86 Vol. 56
NARRATIVE OF DEPPE'S JOURNEYS
The establishment of Mexican independence, which dates from 1821, made it pos-
sible for Europeans of any nationality to settle in Mxico and to send home whatever
they wanted. As early as 1823 William Bullock went to Mxico with the aim of acquir-
ing abandoned gold and silver mines. Bullock formerly was a London goldsmith and
was well known for being the owner of the Londoh Museum which was dissolved by
auction in 1819. When he returned to London at the end of 1823 he brought back with
him all sorts of Mexican curiosities which served for a public show, called "New Mexico,"
in his "Egyptian Hall." Included among these curiosities were a few birds mounted on
artificial palms and cacti and picturesquely arranged around some Mexican mammals.
In Germany the news of mysterious Mxico having become accessible even to the
ordinary traveller excited the curiosity of a wealthy nobleman, the Count yon Sack,
"Zweiter Ober-Jiigermeister" and chamberlain to the King of Prussia. He had recently
returned from a voyage to Egypt and Cyprus where he made a small collection of birds
(Stresemann, Ibis, 1953:549), and he at once felt inclined to visit Mxico, provided
that there was a collecting naturalist of good reputation to go with him. A gardener,
appointed to the Royal Gardens, by the name of Ferdinand Deppe, was recommended
for this task by Professor Hinrich Lichtenstein, Director of the Zoological Museum of
Berlin University. Deppe was an intelligent and energetic young man born in 1794.
For a long while his connection with the Zoological Museum had been intimate, the more
so as his oldest brother Wilhelm was accountant of that institution. On Count yon Sack's
advice Deppe gave up his job in 1821 and prepared for the voyage to Mxico. He trained
himself in skinning birds and mammals, a technique which he soon mastered to great
perfection. Besides, he studied. books on the zoology, botany, and geography of South
America, took lessons in drawing and painting, and acquired English and Spanish. How-
ever, the wayward Count remained undecided for three more years, and it was only due
to the insistence of Deppe that the plan to go to Mxico was at last carried out in 1824.
The party, increased by the Count's domestic, arrived in London on August 23, 1824,
where Deppe visited, besides the British Museum (the zoological section of which he
judged far inferior to the Berlin Museum), Mr. Bullock's Mexican Show and Mr. Lead-
beater's shop where his eyes were caught by some fine Mexican birds'like "Ibis mexicana"
and hummingbirds.
On October 8 they sailed from Falmouth on board a British ship via Barbados to
Jamaica. From there they took another vessel bound for Alvarado, Veracruz, arriving
there in mid-December, 1824, soon after the Count's footman had succumbed on board
to an infection with yellow fever.
Two years later, in January, 1827, Deppe again left Mxico after having travelled
via Mexico City to Oaxaca and Tehuantepec and back via Oaxaca to Alvarado. He and
William Bullock's son, who joined him on the voyage from Mexico City to Tehuantepec,
are the first naturalists who ever collected birds in Mxico for scientific purposes. The
results of their efforts, studied by Swainson, Waglet, and many subsequent systematists,
have formed the foundation of Mexican ornithology.
The following itinerary has been compiled from Deppe's letters kept in the archives
of the Zoological Museum in Berlin and from the entries in Lichtenstein's lists of
acquisitions.
From December 25, 1824, to January, 1825, an excursion was made from Alvarado
to the swamps and lagunas near Tlacotalp/m in Veracruz. In January he went from
Alvarado to Jalapa, Veracruz, and in February from Jalapa to Mxico City.
In April an excursion was made from Mxico City to Temascaltepec, state of M6xico,
where Deppe made the acquaintance of Mr. Bullock, Jr., who, like his father, took to
the hobby of collecting birds and was an excellent shot. He came over with his father
in 1823 and lived in Temascaltepec as agent of a British mining company. Deppe went
back to Mxico City on May 10. He stayed in and near Mxico City from May 11 to
the end of May.
