1.*:^€r: .. Xt^v \,--<>. '^^ *^ M C^ uy, rc-"^ :2c^: Vym. //i. y ■ c^ L^i^'i/y(f^ "^^ ^^J ->^'/ •si-^' /^5**^ .•>.- ,' .^ ^:'tr '2^ ;>a'-->'*w5s' ^"^^^^ >-..:s5^..w//^. jS^ -^ ^' ■• ^ -■■my '■■ -. - (.V/,^ v& iV 71^ % t-r 5 Tin: ZOOLOGY OF TlIK VOYAGE OF H.M.S. EREBUS & TERROR, UNDER THE COMMAND OF CAPTAIN SIR JAMES CLARK ROSS, R.N., F.RS D U U 1 X G T H E Y K A K S 1839 TO 1843. BY jr-THORiry of the lords COMMISSIOXERS UF THE ADMIRALTY. E 1) 1 1' K I) B Y JOHN RICHARDSON, M.D., F.H.S., &c. JOHN EDWARD GRAY, Esq., Ph.D., F.R.S., &c. VOL. !. MAMMALIA, BIRDS. L O ^\ IJ () i\ : v.. W. J AN SON, 2 8, MUSEUM STREET, W.C. M.mcC.XUV.— M.DC'CC.l.XXV. VOL. CONTENTS Cliart of the South Circumpolar Region. (Frontispiece). Title Page. Conten^s. Summary of the Voyage, by Joseph Dalton Hookkk, M.D., F.R.S., F.L.S., &e., (pp. iii — xil). Mammalia, hy J. E. Gkav, Ph.D., F.R.S., F.L.S., F.Z.S., &c. T. The Seals of the Southern Hemispliere, (pp. 1—8), 1844, (pp. 9—12), 1875. II. Miscellanea, (pp. 12a— 12d), 1875. III. Oa the Cetaceous Animals, (|)]). 18 — 53), 1846. BiRBs, hy Gkorge Robert Gray, F.R.S., &c., (])]). 1—20), 1844—1845. Appendix, hy R. Bowdler Sharpe, F.L.S., F.Z.S., cVc, (pp. 21—39), ls75. PLATES. Seals. I— X, XIV— XVII. Miscellanea. XVIII— XXII, XXV— XXIX. Cetacca. BalaeiKi aiifipodm'/ni/, (referred to at p. IG as B. an tare flea), i~- XXXII his, XXXIII XXXVII. Birds. I, 1*, II— XI, XI*, XIII— XX, XX*, XXI*, XXI, XXIII XXXV. 58^86 SUMMARY OF THE VOYAGE, BY JOSEPH DALTON HOOKER, M.D., R.N., F.L.S. ASSISTANT SURGEON OF THE "EREBUs" AND BOTANIST TO THE EXPEDITION. IN the beginning of the year 1839, the British Government having determined on fit- ting out an Expedition, for the purpose of investigating the phsenomena of Terrestrial Magnetism in various remote countries, and for prosecuting Maritime Geographical Discovery in the high southern latitudes, H.M. Ships Erebus and Terror, commis- sioned by Captain Sir James Clark Ross, sailed from Chatham on the 29th of Sep- tember 1839. In addition to carrying out the above-mentioned leading views, it was enjoined to the officers, that they should use every exertion to collect the various objects of Natural History which the many heretofore unexplored countries about to be visited would afford. On the outward voyage we touched at most of the Atlantic Islands, making a longer stay at some of them than is usual, on account of the nature of the observations that were instituted. At Madeira, which was the first visited, we called in the middle of October, and remained eleven days ; and then made Teneriffe and the Cape de Verds, whence we sailed for and landed upon St. Paul's Rocks*, under the Line, in long. 29° W. St. Helena was the next destination, and the course which it was found ne- cessary to follow took us to the Island of Trinidad off the Brazilian coast, lat. 20° S. After spending a week at St. Helena, the vessels sailed for the Cape of Good Hope, arriving there on the 4th of April 1840. The Cape may be regarded as the starting- * For an admirable description of these remarkable rocks, distant 350 miles from the nearest land (the Island of Fernando Noronha), see Mr. Darwin's Journal, p. 8. 6 vi SUMMARY OF THE VOYAGE. point, whence the real object of the voyage, namely that which included South Polar Discovery, would commence. On the 6th of April 1840 we quitted Simon's Bay, and first entered a cold and inhospitable latitude (42° S.) on the 17th of the same month ; then, only four days after, holding a westward course, we passed to the south of Marion's Island, formed of flat terraces of black volcanic rock and cone-shaped mountains, often of a reddish tinge, and towering to a considerable height. Here oc- curred the first botanical phsenomenon, the Macrocystis pyrifera (a remarkable gigantic seaweed), being exceedingly abundant. The ships were hove to between Marion's and Prince Edward's Islands, with the view to going ashore the following day ; but during the night a heavy gale arose which drove them far to the westward, thus disappointing the hopes which had been formed of collecting objects of natural history on an island never previously explored by any scientific individual. On the 28th, after a succession of storms, the Crozet Islands were gained : this group lies far to the westward of the position that had been assigned to it, namely in lat. 47|° S. and long. 46-48° E. ; and here the same disappointment awaited us, for after being blown ofi", and again on the 1st of May beating up to Possession, the most east- ern of the cluster, the threatening appearance of the weather forbade any attempt to land. The Crozet Islands are all volcanic, and of the wildest and most rocky aspect ; the harbours are very few, and some of the islands are entirely inaccessible. The mountains rise in peaks and cones to an elevation of 4000-5000 feet, exhibiting patches of perpetual snow on the summits, while dense fogs frequently envelope their bases, borne from the sea, to such an elevation, that the highest points alone are visible. To all appearance the vegetation is equally scanty and stunted as that which Kerguelen's Island afterwards afforded, and the questions which were put to a party of miserable sealers who came off to the ship, elicited no satisfactory information as to whether the valuable "Cabbage" of the latter island also inhabits the Crozet group. Scudding before heavy westerly gales, on the 6th of May a remarkable conical rock, called Bligh's Cap, was descried ; it Ues off the north-west extremity of Kerguelen's Island ; but thick weather prevented Sir James Ross from making the land, from which the ships were again driven to a distance of 150 miles and obliged to beat back, finally casting anchor in Christmas Harbour, on the 12th of May 1840. At Kerguelen's Island, all the plants that had been originally detected by the illus- SUMMARY OF THE VOYAGE, vii trious Cook were gathered during the two and a half winter months that the " Erebus and Terror" staid there, together with many other species, a remarkable proof of the uniformity of the climate, and the comparative mildness of the winter season. The ships left Kerguelen's Island on the 20th of July, and arrived in the river Derwent, Van Diemen's Island, on the 16th of August 1840. On the 12th of November 1840, we quitted Hobarton for our first voyage to the South Pole, during which the only places visited which yielded many plants were Lord Auckland's Islands, lat. 50|° S., long. 166° E., where we arrived after a week's sail from the last-mentioned coast, and staid there during the spring months of that latitude, and Campbell's Island, in lat. 52^° S., long. 169° E. Quitting that island again on the 17th of December, the ships finally sailed for an entirely unexplored region of discovery. The Macrocystis and D' UrvillcEa were found in large vegetating floating patches, nearly as far south as any open water remained free of bergs, in lat. 6 1° S. The vessels entered the pack-ice in lat. 68° S., long. 175°. During this voyage the vast extent of continent, since called "Victoria Land," was discovered*, together with the active volcano " Mount Erebus," the extinct one " Mount Terror," and that icy barrier, which, running east and west, in the parallel of 78° S., prevents all farther progress towards the polef. Two small islets were landed upon: one in lat. 71° 49' S.,long. 170° 52' E. ; the other, Franklin Island, in lat. 76° S. and long. 168° 59' E. ; but neither of these spots presented the slightest trace of vege- tation. On the return voyage the Macrocystis again occurred, floating as usual in im- mense masses, in lat. 51° 10' S., and long. 137° E. The expedition returned to Hobarton, Van Diemen's Island, late in the autumn (of that latitude), April 7th, 1841 ; on the 7th of July again started from Van Die- men's Island, and after a short visit to Sydney, cast anchor in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand, August 18th, 1841, where we remained three months. This time was spent in collecting materials for a Flora of New Zealand, in which object we received great assistance from Mr. Colenso and many other gentlemen, by means of whose zealous cooperation our collections were rendered extremely valuable. The second exploring voyage was commenced on the 15th of November 1841. It had been Captain Ross's intention to land on Chatham Island, in lat. 44° S. and 176° * Vide Chart. t Vide Vignette. viii SUMMARY OF THE VOYAGE. W , but the prevalence for several days of the densest fogs frustrated all attempts to sight the land. This was much regretted, for few* of the plants of that interesting si,roup are known to botanists. After tracing the Macrocystis into the 57th parallel, the ships entered an ice-pack of immense magnitude on the 18th of December, in lat. 62° S. Here we were entangled till Feb. 2nd, 1842 (the midsummer of those cheerless re- gions), making no more progress during that time than from the latitude just mentioned to 68°, where we emerged into comparatively open water to the southward of a large body of the pack, which however trended to the westward. At this time the season was far advanced, and as, in the preceding year, the retreat had been commenced, through absolute necessity, on the 9th of February, so Captain Ross did not think proper now to re-enter the pack-ice, but proceeded along its edge to the westward, advancing so far as 187° W., and then to the southward and eastward. On the 20th of February a gale came on, which, though in open water, was sufficiently trying ; the wind was very high, and the spray which beat over the ships became frozen ere it reached the deck, forming every object into a mass of ice ; the coils of rope were covered by an icy incrustation several inches thick, and most of the running-gear about the bowsprits was carried away by the weight of ice formed on it. On the 23rd of February the expedition came in view of the grand Victoria Barrier : the day being fine, the voyagers approached within a mile and a half of the Barrier, finally reaching 78° 10' S. lat. in the long. 162° W., having made six miles farther than in the preceding year, the highest latitude hitherto attained. Under all circumstances, this was more than had been expected ; for after the long detention, the rapidly closing sea- son rendered any progress very difficult ; but it was a great object to verify the magnetic and other observations, and to ascertain still more positively the position of the pole. Unable to proceed eastward, the retreat was commenced, tracing the pack edge. Sea- weed was again met with on reaching the parallel of 64°, and occasionally seen when running down the parallel of 60°, from 170° W. to 80° W., and thence in great abun- dance to the Falkland Islands, where the ships anchored in Berkeley Sound on the 6th of April 1842, not having seen land for 138 days, since leaving New Zealand. A prolonged stay in the Falklands, though the season was winter (April to the beginning of September), afforded ample opportunities for thoroughly investigating the * These few were collected by Dr. DieflFenbacli, and are now deposited in the collection of Sir W. J. Hooker. SUMMARY OF THE VOYAGE. IX Flora of that interesting and now highly important group, which, though it had been partially examined by Admiral D'Urville, and previously by the officers of that unfor- tunate ship, the " Uranie," under the command of Captain Freycinet, still afforded considerable novelty. On the 6th of September, the early spring of the southern latitudes, the " Erebus and Terror," with a portion of the officers, sailed from Berkeley Sound for the neighbour- hood of Cape Horn, and arrived there, after having been driven far out of their course by the equinoctial gales, on the 21 st, casting anchor in St. Martin's Cove, Hermit Island, lat. 56°, within a few miles of the far-famed Cape Horn, which is immediately opposite the mouth of the Cove. This is the most southerly spot on the globe which possesses any- thing above a herbaceous vegetation. Here, in the sheltered bays, the two kinds of Antarctic Beech, the Evergreen and Deciduous, form a dense, though small forest, and ascend, in a stunted form, to an elevation of 1000 feet on the bills. Many of the plants gathered during Cook's first voyage, by Sir Joseph Banks and Solander, and by Forster during his second, as also those which Mr. Menzies had detected, when accompanying Vancouver's expedition, and which have not been hitherto published, were found again ; and when the ships returned to the Falklands in November, Captain Ross transported many hundreds of young Beech-trees and caused them to be planted there, in hopes that the productions of so near a country might be found to succeed on these treeless islands. Some were also sent home and have since been distributed in England, from the Royal Botanic Gardens of Kew. The third cruise to the South Polar Regions was commenced on the morning of the 17th of December 1842, when the expedition sailed from Berkeley Sound. An op- portunity was afforded again of tracing the southern limit of Seaweeds. The Macro- cystis was. lost in lat. 55° S.,long. 57° W. ; but on attaining lat. 63°, long. 54°, another species appeared which had been originally discovered by Webster during the stay ot Captain Forster's ship, the " Chanticleer," in Deception Island, one of the South Shetland group, and again found by the expedition of Admiral D'Urville, and has since been pub- lished under the name of Scytothalia Jacquinotii. On the 28th land was made, a por- tion of Palmer's Land, to which the name of " Terre Louis Philippe" has since been given by D'Urville. The ships were already in the pack-ice, through which we pene- trated, tracing the hind to 64°, and seeing a small volcanic island, lying a few miles off X SUMMARY OF THE VOYAGE. the coast (Cockburn's Island), we landed upon it. The vegetable productions only amounted to twenty Cryptogamic species, three of them Seaweeds. Unable, after a series of fruitless efforts, to penetrate farther than 65°, and after having been more or less entangled in the ice for thirty-seven days, Sir James Ross finally bore up, and when, with great diflSculty, the ships had been extricated from the pack-ice, we commenced tracing its edge to the eastward. A succession of easterly gales rendered the pro- gress in the advancing season tedious, most uncomfortable, and hazardous. At last however, on the 22nd of February 1843, the pack was lost sight of, trending to the south- west. On the 28th the Antarctic Circle was recrossed, and in spite of the rapidly shortening days, dark nights, and continual bad weather (for throughout the month of February, corresponding to an English August, only one day elapsed without snow), the Commander persevered in holding a southerly course. On Sunday the 5th of March, the weather being very thick, with snow-squalls, white petrels were seen, a bird whose appearance affords a sure indication of the proximity of pack-ice, and on the afternoon of the same day a heavy pack was descried, only a few yards ahead, with a terrific surf beating on it. The ice here was such as not to allow of being " taken" (or entered), even under the most favourable circumstances, and the ships were accord- ingly put about in lat. 71° 30' S., long. 15° W. The thickness of the weather made it impossible to ascertain the course and posi- tion of the pack, and the Northward Voyage was commenced under violent N.E. equi- noctial gales. Beating to the northward, the ice occurred on both tacks, and the vessels were found to be in a bight of the pack, with the ocean loaded with bergs, and while the continued snow-squalls prevented the possibiUty of seeing any object ahead, the heavy seas and snow-laden state of the rigging rendered all human exertions ineffectual. From that date till the 11th of March, matters remained much the same, the ships beating to the northward with as much press of sail as could be exposed, trusting to Providence alone for guidance among the bergs. On the 19th the position assigned to Bouvet's or Circumcision Island was gained, but the weather rendered all endeavours, for three days, to discover land in this place of no avail. Both ships had a narrow escape of running foul of an iceberg, over which the sea was breaking, eighty feet high. The " Erebus," passing to windward, struck one of the floating masses from it ; and the " Terror," to windward of her consort, did not discover the danger till almost too late, SUMMARY OF THE VOYAGE. xi when bearing up, she ran along the edge of the berg in the wash of the surf. On the 24th D'UrvillcBa and Macrocystis were seen in lat. 51° S., and the last berg on March 25th, in lat. 47° S., the ships finally gaining the Cape of Good Hope on the 4th of April 1843, within two days of three years after they had first quitted that port for the high southern latitudes. Respecting the climate of the various regions visited by the expedition, and especially that which prevails within the Antarctic Circle, little need here be said ; except that the vast proportion which water bears to land, tends to render the temperature uniform throughout the year, and the farther south is the position, the more equable does the climate seem to be. No analogy can prove more incorrect than that which compares the similar degrees of latitude in the north with those of the south. The most casual inspection of the map suffices to show the immense proportion of sea to land in the southern hemisphere, the mass of the continents terminating to the north of lat. 40° S., America alone dwindling away to the fifty-sixth degree. The scattered islands dis- covered to the south of this are therefore removed from the influence of any tracts which enjoy a better or continental climate. The power of the sun is seldom felt, and unless in the immediate neighbourhood of land, and accompanied by a comparatively dry land- wind, that luminary only draws up such mists and fogs as intercept its rays. After entering the pack-ice between 55° and 65°, the thermometer seldom, during any part of the summer day, rises above 32° or falls below 20° ; and while the southerly winds bring snow, the northerly ones transport an atmosphere laden with moisture, which, becoming at once condensed, covers the face of the ocean with white fogs of the densest description. All islands and lands to the southward