- Source: Forktail
- Ayam hutan hijau
- Meninting kalimantan
- Mandar talaud
- Gunung Tambora
- Luntur jawa
- Mandar Calayan
- Brinji bergaris
- Meninting
- Cinenen
- Merbah emas-banggai
- Forktail
- Forktail (disambiguation)
- Bornean forktail
- Little forktail
- Spotted forktail
- African forktail snapper
- White-crowned forktail
- Sunda forktail
- Forktail lates
- Ictalurus
The forktails are small insectivorous birds in the genus Enicurus. They were formerly placed in the thrush family, Turdidae, but are now treated as part of the Old World flycatcher family, Muscicapidae. Their common name derives from their long forked tail.
These are southeast Asian forest species principally associated with mountain forests and streams. Most nest in rock crevices, laying 2–4 eggs.
Taxonomy
The genus Enicurus was introduced in 1822 by the Dutch zoologist Coenraad Jacob Temminck to accommodate Enicurus coronatus, the white-crowned forktail, which is therefore the type species. Temminck's epithet is considered to be a junior synonym as four years earlier in 1818 Louis Vieillot had coined the binomial name Turdus leschenaulti for the same species. The genus name combines the Ancient Greek henikos meaning "singular" with -ouros meaning "-tailed".
The following cladogram showing the relationships between the species is based on a molecular phylogenetic study of the Old World flycatchers published in 2023. The Bornean forktail (Enicurus borneensis) was not included.
Species
The genus contains the following eight species:
Little forktail, Enicurus scouleri
Black-backed forktail, Enicurus immaculatus
Slaty-backed forktail, Enicurus schistaceus
Spotted forktail, Enicurus maculatus
White-crowned forktail, Enicurus leschenaulti
Bornean forktail, Enicurus borneensis
Chestnut-naped forktail, Enicurus ruficapillus
Sunda forktail, Enicurus velatus