In June and July a trip was made to Chico and Toluca in the state of Mxico, in-
cluding a stay at Tlalpaxahua where Diglossa baritula Wagler ("Campylops humills"
Lichtenstein MS) was collected, and another stay at Cimapn. On the slopes of Volc/m
Toluca, Sitta carolinensis mexicana Nelson and Palmer was taken "on Pinus."
On August 26, Deppe, joined by Bullock, Jr., started for a long voyage to Tehuan-
tepec. Taking the route via Puebla and Tehuac/m, Puebla, they reached the city of
Oaxaca by September 6. Extensive field work was done in the vicinity; the collection
includes a skin of Eremophila alpestris oaxacae Nelson "from the mountain range near
Oaxaca," and one of Parus sclateri Kleinschmidt from Uchilacqua. On one of these trips
they reached Villa Alta, "37 Legoas" from Oaxaca on September 22.
On October 22 Deppe and Bullock continued their journeys, and six days later they
reached Tehuantepec via San Bartolo. Early in November they proceeded to the shore
of the Pacific (San Matteo, Santa Maria al Mar) and they were back in the city of
Oaxaca by the 22nd of that month.
On December 5, Bullock left for'Mexico City to meet his father there. Deppe left
Oaxaca the next day and chose a direct route to Alvarado which proved very difficult.
On December 18, he crossed the Cordillera Costal at a place called Valle Real, Veracruz,
clad with luxuriant forest in which, besides many fine new birds, a troup of monkeys
(Ateles vellerosus Gray) was found. He was back in Alvarado on December 22.
Early in January of 1826 Deppe paid another, and this time extensive, visit to Valle
Real. From there he returned to Alvarado in March and proceeded via Santuario to the
City of Vera Cruz which was reached by March 23. After a short stay there he left for
Mxico City at the end of March. The time from April 13 to July 16 was devoted to
excursions to the surroundings of Mxico City, including a ride to Chico and Ixmiquilpec.
On July 17 Deppe left the capital to visit his friend Bullock, Jr., at his place at
Rincon de Temascaltepec. He crossed the range of Las Cruces and proceeded via Tenan-
cingo and Sacualp/m, Mxico. His stay in Temascaltepec lasted from July 28 to late
September, with excursions to Real (de) Arriba, Mxico, and to Jantepeque and Cuerna-
vaca in Morelos. Near Real Arriba, Parus wollwberi increased the collection in August.
In August in Temascaltepec Deppe met William Bullock, who had made a business
voyage to Mxico in company of his wife and daughter. After his return to London in
1823 the senior Bullock had founded a British mining company of which he was then
the director. On going back to London in September of 1826, William Bullock took
with him many bird skins collected at various places which at once were studied, and
partly bought, by his friend William Swainson. The localities of some of the new species
which Bullock, Jr., had collected when crossing the state of Oaxaca in 1825 were wrongly
given as "Temascaltepec" in Swainson's descriptions of 1827. William Bullock remem-
bered Lichtenstein very well, as he had been a prominent figure at the auction of his
"London Museum," and Bullock wished to be remembered to him.
At the end of September, Deppe went back to the Capital Federal and prepared for
a quick departure. He reached Jalapa by October 26 and embarked at Veracruz at the
end of January for Hamburg on the German vessel "Anna Maria." On April 9, 1827,
after almost three years of absence, he was welcomed back in Berlin.
Since the landing at Alvarado in December, 1824, there has been no mention of the
Count von Sack in this short review of the itinerary. The Count seems to have been a
very queer and whimsical person. No longer disposed to support his employer's bad
manners, Deppe parted with him in May of 1825 and carried out all the rest of the
expedition on his own risk. The Count returned to the coast in the autumn of 1825,
sailed back to Jamaica, and reappeared in the summer of 1826 in Berlin, where three
years later he died.
