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| image = Southern lapwing (Vanellus chilenis lampronotus).JPG
| image = Southern lapwing (Vanellus chilenis lampronotus).JPG
| image2 = Southern lapwing (Vanellus chilensis lampronotus) 2.JPG
| image2 = Southern lapwing (Vanellus chilensis lampronotus) 2.JPG
| image2_caption = both ''V. c. lampronotus''<br>The [[Pantanal]], [[Brazil]]
| image2_caption = both ''V. c. lampronotus''<br />The [[Pantanal]], [[Brazil]]
| status = LC
| status = LC
| status_system = IUCN3.1
| status_system = IUCN3.1
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''Parra chilensis'' <small>Molina, 1782</small><br />
''Parra chilensis'' <small>Molina, 1782</small><br />
''Belonopterus chilensis'' <small>(Molina, 1782)</small><br />
''Belonopterus chilensis'' <small>(Molina, 1782)</small><br />
''Vanellus grisescens'' <small>Grant, 1912</small><ref name=Mlikovsky2011/><br/>
''Vanellus grisescens'' <small>Grant, 1912</small><ref name=Mlikovsky2011/><br />
''Dorypaltus prosphatus'' <small>Brodkorb, 1959</small><br />
''Dorypaltus prosphatus'' <small>Brodkorb, 1959</small><br />
and see text
and see text
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}}
}}


The '''southern lapwing''' (''Vanellus chilensis'') is a [[wader]] in the order [[Charadriiformes]]. It is a common and widespread resident throughout [[South America]], except in densely forested regions (e.g. most of the [[Amazon rainforest|Amazon]]), the higher parts of the [[Andes Mountains|Andes]] and the arid coast of a large part of western South America. This bird is particularly common in the [[La Plata Basin|basin of the Rio de la Plata]]. It has also been spreading through [[Central America]] in recent years. It reached [[Trinidad]] in 1961 and [[Tobago]] in 1974, and has rapidly increased on both islands, sporadically making its way North to Barbados where one pair mated, nested and produced chicks in 2007.
The '''southern lapwing''' ('''''Vanellus chilensis'''''), commonly called '''quero-quero''' in Brazil, or '''tero''' in Argentina and Uruguay, '''tero-tero''' in Paraguay, and '''queltehue''' in Chile is a [[wader]] in the order [[Charadriiformes]]. It is a common and widespread resident throughout [[South America]], except in densely forested regions (e.g. most of the [[Amazon rainforest|Amazon]]), the higher parts of the [[Andes Mountains|Andes]], and the arid coast of a large part of western South America. This bird is particularly common in the [[La Plata Basin|basin of the Río de la Plata]]. It has also been spreading through [[Central America]] in recent years. It reached [[Trinidad]] in 1961, [[Tobago]] in 1974, and has rapidly increased on both islands, sporadically making its way North to Barbados where one pair mated, nested, and produced chicks in 2007. There have been sightings reported in [[North America]] with a verified sighting of a bird in [[Texas]] posted on [[Birda.org|Birda]] on the 17th April 2024.<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://app.birda.org/share/sighting/U2lnaHRpbmc6YWE3NzQ2NjMtOGQ3NS00OGJhLWE2M2EtYjEyODU3ZTQ3Zjkz

| title = Sighting
The southern lapwing is the national bird of [[Uruguay]], and one of the symbols of the Brazilian state of [[Rio Grande do Sul]].
| author = Terrilyn Alaniz
| date = 2024-04-17
| access-date = 2024-04-18
| publisher = Birda
}}</ref>


==Description==
==Description==
This [[lapwing]] is the only crested wader in South America. It is {{convert|32|to|38|cm|in|abbr=on}} in length and weighs approximately {{convert|250|to|425|g|oz|abbr=on}}. The upperparts are mainly brownish grey, with a bronze glossing on the shoulders. The head is particularly striking; mainly grey with a black forehead and throat patch extending onto the black breast. A white border separates the black of the face from the grey of the head and crest. The rest of the underparts are white and the eye ring, legs, and most of the bill are pink. It is equipped with red bony extensions under the wings (spurs), used to intimidate foes and fight birds of prey.