of 45° partake more or less of this inhospi- table climate, which, though eminently unfavourable to a varied growth of plants, still, from its equable nature, causes a degree of luxuriance to pervade all the vegetable king- dom, such as is never seen in climates where the vegetable functions are suspended for a large portion of the year. The remoteness of these islands from any continent, to- gether with their inaccessibility, preclude the idea of their being tenanted, even in a single instance, by plants that have migrated from other countries, and still more distinctly do they forbid the possibility of man having been an active agent in the dis- semination of them. On the contrary, the remarkable fact that some of the most xii SUMMARY OF THE VOYAGE. peculiar productions are confined to the narrowest limits, is a strong argument in favour of a general distribution of vegetable life over separate spots on the globe. Hence it will appear, that islands so situated furnish the best materials for a rigid comparison of the effects of geographical position and the various meteorological phfenomena on vege- tation, and for acquiring a knowledge of the great laws according to which plants are distributed over the face of the globe. These subjects are however foreign to the pre- sent sketch, the author of which hopes, ere long, to have an opportunity of dwelling upon them at large and in a different form. Those persons who have spent a series of years on the ocean, in pursuit of a favourite science, know how little can be effected by the unaided efforts of one individual, and where much is accompUshed, how large is the debt of obligation incurred, not only to the facilities afforded by shipmates, but to the accommodating disposition of those with whom he comes in daily contact, and with whom he literally shares one cabin and one table. The author may here be allowed to say, that no man can be more deeply sensible than he is of the rare privilege he enjoyed, in having messmates who were ever ready to sacrifice their own convenience for his accommodation. Most especially does he feel it incumbent on him here to return his thanks to the commanding Officer of the expe- dition (as is his first duty) for the opportunity afforded of accompanying him, for the kindness always shown during this the most important and interesting scientific voyage that has been accomplished since the days of Cook, and for the generous manner in which that officer's private cabin and library were unreservedly placed at his disposal during the whole time the expedition was afloat. Attached as Sir James Clark Ross has ever been to the various branches of Natural History, he took a pleasure in promoting the interests of the collections at all times, and himself gathered many of the plants here described. There were few of the officers of either ship who did not contribute something to the collection of plants ; but the botanist feels it peculiarly imperative on him here to enumerate and return his especial thanks to Mr. Lyall, Lieut. Smith, and Mr. Davis. Mr. Lyall indeed, as appointed to take charge of the botanical collections on board the " Terror," formed a most important herbarium, from which great assistance has been derived, amounting to no less than 1500 species. MAMMALIA. I.— THE SEALS OF THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. Thk Seals have been long considered as one of the most difficult families of Mammalia, partly on account of their great resemblance to one another in external characters, and the changes which they undergo during their growth in colour and form, but more especiallj' on account of the difficulty of observing them in their natural habitations. The labours of M. de Blainville, the two brothers Cuvier, and especially of Professor Nilsson of Lund, have done much to elucidate the characters of the European species and those frequenting the eastern coast of North America, — the species found on the west coast of North America being still laiown by the descriptions of Stellar only ; indeed many naturalists have been inclined to consider them as identical with those found in the southern part of the Pacific Ocean, believing that the species migrate from one extremity of the world to the other ; though we have the testimony of all voyagers that seals are never found between the equatorial line and 21° north latitude, a fact first stated by Dampier (Voy. p. 90). The Seals of the southern hemisphere have not been so well studied, from the want of sufficient materials. Cuvier, when he wrote the 'Ossemens Fossiles,' possessed only eight skulls, belonging to four species, (viz.- — 1. Phoca lepto- nyx ; 2. P. elephantina ; 3. P. pusilla ; 4. P. leonina ?), but as several of these had been brought home without the skins, he could only refer them doubtfully to established species. Indeed, almost the only knowledge that we have of these animals is derived from the obsei-vations of Cook, and the Forsters, who accompanied that intrepid navigator as naturalists ; and the materials which they brought home were well collated together by Pennant, in his ' History of Quadrupeds,' a work of very extraordinary merit considering the date of its publication. To be sure that was a time when England might fairly be described as taking, as she should do, a lead in scientific Zoology ; and it is yet a period which has not been fairly estimated by the modern school of Zoologists, who, at the opening of the continent after the war, appear to have been so dazzled by the brilliant progress made by the Professors in France named by Napoleon, that they appear to have overlooked the fact that these men were only following in the footsteps of Pennant, Latham,* Solander, the Forsters, Fabricius, and others, who were either natives of or had been fostered by the sci- entific men of this countrj', as Linneus followed in the footsteps of Ray. Besides the particulars given by Cook and Forster in the account of their Voyages, Forster communicated to Bufibn the figures of two of the species he had observed, accompanied by details of their organization and habits, which * I may mention as a proof of the indefatigable energy and industry of Dr. Latham, that he commenced at the age of ninety a new edition of his ' Synopsis,' in which he arranged all the more recently discovered species, with references to where they were described, and adopted some of the modem genera. I have this work in my library, in three 4to volumes, all written in the dear old man's own hand. Such was his interest in science, that, having expressed a desire to procure a copy of the drawing of his Butool Pheasant, to send to India, he, then in his ninety-se- cond year, copied the drawing and etched it, that 1 might have the impressions I required. He continued as much attached to the study of .Antiquities and Architecture as to Natural History, to the end of his long and arduous life. B were prinled in the supplementary volumes of Buffon's Natural History, and form the most complete and best account we have yet had of the history of these species. Peron and Lesueur, in their record of Baudin's voyage, indicated some Seals found in the South Sea, and give fuller details of the Sea-Elephant, they having been so fortunate as to fall in with some males of that species, but the Natural History of the voyage was never published, so that we are indebted to Cuvicr (Oss. Foss.) for the description of the only Seal they brought home, which ajipears to have been the Fur Seal of commerce. In the Zoology of Captain Duperrey's ' Voyage of the Coquille,' a Seal is figured, under the name of Phoca Mo- lossina, but the skull and skin, now in the Paris Museum, as Nilsson has correctly observed, is only the young Sea- Lion's. In the ' Voyage of the Astrolabe ' two other southern Seals are figured, one called Otaria cinerea, Peron, which appears to be the Fur Seal of commerce, and the Otaria australis, which is very like my Arctocephalus lohatus, described from a skull in Mr. Brookes' collection many years previously. It is to be regretted that the figures here referred to, especially of the skull, are so bad as to be utterly useless for the determination of the species without com- parison of the original specimens. In the French ' Voyage to the South Pole,' now publishing, figures are given of the Sea-Leopard and the common White Antarctic Seal, which they name Phoca carcinophaya, the two most common species found everywhere in these regions on the packed ice. Lastly, Mr. W. Hamilton has given an account of the Seals and other marine Mammalia, in Sir W. Jardine's 'Naturalists' Library,' which contains a carefully compiled account of these animals, and some original figures from the specimens in the Edinburgh and Liverpool Museums : but unfortunately, Mr. Stewart, the draughtsman, has been more intent on giving them an artistic effect than on attending to their zoological characters. Thus, some which should have no claws on their hind feet, have large ones, and sometimes one too many for any beast ; and the toe-membranes of all the Eared Seals or Otaries are represented as hairy instead of bald. The same author has given an account of the Fur Seal in the ' Annals of Natural History,' which he considers as different from the Sea Bear of Forster and other South-Sea navigators : according to Dr. Hooker, the Fur Seals rarely exceed 3^ or 4 feet in length. As it was necessary to study the species of the whole family the better to understand those of the southern hemi- sphere, I shall proceed, before I enter into a more detailed description of the southern species brought home by this expedition, to give the condensed results of my labour, in the form of a Synopsis of the Genera and Species of Seals, which will at the same time be useful in showing the systematic distribution of the southern species. I. — Synopsis of the Species of Seals. Sect. I.— Grinders two-rooted ; ears none : toes simple, of ** Hie \st front grinder in each jaw single-rooted, the the fore-feet short, of the hindfeet unequal, the outer rest 2-rooted. on each side longest, the middle shortest, the palms o. Stenorhvnchus, F. Cuv. and soles hairy. g^.^^^^ elongate ; muzzle elongate ; grinders compressed. Sub-family 1. Stenorhynchina. — Cutting teeth | ; hind- with three cylindrical elongate lobes, the centre one longest feet nearly clairless ; mujfle hairy to the edge and be- 3-Ji" largest. tiveen the nostrils ; fore-feet triangular; wrist very I. Stenovhync\n\s\e\:>tonyyi, F. Cuv. Mem. Mus. x'l. 191, short. t. 13,/ 1. Phoca leptonyx, Bl. Cuv. Ham. N. L. t. 11. P. Homeii, Lesson. P. Weddcllii, Le.ison. P. Leopardina, * The 1st, 2nd and Srd front upper, and the 1st front Jameson. Sea Leopard, Weddell. Hamilton, t. 12. lower grinder single-rooted, the rest 2-rooted. Inhab. South Sea. 1. LoBODON. 3. h¥.FTONYX, Gray, not Swains. Skull elongate ; muzzle elongate ; grinders rather com- Skull broad, depressed behind ; muzzle short, broad ; pressed, with a large lobe in front, and three lobes behind grinders subcompressed, with a small, subccntral, conical the larger central one. tubercle, and a very small posterior one ; the lower jaw 1 . Lobodon carciuophaga. n=i""o^ behind, without any hinder angle ; fore-feet clawed. Phoca carcinoi)haga, H. S( J. Voy. Pol. Sud. t. Ste- 1. Leptonyx Weddellii, Gray, Mag. Nat. Hist, (not the norhvnchus serridens, Owen. synon.) luhab. Southern Ocean. ' Inhab. Southern Ocean. 4. Pelagios, F. Cuv. Pelagius, Fischer. Monachus, Nilssoii. Skull broatl, depressed behind ; muzzle short, broad, orbits large ; grinders small, conical, " thick, with a small anterior and posterior lobe ;" lower jaw broad, with a dis- tinct ]5osterior angle ; " upper cutting teeth transversely notched." 1. Pelagios monachus, F. Cuv. Ciiv. Oss. Foss. v. t. 17, /. 1 — 8. Blainv. Ostcog. t. 5, 7, 8, !). P. a ventre blanc, Buffon, Snpp. vi. t. 44. Phoca monachus, Herin. Berl. Ahh. iv. t. 12, 13. P. Hermanni, Leswii. Monachus Me- diterraneus, \ils.wri, Vet. Acad. Hand. 1837, 235. Inhab. Mediterranean. Mus. Paris, bad state. Skele- tons and skulls. 5. Ommatophoca. Skull broad, depressed behind ; muzzle very short, broad, orbits very large ; grinders small, compressed, with a central incurved lobe, and a small lobe on each side of it ; fore-feet very slightly clawed. 1. Ommatophoca Rossii. Inhab. Southern Ocean. Sub-family 2. Phocina. — Cuttiiiij teeth | ; the \st front grinder in each jaw single-rooted, rest '2-rooted ; mitf- Jle laid and callous between and above the nostrils, and divided by a central groove ; wrist rather eccsert- ed ; fingers subequal ; claws 5-5, large. 6. Callocephalus, F. Cur. Muzzle rather narrow ; whiskers waved ; toes gradually shorter. * Palate angularhj notched behind; hair subcijlindrical, under fur thin ; web between the hind toes hairy. 1. Callocephalus vitulinus. Phoca vitulina, Linn.} Nilssnn. Blainv. Osteog. Phoca, t. 2, t. 5, and t. 9. Bnffon, H. N. xiii. t. 43. Supp. vi. t. 46. P. littorea, Thienem. t. (J, 7. P. canina, Pallas, Z. R. A. 114. P. communis, Linn. Inhab. Europe and North America. 2. Callocephalus annellalus. Phoca annelata, A'//v. Scand. F. i. 3G2. t. 38. Tliienem. t. 9, 10, 11. Phoque commun, F. Cuv. M. lithog. t. Ha- milton, t. 4. Call, discolor, F. Cuv. Mem. Mus. xi. 186. P. Frederici, Lesson. P. foetida, Mailer, Z. Dan. P. eques- tiis, Pallas, Z. R. A. iii. 40. P. Schreberi, Lesson ? Inhab. Europe. 3. Callocephalus Caspicus. Phoca Caspica, Nilsson. P. canina, var. Casjjica, Pal- las, Z. R. A. Inhab. Caspian seas. ** Palate truncated behind ; muzzle rather produced ; hair dry, fiat, close -pressed, tcithout any under fur ; web between the hind toes baldish. Pagophilus. 4. Callocephalus Grocnlandicus. Phoca gi-oenlandica, MM/Zer, Z'. /^. Thienem. t. 15 — 19. P. oceanica, Le/jcf//, xJt<. Petrop. 177. Hamilton, t. 7. P. semilunaris, Bodd. P. dorsata, Pallas. P. Mullcri, Les- son. Harp Seal, Penn. Quad. Bell. Brit. Quad. Ham. t. 7. Phoca laguvos, Cwy. Oss. i^os*. V. 206. Blainv. Osteog. Phoca, t. 9? Home, Phil. Trans. 1822, /. 28. P. albicauda, Desm. P. Desmarestii, Zes.so«. I*. Filayi, Lesson. Inhab. Northern Ocean. The teeth figured as Phoca Lagurus of De Blainville's ' Osteog. Phoca,' t. 9, appear to be some other, perhaps a new species. 7. Phoca. Muzzle broad, short; forehead convex; whiskers smooth, sinqjle ; ear-hole large : fingers unequal, the 3rd longest, 2nd and 4th long, the 1st and 5th shorter, nearly equal : palate rather angularly notched behind. 1. Phoca barbata, Fab. F. Green. 15. Tliienem. t. 1 — 4. F. Cuv. Mem. Mus. xi. 184, /. 12. Blainv. Osteog. Phoca, t. 9. P. leporina, Lepech. Act. Petrop. i. 264, t. 8, 9. Ham. t. 9. P. naulica, Pallas, Z. R. A. 108. P. albigena, Pal- las, Z. R. A. 109. Great Seal, Penn. Ham. N. L. t. 5. Inhab. Europe. Sect. II. — Grinders with single root fexcept the two hinder grinders oj HalichoerusJ. A. Ears, conch none. Toes simple, of fore feet cvserted, of hind feel large ; the inner and outer ones large, long, the three middle ones smaller: palm and .■soles hairy f sometimes chaffy and callous with wear). Muffle hairy to the edge and between the nostrils. Sub-family 3. Trichechina. Muzzle large, truncated, sim- ple; canines large; grinders lobed or truncated when old. 8. Hauchcekus, Nilsson. Muzzle broad, rounded ; cutting teeth |, grinders {I, conical, the hinder two upper and one lower double-rooted, rest simple, canines moderate ; whiskers crenulated ; muf- fle ? palm and soles hairy ; claws 5-5, elongate. 1. Halichcerus grypus, Xilsson. Phoca grypus. Fab. Xat. Selslc. Skri. i. 167, t. 13, /. 4. P. gryphus, Licht. Berl. Acad. 1821, t. 1, f. 1, 2. Blainv. Osteog. Phoca, t. 9. P. hispida, Schreb.'S. 312, t. 86. Hamilton, t. 8. P. Ha- lichcerus, Thienem. P. ochotensis, Pallas. Hal. griseus. Horns. Lsis, 1824, 810. Nils.^on, Scand. F. 377, t. 34, f. 1,2. Ham i lion, t. 10. Grey Seal, Bell, Brit. Quad. 284, f. " Long-bodied Seal, Parsons," Donovan. Home, Phil. Tr. 1822, t. 27. Inhab. North coast of Europe, (Ireland and Scotland). 9. Tkichechus, Linn. Muzzle very broad, truncate, swollen and convex above ; muffle, palm and soles chaffy, callous, with thehair more or less worn ofl' in the adult (hairy when young ?) : cutting teeth 4 in young, ^ in adult ; grinders ||, truncated, all single-rooted ; canines, upper very large, exserted. 1. Trichechus Rosmarus, Linn. S. N. Blainv. Osteog. Phoca, t.lSi,t.4. Rosmarus arcticus, Pallas, Z. R. A. i. 269. T. obesus and T. divergens, Illiger. Pale brown, when young black, when old white. Inhab. North Soa. Mus. Brit, adult. Sub-family 4. Cystophorina. Muzzle of the males with an infiat He' appendage : cutting teeth 4; grinders with a large swollen root, and a small, compressed, simple, plaited crown : muffle hairy. p. pvo- Hamil- F. Cuv. 10. MoRUNGA, Grai/. Macrovliinus, F. Cuv. Cjstophora pars, Nilssoi). Nose of tlie male with an elongated tubular proboscis ; muzzle of the skull broad, truncated in front ; forehead convex ; hinder palatine bone short, transverse : hair flat, truncated, adpressed; whiskers round, rather waved, thick : claws, front obsolete, hinder distinct. 1. Morunga Ele]ihantina. Plioca Elejjhantina, Molina, Sfiffg. 280, .341 boscidea, Peroii S; Le.siieiir, ii. 32, /. 32, males. ion, t. 10, 17. Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. t. 18, ./. 1. Mem. Mus. xi. /. 14,/. 1, skull. Phoca Leonina, Schreb. 297, /. 83, (cop. from Anson). Blainv. Osieofj. Ph. t. 5. /. 9. Sea Lion, Dam2ner, Voy. 91. Ansou, Voy. 122, /. 19. Bottle-nose Seal, Penn. Quad. ii. 531. Phoca du- bia, Fif:cher, Syn. from Cuv. Oss. Fos. v. 213. Phoque de Patagon, F. Cuv. Mem. Mus. xi. /. 14, /". 2. Inhab. Southern Ocean. Brit. Mus. Females and skulls. 11. Cm &TOPiiOT^ A, Nilsson. Stemmatophus, -F. Cuv. Nose of the male with a large compressed hood, extend- ing to the back of the head ; muzzle very broad, hairy ; nostrils large ; muzzle of the skull broad, narrowed on each side in front ; forehead flat ; palatine bone broad, square ; hair elongate, cylindical ; whiskers flat, waved ; claws 5-5, distinct. I. Cystophora cristata, Nilssou. Phoca cristata, 7)eA-«y, Ann. Lye. N. Y. 1, t. 7. Fab. Nat. Selsk. S/ai. i. 120. Ha- milton, t. 14. P. mitrata, Milbert, MS. Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 210. Hamilton, f. 13. P. leucopla, Thicnem. 