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
Lonchura punctulata holmesi
Restall
Lonchura punctulata holmesi
Restall, 1992: 115
(country east of Pontianak and Banjamarsin [Borneo]).
Now
Lonchura punctulata nisoria
(Temminck, 1830)
. See
Restall, 1995: 141
;
Restall, 1997: 34
, 103–104;
LeCroy, 1999: 214–215
; Smythies, 2000: 616–617;
Dickinson, 2003: 735
;
Mann, 2008: 356
;
Myers, 2009: 197
;
Payne, 2010: 366
.
LECTOTYPE
:
AMNH 831281
, sex?, said to have come from Semitau,
00.30N
,
111.59E
,
Kalimantan
, Borneo,
Indonesia
, cage bird prepared by
R. Restall.
COMMENTS: As noted by
LeCroy (1999: 214–215)
there are a number of problems associated with this name. Although claimed by
Restall (1997: 103–104)
to have been described in 1995 (
Restall, 1995: 141
), it had been described prior to that date by
Restall (1992: 115)
. That description was based on nine individuals said to have been captured east of Pontianak,
00.05S
,
109.16E
(Times atlas), and shipped from that city and on 20 individuals shipped from Banjarmasin (5 Banjamarsin),
03.22S
,
114.33E
(Times atlas); all 29 of these individuals are
syntypes
of
holmesi
.
Restall (1995: 141)
listed only three specimens as
syntypes
, with their AMNH numbers given. They are said to have come from Semitau,
00.30N
,
111.59E
, and are apparently from among the nine
syntypes
said to have come from ‘‘east of Pontianak.’’ Because the supposed collecting locality of the two groups of
syntypes
were widely separated (with a mountain range between them) and because apparently only the three listed
syntypes
were preserved, I (
LeCroy, 1999: 214
) designated AMNH 831281 as the
lectotype
, citing the 1985 Code, then in use. The other two
syntypes
,
AMNH 831282
and
AMNH 831283
, became
paralectotypes
.
Because none of these specimens was sexed by dissection Restall must have used tail measurements as his means of sexing them. His statement that the male had a longer tail appears to be a circular argument. Restall’s method of measuring the tail, shown in one of his diagrams (
Restall 1992: 116
), was made from the tip of the wing to the tip of the tail, which makes comparison with published measurements of other populations impossible.
There has been much discussion of this subspecies in the literature. Smythies (2000: 616) noted the similarity to
nisoria
from Java and suggested that they might have been introduced into Kalimantan from that
Island
and then escaped.
Payne (2010: 366)
synonymized
holmesi
with
nisoria
.