This [[lapwing]] is the only crested wader in South America. It is {{convert|32|to|38|cm|in|abbr=on}} in length and weighs approximately {{convert|250|to|425|g|oz|abbr=on}}. The upperparts are mainly brownish grey, with a bronze glossing on the shoulders. The head is particularly striking; mainly grey with a black forehead and throat patch extending onto the black breast. A white border separates the black of the face from the grey of the head and crest. The rest of the underparts are white, and the eye ring, legs and most of the bill are pink. It is equipped with red bony extensions under the wings (spurs), used to intimidate foes and fight birds of prey.


During its slow flapping flight, the southern lapwing shows a broad white wing bar separating the grey-brown of the back and wing coverts from the black flight feathers. The rump is white and the tail black. The call is a very loud and harsh ''keek-keek-keek''.
During its slow flapping flight, the southern lapwing shows a broad white wing bar separating the grey-brown of the back and wing coverts from the black flight feathers. The rump is white and the tail black. The call is a very loud and harsh ''keek-keek-keek''.
[[File:Southern_lapwing_protecting_one_of_its_chicks_under_its_wings.jpg|thumb|right|Southern lapwing with youngster under wings]]


There are three or four [[subspecies]], differing slightly in head coloration and voice. ''Vanellus chilensis fretensis'' from [[Patagonia]] is sometimes included in the [[nominate subspecies]] ''V. c. chilensis''. The northern subspecies—''V. c. cayennensis'' from north and ''V. c. lampronotus'' from south of the [[Amazon River]]—are sometimes separated as a distinct species, '''''Vanellus cayennensis'''''. These two subspecies have a browner head—particularly the northernmost birds—and the white face band (broad in the northern and narrow in the southern one) does not reach to the center of the crown. However, birds from the general region of Uruguay apparently [[intergrade]].
There are three or four [[subspecies]], differing slightly in head coloration and voice. ''Vanellus chilensis fretensis'' from [[Patagonia]] is sometimes included in the [[nominate subspecies]] ''V. c. chilensis''. The northern subspecies—''V. c. cayennensis'' from the north and ''V. c. lampronotus'' from the south of the [[Amazon River]]—are sometimes separated as a distinct species, '''''Vanellus cayennensis'''''. These two subspecies have a browner head—particularly the northernmost birds—and the white face band (broad in the northern and narrow in the southern one) does not reach to the center of the crown. However, birds from the general region of Uruguay apparently [[intergrade]].


==Fossil record==
{{Gallery
In [[prehistoric]] times, the species seems to have been more widespread. [[Late Pleistocene]] lapwing bones from [[Florida]] were initially described as ''Dorypaltus prosphatus'' but have since been regarded as indistinguishable from those of the southern lapwing of the time, except by being smaller. Though they may not be specifically distinct, the lack of this bird's occurrence out of South America on a regular basis today suggests that they may be better considered a [[paleosubspecies]] ''V. c. prosphatus''. This would have disappeared as the [[Last glacial period|last ice age]] ended, but [[biogeography]] suggests that the species must also have occurred in [[Central America]] and/or the [[Caribbean]]. The entirely [[extinct]] prehistoric species ''V. downsi'' is closely related to the southern lapwing found in [[California]]; its remains have been found at the [[La Brea Tar Pits]] in [[Los Angeles]]. Separated by the [[Rocky Mountains]], ''V. downsi'' makes an unlikely ancestor to the southern lapwing, but it is certainly possible that it was a northwestern [[sister species]].<ref name=Campbell2002/>
|title=Gallery

