Falco albus J. F. Gmelin, 1788

Schmitt, Stéphane & Gouraud, Christophe, 2024, The significance of Buffon and Guéneau de Montbeillard’s Histoire naturelle des oiseaux ([1765] - 1783) in the taxonomy of birds: General presentation and correspondence between Buffon’s “ eagles ” and the species acknowledged by Linnaeus (1758, 1766), Brisson (1759 - 1762), and Gmelin (1788 - 1789), Zoosystema 46 (16), pp. 361-409 : 384

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/zoosystema2024v46a16

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1B22F210-FDA8-4F91-BFEE-10A8823E2A5D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12667043

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/122887C5-FFC0-FFDB-FE87-FE11FC1AFD83

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Falco albus J. F. Gmelin, 1788
status

 

1. Buffon’s “Aigle blanc” (variety)

1.1. Linnaeus (1758): not considered.

1.2. Brisson (1759a: 424-425, 1763a: 122): “ AIGLE BLANC ”, “ AQUILA ALBA ”, species 3 of genus IX (“Aigle”, “ Aquila ”), order III, section 1.

OBSERVATION. — No direct observation. Description mainly borrowed from Gessner.

REFERENCES. — Belon (1555: 89), “Aigle toute blanche, qu’on nommoit Cycnia ”, based on Pausanias; Gessner (1585: 199), “ Aquila alba sive cygnea ”, based on the Ancients and Albertus Magnus; Aldrovandi (1599: 231), idem; Jonston (1657: 6), idem; Nieremberg (1635: 234), “ Aquila alba ”, based on Marco Polo; Charleton (1668: 63 no. 9, 1677: 71 no. 9), “ Aquila alba , seu Cygnea ”, based on Gessner, Aldrovandi, or Albertus Magnus; Rzączyński (1721: 299), “ Aquila alba ”, and Rzączyński (1745: 362), “ Aquila alba seu Aquila Cygnea Aldrovandi ”, based on Albertus Magnus, and other sources relating to Poland and Ukraine (Andreas Cnöffel and Joachim von Hirtenberg); Klein (1750: 42 no. 7), “ Aquila Alba, Cygnea. The white Eagle”, based on Charleton and Rzączyński.

DISTRIBUTION /HABITAT. — Alps, “rocks on the banks of the Rhine River” (based on Gessner referring to Albertus Magnus).

MODERN IDENTIFICATION. — Latham (1821: 56) and Sharpe (1874: 235) considered Brisson’s “Aigle blanc” a white form of the “ Falco chrysaetos ” of Linnaeus (1758), namely, * Aquila chrysaetos ( Linnaeus, 1758) , which is probably not completely true. Indeed, while the “swan-eagle” of the Ancients was certainly mythical (Glardon in Belon 1997: 407), the “white eagle” observed by Albertus Magnus (De animalibus 23, 14), as well as those mentioned by Marco Polo and Rzączyński, may have been albinic or leucistic forms of * Aquila chrysaetos or of other birds of prey (however, the sources relating to Poland are doubtful, since the white eagle is an emblem of this country). Brisson gives a seemingly decisive character (the bird being almost equal to the golden eagle in size), but this piece of information is, in fact, borrowed from Albertus Magnus, who wrote that the “white eagle” was almost as large as the “ herodius ” (an unidentified bird of prey). See also Hume (2017: 412).

1.3. Linnaeus (1766): not considered.

1.4. Buffon in Buffon & Guéneau de Montbeillard (1771a: 73), quarto edition; (1771b: 58), folio edition: according to Buffon, the “aigle blanc” (“white eagle”) is not “a species on its own, nor even a constant race belonging to a definite species”, but an “accidental variety” of an unspecified eagle, resulting from old age or the cold climate.

OBSERVATION. — No direct observation.

REFERENCES. — None.

MODERN IDENTIFICATION. — See Brisson, above.

1.5. Gmelin (1788: 257-258): “ FALCO ALBUS ” G42, S47, order “ Accipitres ”. Gmelin wonders whether it is a mere variety of his “ Falco Chrysaëtos ” (see below).

REFERENCES. — Brisson (1763a: “123” = 122); Klein (1750: 42 no. 7); Charleton (1668: 63 no. 9); Latham (1781: 36 no. 12), “White Eagle”, based on Brisson, Klein, Charleton; Latham writes: “M. Buffon is of opinion that all White Eagles are varieties only, and in course this should not have place as a distinct species; but as [Brisson] has thought fit to make it so, I here retain it on his authority”.

DISTRIBUTION / HABITAT.— Alps, “rocks on the banks of the Rhine”.

MODERN IDENTIFICATION. — See Brisson. Latham (1821: 56) and Sharpe (1874: 236) identified the “ Falco albus ” of Gmelin (1788) with the “ Falco chrysaetos ” of Linnaeus (1758), but Gmelin’s description and references do not allow for any identification of the bird in question with a single species.

MODERN NOMENCLATURE. — Falco albus J. F. Gmelin, 1788 , is a nomen dubium.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Aves

Order

Accipitriformes

Family

Falconidae

Genus

Falco

Loc

Falco albus J. F. Gmelin, 1788

Schmitt, Stéphane & Gouraud, Christophe 2024
2024
Loc

FALCO ALBUS

GMELIN J. F. 1788: 257
1788
Loc

AQUILA ALBA

BRISSON M. J. 1763: 122
BRISSON M. J. 1759: 424
1759
Loc

Aquila Alba

KLEIN J. T. 1750: 42
1750
Loc

Aquila alba

RZACZYNSKI G. 1745: 362
1745
Loc

Aquila alba

RZACZYNSKI G. 1721: 299
1721
Loc

Aquila alba

CHARLETON W. 1668: 63
1668
Loc

Aquila alba

JONSTON J. 1657: 6
NIEREMBERG J. E. 1635: 234
ALDROVANDI U. 1599: 231
1599
Loc

Aquila alba sive cygnea

GESSNER C. 1585: 199
BELON P. 1555: 89
1555
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