White-rumped Hawk
White-rumped Hawk
Here the details of the White-rumped Hawk named bird below:
SCI Name:
Protonym: Falco Leucorrhous Voy.UraniePhys.[Freycinet]Zool. livr.3 p.91 pl.13
Taxonomy: Accipitriformes / Accipitridae / Parabuteo
Taxonomy Code: whrhaw1
Type Locality: 'Bresil.'' Type from Rio de Janeiro.
Author: Quoy & Gaimard
Publish Year: 1824
IUCN Status: Least Concern
DEFINITIONS
PARABUTEO
(Accipitridae; Ϯ Harris's Hawk P. unicinctus harrisi) Gr. παρα para near; genus Buteo de Lacépède, 1799, buzzard; "GENUS ANTENOR, Ridgway ... (Type, Falco harrisi, AUD.) ... This genus includes a single species, the P. unicinctus, with its two climatic races, unicinctus of South America and harrisi of Middle America. It is most nearly related to the genus Urubitinga, of tropical America, the species of which are sluggish and almost Caracara-like in their habits, though they are hardly more so than our own Buteones ... Parabuteo unicinctus, var. harrisi (RIDGWAY). HARRIS'S BUZZARD. ... He [Dresser] describes it as a heavy, sluggish bird, seldom seen on the wing, and subsisting, so far as he could see, entirely on carrion. All along the road from Brownsville to San Antonio, he noticed it either perched on some tree by the roadside, or busy, in company with Vultures and Caracaras, regaling on some offensive carrion." (Ridgway 1874); "Parabuteo Ridgway, in Baird, Brewer and Ridgway, Hist. No. Am. Bds., 3, 1874, p. 250. Type, by monotypy, Buteo harrisi Audubon." (Peters 1931, 1, 240). This raptor, now widely used in falconry, was formerly known as Bay-winged Hawk.
Synon. Antenor, Erythrocnema, Percnohierax.
leucorrhoa / leucorrhoea / leucorrhous
Gr. λευκος leukos white; ορρος orrhos rump (cf. ῥοη rhoē flowing < ῥεω rheō to flow).
● ex “Golondrina rabadilla blanca” of de Azara 1802-1805, no. 304 (Tachycineta).
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)