86 HISTORY OF THE PARROTS. 



it is also a native. The passage from the King-Par- 

 rakeets to the smaller American species, appears to 

 be effected through those species in which the two 

 central tail feathers hegin to lose the peculiar eha- 

 racter of the typical form, and the culmen of the 

 bill assumes the ridged or triangulate shape that pre- 

 vails in that American group of which Psitt. cruen- 

 tatus, Temm., may be taken as an example ; these 

 are followed by the larger species, as Psitt. Caroli- 

 nensis and Patachonica, which lead to the Maccaws 

 by such members as have the cheeks partly feathered. 

 Following the naked cheeked maccaws, we would 

 place the true Psittacara, in which the orbits and 

 part of the face is also naked, and the bill large and 

 powerful, such as Psitt. acuticauda, nobilis, &c. 

 The passage to the next subfamily, or Psitticina, 

 seems to be through Psitt. macrorynchus (Tany- 

 gnatkus macrorynchus^ Wag.)> and other species, in 

 which the tail loses its elongate and graduated 



