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Acrocephalus (bird)

The Acrocephalus warblers are small, insectivorous passerine birds belonging to the genus Acrocephalus. Formerly in the paraphyletic Old World warbler assemblage, they are now separated as the namesake of the marsh and tree warbler family Acrocephalidae. They are sometimes called marsh warblers or reed warblers, but this invites confusion with marsh warbler and reed warbler.

Taxonomy
The genus Acrocephalus was introduced in 1811 by the German naturalist Johann Andreas Naumann and his son Johann Friedrich Naumann. The type species was designated as Turdus arundinaceus Linnaeus, 1758, by the English zoologist George Gray in 1840. This is the great reed warbler. Many species have a flat head profile, which gives rise to the genus name, Acrocephalus from Ancient Greek akros, "highest", and kephale, "head". It is possible that the Naumanns thought akros meant "sharp-pointed". ==List of species in taxonomic order==
List of species in taxonomic order
is raising the young of a common cuckoo. The genus contains 42 species of which 6 insular forms are now extinct: • Bokikokiko, Acrocephalus aequinoctialisPaddyfield warbler, Acrocephalus agricolaGreat reed warbler, Acrocephalus arundinaceus • † Mangareva reed warbler, Acrocephalus astrolabiiTuamotu reed warbler, Acrocephalus atyphusAustralian reed warbler, Acrocephalus australisBlack-browed reed warbler, Acrocephalus bistrigicepsCape Verde warbler, Acrocephalus brevipennisTahiti reed warbler, Acrocephalus cafferBlunt-winged warbler, Acrocephalus concinensBlyth's reed warbler, Acrocephalus dumetorumMillerbird, Acrocephalus familiarisLesser swamp warbler, Acrocephalus gracilirostrisBasra reed warbler, Acrocephalus griseldisSaipan reed warbler, Acrocephalus hiwaeCook reed warbler, Acrocephalus kerearakoMoorea reed warbler, Acrocephalus longirostris • † Nightingale reed warbler, Acrocephalus lusciniusMoustached warbler, Acrocephalus melanopogonSouthern Marquesan reed warbler, Acrocephalus mendanae • † Garrett's reed warbler, Acrocephalus musaeMadagascar swamp warbler, Acrocephalus newtoni • † Aguiguan reed warbler, Acrocephalus nijoiOriental reed warbler, Acrocephalus orientalisLarge-billed reed warbler, Acrocephalus orinusAquatic warbler, Acrocephalus paludicolaMarsh warbler, Acrocephalus palustrisNorthern Marquesan reed warbler, Acrocephalus percernisNauru reed warbler, Acrocephalus rehseiRimatara reed warbler, Acrocephalus rimitaraeRodrigues warbler, Acrocephalus rodericanusGreater swamp warbler, Acrocephalus rufescensSedge warbler, Acrocephalus schoenobaenusCommon reed warbler, Acrocephalus scirpaceusSeychelles warbler, Acrocephalus sechellensisSpeckled reed warbler, Acrocephalus sorghophilusClamorous reed warbler, Acrocephalus stentoreusCaroline reed warbler, Acrocephalus syrinxHenderson reed warbler, Acrocephalus taitiManchurian reed warbler, Acrocephalus tangorum (sometimes included in A. agricola) • Pitcairn reed warbler, Acrocephalus vaughani • † Pagan reed warbler, Acrocephalus yamashinae Fragmentary fossil remains from the Late Miocene (about 11 mya) of Rudabánya (NE Hungary) show some apomorphies typical of this genus. Given its rather early age (most Passerida genera are not known until the Pliocene), it is not too certain that it is correctly placed here, but it is highly likely to belong to the Acrocephalidae at the least. ==References==
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