OD" NKW SOUTH WALES. 



245 



No. 1. No. 2. No. 3. 



PART IL-AVES. 



The works referred to in this paper are Count Salvadori's 

 numerous ornithological contributions to the Anuali del Museo 

 Civico di St. Nat. di Geneva, also his Prodromus Ornitliologice 

 Papuasice et Moluccarum, I. to Y. ; Mr. U. B. Sharpe's Gontrihu- 

 Hons to tJie Ornithology of New Guinea, Papers I, II, and III, in 

 the Journal of the Linnean Society, Zoology, vol. XIII ; and I 

 have also referred to some former papers of my own on the same 

 subject, published in previous numbers of this Society's Pro- 

 ceedings. 



I find, of the 200 species here enumerated, 78 of them are also 

 indigenous to Australia, and, if we add the Australian species 

 from the lists of birds obtained by Signer D'Albertis, and by the 

 Macleay Expedition, we find the number common to the Aus- 

 tralian and South East coast of New Guinea, to be 143 species. 



ACCIPITRES. 



EALCONID^. 

 1. — Haliaetds leucogaster, Gm. 



Sharpe, Oat. Ace. I, p. 307 ; Gould, Bds. Aust. fol. vol. I, pi. 3. 

 This fine sea-eagle was met with occasionally on the coast. On 

 one occasion Mr. Goldie was fortunate enough to obtain its eggs 

 from an immense nest, composed of about a cartload of sticks 

 and placed on a rocky islet near the coast ; a fine adult bird in 

 full plumage was obtained by Broadbent. 



