Type Specimens Of Birds In The American Museum Of Natural History Part 8. Passeriformes: Author Pachycephalidae Author Aegithalidae Author Remizidae Author Paridae Author Sittidae Author Neosittidae Author Certhiidae Author Rhabdornithidae Author Climacteridae Author Dicaeidae Author Pardalotidae Author Nectariniidae, And Author Lecroy, Mary Division of Vertebrate Zoology (Ornithology) American Museum of Natural History (lecroy @ amnh. org) text Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2010 2010-06-03 2010 333 1 178 journal article 0003-0090 Cinnyris frenata dissentiens Hartert Cinnyris frenata dissentiens Hartert, 1896a: 152 (Indrulaman, Bonthain Peak) . Now Cinnyris jugularis plateni (Blasius, 1885) . See White and Bruce, 1986: 405–406 , and Cheke and Mann, 2008a: 296–297 . LECTOTYPE : AMNH 687631 , adult male, collected at Indrulaman , Sulawesi ( 5 Celebes ), Indonesia , in October 1895 , by Alfred Everett. From the Rothschild Collection. COMMENTS: Hartert did not designate a type in the original description, but said that he had a pair from Indrulaman and five specimens collected by Everett on Salayar ( 5 Saleyer) Island , which he included in dissentiens . Later , Hartert (1920a: 427) listed the male from Indrulaman as the type, thereby designating it the lectotype of dissentiens . Only four specimens from Salayar came to AMNH with the Rothschild Collection ; they (as well as the specimen that did not) are paralectotypes , as is the female from Indrulaman: AMNH 687612 , male, Salayar, November 1895 ; AMNH 687613 , male, Salayar, November 1895 ; AMNH 687614 , male immature, Salayar, November 1895 ; AMNH 687615 , male, Salayar, 22 November 1895 ; and AMNH 687632 , female, Indrulaman, October 1895 . The Salayar specimens also comprise the type series of saleyerensis , see below . Although Hartert indicated, when he designated the lectotype , that Indrulaman was on Bonthain Peak, 05.20S , 119.55E (USBGN, 1982), he ( Hartert, 1896a: 149 ) had noted earlier that it was at about 2300 ft , in the foothills and ‘‘a short day’s walk from the mountain.’’