Mr. P. L. Sclatcr on mi unnamed Parrot from St. Domingo. 225 



little Mexican Coimro, which so nearly resembles Mi/lopsi/fa tigrina 

 of Snnancc, liolbnrhifnc/uis catliaruia {VAm\\>\. Kciid. Mnrcli 1857). 

 But there is no doubt that the Mexican l)ir(l (wlietlu-r really distinct 

 from the Venezuelan tigrina or not) should bear the name lineola of 

 Crtssin. Mr. Cassin's type, which is in the IMiiladelphian Academy's 

 Museum, was obtained by Mr. Pease, near Puente Na9ional, in the 

 State of Vera Ornz, and there is no gromul for supposing error in 

 the locality. I have seen the same bird in the collection of Dr. 

 Cabot of Poston. It was obtained by him in Yucatan, in the island 

 of C^)sumel in IS 12. 



The Parrots belonging; to the genus Tonygnathus of the East 

 Indian islands are in nmch confusion, which a more accurate know- 

 ledge of the localities whence s])eciniens are brought would, I think, 

 soon dear up. The ty])e of the genus, Tanygnathufi macrorhynchus 

 (Pi. Enl. 7i.S), distinguished by its enormous blood-red beak and 

 green head, with the wings varied with black and yellow, is said to 

 be from New Guinea. This is very likely to be the case, but more 

 certain localities are the islands of Gilolo, where examples were pro- 

 cured by Forsten, and Ceram, where Reinwardt found it living, as I 

 learn from the marked specimens in the Leyden Museum. Next to 

 it conies T. marginutus (PI. Enl. 2S7,fig. mala) from the Philip- 

 pines. This species has the hind part of the head blue, and the 

 wings varied with yellow and blue. A third bird of this genus is 

 Tanygnathus MuUeri, Bp. Consp. p. 5, et Mull, et SchlegeT, Verb. 

 Ned. Ov. Bez., Land en Volk. p. 108. The type-specimen of this 

 bird (which is in the Leyden Museum) was brought by Muller from 

 the island of Bouton ; but the same sjiccies occurs near IMacassar, 

 in the adjacent island of Celebes, whence Mr. Wallace has lately 

 transmitted specimens ; and living examples in the Zoological Gar- 

 dens at Botterdam are said to be from Timor. 



We have now living in the Society's gardens examples of Tany- 

 yiifi.thiis macrorhynchus and T. MuUeri, 



In our gardens we have also now living another very interesting 

 bird, namely the large green Lory, described by Prince Bonaparte in 

 a note in our ' Proceedings ' in 18.")0 (p. 26) as Fsittacodis Wester- 

 manni, which may be easily distinguished from its near ally, the 

 Psittacus magnus or sinensis of the older authors (of which we have 

 also a living specimen), by the want of the red patch on the flanks, 

 as well as by the different hue of the deep green colour. Prince 

 Bonaparte has employed for these birds, which, as he well remarks, 

 form the only green genus of true Lories, the term Psittacodis. 

 But the true type of Psittacodis (as constituted by Wagler*, its ori- 

 ginator) is the extraordinary Parrot, Psittacus paragua — a distinct 

 form altogether, to which Prince Bonaparte has applied the name 

 Stavori7iius. Mr. G. II. Gray, in his last List of Genera (p. 88, 

 genus 1491), applies the term Mascarinus to these Parrots. But 

 Lesson's name Mascarinus cannot, I think, possibly be used other- 

 wise than for the Psittacus 7na3carinuso{ Madagascar, which Lesson 

 placed within the genus, although he did not arrange it as the first 

 * Wagler, Mon. Psittacoruiii, p. 4'jr>. 



Ann. S^' Mag. N. Hist. Ser.3. Vol.i. 15 



