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Featured researches published by Theodore A. Parker.


Bird Conservation International | 1995

Bolivia has the opportunity to create the planet's richest park for terrestrial biota

J. V. Remsen; Theodore A. Parker

Establishing a reserve of approximately 10,000 km at a strategic location in depto. La Paz, northern Bolivia, would create the planets richest park for birds and presumably all other forest-dwelling biota that reach peak diversity at tropical latitudes. By connecting puna and montane forest habitats of the Andes with lowland tropical forest and savannas of the Amazon basin, we predict that the proposed reserve would contain at least 1,088 bird species, or roughly 11% of all bird species on the planet. Among these are many threatened species and species with relatively small geographical ranges. The proposed reserve would also include threatened habitats, such as lower montane forest, dry forest, and grassland.


The Condor | 1981

Status and Distribution of Some Northwest Peruvian Birds

Thomas S. Schulenberg; Theodore A. Parker

-A brief history of ornithological exploration in northwestern Peru (Depts. of Tumbes, Piura, and Lambayeque) is given, with emphasis on recent work by the authors and other personnel of the Louisiana State University Museum of Zoology. New information on the distribution of 48 species is presented. Two species, Common Nighthawk (Chordeiles minor) and Black-and-white Warbler (Mniotilta varia), are reported in Peru for the first


Ornithological Monographs | 1985

A New Species and a New Subspecies of Thryothorus Wren from Peru

Theodore A. Parker; John P. O'Neill

Field and museum work reveal that the Thryothorus euophrys complex includes two species, one of which is described here, and that there is an additional subspecies of T. euophrys, also described in this paper. Both new forms are from Peru. RESUMEN. Trabajos llevados a cabo en el campo y en museos muestran que el complejo taxonomico de Thryothorus euophrys incluye dos especies, una de las cuales es descrita en el presente trabajo, y que existe una subespecie adicional de T. euophrys, la cual tambien se describe. Estas dos nuevas formas taxonomicas se encuentran en


Ornithological Monographs | 1997

NEW SUBSPECIES OF MYRMOBORUS LEUCOPHRYS (FORMICARIIDAE) AND PHRYGILUS ALAUDINUS (EMBERIZIDAE) FROM THE UPPER HUALLAGA VALLEY, PERU

John P. O'Neill; Theodore A. Parker

The ecologically diverse valley of the upper middle Rio Huallaga, depto. Huanuco, Peru, is isolated by mountains on the south, east and west and supports several endemic subspecies of birds. We herein describe a new subspecies of Myrmoborus leu- cophrys from the humid forest near Tingo Maria, and of Phrygilus alaudinus from the rain-shadow desert near the town of Huanuco.


The Condor | 1979

Notes on Siptornis striaticollis (Furnariidae) in Peru

J. William Eley; Gary R. Graves; Theodore A. Parker; David R. Hunter

The Spectacled Prickletail (Siptornis striaticollis) is a monotypic furnariid previously recorded only from the subtropical zone of the middle and upper Magdalena Valley in Colombia and the east slope of the Ecuadorian Andes (Mapoto) (Chapman, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 36, 1917; Chapman, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 55, 1926). In view of the paucity of information on Siptornis, we offer the following observations and report the first occurrence of the species in Peru. In 1978, during ornithological investigations in the Department of Cajamarca in northern Peru, we found Siptornis striaticollis northeast of Huancabamba, ca. 2 km south of Carmen, on the Sapalache-Namballe mule trail (OSOS’ S, 7922’ W). We saw these birds daily from 2 to 17 July foraging with large mixed-species flocks in patches of cloud forest between 1,660 m and 1,880 m elevation. Occasionally when a mixed-species flock assembled in an isolated cluster of trees, we made exact counts of arriving and departing individuals. Siptornis was a regular, low-density participant, with a maximum of three to four individuals per flock. Common flock members included the furnariids Crunioleuco curtata, Anabacerthia striaticollis, and Xenops rutilans, and the antwren Terenuru callinota. The prickletails foraged by creeping along branches, and probing moss clumps, clusters of dead leaves, fruticose lichens, and bark crevices at the level of the forest subcanopy and edge 5-15 m above ground. Several times individuals were seen hanging “paridlike” from petioles of Cecropia leaves, picking unidentified food items from undersides of leaflets. Among species that occur in the same area, Siptornis most closely resembles Xenops rutilans in behavior, size, coloration, and plumage pattern. Both Siptornis and Xenops tapped sporadically on limbs, often bracing the tail against the bark when probing deep crevices. During light rain or dense fog we often located these birds by their faint tapping sounds. On 9 July, after watching a large mixed-species flock pass over the trail, Eley heard a peculiar high-pitched trill coming from the top of a nearby bush. Immediately afterward, a Siptornis hopped into view and perched upright in the bush about 2 m above the trail. Another motionless individual about0.5 m from the first bird and in the interior of the bush answered the trill with a similar call. We heard no other vocalizations of this species. Siptornis striaticollis appeared most closely to fill the ecological niche of piculets of the genus Picumnus. In most subtropical cloud forest throughout eastern Peru and Bolivia at least one species of piculet occurs (Meyer de Schauensee, A guide to the birds of South America, Livingston Publ. Co., Wynnewood, Penn., 1970, and pers. observ.), but piculets are unknown in subtropical forest in the eastern Andes north of the Mararion River, where Siptornis occurs. Perhaps Siptornis and Picumnus are ecologically incompatible. Our three specimens, all males, are deposited at the Louisiana State University Museum of Zoology (LSUMZ). Data from these specimens are listed in Table 1. We thank Richard D. Semba and Manuel Sanchez S. for field assistance. J. Van Remsen, H. Douglas Pratt, John P. O’ Neill, and John Weske read the manuscript. We are most grateful to John S. McIlhenny and Babette M. Odom for their generous support of the field work of the LSUMZ.


Archive | 1996

Neotropical Birds: Ecology and Conservation

Bruce E. Young; Douglas F. Stotz; John W. Fitzpatrick; Theodore A. Parker; D. K. Moskovits


Archive | 1992

Threatened birds of the Americas

Nigel J. Collar; L. P. Gonzaga; N. Krabbe; A. Madrono Nieto; L. G. Naranjo; Theodore A. Parker; David C. Wege


The Condor | 1984

Arboreal Dead-Leaf-Searching Birds of the Neotropics

J. V. Remsen; Theodore A. Parker


Ornithological Monographs | 1985

The Avifauna of the Huancabamba Region, Northern Peru

Theodore A. Parker; Thomas S. Schulenberg; Gary R. Graves; Michael J. Braun


Ornithological Monographs | 1997

Survey of a Southern Amazonian Avifauna: The Alta Floresta Region, Mato Grosso, Brazil

Kevin J. Zimmer; Theodore A. Parker; Morton L. Isler; Phyllis R. Isler

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Thomas S. Schulenberg

Field Museum of Natural History

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John P. O'Neill

Louisiana State University

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J. V. Remsen

Louisiana State University

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Gary R. Graves

National Museum of Natural History

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Michael J. Braun

National Museum of Natural History

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Linda J. Barkley

Louisiana State University

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Morton L. Isler

National Museum of Natural History

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Phyllis R. Isler

National Museum of Natural History

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