Ciconia, Brisson, 1760
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4780.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D6CC1683-8BF0-4ABF-ABFE-3EC63E66AE5C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3856793 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039EF96A-FFFC-225F-ED83-F88CFB21FDDB |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Ciconia |
status |
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Ciconia View in CoL sp.
( Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 :A)
Ciconia sp. Suárez & Olson, 2003a, Condor, vol. 105, p.151. Referred material. San Felipe I: Distal end of right tibiotarsus, MNHNCu 75.4599.
Description. This specimen differs, according to Suárez & Olson (2003a:151), from the same element in Mycteria americana Linnaeus, 1758 , by a wide intercondylar groove ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ; very narrow in the living species). The only known specimen of Ciconia sp., has a distal width of 15.4; smaller than in the tibiotarsus of C. maltha L. Miller, 1910 (18.0–21.5, N = 25 [ Howard 1942]), and C. maguari ( Gmelin, 1789) (17.1–19.6, N = 5 [ Suárez & Olson 2003a: table 1]).
Comments. Known in Cuba only from asphalt deposits, where the fragment in discussion seems to represent a new species of stork, not yet described ( Suárez & Olson 2003a), smaller than Ciconia maltha , and similar in size to the White Stork, C. ciconia ( Linnaeus, 1758) . The only other material in Cuba referable to this genus is a proximal third of tarsometatarsus and a distal end of tibiotarsus, from the thermal baths of Ciego Montero, Palmira Municipality, Cienfuegos Province, originally identified as Jabiru mycteria Lichtenstein, 1819 , by Wetmore (1928:2), and reassigned to C. maltha by Howard (1942). This last species has not been registered in Cuba since that date. Agnolín (2009) considered that C. maltha is a posterior synonym of C. lydekkeri ( Ameghino, 1891) .
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