102, t. 13, (young). P. leonina, Linn. S. N. i. 55. — P. leonina, Mul- icr. C. borealis, Nilsson, Scand. F. i. 383. P. cucullata, Bodd. Elen. 107. Seal with a Caul, Ellis, Hudson's Bay, 134, /. C,/. 4. Inhab. North Sea. Brit. Mus. two males, one female and one young. The young is like the young of Calhcephahis grcenlan- dicus in external appearance, but it is easily known from that s]:)ecies by the hairiness of the muffle between the nos- trils, and by the teeth not being lobed, but only plaited on the surface. B. Ears tcilli a subcylindrical, distinct, e.vternal conch. Toes of the hind feet subequal, short, with long mem- brane's at the end: fore feet Jin-like : palm and soles bald, longitudinally grooved. Nose simple, tvith a ra- ther large callous muffle above and betireen the nostrils: cutting teeth ^, upper often bifid ; grinders |4- Sub-family 5. Arctocephalina. 12. Arctocephalds, F. Cuv. Cutting teeth |, u]qier subequal ; muzzle rather tapering in front ; whiskers cylindrical, thick, not waved ; palate (of the skull) rather narrower behind than in front, short, scarcely reaching to the middle of the zygomatic arch ; lower jaw narrow, rounded below, without any angle behind. * Fur long, under coat thick, soft, silky. 1. Arctocephalus ursinus. Ursus marinus, Steller, Nov. Com. Petrop. ii. 331, 1. 15, (copied in). Phoca ursina,&/(rei. iii. 289,/. 82. Gmel. S. N. i. (J2. Otaria ursina, Desrn. O. Stelleri, Lesson, O. Krachenninikovii, Lesson, D. C. H. N. xiii. 420. " Hair long, erect, thick, under fur brownish red. Males black, older ones with the hairs white-tipped, the hair of the neck longer and stifl": females ash-coloured : of the \exy young black : flaps of hinder toes very long slender : length 8 or 9 feet." Inhab. Northern Pacific Ocean, Kamschatka. 2. Arctocephalus Falklandicus. Sea Bear, Forster, Voy. i. 174. Ours marin, Buffon, H. N. Supp. vi. 336, t. 47. Otaria Forsteri, Le.sson, D. C. H. N. xiii. 42. Falkland Isle Seal, Penn. Quad. i. 275. Phoca Falk- landica, Shaw, Zool. i. 256. Otaria Falklandica, Desm. Mam. 252. O. Shawii, Lesson, D. C. H. N. xiii. 424. Otaria Falklandica, Hamilton, Nat. Lib. t. 25. Ann. N. H. ii. 81, t. 4. Petit Phoque, Buffon, H. N. xiii. 341, t. 43, (young). Little Seal, Penn. Quad. Phoca parva, Bodd. Elench. 78. P. pusilla, Schreb. 314, t. 85. Gmel. S. N. i. 68. Otaria pusilla, De.wi. O. Delalandii, F. Cuv. D. S. N. xxxis. 423. O. Peronii, Desm. Mam. 250. Otaire de Peron, Blainv. Journ. Phys. xci. 295. Otaria Hauvillii, Lesson, D. C. H. N. xiii. 425 : from Cuv. Oss. Foss. V. 220. Grey, under fur red, young blacki.sh. Length 4 feet. Inhab. Antarctic Ocean, Falkland Islands. Cape of Good Hope ? There may be more than one species combined in these synonyma. 3. Arctocephalus cinereus. Otaria cinerea, Peron. ]'oy. T. Aust. ii. 54 ? Quoy et Gaim. Voy. Astrol. Mam. 89, t. 12, 13 and 15. Phoca cinerea, Fischer, Syn. 233 .' Grey, hair of neck rough, elongate, yellowish, hairs yel- lowish white and blackish, under fur red. Length 7 feet. Inhab. South coast of Australia. Port Western, Quoy. Kangaroo Island, Peron ? Peron indicates a species from Eugene Island, Austra- lia, under the name of Otaria nlhicollis ; and Molina one from Chili, which he calls Phoca porcina, which he says has a nose like a pig, but of which I can find no other in- dications. *^ Fur short, close-pressed, without any under fur. 4. Arctocephalus lobatus. Gray, Spic. Zool. i. t. Pho- ca lobata, Fischer, Syn. ii. 574. The flaps to the hind toes short, not so long as the toes: grinders large, with a lobe on each side ; canines large. Inhab. N. W. coast of Australia. Houtmau's Abrolhos, Mr. Gilbert. 5. Arctocephalus australis. Otaria australis, Quoy et Gaim. Voy. Astrol. Mam. 9, /. 14. — 10. Nilsson, Weigm. Arch. vii. 322. The flaps to the hind toes moderate. Grey, with yellow reflections, head, checks and side of muzzle whitish, be- neath fulvous ; neck thick: limbs beneath blackish ; whis- kers strong, flat, white. Inhab. South coast of Australia, "King George's Sound," Quoy. 6. Arctocephalus Hookeri. Hair Seal, Weddell, 141.' Flaps of the hinder toes elongate, unequal, of the outer toes on each side longest : canines moderate. Pale yel- lowish. Inhab. Falkland Islands and Cape Horn. The Eared Seal, Pennant, Quad. 278: Phoca flavescens, Sfiaw, Zool. i. 260, /. 73 : Otaria flavescens, Desm. Mam. 252 : 22 inches long, may be a young specimen of this spe- cies, but it is not stated if this seal has under fur or not. The young of O. Forsteri of the size mentioned is blackish. 1.3. Otahia, Peron. Platyrhynchus, F. Cuv. Muzzle broad, high in front ; forehead rather convex, oc- ciput high: cutting teeth 4, the upper outer ones very large, like canines; grinders (of the adults) with very large roots and small, compressed, lobed crowns: palate bone rather wider behind than in front, long, extending nearly to the articulation of the lower jaw behind; lower jaw broad, di- lated below in front and behind at the angles. Otaria Stelleri, Lesson, D. C. H. N. xiii. 420. J. Muller, l'T^ei(/ni. Arch. vii. 330, 333. Leo marinus, Steller, Nov. Comn. Petrop. ii. 360. Phoca jubata, Gmel. S. N. i. 63, part. Otaria jubata, Peron et Lesiieiir, Voy. Phoca Stel- leri, Fischer, Syn. 231. Otaria Califomiana, Lesson, D. C. H. N. xiii. 420, from Chloris Voy. Pict. t. 11. Inhab. Northern Pacific Ocean. Otaria Leonina, Peron et Lesueur, Voy. ii. 65. Phoca Leonina, Molini Say. 281, 341, not Schreb. nor Blainv. P. jubata, Dlainr. Ostcoy. Phoca, t. 5 and t. 9. P. juba- ta, part, G>nel. S. N. i. 63. Otaria jubata, part, Desm. O. Pernettii, L^esson. O. Forsteri, lesson. Phoca Byronii, Desm. P. Scout, Bodd. Leonine Seal, Shaw. Platy- rhynchus (leoninus), F. Cuv. Mem. Mas. xi. 208, t. 15, f. 2, adult skull. Otaria Platyrhynchus, Muller, Weiymann, Arch. vii. 333. O. Molossina, Lesson, Voy. 109, t. (young) Phoca Molossina, Lesson, Bull. Sci. N. viii. 96. Lesson Oltary, Hamilton, Nat. Lib. t. 24, from Lesson. Platy- rhynchus Molossina, Lesson, Man. 203. P. Uraniae, Les- son, Man. 204 ? Otaria Guerin, Quoy et Gaim. Zool. Uran. 71 ? Sea Lion of Forster, Hamilton, Nat. Lib. t. 18. Sea Lion of Pernetty, Hamilton, Nat. Lib. t. 19, from Edinb. Mus. Sea Bear of the British Museum, Hamilton, Nat. Lib. t. 23 ? Inhab. Southern Pacific Ocean. Patagonia. The upper jaw elongate and dilate with age. II. — DESCRIPTION OF THE SEALS OF THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. LOBODON. Phoca, part, Homb. et J acq. Leptorhynchus, part, Owen. Head elongate ; ear-conch none exteraally ; muzzle broad ; nostrils ovate, hairy to the edge ; whiskers rigid, tapering, waved ; skull elongate, rather depressed ; muz- zle broad, rather produced : orbits moderate : the petrose portion of the temporal bone very convex, nearly hemi- spherical. Cutting teeth ^, the upper middle ones moderate, with a smaller rather compressed crown, the two others large, conical, like the canines ; the lower pair small, the two mid- dle ones subcylindrical, rather internal, projecting forwards and rounded at the end, the outer ones rather larger, blunt ; canines 4-1-, conical, curved, small, the upper largest; grind- ers 44) ^viih large swollen roots, the crown triangular, sub- trigonal, lobed, lobes rather recurved at the tip, the larger lobe with one, or sometimes a second, small lobe in front, and with three lobes behind; the 1st upper one smaller, with a single large root, the 2nd, 3rd and 4th nearly equal and the 5th smaller and more compressed, the 2nd and 3rd have the root only divided at the base, the 4th and 5th have them divided nearly to the crown, and diverging ; the first under is smallest and single-rooted, the rest are all similar, 2-rooted, the 3rd being the largest and the 5th most comjiressed in the crown; the symphysis of the low- er jaw is very long. The teeth of the younger animals have a rather broader crown, with rather shorter tubercles, a rugose surface with some smaller tubercles on the inner side, near the base of the hinder lobes, but separated from them bj' a groove. Body tapering behind. The fore limljs moderate, rather elongate, triangular, hairy above and below: toes 5, taper- ing, with a narrow, thick, hairy web between them; claws 5, elongate, acute, subequal : the hind limbs large, broad, triangular, hairy above and below, the outer toes on each side of the foot very large, broad, rounded at the end, the three middle ones smaller, narrow, tapering, with a thick haiiy web between them, the central one smaller and shorter, all clawless : tail short, conical, depressed. Fur close-set, rather rigid, directed backwards, soft at the end ; the hairs flat at the base, tapering to a fine point, without any under fur at the roots. Inhab. Antarctic Ocean. The Ckab-eater Seal. Lobodon carcinophaga. Plate 1, animal ; plate 2, skull. Phoca carcinophaga, Homb. et Jacq. Voy. a Pole Sud, t. 10 and t. 10 a, (not described). Leptorhynchus serridens, Owen, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1843, .331. Head, back, hind feet and upper part of the tail pale olive; fore feet, side of the face, body and tail beneath yellowish white, the hinder part of sides of the body, the base of the hind fins yellow-spotted, spots unequal, oilen confluent : whiskers white, the upper one smaller, dusky. Inhab. Antarctic Ocean, on the packed ice. This species has been figured by MM. Hombron and Jacquinot in the French Voyage to the South Pole, though 1 believe, not yet described, but the skull is so characteris- tic that there can be no excuse lor not using their specific name because the description has not appeared, Thej' represent it of a nearly uniform olive colour. Dr. M'Cormick, the surgeon of H. M. S. Ten-or, having sent a skeleton of this Seal to the College of Surgeons, Mr. Owen gave a description of it in the 'Annals of Na- C 6 tural History' for November, 1843, not knowing that it had before been figured by Messrs. Hombron and Jacqui- not, and referred it to the genus Stenurlii/ii.c/ius, with anew specific name, slightly modifying the character of the genus to contain it. It is certainly more nearly allied to that genus than to P/ioca, to which the French surgeons had referred it, but still it differs so much from it in the con- formation of the skull and the lobing and rooting of the teeth, that it can scarcely be left in it : but the latter pe- culiarity appears to have escaped Mr. Owen's research, for in his generic character of Stenorhynchus he says, " Ante- rior molars with one root, the rest with two roots," while in this genus the three front upper molars are single- rooted, a character by which this genus differs from all the others in the family. Stenorhynchus, F. Cuvier. Phoca, Home, Blainville. Head elongate: ear-conch none externally; muzzle broad, elongate ; muffle hairy to the edge and between the nostrils; nostrils acute; whiskers slightly waved ; face elongate, rather compressed ; muzzle tapering, rather pro- duced and compressed on each side ; orbits moderate ; the petrose portion of the temporal bone rather convex. Cutting teeth f, conical, acute, incurved, granular, and with a cutting edge on each side in a regular row, the two outer larger, the upper much larger than the lower, and separated from the canines by a broad space; canines conical, with sharp cutting edges within and on the sides, the upper largest : grinders -14, with moderate roots, sepa- rated fiom the crown by a narrow groove, the crown com- pressed, divided into three elongate lobes, the centre lobe much the largest, longest, and subcylindrical, the anterior and posterior lobes conical, the bases of the lobes are sur- rounded by a sharp-edged ridge, with two small, short, co- nical tubercles on the inner side, the larger one being at the base of the separation of the hinder from the middle lobe : the front grinder in each jaw is rather the thickest, with a single thick conical root, all the rest have two ra- ther diverging roots, divided nearly to the crown ; the hinder tooth in each jaw is rather the smallest. Symphy- sis of the lower jaw short. Body tapering behind. The fore limbs moderate, rather elongate. The toes are rather larger than the wrist, and each furnished with a small nearly terminal claw : the hind limbs are rather large, of two nearly equal lobes, des- titute of any claws. The three middle toes small, tapering. The fur close-set, short, without any under fur ; hairs flattened, tajiering at the tip to a point. Inhab. Antarctic Ocean. MacMurtrie, in his translations of Cuvier, erroneously adds to the generic character in the text of the author, " but with single roots ; " this is repeated in the reprint of the American edition published by Orr, i. 98. The Sea Leopard. Stenorhynchus leptonyx. Plate 3, animal ; plate 4, skull. Phoca Leptonyx, Blahiv. Jour. Phys. xci. 288. Desm. Mam. 247, from Home's specimen. Cuv. Oss. Fos. v. 208, /. 18,/ 2. F. Cuv. Mem. Mus. xi. 190, t. 13,/. 1. Blainv. Osteoyr. Phoca, t. i. and t. 4,/. Skull, (Mus. Paris). Stenorhynchus Leptonyx, F. Cuv. Diet. 8c. N. xxxix. 549, i. 44. Seal from New Georgia, Home, Phil. Trans. 1822, 240, t. 29, (skull). Phoca Homei, Lesson, Did. Class. H. N. xiii. 417. The Small-nailed Seal, Hamilton, Nat. Lib. 180, ^ 11, (nails too large). Stenorhynchus aux Petits Ongles, Hombr. Sf Jacq. Voy. a Pol Sucl. t. 9. Phoca Leopardina, Jameson, IVeddell, Voy. South Pole, 22, 24, 134, t. not good. Leopard Seal, IVeddell, I. c. Otaria? Weddellii, Lesson, Bull. Sci. Nat. vii. 438, 343. Stenorhynchus Weddellii, Lesson, Mam. 200. Leopard Seal, Hamilton, Nat. Lib. 183, /. 12, (from Capt. Weddell's specimen). Grey, paler beneath, with small black spots on the sides of the neck and body, and with a few smaller while spots on the sides ; upper part of the hinder limbs dark, pale- marbled. Inhab. Antarctic Ocean, on the packed ice. A skull of this species, which was brought from New Georgia by Mr. Kearn, was presented by Mr. Chevalier to the Museum of the College of Surgeons, and was described by M. de Blainville, on his visit to England in 1819, and published under the name of Phoca leptonyx, in the ' Journal de Physique ' (of which he was then the editor), in 1820. This skull was also figured by Sir E. Home, in the ' Philosophical Transactions' for 1822. M. Blainville afterwards found a skin with its skull from Falkland Islands, in the collection of M. Hautville of Ha- vre, which was afterwards presented to the Paris Museum, and has furnished all the material for the descriptions of this species until the two late Antarctic Voyages. M. F. Cuvier's figure, copied in Mr. Hamilton's work on Seals, is said to be taken from this specimen ; but it is anything but like the slender subcjdindrical animal preserved in the Paris collection: and in the latter work it is represented as having five large claws on each fool ! The " Sea Leopard " of Capt. Weddell, described by Professor Jameson in that intrepid navigator's Voyage, and since figured by Mr. Hamilton as a second species of Stenorhynchus, does not appear to differ from the species described by M. de Blainville, but unfortunately I have not been able actually to compare the specimens, or to get from Edinburgh any drawing of the teeth, to make myself quite certain on this point. Lesson's names were only gi- ven from the description in the Voyage above quoted. The following notice of this species has been kindly communicated to me by Dr. Frederick Knox, with a ske- leton and part of the viscera, which was caught on the coast of New Zealand. "It was of a dull yellow olive color irregularly spotted. The nostrils opened much after the manner of the Cetacea, in the form of the elongated fissures, Ig- inch from the extremity of the snout, whilst the position and vast size of the pelvic extremities, added to the extreme shortness of the tail, so nearly approached in form and appearance the lateral flanks of the tail in whales. as to deceive any one but a comparative anatomist. The specimen was shot and captured in Evans Bay, Port Ni- cholson, in November, 1843. The skiu was hairy. The stomach of the seal contained numerous fish-bones, a few feathers (gulls'), and some considerable portions of a pale green, broad-leaved, marine Fucus : thousands of a small, hard, round, white worm (parasitical) pervaded all parts of the intestines. The intestinal tube measured 71 feet, 10 inches : caput cajcum, 1 inch, 9 lines : diameter of small intestines, 1 inch ; of large intestines, 1 inch, 6 lines. Li- ver weighed 14 lbs.: kidneys, 2 lbs. each: spleen, 1 tb. : heart, 6 tbs. The arch of the aorta gave off an extremely short innominata, which divided it into a right carotid and subclavian, and left carotid ; the left subclavian came off separately; it resembles Tiedemann's third variety, PI. III. (copy published in Edinburgh). Teeth, -f-f-J-g =32 : the two lower middle incisors appear peculiar ; the arrange- ment at least was new to me. Vertebrae : — cranial, 4 ; cervical. 