|width=135 | height=135 | lines=5
==Ecology==
|align=center
This is a [[lapwing]] of lake and river banks or open grassland. It has benefited from the extension of the latter habitat through widespread cattle ranching. When nesting in the vicinity of airports, it poses a threat to the safety of aerial traffic.<ref name=Pereira2008/> Its food is mainly [[insect]]s (such as [[grasshopper]]s)<ref name="sta.uwi.edu">{{cite web|url=https://sta.uwi.edu/fst/lifesciences/sites/default/files/lifesciences/documents/ogatt/Vanellus%20chilensis_Southern%20Lapwing.pdf|title=Vanellus chilensis (Southern Lapwing|website=Sta.uwi.edu|access-date=27 March 2022}}</ref> and other small [[invertebrate]]s (including [[earthworm]]s and [[cutworm]]s), as well as small [[fish]],<ref name="sta.uwi.edu"/> hunted using a run-and-wait technique mainly at night, often in flocks. In urban areas like [[Rio de Janeiro]], [[Montevideo]], and [[La Plata]] it can even be seen feeding on floodlit soccer pitches during televised matches.
|File:Vanellus chilensis Valdivia.jpg|''V. c. chilensis'' ([[Valdivia, Chile]])
|File:Quero-Quero.Southern Lapwing.Teru-Teru.Vanellus Chilensis.JPG|Nesting ''V. c. lampronotus'' threatening photographer. Note spurs protruding from wrists.
The southern lapwing breeds cooperatively in social groups and that social group consists of a breeding pair with one or two young from the previous breeding season.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Cerboncini|first1=Ricardo A. S.|last2=Braga|first2=Talita V.|last3=Roper|first3=James J.|last4=Passos|first4=Fernando C.|date=2020|title=Southern Lapwing Vanellus chilensis cooperative helpers at nests are older siblings|url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/ibi.12758|journal=Ibis|language=en|volume=162|issue=1|pages=227–231|doi=10.1111/ibi.12758|s2cid=196682485 |issn=1474-919X}}</ref> They breed on grassland and sometimes on ploughed fields, and have an aerobatic flapping display flight. It lays 2–3 (rarely 4) olive-brown eggs in a bare ground scape. The nest and young are defended noisily and aggressively against all intruders (including humans) by means of threats, vocalizations, and low flights. After the breeding season, it disperses into wetlands and seasonally-flooded tropical grassland.
|File:Two Southern Lapwings (Vanellus chilensis) in flight.jpg|In flight

|File:Vanellus chilensis -Rio Grande do Sul -chick-8.jpg|Chick
==Gallery==
|File:Skeleton of Vanellus chilensis.JPG|Skeleton
|File:Southern lapwing (Vanellus chilensis cayennensis).jpg|''V. c. cayennensis'', Tobago
}}
{{Listen
{{Listen
| filename = Vanellus Chilensis.ogg
| filename = Vanellus Chilensis.ogg
| title = Southern Lapwing Calls
| title = Southern Lapwing Calls
| description = Recorded by Eurico Zimbres
| description = Recorded by Eurico Zimbres
| pos = left
| pos = right
}}
}}
[[File:Southern lapwing chick.jpg|thumb|left|Southern lapwing chick]]


<gallery align=left>
==Fossil record==
File:Southern lapwing chick.jpg|Southern lapwing chick
In [[prehistoric]] times, the species seems to have been more widespread. [[Late Pleistocene]] lapwing bones from [[Florida]] were initially described as ''Dorypaltus prosphatus'' but have since been regarded as indistinguishable from those of the southern lapwing of our time, except by being smaller. Though they may not be specifically distinct, the lack of this birds' occurrence out of South America on a regular basis today suggests that they may be better considered a [[paleosubspecies]] ''V. c. prosphatus''. This would have disappeared as the [[Last glacial period|last ice age]] ended, but [[biogeography]] suggests that the species must also have occurred in [[Central America]] and/or the [[Caribbean]]. The entirely [[extinct]] prehistoric species ''V. downsi'' is closely related to the southern lapwing found in [[California]]; its remains have been found at the [[La Brea Tar Pits]] in [[Los Angeles]]. Separated by the [[Rocky Mountains]], ''V. downsi'' makes an unlikely ancestor to the southern lapwing, but it is certainly possible that it was a northwestern [[sister species]].<ref name=Campbell2002/>
File:Ninho Quero-quero.jpg|Nest of ''V. c. lampronotus'' with small [[clutch (eggs)|clutch]]
File:Vanellus chilensis Valdivia.jpg|''V. c. chilensis'' ([[Valdivia, Chile]])
File:Quero-Quero.Southern Lapwing.Teru-Teru.Vanellus Chilensis.JPG|Nesting ''V. c. lampronotus'' threatening photographer. Note spurs protruding from wrists.
File:Two Southern Lapwings (Vanellus chilensis) in flight.jpg|In flight
File:Vanellus chilensis -Rio Grande do Sul -chick-8.jpg|Chick
File:Skeleton of Vanellus chilensis.JPG|Skeleton
File:Southern lapwing (Vanellus chilensis cayennensis).jpg|''V. c. cayennensis'', Tobago
File:Southern_lapwing_protecting_one_of_its_chicks_under_its_wings.jpg|Southern lapwing with youngster under wings
File:Teteu em voo 830.jpg|In flight to defend its nest in ([[Gravatá]], [[Brazil]])
File:Vanellus chilensis -Natal, Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil -flying-8.jpg| In flight ([[Natal, Rio Grande do Norte|Natal]], [[Brazil]])


