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Palmchat
Palmchat
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Palmchat
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Superfamily: Bombycilloidea
Family: Dulidae
P.L. Sclater, 1862
Genus: Dulus
Vieillot, 1816
Species:
D. dominicus
Binomial name
Dulus dominicus
(Linnaeus, 1766)
Synonyms

Tanagra dominica Linnaeus, 1766

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is a small, long-tailed passerine bird, the only species in the genus Dulus and the family Dulidae endemic to the Caribbean island of Hispaniola (split between the Dominican Republic and Haiti). It is related to the waxwings, family Bombycillidae. Its name reflects its strong association with palms for feeding, roosting, and nesting.

The palmchat is the national bird of the Dominican Republic.[2]

Taxonomy

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In 1760 the French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson included a description of the palmchat in his Ornithologie based on a specimen collected from the French colony of Saint-Domingue, modern Haiti. He used the French name Le tangara de S. Dominigue and the Latin Tangara Dominicensis.[3] Although Brisson coined Latin names, these do not conform to the binomial system and are not recognised by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature.[4] When the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the twelfth edition in 1766, he added 240 species that had been previously described by Brisson,[4] with one of them being the palmchat. Linnaeus included a brief description, coined the binomial name Tanagra dominica and cited Brisson's work.[5]

The palmchat is the only species placed in the genus Dulus that was introduced by the French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot in 1816.[6][7] The species is monotypic.[7]

Description

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Palmchats are about 20 cm (8 in) in length. They are olive-brown above, and heavily streaked with brown below. Their rumps, as well as the edges of their primary feathers, are dark yellow-green. They have strong yellow bills and russet eyes. They lack the soft silky plumage of the waxwings or silky-flycatchers. Adults show no sexual dimorphism; immature birds have dark throats.[citation needed]

Distribution and habitat

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The species is endemic to the island of Hispaniola (in both Haiti and the Dominican Republic), and the adjacent Saona and Gonâve Islands, where it is common and widespread. It inhabits areas from sea level to 1500 m asl where palm savannas can be found, or other open areas with scattered trees. Where its food trees are present, it has adapted well to city parks and gardens.[citation needed]

Behaviour

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Palmchats are very sociable birds, often seen in small flocks containing several pairs, which will roost closely together with their bodies in contact.

Breeding

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The breeding season is mainly from March to June. The birds build large, messy, communal nests of twigs in the crowns of palms (mainly Puerto Rico royal palms, Roystonea borinquena). Occasionally, in the absence of palms, other trees or even telephone poles may be used. The whole nesting structure may be up to 2 m across, containing up to 30 adjoining nests with their own separate chambers and entrances. The females lay clutches of 2-4 thickly spotted, grey-purple eggs.[citation needed]

Food

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Palmchats feed on fruits and berries, including those of palms and of the gumbo-limbo tree, as well as on flowers, especially those of epiphytic orchids.[citation needed]

Voice

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They are voluble and noisy birds, with a large repertoire of gurgling and cheeping sounds constantly used in their social behaviour.[citation needed] With their loud whistles, they are able to imitate the calls of hawks and kestrels which may be a surprise coming from their tiny bodies. They are typically classified as songbirds, but hardly ever make a coherent song.[8]

Conservation

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The palmchat is a common species within its range of about 75,000 km2 (28,958 sq mi), and highly adaptable. As it is not approaching the thresholds for the population decline criterion of the IUCN Red List (i.e., declining more than 30% in ten years or three generations), it has been evaluated as being of Least Concern.[1]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is a small, olive-brown with a long tail, pale-yellow bill, heavily dark-streaked white underparts, and red irides, measuring approximately 18–20 cm in length. It is the sole in the Dulus and the Dulidae, making it taxonomically unique among New World , and is endemic to the island of , where it occurs throughout the and at elevations from to 1,830 m. Highly social and conspicuous, the palmchat is one of Hispaniola's most abundant resident birds, often observed in noisy flocks of up to 50 individuals foraging high in palm trees. It prefers open, disturbed habitats such as urban areas, dry savannas, and degraded forests containing royal palms ( spp.), from which it derives its common name, though it avoids dense primary forests and montane regions. Primarily frugivorous, it feeds on fruits from palms and other trees but also consumes and arthropods opportunistically; its vocalizations include buzzy, squeaky, and whistled notes that contribute to its noisy presence. A notable aspect of its behavior is its communal nesting, where groups of 5–10 pairs (and occasionally up to 50 birds) construct large, bulky "apartment block" nests from sticks atop palm fronds, sometimes providing secondary nesting sites for other like the endangered Ridgway's hawk (Buteo ridgwayi). Designated as the national bird of the due to its abundance, visibility, and cultural symbolism—appearing on postage stamps and merchandise—the palmchat holds ecological and symbolic importance on the island. Classified as Least Concern by the IUCN with a stable population, it faces no major threats but benefits from ongoing research into its social evolution and role in island ecosystems.

