76 General
Notes.Loxiacristata J.R. Forster,IhdischeZoologie, 1781, p. 41.
LoxiabutanensisJ.R. Forster,FaunulaIndica,1795,p. 8.
LoxiarubraSuckow, Anfangsgr. Naturgesch. Thiere,II,2, 1801,p.832.
LoxiacrislataFoi-ster,1781,beingtheoldest
name
forthe species(assuming Seba's platetobe recognizable),Mr.Hartertwould
probablyadoptit,but asit istwice preoccupied (Linnaeus1758, Miiller 1776),thecorrectname
;accordingtothe
American
Ornithologists'Union
"Code," would be Hsema- ospiza indica(Gmelin). Chas. W. Richmond.NEW GENERIC NAME FOR THE GIANT FULMAR.
The
genericname
Ossifraga,givenby Hombron and
Jacquinot(Comptes
Rendus,XVIII,
1844,p. 356)toProcellariagigantea Gmelin,is antedatedby
OssifragaN.Wood
(Analyst,II,1835,p.305; VI,1837,p.244),applied toaverydifferentgroupofbirds. As the GiantFulmar
isthusbereft ofitsgenericname,that ofMacronectes
may
besuggestedasan
equivalent.Chas. W. Richmond.
NOTE ON A SPECIMEN OF PITHECOPHAGA JEFFERYI OGILVIE-GRANT.
The
United States NationalMuseum
has recently received from Mr.'Fletcher L. Keller,a hemp-planter ofDavao, Mindanao,
and
anenergeticmember
ofthe PhilippineScientificAssociation, afineskin of the Philip pine Monkey-eating Forest-Eagle,which
Mr.W.
R. Ogilvie-Grantmade known
as Pithecophagajefferyi,anew
genusand
species, describedinthe Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, Vol.VI, No.XL,
p.XVII,
1896,
and
subsequentlyfiguredand
describedingreater detail in theIbis for1897 (pp.214-220,pi.V,and
textfigures1-4).
He
speaksofitas"per hapsthemost remarkable bird
which
hasbeen discovered inthe Philip pines." Mr.Ogilvie-Grant'sspecimencame
fromthe island ofSamar.He
remarks:
"
The
Discovery ofthismighty
bird ofpreyiswithoutdoubtthe most remarkableofMr. Whitehead's achievements in the Philippine Is lands.That
so large a Raptor should have remainedunknown
till the presenttime onlyshows how
easilythese great Forest-Eaglesmay
beoverlooked." Respecting th*e size of this specimen,
which was
a male,Mr.Ogilvie-Grant states:
"Mr. Whitehead
says thatitweighed between16and
20Ibs."The
billofthis speciesischaracterizedby
extreme narrowT- nessand
verygreatdepth;and
the high vaultednarialopeningisalsoa peculiarcharacter.The naked
tarsiand
feetresemblethose of theHarpy
Eagle although considerably weaker.The
wings are shortand
thetail verylong, w^hich is just the reverse of thecommon
Eagleof the Islands (Pontoaetusleucogaster). Mr.Ogilvie-Grant says: "Strangeasitmay
seem,"we
have
littledoubtthattheHarpy
isthe nearestknown
allyofthe present species." In Sharpe's"Hand-List
of theGenera and
Species of Birds"(Vol. I, page 265), this bird is given a position between the Short-toed Eagles(Circa'etus)