</gallery>
==Ecology==
[[File:Ninho Quero-quero.jpg|left|thumb|Nest of ''V. c. lampronotus'' with small [[clutch (eggs)|clutch]]]]
This is a [[lapwing]] of lake and river banks or open grassland. It has benefited from the extension of the latter habitat through widespread cattle ranching. When nesting in the vicinity of airports, it poses a threat to the safety of aerial traffic.<ref name=Pereira2008/> Its food is mainly [[insect]]s and other small [[invertebrate]]s, hunted using a run-and-wait technique mainly at night, often in flocks. In urban areas like [[Rio de Janeiro]], [[Montevideo]], and [[La Plata]] it can even be seen feeding on floodlit soccer pitches during televised matches.
The southern lapwing breed cooperatively in social groups that social groups consist of a breeding pair with one or two young from the previous breeding season.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Cerboncini|first1=Ricardo A. S.|last2=Braga|first2=Talita V.|last3=Roper|first3=James J.|last4=Passos|first4=Fernando C.|date=2020|title=Southern Lapwing Vanellus chilensis cooperative helpers at nests are older siblings|url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/ibi.12758|journal=Ibis|language=en|volume=162|issue=1|pages=227–231|doi=10.1111/ibi.12758|issn=1474-919X}}</ref> They breed on grassland and sometimes ploughed fields, and has an aerobatic flapping display flight. It lays 2–3 (rarely 4) olive-brown eggs in a bare ground scrape. The nest and young are defended noisily and aggressively against all intruders (including humans) by means of threats, vocalizations and low flights. After the breeding season it disperses into wetlands and seasonally-flooded tropical grassland.


==References==
==References==
Line 66: Line 72:
<ref name=Mlikovsky2011>{{cite journal |journal=Zootaxa |issue= 3005 |pages=45–68 |date=26 August 2011 |title=Nomenclatural and taxonomic status of bird taxa (Aves) described by an ornithological swindler, Josef Prokop Pražák (1870–1904) |last=Mlíkovský |first=Jiří|volume= 3005 |doi= 10.11646/zootaxa.3005.1.2 }}</ref>
<ref name=Mlikovsky2011>{{cite journal |journal=Zootaxa |issue= 3005 |pages=45–68 |date=26 August 2011 |title=Nomenclatural and taxonomic status of bird taxa (Aves) described by an ornithological swindler, Josef Prokop Pražák (1870–1904) |last=Mlíkovský |first=Jiří|volume= 3005 |doi= 10.11646/zootaxa.3005.1.2 }}</ref>


<ref name=Campbell2002>{{cite journal |last=Campbell |first=Kenneth E. Jr. |year=2002 |title=A new species of Late Pleistocene lapwing from Rancho La Brea, California |language=English, Spanish |journal=[[Condor (journal)|Condor]] |volume=104 |issue=1 |pages=170–174 |doi=10.1650/0010-5422(2002)104[0170:ANSOLP]2.0.CO;2 |jstor=1370353 }}</ref>
<ref name=Campbell2002>{{cite journal |last=Campbell |first=Kenneth E. Jr. |year=2002 |title=A new species of Late Pleistocene lapwing from Rancho La Brea, California |language=English, Spanish |journal=[[Condor (journal)|Condor]] |volume=104 |issue=1 |pages=170–174 |doi=10.1650/0010-5422(2002)104[0170:ANSOLP]2.0.CO;2 |jstor=1370353 |s2cid=198159856 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


<ref name=Pereira2008>{{cite book |last=Pereira |first=José Felipe Monteiro |year=2008 |title=Aves e Pássaros Comuns do Rio de Janeiro |trans-title=Common Birds of Rio de Janeiro |language=Portuguese |publisher=Technical Books |location=Rio de Janeiro |page=54 |isbn=978-85-61368-00-5}}</ref>
<ref name=Pereira2008>{{cite book |last=Pereira |first=José Felipe Monteiro |year=2008 |title=Aves e Pássaros Comuns do Rio de Janeiro |trans-title=Common Birds of Rio de Janeiro |language=Portuguese |publisher=Technical Books |location=Rio de Janeiro |page=54 |isbn=978-85-61368-00-5}}</ref>
}}
}}

