Red-throated Piping-Guan

Red-throated Piping-Guan / Pipile cujubi

Red-throated Piping-Guan

Here the details of the Red-throated Piping-Guan named bird below:

SCI Name:  Pipile cujubi
Protonym:  Penelope cujubi Sitz.K.Akad.Wiss.Wien 31 p.328
Taxonomy:  Galliformes / Cracidae /
Taxonomy Code:  rtpgua1
Type Locality:  Pard.
Author:  
Publish Year:  1858
IUCN Status:  

DEFINITIONS

PIPILE
(Cracidae; Ϯ Trinidad Piping Guan P. pipile) Specific name Crax pipile von Jacquin, 1784; "I. PENELOPEÆ.  ...  20. Pipile, Bp.   48. leucolophos, Merr. (pipile, Gm.  jacutinga, Spix.)   49. cumanensis, Gm.   50. nigrifrons, Temm.   51. argyrotis, Bp." (Bonaparte 1856); "Pipile Bonaparte, Compt. Rend. Acad. Sci. Paris, 42, 1856, p. 877. Type, by tautonymy, Penelope leucolophos Merrem = Crax pipile Jacquin." (Peters 1934, II, 22). Recent work indicates that this genus should be included in Aburria.
Synon. Cumana.

pipile
German Pipen (modern Pfeifer)  piper (cf. L. pipilare  to chirp  < pipare  to chirp); "Der Pipile.  Tab. II.  CRAX (Pipile)  ...  Sein Stimme besteht in einem sansten Pipen, woher er auch obbesagten Nahmen bey den Amerikanern erhalten hat." (von Jacquin 1784) (Pipile).

cujubi
Tupí name Cujubí green guan, for a piping guan.

SUBSPECIES

Red-throated Piping-Guan (Gray-crested)
SCI Name: Pipile cujubi cujubi
cujubi
Tupí name Cujubí green guan, for a piping guan.

Red-throated Piping-Guan (White-crested)
SCI Name: Pipile cujubi nattereri
natterei / nattereri / nattererii / natterii
Dr Johann Natterer (1787-1843) Austrian zoologist, collector, resident in Brazil 1817-1835 (subsp. Amazona ochrocephala, Anthus, subsp. Attila bolivianus, syn. Augastes scutatus, syn. Certhia brachydactyla, subsp. Colaptes melanochloros, Cotinga, Hylopezus, Lepidothrix, subsp. Loriotus cristatus (?x), Lurocalis, subsp. Momotus momota, subsp. Nonnula ruficapilla, Phaethornis, syn. Phylloscopus bonellii, Pipile, subsp. Platyrinchus platyrhynchos, syn. Poecilotriccus latirostris ochropterus, subsp. Rupornis magnirostris, Selenidera, syn. Tinamus solitarius, syn. Tityra inquisitor).