Asian Brown Flycatcher
Asian Brown Flycatcher
Here the details of the Asian Brown Flycatcher named bird below:
SCI Name:
Protonym: Muscicapa Grisola var. Dauurica Zoogr.Rosso-Asiat. 1 p.461
Taxonomy: Passeriformes / Muscicapidae / Muscicapa
Taxonomy Code: asbfly
Type Locality: Onon River, Dauria, Siberia.
Author: Pallas
Publish Year: 1811
IUCN Status:
DEFINITIONS
MUSCICAPA
(Muscicapidae; Ϯ Spotted Flycatcher M. striata) L. musca fly < Gr. μυια muia, μυιας muias fly; capere to catch; "Genus Muscicapæ ... Le genre du Gobe-mouche ... MUSCICAPA" (Brisson 1760); based on "Curruca" or "Ficedula" of Gessner 1555, "Grisola" of Aldrovandus 1599-1603, Willughby 1676, and Ray 1713, "Stoparola" of Willughby 1676, "Curruca subfusca" of Frisch 1733-1743, and "Sylvia pestilentialis" of Klein 1750; "Muscicapa Brisson, 1760, Ornith., 1, p. 32; 2, p. 357, pl. 5, fig. 3. Type, by tautonymy, Muscicapa = Motacilla striata Pallas." (Watson in Peters, 1986, XI, 313). The Spotted Flycatcher is the archetypal flycatcher, perching stolidly, then darting out to seize passing insects before returning to its perch.
Var. Muscicopa, Musicapa, Mussicapa, Muscapa.
Synon. Alseonax, Arizelomyia, Butalis, Hemichelidon, Myiotheras, Stoparola.
muscicapa
L. musca fly < Gr. μυια muia, μυιας muias fly; capere to catch.
dauura / dauurica / dauuricae / dauuricus
Dauria, south-eastern Siberia (after the Dauuri or Daguuri, a nomadic Mongolian tribe that inhabited the area).
SUBSPECIES
Asian Brown Flycatcher (dauurica)
SCI Name: Muscicapa dauurica dauurica
dauura / dauurica / dauuricae / dauuricus
Dauria, south-eastern Siberia (after the Dauuri or Daguuri, a nomadic Mongolian tribe that inhabited the area).
Asian Brown Flycatcher (siamensis)
SCI Name: Muscicapa dauurica siamensis
siamense / siamensis
Siam, a former name for Thailand, and the origin of which is disputed (e.g. Pali suvannabhumi land of gold; Sanskrit syama dark; Portuguese corruption of Chinese name for the area Xian).
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)