==Bibliography==
* {{cite book |last = ffrench<!--this name should not be capitalized--> |first = Richard |last2=O'Neill |first2=John Patton |last3=Eckelberry |first3=Don R.|title=A Guide to the Birds of Trinidad and Tobago |edition = 2nd |year = 1991 |location=Ithaca, N.Y. |publisher = Comstock Publishing |isbn = 978-0-8014-9792-6 }}
* {{cite book |last = ffrench<!--this name should not be capitalized--> |first = Richard |last2=O'Neill |first2=John Patton |last3=Eckelberry |first3=Don R.|title=A Guide to the Birds of Trinidad and Tobago |edition = 2nd |year = 1991 |location=Ithaca, N.Y. |publisher = Comstock Publishing |isbn = 978-0-8014-9792-6 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Hayman |first1=Peter |last2=Marchant |first2=John |last3=Prater |first3=Tony |year=1986 |title=Shorebirds: an identification guide to the waders of the world |publisher=Houghton Mifflin |location=Boston |isbn=978-0-395-60237-9}}
* {{cite book |last1=Hayman |first1=Peter |last2=Marchant |first2=John |last3=Prater |first3=Tony |year=1986 |title=Shorebirds: an identification guide to the waders of the world |publisher=Houghton Mifflin |location=Boston |isbn=978-0-395-60237-9}}
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* {{Xeno-canto species|Vanellus|chilensis|Southern lapwing}}
* {{Xeno-canto species|Vanellus|chilensis|Southern lapwing}}


{{Charadriiformes|C.|state=collapsed}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q855348}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q855348}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:lapwing, southern}}
[[Category:Vanellus|southern lapwing]]
[[Category:Vanellus|southern lapwing]]
[[Category:Birds of South America]]
[[Category:Birds of South America]]
Line 94: Line 102:
[[Category:Birds of Chile]]
[[Category:Birds of Chile]]
[[Category:Taxa named by Juan Ignacio Molina]]
[[Category:Taxa named by Juan Ignacio Molina]]
[[Category:Symbols of Rio Grande do Sul]]

Latest revision as of 15:39, 3 June 2024

Southern lapwing
both V. c. lampronotus
The Pantanal, Brazil
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Charadriiformes
Family: Charadriidae
Genus: Vanellus
Species:
V. chilensis
Binomial name
Vanellus chilensis
(Molina, 1782)
Subspecies

3-4 (see text)

Synonyms

Parra chilensis Molina, 1782
Belonopterus chilensis (Molina, 1782)
Vanellus grisescens Grant, 1912[2]
Dorypaltus prosphatus Brodkorb, 1959
and see text

The southern lapwing (Vanellus chilensis), commonly called quero-quero in Brazil, or tero in Argentina and Uruguay, tero-tero in Paraguay, and queltehue in Chile is a wader in the order Charadriiformes. It is a common and widespread resident throughout South America, except in densely forested regions (e.g. most of the Amazon), the higher parts of the Andes, and the arid coast of a large part of western South America. This bird is particularly common in the basin of the Río de la Plata. It has also been spreading through Central America in recent years. It reached Trinidad in 1961, Tobago in 1974, and has rapidly increased on both islands, sporadically making its way North to Barbados where one pair mated, nested, and produced chicks in 2007. There have been sightings reported in North America with a verified sighting of a bird in Texas posted on Birda on the 17th April 2024.[3]

Description

[edit]

This lapwing is the only crested wader in South America. It is 32 to 38 cm (13 to 15 in) in length and weighs approximately 250 to 425 g (8.8 to 15.0 oz). The upperparts are mainly brownish grey, with a bronze glossing on the shoulders. The head is particularly striking; mainly grey with a black forehead and throat patch extending onto the black breast. A white border separates the black of the face from the grey of the head and crest. The rest of the underparts are white and the eye ring, legs, and most of the bill are pink. It is equipped with red bony extensions under the wings (spurs), used to intimidate foes and fight birds of prey.

During its slow flapping flight, the southern lapwing shows a broad white wing bar separating the grey-brown of the back and wing coverts from the black flight feathers. The rump is white and the tail black. The call is a very loud and harsh keek-keek-keek.

