Racket-tail
Appearance
Racket-tails | |
---|---|
Blue-crowned racket-tail | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Psittaciformes |
Family: | Psittaculidae |
Tribe: | Psittaculini |
Genus: | Prioniturus Wagler, 1832 |
Type species | |
Psittacus platurus[1] Vieillot, 1818
|
The genus Prioniturus, commonly known as racket-tails, contains nine parrot species found in the Philippines and Indonesia. They are easily distinguished from all other parrots by their elongated central tail feathers with the bare shaft and spatula at the end.[2]
Taxonomy
[edit]The following nine species and several subspecies are recognized in the genus:[3]
- Prioniturus, Wagler 1832
- Prioniturus montanus, Ogilvie-Grant 1895 (Montane racket-tail)[4]
- Prioniturus waterstradti, Rothschild 1904 (Mindanao racket-tail)[4]
- Prioniturus platenae, Blasius, W 1888 (Blue-headed racket-tail)
- Prioniturus luconensis, Steere 1890 (Green racket-tail)
- Prioniturus discurus, (Vieillot 1822) (Blue-crowned racket-tail)
- Prioniturus discurus discurus, (Vieillot 1822)
- Prioniturus discurus whiteheadi, Salomonsen 1953
- Prioniturus mindorensis, Steere 1890 (Mindoro racket-tail)
- Prioniturus verticalis, Sharpe 1893 (Blue-winged racket-tail or Sulu Racket-tail)
- Prioniturus flavicans, Cassin 1853 (Yellow-breasted racket-tail)
- Prioniturus platurus, (Vieillot 1818) (Golden-mantled racket-tail)
- Prioniturus platurus platurus, (Vieillot 1818)
- Prioniturus platurus sinerubris, Forshaw 1971
- Prioniturus platurus talautensis, Hartert 1898
- Prioniturus mada, Hartert1900 (Buru racket-tail)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Psittaculidae". aviansystematics.org. The Trust for Avian Systematics. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
- ^ Forshaw, Joseph M.; Cooper, William T. (1981) [1973, 1978]. Parrots of the World (corrected second ed.). David & Charles, Newton Abbot, London. ISBN 0-7153-7698-5.
- ^ "Zoological Nomenclature Resource: Psittaciformes (Version 9.020)". www.zoonomen.net. 2009-03-20.
- ^ a b c d Forshaw, Joseph M. (2006). Parrots of the World; an Identification Guide. Illustrated by Frank Knight. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-09251-6.