137 



PENNULA DOLE. 



Pennula Dole, Hawaiian Alman. 1879 p. 54 (Reprint in Ibis 1880 p. 241). 



I BELIEVE that the genus Pennula should be placed near Porzanula, but 

 its wings are softer, the rectrices are next to invisible, but can be felt, as 

 they have stiff shafts and are about 13 mm. long, though being entirely 

 hidden by the soft tail-coverts. The tibia is bare for about 7 mm., the meta- 

 tarsus covered in front with nearly a dozen transverse, very distinct scales, and 

 distinctly reticulated behind. The bill much as in Poliolimnas and Porzanula. 



Two species can be recognized : Pennula millsi, with a uniform upper 

 surface, and Pennula sandwichensis, with a distinctly spotted upper side. Both 

 forms are now extinct. 



PENNULA MILLSI DOLE. 

 MOHO OF THE NATIVES. 



(Plate 26, Fig. 3.) 



Pennula millet (misprint for millsi) Dole, Hawaiian Almanac 1879 p. 54 (reprint in Ibis 1880 

 p. 241. "Uplands of j Hawaii : named in honour of Mr. Mills, spec, in Mills's Coll., nearly 

 extinct ") ; Rothsch., Avif. Laysan, etc., p. 241 pi. LXXVI. 



"Pennula ecaudata " apud Wilson & Evans, Aves. Hawaii., part V, text and plate. 



ALL we know of this bird are the five specimens caught by an old native 

 bird-catcher named Hawelu for the late Mr. Mills of Hawaii. Two of 

 these are now in my Museum, one in Cambridge, and two in the Bishop- 

 Pauahi Museum in Honolulu. There can be no doubt that this bird is now 

 extinct. All recent attempts to find specimens have been futile. Mr. Palmer, 

 whom I sent a specially trained dog, also failed to find even traces of it. It 

 lived formerly in the country between Hilo and the volcano Kilauea, in places 

 where thick grass, Vaccinium and Dianella, forms the thickest cover possible. 

 In former times the " Moho " was a dainty on the tables of the Hawaiian kings, 

 but its disappearance is probably due to the introduction of the obnoxious 

 mongoose and to bush fires. 