In the years 1825 and 1826, Deppe had made, all by himself, 958 bird skins, repre-
senting about 315 species; besides, he had collected a number of mammals, a quantity
of reptiles, amphibians, fishes, snails, and thousands of insects. Nor had botany been
neglected by this indefatigable naturalist. All his zoological material was bought by the
Zoological Museum of Berlin. But in vain had he hoped to be rewarded with a post at
one of the scientific institutions of the Prussian capital. This induced him to return to
his beloved Mxico once more, this time in company of a dear friend, the botanist Dr.
Wilhelm Schiede. They expected to make their living in Mxico by selling zoological
and botanical specimens to European museums and dealers. In July of 1828 they settled
down in Jalapa, whence they made distant excursions to various places, all within or
near to the boundary of the state of Veracruz; among others were the Pico de Orizaba,
which they ascended almost to the summit, Misantla, Papantla, Veracruz, and the La-
guna Huetulachn, west of the Cofre de Perore. But they were soon disappointed. Lich-
tenstein was no longer able to buy quantities of Mexican material at reasonable prices,
and although part of the material which the two friends had collected up to May 7,
1829, had been acquired by the museums of Berlin and Vienna, the financial result of
their efforts was far from what they had expected. In order to save his brother from dis-
tress, Wilhelm Deppe decided to distribute in print a "Preis-Verzeiclmiss der Siugethiere,
ViSgel, Amphibien, Fische und Ktebse, welche von den Herren Deppe und Schiede in
Mexico gesammelt worden, und bei dem unterzeichneten Bevollm'chtigten in Berlin
gegen baare Zahlung in Preuss. Courant zu erhalten sind." This was signed "Berlin am
lten September 1830. W. Deppe." [The reprint of this in the Journal fiir Ornithologie,
1863, pages 54-60, was headed by the misleading title "Lichtensteins's Preis-Verzeich-
niss mexicanischer ViSgel," etc.]. The success of this price list must have been very dis-
couraging. Ferdinand Deppe and Schiede were forced to give up this kind of business in
1830. The latter died soon afterward. Deppe became a commission agent of merchants
that were located at Acapulco and Monterey, California, and travelled through the west-
ern and northern states of Mxico without ever touching the collecting gun. In 1836
he was tricked out of all he had earned and decided to sail home to Germany once more.
On his way back he collected a number of interesting birds near Monterey, California,
and on the island of Oahu, Hawaii. These proofs of Deppe's renewed activity will be
discussed in another article. Back to Berlin in 1838 the unfortunate Deppe was again
denied an official appointment. He died in oblivion about 1860.
THE SCIENTIFIC RESULTS
Ferdinand Deppe was to share the fate of all the zealous men who, during the era of
Lichtenstein, collected quantities of birds overseas for the benefit of the Berlin Museum.
Like that of his contemporaries Hemprich, Ehrenberg, Friedrich Sellow, and Ludwig
Krebs, Deppe's important material never was properly studied by Lichtenstein. Lich-
tenstein gave every species, or what he judged to be a species, a name, it is true, but
this was done without consulting the recent English and French literature. His only aim
was to give the specimens in question a distinguishing mark for his personal needs. These
names were used in Lichtenstein's registers and reappeared on the labels of the mounted
specimens, but they only e/rceptionally were publishd by himself in connection with a
scientific description. Of the many dozens of striking novelties contained in Deppe's
Mexican collections, Lichtenstein described and figured just one, Hylomanes m.omotula,
and this only 14 years afterward, in 1839. The critical examination of the material was
left to learned visitors at the Berlin Museum, and finally to Cabanis. Johann Wagler
(1828), John Gould (1833, 1843), C. L. Brehm (1851), C. L..Bonaparte (1850), Reich-
enbach, H. Schlegel, and P. L. Sclater (1868) studied some of Deppe's Mexican birds
when visiting Berlin, and by publishing their descriptions of new species have saved
the types for the Berlin Museum.
