Type Specimens Of Birds In The American Museum Of Natural History Part 11. Passeriformes: Parulidae, Drepanididae, Vireonidae, Icteridae, Fringillinae, Carduelinae, Estrildidae, And Viduinae
Author
LeCroy, Mary
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2013
2013-09-26
2013
381
1
155
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/832.1
journal article
10.1206/832.1
85bd2c66-f9f0-4172-8d82-2e8841cd354a
0003-0090
4611863
Basileuterus tristriatus chitrensis
Griscom
Basileuterus tristriatus chitrensis
Griscom, 1927a: 13
(Chitrá (
4000 ft
),
Veraguas
, Pacific slope of western
Panama
).
Now
Basileuterus tristriatus melanotis
Lawrence, 1868
. See
Hellmayr, 1935: 491–492
; Zimmer, 1949: 38;
Blake, 1958: 561–562
;
Lowery and Monroe, 1968: 72
;
Wetmore et al., 1984: 314– 315
;
Dickinson, 2003: 767
;
Curson, 2010b: 795
; and
Lovette et al., 2010: 765–766
.
HOLOTYPE
:
AMNH 257138
, adult male, collected at
Chitra
,
4000 ft
, ca.
08.32N
,
80.55W
(
Siegel and Olson, 2008
),
Veraguas
, western
Panama
, on
29 January 1926
, by
Rex R. Benson
(no. 2055).
COMMENTS:
Griscom
cited the
AMNH
number of the
holotype
in the original description and listed two males from
Santa Fé
and seven males (in addition to the type), seven females and three sex? from Chitra.
Paratypes
in
AMNH
are:
Santa Fe´
:
AMNH 187748
,
187749
, males,
7 and 8 April 1925
, by Benson
;
Chitra
,
AMNH 246437–246453
, seven males, seven females, three sex?,
December-March
1926, by
Benson. I
did not find
AMNH
246438 in
the collection
.
Hellmayr (1935: 491–492)
and Zimmer (1949: 38) recognized both
melanotis
and
chitrensis
;
Lowery and Monroe (1968: 72)
omitted
melanotis
, not listing
Costa Rica
within the range of
tristriatus
;
Dickinson, 2003: 767
) apparently followed Lowery and Monroe and omitted
melanotis.
Blake (1958: 560–561)
questioned the distinctness of
melanotis
and
chitrensis
‘‘in view of the variability apparent in a representative series of
melanotis
from Chiriquí’’;
Wetmore et al. (1984: 314–315)
considered
chitrensis
a synonym of
melanotis
and correctly used the older name,
melanotis
Lawrence, 1868
;
Curson (2010b: 795)
said ‘‘
melanotis
(described from
Costa Rica
) is treated as [a] synonyn of
chitrensis
,’’ but, of course, if the two forms are synonyms,
melanotis
is senior by nearly 60 years.