Haliaeetus
Genus of eagles
Haliaeetus is a genus of four species of eagles , closely related to the sea eagles in the genus Ichthyophaga .
Taxonomy
The genus Haliaeetus was introduced in 1809 by the French zoologist Marie Jules César Savigny to accommodate a single species, the "L'aigle de mer" with the binomial name Haliaeetus nisus . This is the type species . Savigny's binomial name is now regarded as a junior synonym of Falco albicilla (the white-tailed eagle ) that had been described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758.[ 1] [ 2] The genus name is from Latin haliaetus or haliaetos meaning "sea-eagle" or "osprey".[ 3]
This genus includes the following four species:[ 4]
Genus Haliaeetus – Savigny , 1809 – four species
Common name
Scientific name and subspecies
Range
Size and ecology
IUCN status and estimated population
Bald eagle
Haliaeetus leucocephalus (Linnaeus, 1766)
H. l. leucocephalus (Linnaeus, 1766)
H. l. washingtoniensis (Audubon, 1827)
Most of Canada and Alaska , all of the contiguous United States , and northern Mexico
Size : Habitat : Diet :
LC
Pallas's fish eagle
Haliaeetus leucoryphus (Pallas, 1771)
Kazakhstan , Russia , Tajikistan , Turkmenistan , Uzbekistan , Mongolia , China , India , Nepal , Bangladesh , Myanmar and Bhutan .
Size : Habitat : Diet :
EN
White-tailed eagle
Haliaeetus albicilla (Linnaeus, 1758)
H. a. albicilla - (Linnaeus, 1758)
H. a. groenlandicus - Brehm, CL, 1831
Greenland and Iceland across Europe and Asia to as far east as Hokkaido , Japan
Size : Habitat : Diet :
LC
Steller's sea eagle
Haliaeetus pelagicus (Pallas, 1811)
Russia , Korea , Japan , China , and Taiwan
Size : Habitat : Diet :
VU
References
^ Savigny, Marie Jules César (1809). Description de l'Égypte: Histoire naturelle (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Imprimerie impériale. pp. 68 , 85 .
^ Mayr, Ernst ; Cottrell, G. William, eds. (1979). Check-List of Birds of the World . Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Museum of Comparative Zoology. p. 299.
^ Jobling, James A. "Haliaeetus" . The Key to Scientific Names . Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Retrieved 20 November 2024 .
^ Gill, Frank ; Donsker, David; Rasmussen, Pamela , eds. (August 2024). "Hoatzin, New World vultures, Secretarybird, raptors" . IOC World Bird List Version 14.2 . International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 20 November 2024 .