There are three or four subspecies, differing slightly in head coloration and voice. Vanellus chilensis fretensis from Patagonia is sometimes included in the nominate subspecies V. c. chilensis. The northern subspecies—V. c. cayennensis from the north and V. c. lampronotus from the south of the Amazon River—are sometimes separated as a distinct species, Vanellus cayennensis. These two subspecies have a browner head—particularly the northernmost birds—and the white face band (broad in the northern and narrow in the southern one) does not reach to the center of the crown. However, birds from the general region of Uruguay apparently intergrade.

Fossil record

[edit]

In prehistoric times, the species seems to have been more widespread. Late Pleistocene lapwing bones from Florida were initially described as Dorypaltus prosphatus but have since been regarded as indistinguishable from those of the southern lapwing of the time, except by being smaller. Though they may not be specifically distinct, the lack of this bird's occurrence out of South America on a regular basis today suggests that they may be better considered a paleosubspecies V. c. prosphatus. This would have disappeared as the last ice age ended, but biogeography suggests that the species must also have occurred in Central America and/or the Caribbean. The entirely extinct prehistoric species V. downsi is closely related to the southern lapwing found in California; its remains have been found at the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles. Separated by the Rocky Mountains, V. downsi makes an unlikely ancestor to the southern lapwing, but it is certainly possible that it was a northwestern sister species.[4]

Ecology

[edit]

This is a lapwing of lake and river banks or open grassland. It has benefited from the extension of the latter habitat through widespread cattle ranching. When nesting in the vicinity of airports, it poses a threat to the safety of aerial traffic.[5] Its food is mainly insects (such as grasshoppers)[6] and other small invertebrates (including earthworms and cutworms), as well as small fish,[6] hunted using a run-and-wait technique mainly at night, often in flocks. In urban areas like Rio de Janeiro, Montevideo, and La Plata it can even be seen feeding on floodlit soccer pitches during televised matches.

The southern lapwing breeds cooperatively in social groups and that social group consists of a breeding pair with one or two young from the previous breeding season.[7] They breed on grassland and sometimes on ploughed fields, and have an aerobatic flapping display flight. It lays 2–3 (rarely 4) olive-brown eggs in a bare ground scape. The nest and young are defended noisily and aggressively against all intruders (including humans) by means of threats, vocalizations, and low flights. After the breeding season, it disperses into wetlands and seasonally-flooded tropical grassland.

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ BirdLife International (2020). "Vanellus chilensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T22694075A163620949. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T22694075A163620949.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ Mlíkovský, Jiří (26 August 2011). "Nomenclatural and taxonomic status of bird taxa (Aves) described by an ornithological swindler, Josef Prokop Pražák (1870–1904)". Zootaxa. 3005 (3005): 45–68. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3005.1.2.
  3. ^ Terrilyn Alaniz (2024-04-17). "Sighting". Birda. Retrieved 2024-04-18.
  4. ^ Campbell, Kenneth E. Jr. (2002). "A new species of Late Pleistocene lapwing from Rancho La Brea, California". Condor (in English and Spanish). 104 (1): 170–174. doi:10.1650/0010-5422(2002)104[0170:ANSOLP]2.0.CO;2. JSTOR 1370353. S2CID 198159856.
  5. ^ Pereira, José Felipe Monteiro (2008). Aves e Pássaros Comuns do Rio de Janeiro [Common Birds of Rio de Janeiro] (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro: Technical Books. p. 54. ISBN 978-85-61368-00-5.
  6. ^ a b "Vanellus chilensis (Southern Lapwing" (PDF). Sta.uwi.edu. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  7. ^ Cerboncini, Ricardo A. S.; Braga, Talita V.; Roper, James J.; Passos, Fernando C. (2020). "Southern Lapwing Vanellus chilensis cooperative helpers at nests are older siblings". Ibis. 162 (1): 227–231. doi:10.1111/ibi.12758. ISSN 1474-919X. S2CID 196682485.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • ffrench, Richard; O'Neill, John Patton; Eckelberry, Don R. (1991). A Guide to the Birds of Trinidad and Tobago (2nd ed.). Ithaca, N.Y.: Comstock Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8014-9792-6.
  • Hayman, Peter; Marchant, John; Prater, Tony (1986). Shorebirds: an identification guide to the waders of the world. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-395-60237-9.
  • Hilty, Steven L. (2003). Birds of Venezuela. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-7136-6418-8.
[edit]