Taxonomy

Classification

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is the sole species comprising the genus Dulus, which was established by Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot in 1816; the species was described by Carl Linnaeus in 1766 as Dulus dominicus in the 12th edition of Systema Naturae. This monotypic genus belongs to the equally monotypic family Dulidae, reflecting the palmchat's isolated taxonomic position among passerines. The family Dulidae was formally recognized and named by Philip Lutley Sclater in 1862, marking a key reclassification that separated the palmchat from earlier associations with other avian groups. Within the broader avian hierarchy, the palmchat is classified in the order Passeriformes and the suborder Passeri, aligning it with the oscine passerines known for their complex vocalizations and structure. This distinct familial status stems from the palmchat's unique morphological features, such as its pale-yellow bill and heavily dark-streaked underparts, combined with behavioral traits like communal breeding in large compound nests, which set it apart from superficially similar but unrelated groups, including the woodcreepers of the Dendrocolaptidae.

Phylogenetic relationships

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) occupies an enigmatic position within the order Passeriformes, with its evolutionary relationships historically difficult to resolve due to convergent morphological traits shared with distantly related taxa. Early hypotheses based on anatomical and behavioral similarities proposed affinities with the waxwings of the Bombycillidae, citing shared features such as soft texture and fruit-based diets, or with the woodcreepers of the Dendrocolaptidae, based on arboreal and climbing adaptations. Molecular phylogenetic analyses have provided greater clarity, placing the palmchat within the oscine . A seminal study by Spellman et al. (2008) in Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, utilizing sequences from two mitochondrial and three nuclear genes across 45 taxa, recovered the palmchat as part of the superfamily Bombycilloidea, with strong support ( >0.95) for its sister relationship to a comprising the waxwings (Bombycillidae) and silky-flycatchers (Ptiliogonatidae), though internal relationships within this group remained partially unresolved due to limited taxon sampling. Subsequent analyses, including broader Passeriformes phylogenies, have corroborated this placement but highlighted ongoing uncertainties in the precise branching order near the base of Bombycilloidea. The palmchat's distinctive traits, including its communal nesting in large, dome-shaped structures housing multiple pairs, diverge markedly from those of its Bombycilloidea relatives, which typically exhibit solitary or paired nesting without such complexity; this behavioral uniqueness reinforces the justification for its monotypic family status as Dulidae.

Physical description

Morphology

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is a small bird measuring 19–20 cm in total length. Its body mass averages 48 g, ranging from 41 to 53 g. The exhibits a averaging 67 mm in length. The wings have a chord length averaging 87 mm. The bill is sturdy, pale yellow, and slightly curved, with a culmen length from base averaging 15 mm. The possesses striking red irides. Palmchats display sexual monomorphism, with no significant size differences between males and females. The overall olive-brown coloration provides a base for plumage variations (see Plumage and variation).

Plumage and variation

The palmchat exhibits a distinctive plumage characterized by dull olive-brown upperparts, with darker brown tones on the wings and tail. The underparts are buff-white to whitish, heavily streaked with dark brown across the breast, throat, and flanks. The bill is pale yellow, and the eyes feature striking russet-red irides in adults. There is no sexual dimorphism in plumage, with males and females appearing identical. Juveniles resemble adults but possess brown irides that transition to russet-red with maturity. Their is broadly similar, though the feathers of the throat and foreneck are darker, nearly solid dark with only faint lighter edgings, resulting in a somewhat duller appearance on the underparts. The bill remains pale yellow in juveniles. The palmchat shows no seasonal plumage changes, maintaining its adult appearance year-round. Intraspecific variation is limited, with no significant differences reported across populations.

