CHAPTEE VI 



NEORNITHES CARINATAE COXTIXUED 



BRIGADE II LEGION II (COUACIOMORPHAE). ORDERS : CUCULI- 



FORMES CORACIIFORMES 



Order XII. CUCULIFORMES. 



The Order Cuculiformes commences the last great division of 

 Carinate Birds. It contains the Sub-Orders Cuculi and Psittaci ; 

 the former consisting of the Families Cnculidae, or Cuckoos, and 

 Musopliagidae, or Plantain-eaters ; the latter of the Fsittacidae, or 

 Parrots, Parakeets, Macaws, and Cockatoos, and the I'richoglossidae, 

 or Lory group. Zygodactylous feet (p. 10) are characteristic of 

 the Order, while further structural details are to be found below. 

 Dr. Gadow confirms the close connexion of the two Sub-Orders.-^ 



Fam. I. Cuculidae. — Here we may accept, in default of full 

 anatomical investigation, the Sub-families of Captain Shelley," 

 namely, (1) Cucidinae, (2) Centrojjodinae, (3) Phoenico2)kainae, 

 (4) Neomorphinae, (5) Diplo'pterinae, and (6) Crotophaginae. 



The bill is generally long and curved, being strongly arched 

 in Hyctornis, Piaya, Taccocua, and Zcmclostomus ; it is straight 

 in Saurothera and Phinortha, abnormally large in Phampho- 

 mantis and Scythrojjs, and has the maxilla compressed into a 

 thin elevated plate in Crotopliaga. The scutellated metatarsi 

 are commonly stout, and are especially long in the cursorial 

 genera Cotia and Geococcyx ; in Centropus the hallux terminates 

 in an elongated spur-like claw. The wings are long and straight 

 in the Cuculinae, Diplopterinae, and Crotophaginae, short and 

 curved elsewhere ; the primaries numbering ten, and the second- 

 aries usually nine or ten, but thirteen in Scythrops; in the 

 Neomorphinae the quills are about equal in extent. The rounded 



^ Broiin's Thier Reich, Aves, Sijst. Thcil, 1893, jip. 212-223. 

 - Cat. Birds Brit. JIus. xix. 1891, pp. 209-210 



