616 



APPENDIX. 



"Bigger than the Ceram Lory. Bill cinereous ; general colour green ; head, 

 throat, fore part of the neck, and breast red ; lesser wing-coverts the same ; legs 

 cinereous ; claws black. 



" Inhabits Brazil." (Latham.) 



53. PsiTTACUS LEUCOPHTHALMUS. 



Petite Perruche de l'lsle de Lucon, seconde espeee, Sonn. Voy. a la Nouv. 



Gitin. p. 76, pi. 38 (upper figure) (177(3) ; Wald. Tr. Zool. Hoc. ix. p. 137 



(1875); Tweedd. Om. Works, p. 304 (1881). 

 Psittacus leucophthalmus, Scop, (nee Mull. 1776) Del. Flor. et Faun. Insub. 



p. 87, n. 25 (1786) ; Wald. Tr. Zool. Soc. ix. p. 137(1875) ; Tweedd. Om. 



Works, p. 305 (1881); Eidgw. Pr. U. S. Nat. Mm. x. p. 546 (1887). 

 Psittacus simplex, Kithl, Consp. Psitt. p. 66 (ex Sonn.) (1820) ; Voiqt, Cuv. 



Uebers. p. 747 (1831); Wacjl. Mon. Psitt. p. 747 (av. dub.) (1832). 

 ? Blue-winged Parrakeet, var. B, Lath. Gen. Hist. ii. p. 274 (1822). 

 Psittacula leucophthalma, G. R. Gr. Gen. B. ii. p. 423, n. 24 (1846); id. 



List Psitt. Brit. Mus. p. 91 (1859) ; id. Hand-list, ii. p. 166, n. 8358 



(1870). 

 Loriculus (Cyclopsitta) leucophthalmos, v. Mart. Joum.f. Om. 1866, p. 22. 

 Psittacula passerina, var., Finsch, I'apag. ii. p. 650 (1868). 



Dr. O. Finsch has, with some doubt, identified this Parrot with the well- 

 known South- American Psittacula passerina (Linn.) ; but there do not appear 

 to be sufficient reasons for this identification. 



54. Psittacus aureus. 



Le Perroquet d'Or, Levaill. Pen: ii. pi. 138 (1805) (Brazil ?). 



Psittacus aureus, Shaw, Gen. Zool. viii. 2, p. 543 (1811) (ex Levaillant); 

 Bcchst. Kurze Ueb. p. 103, pi. 20 (1811); Kuhl, Consp. Psitt. p. 119 

 (1820) ; Wagl. Mon. Psitt. p, 746 (1832) (var. Pioni senegali) ; Hahn, 

 Om. Ail., Papag. p. 49, t. 34 (1834) ; Brehm, Mon. d. Papaq. t. 56 

 (1854) (ex Levaillant). 



Pyocephalus aureus, Sw. Class. B. ii. p. 301 (1837). 



Mr. G. R. Gray and Dr. Finsch consider the Perroquet cVOr of Levaillant to 

 be a variety of Gcoffroyus personatus, while Wagler thought it was a variety of 

 P. senegalus. 



55. Parrot, sp. 



A third species of the Parrot Family from Norfolk Island, Downing, Proc. 

 Boy. Soc. Tasm. iii. p. 208 (1859) ; Gray, Ibis, 1862, p. 231. 



56. Parrot, sp. 



G. Forster, in his Account of the Voyage round the World (ii. p. 334), speaks 

 of large and beautiful Parroquets that were found in Tanua ; and he further 

 describes them as having a black, red, and yellow plumage. They have not 

 been noticed by any other naturalist (G. R. Gray, Cat. B. Trop. Isl. p. 30 note, 

 1859 ; Finsch, Papag. ii. p. 934, 1868). 



