130 BROOKLYN INvSTiTUTE MUSEUM. SCIENCE BULLETIN 2 . 5 - 
March 3, 1913. Our fox terrier presently began to worry two small 
])engnins which stood on a ])ile of rock some four hundred meters back 
from the water. As soon as I heard the strident \’oices of the birds I 
knew that they were not P. papua, and on inve.stigation the}' proved to 
be P. antaixtica. A few minutes afterwards I met a third in the midst of 
a flock of a dozen papiia. The presence of the stranger was evident!}' not 
welcomed for several of the johnny penguins were pecking and strik- 
ing it. 
All three of the ringed ]iengnins were molting. 
This species was found breeding at Royal Ba}' b}' the German Ex- 
])edition of 1882-83. It is known, also, from the Falklands. It is not 
typically a Snbantarctic form, however, its center of abundance being in 
West Antarctica and the ont-lying islands. 
Of my three specimens one was preserved in alcohol and another 
prepared as a skeleton. The measurements of the third, a skin, are : 
Bill from 
gape 
Bill from 
nasal 
feathers 
Wing from 
axilla 
Tail 
Foot 
No. 1913 (T ad. 
65 
36 
120 
1 1 
94 
I rides straw-color. 
Recentl}' I have received a fourth specimen, a female collected at 
Cumberland Bay, South Georgia, in Febrnar}' 1915. 
Eudyptes chrysolophus (Brandt). 
Catarrh actes chrysoloph ns Cat. B. Brit. Mus., XXVI, p. 641. 
The macaroni penguin was evidently common at the time of 
Weddell’s visit, but the German Expedition of 1882-83 found only a 
single straying example. 
I did not see this species during my stay. That it .still exists, 
however, I was flust assured by a letter dated at .South Cxeorgia, Jiih' 5, 
1914, and received by me from Mr. Jo.se G. Correia, a New Bedford 
whaler. From this letter I extract the following jiaragraph, translated 
from the Portngne.se : 
Captain Larsen asked the coinniander of the Undine to bring four of the 
penguins which have orange feathers on their heads. These are called niaccaronas. 
