XXXIV 
APPENDIX. 
^ 2. Lycocorax obiensis. 
Lycocorax obiensis, Sharpe, Monogr. Parad. pai-t ii. (1893). — -Id. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, iv. p. xiv (1894). — * 
Meyer, Abhandl. k. zool. Mus. Dresden, vii. no. 2, p. 48 (1898).— Rothschild, Thierreich, Lief. 2, 
Parad. p. 48 (1898). 
Add:— 
3. Lycocorax morotensis. 
Lycocorax morotensis, Sharpe, Monogr. Parad. part v. (1895). — Meyer, Abhandl. k. zool. Mus. Dresden, vii. 
no. 2, p. 52 (1898). — -Rothschild, Thierreich, Lief. 2, Parad. p. 48 (1898). 
Genus XXVIII. PARADIGALLA. 
1. PARADIGALLA CARUNCULATA. 
Paradigalla carunculata, Sharpe, Monogr. Parad. part ii. (1893).- — -Id. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, iv. p. xii (1894). — 
Meyer, Abhandl. k. zool. Mus. Dresden, vii. no. 5, p. 42 (1898). — Rothschild, Thierreich, Lief. 2, 
Parad. p. 46 (1898). 
Add : - 
Family II PTI LON ORH YNC H I DvE . 
Genus I. MACGREGORIA. 
1. Macgregoria PULCHRA. 
Macgregoria pulchra, Hartert, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, vii. p. iv (1897). — Sharpe, Monogr. Parad. part vii. (1897). — 
Meyer, Abhandl. k. zool. Mus. Dresden, vii. no. 2, p. 53 (1898). — Rothschild, Thierreich, Lief. 2, 
Parad. p. 16 (1898). 
Genus II. PAROTIA. 
. .. 1. Parotia sexpennis. 
Add : — 
Parotia sexpennis, Sharpe, Monogr. Parad. part v. (1895). — Meyer, Abhandl. k. zool. Mus. Dresden, vii. no. 2, 
p. 50 (1898). 
Parotia sefilata, Rothschild, Novit. Zool. v. p. 87 (1898).— Id. Thierreich, Lief. 2, Parad. p. 17 (1898). 
Mr. Rothschild has resuscitated the name of sefilata for this species. This is undoubtedly the oldest 
name; but if Count Salvadori is right in believing that it is taken from the French ‘ Sifilet,’ ought not the 
correct rendering to be P. sifilata ? 
. , . 2. Parotia layvesi. 
Parotia laiuesi, Sharpe, Monogr. Parad. part i. (1891). — Id. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, iv. p. xiii (1894). — Salvad. 
Ann. Mus. Genov. (2) xvi. p. 104 (1896). — Meyer, Abhandl. k. zool. Mus. Dresden, vii. no. 2, 
p. 50 (1897). — -Rothschild, Thierreich, Lief. 2, Parad. p. 18 (1898). 
Dr. Loria procured a large number of specimens in the Moroka district, in the Owen Stanley Mountains. 
The iris of the adult male is given by him as sky-blue, with an external ring of yellow, the bill black, and 
the feet horny-black. The female has the soft parts exactly the same. The native name is “ Mamanu,” 
and the food consists of insects and fruit. Count Salvadori says that a large number of males, evidently fully 
adult, in the Loria collection, were exactly like the females, from which he argues that they must lose their 
full plumage for a certain time. 