Some of these descriptions have not been provided with an exact locality. The recent
discovery of Lichtenstein's detailed registers written immediately after the arrival of
Deppe's collections and mostly supplemented by a copy of the original label's text,
enables me to supply these locations i.n the following list. Only the valid names are
given, not those which .already have become synonyms. All specimens listed are types
(holotypes or cotypes, respectively).
Dendrortyx barbatus Gould, 1846"Jalapa" [,Veracruz], 1828.
Odontophorus lineolatus Gould, 1850Papantla [,Veracruz], 1829.
This name has been applied wrongly by Hellmayr and Conover (Cat. Birds Am. 1, 1, 1942:282)
to the race (still anonymous) inhabiting Oaxaca. It therefore tums out to be a synonym of
Dactylortyx thoracicus thoracicus (Gambel, 1848) named' from Jalapa.
Ortalis vetula poliocephala (Wagler, 1830)--Real Arriba [,M6xico], August, 1826.
Burhinus bistriatus (Wagler, 1829)--San Matteo [,Oaxaca], November, 1825.
Asturina nitida plagiata Schlegel, 1862--Veracruz [,Veracruz], 1829.
Ciccaba virgata squamulata (Bonaparte, 1850)--Los Cues [,Puebla], September 1, 1825 (trans-
ferred to Leyden. Museum).
Trogon citreolus citreolus Gould, 1835--Tehuantepec [,Oaxaca], November, 1825.
Trogon citreolus melanocephalus Gould, 1838types or cotypes: Alvarado [,Veracruz], December,
1824, January, 1826; Valle Real [,Veracruz], February, 1826.
Trogon violaceus braccatus (Cabanis and Heine, 1863)--Valle Real [,Veracruz], December, 1825,
February, 1826.
Aulacorhynchus prasinus Gould, 1834--Valle Real [,Veracruz], December, 1825; Pico de Orizaba (?),
1828.
Veniliornis oleagineus Reichenbach, 1854--Papantla [,Veracruz], 1829.
Dendrocopos scalaris (Wagler, 1829)--Jalapa [,Veracruz], January, 1825, lectotype ;' Tehuac,-tn
[,Puebla], August 30, 1925.
Phloeoceastes guatemalensis regius (Reichenbach, 1854)--Papantla [,Veracruz], 1829.
Centurus polygramrnus Cabanis, 1862--San Bartolo [,Oaxaca], October, 1825.
Centurus hypopolius (Wagler, 1829)--Tehuacn [,Puebla], August 30, 1825.
Celeus castaneus (Wagler, 1829)--Valle Real [,Veracruz], December, 1825, and February, 1826.
Myiochanes pertinax (Cabanis and Heine, 1859)--Jalapa [,Veracruz], 1828 (transferred to Museum
Heineanum).
Empidonax ]ulvi/rons rubicundus Cabanis and Heine, 1859--M6xico City, March, 1825; Real Arriba
[,M6xico], August, 1826; Jalapa [,Veracruz], 1828, lectotype.
Lanius ludovicianus mexicanus Brehm, 1854--Jantepeque [,Morelos], September, 1826.
Corvus corax sinuatus Wagler, 1828No special locality mentioned.
Psilorhinus toorio (Wagler, 1829)--Alvarado [,Veracruz], December, 1824, and January, 1825;
Jalapa [,Veracruz], January, 1825, lectotype.
Thryothorus pleurostictus nisorius Sclater, 1869--Real Arriba [,M6xico], September, 1826.
Tangavius aeneus (Wagler, 1829)--*Oaxaca [,Oaxaca], October, 1825, lectoype; Laguna Huetulacan
[,Veracruz], 1828.
