130 Notes on the Parrots. 



from Celebes, while the females have them no larger than 

 those from Djarnpea. 



Cacatua citrinocristata (Fras.) ; Hartert, Nov. Zool. iii. 

 p. 587 (1896) (Sumba); Forbes & Robins. Bull. Liverp. 

 Mus. i. n. 1, p. 9 (1897) ; Hartert, op. cit. v. p. 472 (1898) 

 (Sumba) ; Dub. Syn. Av. i. p. 2, n. 13 (1899) ; Sharpe, 

 Hand-list, ii. p. 11, n. 7 (1900). 



Forbes and Robinson mention a co-type or authentic 

 specimen of the species in the Liverpool Museum. 



Cacatua leadbeateri (Vig.) ; Dub. Syn. Av. i. p. 2, u. 14 

 (1899); Sharpe, Hand-list, ii. p. 11, n. 8 (1900); Tuck, 

 Zoologist, 1901, p. 478 (breeding in England). 



Cacatua alba (P. L. S. Mull.) ; Dub. Syn. Av. i. p. 2, 

 n. 15 (1899) ; Sharpe, Hand-list, ii. p. 11, n. 9 (1900). 



Cacatua albus (sic) Hartert, Nov. Zool. x. p. 4 (Obi major), 

 p. 45 (Batjan) (1903). 



Cacatua gymnopis Sclat. ; North, Pr. Linn. Soc. N. S. W. 

 (2) ix. pp. 37, 38 (habitat) (1894) *; Dub. Syn. Av. i. p. 3, 

 n. 18 (1899) ; Sharpe, Hand-list, ii. p. 11, n. 12 (1900) ; 

 Hartert, Nov. Zool. xii. p. 211 (1905). 



This bird is now known from Depot Creek in Central 

 South Australia and Northern Queensland. The Tring 

 Museum has recently received it from Flora Valley and 

 the Alligator River in N.W. Australia, and from Eureka, 

 N. Territory. 



Cacatua goffini Finsch; Sharpe, Hand-list, ii. p. 11, 

 n. 14 (1900) ; Hartert, Nov. Zool. viii. p. 5 (Toel, Little Key), 

 p. 165 (Larat, Timor-laut) (1901), xi. p. 195 (Kisser) (1904). 



Cacatua sanguinea var. goffini Dub. Syn. Av. i. p. 3 (1899). 



We know for certain that this bird is a native of the 

 Tenimber Islands, and I firmly believe that the birds which 

 have been found in Little Key and Kisser must have been 

 brought there alive by man. 



Cacatua ducorpsi J. & P. ; Dub. Syn. Av. i. p. 3, n. 20 



(1899) ; Sharpe, Hand-list, ii. p. 11, n. 15 (1900) ; Rothsch. 



* See also on the patria of Cacatua gymnopis, 'Ibis/ 1894, p. 454. 



