Type specimens and type localities of birds (Aves) collected by Gustav Adolf Fischer (1848 - 1886) in East Africa
Author
Frahnert, Sylke
Author
Turner, Donald A.
Author
Bracker, Cordula
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-08-18
5334
1
1
84
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5334.1.1
journal article
264230
10.11646/zootaxa.5334.1.1
86bd1537-578b-462b-ae18-c669bc6e0dce
1175-5326
8261358
5CA866F3-0375-4E09-89FC-DBB259BAE535
Cotyle rufigula
G.A.
Fischer & Reichenow, 1884a: 53
.
Now
:
Ptyonoprogne rufigula rufigula
(G.A. Fischer & Reichenow, 1884)
. Nec
Cotyle fuligula
(Lichtenstein, MHC, 1842)
; see
Mayr & Greenway (1960: 104)
and remarks below.
Holotype
:
ZMH 6906
(Fischer no. 860), skin, former mount, male, collected at “Naiwascha (Massai)(1500–200 Meter Höhe)”, 12.06.[18]83.
Type locality
: “
Naiwascha (Massai) (1500–200 Meter Höhe)” [near
Lake Naivasha
(
elevation
1500–2000m
),
Nakuru County
,
Kenya
], from the original description as well as locality of the
holotype
.
Remarks
: In the original description no type was chosen nor were inventory numbers for specimens provided, but measurements for
one specimen
and the locality “Naiwascha
See
” were given. Fischer (1884) listed
one specimen
(no. 860) for this species, so ZMH 6906 is the
holotype
. The specimen was also mentioned as the type in
Bolau (1898)
.
Fischer & Reichenow (1884a)
clearly described the differences of the newly described species from
Cotyle fuligula
(Lichtenstein, MHC, 1842)
. The species was formerly placed in
Hirundo
and treated as
H. fuligula fusciventris
by
White (1961: 62)
, (
rufigula
being preoccupied by
Hirundo rufigula
Bocage, 1878
), but when placed in
Ptyonoprogne
the name
rufigula
is no longer preoccupied, and
Ptyonoprogne fuligula rufigula
is used by many authorities including
Mayr & Greenway (1960)
and
Dickinson & Christidis (2014)
. Meanwhile del
Hoyo & Collar (2016)
split the African Rock Martin into two species: the tropical African
P. rufigula
(Red-throated Rock Martin) and the southern African
P. fuligula
(Large Rock Martin)
.
It
is impossible to say where at
Naivasha
the
holotype
was collected; as being a bird of cliffs and gorges it would have been unlikely to be found near the lake itself.
It
is far more likely that it would have been collected close to
Hell’s Gate National Park
(towards
Mount Suswa
) where it is locally abundant, also on
12 June 1883
Fischer
was retreating from the
Masai
and was south of the lake at approximately
1°05’S
,
36°21’E
(see
Fischer 1885b
, c)
.