Western Wattled-Honeyeater
Western Wattled-Honeyeater
Here the details of the Western Wattled-Honeyeater named bird below:
SCI Name:
Protonym: Ptilotis procerior Beitr.FaunaCentralpolynesiens p.62 pl.5 fig.3
Taxonomy: Passeriformes / Meliphagidae / Foulehaio
Taxonomy Code: weswah1
Type Locality: Ovalau Island, Fiji Islands.
Author: Finsch & Hartlaub
Publish Year: 1867
IUCN Status: Least Concern
DEFINITIONS
FOULEHAIO
(Meliphagidae; Ϯ Polynesian Wattled Honeyeater F. carunculatus) Tongan names Foulehaio, Fuoulehaoi or Fulehau for the Polynesian Wattled Honeyeater (cf. Samoan name E-yow); “Foulehaio est le nom que cet oiseau porte à Tongotabo ou à Amsterdam, qui sont deux des îles des Amis” (Vieillot 1817); "Ab incolis appellatur Fureehee-òw" (Forster in Lichtenstein 1844); "XLIX. Foulehaio VIEILLOT ois. dor. II. 131. — Nat. Syst. d. Vög. sppl. Habitus und am Männchen das Kleid wie Ptilotis, von dem des Weibchen (wenn nicht Varietät, wie LATHAM glaubt, oder verschiedene Art?) abweichend, hier ochergelb gefärbt. Bei beiden Geschlechtern Fleischzäpfchen am Grunde des Unterschnabels. 252. F. musicus (Philedon — VIEILL.) RCHB. — t. CCCCXCVII. 3550. ♂. ... Der "Wattled Creeper" LATH. syn. I. II. 732. 34. Certhia carnuculata [sic] GMEL. 472. 39. wurde von VIEILLOT Ois. dor. II. 131. unter den Heorotaires "le Foulehaio" genannt und das Männchen pl. 69, das Weibchen pl. 70 abgebildet." (Reichenbach 1852); "Foulehaio Reichenbach, 1852, Handb. spec. Orn., Icon. Synops. Avium, continuatio no. IX (Meropinae), 1, p. 110. Type, by monotypy, Philemon musicus Vieillot = Certhia carunculata Gmelin." (Salomonsen in Peters, 1967, XII, p. 392). I have suggested elsewhere that the substantive name Wattlebird be given to the birds of this genus.
Var. Foulehajo.
Synon. Proceriolotes, Sarcogenys.
procerior
L. procerior, procerioris longer, more extended < comp. procerus long.
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)