Amaurornis


Amaurornis is a genus of birds in the rail family Rallidae. The white-browed crake, type species of the defunct genus Poliolimnas, is now provisionally placed here. The species in this genus are typically called bush-hens. A monotypic subtribe, Amaurornithina, was proposed for this genus.

Systematics

The genus Amaurornis was erected by the German naturalist Ludwig Reichenbach in 1853 with the plain bush-hen as the type species. The name comes from the Greek amauros, meaning "dusky" or "brown" and ornis, meaning "bird".
The New Guinea flightless rail was sometimes included in this genus, but more often held to constitute a distinct monotypic genus Megacrex. The first cladistic studies of rails, based on morphology, strongly suggested that Amaurornis as traditionally defined is not monophyletic, and that several species placed here are in fact closer to the small crakes traditionally placed in Porzana. This was subsequently confirmed by molecular data. However, these smallish species are probably not close to the large members of Porzana either, and would warrant re-establishment of the old genus Zapornia.
Conversely, the white-browed crake - sometimes placed in Porzana too - was moved to Amaurornis when its alternate genus Poliolimnas was abolished. Regardless, it seems to be reasonably close to the striped crake, formerly also in Poliolimnas but subsequently separated as Aenigmatolimnas. Their relationship with each other and the core group of Amaurornis is not yet resolved, so Aenigmatolimnas might eventually also be abolished in favor of Amaurornis, or Poliolimnas might be re-established. Furthermore, the molecular data also confirm the distinctness of Megacrex. More surprisingly, the Amaurornithina are found to contain two singular and monotypic genera, formerly held to be quite distinct from Amaurornis, namely Gallicrex and Himantornis. The former was traditionally considered a more terrestrial member of the moorhens, and the latter even treated as a subfamily of its own.

Species

The genus contains 8 species: