Todus
Todus is a genus of birds in the family Todidae, the todies, found in the Caribbean. It is the only extant genus with the family Todidae. The five species are small, near passerine birds of the forests of the Greater Antilles: Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and Cuba, with adjacent islands, have one species each, and Hispaniola has two, the broad-billed tody in the lowlands and the narrow-billed tody in the highlands.
Taxonomy and systematics
The genus Todus was introduced by the French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760 with the Jamaican tody as the type species. Todus is a Latin word for a small bird mentioned by the Roman playwright Plautus and the grammarian Sextus Pompeius Festus. This name had earlier been used for the Jamaican tody by the Irish physician Patrick Browne in his book The Civil and Natural History of Jamaica which was published in 1756.Extant species
Five species are recognized:Image | Scientific name | Common Name | Distribution |
Todus multicolor | Cuban tody | Cuba | |
Todus subulatus | Broad-billed tody | Hispaniola | |
Todus angustirostris | Narrow-billed tody | Haiti and the Dominican Republic. | |
Todus todus | Jamaican tody | Jamaica | |
Todus mexicanus | Puerto Rican tody | Puerto Rico |
Former species
- Emperor fairywren
- Leaden flycatcher
Description