Drongo - Species of Dicruridae in Taxonomic Order

Species of Dicruridae in Taxonomic Order

Dicruridae

aeneus



paradiseus



annectans




megarhynchus



bracteatus




hottentotus



balicassius






remifer




waldenii



aldabranus



forficatus





adsimilis



macrocercus




modestus




fuscipennis





leucophaeus





atripennis



ludwigii





A phylogenetic overview of the family.

Genus Dicrurus

  • Bronzed Drongo, Dicrurus aeneus
  • Lesser Racket-tailed Drongo, Dicrurus remifer
  • Square-tailed Drongo, Dicrurus ludwigii
  • Shining Drongo, Dicrurus atripennis
  • Fork-tailed Drongo, Dicrurus adsimilis
  • Velvet-mantled Drongo, Dicrurus modestus
  • Aldabra Drongo, Dicrurus aldabranus
  • Grand Comoro Drongo, Dicrurus fuscipennis
  • Crested Drongo, Dicrurus forficatus
  • Mayotte Drongo, Dicrurus waldenii
  • Black Drongo, Dicrurus macrocercus
  • Ashy Drongo, Dicrurus leucophaeus
  • White-bellied Drongo, Dicrurus caerulescens
  • Crow-billed Drongo, Dicrurus annectans
  • Hair-crested Drongo, Dicrurus hottentottus
  • Balicassiao, Dicrurus balicassius
  • Sulawesi Drongo, Dicrurus montanus
  • Sumatran Drongo, Dicrurus sumatranus
  • Wallacean Drongo, Dicrurus densus
  • Paradise Drongo, Dicrurus megarhynchus
  • Spangled Drongo, Dicrurus bracteatus
  • Andaman Drongo, Dicrurus andamanensis
  • Greater Racket-tailed Drongo, Dicrurus paradiseus

Genus Chaetorhynchus (Now best placed with Rhipiduridae):

  • Pygmy Drongo, Chaetorhynchus papuensis

Read more about this topic:  Drongo

Famous quotes containing the words species of, species and/or order:

    A man can go from being a lover to being a stranger in three moves flat ... but a woman under the guise of friendship will engage in acts of duplicity which come to light very much later. There are different species of self-justification.
    Anita Brookner (b. 1938)

    A man can go from being a lover to being a stranger in three moves flat ... but a woman under the guise of friendship will engage in acts of duplicity which come to light very much later. There are different species of self-justification.
    Anita Brookner (b. 1938)

    There are instances when we are like horses, we psychologists, and grow restless: we see our own shadow wavering up and down before us. A psychologist must look away from himself in order to see anything at all.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)