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title: "Cory's and Scopoli's Shearwaters are now considered to be separate species"
---

# Cory's and Scopoli's Shearwaters are now considered to be separate species

George Sangster ([Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History](http://www.nrm.se/english/researchandcollections/researchdivision/vertebratezoology.74_en.html), Stockholm, Sweden) and colleagues writing in the journal *[Ibis](http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1474-919X)* have reviewed the taxonomy of the three *Calonectris* shearwater taxa of the Mediterranean and North Atlantic and consider that Scopoli's or Mediterranean Shearwater *C. diomedea*that breeds within the Mediterranean is a monotypic species, separable from Cory's Shearwater *C. borealis* of the Macaronesian Islands in the North Atlantic.  Hitherto these two taxa have been usually separated only at the subspecific level.  The third taxon (now generally recognized as a full species) is the Cape Verde Shearwater *C. edwardsii**of the Cape Verde Islands*.

 Abbreviated extracts from their paper follow:

 "Phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial DNA sequences indicate that the three subspecies of Cory's Shearwater form reciprocally monophyletic groups and suggest that *C. d. diomedea* and *C. d. edwardsii* are more closely related to each other than either is to *C. d. borealis.  C. d. borealis* and *C. d. diomedea* differ in mean size and in the typical extent of white on the inner webs of the primaries.  The three taxa further differ in vocalizations.  Playback studies have documented differential responses to recordings of *C. d. borealis* and *C. d. diomedea*.  There are several reports of *C. d. borealis* within breeding colonies of *C. d. diomedea* but most of these involved non-breeding individuals or birds of unknown breeding status.  Despite intensive monitoring of Atlantic and Mediterranean breeding colonies, reports of interbreeding by *C. d. borealis* and *C. d. diomedea* are limited.  [T]he breeding grounds of these two forms are not fully allopatric and ... some mechanisms of reproductive isolation are likely to be involved in maintaining their differences.  *C. d. borealis* and *C. d. diomedea* breeding in sympatry in the Chafarinas Islands differ in their feeding ecology and foraging areas during both chick-rearing and wintering periods.  The Cory's Shearwater complex is best treated as three full species.  [These are] Cory's Shearwater *Calonectris borealis*, Scopoli's Shearwater *Calonectris diomedea*, Cape Verde Shearwater *Calonectris edwardsii*."

 ![corys_shearwater_john_graham](https://acap.aq/images/stories/acap/Birds/Shearwaters/Corys/corys_shearwater_john_graham.jpg)  
A Cory's/Scopoli's Shearwater off South Africa. Photograph by John Graham

 **Reference:**

 Sangster, G., Collinson, J.M., Crochet, P.A., Knox, A.G., Parkin, D.T. & Votier S.C.  2012.  Taxonomic recommendations for British birds: eighth report.  [*Ibis*154: 874-883](http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1474-919X.2012.01273.x/pdf).

 John Cooper, ACAP Information officer, 3 November 2012
