374 
ON TUB CLASSIFICATION OP BIEDS. 
curvetl at their tips. Nostrils in double tubes. Legs 
moderate or lengthened. A claw in place of the hind 
toe. Grallatorial. 
T. cinerea. Selby, 102*. Leacliii. Ib. 10.“?. f. 1. 
Anglorum. Ib. 102. oceanica. PI. Enl. 99.3. 
pelagica. Ib. 103. f. 2. Wilsoni. Wils. 60. f. 6. 
Pachyptila, Illiger. Bill broad, and considerably dilated 
at its base ; the margins with internal laminse. Feet 
three-toed. Rasorial. 
P. Forsteri. Ind. Orn. ii. 827. 
Dbomas, PaykuU. (1805.) Bill longer than the head, 
compressed, very .straight, strong, depressed at the 
base. Gonys strongly angulated. Nostrils large, 
depre.ssed; aperture terminal. Feet long, slender, 
compressed. All the toes articulated on the same 
plane ; the posterior long and free, the anterior pal- 
mated as far as their last joint. Claws depressed. 
Wings moderate, pointed. Affinities uncertain. The 
! grallatorial type? 
D. ardeola. PI. Col. 362. 
NOTES. 
bi reference to the observations on teptostoma, page 139., 1 may ob- 
serve, that this bird seems to have been described in France {some time 
aUer the specimen in que.stion passed into the possession of the Zoological 
Society) under the name of Savntha-a Bottro. 
The great delay in determining the apparently undescribed species enu- 
merated in the systematic arrangement, and the lateness of their appear- 
ance, has prevental me from availing myself of some few ornithological 
publications J as the late Numbers of the Zoological Proceedings, Gould's 
Ornithology of New South Wales, &c. 
My suspicions that T. orientalis was a distinct species from that found in 
Southern Africa, has been fully confirmed by specimens of the hatter just 
brought home by Dr. Smith. M. Lichtenstein has evidently mistaken them 
for one, his measurements being those of the African, which he has thought 
to be the same as the Indian. M. Tcmminck, and Dr. Latham, have both 
fallen into the same error. As the case, therefore, now stands, I should 
propose that the Cape species be distinguished by the name of T. Capensis. 
