Ochre-rumped Bunting
Ochre-rumped Bunting
Here the details of the Ochre-rumped Bunting named bird below:
SCI Name:
Protonym: Schoenicola yessoënsis Ibis p.161
Taxonomy: Passeriformes / Emberizidae / Emberiza
Taxonomy Code: ocrbun1
Type Locality:
Author: Swinhoe
Publish Year: 1874
IUCN Status: Near Threatened
DEFINITIONS
EMBERIZA
(Emberizidae; Ϯ Yellowhammer E. citrinella) Old Swiss German name Embritz for a bunting < Old German Ammer bunting. "97. EMBERIZA. Rostrum conicum. Mandibulæ basi deorsum a se invicem discedentes: inferiore lateribus inflexo-coarctata; superiore angustiore." (Linnaeus 1758); "Emberiza Linnaeus, 1758, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, p. 177. Type, by subsequent designation (G. R. Gray, 1840, List Genera Birds, ed. 1, p. 47), Emberiza citrinella Linnaeus." (Paynter in Peters, 1970, XIII, p. 5). Linnaeus's Emberiza comprised fourteen species (E. nivalis, E. Calandra, E. Hortulana, E. Citrinella, E. Orix, E. Quelea, E. militaris, E. atrata, E. familiaris, E. flaveola, E. psittacea, E. paradisæa, E. Ciris, E. Alario).
Var. Emberyza, Emberitza, Embritza, Embriza, Emberisa, Emeberiza.
Synon. Buscarla, Chrysophrys, Cia, Cirlus, Citrinella, Cosmospina, Cristemberiza, Crithophaga, Cynchramus, Fringillaria, Fringilloides, Glycyspina, Granativora, Hortulana, Hortulanus, Hylaespiza, Hypocentor, Latoucheornis, Melophus, Miliaria, Ocyris, Onychospina, Orospina, Pityornis, Polymitra, Pyrrhulorhyncha, Schaenicola, Schoeniclus, Spina, Spodiospina, Tisa.
yesoensis / yessoensis
Yesso / Hokkaido, Japan.
SUBSPECIES
Ochre-rumped Bunting (continentalis)
SCI Name: Emberiza yessoensis continentalis
continentalis / continentis
Mod. L. continentalis continental, of a continent, of the mainland < L. continens, continentis mainland, continent < continere to hold together.
Ochre-rumped Bunting (yessoensis)
SCI Name: Emberiza yessoensis yessoensis
yesoensis / yessoensis
Yesso / Hokkaido, Japan.
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)