Blood-breasted Flowerpecker
Blood-breasted Flowerpecker
Here the details of the Blood-breasted Flowerpecker named bird below:
SCI Name:
Protonym: Dicaeum sanguinolentum Pl.Col. livr.80 pl.478 fig.2
Taxonomy: Passeriformes / Dicaeidae / Dicaeum
Taxonomy Code: blbflo1
Type Locality: Java; restricted to West Java by Robinson and Kloss, 1923, Journ. Fed. Malay States Mus., 11, p. 57.
Author: Temminck
Publish Year: 1829
IUCN Status:
DEFINITIONS
DICAEUM
(Dicaeidae; Ϯ Scarlet-backed Flowerpecker D. cruentatum) Gr. δικαιον dikaion supposedly an Indian bird mentioned by Aelianus, but the name probably refers to the scarab beetle Scarabaeus; "LES DICÉES. (DICÆUM. Cuv.) (3). Ne grimpent pas non plus, et n'ont pas la queue usée; leur bec aigu, arqué, pas plus long que la tête, est déprimé et élargi à sa base. Ils viennent des Indes-Orientales, sont fort petits, et portent généralement de l'écarlate dans leur plumage. ... (3) DICÆUM, nom d'un très-petit oiseau des Indes selon Ælien. A ce sous-genre appartiennent certh. erythronotos, Vieill. II, 35. Le C. cruentata, Edw. 81, en est probablement une variété d'âge. — C. rubra, Vieill. pl. 54. — C. erythropygia, Lath. 2e Supp. — C. tæniata, Sonn. IIe Voy. pl. 107, fig. 3. — C. cantillans, id. ib. 2." (Cuvier 1817); "Dicaeum Cuvier, 1817, Règne Animal., 1, p. 410. Type, by subsequent designation (G. R. Gray, 1840, List Gen. Birds, ed. 1, p. 13), Certhia erythronotum Gmelin = Certhia erythronotos Latham = Certhia cruentata Linnaeus." (Salomonsen in Peters, 1967, XII, p. 174).
Var. Diceaum, Diceum, Dicoeum, Decaeum.
Synon. Austrodicaeum, Bournsia, Chilociris, Chromatociris, Cryptociris, Microchelidon, Myzanthe, Pachyglossa, Phenacistes, Polisornis, Psarisoma.
sanguinolenta / sanguinolentum / sanguinolentus
L. sanguinolentus bloody < sanguis, sanguinis blood.
● ex “Sanguineous Creeper” of Latham 1801 (Myzomela).
SUBSPECIES
Blood-breasted Flowerpecker (Blood-breasted)
SCI Name: Dicaeum sanguinolentum sanguinolentum/rhodopygiale
DICAEUM
(Dicaeidae; Ϯ Scarlet-backed Flowerpecker D. cruentatum) Gr. δικαιον dikaion supposedly an Indian bird mentioned by Aelianus, but the name probably refers to the scarab beetle Scarabaeus; "LES DICÉES. (DICÆUM. Cuv.) (3). Ne grimpent pas non plus, et n'ont pas la queue usée; leur bec aigu, arqué, pas plus long que la tête, est déprimé et élargi à sa base. Ils viennent des Indes-Orientales, sont fort petits, et portent généralement de l'écarlate dans leur plumage. ... (3) DICÆUM, nom d'un très-petit oiseau des Indes selon Ælien. A ce sous-genre appartiennent certh. erythronotos, Vieill. II, 35. Le C. cruentata, Edw. 81, en est probablement une variété d'âge. — C. rubra, Vieill. pl. 54. — C. erythropygia, Lath. 2e Supp. — C. tæniata, Sonn. IIe Voy. pl. 107, fig. 3. — C. cantillans, id. ib. 2." (Cuvier 1817); "Dicaeum Cuvier, 1817, Règne Animal., 1, p. 410. Type, by subsequent designation (G. R. Gray, 1840, List Gen. Birds, ed. 1, p. 13), Certhia erythronotum Gmelin = Certhia erythronotos Latham = Certhia cruentata Linnaeus." (Salomonsen in Peters, 1967, XII, p. 174).
Var. Diceaum, Diceum, Dicoeum, Decaeum.
Synon. Austrodicaeum, Bournsia, Chilociris, Chromatociris, Cryptociris, Microchelidon, Myzanthe, Pachyglossa, Phenacistes, Polisornis, Psarisoma.
Blood-breasted Flowerpecker (Sumba)
SCI Name: Dicaeum sanguinolentum wilhelminae
wilhelminae
● Wilhelmine Meyer (fl. 1874) wife of German collector A. B. Meyer, and who accompanied him on his expeditions in Celebes and Philippines (Charmosyna, syn. Drepanornis albertisi, Lamprothorax (hybrid)).
● Wilhelmina Helena Pauline Maria Queen of the Netherlands (1880-1962; reigned 1890-1948) (syn. Alisterus chloropterus calopterus, Dicaeum).
Blood-breasted Flowerpecker (Timor)
SCI Name: Dicaeum sanguinolentum hanieli
hanieli
Dr Curt Berthold Haniel (1886-1951) German zoologist, collector in tropical America, and the East Indies (with his cousin Curt Alfons Haniel (1884-1914)) (Dicaeum, subsp. Falco longipennis, subsp. Sphenopsis frontalis).
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)