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Sexing California Clapper Rails using morphological measurements

January 1, 2009

California Clapper Rails (Rallus longirostris obsoletus) have monomorphic plumage, a trait that makes identification of sex difficult without extensive behavioral observation or genetic testing. Using 31 Clapper Rails (22 females, 9 males), caught in south San Francisco Bay, CA, and using easily measurable morphological characteristics, we developed a discriminant function to distinguish sex. We then validated this function on 33 additional rails. Seven morphological measurements were considered, resulting in three which were selected in the discriminate function: culmen length, tarsometatarsus length, and flat wing length. We had no classification errors for the development or testing datasets either with resubstitution or cross-validation procedures. Male California Clapper Rails were 6-22% larger than females for individual morphological traits, and the largest difference was in body mass.  Variables in our discriminant function closely match variables developed for sexing Clapper Rails of Gulf Coast populations. However, a universal discriminant function to sex all Clapper Rail subspecies is not likely because of large and inconsistent differences in morphological traits among subspecies. 

Publication Year 2009
Title Sexing California Clapper Rails using morphological measurements
Authors Cory T. Overton, Michael L. Casazza, John Y. Takekawa, Tobias M. Rohmer
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title North American Bird Bander
Index ID 70176794
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Western Ecological Research Center