7 ; dorsal, 14; lumbar, 6 ; sacral, 3 ; coccygial, 13;= 47." Dr. Frederick Knox called it the " Sea Bear," so that this is probably the animal so named by Pollack and other authors, which has caused Phoca ursina to be included in the New Zealand Fauna. Mr. Owen [Ann. N. H 1843, 831), appears to think that this animal is one-coloured, for he says the Sea Leopard is distinguished from it " by the spotted hide." Leptonyx, Gray, Mag. Nat. Hist, not Swainson. Head flattened. Muzzle broad, rather short, rounded ; muffle hairy between and to the edge of the nostrils ; nos- trils ovate ; whiskers compressed, slightly waved. Ears, no external conch. Skull slightly depressed, expanded behind ; muzzle ra- ther short, broad, high above ; orbits rather large : the pe- trose portion of the temporal bone convex, hemispherical. Cutting teeth ^, conical, rather recurved, those of the upper jaw largest; the middle in each jaw smaller; the outer upper much larger. Canines 4t) l^^i'ge) conical, curved, rather compressed, upper largest. Grinders -|- 3-) moderate, rather far apart, parallel to the edge of the jaw, compressed, with subcentral, conical, prominent tubercle ; the second, third and fourth, in the more perfect speci- mens, with a small conical tubercle on the hinder edge, and a sharp edged ridge round the inner side of the base. The front grinder in each jaw smaller, and with a single conical root, the rest all 2-rooted nearly to the crown. Lower jaw slender, with a short symphysis in front, and narrow, without any angle at the hinder part of the lower edge. Fore feet small, elongate, triangular, hairy above and below, with five graduated, distant, marginal claws : hind feet moderate ; the two marginal toes largest, rounded at the end ; claws small, rudimentary, two middle largest. Fur short, adpressed, without any under fur ; hair slen- der, tapering, slightly flattened. The skull of this genus resembles, in many respects, Cuvier's fig\u'c of a skull of Phoca bicolor; but it diflfers from it in all the grinders being ]jlaced more longitudi- nally, and in the lower jaw being slender, and without any angle on the hinder part of the lower edge. It is far more nearlv allied to that genus than Ste)iorhyiichu!s, to which Mr. Owen [Ann. N. H. 1843, 331, 332) has referred it; observing that his Sten. serriden.'s (our Lobodon cancri- ■vora) shows modifications of the molar teeth which would give it a better claim to subgeneric distinction than the Sleii. WeddelUi (which he observed is the type of the subgenus Leptony.v of Mr. Gray) has been supposed to possess ; — an observation not borne out by the specimen. But Mr. Owen made the remark, and drew up his specific character, without having seen the teetli ; for the skull was not then removed from the skin, and the specimens in the British Museum — the only ones then known — were stuffed with their mouth nearly closed. Mr. Swainson, in 1832, applied the name oi Leptonyx to a genus of birds; and in 1837, the same name to a second: but the former had before been named Pteroptychos, and the latter Coryphospiza, so that the name may still be used for the Seal. This animal is easily known from Stenorhynclius by the shortness of the wrist, and the triangular form of the fore feet, being intermediate in this respect between that genus and Ommatophoca. The False Sea Lkopard. Leptonyx Weddellii. Plate 5, animal. Plate 6, skull. Leptonyx Weddellii, Gray, Mag. Nat. Hist. 1836 (not the synonymes). Fulvous, with the firont of the back, and a line down the back, blackish grey : whiskers brown, tapering. Female and young blackish grey above ; sides with a series of longitudinal yellowish spots. Inhab. South Seas, — Santa Cruz. Capt. Fitzroy, R.N. This Seal was first described by me from two specimens sent to the British Museum, by Capt. Fitzroy, R.N., when employed, with Capt. P. P. King, R.N. on the survey of the South American continent. I was then led to believe that it was the Sea Leopard of Weddell, which induced me to name it after that intrepid navigator; but I now find that the S/eiiorhynchus Leptonyx is the animal so called by the whalers, and therefore the one intended by Capt. Weddell, and consequently the references to his descrip- tion nuist be erased, and referred to the Stenorhynclius. We have a third specimen in the Museum, which was brought home by the Antarctic Expedition. The skin is not in a very good state, and is of a reddish colour, but this is probably produced by the staining of the blood. In proportions and skull it exactly agrees with the two before described ; and it is the skull of this specimen, as being most perfect, that is here figured. Ommatophoca. Head short, broad; ears small, with no external conch; muzzle very short, rounded ; muffle hairy between and to the edge of the nostrils ; nostrils ovate : whiskers taper- ing, conical. Skull depi'essed, expanded behind ; orbits very large ; muzzle very short, broad, truncated in front, high behind ; petrose portion of the temporal bone convex. Cutting teeth |, small, conical, .sharply recurved at the 8 tip, ridged within, those of the upper jaw largest, tlie two central in each jaw smaller; canines 4-r> rather small, co- nical, curved, rather compressed, with a sharp internal keel : grinders 4t) small, longitudinal, rather far apart, compressed, with a subcentral, rather large, broad, slightly incurved, lobe ; ha\ing a very small lobelet on the inner side of its front, and a larger conical one in the middle of its hinder edge ; the front grinder of each jaw is smaller and thicker, with a single conical root, the rest all with two di- verging roots to the crown : lower jaw rather slender, with a short symphysis in front, and rather narrow, with a thick rounded edge in the hinder part of the lower edge in the place of the angle. Fore feet moderate, elongate, triangular, hairy above and below ; toes 5-5, tapering, subequal, separated by a thick, narrow, hairy web ; claws 2 or 3, very small, rudimentary, homy, acute: hind feet large, broad-triangular, hairy above and below ; the outer toes on each side of the foot very large, broad, rounded at the end, the middle ones small, narrow, tapering, with a thick, hairy web between them ; the central one smaller and shortest ; all clawless : tail short, conical. Fur very close set, rather rigid. Inhab. Antarctic Ocean. Ross's Large-eyed Seal. Oramatophoca Rossii. Plate 7, animal ; plate 8, skull and teeth. Greenish yellow, with close, oblique, yellow stiipes on the side, pale beneath. Inhab. Antarctic Ocean. There is a skin with its skull, and a separate skull, which appears to belong to this species, in tbe collection brought home by the Antarctic Expedition. The skulls differ considerably from one another in the form of the palate and in the teeth; but it is probable that the teeth of the skull belonging to the skin (plate 8, f. 1, 2 and 4), is a malformation. In the separate skull (pi. 8, f. .3 and 6), the first upper and lower grinder has a single large subcylindrical root, tapering to a point beneath, iind each of the other grinders has two conical separate roots diverging nearly from the col- lar. The palate is broad and rather truncated behind, and the transverse suture between the two bones in the palate is rather more than two-thirds the distance from the inner edge of the cutting teeth. In the other skull (pi. 8, f. 1,2 and 4), the first and se- cond grinder of the upper jaws are small, with a single co- nical root ; and on the right side both these teeth are united together in one cavity : and as there are four other grinders in each side, it would appear as if there were front grinders of two sets. The third, fourth, fifth and sixth of the same jaw have a compressed, single, tapering root, with a deep central groove nearly dividing it into two parts, the groove being deepest and most distinguishable on their outer side. In the lower jaws the front grinder has a dou- ble crown, with a thick single root, tapering below, as if formed of two teeth united together by their roots. The second and third grinders ha\ e a broad, compressed, sin- gle root, divided by a rather deep, central, longitudinal groove on each side, and the fourth and fifth grinders each have two tapering, nearly parallel roots, well separated at the base fi-om each other. In this skull the palate is rounded behind, and the suture between the two bones is much more nearly in its centre. I do not recollect to have observed such a malformation, or soldering together of the roots of the teeth, in any other beast. MoRUNGA, Gray. Macrorhinus, F. Cuv. Cystophora, part, Nihson. The head broad, short, truncated in front, with a tuft of bristles over each eye, and one on each side of the middle of the muzzle ; the upper lip longer than the lower ; the forehead convex ; the nostrils of the male " are wrinkled, and can be blown up into a crest" (Fors/er), "with an elongate tubular proboscis," {Peron) ; of the female simple, rounded, with a hairy muffle between and around the edge of the nostrils. Cutting teeth |, far apart, conical, the two middle up- per smaller, the rest nearly equal ; the grinders with large, swollen, subcylindrical roots, and a small, compressed, simple, plaited crown ; the hinder palatine bones short, transverse. The whiskers are very long and large, roundish, very slightly compressed, rather waved. The fore feet are rather small, oblong, obliquely trun- cated, the wrist being nearly as long as the feet, with 5 elongated claws, the first the smallest ; the hinder feet are moderate, the marginal toes upon each side large, rounded, the three middle ones very small, tapering ; all clawless. The tail conical. Fur short, hair short, flat ; broad and rounded at the tip in the adult; rather more tapering in the young; hair on the lips rather longer, more slender and slightly curled. Inhab. The Southern Ocean. This genus has many characters in common with the Crested Seal of the North American Continent, but differs from it in the characters given in the Synopsis at the com- mencement of this article (see p. 4), but especially in the male being provided with a proboscis, while in that genus it has a hood-like swelling proceeding up the nose to the back of the head. The Sea Elephant. Morunga Elephantina. Plate 9, female ; plate 1 0, skull. A Sea Lion and Lioness from Juan Fernandez, Anson, Vol/. Round Ike World (1786), 122, t. 19, copied. Fernet- tif, Voy. Isle Malorines, ii. 47, t. 9*, f. 1, and altered i. 8*, j'.\. Hence Phoca Leonina, Linn. S. N. i. 55. Schre- ber, Saugth. 297, t. 83, a. Bottle-nosed Seal, Shaw, Zool. i. t. 73. — Penn. Quad. ii. 531, (with an original descrip- tion of the female). Phoca Ansonii, Desni. Mam. 239, 369, (part only). Grand Phoque a Museau ride, Bujfon, Snppl. vi. 316, Anson's Sea Lion, Forster, Voy. Round lite JVorld,\i. 527. Phoca major, &c. n. 5. " Manate from Nicuragua," Par- sons, Phil. Trans. 1751, 121, (female). Phoca Elei)hantina, Molini Saayi, 260, (1782). L'Elephant marino, ou Phoque a trompe. Phoca pro- boscidea, Peron !^ Lesueur, Voy. Terre Austr. ii. 34, ^ 32, Hamilton, Jar dines' Nat. Lily. Mirounga proboscidea, Gray, Griff. An. King, v., 180 (1827). Morunga elephantina, Gray, Cat. OsteoL, Spec B. M. 33 ; Cat. Seals B. M. 34 ; Cat. Seals & Wliales 38, Jig. 13 (skull). Leo mariiius (Cap. B. S.) Pallas. Zool. Rosso-Asiat. i., lOG. Sea Elephant, Weddell, Voy. 53, 84, 134. Macrorhyiiclius proboscideus, Gray, in Brooke's Mus. Cat. 36 (1828). riiO(iue gris argente a os nasaux tres courts, Mas. Paris from M. Dubrodie ; Cuvier, Oss. Foss., v., 213 ; Nilsson, Wicgm. Archiv. vii., 325 — hence Phoca dubia, Fischer, Mamvi. i., 225. Phoque des Patagons,i^. Cuvier, Mem. Mus. i., 203, tab. 14,/. ■Id.e.f. Mirounga Patagonica, Gray, Griff. An. King, v., 180. Stemmatopus Patachoniciis, Brooke's Mus. Cat. Rhiuoplura proboscidea, Wagler, Nat. Syst. Ain^yh. 27. The noses of the male and female differ in width as is well seen in the collection of skulls in the Museum. McGill describes a skull, said to come from California, in the " Proceedings of the Essex Institute " 1866, v. 13, under the name of Macrorhinus angu.stirostris, which may be from a female specimen. Inhab. Southern Ocean. Plate 9 (adult female), plate 10 (its skull). Both in P.M. Family Otariadae, Gray. Suppl. Cat. Seals a)id Whales Brit. Mus. 6. Nose simple ; muffle rather large, callous above and between the nostrils. Ears with a cylindrical external conch. Arms and legs rather elongate. The fore and hind feet fringed. Fore feet fin with a scolloped naked membrane. Palms and soles bald, longitudinally grooved, more or less triangular. Fingers gradually diminishing in size from the inner side. Hind feet elongate, narrow, all clawless. Toes nearly of equal length, the outer one on each side being rather the strongest (see Cat. Seals and Whales 44, f. 15). Three middle toes clawed. The fur is generally provided with a more or less thick under fur. Skull with a post-orbital process. An alisphenoid canal. Mastoid process strong and salient, extending aloof from the auditory bulla. Cutting teeth f , 4 middle upper bitid ; Literal upper cutting teeth and canines conical ; grinders ?- or f. The scapula is curved backwards to the upper angle, but with its spine or crest near the posterior margin. These animals are thus arranged — 1. The palate produced behind the opening of the inner nostrils just before the condyles. Upper giinders 6-6. Under fur sparse. Sea Lions. Otariina. 1. Otaria. IL The palate shorter, with the o])ening of the inner nostril some distance before the line of the condyles. Sea Bears. i. Gypsophocina. The upper grinders 6-(), the fifth and sixth quite behind the back edge of the front of the zygomatic arch. 2. Gypsophoca. ii. Arctocephaliua. The upper grinders 6-6, the sixth behind the back edge of the front of tlie zygomotic arch, the fifth is even with it, and is sometimes rudimentary. * Head elongate ; face produced in front. 3. Phocarctos. ** Head elongate ; face short, arched. 4. Callorhinus. *** Head broad. 5. Arctocephalu.s. Crown of grinders broad, slightly lobed. 6. Euotaria. Crown of gi-inders compressed, lobed. 7. Eumetopias. Fifth upper grinder soon deci- duous. III. Zalophina. Upper grinders 5-5, the fifth in a line with or before the back edge of the front of rlje zygomatic arch. 8. Zalophus. 9. Neophoca. These animals have been divided into many species, founded on the accounts of travellers and defective figures. In the " Catalogue of Seals and Whales " I have attempteil to unravel these nominal species, but here I have onlv referred to the species established upon the examination ;s. Turner. Arctocephalus schisthvperoiis. Turner, Journ.Anat., 1868, 113,/. (.skull). 12 Skull, palate narrow. The cutting teetli narrow, forming a sliort series. Inliab. Cape of Good Hope. Only known from the skull of a young animal evidently having an undeveloped palate, which is in the Museum of Edinburgh, and of which Professor Turner has kindly sent to the British Museum a beautiful cast. 1 formerly thought that this skull might be an un- developed specimen of Arctorcpludits antardicus, never liaviug seen a young skull of tliat species, but having since had the opportunity of examining the skull of a young animal of A. antarcticus with perfect crowns to the grinders, it shows that this cannot be the young of it. It is said to come from the Cape ; it differs from Euotaria cinerea in its narrower palate, and smaller cutting teeth. EuoTARiA CINEREA. The Australian Fur Seal. Arctocephalus cinereus, Gh-ai/, P.Z.S., 1873, (556,/. 1 and 2 (skull, misnamed A. niyrexceiis). Otaria cinerea, Quoy and Gaimard, Voy. Astrolabe, Mamm., 89, tab. 12, 13, 15. Phoca ursina, J. R. Forster, Dcxcr. Aniiii., (14. Sea Bear, Cook's second voyage. Grinders .short, thick ; crowns short. Inhab. Australia. Dusky Bay, New Zealand. EuOTARiA NIGRESCENS. Tlie Southern Fur Seal. Euotaria nigrescens, trrai/, A. & M. N. H., 1866, xviii., 236, 1868, 192. Arctocephalus nigrescens, Grmi, P.Z.S., 1850, 100, and 360, 1872, 658, /. 4 (skull, misnamed A. cinereus). Otaria falklandica. Abbot, F.Z.S., 1868, 192. (Jrinders compressed, crown elongate. Inhab. Falkland Lslands, Volunteer Eock (Capt. Abbott). Euotaria latirostris. The broad nosed Sea Bear. Arctocephalus nigrescens, Grai/, P.Z.S., 1872, 656 (not fig.) Upper cutting teeth fornung a broad line. Inhab. Falkland Islands. Zool. Soc. This species is only known from an adult skull without lower jaw or teeth, which was received from the Zoological Society as coming from the Falkland Islands, but it is most distinct from any other species in the Museum. Euotaria falklandica. The Falkland Island Fur Seal. Arctocephalus falklandicus, Gray, A. & M. N. H., 1868. i., 103 ; Suppl. Cat. Seals & Wliales, 25. The Seal of Commerce (Otaria falklan diva), Hamilton, A. & M. N. H., 1838, ii., 81, tab. 41 ; Jardines Naturalists Library. Falkland Seal, Pennant Quadrupeds. Inhab. Falkland Islands (Abbott). Only known from skins without skulls, which are very peculiar for the closeness and softness of the fur, and the abundance of the under fur. Dr. Hamilton gives a good account of the fi.sJiery of these Seals, and sent two speci- mens to the Museum of Edinburgh. Shaw gave the name of Phoca falklandica, Peimant Otaria falklandicu, and Lesson Otaria Houvillii, and Fischer Phoca Houvillii, all from the same animal shortly noticed by Cuvier. I have determined that the Seal described and figured by Mr. Hamilton is the one here described by the compari- son of his specimens, which are now in the Edinburgh Museum, with the skins in the British Museum. This is a most distinct species, and easily known from all the other Fur Seals in the British Museum by the even- ness, shortness, closeness, and elasticity of the fur. The fur is soft enough to wear as a rich fur without the removal of the longer hairs which are always removed in the other Fur Seals. Neophoca, Gray. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., 1866, xviii., 231. Grinders |^:f, the fifth upper grinder in a line witii ur Ijefore tlie front edge of the zygomatic arch. Neophoca lobata. Australian Hair Seal. Arctocephalus lobatus. Gray, Spied. Zool., 1828, tab. 4, _/'. 2 (teeth) ; Cat. Seals & Whales, 50. Neophoca lobata. Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., 1866, xviii., 231 ; Suppl. Cat. Seals cf- Tfliales, 28. (Jtaria australis, Qaoi/ and Gaimard, Voy. Astrolabe, tali. 10, 14. Inhab. W. Australia, Houtman's Abrolhos l.sland (Mr. Gilbert). Plate 16. Adult and young animal from stuffed skins. Plate 17, fig. 3-5. Different parts of the face of the skull of the same animal ; both in tlie British Museum. 12a II.— MISCELLANEA. Jacchus rufiventer. The red-bellied Marmozet. Plate 18. Midas rufiventer, Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hint, xii., 398, J'.Z.S., 1865 ; Cat. Monkeys, &i:, Brit. Mun., 66. Midas elegantulus, Slack, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philad., 1861, 463. Iilack, hinder part of the back wa.shed with ashy grey. Tlie chest, belly, inside of limbs and the under-side of the base of the tail bright dark rufous. Tip of the nose and edges of the upper and lower lip white. Crown of the head with a rufous spot, and the nape grey. Inhab. Mexico. Waterh., from Amboyna, as a variety of the same specie.s. It is said to be very much like Miniopteris Schre.ihersii, but the face appears more elongated, and rather more pointed, and the nostrils more prominent; the ears are somewhat longer. ScOTOPHlLUS Greyii. Captain Grey's Scotophilus. Plate 20, fig. 2. Scotophilus Greyii, Gray; Gould, Momm. Austr. m., pi. 45. Inhab. Port Essington. Scotophilus Gouldii. Gould's Scotophilus. Plate 19, fig. 1. Scotophilus Gouldii, Gray, App. Grey's Narrative, 406 ; Gould, Mamvi. Austr. in., p)l. 40. Blackish ; hinder half of the back brownish ; sides and abdomen brownish ash. Ears rather large, broad. Tragus half ovate. Under-side of the wings, and interfemoral mem- brane with lines of hairs. Inhab. Australia, New South Wales, and Victoria. Miniopteris morio. The plain Miniopterus. Plate 19, fig. 2 {Scotophilus morio). Scotophilus morio. Gray, Aptp. Grey's Narrative, 405 (1841) ; Gmild, Mamm. Austr. iii., p/. 