Alauda arvensis herberti Hartert

LeCROY, M. A. R. Y., 2003, TYPE SPECIMENS OF BIRDS IN THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY. PART 5. PASSERIFORMES: ALAUDIDAE, HIRUNDINIDAE, MOTACILLIDAE, CAMPEPHAGIDAE, PYCNONOTIDAE, IRENIDAE, LANIIDAE, VANGIDAE, BOMBYCILLIDAE, DULIDAE, CINCLIDAE, TROGLODYTIDAE, AND MIMIDAE, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 278 (278), pp. 1-156 : 28

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1206/0003-0090(2003)278<0001:tsobit>2.0.co;2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12775721

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8D160F03-FF92-FFB8-7CF5-FC651DCCFCD1

treatment provided by

Felipe (2024-07-18 18:43:19, last updated 2024-08-07 17:25:41)

scientific name

Alauda arvensis herberti Hartert
status

 

Alauda arvensis herberti Hartert

Alauda arvensis herberti Hartert, 1923d: 149 (Bangkok, Siam).

Now Alauda gulgula herberti Hartert, 1923 View in CoL . See Peters, 1960a: 70, Robson, 2000: 476, and Dickinson et al., 2001a: 93.

LECTOTYPE: AMNH 555589 About AMNH , adult male, collected in Bangkok, 13°44′N, 100°30′E (Times Atlas), Thailand, on 31 March 1915, by W.J.F. Williamson. From the Rothschild Collection. GoogleMaps

COMMENTS: In the original description, Hartert (1923d: 149) said that the type, an adult male collected by Williamson on 31 March 1915, was in the Rothschild Museum; in his list of Rothschild types, he ( Hartert, 1928: 210) did not add any further information. There are two adult males collected on 31 March 1915, which would therefore have to be considered syntypes. The above specimen, AMNH 555589 About AMNH , bears the Rothschild type label and the Rothschild Collection label marked ‘‘Type of Alauda arvensis herberti Hartert’’ in Hartert’s hand. It is undoubtedly the specimen intended as the type and I hereby designate it the lectotype to remove the ambiguity. The paralectotype is AMNH 555591 About AMNH .

Hartert (1923d: 149) gave measurements of four males (88–91 mm) and one female (85.5 mm), all from Bangkok. In fact, five males and one female in the type series came to AMNH with the Rothschild Collection. Four of the males and the female were collected by Williamson in February–June 1915 (AMNH 555589–555593), and a juv. male, AMNH 555588, was collected on 6 July 1919 by E.G. Herbert, for whom the taxon was named. Herbert noted that he collected this specimen and saw several other juveniles that had ‘‘nearly finished moulting from the white­tipped feathers, and have no tail feathers... ’’. This specimen is indeed without tail feathers, and the third primary from the outside is growing. Hartert would not have included its measurements, and its wing measures only 80.0 mm. Hartert (1923d: 149) indicated that he included wing measurements of the four males collected by Williamson; however, AMNH 555592 has the outer primaries worn and badly broken. While this could have occurred subsequent to his taking measurements, my measurements of the wings of the three other males, 87–91 mm, almost exactly correspond to Hartert’s published measurements. The wing of the above lectotype measures 88 mm. The female wing measures 85.0 mm.

Hartert, E. 1923 d. [Dr. E. Hartert communicated the following descriptions of new subspecies: -.] Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club 43: 149 - 150.

Hartert, E. 1928. Types of birds in the Tring Museum. C. Additional and overlooked types. Novitates Zoologicae 34: 189 - 230.

Peters, J. L. 1960 a. Family Alaudidae. In E. Mayr and J. C. Greenway, Jr. (editors), Check-list of birds of the world, vol. 9: 3 - 80. Cambridge, MA: Museum of Comparative Zoology, 506 pp.

Robson, C. 2000. A guide to the birds of southeast Asia. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 504 pp.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Aves

Order

Passeriformes

Family

Alaudidae

Genus

Alauda