Presence
Presence status | Incorrectly reported (3b) |
Notes on presence status | Voous (1965) and Prins et al. (2009) recorded Tyto alba for the Dutch Caribbean islands. According to Gill et al. (2024) the American Barn Owl is one of three genetic and morphological clades of classical cosmopolitan Barn Owl T. alba and should be named American barn owl Tyto furcata subsp. (Aliabadian et al. 2016, König & Weick 2009, Nijman & Aliabadian 2013, Uva et al. 2018). |
Publications
- Aliabadian, M., Alaei-Kakhki, N., Mirshami, O., Nijman, V. & Roulin, A. 2016. Phylogeny, biogeography, and diversification of barnowls (Aves: Strigiformes). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 119: 904-918.
- Gill, F., Donsker, D. & Rasmussen, P. 2024. IOC World Bird List (14.1). [link]
- Nijman, V. & Aliabadian, M. 2013. DNA Barcoding as a Tool for Elucidating Species Delineation in Wide-ranging Species as Illustrated by Owls (Tytonidae and Strigidae). Zoological Science 30: 1005-1009.
- Prins, T.G., J.H. Reuter, A.O. Debrot, J. Wattel & V. Nijman 2009. Checklist of the birds of Aruba, Curaçao and Bonaire, South Caribbean. Ardea 97(2): 137-268.
- Uva, V., Päckert, M., Cibois, A., Fumagalli, L. & Roulin, A. 2018. Comprehensive molecular phylogeny of barn owls and relatives (Family: Tytonidae), and their six major Pleistocene radiations. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 125: 127-137.
- Voous, K.H. 1955. De vogels van de Nederlandse Antillen (Birds of the Netherlands Antilles). 205pp. Werkgroep Nederlandse Antillen, Curaçao.