Agelaius phoeniceus gubernator (Wagler, 1832)--Mxico City, March, 1825.
lcterus gularis (Waglet, 1829)--Tehuantepec [,Oaxaca], November, 1825.
lcterus mesomelas (Waglet, 1829)--Chacaltianges [,Veracruz], March, 1826.
lcterus pectoralis (VCagler, 1829)--Totulapa [(Oaxaca], October, 1825.
lcterus pustulatus (Wagler, 1829)--San Matteo [,Oaxaca], November, 1825, lectotype; Cuernavaca
[,Morelos], September, 1826; Huantepec [,Oaxaca], September, 1825.
Euphagus cyanocephalus (Waglet, 1829)--Mxico City, March, 1825; *Temascaltepec [,Mxico],
April, 1825, lectotype; Oaxaca [,Oaxaca], October, 1825.
Cyanocompsa parellina (Bonaparte, 1850)--Alvarado [,Veracruz], January, 1826.
Sporophila torqueola (Bonaparte, 1850)--Mexico City, March, 1825.
Melozone kieneri rubricatum (Cabanis, 1851)--Real Arriba [,Mxico], August, 1826.
Aimophila humeralis (Cabanis, 1851)--Tehotepec [,Puebla], September, 1825; Cuernavaca
[Morelos], September, 1826, lectotype (transferred to Museum Heineanum).
Euthlypis lachrymosa (Bonaparte, 1850)--Laguna Huetulacan [,Veracruz], 1828.
Vermivora superciliosa mexicana (Bonaparte, 1850)--Chico [,Mxico], June, 1825; Real Arriba
[,Mxico], August, 1826, lectotype.
lcteria virens auricollis Bonaparte, 1850Cimapfin [,Mexico], July, 1825; Mexico City, June, 1826,
lectotype; Tehuante13ec [,Mxico], November, 1825.
Catharus melpomene (Cabanis, 1851)--Temascaltepec [,Mxico], April, 1825; Chico [,Mxico],
July, 1825; Real Arriba [,Mxico], August-September, 1826; Jalapa [,Veracruz], 1828, lectotype.
Turdus assimilis Cabanis, 1851--"Jalapa" [,Veracruz], 1828 (transferred to Museum Heineanum).
Polioptila caerulea mexicana (Bonaparte, 1850)Oaxaca [,Oaxaca], October, 1825.
Certhia americana alticola G. S. Miller, 1895 (new name for Certhia mexicana Gloger, 1834, not
Gmelin, 1788)--Mountains near Oaxaca [,Oaxaca], September, 1825.
An additional number of descriptions based on Deppe's collections has generally
been ascribed to Lichtenstein, namely, those appearing in the "Preis-Verzeichniss" of
1830 (vide supra). This, however, means doing injustice to Lichtenstein. Those naive
allusions to color and shape are not his work, but that of Wilhelm .Deppe who himself
signs responsibility for the list. He simply made use of the manuscript names given to
the respective species by Lichtenstein in the Berlin Museum. Technically not the Mu-
seum's specimens, but those offered for sale in the "Preis-Verzeichniss" will have to be
considered types of the new species. They all were collected in the state of Veracruz
(or, as far as the Pic0 de Orizaba is concerned, in that of Puebla) which thus automati-
cally becomes their type locality. The cotypes mentioned had been selected by Lichten-
stein from the Deppe and Schiede collection before W. Deppe drew up his Preis-
Verzeichniss.
In the following list the necessary nomenclatural changes are given. Numbers are
those of W. Deppe's price list. The nomenclature is in accord with Hellmayr's and
Peters' works.
