The 'accentors' are in the only
bird family, Prunellidae, which is completely endemic to the
Palearctic. This small group of closely related
passerines are all in a single genus ''Prunella''. All but the Dunnock and the Japanese Accentor are inhabitants of the mountainous regions of Europe and Asia; these two also occur in lowland areas, as does the Siberian Accentor in the far north of Siberia. This genus is not strongly
migratory, but they will leave the coldest parts of their range in winter, and make altitudinal movements.
These are small, fairly drab species superficially similar, but unrelated to,
sparrows. However, accentors have thin sharp bills, reflecting their diet of insects in summer, augmented with seeds and berries in winter.
They build neat cup nests and lay about 4 unspotted green or blue eggs. Both sexes incubate.
Species list:
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Alpine Accentor, ''
Prunella collaris''
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Altai Accentor, ''
Prunella himalayana''
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Robin Accentor, ''
Prunella rubeculoides''
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Rufous-breasted Accentor, ''
Prunella strophiata''
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Siberian Accentor, ''
Prunella montanella''
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Brown Accentor, ''
Prunella fulvescens''
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Radde's Accentor, ''
Prunella ocularis''
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Black-throated Accentor, ''
Prunella atrogularis''
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Koslow's Accentor, ''
Prunella koslowi''
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Dunnock or
Hedge Accentor or
Hedge Sparrow, ''
Prunella modularis''
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Japanese Accentor, ''
Prunella rubida''
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Maroon-backed Accentor, ''
Prunella immaculata''
Harrison (''An Atlas of the Birds of the Western Palaearctic'', 1982) used the group name 'Dunnock' for all of the species, not just ''Prunella modularis'' (thus e.g. 'Japanese Dunnock' for ''P. rubida''); this usage has much to be said for it, based as it is on the oldest known name for any of the species (old English ''dun''-, brown, + -''ock'', small bird: "little brown bird"), and a much more euphonious name than the contrived "Accentor". ''Accentor'' was the scientific name for the Alpine Accentor (''Accentor collaris''). It comes from
Late Latin, meaning "sing with another" (ad + cantor).
External links
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Accentor videos on the Internet Bird Collection