Tamarugo Conebill Conirostrum tamarugense Scientific name definitions
- LC Least Concern
- Names (20)
- Monotypic
Fernando Medrano, Natacha González, Vicente Pantoja, Matías Garrido, Ivo Tejeda, Ignacio Escobar Gutiérrez, and Heraldo V. Norambuena
Version: 2.0 — Published March 10, 2023
Revision Notes
Revision Notes
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Species names in all available languages
Language | Common name |
---|---|
Catalan | tàngara beccònica dels tamarugos |
Dutch | Roodsterspitssnavel |
English | Tamarugo Conebill |
English (United States) | Tamarugo Conebill |
French | Conirostre des tamarugos |
French (France) | Conirostre des tamarugos |
German | Rotstirn-Spitzschnabel |
Japanese | タマルゴマルハシミツドリ |
Norwegian | tamarugokjeglenebb |
Polish | prostodziobek rdzawobrewy |
Russian | Рыжегрудый конусоклюв |
Serbian | Riđogrla kupokljunka |
Slovak | hrotozobka tamarugovka |
Spanish | Conirrostro de Tamarugal |
Spanish (Chile) | Comesebo de los tamarugales |
Spanish (Peru) | Pico-de-Cono de los Tamarugales |
Spanish (Spain) | Conirrostro de tamarugal |
Swedish | tamarugokägelnäbb |
Turkish | Tamarugo Sivrigagası |
Ukrainian | Тамаруго рудобровий |
Revision Notes
Fernando Medrano, Natacha González, Vicente Pantoja, Matías Garrido, Ivo Tejeda, Ignacio Escobar Gutiérrez, and Heraldo V. Norambuena revised the account. Peter Pyle contributed to the Plumages, Molts, and Structure page. Andrew J. Spencer contributed to the Sounds and Vocal Behavior page. JoAnn Hackos, Miriam Kowarski, Robin K. Murie, and Daphne R. Walmer copy edited the account. August Davidson-Onsgard curated the media.
Conirostrum tamarugense Johnson & Millie, 1972
PROTONYM:
Conirostrum tamarugense
Johnson & Millie, 1972. Supplement to the birds of Chile and adjacent regions of Argentina, Bolivia, and Peru, p.6.
TYPE LOCALITY:
SOURCE:
Avibase, 2023
Definitions
- CONIROSTRUM
- tamarugense
The Key to Scientific Names
Legend Overview
UPPERCASE: current genus
Uppercase first letter: generic synonym
● and ● See: generic homonyms
lowercase: species and subspecies
●: early names, variants, misspellings
‡: 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)