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Probosciger
Probosciger













probosciger

aterrimus ( Gmelin, JF, 1788) – Aru Islands (southwest of New Guinea) goliath ( Kuhl, 1820) – Raja Ampat Islands (northwest of New Guinea), Bird's Head Peninsula (northwest New Guinea) and west, central, southeast New Guinea stenolophus ( van Oort, 1911) – Yapen ( Geelvink Bay islands, northwest New Guinea) and north, east New Guinea Confusingly, this name was also used by early naturalists and Brazilian natives to refer to the dark blue hyacinth macaw. It is also sometimes given the misnomer "black macaw" in aviculture – the macaws are unrelated New World parrots. The species was named the "Goliath Aratoo" in Wood's Natural History (1862).

probosciger

"Palm cockatoo" has been designated the official name by the International Ornithological Committee (IOC). Earlier limited genetic studies found it to be the earliest offshoot from the ancestors of what have become the cockatoo family. The palm cockatoo is a member of the white cockatoo subfamily Cacatuinae. The accepted type locality is the Aru Islands, rather than "northern Australia". The specific epithet aterrimus is Modern Latin meaning "very black". The genus name combines the Latin proboscis meaning "snout" with -ger meaning "carrying". The palm cockatoo is now the only species placed in the genus Probosciger that was introduced by Heinrich Kuhl in 1820. The original drawing by de Bere is in the collection of the Natural History Museum, London. Joan Gideon Loten had provided Edwards with a drawing of the bird by the Sri Lankan artist Pieter Cornelis de Bevere. Gmelin based his description on the "black cockatoo" that had been described and illustrated in 1764 by the English naturalist George Edwards. He placed it with the parrots in the genus Psittacus and coined the binomial name Psittacus aterrimus. The palm cockatoo was formally described in 1788 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. It has a very large black beak and prominent red cheek patches. The palm cockatoo ( Probosciger aterrimus), also known as the goliath cockatoo or great black cockatoo, is a large smoky-grey or black parrot of the cockatoo family native to New Guinea, Aru Islands, and Cape York Peninsula. This information is sourced from the WildNet database managed by the Queensland Department of Environment and Science.Australian palm cockatoo range (in green) This profile data is sourced from the QLD Wildlife Data API using the Get species by ID function used under CC-By 4.0.

probosciger

Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM).Species Profile and Threats Database (SPRAT).Great palm cockatoo Nature Conservation Act 1992 (NCA) status Endangered Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC) status Vulnerable Conservation significant Yes Endemicity Native Pest status Nil Species environment Terrestrial Other resources WildNet taxon ID 1175 Synonym(s) Probosciger aterrimus Alternate name(s) Cape York cockatoo A Reference-List to the Birds of Australia.

PROBOSCIGER DOWNLOAD

Animalia (animals) → Aves (birds) → Cacatuidae (cockatoos and corellas) → Probosciger aterrimus macgillivrayi (palm cockatoo) Sighting data Download KML | CSV | GeoJson Species details Kingdom Animalia (animals) Class Aves (birds) Family Cacatuidae (cockatoos and corellas) Scientific name Probosciger aterrimus macgillivrayi (Mathews, 1912) Common name palm cockatoo Type reference Mathews, G.M.















Probosciger