737 
by Mr . Claude Grant in South Africa. 
bine without any trace of green. This distinction is quite 
obvious when the Woodbush Louries are compared with those 
from Knysna. Neumann’s type is an adult male from the 
Kaap near Barberton in the Transvaal, now in the Liverpool 
Museum, and he also mentions two examples in the British 
Museum from the Lydenburg District. Others from Knysna, 
Elands Post, and King Williamstown in Cape Colony, and 
from Durban, all specimens in the British Museum, are 
typical T. corythaix . 
[“ Lourie ” of the Transvaal Colonists. 
Only in the forest of the Woodbush Hills in the North- 
Eastern Transvaal have I seen this form of the Knysna 
Lourie. There it is decidedly plentiful, and in every habit 
and action it resembles the southern T. corythaix and cannot, 
until handled, be distinguished from that species. The soft 
parts are also similar.] 
480. Turacus livingstonii. 
P. Tambarara, Mch. (1). 
[“ Nkurukuruof the Gorongozas. 
Livingstone’s Turaco much resembles in general habits the 
common T. corythaix. I have found it only in forest country 
and either singly or in pairs, never in flocks. It was by no 
means plentiful in the Gorongoza forests, where it frequented 
the denser parts and was more often heard than seen. The 
cry is similar to that of T. corythaix , but rather harsher. 
The native name is derived from its alarm-note. 
The soft parts are:—-Irides brown ; orbits red ; bill red- 
orange ; legs and toes black.] 
Turacus reichenowi. 
Reichenow, Yog. Afr. ii. p. 53 ; C. Grant, Bull. B. O. C. 
xxi. 1908, p. 66. 
P. Masambeti, Nov. (1). 
This bird, taken for the first time within South African 
limits, differs from T. livingstonii very much in the same way 
in which T. c. pheebus differs from T. corythaix, by the pure 
blue metallic coloration of the lower back, wings, and tail, 
without any traces of green. 