41. Hack uniform brownish black, scarcely paler beneath. Cheeks nearly black. Underside of wings, and interfemoral membrane with lines of hairs. Heel-bone elongated, slender ; Ears moderate, rounded. Tragus oblong, blunt. Inhab. Australia. Mr. Tomes, P.Z.S., 1858, 121, refers this species to the genus Miniopteris, and considers it a variety of Miniopteri'i hlepoiis of Java, and he considers Vespertilio Eschscholtzii, Scotophilus pumilus. The Dwarf Scotophilus. Plate 20, fig. 1. Scotophilus pumilus. Gray, App. Grey's Narrative, 403 ; Gould, Mamm. Av^tr. iii., pi. 46. Grey-brown, base of the fur blackish, beneath paler. Cheeks blackish. Ears small, rather thin, longer than the fur. Tragus elongate, half as long as the ears, rounded at the end. Wings nearly bald, except near the arm-pit. Inter- femoral membrane hairy at the base. Heel-bone elongate, t^^■o-thirds the length of the margin of the interfemoral membrane. Inhab. Australia, New South Wales. Mr. Tomes describes an allied species of a rather larger size from Australia under the name of Scofophibcs pumi- loides, P.Z.S., 1857, 51. Nyctophilus Geoffroyi. The Nyctophile. Plate 21, fig. 1. Nyctophilus Geoffroyi, Leach, Linn. Trans, xiii., 73 ; Tcmminck, Monogr. ii., 47 ; Tovies, P.Z.S., 1858, 29 ; Gmdd, Mamm. Austr. iii., pi. 36. 1-Ib Fur of tli(> Ti])pei' part conspicuously liicoloureil, black for nearly two-thirds of its length, the remainder being olive bi'own, with the extreme tips darker. Fur of the throat II nd flanks uniformly brownish white, of all the rest of the under part lilack at base and brownish white at the end. Inhab. Western Australia. NvcToi'HiLUs MA.ioi;. The larger Nyctophile. Plate 21, fig. 2. Mr. Tomes, since these figures were made, has described three species from Australia ; iV. Timorensis, from W. Aus- tralia, iV. Gouldii, from Moreton Bay, N. unicolor, from Van Dienien's Land, and I am not quite sure to ■\\hich of tliese species the above figure refers. Mystacixa tuberctlata. The Mystaciue. Plate 22, fig. 1. Mystacina tuberculata. Gray, Cat. Mamm. B. M. 34, 1843 ; App. Diefnib. Trav. N. Z., 296, 1843 ; Zool. Vo;j. Sulphur ii., 23; Tomes, P.Z.S., 1857, 138. Inhab. Xew Zealand. I at first thought this was the little Bat named and figured as Ves2)crtilio tuhcrculata by Forster, collected during Cook's voyages, the drawings of which are in the lianksian Library, British Museum, and of which Lichten- stein published Forster's MS. descriptions and notes in 1844, but Mr. Tomes, who has found in the British Museum two kinds of Bats from New Zealand, believes that the one which is a Seotopltilus is the one which Foi'ster described, on account of the number of incisors lie indicates, and he describes it as Scotophilustuhcrcu.ldtnH, P.Z.S., 1857, Ib^, pi. 43, and he also describes and figures the one that I have described as Mystacina tuberculata, P.Z.S., 1857, 138, pi. 44. MoLOSSUS NORFOLKENSis. The Xortblk Island Bull-dog Bat. Plate 22, fig. 2. Molossus australis, Gran; GoulJ, Muhuh. Austr. \u.,pl. 31. Antechinus fl.wipes. Plate 26, fig. 2. Phascogalc riavi|ics, JVcJerh., I'.ZX, 1837, 75. Antechinus flavipes, Gould, Mamm. Austr. i., pi. 40 : Krcft, P.Z.S., 1866, 432. Fur brownish yellow, intermi.xed with 1 ilack hair. Under- side of body and limbs yellow. Throat whitish. Tail as long as the body, blackish, beneath yellow, clothed with short appressed hairs. Inhab. New South Wales north of Hunter's lii\er. Antechinus Stuartii, MacLeay, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. viii,, 242, has been thought to be identical with this species, Waterh., N. H. Mamm. i., 419. Antechinus akfinis. Plate 25, fig. 3. Phascogale affinis, Gray, App. Grey's Narrative, 406. Above brown, grizzled, with yellowish brown tips to the hairs ; beneath grey-brown ; under fur lead colour. Tail short. Male darker; length of body and head 61, tail 4i inches. Female, length of body and head 41, tail 2| inches. Inhab. Tasman's Peninsular (Gould). Mr. Waterhouse considers this species and Phascogale iiiinima varieties of Antechinus Jlavipes. Antechinus leucopus. Plate 27, fig. 2. Phascogale leucopus. Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., x., 1842, 261. Podabrus leucopus, Gould, Mamm. Austr. i., pi. 35. Fur grey, washed with blackish, head rather redder. Lips, chin, throat, chest, inside of limbs, and feet white. Tail slender, lower half white, upper blackish brown. Ears large. Inhab. Australia. This species is distinguished from P. leucogaster, Gray. by the feet being white. Antechinus crassicauhatus. Plate 26, fig. 1. Phascogale crassicaudata, Gould, P.Z.S., 1844, 105. Podabrus crassicaudatus, Gould, Mamm. Austr. i., pi. 47. Fur moderately long and soft, above ash coloured with a yellow tint. Under-side of the body and feet pure white. E;irs moderate, clothed with pale hairs, and with a large blackish spot externally. Eyes encircled with blackisli 12c liairs. Tail short, much swollen, especially in the middle, and clothed throughout with minute pale hairs. Inhab. Western Australia. Size of the common mouse, and coloured like }fiiti si/lvaticus. Antechinus albipes. Plate 27, fig. 1. l^hascogale albipes, Waterh., P.Z.S., 1842, 48. Podabrus albipes, Gould, Mamm. Austr. i., j)l. 43. Fur extremely soft, u])per part of body brownish, the liairs deep slate colour at the base, annulated with yellow, and with a black tip. Under-side of body greyish white, liairs deep grey with white ti]is. Feet white. Tail long, covered with many minute hairs, brownish above and paler beneath. Inhab. Western Australia. Antechinus Swainsonii. Plate 25, fig. 1. Phascogale Swainsonii, Waterh., Mag. Nut. Hid. iv., 304' Antechinus Swainsonii, Gould, Mamm. Austr. i., ^j/. 34. Fur long, and moderately soft. Above brown, deeper on the liinder part of the back. Hairs annulated, and tipped with yellowish. Feet uniform dusty brown. Tail clothed with small appressed dusty brown liairs. Inhab. Van. Diemen's Land. Antechinus leucogaster. Plate 25, fig. 2. Phascogale leucogaster, Gray, Apj). Grci/n Narrative ii., 407. Antechinus leucogaster, Gray, List Mamm. Brit. Mm., 99 ; Gould, Mamm. Austr., i., pi. 38. Fur rather soft, above dark brownish grey, tinted with rusty brown behind, and beset with numerous fine black liairs. Ears sparingly clothed with minute pale coloured hairs. Chin and under-surface greyish white. Tail dusky, darker at apex. Inhab. W. Australia. Antechinus apicalis. Gray, List. Mamm. Brit. Mva., 99; Gould, Mamm. Austr. i., pi. 39. Fur above reddish brown, interspersed with numerous lilack hairs, witli white tips. Outside of fore and hind legs rufous, Chin and beneath whitLsh. Tail like back, blacker at tip, covered with rigid hairs. Inhab. W. ami S. Australia. Phascogale calurus. Plate 26, fig. 3. Phascogale calurus, Gould, P.Z.S., 1844, 105. Phascogale calura, Gould, Mamm., Austr., pi. 32. Cinereous, under-side and feet white, indistinctly yellow tinted. Tail longer than the body, the basal half with short rufous hairs, ai>ical part with long black liairs. F]ars large, with yellow liairs at the base. Inhab. Western Australia. Allied to P. penicillata, but smaller. Hapalotis -melanura. Plate 29, fig. 2. Hapalotis melanura, Gould, P.Z.S.; Gray, List. Mamm. Brit. J/«s., 1843, 115. Fur harsh. Upper surface and sides sandy brown, with numerous long black hairs, the surface buffy white. Tail black. Mr. Gould has described a somewhat similar species, which the British Museum has received, collected by Mr. Fdsey in the interior of Australia, under the name (if Hapalotis hemileucMra, P.Z.S., 1857, 243, it diflers from H. melanura in the tip of the tail being white. Hapalotis albipes. Plate 28, fig. 1. Hapalotis albipes, Ijichtenstein, Darstelluny, pi. 29 ; Gould, Mamm. Austr. in., pi. 1. Conilurus constructor, Ogilhy, Linn. Traiis. xiii., 125. Inhab. New Holland. Antechinus apicalis. Plate 27, fig. 3. Phascogale apicalis, Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ix. 508. Hapalotis longicaudata. J'late 29, fig. 1. Hapalotis longicaudata, Gould, P.Z.S., 1844, 104; Mamm. Austr. iii., ^/. 8. 12d Tlie upper surface and outside of limbs pale sandy, inter- spersed on the head and over the back with numerous fine Idack hairs, longer on the lower part of the back and rump- Kurs naked, dark brown. Sides of muzzle, all tlie under- surface, and the inner surface of the limbs white. Tail clothed with short dark brown hairs at the base, with long black hairs tipped with white on the apical ludf of its length. inhab. W. Australia. Called "Kortung" and "Goota- was." Smaller tlian Jl. alhipes, liut lias a much longer tail and longer hind legs. HaPALOTIS ElCHARDSONIl. Plate 28, fig. 2. Hajjalotis Kicliardsonii, Gray, Zool. Erebus and Terror, Ma III III., pi. 28, fig. 2, ined. H. Mitclielli, Gould, Mamm. Avsfr. iii., pi. 9. H. Gouldii, Gould, P.Z.S., 1851, 127. Inhal). W. and S. Australia. Mr. Gould described an imperfect skin and skeleton, frcjm Port Essington, under the name of Mus hirsutus. In the Appendix to Grey's Travels in Australia, p. 403, and in the List of Mammals in the British Museum, 1 named these specimens Hiqudotis Gmddii, since that time more perfect specimens have been received from the N. ^^^ coast of Australia, and Mr. (Jould notes them under tht' name of Hcqxdutis hirsutus, P.Z.S., 1851, 127, notices that it is the largest species of the genus, and erroneously retains the name of H. Gouldii for the one I named H. Rirhcrdsnnii. 13 ON THE CETACEOUS ANIMALS. It has been observed by Cuvier that the largest animals are most imperfectly known, arising from the impossi- bility of bringing the specimens side by side, and carefully comparing them with each other. If this is true of the land animals, it is particularly the case with the Whales, Dolphins, Bottlenoses, and other marine Mammalia, which can only be seen at distant periods, and often under most unpromising circumstances. For though we may have Elephants, Giraffes, Elands, &c. in our Zoological Gardens and Parks, there has no plan yet been discovered whereby we could preserve alive, even for a short time, any of the gigantic Whales or Cachalots, or even of the Dolphins. Having been under the necessity of studying the subject for the purpose of putting into scientific order the mate- rials brought home by this Expedition, and especially for the purpose of arranging and naming the extensive collection of specimens of these animals, and their osseous remains, in the British Museum ; and thinking that I have been suc- cessful in elucidating some few points which appear to have escaped the Cuviers, almost the only modern authors who appear to have attempted an extensive and systematic examination of the subject, I have been induced to follow the plan adopted in the Seals ; and throw the result of my labours into a synoptic revision of the species of the entire family. In this examination I hope I have been able to arrange the .species on more secure bases, and placed them together in more natural groups, with definite characters ; but I make no doubt I have overlooked many things which I ought to have observed, and left much for my successors to accomplish. I may add that our insular position, by enabling us more frequently to examine these animals, and the extensive trade which we formerly carried on in them, have caused our writers to be better acquainted with them, and for us to collect together a greater mass of their remains than our continental neighbours. Belon and Rondelet appear to have known the Dolphin [Delphinus Delphis), the 'Ondre' (D. Tursio), and the Phocaena (P. vulgaris) ; but their account of the Spermaceti Whale is very indistinct. Clusius, in 1605, first described and figured the Sperm Whale in a recognizable manner, from two specimens thrown on the coast of Holland in 1598 and 1601 ; and Johnston (t. 41 and 42) well figures one of these specimens. In 1671, Martens, in his ' Voyage to Spitzbergen,' gave a description and figure of the Whalebone Whale, the " Fin Fish" (Balmnoptera Physalus), the Weise Fish [Beluga Catodon), and of the Botzkopt [Orca Gladiator): and his figures of the first and second have been the chief authorities for these animals until our time. In 1692, Sibbald published a small quarto pamphlet, with three plates, describing the Whales which had come under his observation. He divides them into three groups : — 1. The small Whales with teeth in both jaws, of which he notices three :— the Orca (O. Gladiator), the Beluga, and one from hear-say, which, fi-om its size, was probably a Porpesse [Phocana vulgaris). II. The larger Whales with teeth in both jaws : — 1, the Sperm Whale; and, 2, the Black-fish. And III. The Whale-bone Whales, of which he describes three specimens. The anangement he pro- posed is the one used in this paper; and his work forms the ground-work of all that was known on the larger Cetacea up to the Linnaan time : but Artedi and Linnaeus committed the mistake of regarding individual peculi- arities resulting from accidental circumstances as specific distinctions, so that three of their species have to be re- duced to synonyraa. In 1725, Dudley, in the 'Philosophical Transactions' (No. 387), describes all the Whales now recognized by the whalers, except the Black-fish ; viz., 1. The Right or Whalebone Whale. 2. The Scrag Whale. 3. The Fin-back Whale. 4. Bunch or Hump-back Whale. And 5. The Spermaceti Whale. Cuvier, in his historical account, does not I think sufficiently estimate either Sibbald's or Dudley's contribution. Bonnaterre, and after him Lacepede, in their Catalogues, collected together all the materials they could find, and ransacked every work that came in their way ; and the latter especially formed a number of species on most insuf- ficient authority : for example, making a genus on the otherwise good figure of the Sperm Whale figured by Anderson, because the artist had placed the spout on the hinder part of the head ; and a division of a genus for the Fin-fish of Martens, because he did not notice in his description or figure the fold on the belly. Yet the characters given by E 14 Lacepede, and genera formed by him, have been used in our latest works, some even in Cuvier's last edition of the ' Animal Kingdom ;' and many of these species still encumber our Catalogues. Cuvier, dissatisfied with this state of things, in his 'Ossemens Fossiles,' examined the various documents and con- sulted the authorities which had been used by Lacepede ; but, unfortunately, instead of examining with diligence the various descriptions, and comparing the various figures and their proportions, &c., he appears to have undertaken the work with a predisposition to reduce the number of species which his predecessor had described, to the smallest number. Thus, he concludes that there are only eleven species of Dolphins, one Narwhal, one Hyperoodon, one Cachalot or Sperm Whale ; and he ajjpears to think there are only two Whalebone Whales, the Right Whale and the Finner. To make this reduction, he believes that the Hump-backed Whale of Dudley is only a Whale that has lost its fin, not recognizing that the Cape Rorqual, which he afterwards described from the fine skeleton now shown in the inner court of the Paris Museum, is one of this kind, and that the Black-fish and the Sperm Whale are the same species ; an error which must have arisen from his not having observed that Sibbald had figured the former, for he ac- cuses Sibbald of twice describing the Sperm Whale, and when he came to Schreiber's copy of Sibbald's figure, he thinks the figure represents a Dolphin which had lost its upper teeth, overlooking the peculiar form and posterior posi- tion of the dorsal fin, and the shape of the head, which is unlike that of any known Dolphin. This mistake is impor- tant, as it vitiates the greater part of Cuvier's criticism on the writings of Sibbald, Artedi, and others, on these animals. And unfortunately his views have been very generally adopted without re-examination, especially in the ' Catalogue of the Osteological Specimens in the Museum of the College of Surgeons,' p. 169. It is but right to observe that in making these remarks I do not in the least desire to underrate the great obligation we owe to Cuvier for the papers above refen'ed to. It is to him that we are indebted for having placed the examination of the Whales on its right footing, and for directing our enquiries into the safe course on these animals, which only fall in our way at distant pe- riods, and generally under very disadvantageous circumstances for accurate examination and study. M. F. Cuvier's 'Cetacea' (Paris, 1836) is little more than an expansion of his brother's essays, with a compiled account of the species ; but he has consulted with greater attention the works of Sibbald and Dudley, has some doubts about the finned Cachalots being the same as the Sperm Whale (p. 475), but at length gives up the subject. He has found out that the Hump-backed Whale is evidently a Rorqual (p. 305), but does not record it as a species, nor recog- nize it as the Cape Rorqual nor as Dr. Johnston's Whale ; the latter he incorrectly considers the same as B. Physalus. He combines together as one species Quoy's short-finned Rorqual of the Falkland Islands with Lalande's long-finned Whale of the Cape, (p. 352). He is quite at sea about the hump of the Cachalots, (p. 279) ; his remarks on that sub- ject, and on the Cachalots of Sibbald, show how dangerous it is for a naturalist to speculate beyond his knowledge. Sir William Jardine's Whales in the' Naturalists' Library' is an abridgement of M. Lesson's miserable compilation, with some extracts from English writers on the subject. Nor are the British species better known ; for in Fleming's work they are left nearly in the same state they were in when Linnffius published his twelfth edition of the ' Systema Naturte ; ' and Mr. Bell's account and figures are entirely derived from preceding authors, without any addition being made to our knowledge : while this revision, though not undertaken with any view to this subject has taken three or four species from our list, and determined the specific identity of one hitherto neglected, and added two or three species for the first time to our Fauna. I am by no means convinced that all the species in the following Synopsis are distinct. It is rather to be regarded as a collection of the accounts of the Whales of different locahties, derived from the materials at present at our com- mand; and I have endeavoured to select from these sources what appeared to afford the best characters for defining them, so as to furnish to those naturalists who might enjoy the opportunity of observing the animals, a short abstract of what has been said with regard to them, and of referring them to where they could find a more detailed account of each kind. I have been induced to adopt this course, as wherever I have had the opportunity of examining and comparing the proportions of the allied species of distant seas, and of comparing their bones, they have invariably proved distinct, which leads me to believe that many of the other species of different countries, which have been re- garded as the same, will be found to be distinct, though representatives of those found in other seas. 15 The Cetacea may be divided into the Whales (Cete), which are carnivorous, and the Manates or Mermaids, which are herbivorous. I. Cete. Skin smooth, without hair. Limbs clawless, fore fin-like, hinder caudal, horizontal, forked. Teats 2, inguinal. Nostrils enlarged and close together, called blowers. Carnivorous. The group contains three families, the Balwnidcc, Physeteridw, and the Delphinidce. Fam. 1. Balenid^. Whalebone Whales. Head very large, one-third the size of the body. Jaws toothless. Palate with crowded, transverse, triangular, pendant, homy plates (whalebone or baleen), with a fibrous inner edge, forming " a screening apparatus." Head shelv- ing in front. Blowers far back, longitudinal, separate, each covered with a valve. Spout double. Gullet small. Eyes small, near angle of the mouth. 