Birds. 513 



Woodward (Bernard), Director of the West Australian Museum, 

 Perth. 

 See West Australian Museum. 



Woodward (R. B. and J. D. S.). 

 See Gerrard, E. 

 20 specimens from Zululand. Purchased. [99. 4. 3, 1-20.] 

 The brothers Woodward made some important collections in the Zulu 

 country, described by me in the 'Ibis' for 1897, pp. 400-422, pi. x., 

 pp. 495-517. They afterwards wrote an excellent summary of their work 

 with field-notes (c/. Woodward, Ibis, 1898, pp. 216-228, 517-525). 



Woosnam {Capt. R. B.). 



ASee aha Bail ward, Colonel E. C. 

 65 birds from the Vaal River. Purchased. [1904. 11. 19, 1-65.] 



Woosnam (R. B.) and Dent (R. E.). 



237 birds from the Orange Colony. Purchased. [1904. 4. 1, 1-61 ; 

 1904. 11. 18, 1-176.] 



41 birds from Bechuana Land. Purchased. [1904. 6. 7, 1-41]. 



99 birds from the Kuruman district. Cape Colony. Purchased. 

 [1904. 7. 23, 1-99.] 



Worthen (K.). 



32 specimens from Texas, California, etc. Purchased. [1900. 11. 30, 

 11-32.] 



Worthington (A. B. Bayley). 



71 birds from Karakol, Tian Shan Mountains. Presented. [1905. 

 9. 14, 1-71.] 



Wray (Leonard). 



139 specimens from the State of Perak in the Malay Peninsula. 

 Presented. [86. 5. 11, 1-11; 86. 12. 22, 1-33; 87. 3. 20, 1-19; 88. 3. 

 18, 1-68 ; 88. 9. 9, 1-8.] 



Mr. Wray was the first naturalist to ascend the mountains of Perak, 

 and he discovered many new species, of which the types are now in the 

 Biitish Museum — Artamides larutensis, Pericrocotus wrayi, P. croceus, 

 Crypfohpha daaisoni, Muscicapula westermanni, Trochalopterum penin- 

 sulse, Melanocichla peninsular is, Oampsorhynchus saturatior, Alcippe 

 peracensis, Minla soror, Siva sordidior, Cutia cervinicrissum, ^tkopyga 

 wrayi, Chrysophlegma wrayi. 



The collections were tiescribed by me in the 'Proceedings' of the 

 ZooloLiical Society (1887, pp. 431-443, pis. xxxvii., xxxviii. ; 1888, 

 pp. 268-280, pi. XV.). 



Of. ' Who's Who,' 1905, p. 1776. 



Wyatt (Claude W.). 



3 species new to the collection. Presented. [76. 3. 3, 1-3.] 

 Scotocerca inquieta, Carpodocus sinaiticus, from the Peninsula of 



Sinai, and Pachyrhamphus cin7iamomeus, from the Magdalena Valley, 



U.S. Colombia. 



Wyatt was an enthusiastic naturili^t and a good artist. He visited 



Palestine, Egypt and the Peninsula of Sinai, publishing the results of 



his journey to the last-named place in the * Ibis ' for 1870 (pp. 1-lS) ; 



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