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
Artamus cinereus inkermani
Keast
Artamus cinereus inkermani
Keast, 1958: 214
(Inkerman)
.
Now
Artamus cinereus inkermani
Keast, 1958
. See
Mayr, 1962b: 165
;
Ford, 1978
;
Schodde and Mason, 1999: 565–567
;
Dickinson, 2003: 464
; and
Rowley and Russell, 2009b: 307
.
HOLOTYPE
:
AMNH 665009
, adult male, collected at
Inkerman Station
,
19.45S
,
147.29E
(
USBGN
, 1957),
Queensland
,
Australia
, on
16 April 1907
, by
Wilfred Stalker
(no. 302).
From
the
Mathews Collection
via the Rothschild Collection.
COMMENTS: In the original description, Keast gave the AMNH number of the
holotype
and said that he based the name on five AMNH specimens from Inkerman.
Ingram (1908b: 471)
listed four specimens of
A. cinereus
(as
A. hypoleucus
, with
albiventris
as a synonym) from Inkerman, one of which, AMNH 665011, is an immature male and was not mentioned by Keast. The other two Ingram specimens in addition to the
holotype
are considered
paratypes
of
inkermani
:
AMNH 665010
, male,
15 March 1907
,
AMNH 665012
, female,
5 March 1907
, both collected by Wilfred Stalker. There are two further AMNH specimens that I consider
paratypes
of
inkermani
:
AMNH 461373
, male,
AMNH 461375
, female, collected
20 miles
south of Inkerman, on
4 August 1954
, by J.L.C. Lawson. These specimens were cataloged in 1954 or 1955 and would have been available to Keast. A third specimen, AMNH 461374, female, collected at
Marlborough
,
Queensland
, on
10 August 1954
, by Lawson is not considered a
paratype
, as that locality is not mentioned by Keast.
When these specimens were studied by
Ford (1978: 106)
, he considered
normani
and
inkermani
to be synonyms of
albiventris
, stating that
normani
showed signs of introgression. But he did not state the same for
inkermani
, only repeating Keast’s statement that they were paler on the breast and abdomen. In his table 1 and
figure 1
,
Ford (1978: 108–109)
did not indicate evidence of introgression.
Schodde and Mason (1999: 565–567)
accepted
normani
as representing
A. cinereus
on the
Cape
York
Peninsula. For the white bellied forms farther south in
Queensland
, they considered
hypoleucus
and
albiventris
, which share
type
material, to be unidentifiable, and they renamed and retypified the southern form as
Artamus cinereus dealbatus
, but did not mention
inkermani
. The above specimens all are whitish on the abdomen and have white vents and undertail coverts. Further comparisons are needed before a decision can be made about the validity of
inkermani
, but AMNH lacks comparative material of
dealbatus
.