Usage of a name (Instance)
An instance of a name in a reference, or usage of a name.
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An instance of a name in a reference, or usage of a name.
- At the bottom of this page are the citable links to this Instance object or just use the icon. You can "right click" in most browsers to copy it or open it in a new browser tab.
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Type: "AUSTRALIA, VICTORIA. Burrowa-Pine Mountain National Park. On the Burrowa Walking Track c. 1.5 km N by foot from the junction of the Mount Burrowa Walking Track with Hinces Walking Track. On ridgeline and c. 150 metres down NNW slopes, 1.56 km SE of Mount Burrowa. 28 October 2002. 36° 06’ 03” S 147° 42’ 28” E; Alt. 1143 m, V. Stajsic 3314, W. Molyneux, S. Forrester, P. Ashton and H. Merkel. On broad rhyolite N-S running ridge line and down NW slopes. Holotype: MEL 2190712A and MEL 2299595 (same collection, comprising a dry sheet and spirit, respectively); Isotypes: AD, BRI, CANB, HO, NSW, K, NY, WELT."
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Etymology: "The epithet recognizes the collection of the type material on a walking track to Mt. Burrowa and also its location in the Burrowa-Pine Mountain National Park in north-eastern Victoria where it is apparently endemic. Unfortunately, due to the extinction of the local language groups (Luise Hercus pers. comm. 2013) the origin of the name Burrowa is not known from the Pallanganmiddang. Barry Blake (pers. comm. 2014) indicated that Booroowah, the ‘White Breasted Diver’ in Dhudhuroa, was the closest traditional name that he could find to Burrowa. It is plausible that the ‘White-breasted Sea-eagle’, also known as the White-bellied Sea-eagle, which still feeds and nests along the Murray River and its tributaries, may be the bird referred to by the Pallanganmiddang and perhaps seen hunting in the vicinity of the present day Mt Burrowa."
Nomenclatural links
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Please cite using:
https://id.biodiversity.org.au/instance/apni/5441948
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You may link to this resource with any of the specific links, but we would prefer you used the preferred link as
this makes later comparisons of linked resources easier.
- These are all the non deprecated permalinks to this object. The link with a is the preferred link.
- Deprecated (old, no longer used) links will not appear here, but will still resolve. You will get a 301, moved permanently, redirect if you use a deprecated link.
- You may link to this resource with any of the specific links, but we would prefer you used the preferred link as this makes later comparisons of linked resources easier.