Black-vented Shearwater
Black-vented Shearwater
Here the details of the Black-vented Shearwater named bird below:
SCI Name:
Protonym: Puffinus opisthomelas Proc.Acad.Nat.Sci.Philadelphia 16 p.139
Taxonomy: Procellariiformes / Procellariidae / Puffinus
Taxonomy Code: bkvshe
Type Locality: Cape San Lucas, Lower California.
Author: Coues
Publish Year: 1864
IUCN Status: Near Threatened
DEFINITIONS
PUFFINUS
(Procellariidae; Ϯ Manx Shearwater P. puffinus) English names Puffing (c. 1502) or Puffin (c. 1508), originally applied to the cured carcass of the fat nestling shearwater, a delicacy until the end of the 18th century (cf. Med. L. paphinus puffin; Late Med. L. puphinus puffin or shearwater). By confusion and association the name was gradually also applied to the Atlantic Puffin, becoming fixed on that species during the second half of the 19th century, but retained in ornithology as a generic name for the shearwaters (see Lockwood 1984, 121-122); "Genre du Puffin. Genus Puffini" (Brisson 1760): based on "Puffinus" of Jonston 1650-1653, and Sibbald 1684, “Puffin of the Isle of Man” of Willughby 1676, and "Shear-Water" of Ray 1713; "Puffinus Brisson, Orn., 1, 1760, p. 56; 6, p. 130. Type, by tautonymy, Puffinus [puffinus] Brisson = Procellaria puffinus Brünnich." (Peters 1931, 1, 53).
Var. Pufflnus.
Synon. Alphapuffinus, Cinathisma, Cymotomus, Microzalias, Nectris, Reinholdia, Rhipornis, Thyellas, Zalias.
● (syn. Fratercula Ϯ Atlantic Puffin F. arctica) "Puffin, (Puffinus, Will.) Common Puffin Puffinus flavirostris, (W.)" (C. T. Wood 1836).
puffinus
English name Puffin (c. 1508), applied to the cured carcass of the nestling shearwater; ex “Skrabe” of Debes 1676, “Puffin of the Isle of Man” of Willughby 1676, and Puffinus Brisson 1760 (Puffinus).
opisthomelas
Gr. οπισθε opisthe rear, at the back; μελας melas, μελανος melanos black.
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)