yS Rcconis uj Hirds Zi'liicli. have bred in Capiiirty. 



British Birds : All do well out here. Neither the 

 moult nor the heat of summer seem to trouble them much. 

 True, none of mine have made any attempt at breeding, but 1 

 hope with a more careful [)airiny when 1 can get some more 

 birds, to have success in this direction too. 



Since stocking this aviary with the ab(nc list of birds 1 

 have not lost a single bird either directly or indirectly through 

 fighting, nor have any sustained injuries. Uf course small 

 quarrels occur now and then, but these are never serious, and 

 all 1 can say is that if all human families lived together as 

 sociably as my bird family does, the world would be a much 

 happier place. 



To be continued. 



■<-¥^^ 



Records of Birds which have Bred in Captivity. 



Bv E. lioPKiNSON, D.S.O., M.A., M.B. 



l'"or incaning uf abbreviations fide paycs 58-59 (last vol.j. 

 ( t oiitiiiiicd from pugc Oj). 



CACATUIDAE. 



272.— GREATER SULPHUR-CRESTED COCKATOO Caca/na L^alcriia. 

 Whitely. 1915., in partial lilx'rty. See B.N., 1916, 102. 

 Abroad. 1st Dulitz f Russ. " in ijerlin in 1883"' fA.G.B. ii. 142. 

 Hybrids. 

 X Greater Sulphur-crested (Roseate Cockatoo). 



273.— LEADBEATER'S COCKATOO. C laidbcatai. W.T.P. 

 Johnstone, 1901. A. S. Medal. A.M. vii. 191. 

 Zoo, 1900, 1907. 



-<>- 



274.— BARE-EYED COCKATOO. C. gy)nnopis. 

 Zoo, 1907. 



