White-naped Seedeater
White-naped Seedeater
Here the details of the White-naped Seedeater named bird below:
SCI Name:
Protonym: Oryzoborus(?) fringilloides Orn.Brasil. Abth.3 p.223,329
Taxonomy: Passeriformes / Thraupidae / Sporophila
Taxonomy Code: whnsee1
Type Locality: Rio Xie, upper Rio Negro, Brazil.
Author: von Pelzeln
Publish Year: 1870
IUCN Status: Least Concern
DEFINITIONS
SPOROPHILA
(Thraupidae; Ϯ Temminck's Seedeater S. falcirostris) Gr. σπορος sporos seed < σπειρω speirō to sow; φιλος philos lover; "62. Gen. Sporophila 1) Cab. Pyrrhula Tem. part. Spermophila Swains. 1827. ... 1) σπορος sperma." (Cabanis 1844); "Sporophila Cabanis, 1844, Archiv f. Naturg., 10 (1), p. 291. New name for Spermophila Swainson, 1827, preoccupied by Spermophila Richardson, 1825." (Paynter in Peters 1970, XIII, 133) (see Spermophila).
Var. Sporofila, Sporoptula, Sporophilus.
Synon. Amazonica, Callyrhynchus, Dolospingus, Drepanorhynchus, Gyrinorhynchus, Microphila, Neorhynchus, Oryzoborus, Spermophila, Spermophilopsis.
fringilloides
L. fringilla finch; Gr. -οιδης -oidēs resembling.
● Specific name Accipiter fringillarius Eyton, 1836 (= syn. Accipiter nisus); Gr. -οιδης -oidēs resembling; "2. ACCIPITER FRINGILLOIDES. Acc. supra cinereo-griseus, subtus albus brunnescente-fusco graciliter fasciatus, rectricibus fasciis quinque saturate fuscis. ... I find no description in any author which exactly corresponds with this delicate Sparrow Hawk. ... Our bird is a genuine Accipiter, and typical in the group." (Vigors 1827) (subsp. Accipiter striatus).
● "5. TACHYPHONUS fringilloides. Sp. Nov. T. supra cinereus, infra albens, cristæ coccineæ, marginibus lateralibus nigris; rostro brevi, conico. ... In the shortness and compression of the bill it agrees with T. rubescens; but the tail, which in that bird is nearly, if not quite, even, in this is more rounded; the feathers likewise are broader. The margins of the bill are inflexed, but not sinuated; and the acute angle, which constitutes a very prominent character in the Fringillæ, is wholly wanting in both these birds." (Swainson 1825) (syn. Coryphospingus pileatus).
● "70. MONTIFRINGILLA FRINGILLOIDES (Boie) (nivalis, auctt.). Fringilla nivalis, Severtzoff, p. 64." (Dresser 1875) (syn. Montifringilla nivalis alpicola).
● "TISSERIN. PLOCUS [sic]. Cuvier. T. FRINGILLOÏDE. P. fringilloides. Lafresnaye. Nous avons cru devoir donner à cette nouvelle espèce de Tisserin le nom de Fringilloïde, parce que, si d'un côté la forme robuste et longicône de son bec la place évidemment dans les Tisserins, d'autre part la couleur de son plumage, entièrement conforme à celle de plusieurs espèces de Gros-Becs ou Fringilles de l'Inde, sa patrie, et distincte de celles de toutes les espèces de Tisserins connus jusqu'alors ... Le nom de Tisserin ou Tisserand semble ne devoir appartenir qu'à certains Conirostres, voisins de nos moineaux, qui ont l'habitude de tisser leurs nids avec plus ou moins d'art, en entrelaçant des brins d'herbe sèche." (de La Fresnaye 1835) (Spermestes).
● "8. Oryzoborus fringilloides Pelzeln. N. 1037 (754) n. sp.? Fringilla sp. Natterer Catal. msc. ... Oryzoborus? fringilloides Pelzeln. N. 1037 (754). Femina. Cinnamomeo brunnea, gula, medio pectoris inferioris et abdominis rufescente albis, rostro illi O. unicoloris simili elongato fringillaceo, et pedibus obscure cinereis. ... Fringilla sp. Natterer Catal. msc. Hab. Rio Xiè." (von Pelzeln 1870) (Sporophila).
Fringilloides
(Emberizidae; syn. Emberiza † Black-headed Bunting E. melanocephala) Genus Fringilla Linnaeus, 1758, finch; Gr. -οιδης -oidēs resembling; "a very peculiar group of buntings, which I, for their long, large, conical beak, resembling the beak of finches (Fringillidae), suggest the name Fringilloides gen. nov. (type: Emberiza melanocephala)" (Buturlin 1910) (transl. and OD per Laurent Raty); "Fringilloides Buturlin, 1910, Nasha Okhota, 4 (1), p. 119. Type, by original designation, Emberiza melanocephala Scopoli, 1769." (JAJ 2021).
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)