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	 Pigeon, Dove (Family: Columbidae) - Wiki
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| 제목: | Pigeon, Dove (Family: Columbidae) - Wiki 
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동물그림창고 똑똑전화 누리집
^o^| Columbidae
 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
 [Photo] Luzon Bleeding-heart Dove (Gallicolumba luzonica); Bleeding Heart Pigeon, "Gallicolumba luzonica". Date 19 March 2006. Photo taken by http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Frances76
 | Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". | 
 
 Pigeons and doves constitute the family Columbidae within the order Columbiformes, which include some 300 species of near passerine birds. In general parlance the terms "dove" and "pigeon" are used somewhat interchangeably. In ornithological practice, there is a tendency for "dove" to be used for smaller species and "pigeon" for larger ones, but this is in no way consistently applied, and historically the common names for these birds involve a great deal of variation between the term "dove" and "pigeon." This family occurs worldwide, but the greatest variety is in the Indomalaya and Australasia ecozones. The young doves and pigeons are called "squabs."
 
 Pigeons and doves are stout-bodied birds with short necks and short slender bills with a fleshy cere. The species commonly referred to just as the "pigeon" is the feral Rock Pigeon, common in many cities.
 
 Their usually flimsy nests are made of sticks, and the two white eggs are incubated by both sexes. Doves feed on seeds, fruit and plants. Unlike most other birds (but see flamingo), the doves and pigeons produce "crop milk," which is secreted by a sloughing of fluid-filled cells from the lining of the crop. Both sexes produce this highly nutritious substance to feed to the young.
 
 Systematics and evolution
 This family is a highly coherent group with no members showing obvious links with other bird families, or vice versa. The dodo and solitaires are clearly related, as discussed below, but equally lacking in obvious links with other bird families. The limited fossil record also consists only of unequivocal Columbidae species. Links to the sandgrouse and parrots have been suggested, but resemblances to the first group are due to convergent evolution and the second depend on the parrot-like features of the Tooth-billed Pigeon. However, the distinctive features of that bird seem to have arisen from its specialized diet rather than a real relationship to the parrots.
 
 The family is usually divided into five subfamilies, but this is probably inaccurate. For example, the American ground and quail doves which are usually placed in the Columbinae seem to be two distinct subfamilies. The order presented here follows Baptista et al. (1997) with some updates (Johnson & Clayton 2000, Johnson et al. 2001, Shapiro et al. 2002).
 
 Note that the arrangement of genera and naming of subfamilies is in some cases provisional because analyzes of different DNA sequences yield results that differ, often radically, in the placement of certain (mainly Indo-Australian) genera. This ambiguity, probably caused by Long branch attraction, seems to confirm that the first pigeons evolved in the Australasian region, and that the "Treronidae" and allied forms (crowned and pheasant pigeons, for example) represent the earliest radiation of the group.
 
 As the Dodo and Rodrigues Solitaire are in all likelihood part of the Indo-Australian radiation that produced the 3 small subfamilies mentioned above with the fruit-doves and -pigeons (including the Nicobar Pigeon), they are here included as a subfamily Raphinae, pending better material evidence of their exact relationships.
 
 Exacerbating these issues, columbids are not well represented in the fossil record. No truly primitive forms have been found to date. The genus Gerandia which most likely belongs to the Columbinae has been described from Early Miocene deposits of France. Apart from that, all other fossils belong to extant genera. For these, and for the considerable number of more recently extinct prehistoric species, see the respective genus accounts.
 
 A list of all the species, sortable by common and scientific name, is at list of Columbidae species
 
 Subfamily Columbinae - typical pigeons & doves
 
 Genus Columba including Aplopelia - Old World pigeons (33-34 living species, 2-3 recently extinct)
 
 Genus Streptopelia including Stigmatopelia and Nesoenas - turtledoves (14-18 living species)
 
 Genus Patagioenas - American pigeons; formerly included in Columba (17 species)
 
 Genus Macropygia
 Barred Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia unchall
 Slender-billed Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia amboinensis
 Brown Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia phasianella
 Dusky Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia magna
 Andaman Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia rufipennis
 Philippine Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia tenuirostris
 Ruddy Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia emiliana
 Black-billed Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia nigrirostris
 Mackinlay's Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia mackinlayi
 Little Cuckoo-dove, Macropygia ruficeps
 
 Genus Reinwardtoena (3 species)
 
 Genus Turacoena (2 species)
 
 Subfamily N.N. - Bronzewings and relatives
 
 Genus Turtur - African wood-doves (5 species; tentatively placed here)
 
 Genus Oena - Namaqua Dove (tentatively placed here)
 
 Genus Chalcophaps (2 species)
 
 Genus Henicophaps (2 species)
 
 Genus Phaps (3 species)
 
 Genus Ocyphaps - Crested Pigeon
 
 Genus Geophaps (3 species)
 
 Genus Petrophassa - rock-pigeons (2 species)
 
 Genus Geopelia (3-5 species)
 