1. Bal^ena, Ray, Linn. Right Whales. Head rather blunt, swollen. Throat and belly smooth, not plaited. Dorsal fin none. These Whales yield the train oil of commerce ; but train appears to be applied by the whalers as we use drain : they refer to the train of the blubber, when speaking of the oil of dolphins, &c., and appear to call all blubber-oil train, in contradiction to head-matter, or spermaceti, which Sibbald says is called " tr/iale-shot" by the English ; it is so called by the Dutch whalers. * Bodi/ smooth above. The Right Whale. Balaena mysticetus. Balsena myslicetus, //«««. ^. iV. i. 105. O. Fab. Si. Cuv. R. A. i. 296. Oss. Foss. v. 361, t. 25,/. 9, II, t. 26,/. 25. The Right, or Whalebone Whale, Dudley, Phil. Trans. xx.xiii. 256. Scoresby, Arctic Regions, i. 448, /. 12,/ 1. B. Groenlandica, Linn. B. vulgaris, Brisson. Head depressed, temporal bone narrow, oblique. There are two series of tubercles on each side of the lower lip ; and according to Scoresby's figure, the head is f , the fins are -j, the vent \, and the sexual organs -f from the head. Females larger than the males. Inhab. North Sea. The Nord Caper, Anderson, B. Islandica, Brisson, B. glacialis, Klein, Noi-d Caper, Bonnat. Sjr Lacep. t. 2, 3, does not appear to differ from the former. It is said to be thin- ner, and infested with Barnacles ; this would lead one to think that it was established on a specimen out of health. Lacepede's figures above cited, from a drawing by Back- strom, communicated by Sir Joseph Banks, are the best figures of the Right Whale after Scoresby's. Cuvier gives a figure of the skull of this species fi-om the specimen in the British Museum. The nose of the skull is regularly and gradually arched above, rather wide be- hind, near the blow-hole, the nose and the intermaxillary bones regularly taper in front. The hinder end of the jaw- bones is obliquely produced behind, and the firontal bones are narrow, nearly linear, and oblique. — Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. /. 25,/ 9— 11. Mr. Pearsall informs me the foetus of the Whalebone Whale in the Museum of the Hull Philosophical Society has no rudiment of whalebone on the palate, and the lips are very large, and longly depending over the sides of the under jaw. Camper (t. 1, f 1, 2) figures the foetus of this species, and the skull of a young specimen, t. 4 — 0. A variety, or probably different species, is thus noticed by M. Guerin, a surgeon of a whaler. The RocK-NOSED Whale is said " never to leave the coast, and even to make the circuit of the bays. The most important point (of difi'erence) is the comparative size of the head and body. The head is always considerably more than ^, while in the true B. mysticetus it is, as stated by Scoresby, less than ^, or as 16 to 51. The whalebone is longer in comparison to the length of the animal, but the lamina) are thinner for their length, the body is broader and terminates more abruptly ; the skin is dark velvet- brown, and has fewer spots and yields less oil. The whal- ers in general seem to think that it is merely a difference of age that causes this difference in their external charac- ters, but cubs or sucklers are as often found amongst the Rock-noses as amongst the Middle Ice Whales ; the for- mer must have attained the age of maturity." — Guerin, in Jameson's N. Edin. Phil. Jour. 1845, 267. The Cape Whale. Balaena australis. Balaena australis, Desmoulin, Diet. Class. H. N. t. 140, /. 3, foetus. B. du Cap, Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 368, t. 24, t. 25, /'. 1—8, t. 26, f. 7, 11, 13, 23, t. 27,/ 10, 15,24. Skull convex, temporal bone broad, erect. Inhab. South Sea, Delalande. Cape of Good Hojje. Skeleton and foetus, Mus. Paris. Cuvier gives the details of the skeleton of this species, and figures them. The nose of the skull is high, straight, and rather suddenly bent down in front ; the nose and the intermaxillary bones contract in the middle, and then con- tinue of the same width in front. The hinder part of the jaw-bones is nearly perpendicular, and the temporal bones are broad and erect. — Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. t. 25,/. 5 — 7. Cuvier also figures the skull of a newly born specimen of the same species, only two feet long, which only differs in being shorter, lower, and in the hinder part of the jaw- bone being more slanting. — Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. /. 25,/ 1 — 3. In False Bay they carry on the fishery from the shore, and during the time Mr. Warwick was there, only one bull out of sixty specimens was killed, the females coming in- to the bay to bring forth their young. He skinned one, which was supposed to be not more than eight or ten days old, and it was 20 feet long. The Japan Whale. Balaena Japonica. Balaena australis, Temm. Fauna Japon. t. 28, 29. Temminck's figure is black ; the middle of the belly to the vent, and a spot on the chin and over the eye, white ; the nose has a rounded prominence in front; the head is 5. the entire length ; the pectoral fin large, pointed. Inhab. Japan. 16 They visit the coast periodically. The head is often co- vered with barnacles. This species is only described from a model, made in porcelain clay by a Japanese, under the insjiection of a ,Ta]>anese whaler and M. Sicbold ; but no remains of the animal were brought to Europe. The figures in the 'Fau- na Japonica' are from this model. This is probably B. Japonica, LacepMe, Mem. Mus. iv. 473, from a Japanese drawing, which is white below. Lacepede also notices another Japanese drawing, in the same place, under the name oi B. lunnlala. Lesson (Tab. Reg. Anim. 202) gives the name of " B. antarctica to the Right or Black Whale of the whalers of the antarctic seas." The New Zealand Whale. Balaena antarctica. Plate 1. Balsena antarctica, Gray, Dieff. New Zealand, t. 1. I described this species from a very accurate drawing of a specimen taken in Jackson Bay : it is very like Tem- minck's figure of B. australis, but there is a roundish pro- minence on the front of the under jaw similar to, as well as the one on the nose, figured in that species; the pecto- ral fin is, as in that species, about f from the chin. Chamisso figures a species of these animals as Balaena Kuliomoch, found in the Aleutian seas, from a wooden model made by the Aleutians ; see N. Act. Nat. Cur. t. 17, f. 1. It is noticed as B. Culammak by Pallas, Zool. Ross. Asiat. i. 288. ** Back knobbed. The Scrag Whale. Balaena gibbosa. Balaena gibbosa, Brisson. Besides these Dudley (Phil. Trans, xxxiii 259) described "a Scrag Whale," which he says "is near akin to the Fin- back, but instead of a fin upon its back, the ridge of the after part of its back is scragged, with half-a-dozen knobs or knuckles. He is nearest the Right IVliale in figure and quantity of oil. His bone (whalebone) is white, but wont split." Cuvier thought the Scrag Whale [B. gibbosa) was only a Rorqual (Oss. Foss. v. 267) which had been mutilated, but 1 susjject, from Dudley's account of the form, that it must be a Bahena, probably well known formerly. Bonnaterre, and all succeeding authors, have referred to this genus, the Hump-backed Whale of Dudley, not under- standing his description of the belly " being reeved," that is, plaited ; they call it B. nodosa. 2. Megapteea. Hump-b.\cked Whales. Balaenoptera, part, Lacep. B. nodosa, Bonat. Head broad, moderate, flattened. Throat and chest with deep longitudinal folds. Dorsal fins low or tuberous, ra- ther behind the middle of the body. The pectoral very large, -j to t the entire length of the animal, as long as the head, consisting of only four fingers. The eyes rather above the angle of the mouth. The navel is rather before the front edge, the male organs under the back edge of the dorsal, and the vent rather nearer the tail, and the female organs are rather behind the back edge of the dorsal, with the vent at its hinder end. Skull, nose narrow, broad behind, and contracted in front. Temporal bone broad. Inlerorbital space wide. Lower jaw much arched. — Ckv. Oss. Foss. v. t. 26,/. 1, 3. These Whales are easily known from the Finners {Ba- Icenoplera), in being shorter and more robust, the skull nearly -^ the entire length, the head wider between the eyes, the mouth larger, the lip warty, and the nose large and rounded ; the plaits of the belly and throat are broad ; the dorsal is more forward, the pectoral larger and narrow, from -J to T tlie length of the body, and the tail is wider, and the lolaes generally more pointed. The skull of this genus is intermediate in form between that of Bal 0 CO 3 1 fX} ^ ''o 0+ 0+ 0+ 0* Length entile 78'0 42-0 400 25-0 4-8 17-6 170 3-3 140 2-8 to mouth to pectoral 19-7 10? 120 &9 5-0 6 4-10 to navel 21 13-7 to ffeuitul organ 620 25-0 30-0 28-0 16-3 18-1 12-6 12-3 9-8 to vent or front of dorsal, Breadtl 10 2.6 30 4.4 13 3-7 31 0-68 1-3 2-0 0-7 10 2-4 0-9 1-10 0-11 of pectoral fin 1 of pectoral oftail 10 8-4 4 6 .l-O The older specimens, viz., Sibbald's male, 78, Ravin's, 42, and Schlegel's, 40, and Van Breda of Ostend's female, 82 feet long, have the pectoral fin about i the length fi-om the head, and I'rom ^ to Vw (probably as the inner or outer edge is measured) of the entire lengtli of the body, in lengths, and the dorsal about |- the entire length from the nose. It would appear as if the middle of the body length- ened more rapidly than the other parts as it grew, at least the young females are shorter in proportion ; for Scoresb}''s female, 17 feet 6 inches. Hunter's, 17 feet, and one I mea- sured at Deptford, now in the British Museum, 14 feet long, have the pectoral rather less than y the entire length. 19 and the dorsal and vent only about ^ of the entire length, from the chin, so that the interspace between the pectoral and dorsal must have doubled its length, while those fins retained their original situations with regard to the head and tail. Sibbald (Phalainologia Nova, 1692) figures two speci- mens of this genus caught on the coast of Scotland. Ray (Hist. Pisciuni, 17) notices these specimens ; and Brisson and Linnit'us have regarded them as separate species. Linna;us designated the one with the skin under the throat dilated Baheiia muscidus, and the other, with this part contracted and flat, B. Boops. Now, as I proved by the examination of the specimen we have in the British Museum, when alive, and as M. Ravin observes (Ann. Sci. Nat. V. 275) this skin is very dilatable, so that these charac- ters ap)iear to depend on the manner in which the speci- men might lay when drawn. Ray, and after him Brisson and Linnajus, established a third species, B. Physalus (S. N. i. 186) on the Fin-fish of Martens (Spitz. 125, t. Q, f. c) copied E. M. t. 2, f. 2, which well represents our sjjecies ; yet as there are no folds on the belly in the figure, it has been regarded by most authors as distinct from the B. rostrata of Mailer and Hunter ; but the name used by Martens, which is the one now given by the Greenland whalers, to the Whale under consideration, I think at once shows that it properly belongs to that species : and Mar- tens neither mentions the colour, nor says a word about the belly ; and Scoresby, who calls it B. gibbar, after Bonnaterre, saj's from report that the "skin is smooth, ex- cept about the sides of the thorax, where longitudinal rugae or sulci occur," which at least must be a BaUenoptera. Lacepede formed the Fin-fish of Martens, the Hunch- back and Scrag Whale of Dudley, into a section, which he calls Rorqual a ventre lisse. The Hunch-back has a "reeved" or plaited belly, and the Scrag Whale is shaped like, and doubtless is, a true Balcena ; yet these species are kept together in Fischer, and other modern systematic works : and Dr. Fleming has made Lacepede's section into a genus, under the name o( Phi/salis. The skeleton of the young " Balieiia Boops" (No. 1194, Mus. Col. Surg.) which formed part of the Hunterian col- lection, and is probably the skeleton of the B. rnsiraia described by him (as the head is about 4 feet long, which agrees with the measurements of his figure of the animal) belongs to this species, and has the lower jaws expanding considerably beyond the nose of the skull. Albers (Icon. Anat. 1822, t. i) figures, under the name of B. Boops, the skeleton of a Whale cast ashore at Vegisack near Bremen, in 1669. The length was 29 feet; length of pectoral fin 3, width of tail 9. Camper (Cetac 74, t. 11, 12) figures the skull of this specimen. Cuvier says he compared this skull with the one from St. Marguerite's, figured by Lace- pede, and could see no difference between them. Alber's figures would lead to the idea that the lower jaw was scarce- ly wider than the upper ; but this is corrected by Camper. M. Cuvier's Rorqual de la Mediterranee is founded on the skull of a whale described by Lacepede (Cetac. t. 5 — 7) which was stranded near the Isle of Marguerite in 1797. Lacepede gives the following measurement, viz., length, 60 feet; length to the pectoral, 14 feet 6 inches; from thence to dorsal, 10 feet 9 inches ; and from dorsal to caudal, 8 feet 9 inches : but there must be some mistake, as this makes only 34 feet. The pectoral was 5 feet long, and all black. M. F. Ciivier regards this specimen as the type of B. musciilus (Cetac. 334). M. Van Bcneden found by examining the ear-bone brought liom Island by M. Quoy, that it belonged to the Rorqual de la Mediterranee of Cuvier (see Ann. Sci. Nat. n. s. vi. 159), not knowing that this is the commonest species of the North Sea. M. F. Cuvier's Cetacea also refers to the Mediterranean Rorqual [B. musculus), a male Whale described by M. Companyo, whicli was cast ashore near St. Cyprien, which, from the account of the large size of the lower jaw, must belong to this species. It was 25,060 meters (82 feet) en- tire length; the head 5,038 meters (16 feet); length of pec- toral 2,010 (13 feet). It had 7 cervical, 14 dorsal, 15 lumbar, and about 25 caudal vertebrae, in all 61. It was dark gray, with the throat and the sides of the pectoral white, the belly blue and white banded, pectoral grayish. Dr. Knox notices a specimen of a Whale found oft' N. Berwick which was 80 i'eet long, the head 23 feet and the tail 20 feet wide from tip to tip (Edin. N. Phil. Jour. 1833, 181). The skeleton of this whale is now in Dr. Knox's Museum, and is figured in Jardine's ' Naturalist's Library,' vi. t. 5. Dr. Knox describes it as having 13 dorsal and 43 lumbar, sacral and caudal vertebrae, (Edin. N. Phil. Journ. 1834, 198). Dr. Knox examined a young Rorqual, 9 feet 11 inches long, 3 feet from snout to ear, and 4 feet 8 inches in girth, at the end of the folds, which was cast ashore near Queens- ferry, Frith of Forth, in 1834. He considers it quite dis- tinct from the Great Rorqual [B. Boops), because it has only 11 dorsal, 36 lumbar, sacral and caudal vertebra3, but he considers it the same as B. rostrata of O. Fabricius, Hunter and Scoresby (Edin. N. Phil. Jour. 1834, 199). Dr. Knox's specimen is figured by Jardine under the name of the Lesser Rorqual (Nat. Lib. vi. t. 7). Schlegel (Fauna Japon. 24, and Abhand. 44) refers to this figure as a repre- sentation of Balceiiapfera antarclica, but I cannot think correctl}', for though the pectoral in the figures is larger in proportion than the}' should be for a Baleen op I era, they are not of the shape of the fins of Megapterce, and the artist of this work was more intent on making pretty pictures than accurate figures of the animals, and has made the fins of both the animal and skeleton of the larger Rorquals too large in proportion for the other ]3arts of the body, and perhaps the length of the body is fore-shortened. The figure in other respects is a pretty accurate representation of a young connuon Finner. It is to be remarked that Dr. Knox does not mention the length of the pectoral fins, which he would have done if it had been a Megaplera. Dr. Knox found 8 distinct bristles arranged in perpen- dicular rows on the extremity of the snout, in each jaw, (Knox, Edin. N. Phil. Journ. 