The Library of Congress > LCCN Permalink

View this record in:  MARCXML | LC Authorities & Vocabularies

Forbes' parakeet

LC control no.sh2003011240
LC classificationQL696.P7 Zoology
Topical headingForbes' parakeet
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Variant(s)Chatham Island yellow-crowned parakeet
Chatham Islands parakeet
Chatham parakeet
Cyanoramphus auriceps forbesi
Cyanoramphus forbesi
Forbes's parakeet
Parakeet, Forbes'
Yellow-crowned parakeet, Chatham Island
See alsoCyanoramphus
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities
Found inWork cat.: Greene, T.C. Forbes' parakeet (Cyanoramphus forbesi) population on Mangere Island, Chatham Islands, c2000.
ITIS, Dec. 8, 2003 (Subspecies Cyanoramphus auriceps forbesi -- forbe's parakeet)
NCBI taxonomy browser, via WWW, Dec. 8, 2003 (Cyanoramphus forbesi (Forbes' Parakeet))
2003 IUCN red list of threatened species, via WWW, Dec. 8, 2003 (Cyanoramphus forbesi, Forbes's Parakeet)
Avibase, via WWW, Dec. 8, 2003 (Chatham Parakeet (Cyanoramphus forbesi). Species status: full species (sometimes considered a subspecies). This taxon is considered a subspecies of Cyanoramphus auriceps (sensu lato) by some authors. Clements 5th ed.: Chatham Islands Parakeet (Cyanoramphus forbesi), Clements 5th ed. (updated 2003): Chatham Islands Parakeet (Cyanoramphus forbesi). Other synonyms: English: Chatham Island Yellow-crowned Parakeet, Chatham Islands Parakeet, Forbes's Parakeet; Scientific: Cyanoramphus auriceps forbesi)
The Internet bird collection, via WWW, Dec. 8, 2003 (Cyanoramphus forbesi, Chatham Parakeet)
Parrots : status survey and conservation action plan 2000-2004, c2000, via WWW (PDF), Dec. 8, 2003: p. 35 (Forbes' parakeets) p. 38 (Forbes' parakeet Cyanoramphus (auriceps) forbesi has been considered a subspecies of the yellow-crowned parakeet C. auriceps. Recently it was proposed that it be elevated to specific status ... If it is a species, then it is one of the most threatened parrot species in the world) p. 53 (Forbes' parakeet, Cyanoramphus forbesi; C. forbesi is best treated as a distinct species)