Guatemalan Pygmy-Owl (Glaucidium cobanense) occurs in the highlands of northern Central America, including Chiapas (Mexico), Guatemala, and Honduras.
A male of the brown morph calling from a branch of Guatemalan Fir (Abies guatemalensis), mocked by a White-eared Hummingbird. Video by Knut Eisermann.
Vocalizations of Guatemalan Pygmy-Owl (Glaucidium cobanense)
Analyses of the vocalizations of Guatemalan Pygmy-Owl (Glaucidium cobanense), restricted to the highlands of northern Central America, provided new insight in the specific separation from Mountain Pygmy-Owl (Glaucidium gnoma), which occurs in the Mexican highlands north of the isthmus of Tehuantepec. Two papers have been published:
Eisermann, K. & S. N. G. Howell (2011). Vocalizations of the Guatemalan Pygmy-Owl (Glaucidium cobanense). Journal of Raptor Research 45: 304-314.
Abstract: The lowlands of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec separate the range of the Guatemalan Pygmy-Owl
(Glaucidium cobanense), recognized as a species in modern owl taxonomy and resident in the highlands of
southeastern Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras, from the range of Mountain Pygmy-Owl (Glaucidium
gnoma) in the Mexican highlands northwest of the isthmus. Here we document hitherto undescribed
vocalizations of Guatemalan Pygmy-Owls in the Guatemala-Chiapas highlands. We recorded four different
vocalization types of adults: (1) territorial toot calls, (2) whiwhiwhi calls given by the female during nest-site
establishment, (3) soft toot calls of the male near the nest, and (4) copulation calls. The territorial toot calls
of Guatemalan Pygmy-Owls differed from those of Mountain Pygmy-Owls in Mexico. The mean individual
call rate of Guatemalan Pygmy-Owls was 3.4 ± 0.5 notes/sec (n = 49 call series of six individuals), significantly
higher than in Mountain Pygmy-Owls (1.9 ± 0.3 notes/sec, n = 34 call series of eight individuals).
This new evidence of vocal differences supports modern taxonomic separation of both taxa.
Howell, S. N. G. & K. Eisermann (2011) Guatemalan Pygmy-Owl Glaucidium cobanense is a good species. Neotropical Birding 9: 74-76.