Distribution and habitat

Geographic range

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is endemic to the island of , where it occurs throughout both the and as a widespread resident, including satellite islands such as Gonâve and Saona. Its distribution spans a broad elevational from sea level up to 1,830 m. There are no confirmed records of vagrants or introduced populations beyond its native range, and the has remained historically stable based on records dating back to the . The total estimated range area covers approximately 123,000 km².

Habitat preferences

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is primarily associated with open woodlands, dry savannas, and agricultural landscapes that feature palm trees, particularly the royal palm (Roystonea borinquena), where it achieves its highest densities. These environments provide the scattered tree cover and palm availability essential for the species' nesting and roosting behaviors, with the bird showing a marked preference for areas dominated by royal palms over other palm species like coconut (Cocos nucifera) or thatch palms. This species demonstrates considerable adaptability to disturbed and human-modified habitats, including urban edges, gardens, orchards, and heavily degraded former forests, where it readily exploits available palms for shelter. It avoids dense rainforests, which lack the open structure and suitable palm resources it requires, as well as the island's highest montane elevations above 1,830 m. The palmchat exhibits altitudinal flexibility, occurring from up to montane zones around 1,830 m, though populations are densest in semi-arid to mesic conditions within lowland savannas and modified landscapes. Its distribution is closely tied to palm availability, resulting in localized abundances near human-altered areas such as plantations and settlements that support royal palms or similar trees with tall, sturdy structures suitable for nest-building.

Behavior and ecology

Social structure

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is a highly gregarious species that maintains year-round social groups, typically foraging, roosting, and sleeping in flocks of up to 16–20 individuals composed of several socially monogamous pairs and their young. These multi-family units exhibit communal living, with birds traveling and resting in close contact, often with bodies touching during roosts. Group sizes at shared nest sites average around 2.8 pairs (ranging from 1 to 5), though larger nests support up to 5–5.5 birds actively maintaining the structure even outside the breeding season. Social cohesion within flocks is reinforced through affiliative behaviors such as frequent allopreening and coordinated vocal choruses, particularly in large, noisy pre-dawn aggregations exceeding 100 individuals that form before sunrise. These displays help maintain pair and group bonds year-round, with pairs remaining together within the flock. Cooperative defense of communal nest sites against predators, including hawks such as the (Accipiter striatus), is facilitated by the shared "apartment block" nest architecture, which deters attacks through collective occupancy by up to 10 pairs or, rarely, 50 individuals. Aggression is uncommon in general flock interactions but occurs at nest sites, where territorial skirmishes and fights have been observed, potentially arising from overlapping group use of the same structure. During the non-breeding period, units continue to share nest maintenance responsibilities, with higher visit rates to larger nests indicating sustained group investment in communal resources.

Diet and foraging

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is primarily frugivorous, with its diet consisting mainly of fruits and berries from a diverse array of plants, including royal palms (Roystonea spp.), figs (Ficus spp.), and melastomes (family Melastomataceae), as well as the gumbo-limbo tree (Bursera simaruba). It consumes fruits from at least 50 species across 34 plant families, making it a key vertebrate seed disperser in its habitats. Supplemental foods include nectar from flowers—particularly epiphytic orchids—and small amounts of leaves, blossoms, and arthropods such as insects and other invertebrates, though the latter form only a minor component of the overall diet. Palmchats forage mainly in the forest canopy but also descend to lower or ground level when necessary, often in social flocks or aggregations of several individuals that move together between fruiting trees. They employ their stout bill to peck open or extract pulp from larger fruits and occasionally sally into the air to capture flying . Lacking specialized tools or techniques, they are generalist and opportunistic feeders well-adapted to human-modified landscapes, including urban areas and savannas with introduced palms. Dietary composition shows some seasonal variation tied to breeding, which peaks from to ; nestlings receive a mix dominated by fruits but including flowers and arthropods to support growth. In drier periods, reliance increases on abundant palm fruits, reflecting the bird's association with open, palm-dominated habitats.

