Passer Zarudnyi Bird

Zarudny\'s Sparrow / Passer zarudnyi

Passer Zarudnyi Bird

English Name:  Zarudny's Sparrow
Latin Name:  Passer zarudnyi
Protonym:  Passer simplex Zarudnyi Ezheg.Zool.Mus.Imp.Akad.Nauk 1 p. 32
Taxonomy:  Passeriformes / Passeridae / Passer
Taxonomy Code:  desspa4
Type Locality:  Transcaspia.
Author:  Pleske
Publish Year:  1896
IUCN Status:  Least Concern

DEFINITIONS

PASSER
(Passeridae; Ϯ House Sparrow P. domesticus) L. passer, passeris  sparrow; "Rostro in apicem crassum & brevem exeunte; { Rostri basi capiti latitudine multo cedente. . . . . .Passer. Genus 33.   ...   XXXIII. Genus Passerinum.  Le genre du Moineau.  ...  1. LE MOINEAU FRANC  ...  PASSER DOMESTICUS.  ...  Ils se nourrissent de graines & d'Insectes. Ils font leur nid dans les trous des murs." (Brisson 1760): based on "Passer" and "Passer domesticus" of many authors (Brisson lists over 20 species and forms of 'Moineau'); "Passer Brisson, 1760, Orn., 1, p. 36 [; 3, p. 71]. Type, by subsequent designation (Gray, 1840, List Gen. Birds, ed. 1, p. 46), Fringilla domestica Linnaeus." (Greenway in Peters 1962, XV, 8).  No thanks to positive introduction, the House Sparrow, with a natural Palaearctic and western Indomalayan range, is now found throughout the world as a commensal of man. If the New Zealand wrens (Acanthisittiformes) and the tyrants and allies (Subosciniformes) are separated from the Passeriformes sens. lat. the remaining species could be titled Osciniformes.
Synon. Ammopasser, Auripasser, Caffropasser, Chrysospiza, Corospiza, Leucophrya, Megapasser, Pseudostruthus, Pyrgita, Pyrgitopsis, Salicipasser, Sorella.

passer
L. passer, passeris  sparrow.

zarudnoi / zarudnyi
Dr Nikolai Alekseyvich Zarudnyi (1859-1919) Russian zoologist, collector in Turkistan and Persia, Curator of Tashkent Mus. 1885-1903 (subsp. Acrocephalus arundinaceus, subsp. Ammomanes cinctura, syn. Emberiza schoeniclus pyrrhuloides, Lanius collurio x Lanius isabellinus hybrid, syn. Otus scops pulchellus, Passer, subsp. Phasianus colchicus, syn. Picus squamatus flavirostris, subsp. Sitta neumayer, syn. Turdus pilaris).