CATALOGUE OF CHARADRIFORMES. 63 
We can hardly believe it possible that H. finschi, Martens (Ornith. Monatsber. 
vy. p. 191, 1897), described from a single example, is really distinct from this 
well-known New Zealand species. 
leucopus, Garn. Two. 6. Straits of Magellan (Puerto del Morro, 
October). 
palliatus, Zemm. Two. North America. Guatemala (Chiapam, January). 
galapagensis, Ridgw. ; durnfordi, Sharpe. 
frazari, Brewst. Two. Chili. 
Two eggs collected by Bridges ‘‘on rocky islands near the coast of Chili, in 
November and December.” These and other Chilian and Bolivian eggs out of 
the same collection will shortly be figured in the Bulletin. 
unicolor, Vagl. Four. 2¢. West Australia (Houtman’s Abrolhos, South 
Island, February). New Zealand (Port Cooper). 
moquini, Bp. Four. 1¢. Canary Islands (Isla Graciosa, February). 
South Africa. 
niger, Pall. One. ¢. Kamtschatka. 
ater (Less.). Nine. 4, 2jr. Chili. Straits of Magellan, February. 
The eggs of this species are in the Museum out of the Bridges Collection. 
LOBIVANELLINAZ. 
OREOPHILUS, Jard. & Selo. 
ruficollis (Vagl.). Two. Chili. 
ERYTHROGONYS, Gou/d. 
cinctus, Gould. Ten. 6. Australia (New South Wales, Upper Hunter 
River, Invermein, November ; West Australia, Swan River). 
HEMIPARRA, Sa/vad. 
This generic name is adopted in substitution for Defilippia, Salvad., which is pre- 
occupied according to Oberholser, Proc. Philad. Acad., 1899, Joc. cit. 
crassirostris (De/i/.). 
leucoptera, Rchnw. One. Nyassaland (Tschiromo, September). 
SARCIOPHORUS, Strick/. 
tectus (Bodd.). Four. Central Africa (White Nile). 
latifrons, Rchnw. 
LOBIPLUVIA, Bp. 
malabarica (Bodd.). Five. 2¢, 2¢@ (1 jr.). Northern India (Calcutta 
Mhow, July, October, December). 
MICROSARCOPS, Sharpe. 
cinerea (Blyth). Two. Bengal. Japan (Yokohama, October). 
HOPLOXYPTERUS, Bp. 
cayanus (Luth.). Three. 2 ¢. British Guiana, August. Brazil (Para ; 
Rio Huallago). 
The footnote to p. 136 (Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. Vol. xxiv.) is written under a mis- 
apprehension of the facts. Leyland, not Leybold, was a Natural History dealer 
in Liverpool, who also spent some time at) Omoa, in Honduras, where he made 
considerable collections. On his return to England he submitted his collections 
to Mr. T. J. Moore, the Curator of the Derby Museum, who wrote a paper on them 
(Proc. Zool. Soc. 1859). A small portion only of them were selected for purchase. 
The localities, also, are by no means to be trusted, as specimens obtained by 
Leyland, -in the ordinary course of his business, from other parts of South 
America, got mixed up with his Honduras Collection ; for instance, we strongly 
suspect that the type of the extremely rare woodpecker, Dendrobates sanguino- 
lentus (Sclat.), really came from Venezuela. 
