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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.Hartert

would

probablyadoptit,but asit istwice preoccupied (Linnaeus1758, Miiller 1776),thecorrect

name

;

accordingtothe

American

Ornithologists'

Union

"Code," would be Hsema- ospiza indica(Gmelin). Chas. W. Richmond.

NEW GENERIC NAME FOR THE GIANT FULMAR.

The

generic

name

Ossifraga,given

by Hombron and

Jacquinot(

Comptes

Rendus,

XVIII,

1844,p. 356)toProcellariagigantea Gmelin,is antedated

by

OssifragaN.

Wood

(Analyst,II,1835,p.305; VI,1837,p.244),applied toaverydifferentgroupofbirds. As the Giant

Fulmar

isthusbereft of

itsgenericname,that ofMacronectes

may

besuggestedas

an

equivalent.

Chas. W. Richmond.

NOTE ON A SPECIMEN OF PITHECOPHAGA JEFFERYI OGILVIE-GRANT.

The

United States National

Museum

has recently received from Mr.

'Fletcher L. Keller,a hemp-planter ofDavao, Mindanao,

and

anenergetic

member

ofthe PhilippineScientificAssociation, afineskin of the Philip pine Monkey-eating Forest-Eagle,

which

Mr.

W.

R. Ogilvie-Grant

made known

as Pithecophagajefferyi,a

new

genus

and

species, describedinthe Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, Vol.VI, No.

XL,

p.

XVII,

1896,

and

subsequentlyfigured

and

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'sspecimen

came

fromthe island ofSamar.

He

remarks:

"

The

Discovery ofthis

mighty

bird ofpreyiswithoutdoubtthe most remarkableofMr. Whitehead's achievements in the Philippine Is lands.

That

so large a Raptor should have remained

unknown

till the presenttime only

shows how

easilythese great Forest-Eagles

may

beover

looked." Respecting th*e size of this specimen,

which was

a male,Mr.

Ogilvie-Grant states:

"Mr. Whitehead

says thatitweighed between16

and

20Ibs."

The

billofthis speciesischaracterized

by

extreme narrowT- ness

and

verygreatdepth;

and

the high vaultednarialopeningisalsoa peculiarcharacter.

The naked

tarsi

and

feetresemblethose of the

Harpy

Eagle although considerably weaker.

The

wings are short

and

thetail verylong, w^hich is just the reverse of the

common

Eagleof the Islands (Pontoaetusleucogaster). Mr.Ogilvie-Grant says: "Strangeasit

may

seem,

"we

have

littledoubtthatthe

Harpy

isthe nearest

known

allyofthe present species." In Sharpe's

"Hand-List

of the

Genera and

Species of Birds"

(Vol. I, page 265), this bird is given a position between the Short-toed Eagles(Circa'etus)

and

the Serpent-Eagles (Spilornis).

Referensi

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