incongruent Phylogenetic Signals . Biology . 2 . 1. 419–444 . 10.3390/biology2010419 . etal . 24832669 . 4009869. free.
- Hackett . S.J. . etal . 2008 . A Phylogenomic Study of Birds Reveals Their Evolutionary History . Science . 320 . 5884. 1763–1768 . 10.1126/science.1157704 . 18583609 . 2008Sci...320.1763H . 6472805 .
- Yuri . T . 2013 . Parsimony and model-based analyses of indels in avian nuclear genes reveal congruent and incongruent phylogenetic signals . Biology . 2 . 1. 419–44 . 10.3390/biology2010419 . 24832669 . 4009869 . free .