
thumb|Superciliaried hemispingus (Thlypopsis superciliaris) Hemispingus is a former scientific genus name of slender-billed tanagers in the family Thraupidae in highland forest in South America, especially in the Andes. The name is retained in the common name for several species of birds previously included in the genus:
GENUS
via GBIF · CC0
via Wikidata · CC0
thumb|Superciliaried hemispingus (Thlypopsis superciliaris) Hemispingus is a former scientific genus name of slender-billed tanagers in the family Thraupidae in highland forest in South America, especially in the Andes. The name is retained in the common name for several species of birds previously included in the genus: Black-headed hemispingus Pseudospingus verticalis, syn. Hemispingus verticalis Drab hemispingus Pseudospingus xanthophthalmus, syn. Hemispingus xanthophthalmus Slaty-backed hemispingus Poospiza goeringi, syn. Hemispingus goeringi Rufous-browed hemispingus Poospiza rufosuperciliaris, syn. Hemispingus rufosuperciliaris Grey-capped hemispingus Kleinothraupis reyi, syn. Hemispingus reyi Black-capped hemispingus Kleinothraupis atropileus, syn. Hemispingus atropileus White-browed hemispingus Kleinothraupis auricularis, syn. Hemispingus auricularis Orange-browed hemispingus Kleinothraupis calophrys, syn. Hemispingus calophrys Parodi's hemispingus Kleinothraupis parodii, syn. Hemispingus parodii Oleaginous hemispingus Sphenopsis frontalis, syn. Hemispingus frontalis Black-eared hemispingus Sphenopsis melanotis, syn. Hemispingus melanotis Western hemispingus Sphenopsis ochracea, syn. Hemispingus ochraceus Piura hemispingus Sphenopsis piurae, syn. Hemispingus piurae Superciliaried hemispingus Thlypopsis superciliaris, syn. Hemispingus superciliaris Three-striped hemispingus Microspingus trifasciatus, syn. Hemispingus trifasciatus
The genus Hemispingus, described by Cabanis in 1851 for Hemispingus superciliaris, became superfluous when a molecular phylogenetic study published in 2014 found that this species was embedded in the larger genus Thlypopsis. The name means "half finch", from Greek, hemi, half, and spingos, a finch.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).