1834) ; and Van Breda says there is a small tuft of 9 much-divided hairs, about a foot long, and united by a membrane at the base, observed at the end of the nose of the specimen he described. Pallas, under the name oi B. Physalus, (Zool. Ross. As. 290), described a specimen of this genus found in the North 20 Sea in 1740. It was 84 feet long; the pectoral, 9, the head 22 feet long, and the tail 14 feet wide. He describes the skin as brown. The following description must be referred to this spe- cies with doubt. Ascanius (Icon. Her. Nat. iii. t. 26) gives a figure of a female BalieHoptera, which he calls a Rorqual with a plaited belly, 66 feet long, from the North Sea, which he thought might be B. musculus of Linneeus, (it is not well copied by Bonnaterre E. M. t. 3, f. 1 and Schreber, t. ), which has a larger pectoral fin, about f the length of tlie body, but the drawing is not so good as the others in the work, and the fin is so awkwardly applied to the body, that perhaps its size may depend on the incompetence of the artist. The dorsal fin, which is only indicated as if doubtful in the original figure, is continued to the tail, but in Bonnaterre's copy it is represented as of equal authority with the other part. I may remark that the pectoral fin, instead of having the white spot occupying the greater part of its upper side, which is spoken of l\y Hunter, Ra- vin, and F. Cuvier, and found in our specimen, is repre- sented dark like the back, with a pale edge. It is also to be observed that Schlegcl, in the three figures he gives of the Rorqual Whale, represents the pectoral fin as all black, like the back. Fabricius (Faun. Groen. 37) five years after, described a Balcenopfera under the name of B. Boops, Linn, which appears to differ from B. P/iysalus, for he described the " Pinna; pectorales magnae, obovato-oblongir, margine pos- tica Integra, regione cubiti parum fractw, antica autem ro- tundato-crenata3." And he continues, " Antes nares in vertice capitis tres ordines convexitatum circularium, huic lorsitan peculiare quid," "Pinna dorsalis compressa, basi latior, apice acutiuscula, antice sursum repanda, postice fere pei-pendicularis," and " Corpus pone pinnam dorsalem incipit carina acuta in pinnam caudalem usque pergens." This, from the size of the pectorals, may be the same as tlie one figured by Ascanius. Both are true Balaiioptera, from the position of the genital organs and vent compared with the dorsal fin, and Fabricius especially says the pec- toral fin is composed of five fingers. Ri DOLPHi's FiNNER Whale. Balaenoptera laticeps. Bakena rostrata, Rudolphi, Berl. Abhand. 1820, t. 1 — 4. Rorqual du Nord, Cuvier, Oss. Foss. v. 564, I. 26,/. 6. copied from Rudolphi. Black, beneath white ; upper jaws wide, in the skull only twice as long as the width of their base in front of the orbits, the lower ones slightly curved and scarcely wider than the edge of the upper ones. Pectoral fin J the entire length, and rather more than ^, and the dorsal nearly ^, from the nose. Inhab North Sea, coast of Holstein, 1819, Rudolphi. The length was 31 feet 1 ; from nose to the eye, 2,9 ; to blower, 3,11 ; to pectoral, 3,6i ; to the front of the dor- sal, 19,2 ; to the vent, 21 feet. * Cuvier copies the figure of the head of this Whale as tliat of the Northern Rorqual, and points out its distinc- tions from that which he had received from the Mediterra- nean, which agrees with the head of the Balaiia rostrata of Hunter, the one we have from Deptford, and with M. Ravin's animal, and that found on the shores of Ostend. It is very desirable that Rudolphi's skeleton should be more particularly examined and compared with the other species: in the figures, the nasal bones are much broader than in the common Finner, Balcenoptera Physalus. The Peruvian Finner. Balaenoptera fasciata. Bal. n. s. Tschndi, Mammal. Coiisp. Peruana, 13. " Lower jaw scarcely longer than the upper ; head and back ash-brown ; belly whitish ; tips of fins and a streak from the eye to the middle of the body white." Tschudi. Inhab. Coast of Peru. The Japan Finner. Balaenoptera Iwasi. Balaenoptera arctica, Schlegel, Faun. Japon. 26. A species of this genus is known in Japan under the name of Iwasi Kuzira. It is very rare. One was cast ashore in 1760 at Kii, which was about 25 feet long: black, belly whitish, .sides white-spotted. They distinguish it from the other Whales by the head being smaller, narrower and more pointed, and the pectoral shorter. It was driven ashore by the Sakaiiata (grampus). No remains of this species were brought home by AI. Siebold. Temminck's ' Fauna Japonica ' says that it is the same as the northern species. It is very desirable that the bones of the Japan and northern specimens should be accurately compared. It may be observed that several animals, the Mole and the Badger for example, were said to be equally like the Eu- ropean species, but recent research has .shown they are distinct, and are now so allowed in the ' Fauna Japonica.' This genus also inhabits the Columbian shores. Lewis and Clarke mention the skeleton of a Rorqual found near the Columbia river, 105 feet long. — Travels, -iii. Chamisso, in his accounts of the wooden models of Whales which were made by the Aleutians, of the species found in their seas, which he deposited in the Berlin Mu- seum, and described and figured in the N. Acta Nat. Cur. xii. 212, figures three kinds of this genus, viz., Ahucjulich, t. 16, f. 2; Maiiffidac/t, t. 16, f. 3; and A(/amachtsc]iidi, t. 18, f. 4, the B. Afjamaclischik, Pallas, Z. Ross. t. a. If reliance is to be placed in the wooden models made by the Aleutians, which have been described and figured by Chamisso, and many of them are not bad representa- tions of known genera. There is a genus found at Kams- chatka which has not yet been described : it is called Baleena Tschiekagluk by Pallas, Zonl. Ross. Asiat. i. 289. — Nor. Act. Nat. Cur. 259, /. 19,/: 6. It has no dorsal fin, and a smooth belly and chest ; the upper and lower part of the under portion of llie body is slightly keeled, the head rounded, like BalcBnoptera, with the blower on the hinder part of the crown. The lower side of the tail and the pectoral are white. *** " Male Organs under the Dorsal." Southern Finner. Balaenoptera australis. B. Quoyii, Fischer, Sijii. 526. B. rostrata australis, Desmoulin , Diet. CI. H. N. ii. 166. Inhab. Falkland Islands. Desmoulin (Diet. Class. H. Nat. i. 164), under the name of Balaiiia rostrata australis, described a Whale seen by 21 M. Quoy on the shores of Falkland Islands, which he says was exactly like B. Plnjsalus. It was 55 feet long, and the pectoral fin (5 feet 3 inches, that is, abont \ the entire length, the same as in Bahenoptera P/ii/fialus, but he says the dorsal fin was over the male organ, a character which as far as I know is peculiar to the Hump-backed Whale, thus presenting a combination of characters which, if correct, will not only prove it to be a distinct species, but one form- ing a section by itself. Fam. 2. Catodontid.e. Toothed Whales. Head large. Upper jaw toothless; lower jaw with co- nical teeth fitting into cavities in the edge of the upper one. Blowers united together, with a lunate opening. I. Catodon, part, Artedi. Spermaceti Whale. Physeter, part, Linn. Physalus, Lacep. Head truncated and rather compressed in front, with the blowers close together on the front of the upper edge, separated from the head by an indentation. Nose of skull elongate, broad, depressed. Lower jaw shorter than the upper one, very narrow, C3'lindrical in front, and united by a symphysis for nearly half their length. Back with a roundish tubercle in front, over the eyes, called the " bunch," and a rounded ridge of fat behind, highest in fi'ont over the genital organs, called the " hump," and con- tinued in a ridge to the tail. No true dorsal fin. Pec- toral broad, truncated. Teeth conical, often worn down. Males larger than the females. Clusius describes tlie blowers as placed on the head near the back, and Artedi and Linnaeus adopt this error in their character of Pliyseler macrocepltaliis. Anderson (Iceland, ii. 186, t. 4) gives a figure of a Whale with a truncated head, much resembling the old figures of the Sperm Whale, with the blower on the hinder part of the head, like a Phy- seter. Bonnaterre established on this figure his Physeter cylindrus ; and Lacepede forms a genus for it, which he calls Physnlii-t. The Dutch engraving of the animal de- scribed by Clusius, shows this to have been a mistake. The bunch and hump referred to by Beale and the other whalers, appears first to have been described by T. Hasaeus of Brerae, in 17-23, in a dissertation on the 'Leviathan of Job and the Whale of Jonas;' on "a specimen 70 feet long, with a very large head, the lower jaw 16 feet long, with 52 pointed teeth, with a boss on the back, and another near the tail, which resembles a fin." Cuvier, after quoting this very accurate description, observes, " Mais d'apres Tobser- vation fait sur divers dauphins, cette disposition que per- sonne n'a revue pourroit avoir ete accidentelle, et alors cet animal n'auroit diflere en rien du Cachalot vulgaire." — Oss. Foss. V. -331. Indeed Cuvier's mind a])])cars to have been made up that the Sperm Whale had no hump in the place of the dorsal fin, for he wrongly accuses Bonnaterre of having added a tubercle in his copy of Anderson's figure, which is not in the original. — Oss. Foss. 332. Anderson, in the description of this animal, says that it has a pro- minence four feet long and a foot and a half high near its tail, as in his figure. But the fact was that Cuvier erro- neously combined the Sperm Whale and the Black-fish {Physeter) together ; and he could not otherwise reconcile how some authors, as Haseus, Anderson and Pennant, described the Sperm Whale with a hump ; while Sibbald describes the Physeter, which he erroneously considered the same animal, with a donsal fin, overlooking at the same time the great difference in the form of the head, and in the position of the blower of these two very dissi- milar genera. — Oss. Foss. 338. From the following extract it would appear that Mr. Bell has most unaccountably fallen into the same mistake. He says, — " After careful examination of the various ac- counts which have from time to time been given of Whales belonging to this family, called Spermaceti Whales, I have found it necessary to adopt an opinion in some measure at variance with those of most previous writers, with regard to the genera and species to which all those accounts and details are to be referred. The conclusion to which I have been led is, first, that the Hiyh-finned Cachalot is specifi- cally but not generically distinct from the common one, and that therefore the genus Catodon is to be abolished, and the name Physeter retained for both species, and se- condly, that all the other species which have been distin- guished by various naturalists, have been founded upon trifling variations, or upon vague and insufficient data." — Brit. Quad. 507. Thus, though he differs from Cuvier in regarding them as distinct species, yet he overlooked Sib- bald's figures, lor he says there is none of the High-finned Cachalot in existence, and persists in keeping it in the genus Physeter, which he characterizes as having the "Head enormously large, truncated in front," which is quite unlike the de])ressed rounded head of the high-finned Cachalot, or Black-fish of the whalers; and he also adopts the mistaken description of the dorsal fin. The Northern Sperm Whale. Catodon macrocephalus. Spermaceti Whale, Dudley, Phil. Trans, xxxii. 258. Blunt-head Cachalot, Robertson, Phil. Trans. Ix. t. Balaena macrocephala bipinnis, Sibbald, Phal. 13. Rati, Pisces, 15, 11. Physeter Catodon, O. Fab. 44, and Robertson, not Linn. Ph. Trumpo, Bonnat. Cetac. t. 8, /". 1, from Robertson. Phj'seter macrocephalus, Linn. S. N., O. Fab. F. Groen. 41. Physeter gibbus, Schreb. Inhab. North Sea, Teignmonth, Gesner, 1532. Scot- land, Sibbald, Robertson. Greenland, O. Fab. &c. New England, Dudley. It is to be remarked that all the older writers only de- scribe this animal as occurring in the Northern Seas, and Robertson and Fabricius described it as black when young, becoming whitish below. All the figures, except Anderson's, are, by the unani- mous experience of the whalers, far too long for the thick- ness, and Anderson's scarcely represents the " bunch " sufficiently prominent ; besides having the blower on the wrong part of the head. Beale (Hist, of the Sperm Whale) says there is but one species found in the North Sea, North America, New Gui- nea, Japan or Peru ; but this is merely speaking the lan- guage of whalers, and by species he means, as he does in the other parts of his book, genus. I have no doubt, from G 22 analogy of other Whales, that when we shall have had the opportunity of accurately comparing the bones and the va- rious proportions of the parts of the northern and southern kinds, we shall find them distinct. Wishing to call atten- tion to this subject for future examination, I may observe that Beale (A^. H. Sperm Whale, 22,/. 1,14) describes the Southern Sperra Whale as grey. Female one-fifth the size and bulk of the males, more slender and large in propor- tion. Young black, skin thicker. Varies sometimes black and gray mottled. Quoy gives an engraving of a drawing of a Sperm Whale, which was given him by an English captain, which is pro- bably the Southern Whale. He calls it Physeter polycy- phus (and Desmoulin re-names it P. australis) because its back appears to be broken into a series of humps by cross ridges. In this particular it agrees with the Scrag Whale of Dudley (on which Bonnaterre established his B. gibho- ■sa) ; but it cannot be that animal, as Dudley says it is a Whalebone Whale. Quoy's figure differs from Beale's in being much longer, but as Beale observes, when speaking of the figures of the northern kind, this is the common fault of all the drawings of the Sperm Whales. Colnet, in his Voyage, p. 80, f. 9, (copied by Brandt and Ratzeburg, t. 14, f. 3) gives a very good figure of a Sperm Whale, 15 feet long, from measurements; with details of the manner of flenching or peeling it. It agrees with Beale's in proportions. It was caught in the North Pacific near Point Angles, on the coast of Mexico. This figure escaped Cuvier's researches. Purchas says the Sperm Whale is found at Bermuda, where it is called Trumpo, a name which Lacepede ap- plied to the northern animal ; and Dudley describes those found on the east coast of North America. The Japanese distinguish three varieties of this animal, according to their size. They live in herds on the Japan- ese coast. — Faun. Japan. Upper jaw in British Museum : — Length, entire, 179 inches. „ of beak, 127 Width at notch, 67 „ at middle of beak, .... 52 Lower jaws in British Museum : — No. 1. No. 2. No. 3. Entire length, 157 inches. 92 inches. 51 inches. Length of teeth-groove, .... .... 29 „ symphysis, 85 44 21J Teeth on each side, 23 21 19 Width at condyle, .... .... 31 In these, the beak is not quite twice the length of the breadth at the notch, and more than -J the length of the entire head. The lower jaw appears to increase in length in front, for in the older specimens the symphy.sis is more, and the younger ones less, than half the entire length of the jaw. There is the head of a very young specimen, probably a foetus of this animal, in the Museum of the College of Sur- geons : the bones are of a very soft structure. The follow- ing are its measurements : — Length, entire, 32 inches. „ of nose, 20 „ of lower jaw, .... 28 „ of symphysis, .... 9"6 Width at notch of nose, .... 12'6 „ of condyles apart, 16 6 Camper (Cetac. t. 17, 20 — 22, from the church of Scher- clinge, t. 18, 19, 27, Mus. Paris), figured the skull of this Whale. He represents the nose of the skull as nearly twice and a half as long as the width at the notch. II. KoGiA. Short-headed Whales. Head moderate, broad, triangular. Lower jaw wide be- hind, slender, united by a short symphysis in front. Jaw bone of skull broad, triangular, as broad as long. This genus is intermediate between Catodon and Del- ph inns. The Short-headed Whale. Kogia breviceps. Physeter breviceps, Blainv. Ann. Anat. P/tys. iii. t. 15. Inhab. Cape of Good Hope, Mus. Paris. Of this species only a single skull is known, which M. de Blainville thus described. Skull very broad and high, the frontal crest very distinct, and the nasal pit very deep, rather like that of the Cacha- lot. Nose very short and pointed, very rapidly tapering, only 1 inch longer than the breadth of the occipital bone. The lower jaw is very wide apart at the condyles, bent sharply inwards, and united in front by a moderate sym- physis, and very narrow but rounded at the end. Teeth 14 or 15, narrow, slender, conical, acute and rather arched inwardly. Length of the skull 14 inches 6 lines. Lower jaw 13 inches, separation at the condyles 12 inches, sym- physis about f of the length of the lower jaw. Beak the length of the width at the notch. This skull bears no resemblance to the skull of the young Sperm Whale. III. Physeter, Artedi. The Black-fish, or Cachalot. Physeter, part, Linn. Sfc. Cetus, Brisson. Head rounded, convex above; upper jaw longest ; the blowers on the middle of the top the head, separate, " co- vered with one flap," [Sihbald) ; pectoral fin moderate, triangular ; dorsal fin high, falcate ; teeth conical, com- pressed; the male organ is under the front edge of the dor- sal, and the vent nearly under its hinder edge. They produce spermaceti according to Sibbald, but this is denied by Beale ; eat Porpesses and small Cetacea, and even attack the larger Whales and Seals. Cuvier, in his ' History and Examination of the Syno- nyma of the Cachalots or Sperm Whales' (Oss. Foss. v. 328, 338), regards the description of this animal given by Sibbald as merely a redescription of the Sperm Whale, and finds great fault with Artedi, Bonnaterre, and others, for having considered them as separate ; and he regards the second blunt-toothed specimen as either a Delphintis glo- biceps, or a D. Tursio, which had lost its upper teeth ; this error is important, as it vitiates many of his remarks. To have come to these conclu.sions he must have over- looked Sibbald's figure, with ample details, of the first, and of the teeth of the second, which must have at once shown 23 him his error. That he did so is certain ; for when he comes to Schreber's reduced copy of Sibbald's figures of the first (p. 337), he says Schreber does not indicate its origin, but here he goes on to remark of what he has be- fore regarded as a Sperm Whale, "fi-om the form of its lower jaw it most resembles a large Dolphin which had lost its upper teeth." Thus, while he was reducing the numerous species of Sperm Whales that had been made by Bonnaterre, Lace- pede, and other compiling French authors, to a single species, he has inadvertently confounded with it the very distinct genus of Black-fish, or Physeter of Artedi, which has a perfectly differently formed head, its top flatter, and with the blow-hole on the hinder part of its crown, and with a distinct dorsal fin, particulars, all well described by Sibbald and O. Fabricius, two original and most accurate observers, and conscientious recorders, and not badly re- presented by Bayer. Some parts of Sibbald's description, and his reference to Jonston's figure, might lead to this error, but his figures, which exactly agree in proportion with his description, at once set this at rest, the drawing being -^ of the natural size, that is to say, 6 feet to an inch; and he observes that his animal is longer and more slender than Willoughby's figure of the Sperm Whale. J. Bayer (Act. Nat. Cur. 1733, 111, 1, t. 1) gives a rather fanciful but very recognizable figure of a male specimen of this genus, which was thrown ashore at Nice, on the 10th of Nov., 1736, where it is called Mular. He compared it with Clusius' description of the whale which was stranded on the coast of Holland, and observes that it has a dorsal fin, very small pectorals, and other characters not noticed by Clusius ; and he says it agi'ees in all points with the Whale noticed by Ray (Syn. Pise. 14), which is extracted from Sibbald as above quoted : and F. Cuvier remarks on this figure, " Elle est en efiect d'un Cachalot ; mais elle le rend de la maniere la moins fidele." — Cetac. 