 Subfamily Leptotilinae - Zenaidine and quail-doves
 
 Genus Zenaida (7 species)
 
 Genus Ectopistes - Passenger Pigeon (extinct; 1914)
 
 Genus Leptotila
 
 White-tipped Dove, Leptotila verreauxi
 White-faced Dove, Leptotila megalura
 Grey-fronted Dove, Leptotila rufaxilla
 Grey-headed Dove, Leptotila plumbeiceps
 Pallid Dove, Leptotila pallida
 Brown-backed Dove, Leptotila battyi
 Grenada Dove, Leptotila wellsi
 Caribbean Dove, Leptotila jamaicensis
 Grey-chested Dove, Leptotila cassini
 Ochre-bellied Dove, Leptotila ochraceiventris
 Tolima Dove, Leptotila conoveri
 
 Genus Geotrygon - quail-doves
 Purplish-backed Quail-dove, Geotrygon lawrencii
 Veracruz Quail-dove, Geotrygon carrikeri
 Costa Rica Quail-dove, Geotrygon costaricensis
 Russet-crowned Quail-dove, Geotrygon goldmani
 Sapphire Quail-dove, Geotrygon saphirina
 Grey-headed Quail-dove, Geotrygon caniceps
 Hispaniolan Quail-dove, Geotrygon (caniceps} leucometopius
 Crested Quail-dove, Geotrygon versicolor
 Rufous-breasted Quail-dove, Geotrygon chiriquensis
 Olive-backed Quail-dove, Geotrygon veraguensis
 White-faced Quail-dove, Geotrygon albifacies
 Lined Quail-dove, Geotrygon linearis
 White-throated Quail-dove, Geotrygon frenata
 Key West Quail-dove, Geotrygon chrysia
 Bridled Quail-dove, Geotrygon mystacea
 Violaceous Quail-dove, Geotrygon violacea
 Ruddy Quail-dove, Geotrygon Montana
 
 Genus Starnoenas
 Blue-headed Quail-dove, Starnoenas cyanocephala
 Subfamily Columbininae - American ground doves
 
 Genus Columbina
 Common Ground Dove, Columbina passerina
 Plain-breasted Ground Dove, Columbina minuta
 Ecuadorian Ground Dove, Columbina buckleyi
 Ruddy Ground Dove, Columbina talpacoti
 Picui Dove, Columbina picui
 Croaking Ground Dove, Columbina cruziana
 Blue-eyed Ground Dove, Columbina cyanopis
 
 Genus Claravis
 Blue Ground Dove, Claravis pretiosa
 Purple-winged Ground Dove, Claravis godefrida
 Maroon-chested Ground-dove, Claravis mondetoura
 
 Genus Metriopelia
 Bare-faced Ground Dove, Metriopelia ceciliae
 Moreno's Ground Dove, Metriopelia morenoi
 Black-winged Ground Dove, Metriopelia melanoptera
 Golden-spotted Ground Dove, Metriopelia aymara
 
 Genus Scardafella - possibly belongs into Columbina
 Inca Dove, Scardafella inca
 Scaled Dove, Scardafella squammata
 
 Genus Uropelia
 Long-tailed Ground Dove, Uropelia campestris...
 Subfamily N.N. - Indopacific ground doves
 
 Genus Gallicolumba (16-17 living species, 3-4 recently extinct)
 
 Genus Trugon
 Thick-billed Ground Pigeon, Trugon terrestris
 
 Subfamily Otidiphabinae - Pheasant Pigeon
 
 Genus Otidiphaps - Pheasant Pigeon
 
 Subfamily Didunculinae - Tooth-billed Pigeon
 
 Genus Didunculus
 Tooth-billed Pigeon, Didunculus strigirostris
 Tongan Tooth-billed Pigeon, Didunculus placopedetes - prehistoric
 
