6 BULLETIN OF THE LIVERPOOL MUSEUMS. 
cardinalis (G.R.Gr.). Five. 4g. Solomon Islands (Guadalcanar ; 
Rendova ; Bugotu. 
rubra (Gm.). Six. Ceram; Moluccas. 
semilarvata, Bp. 
wallacei (finsch). Two. 
insularis, Guillem. 
riciniata (Bechst.). Three. 23. Batchian; Ternate. 
No. 1 (=12764 Tristr. Coll.), is Type of Lorius isidorii, Swains., Zool. Ill. (2) i. 
pl. viii. (1829). Ex Zool. Soc. Coll. 
rubiginosa (Bp.). Two. ¢@. Caroline Islands (Ponapé). 
fuscata, Blyth. Four. 33. New Guinea (Fly River). 
No. 4 has yellow where the others have red. 
LORIUS, Vig. 
hypoenochrous, G.A.Gr. Four. 33. New Britain (Ferguson Bay). 
lory (Linn.). Three. 9. New Guinea. 
erythrothorax, Salvad. Three. ¢. 
NS Be sub. sp. rubiensis, Aeyer ; jobiensis (Meyer) ; salvadorii, 
Teyer. 
cyanauchen (S. Miill.). One. 
Apparently collected by S. Miiller, and possibly a Co-type of species. 
domicella (Linn.). Five. 3,29. °Amboina. 
chlorocercus, Gould. Three. 3¢. 
No. 3 (=2918 Tristr. Coll.), collected by E. L. Layard, has more yellow on breast than 
the typical bird, with bases of neck feathers behind yellow. 
tibialis, Scat. 
garrulus (Linn.). One. Moluccas. 
flavo-palliatus, Salvad. (No. 1=Z. garrulus, Linn., Tristr., Cat. Coll. 
Birds, p. 73.) Four. 23, 2. Moluccas. 
CALLIPTILUS, Sund. 
solitarius, (Lath.). Six. g. Fiji; ‘South Seas.’ 
Nos. 5 and 6, ‘South Seas,’ are the Types of Solitary Parrot, Lath., Gen. Hist. ii., p. 
190 (1822). 
VINI, Less. 
australis (Gm.). Ten. 3, 2; 6sterna. Samoa. 
kuhbli (Vig.). Four. Austral and Fanning Islands. 
CORIPHILUS, Wagl. 
taitianus (Gm.). Six. Tahiti. (Plate IL., fig. 1.) 
Nos. 5 and 6 =5639 and 5646, Lord Derby’s Coll. ; the former is albino, and the latter, 
which we figure, entirely blue, except for a white speck on the throat. 
ultramarinus (Kuhl). Hight. Marquesas (Nukuhiva). 
No. 6 (=706a, Lord Derby’s Coll.), is an authentic specimen of C. dryas, Gould, 
TRICHOGLOSSUS, Vig. & Horsf. 
hematodes (Linn.). Four. 23, 9. Timor, June. 
forsteni (Temm.). One. [Amboina.] 
Apparently a slightly immature bird. The blue of the forehead corresponds in shade 
exactly with that of a specimen in this Museum of a male 7’. djampeanus, Hartert, of 
Everett’s collecting; the band behind the yellowish green ring is indicated by 
partially purple feathers, which show that its breadth will be equally extensive with 
that in 7. djampeanus. No marked green can be seen in the hinder part of the 
crown, but in certain lights there is a nwance of that colour, which is equally per- 
eeptible in 7. djampeanus; no green in the middle of the abdomen. The wings, 
measuring 133 mm., are slightly shorter than in Hartert’s sub-species. In the figure 
of 7. forsteni in Mivart’s Monograph the yellow-green ring, though described in the 
text, has been entirely omitted, 
