The
binomial name Halcyon sanctus was introduced by
Nicholas Aylward Vigors and
Thomas Horsfield in 1827 who
described a sacred kingfisher
zoological specimen from
New Holland, Australia. Vigors and Horsfield compare it with
Alcedo sacra described by
Johann Friedrich Gmelin in 1788. Gmelin in turn based his description on
John Latham's "Sacred King's Fisher" published in 1782. Latham described several varieties, one of which was illustrated in
Arthur Phillip's
The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay published in 1789. The genus
Halcyon was split and the sacred kingfisher was placed in the genus
Todiramphus that had been erected by the French surgeon and naturalist
René Lesson in 1827. The generic name is derived from the genus
Todus (Brisson, 1760), 'tody' (a West Indian insectivorous bird) and
Ancient Greek (), 'bill'. The specific epithet is the Latin 'sacred'. Five
subspecies are recognised: •
T. s. sanctus (Vigors & Horsfield, 1827) –
Australia to eastern
Solomon Islands,
New Guinea and
Indonesia •
T. s. vagans (
Lesson, 1828) –
New Zealand,
Lord Howe Island and
Kermadec Islands •
T. s. norfolkiensis (
Tristram, 1885) –
Norfolk Island •
T. s. canacorum (Brasil, L, 1916) –
New Caledonia •
T. s. macmillani (
Mayr, 1940) –
Loyalty Islands The
holotype of
Halcyon norfolkiensis Tristram is an adult male held in the vertebrate zoology collection of
National Museums Liverpool at
World Museum, with accession number NML-VZ T6527. The specimen was collected in
Norfolk Island in October 1879 by E. L. Layard and came to the Liverpool national collection through the purchase of Canon
Henry Baker Tristram's collection by the museum in 1896. == Etymology==