Balearic Warbler
Balearic Warbler
Here the details of the Balearic Warbler named bird below:
SCI Name:
Protonym: Sylvia sarda balearica Falco 9 p. 43
Taxonomy: Passeriformes / Sylviidae / Sylvia
Taxonomy Code: balwar1
Type Locality: Dragonera Island, west coast of Mallorca, Balearic Islands.
Author: von Jordans
Publish Year: 1913
IUCN Status: Least Concern
DEFINITIONS
SYLVIA
(Sylviidae; Ϯ Eurasian Blackcap S. atricapilla) Mod. L. sylvia woodland sprite < L. silva or sylva woodland (cf. Motacilla sylvia Linnaeus, 1766 (considered unidentifiable, but perhaps the Common Whitethroat)); "SYLVIA. Gens tenuirostris, insectivora, canora, garrula, inquieta, arboribus insidens, strigi illudens, migrans, saltitans nec ambulans, vocem nullam edens dum volat. 227. SYLVIA LUSCINIA. ... Ital. Rossignolo. Germ. Nachtigall. ... 228. SYLVIA CURRUCA. ... Ital. Bianchetto. Germ. Spottvogel. ... 229. SYLVIA ATRICAPILLA. ... Ital. Capo nero. Germ. Schwarzplatl. ... 230. SYLVIA OENANTHE. ... Ital. Cullo bianco. Germ. Steinschwazer. ... 231. SYLVIA RUBECULA. ... Ital. Petto rosso, Pitardello, Petuzzo. Germ. Rothkehlchen, Rothkröpfl. ... 232. SYLVIA PHOENICURUS. ... Ital. Scorsolato, Quarossolo. German. Rothschwänzchen, Waldrothschweifl. ... 233. SYLVIA TITHYS. ... Ital. Moretto. Germ. Hausrothschweifl. ... 234. SYLVIA ZYA. ... 235. SYLVIA SCHOENOBAENUS? ... Ital. Grisato. ... 236. SYLVIA MUSCIPETA. ... Ital. Grisatto bastardo. ... 237. SYLVIA RUBETRA. ... 238. SYLVIA TROCHILUS. ... Germ. Schmittl. ... 239. SYLVIA TROGLODYTES. ... Ital. Reatolo. Germ. Königerl, Zaunschlupferl. ... 240. SYVIA REGULUS. ... Germ. Goldhähnlein, Zaunkönig." (Scopoli 1769). "When the genus Sylvia, containing upwards of two hundred and fifty species, shall have been properly studied, it will be found practicable to divide it into several more sections, subgenera, and even perhaps genera. This bird [Sylvia palmarum], along with many other North American species, will constitute a highly natural group, very distinct from the true Sylvia, of which S. atricapilla may be considered as the type" (Bonaparte 1828); “This genus, proposed by Scopoli ... has no type designated by the author. Of later writers, Swainson in 1836 designated Sylvia hippolais (the Icterine Warbler), Gray in 1840 Sylvia melanocephala (the Sardinian Warbler), and Seebohm in 1881 Sylvia cinerea (the Whitethroat) as the types. As these three species are not to be found among those included by Scopoli in his original list of species, it is obvious that another type must be found. Motacilla sylvia Linnaeus, 1766 (= Sylvia communis Lath.), which might be regarded as the type by tautonymy, cannot be taken into consideration; it is not included in Scopoli’s original list of the members of the genus, and the identification of Motacilla sylvia with Sylvia communis is very doubtful. The Committee suggest that Sylvia curruca (Linn.) should henceforth be regarded as the type of this genus” (BOU 1915); "Sylvia Scopoli, 1769, Annus I Hist. Nat., p. 154. Type, by subsequent designation (Bonaparte, 1828, Amer. Ornith., 2, p. 17), Motacilla atricapilla Linnaeus." (Watson in Peters 1986, XI, 270).
Var. Silvia, Silvya, Slyvia, Sylcia.
Synon. Adophoneus, Adornis, Aegithalopsis, Alsoecus, Atraphornis, Communis, Corytholaea, Cuphopterus, Cuphornis, Curruca, Dagela, Epilais, Erythroleuca, Ficedula, Horizorhinus, Hortensis, Lioptilornis, Lioptilus, Melizophilus, Melophilus, Monachus, Nisoria, Parisoma, Philacantha, Philydra, Pseudoalcippe, Pyrophthalma, Sterparola, Thamnodus, Trochilus.
sylvia
Mod. L. sylvia woodland sprite, little bird, warbler < L. silva woodland.
● Roman myth. Rhea Silvia, wife to the river god Tiberinus, and mother of the twins Romulus and Remus, founders of Rome; alluding to watery habitats (subsp. Cisticola erythrops, Tanysiptera).
● Roman myth. Silvia, goddess of the forests (syn. Peneothello bimaculata vicaria).
● "99. MOTACILLA. ... Sylvia. 9. M. supra cinerea, subtus alba, rectrice prima longitudinaliter dimidiato albo, secunda apice alba. Fn. svec. 228. Habitat in Europa." (Linnaeus 1758) (?syn. Sylvia curruca).
BALEARICA
(Gruidae; Ϯ Black Crowned Crane B. pavonina) L. grui Balearicae Balearic crane with a tufted head mentioned by Pliny. It is not known to which species Pliny referred, or even if it was a type of crane, although the Demoiselle Crane Anthropoides formerly occurred in Spain, and still migrates through the Nile valley, and it is possible that the Black Crowned Crane bred in the Nile delta or the marshes of Tunisia in classical times. Ulysses Aldrovandus 1599, gave the name grus Balearica to the latter sp., translated by Willughby 1676, as the ‘Balearic Crane’; "Balearica. Genus 84. ... La tête ornée d'une hupe composée de plumes ressemblantes à des racines de Chiendent. **1. L'OISEAU-ROYAL. ... BALEARICA." (Brisson 1760): based on "Grus Balearica" of Aldrovandus 1599-1603, Ardea pavonina Linnaeus, 1758, and many other references; "Balearica Brisson, Orn., 1760, 1, p. 48; 5, p. 511. Type, by monotypy, Balearica Brisson = Ardea pavonina Linné." (Peters, 1934, II, p. 154).
balearica / balearicus
L. Baliaricus Balearic, of the Balearic Is < Baliares or Baleares Balearic Is. (Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza, Formentera).
UPPERCASE: current genus
Uppercase first letter: generic synonym
● and ● See: generic homonyms
lowercase: species and subspecies
●: early names, variants, mispellings
‡: extinct
†: type species
Gr.: ancient Greek
L.: Latin
<: derived from
syn: synonym of
/: separates historical and modern geographic names
ex: based on
TL: type locality
OD: original diagnosis (genus) or original description (species)