448 Recently published Ornithological Works. 



Whetlier tliis reference be correct or not, the discovery is one 

 of great interest. 



In our notice of Dr. Forbes's paper in the first number of 

 the ' Bulletin ' of the Liverpool Museums (Ibis, 1898, p. 161), 

 we regret to find that we omitted to call attention to two 

 new species of Parrots described from specimens in the Derby 

 Museum — namely, Pceocephalus rubricapillus from West 

 Africa (op. cit. p. 15) and Cyanorhamphus magnirostris from 

 Tahiti (op. cit. p. 21). 



64. Hartert on the Birds of Flores. 



[On the Birds collected by Mr. Everett in South Flores. Part I. By 

 Ernst Hartert. Novitates Zool. iv. p. 513.] 



Mr. Hartert now gives us the first part of his account of 

 Mr. Alfred Everett's collection in Flores, to the avifauna of 

 which considerable additions are thus made. Preliminary 

 descriptions of some of the new species have already appeared 

 (see Ibis, 1897, p. 443), but Phyllergaies everetti, Zosterops 

 unica, Culicicapa ceylonensis sejuncta, and Pisorhina alfredi 

 are now added. Altogether 64 species are enumerated. The 

 curious Pachycephala nudigula and two species of Zosterops 

 [Z. crassirostris and Z. superciliaris) are figured. 



65. Hartert on various Humming-birds. 



[Various Notes on Humming-birds. By Ernst Hartert. Novitates 

 Zool. iv. p. 529.] 



Mr. Hartert writes on 14 species of Trochilidae, chiefly on 

 points of nomenclature. He describes Eriocnemis mosquera 

 bogotensis, E. berlepschi, and Heliangelus dubius as new. 



66. Harvie-Brown on the Migration of Birds. 



[The Migration of Birds ; a Paper addressed to the Lighthouse-keepers 

 of the English Channel and to the local Ornithologists of the Counties 

 abutting thereon. By J. A. Harvie-Brown. Zoologist, 1897, p. 505.] 



Mr. Harvie-Brown appeals to the ornithologists of the 

 South of England for assistance in recording observations on 

 the migi'ation of birds on this coast. On behalf of the 



