The type specimens, type localities and nomenclature of Sarcoramphus vultures (Aves: Cathartidae), with a note on their speciation
Author
Mlíkovský, Jiří
text
Zootaxa
2015
3918
4
579
586
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3918.4.7
c7707453-facb-4798-8bb2-227162f7bc0f
1175-5326
244381
551F0100-C2BD-4B06-B13D-CB0E2E073383
Sarcoramphus sacer
(Zimmermann)
Bartram (1791: 150)
described from his travels in southeastern North
America
a vulture, which he called
Vultur sacra
. Most ornithologists accepted
sacra
as a valid species until the 1870s (e.g.,
Vieillot 1819
: 458,
Cassin 1853
: 59,
Sharpe 1874
: 22, footnote), but subsequent authors (e.g.,
Ridgway 1887
,
Peters 1931
,
Hellmayr & Conover 1949
: 4,
Friedmann 1950
: 17) did not recognize
sacra
as a taxon. Other authors (e.g.,
Yadav 2004
: 44–46, Hume & Walters 2011: 329–330) were uncertain about its taxonomic status. Recently,
Snyder and Fry (2013)
resurrected
sacra
as a species, but left the authorship of the name, its
type
locality and
type
series unresolved.
The name
Vultur sacra
first appeared in
Bartram (1791: 150, 289)
, but this work was correctly recognized as non-binominal and the names created by Bartram in it were declared not available for the purposes of zoological nomenclature (
Hemming 1955
, ICZN 1957).
McAtee (1942: 104)
suggested that
sacra
should be attributed to Lesson (“1831” = 1830: 26; for the dating of Lesson’s work see
Mathews 1911
,
1925
;
Zimmer 1926
; and
Dickinson 2008
, 2011).
Friedmann (1950: 17)
attributed
sacra
to Cassin (“1854" [= 1853]: 59), a view adopted by
Snyder & Fry (2013: 75)
.
My search of literature showed that the name
Vultur sacra
should be attributed to Zimmermann (in
Bartram 1793
: 147, footnote). Eberhard August Wilhelm von Zimmermann (
1743–1815
), a
German
zoologist, translated Bartram's book into
German
, blamed Bartram for his ignorance of scientific literature and non-acceptance of Linnaean nomenclature and added, in footnotes, Latin binomina to those species described by Bartram which he (Zimmermann) recognized as new for science. His names added to Bartram's work are thus available for the purposes of zoological nomenclature, as first observed by
Mathews (1914)
. Shortly after Zimmermann, the name
Vultur sacra
was also used by
Meyer (1794: 288)
in a manner required by the Code.
Although the species was described as “
Vultur sacra
”, the ending of the specific name should be corrected to
sacer
if combined with the generic names
Vultur
or
Sarcoramphus
, because the gender of both of these names is masculine and
sacer
is a classical Latin adjective, meaning sacred or holy (Art. 34.2 of the Code).
Zimmermann (in
Bartram 1793
) clearly based his
sacer
on the birds described by
Bartram (1791
: 150–152, 1792: 148–150, 1793: 147–149). Bartram reported on an unspecified number of birds of this species and mentioned that "the Creeks or Muscogulges construct their royal standard of the tail feather of this bird" (
Bartram 1791: 151; note the singular “feather”
). Thus, the
type
series upon which Zimmermann (in
Bartram 1793
) based his
Vultur sacer
consists of an unspecified set of specimens and tail feathers.
Snyder and Fry (2013: 68–69)
speculated that the feathers shown on the picture of "Mico Chlucco the Long Warrior" (see below for citations) might belong to
Vultur sacer
. Considering that
Bartram (1791
,
1792
,
1793
) did not refer to these specific feathers when he described the vulture, there is no basis for considering the feathers shown on the pictures of Long Warrior to be
syntypes
of
Vultur sacer
Zimmermann.
Harper (1936: 381)
suggested that Bartram observed these vultures at St. John's River north of Lake George, Florida, because he (Bartram) reported on them in the corresponding part of his travelogue (see also
Harper 1943
: 165).
Snyder & Fry (2013: 79)
came to the same conclusion. Thus, this area, approximately corresponding with the modern-day Putnam County, Florida, can be considered the
type
locality of
Vultur sacer
Zimmermann.