Taraba major duidae Chapman, 1929: 17
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1206/0003-0090(2000)257<0001:TSOBIT>2.0.CO;2 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6F618792-FF96-FD79-294F-D6AFFDEEFE57 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Taraba major duidae Chapman, 1929: 17 |
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Taraba major duidae Chapman, 1929: 17 View in CoL (Mt. Duida,
6200 ft., Venezuela). Now Taraba major duidae Chapman, 1929 . See Phelps and Phelps, 1963: 80.
HOLOTYPE: AMNH 245925 , adult female, collect- ed at Camp no. 16, Caño de Sapos , 6200 ft, Cerro Duida, 03°25′N, 65°40′W, Amazonas, Venezuela, on 18 January 1929, by the Olalla brothers on the Tyler Duida Expedition. GoogleMaps
Taraba major virgultorum Cherrie
Taraba major virgultorum Cherrie, 1916b: 391 (Todos Santos, Rio Chaparé, Bolivia).
Now Taraba major major (Vieillot, 1816) View in CoL . See Cory and Hellmayr, 1924: 47.
HOLOTYPE: AMNH 148400 , adult male, collected at Todos Santos , 16°48′S, 65°08′W, ca. 300 m, Río Chaparé, Cochabamba, Bolivia, on 13 March 1915, by George K. Cherrie (no. 18522) on the Collins – Day Expedition. GoogleMaps
Hypolophus canadensis intermedius Cherrie Hypolophus canadensis intermedius Cherrie, 1916c: 277 (Caicara, Orinoco River, Venezuela).
Now Sakesphorus canadensis intermedius (Cherrie, 1916) . See Meyer de Schauensee and Phelps, 1978: 203, and Pinto, 1978: 345.
HOLOTYPE: AMNH 177287 , adult female (not male), collected at Caicara , 07°37′N, 66°10′W, Río Orinoco, Bolivar, Venezuela, on 9 May 1905, by George K. Cherrie (no. 13669). Formerly in the collection of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences Museum, no. 3674. GoogleMaps
Sakesphorus canadensis fumosus Zimmer Sakesphorus canadensis fumosus Zimmer, 1933c: 10
(Lalaja, Río Orinoco, Venezuela; altitude 325 feet).
Now Sakesphorus canadensis fumosus Zimmer, 1933 . See
Ridgely and Tudor, 1994: 224.
HOLOTYPE: AMNH 273356 , adult male, collected at La Laja, 325 ft, ca. 03°10′N, 65°35′W, Río Orinoco , Amazonas, Venezuela, 26 February 1929, by the Olalla brothers on the Tyler Duida Expedition. GoogleMaps
COMMENTS: The manuscript notes on the Olalla collecting localities in the Department of Ornithology have the brothers at this locality 26–28 February and 1–9 March 1929. It is listed only as “Rio Orinoco, Mte. Duida.” In an effort to place La Laja more exactly, we consulted the journals of G. H. H. Tate, leader of the Tyler Duida Expedition, housed in the Department of Mammalogy, AMNH. Tate was at higher altitude camps during much of the expedition, but made many trips up and down Mt. Duida to keep in touch with the Olallas. In his letter of 23 February 1929, Tate noted “Water in camp at Grand Savannah had dried up and [the Olallas] had crossed to Fish Cano [= Cano Pescado on the right bank of the Orinoco].... I... told [Olalla] to move out to the bank of the Orinoco to a station [La Laja] a little way down the river. There is a flat rock expanse there, and an abandoned house.” We read this as meaning that La Laja is also on the right bank, as it was shown on Gilliard’s (1941: 454) map.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Taraba major duidae Chapman, 1929: 17
LECROY, MARY & SLOSS, RICHARD 2000 |
Taraba major virgultorum
Cherrie 1916: 391 |