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Gymnogyps varonai
Cuban Condor(+1)·(Arredondo, 1972)
GBIF:288465604
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GEOGRAPHY
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REGIONS
Geographic Distribution(1)
Distribution. — Cave, asphalt and sinkhole deposits over Cuba’s main island (see Appendix). Pinar del Río. Minas de Matahambre: PPD (Suárez 2000 a: 113). Artemisa. Caimito: ACP = type locality (Arredondo 1971: 96 [see ‘ History’], 1972 a: table 1 [‘ Especie de Buitre ligeramente mayor que un Cóndor’], 1972 c: 310 [‘ Antillovultur varonai n. gen., n. sp. ’], 1975: 151 [‘ Antillovultur varonai ’], Suárez & Arredondo 1997: 100 [‘ Gymnogyps sp. ’], Suárez 2000 a: 113, fig. 2 * = tarsometatarsus: A [anterior], B [posterior], Suárez & Emslie 2003: 30, fig. 4 = tarsometatarsi: middle [anterior], right [anterior], Arredondo & Arredondo 2002 a: table 1 [‘ Antillovultur varonai ’], 2002 b: table 1 [‘ Antillovultur varonai ’]), ASA (Suárez 2000 a: 112 – 113, 2000 b: 68 [‘ Gymnogyps ’], 2004 a: 124, Arredondo & Arredondo 2002 a: table 1 [‘ Antillovultur varonai ’]). Mayabeque. Quivicán: YIN (Suárez 2000 a: 113). Matanzas. Martí: MLB (Suárez 2000 a: 112, fig. 4 * = rostrum: A [dorsal], B [lateral], Iturralde-Vinent et al. 2000: table 2, Suárez & Emslie 2003: 30, fig. 2 = rostrum: middle [lateral], Suárez 2020 a, fig. 7: A = humerus [anconal], B = coracoid [ventral], C = carpometacarpus [ventral], D = tibiotarsus [anterior], E = tibiotarsus [distal], F – J = tarsometatarsus: F [anterior], G [proximal], H [posterior], I [anterior], J [distal]). Villa Clara. Corralillo: VSM (Pradas 1998: 7 [‘ Antillobultor [sic] varonai ’], Suárez 2000 a: 112, fig. 3 * = skull: A [dorsal], B [lateral], C [posterior], Suárez & Emslie 2003: 30, figs. 1 = skull: top row, middle [dorsal], bottom row, middle [posterior], 3 = tibiotarsus: left [anterior], Arredondo Antúnez & Villavicencio Finalet 2006: 163, tables I – II). Holguín. Mayarí: OCS (Arredondo 1984: 8 [‘ Antillovultur varonai ’], 1996: 1 [‘ Antillovultur varoni [sic] ’. This record has been cited with reservations, see Suárez 2000 a, fig. 5]). Direct 14 C dating. — Late Pleistocene (MLB):> 41,000 14 C yr BP (Suárez 2020 a: table 2, tibiotarsus). Notes. — The commonest cathartid in Cuban Late Pleistocene / Early Holocene deposits, from where it is known by most of its skeletal elements (Suárez 2000 a, 2020 a, Suárez & Emslie 2003). Approximately the same size (not ‘ bigger’, as incorrectly indicated by Gutiérrez Domech 2010: 12, Gutiérrez Domech et al. 2018: 42) as Andean Condor Vultur gryphus Linnaeus, 1758, and larger than California Condor Gymnogyps californianus (see Arredondo 1971: 96, 1972 c: 311, 1976: 172, 1984: 8). Comments on the taxonomic status of Cuban Condor by Navarro (2020: 51) are outdated, overlooking the taxon’s redescription (Suárez & Emslie 2003). The original description of Antillovultur (= Gymnogyps) varonai was not published in September – December 1971, as appears on Mem. Soc. Cienc. Nat. La Salle 31 (90). Some evidence indicates it was printed after the description (March 1972) of the extinct barn owl Tyto noeli Arredondo, and probably before that of ‘ T. riveroi ’ Arredondo (December 1972 [but see Arredondo 1975: 159, 189]). On 5 February 1971, Arredondo (1971: 95 – 96) commented about his discoveries and progress with investigations concerning the two large Tyto species and the condor. Of the barn owls, he wrote that ‘ aunque están descritas, no han sido aún dadas a conocer como especies nuevas’ [‘ although they are described, they have not yet been released as new species’], and concerning the condor, ‘ aún no está descrita, pero en un futuro se dará a conocer’ [‘ it is not yet described, but in the future it will be released’], indicating that both Tyto manuscripts were finished (one being in press, see Arredondo 1970 b: 151) and he expected them to be published before that of the condor, which was still not finished. This accords with the original description of T. noeli (supposedly published 3 – 4 months after the condor paper), wherein the condor is listed in a table without a scientific name (Arredondo 1972 a: table 1). This seems logical, as Arredondo had no means of easily modifying manuscripts in press outside Cuba (in this case Venezuela) (O. Arredondo pers. comm.). But, the barn owl paper, supposedly published a year after ‘ A ’. varonai, is cited in the condor’s original description as a source that had previously mentioned the presence of this scavenger in Cuba, with a precise indication of page numbers (Arredondo 1972 c: 309, 322), year (= 1972), month (= March), and even the scientific name of the tytonid (Arredondo 1972 c: 319, table 1). Or, in other words, a publication from 1972, is cited in all its details in a paper supposedly published the previous year, 1971. More precise information exists in an article on the history of the discovery of Cuban Condor and other fossil raptors by Arredondo, published by Morejón (1974: 85): ‘ En septiembre de 1959 un grupo de investigadores, entre los cuales se encontraban ... Manuel Acevedo-González, Juan N. Otero y Walter M. Acevedo-González, todos espeleólogos; y el paleontólogo Arredondo, encontraron en … la Cueva de Paredones ... huesos de un ave que muy posteriormente, en 1972, pudieron ser clasificados como pertenecientes a una especie de buitre mayor que el actual cóndor de California. Se trata de un nuevo género y una nueva especie, y recibió la denominación de “ Antillovultur varonai ” ... ’ [‘ In September 1959, a group of researchers, among them ... Manuel Acevedo-González, Juan N. Otero and Walter M. Acevedo-González, all speleologists, and the palaeontologist Arredondo, found in ... Cueva de Paredones ... bones of a bird that much later, in 1972, was finally classified as belonging to a species of vulture larger than the living California Condor. It is a new genus and a new species, and received the name of “ Antillovultur varonai ” ... ’]. Considering the evidence from these papers, the publication date of the condor cannot be in the last quarter of 1971, but sometime after March 1972. Delays, even of a year, in the printing of some issues of Mem. Soc. Cienc. Nat. La Salle were common at the time (F. Rojas in litt. 2021). As the precise date is unknown, according to the ICZN (1999, Art. 21.3 and 21.4), the date of publication for Antillovultur (= Gymnogyps) varonai Arredondo to be adopted is 31 December 1972, rather than September – December 1971, as has been generally accepted by the palaeontological community.
DATA
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Common names used for this species across different languages and regions. Available in 2 languages.
Cuban CondorengCóndor cubanospa
Vernacular (common) names are the everyday names used for a species in different languages and regions. A single species may have dozens of common names worldwide. This taxon has names in 2 languages.
Cuban Condor
eng
Cóndor cubano
spa
CLASSIFICATION