Type Specimens Of Birds In The American Museum Of Natural History. Part 7. Passeriformes: Sylviidae, Muscicapidae, Platysteiridae, Maluridae, Acanthizidae, Monarchidae, Rhipiduridae, And Petroicidae
Author
LeCroy, M.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2008
2008-07-02
313
1
1
287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1206/313.1
journal article
10.1206/313.1
0003-0090
13223808
Ethelornis normantoni
Mathews
Ethelornis normantoni
Mathews, 1920a: 169
(Kimberley (
5
Normanton),
Gulf
of Carpentaria,
Queensland
).
Now
Gerygone levigaster levigaster
Gould, 1843
. See
Meise, 1931: 363
,
Ford, 1981a
,
Mayr, 1986b: 455
, and
Schodde and Mason, 1999: 183–184
.
HOLOTYPE
:
AMNH 606952
, adult female, collected at
Karumba
(
5
Kimberley, as on label),
17.29S
,
140.51E
(
Storr, 1984: 184
),
Queensland
,
Australia
, in
July 1884
, by Kendall Broadbent. From the
Mathews Collection
(no. 18454) via the Rothschild Collection.
COMMENTS
:
Mathews (1920a: 169)
named this form thus: ‘‘If the bird described on p. 167 be not
mastersi
it can be called
Ethelornis normantoni
name nov.’’ On p. 167 he described an adult female, said to be the figured specimen, ‘‘Collected at Kimberley (
5
Normanton),
Gulf
of Carpentaria,
Queensland
, in
July 1884
.’’ The above specimen is the single such specimen in the Mathews Collection, which, according to his catalog, Mathews obtained from QM in 1914. It bears a label, the front of which gives the collecting locality as ‘‘Kimberley’’; on the reverse, in a hand unknown, is written ‘‘Collected by K. Broadbent at Normanton Q’land’’. A second label is the Rothschild Collection label printed ‘‘Ex. coll. G.M. Mathews’’ and Mathews’ catalog number, apparently written by Meise, whose note on the reverse reads: ‘‘
Typus
v. normantoni Math. Birds Austr.
v.
8 p.
169
5
Ger. fusca
mastersi, Nov. Zool. 36, p. 363’’. This latter is a reference to Meise’s monograph on
Gerygone
. A third label is a yellow ‘‘Figured’’ label, indicating that it was illustrated in
Mathews (1920a
: pl. 384, top fig., opp. p. 149, text pp. 167–169). The fourth label is an AMNH
type
label written by Mayr.
As he did in this case, Mathews sometimes used the term ‘‘name nov.’’ to indicate a new taxon rather than a nomen novum for an already existing but preoccupied name.
Mayr (1986b: 455)
considered it a nomen novum for
Pseudogerygone mastersi
Sharpe
, which was itself a nomen novum for
Gerygone simplex
Masters
, in which case the
type
would remain that of
Gerygone simplex
(now a synonym of
G. levigaster
. This was also the interpretation of
Longmore (1991: 15–16)
. However, because Mathews gave a description and designated a
type
, it would seem to me to be a valid description.
Meise (1931: 363)
also referred to the
type
of
normantoni
in the Rothschild Collection.
Mathews (1920a: 169)
considered his other specimens from ‘‘Normanton’’, collected by Kemp, to represent
Gerygone mastersi
(
5
Gerygone levigaster levigaster
). But because of the complicated juxtaposition of populations of
Gerygone fusca
and
Gerygone levigaster
in the southern
Gulf
of Carpentaria and the recent reinterpretation of relationships among these populations, it seemed important to reexamine the
type
of
normantoni
carefully.
The
syntypes
of
Gerygone simplex
Masters
, a male and a female, were collected in 1875 on the cruise of the
Chevert
(
Macleay, 1876
), type locality given as the
Gulf
of Carpentaria, and are now in AM (
Longmore, 1991: 16
). Broadbent was not a member of this expedition (
Macleay, 1876: 36–40
) but specimens were apparently obtained from him. Masters’ (1876: 44–64) article in which he reported on the specimens collected on the cruise ‘‘during the months of June, July, August, and September of this year’’ and in which he named
simplex
(p. 52) was communicated to the Linnean Society of
New South Wales
on
27 December 1875
and published in the first part of Volume 1 of the
Proceedings
in 1876 (
February 1876
, according to
Mathews, 1930: 464
).
Mathews’ type of
normantoni
was obtained by him from the QM in 1914. It was apparently part of a later Broadbent collection reported on by
De Vis (1884)
: ‘‘In July last [1884] Mr. K. Broadbent, during his progress in the north, paid a visit to Kimberley, at the mouth of the Norman
River
: a locality which, some years ago, he examined for novelties with success.’’ This has usually been interpreted as Normanton, but Karumba is correct, as listed by
Longmore (1991: 15)
for the
syntypes
of
Gerygone simplex
. Older maps show Kimberley as an alternate name for Karumba. According to
De Vis (1884)
, this was a period of drought (perhaps allowing an invasion of the mangrove areas by species usually found in more inland localities?).
As shown by
Schodde and Mason (1999: 185)
,
mungi
and
exsul
, the central western and eastern subspecies of
fusca
, intergrade in the southern
Gulf
of Carpentaria. The range of
G. l.
levigaster
, the mangrove-inhabiting species, abuts on this area (
Schodde and Mason, 1999: 183
). The
type
of
normantoni
has the base of the outermost rectrices the dull grayish tan of
G. levigaster
, not the clear white of
G. fusca
, thus confirming it as a specimen of the coastal mangrove-inhabiting species.