17. "Cuculus viaticus Lichtenst. Bunt gesprenkelt wie der Tannenhiher, die Federn griin mit weissen
Rndern, sehr langer Schwanz" is the earliest name of the Mexican Roadrunner, antedating
Geococcyx variegata Waglet, 1831, and Cuculus velox Wagner, 1836. According to F. Deppe's
letter dated Mexico, May 18, 1825, this species was first shown to him by Mr. Bullock, Jr. It was
known in Temascaltepec by the name of Corre Camino, but in Mexico City not even Sefiores
Cervantes and de la Llave, the only men interested in natural history, had even seen it. Deppe
sent the Roadrunner's nest with two eggs to Berlin in 1825 and got additional specimens at
Actopen in June, 1825, and at Tehuantepec in November, 1825. The name of Geococcyx velox
(Wagner) has to be replaced by Geococcyx viatic,ts (W. Deppe), unless it will be considered a
nomen conservandum by the International Commission of Zoological Nomenclature.
26. Amazilia beryllina (Lichtenstein) becomes Amazilia beryllina (W. Deppe). Type sold. Cotype,
from "Jalapa," 1828, in Zoological Museum, Berlin.
27. "Trochilus verticalis Lichtenst." becomes A'mazilia verticalis (W. Deppe), replacing Amazilia
violiceps Gould, 1859, unless the former will be considered a nomen conservandum. Type sold.
Cotype, from "Jalapa," 1828, in Zoological Museum Berlin.
29. "Trochilus cuculliger Lichtenst." is a synonym of Basilinna leucotis (Vieillot, 1818).
32. Campylopterus curvipennis (Lichtenstein) becomes Campylopterus curvipennis (W. Deppe).
Type sold. Cotype, from "Jalapa," 1828, in Zoological Museum Berlin. Deppe's field note, Jalapa,
November, 1828, is as folows: "Zeichnet sich dutch sein Geschrei aus, das sehr laut ist und
ungefiihr wie die Stimme yon Penelope superciliaris klingt. Er lebt .nut in ganz dichtem Gebiisch
wo man immer mehrere beisammen finder. Sie sitzen viel'hiiufiger auf Zweigen als andere Kolibris.
In der Luftr6hre befindet sich eine eigentiimliche knorplige Bildung, die bei keiner der iibrigen
Kolibri Arten vorkommt. Zur niheren Untersuchung folgt ein K6rper in Branntwein."
33. Campylopterus hemileucurus (Lichtentein) becomes Campylopterus hemileucurus (W. Deppe).
Type sold. Cotype, from "Jalapa," 1828, in Zoological Museum Berlin.
34.."Trochilus coruscus Lichtenst." is a synonym of Calothorax luciJer (Swainson, 1827).
38. Amblycercus holosericeus (Lichtenstein) becomes Amblycercus holosericeus (W. Deppe). Type
sold. Cotype, from Alvarado [Veracruz], in Zoological Museum Berlin.
42. Dives dives (Lichtenstein) becomes Dives dives (W. Deppe). Type sold. Cotype, from Valle Real
[Veracruz], in Zoological Museum Berlin.
59. "Alauda glacialis Mas (alpestris affinis)" is a synonym of Eremophila alpestris chrysolaema
(Waglet).
66. Saltator caerulescens grandis (Lichtenstein) becomes Saltator caerulescens grandis (W. Deppe).
Type sold. Cotype, from Jalapa, 1828, in Zoological Museum Berlin.
70. Thraupis abbas (Lichtenstein) becomes Thraupis abbas (W. Deppe). Type sold. Cotype, from
Jalapa, 1828, in Zoological Museum Berlin.
71. "Tanagra rutila Lichtenst. Mas. Oberhalb braungrau, unterhalb ebenso, heller." This meagre de-
scription was aken from a specimen in the Deppe and Schiede collection, which has been sold.
Consequently, Tanagra rutila W. Deppe becomes a synonym of Pipilo juscus Swainson, 1827,
whereas Pipilo albicollis Sclater is the correct name of the species inhabiting the state of Oaxaca
which has been called Pipilo rutilus (Lichtenstein) by Hellmayr (Cat. Birds Am., part 11, 1938:
468). The manuscript name of Tanagra rutila was first given by Lichtenstein to two specimens,
collected, respectively, at Cimapfm [,Mxico], in July, 1825, and at Oaxaca [,Oaxaca], in Sep-
tember, 1825, and later on to three specimens from Temascaltepec, August and September, 1826,
none of which can be considered the type of W. Deppe's description. It now proves to have been
a technical mistake to select the Oaxaca specimen as the type of Tanagra rutila.