 Subfamily Gourinae - crowned pigeons
 
 Genus Goura
 
 Subfamily N.N. ("Treroninae") - green and fruit-doves and imperial pigeons
 
 Genus Ducula - imperial-pigeons
 Pink-bellied Imperial Pigeon, Ducula poliocephala
 White-bellied Imperial Pigeon, Ducula forsteni
 Mindoro Imperial Pigeon, Ducula mindorensis
 Grey-headed Imperial Pigeon, Ducula radiata
 Grey-necked Imperial Pigeon, Ducula carola
 Green Imperial Pigeon, Ducula aenea
 White-eyed Imperial Pigeon, Ducula perspicillata
 Blue-tailed Imperial Pigeon, Ducula concinna
 Pacific Imperial Pigeon, Ducula pacifica
 Micronesian Imperial Pigeon, Ducula oceanica
 Polynesian Imperial Pigeon, Ducula aurorae
 Nukuhiva Imperial Pigeon, Ducula galeata
 Red-knobbed Imperial Pigeon, Ducula rubricera
 Spice Imperial Pigeon, Ducula myristicivora
 Purple-tailed Imperial Pigeon, Ducula rufigaster
 Cinnamon-bellied Imperial Pigeon, Ducula basilica
 Finsch's Imperial Pigeon, Ducula finschii
 Shining Imperial Pigeon, Ducula chalconota
 Island Imperial Pigeon, Ducula pistrinaria
 Pink-headed Imperial Pigeon, Ducula rosacea
 Christmas Imperial Pigeon, Ducula whartoni
 Grey Imperial Pigeon, Ducula pickeringii
 Peale's Imperial Pigeon, Ducula latrans
 Chestnut-bellied Imperial Pigeon, Ducula brenchleyi
 Vanuatu Imperial Pigeon, Ducula bakeri
 New Caledonian Imperial Pigeon, Ducula goliath
 Pinon's Imperial Pigeon, Ducula pinon
 Bismarck Imperial Pigeon, Ducula melanochroa
 Collared Imperial Pigeon, Ducula mullerii
 Zoe's Imperial Pigeon, Ducula zoeae
 Mountain Imperial Pigeon, Ducula badia
 Dark-backed Imperial Pigeon, Ducula lacernulata
 Timor Imperial Pigeon, Ducula cineracea
 Pied Imperial Pigeon, Ducula bicolor
 Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Ducula spilorrhoa
 White Imperial Pigeon, Ducula luctuosa
 
 Genus Lopholaimus - Topknot Pigeon
 
 Genus Hemiphaga
 Kerer?? Hemiphaga novaseelandiae
 Parea Hemiphaga chathamensis
 
 Genus Cryptophaps
 Sombre Pigeon, Cryptophaps poecilorrhoa
 
 Genus Gymnophaps - mountain-pigeons
 Papuan Mountain-pigeon Gymnophaps albertisii
 Long-tailed Mountain-pigeon Gymnophaps mada
 Pale Mountain-pigeon Gymnophaps solomonensis
 
 Genus Ptilinopus - fruit-doves (some 50 living species, 1-2 recently extinct)
 
 Genus Natunaornis - Viti Levu Giant Pigeon (prehistoric)
 
 Genus Drepanoptila
 Cloven-feathered Dove, Drepanoptila holosericea
 
 Genus Alectroenas - blue pigeons
 Madagascar Blue Pigeon, Alectroenas madagascariensis
 Comoro Blue Pigeon, Alectroenas sganzini
 Seychelles Blue Pigeon, Alectroenas pulcherrima
 Farquhar Blue Pigeon, Alectroenas sp. (extinct)
 Mauritius Blue Pigeon, Alectroenas nitidissima (extinct)
 Rodrigues Pigeon "Alectroenas" rodericana (extinct; probably distinct genus)
 
 Subfamily Raphinae - didines
 
 Genus Raphus - Dodo (extinct; late 17th century)
 
 Genus Pezophaps - Rodrigues Solitaire (extinct; c.1730)
 
 Placement unresolved
 
 Genus Caloenas
 Nicobar Pigeon, Caloenas nicobarica
 Greater Maned Pigeon, Caloenas canacorum (prehistoric)
 Liverpool Pigeon, "Caloenas" maculata - extinct; probably distinct genus
 
 Genus Treron - green pigeons
 Cinnamon-headed Green Pigeon, Treron fulvicollis
 Little Green Pigeon, Treron olax
 Pink-necked Green Pigeon, Treron vernans
 Orange-breasted Green Pigeon, Treron bicincta
 Pompadour Green Pigeon, Treron pompadora
 Thick-billed Green Pigeon, Treron curvirostra
 Grey-cheeked Green Pigeon, Treron griseicauda
 Sumba Green Pigeon, Treron teysmannii
 Flores Green Pigeon, Treron floris
 Timor Green Pigeon, Treron psittacea
 Large Green Pigeon, Treron capellei
 Yellow-footed Green Pigeon, Treron phoenicoptera
 Bruce's Green Pigeon, Treron waalia
 Madagascar Green Pigeon, Treron australis
 African Green Pigeon, Treron calva
 Pemba Green Pigeon, Treron pembaensis
 Sao Tome Green Pigeon, Treron sanctithomae
 Pin-tailed Green Pigeon, Treron apicauda
 Sumatran Green Pigeon, Treron oxyura
 Yellow-vented Green Pigeon, Treron seimundi
 Wedge-tailed Green Pigeon, Treron sphenura
 White-bellied Green Pigeon, Treron sieboldii
 Whistling Green Pigeon, Treron formosae
 
 Genus Phapitreron - brown doves
 White-eared Brown Dove, Phapitreron leucotis
 Amethyst Brown Dove, Phapitreron amethystina
 Dark-eared Brown Dove, Phapitreron cinereiceps
 
 Genus Leucosarcia - Wonga Pigeon
 
 Genus Microgoura - Choiseul Crested Pigeon (extinct; early 20th century)
 
 Genus Dysmoropelia
 St Helena Dove, Dysmoropelia dekarchiskos (extinct)
 
 Genus indeterminate
 Henderson Island Archaic Pigeon, Columbidae gen. et sp. indet. (prehistoric)
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbidae
 
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