Type Specimens Of Birds In The American Museum Of Natural History Part 12. Passeriformes: Ploceidae, Sturnidae, Buphagidae, Oriolidae, Dicruridae, Callaeidae, Grallinidae, Corcoracidae, Artamidae, Cracticidae, Ptilonorhynchidae, Cnemophilidae, Paradisaeidae, And Corvidae
Author
Lecroy, Mary
Department of Vertebrate Zoology (Ornithology) American Museum of Natural History
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2014
2014-12-30
2014
393
1
165
journal article
7639
10.1206/885.1
48769858-fe3b-415b-9ac8-3feeb42a9bae
0003-0090
4629954
Xanthomelas bakeri
Chapin
Xanthomelas bakeri
Chapin, 1929: 1
(Madang, Territory of New
Guinea
).
Now
Sericulus bakeri
(
Chapin, 1929
)
. See
Mayr, 1941: 184
;
Mayr and Jennings, 1952: 7–8
;
Gilliard and LeCroy, 1967: 74–75
;
Gilliard, 1969: 330– 335
, pl. 13;
Coates, 1990: 402–403
; and
Frith and Frith, 2004: 343–344
;
2009a: 399–400
.
HOLOTYPE
:
AMNH 268253
, adult male, collected at ‘‘
Madang
,
Territory of New
Guinea,’’ now known to be from the
Adelbert Mountains
,
04.54S
,
145.24E
(
Frith and Beehler, 1998: 566
),
Madang Province
,
Papua New Guinea
, on
29 August 1928
, by
Rollo H. Beck
(no. 84).
COMMENTS: In the original description, Chapin cited the
AMNH
number of the
holotype
and listed the two additional specimens that Beck collected. The two
paratypes
, both labeled as from ‘‘Madang’’ are:
AMNH 268254
(Beck’s no. 134), immature male,
3 September 1928
;
AMNH 268255
(184), male,
10 September 1928
. This last specimen had been exchanged to the Rothschild Collection, and when that collection came to
AMNH
, it was inadvertently renumbered as
AMNH 679305
.
After Rollo Beck left the American Museum’s Whitney South Sea Expedition, Museum Trustee George F. Baker, Jr., supported him on a collecting trip into what was at that time the Mandated Territory of New
Guinea
. He collected in the vicinity of Madang and on the Huon Peninsula, and his most important discovery was this new species of bowerbird. However, the exact collecting locality was not known, and additional specimens were not found until 1959, when E. Thomas Gilliard and his wife, Margaret, made a collection in the Memenga Forest, Adelbert Mountains, to the northwest of Madang (See
Gilliard and LeCroy, 1967: 74– 75
, and
Gilliard, 1969: 330–335
). The bower was first reported by
Mackay (1989: 62–64)
and
Coates (1990: 403)
.
See cover for painting of this species by William T. Cooper.