72. Rhodothraupis celaeno (Lichtenstein) becomes Rhodothraupis celaeno (W. Deppe). Type sold.
Cotype, from Papantla, 1829, in Zoological Museum Berlin.
78. Basileuterus culicivorus (Lichtenstein) becomes Basileuterus culicivorus (W. Deppe). Type sold.
Cotype, from Jalapa, 1828, in Zoological Museum Berlin.
81. "Troglodytes mexicanus Lichtenstein" becomes Thryomanes bewickii mexicanus (W. Deppe),
antedating Thryomanes bewickii rnurinus (Hartlaub, 1852), see Meise (Jour. fiir Ornith. 93,
1952:178). Type, from the State of Veravruz, sold.
82. "Troglodytes latifasciatus Lichtenstein" becomes Salpinctes obsoletus latifasciatus (W. Deppe),
antedating Salpinctes obsoletus notius Ridgway 1903, see Meise (loc. cit.). Type sold.
107. Nuttallornis mesoleucus (Lichtenstein) becomes Nuttallornis mesoleucus (W. Deppe).
113. Buteogallus anthracinus (Lichtenstein) becomes Buteogallus anthracinus (W. Deppe).
The "Preis-Verzeichniss" is apparently not the only publication specially devoted
to specimens which were collected by Deppe and Schiede. I take it for certain that the
Mexican species described by Wagler in Oken's "Isis" for 1830 and 1831 belong to the
same group. In 1830 the Munich Museum was presented with a case containing Mexican
mammals and birds. The donor was a Bavarian by the name of Reerl (or Keerl), who
had lived in Mxico for several years. The novelties and all the additional species listed
by Wagler had been represented in Deppe's collection of 1825-1826, or in the Deppe
and Schiede collections which were sent to Berlin in 1828 and 1829. Three of Wagler's
new species are birds of high altitude. According to the documents preserved in the
archives of the Berlin Museum, Deppe and Schiede aSCended the Pico de Orizaba in
1828. Soon afterward, in 1829, they were in great financial trouble. It seems therefore
most likely that th two friends sold part of their collection to a German who was about
to sail home again from Verucruz. If this theory is accepted, the types of the following
species must have been obtained in the state of Veracruz, or on the Pico de Orizaba
(Puebla).
From High Altitude
Ariaperes pileatus Wagner, 1831.
Junto phaeonotns Waglet, 1831.
Eremophila alpestris 1/2hrysolaema (Waglet, 1831), [see Preis-Verzeichniss, 1830, Nr. 59].
From the Lowlands
Geo1/2occyx variegata Waglet, 1831 = Geo1/2o1/21/2yx viaticus (W. Deppe, 1830), [see Preis-Verzeich'niss,
Nr. 17].
Columba fiavirostris Waglet, 1831.
Jacana spinosa gymnostoma (Waglet, 1831).
Larus pipixcan Waglet, 1831.
Penelope purpurascens Waglet, 1830.
Ortalis vetvia (Waglet, 1830), [see Preis-Verzeichniss, Nr. 122].
The five Mexican birds which were discovered by Wagler in the Wiirzburg Museum
["Dr. Petz leg."] and described by him in 1832--Diglossa baritula, Glaucidium gnoma,
Otus tricttopsis, "Odontopliorus meleagris"--Cyrtonyx montezumae (Vigors) and
"Calllpepla strenua" = Callipepla squamata (Vigors)--certainly did not pass through
the hands of Deppe and Schiede. They apparently were collected in the Valley of Mexico
(by Dr. Petz himself?).
Zoological Museum Berlin, May 12, 1953.