Psittacara Maugei Bird
Psittacara Maugei Bird
English Name:
Latin Name:
Protonym: Psittacara Maugei Rev.Mag.Zool. (2), 8 p.59
Taxonomy: Psittaciformes / Psittacidae / Psittacara
Taxonomy Code: purpar2
Type Locality: No locality = Puerto Rico?
Author: Souancé
Publish Year: 1856
IUCN Status:
DEFINITIONS
PSITTACARA
(Psittacidae; Ϯ White-eyed Parakeet P. leucophthalmus) Portmanteau of genera Psittacula Cuvier, 1800, parakeet, and Ara de Lacépède, 1799, macaw; "These birds, although their cheeks are covered with feathers and they are thus brought within the circle of the Parrakeets, have yet the bill of the Maccaws ... From their osculant situation between the two groups, thus strikingly apparent, the species that exhibit these characters have received the familiar name of Parrakeet-Maccaws in our language, and of Perruche-Aras among the French Ornithologists. Like the true Maccaws they are exclusively natives of the New World. Two species, lately added to our collections in this country, and which appear to me to be new to science, afford me an opportunity of characterizing this interesting group, which from its intermediate station between the two subfamilies, and with a reference to the trivial name already bestowed upon it, I shall denominate PSITTACARA. ... The Psittacus Guianensis of Linnaeus, the Perruche-Ara Pavouane of M. Le Vaillant [Pl. 14. 15] may be selected as the type of this genus" (Vigors 1825).
Var. Psittacaria, Psittacarus.
Synon. Evopsitta, Maracana, Protoconurus, Thectocercus.
maugaeus / maugeanus / maugei / maugens / maugerii / maugeris / maugeus
René Maugé (1757-1802) French zoologist, collector in the West Indies 1796-1798, the East Indies and Australia 1800-1802 (Chlorostilbon, Dicaeum, Geopelia, syn. Ninox boobook fusca, syn. Polytmus guainumbi thaumantias, ‡subsp. Psittacara chloropterus).
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)