Reproduction and nesting

The Palmchat exhibits a breeding season typically spanning to . Clutch sizes range from 2 to 4 eggs, which are white with purple-gray spots and incubated primarily by both parents. A defining feature of Palmchat reproduction is the construction of large, communal nests, which are oval or dome-shaped structures up to 1 m wide and composed of palm fibers, grass, and twigs. These nests are built in the crowns of palm trees, particularly royal palms (Roystonea spp.), and accommodate 5–30 breeding pairs, with each pair utilizing a separate, enclosed chamber connected by internal tunnels. The species practices cooperative breeding, in which multiple adults—often more than the breeding pair—share each chamber and assist with incubation duties as well as feeding and caring for the nestlings. Fledglings leave the nest after approximately 30 days, continuing to receive parental provisioning post-fledging. These communal nests are frequently reused across multiple breeding seasons and may serve as substrates for other species, including Ridgway's Hawk (Buteo ridgwayi), which often builds atop them. These communal nests may also serve as nesting sites for other species, such as the Ashy-faced Owl (Tyto glaucops), which has been recorded using active Palmchat nests. Nest success is bolstered by collective defense from group members against potential threats, though predation by introduced mammals such as cats () and rats (* spp.) remains a significant .

Vocalizations

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is a notably vocal species, possessing a complex and diverse repertoire of sounds that includes chatters, whistles, screeches, cheeps, and squeaks, primarily employed in social and foraging contexts. These vocalizations are particularly prominent near communal nests and during group activities, where the bird produces a broad array of gurgling, buzzy, and whistled notes to facilitate communication within flocks. A common contact call is a short, squeaky note often heard pre-flight from perches or in flight, aiding in flock coordination during foraging and movement. Overall, the species exhibits at least five distinct vocalization types, differentiated by quantifiable acoustic parameters such as and duration, as identified through field recordings in the . In flock settings, primary calls often consist of rapid, repetitive series described as "chick-a-dee"-like or "peer-peer-peer" phrases, which help maintain group cohesion and signal location among individuals. Alarm calls are sharp, high-pitched, and varied, with specific types alerting conspecifics to ground-based threats (e.g., a low "rahw" note) or aerial predators, enabling coordinated responses to deter dangers. These calls are frequently emitted in noisy arrays, especially around nesting sites, where they also serve to defend territories and communal roosts. Breeding vocalizations include duet-like phrases exchanged between pairs, contributing to pair bonding and nest defense, though the species lacks a coherent, melodious and instead relies on abrupt, blurted notes and whistles. Vocal mimicry is not a prominent feature of the palmchat's repertoire, though one call type has been suggested to imitate the sound of a native predator, potentially enhancing alarm signaling. This limited contrasts with the bird's overall reliance on innate, species-specific sounds for social interactions, which are constantly used in its gregarious lifestyle. The palmchat's vocalizations underscore its role as a highly communicative endemic of , with recordings indicating their effectiveness in dense flock environments.

Conservation

Population status

The palmchat (Dulus dominicus) is classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List (last assessed 2024), reflecting its stable global population of unknown size. The species remains common and widespread across its range on Hispaniola. Population trends show no significant declines. Monitoring efforts face challenges due to the absence of long-term banding studies.

Threats and protection

The palmchat faces minor threats from driven by agricultural expansion and , which reduce the availability of preferred royal palms for nesting and foraging, particularly in where deforestation rates exceed 90% of original forest cover. As the national bird of the , the palmchat receives symbolic protection and benefits from in reserves such as Jaragua National Park, where it occurs commonly alongside other endemics. While no species-specific recovery programs exist, it is encompassed within broader avian conservation efforts by organizations like BirdsCaribbean, which promote habitat restoration and monitoring across . Hunting for food occurs locally but has not impacted its stable, widespread population. Research priorities, as outlined in the 2022 Birds of the World account, emphasize further study of social breeding dynamics to better inform potential management strategies amid emerging localized pressures.

References

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