Spermophaga Poliogenys Bird
Spermophaga Poliogenys Bird
English Name:
Latin Name:
Protonym: Spermospiza poliogenys Bull.Br.Orn.Club 19 p.32
Taxonomy: Passeriformes / Estrildidae / Spermophaga
Taxonomy Code: grablu1
Type Locality: 20 miles north of Beni, Semliki Valley.
Author: Ogilvie-Grant
Publish Year: 1906
IUCN Status: Least Concern
DEFINITIONS
SPERMOPHAGA
(Estrildidae; Ϯ Western Bluebill S. haematina) Gr. σπερμα sperma, σπερματος spermatos seed < σπειρω speirō to scatter; -φαγος -phagos -eating
< φαγειν phagein to eat; "BLUE BILLED NUT CRACKER. Spermophaga cyanorynchus, SWAINS. ... Loxia hæmatina, Vieillot, Ois. Chant. Pl. 67.— Loxia guttata, ib. 68. ALTHOUGH the two birds we shall now describe under the above name have been considered different species, we strongly suspect they will turn out to be sexes of only one. Their size and proportions are precisely the same, while the very remarkable colour of the bill, exactly alike in both, still further strengthens this belief. ... The colouring is simple,— that of the bill is very peculiar in some lights; at a distance it appears almost black; when viewed more closely, however, it becomes of the darkest indigo-blue, but with reflections of a much lighter colour, nearly resembling ultramarine, the tips being rich orange." (Swainson 1837 (Nat. Hist Bds. Western Africa)); "Spermophaga, Sw. Bill moderate, conic, but rather lengthened; upper mandible thicker than the under; the tip entire; the commissure sinuated. Wings and tail much rounded; the first quill fully developed, but only half as long as the fifth. Africa. S. cyanorynchus. West. Af. i. 164. Vieil. Ois. Chant. pl. 67, 68." (Swainson 1837 (Nat. Hist. Classification Bds.)); "Spermophaga Swainson, 1837, Birds W. Africa, 1, p. 164. Type, by monotypy, Spermophaga cyanorynchus Swainson = Loxia haematina Vieillot." (Traylor in Peters 1968, XIV, 321).
Synon. Spermospiza.
poliogene / poliogenis / poliogenys
Gr. πολιος polios grey; γενυς genus, γενυος genuos cheek, chin, jaw.
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)