267. The Black-fish. Physeter Tursio. Physeter Tursio, Linn. S. N. i. 107, from Balajna macrocephala, Sibbald, Phal. t. \.f. 5, copied P. microps, Schreber, t. 339, also Anderson, Ice. 248,/. Black-fish, Beale, H. Sperm IVltale, 11. Ph. microps, Litin. S. N. i. 107. O. Fab. Faun. Groenl. 44, from 13. macrocephala, n. 2. Sibbald, Phal. 13, t. 2,/. 1, 2, 4, 5, teeth. Ph. Mular, Bonnat. Cei. 17. Mular, Bayer, Act. Nat. Cur. \\\,t. 1, male. Ph. orthodon, Lacep. C'et. 236, from Anderson, 246. Delphinus Bayeri, Risso, Eur. Merid. iii. F. Ctiv. Cetac. 224. Black. Teeth 11 to 22 on each side, conical, compress- ed ; head nearly 5^, pectoral fin ^ the entire length ; the length 50—60 feet. Inhab. North Sea. Greenland, common, O. Fab. Scot- land, Sibbald. Nice, Bayer. The only zoologists who appear to have had the oppor- tunity of seeing and describing this Whale are Sibbald and O. Fabricius. Bayer appears only to have had the drawing sent to him. This species has been divided into two, according to the more or less truncated state of its teeth. I shall quote their descriptions, somewhat abridged. Fabricius says it "has in the lower jaw 22 teeth, 11 on each side, arched, falciform, hollow internally as far as the point, projecting scarcely a third part (and this visible part is enamelled, compressed-conical, with the point sharp, curved inwardly and at the same time verging a little back- wards ; but the concealed part broader and having two parts, compressed anteriorly and posteriorly, and, espe- cially on the side nearest the throat, channelled) ; of the length of a finger, and li inch broad, the middle ones lar- ger, the anterior and posterior smaller. Beak rather ob- tuse. Beside the pectoral fins it has a long, erect, dorsal fin. In size, it is to be considered as amongst the smaller Whales. Skin glabrous, black; the fat thick, but little oily; flesh red." — Fabricius, Faun. Groenl. Sibbald observes that " the superior part of the body was swelled to a prodigious size. In length it was 52 or 53 feet, its height 12 feet, its girth above 32 feet. Its head was so large that it was (the tail being removed) half the length of the whole body. In form it was oblong- round, somewhat compressed in the upper part; inferior part of rostrum beyond lower jaw 2j feet, the superior part nearly 5. Lower jaw 10 feet long. The extreme part of the rostrum was distant 12 feet from the eyes, which were very small for the size of the head, about the size of those of the haddock. A little above the middle of the rostrum is a lobe, which is called "the lum," with two entrances covered with one operculum, called the " flap." The size of the cranium may be estimated by the fact that four men were seen inside it at one time, extract- ing the brain, which contained several cells or alveoli, like those which bees keep their honey in, and in these were round masses of a white substance, which, upon examina- tion, were proved to be sperm. Some of this substance was also found externally on the head, in some parts to the thickness of 2 feet. In the superior jaw were 42 alveoli, hollowed out for receiving the teeth of the lower jaw ; they were of a cartilaginous nature. In the inferior mandible there were 42 teeth, 21 on each side, all of the same form, which was like that of a sickle, round and a little com- pressed, thicker and more arched in the middle, and gra- dually becoming thinner, terminating superiorly in an acute cone turning inwards. Inferiorly it becomes thinner, and terminates in a more slender root, which is narrower in the middle. Of these teeth those in the middle of the jaw are larger and heavier, those external are smaller. One of the larger, 9 inches long, weighed 18|- oz., and at the thickest end was of the same length as breadth. The smallest tooth which I got was 7 inches long and 5 in girth. The osse- ous part of these teeth projected 3 inches beyond the gums, was like polished ivory, smooth and white, the fang of each tooth was provided with a large cavity, which was so constructed that in the larger teeth there was a cavity 3 inches deep. It had 2 lateral fins, each about 4 feet long, and besides these a long fin on the back. Colour of skin black. The throat was observed to be larger than usual in whales. Only one stomach was found." 24 Of the AidhiU, which this species is said to be called in Greenland, wonderful stories are told : the following is not the most extraordinary. " Where these appear all the seals disappear, else they make desperate slaughter among them, for they have such sagacity and skill in catching them with the mouth and fins, that they arc sometimes seen loaded with five at a time, one in the mouth, a couple un- der each fin and one under the back fin." — Craii/z, Green- land, i. 116. Sibbald describes the comparatively small triangular dorsal to be erect, like a " Mizam mast," which Artedi and Linnajus translate pinna allissima, and caused Shaw to call it the High-finned Cachalot. Dr. Fleming by mis- take calls this species the Spermaceti Whale (Brit. A. 38); and he refers to /'. macrocephalus (Linn.), as the true Sperm Whale figured by Robertson. Sibbald, in speak- ing of another specimen, says, "spinam dorso longam," as correctly quoted by Artedi and Linnaeus, but used by them in opposition to the altisaima of their other species. Colnett (Voy. S. Pacific) speaks of innumerable shoals of Black-fish on the shores of California. Mr. Warwick informs me that there is a stuffed speci- men of this Whale perambulating this country in three caravans ; unfortunately I have never had the opportunity of seeing it. There is an etching of Van den Veld, of a " Pot Wal- vvesk op Noortwijek op Zee, 28 Dec. 1614," which I think represents this species. In the Catalogue of the Museum of the College of Sur- geons the truncated Whales' teeth are called "the teeth of the High-finned Cachalot, P. Tursio?'' p. 171, n. 1189— 1194. And the small jaws of the Sperm Whale are called "the Lesser Cachalot [Physeter Cafodon, Linn.)" Duha- mel (Pech. iv. t. 9, f. 2) figured a whale from the " River Gabon" in Guinea, with teeth in the lower jaw, a dorsal on the hinder part of the back, and the blowers in the crown, as in this genus ; but the jaws are equal, and the mouth bent up at the angles to the eyes. He says it is called Grampus by the Eugli.sh. Fam. .3. Delphinid.^:. Dolphins. Head moderate. Teeth in both jaws, rarely rudimen- tary and early deciduous. Blowers united together, open- ing in a single transverse or lunate opening on the crown of the head. This family is easily known from the Toothed Whales, or Cafodon lida, by the smaller and more proportionate head ; and in those species which have lost their upper teeth at an early age, by there being no regular series of pits in the gum of the upper jaw for the reception of the teeth of the lower one : and also by the hinder part of the skull not being deeply concave, and surrounded on the sides and behind by a high ridge. These animals when first born are large compared with the size of the parents, (according to Dr. Knox, the foetus of the porpesse is half the length, that is, one foin-th the size of the parent before it is born, Trans. Hoy. Sac. Ed. ii. 208) ; and they appear to attain their full size very ra- pidly, which may account for the very slight difference to be observed in the size of the skull, and the great unifor- mity in the number, and in the space which the series of teeth occupy u]3on the edge of the jaws in different speci- mens of the same species. Hunter thought the exact num- ber of teeth in any species was uncertain ; observing the teeth in the middle of each series were the largest and the most firmly fixed, he states his belief that " the jaws increased posteriorly and decay at the symphysis, and while the growth is going on, there is a constant succes- sion of new teeth, by which means the new-formed teeth are proportioned to the jaw." — Phil. Trans. 1788, 398. Dr. Fleming, from the examination of the jaws of two porpoises of different ages, thinks " the jaws lengthen at the symphysis and at the base ; " and that the new teeth formed at these places are the smallest, and that there is no absorption." — Fleming, Phil. Zool. ii. 208. This may be the case with the specimens before they arrive at their full size ; but no skull of this kind has fallen under my observation : and as far as my experience will carry me, I have foimd the numbers, size, and disposition of the teeth, one of the most important characters for the deter- mination of the species and the definition of genera. M. F. Cuvier's remarks [Cetac. 103, 104) on the teeth as the characters of genera are not consistent with my observa- tions, but I have found them quite as characteristic of the different genera as those of other orders of Mammalia, though they do not present so many different forms. At the same time, it is true, that compilers like Lesson, who have not taken the trouble to examine a single skull, have made far too many genera. And I may also observe that the genera Phocana and Delphinapterus, as formed and adopted by the Cuviers are founded on very slight charac- ters, and bring together species that have very little relation to each other. I have found it necessary, for the pin-pose of more distinctly defining the species, to divide them into into several new groups, which has enabled me to arrange them into what appears to be a more natural series, and to more nearly circumscribe the genera. My thanks are due to Dr. Richardson of Haslar, to Mr. Brightwell and the Committee of the Norwich Philosophi- cal Society, and to Mr. Bell, for allovving me to have at the Museum for couqjarison the specimens of these animals in the collections under their care; and to Mr. Owen and the Council of the College of Surgeons, and to Mr. Fraser and the Council of the Zoological Society, for permission to examine the skulls in their Museums. The family is divided into sections by the form of the skull, and these into genera by the form and disposition of the teeth, and by the absence and presence of the dorsal fin. A. Jaw-hones dilated on each side behind. a. Pectoral fin tapering. Jaw-bones produced and bent up before the orbits. Teeth few. Hyperoo- dontina. b. Pectoral fin truncated. Jaw-bone produced, bent up over the orbits. Teeth many. Platanistina. B. Jaw-bone not bent up behind. a. Wing of jaw-bone horizontal. Head produced in- into a beak. Teeth numerous. Delphinina. b. Wing of the jaw-bone horizontal. Head rounded. Teeth numerous. Orcadina. 25 c. Wing of the jaw-bone and beak shelved downwards. Monocerina. Having, since the above table was in type, had the op- portunity of examining the skulls oi Ziphius Inia, &c., I am induced to pi-oposo the following arrangement as more consistent with their natural distribution : — A. Jaws tapering, the syniphysis of the lower jaw short (not half the length of the jawj. Dorsal fin generally distinct. Marine. a. Upper jaw toothless, lower jaw with only one or two teeth on each side, often hidden in the gums. Beak of skull keeled or winged on the side. Hyperoodon- tina. b. Upper and lower jaw with few or deciduous teeth. Wings of jaw-bone shelving downwards. Monocera- tina. c. Upper and lower jaw with many teeth. Wings of jaw-bone horizontal. Delphinina. B. Jaws much compressed, the symphysis of the lower very long, more than half the length ; dorsal none ; teeth in both jaws. Fluviatile. d. Wings of jaw-bone bent up in front. Platanistina. e. Wing of jaw expanded. Iniina. A. Jaws tapering, the symphysis of the lower jaw short, not half the length of the jaw. Dorsal fin generally dis- tinct. Pectoral fin orate acute. Marine. a. Upper jaw toothless, lotcer jaw with only one or two teeth (which arc often hidden in the gums) on each side. Beak of the skull keeled on each side, the keel being sometimes large, and, forming a large kind of refiexed wing on each side. Hyperoodontina. Synopsis of the Genera. 1. Hyperoodon. — The beak of the upper jaw with a large erect wing-like expansion in front of the blowers, lower jaw with two rudimentary teeth in front. 2. Ziphius. — Beak of upper jaw keeled on each side, lower jaw broad, with large compressed teeth in the mid- dle of each side. 3. Delphinorhynchus. — Beak of upper jaw keeled on each side, lower jaw with two or three small, rudimentary, conical teeih in the middle of each side. Hyperoodon, Lacep. Delphinus, part, Lacep. Uranodon, Illiger. Nodus, Wagler. Aodon, Lesson. Cetodiodon, Jacob. Upper jaw toothless ; lower jaw with a small, conical, acute, rudimentary, moveable tooth, in a cavity under the gums, on each side of the front part. Blowers linear, transverse, sub-lunate. According to Voight and Wesmael, the ends of the blow- ers, as in other Dolphins, point forward. Dale, Baussard and Doumet describe them as pointing backwards; Des- marest and others assumed the latter as a generic charac- ter. Illiger's genus, Uranodon, depends on the hard sharp points said to be found in the palate by Baussard. Wes- mael did not find them in his specimen. This genus is at once known from Delphinorhynchus, without examining the skull, by the head being more con- vex and rounded in front, and the two teeth being situated in the front end of the lower jaw, while in that genus they are in the middle of each side. The descriptions of the species of this genus are so dif- ferent, that I am inclined to keep them distinct, for the purpose of calling attention to them. Cuvier regarded them all as one. * Dorsal fin in the centre of the back. Hyperoodon, Lacep. Uranodon, Illiger. The Bottle-head. Hyperoodon Butskopf. Tab. 1. Hyperoodon Butskopf, Lacep. Cetac. 319; from Baussard, Jour. Phys. xxxiv. 201, t. copied F. Cuv. Cetac. 2il, t. 17,/. 1, t. 11,/. 1, cop. Delphinus ? edentatus, Schreb. Saugth. t, 347. D. Hyperoodon, Desm. Main. 521. D. Honfloriensis, Desm. D. Butskopf, Bonnat. 25. 2. Bottle-head, or Flounder's Head, Dale, Hist. Har- wich, 411, t. 149, cop. Beaked Whale, Penn. Brit. Zool. t. Black, beneath lead-coloured ; dorsal fin central ; lower jaw with 2 pointed teeth in front, sunk in the gums; "pa- late with acute hard points ;" blowers transverse, lunate, with the convexity in front. Inhab. North Sea. Harwich, Dale. Baussard. Adult. Young. 23-6 ft. 12-6 ft. 0-5 4-4 111 1-4 20 10 Dale. Female. Male. 13 ft. 18 ft. Length, entire, „ of beak, ... „ to blower ... „ of head, ... „ of pectoral, „ to dorsal fin, 13"6 7'8 Length of dorsal fin, 2-0 I'O „ to vent, 7' 10 Width of pectoral, 1-3 T „ of caudal, .... 6-10 3-2 Circumference, .... 15'7 S'O „ of head, 8*7 Height of dorsal, .... 13 7. Lacepede called the genus Hyperoodon, and Illiger Uranodon, because of the teeth on the palate described by Baussard. They have not been observed on the other spe- cimens ; and Illiger, in his generic character, by mistake says the two teeth are in the upper jaw, {Gen. 143). 'Heterodon Dalei (Lesson), is not from Dale's, but from Blainville's account oi Delphinorhynchus micropterus. Lacepede placed this species as the type of his Hyper- oodon, and refers Delphinus bidentatus to Delphinus? F. Cuvier considers Hunter's and Baussard's as incontes- tibly the same species, taking no notice of the position of the dorsal [Cetac. 242). Dale does not mention the teeth, but they are only to be seen when the flesh is removed. H 26 ** Dorsal Fin behind the middle of the hack, triangular. The Beaked Hyperoodon. Hyperoodon rcstratuin. Blackish ; pectoral nearly \, and dor.sal f the length from the tip of the beak ; blowers lunate, concave in front. Var. I. Black above and below; vcrtebrw 46, 11 lumbar and 19 caudal. " Blowers concave towards the head, ra- ther in front of the eye ; palate smooth ; " Wesmael. Inhab. North Sea. Hyperoodon rostratum, Wesmael, Acad. Brux. 1840, xiii.^1,2. Balwna rostrata, Chemnitz, Berlin Besch. iv. 183, hence Deljahinus Chemnitzianus, Blainr. Length, entire, 6'70 meters. „ to blowers, 1"24 „ to eye, r06 to point of dorsal. 4-40 0-70 517 1-40 0-86 3-76 „ of pectoral, .. „ to vent, Breadth of pectoral,.... „ of face. Circumference, Var. 2. Blackish brown, beneath brownish white. Ver- tebrsE 45 ; 12 lumbar and 17 caudal, F. Ciiv. Bottle-nose Whale of Dale, Hunter, Phil. Trans, \kxyu. t. 19, copied Bonnat. Cetac. t. 11,/. 3. Bell, Brit. Quad. 292,/. Delphinus Hunteri, Desm. D. diodon, Lacep. D. bidentatus, Bonnat. from Hunter. Hyperoodon, Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 321, t. 24,/. 19, 21, co- pied from B. a museau pointu. Camper, Cetac. 78, t. 13 — 16. Cetodiodon Hunteri, Jacob, Dublin Phil. Jour. 1825, t. Hyperoodon, Thompson, Mag. N. Hist. 1838, 221. Annals <^ Mag. N. H. 1846. Inhab. North Sea. Thames, Hunter. Humber, Thomp- son. Length, entire, 21 feet. Skeleton, Mus. Col. Surg. The skull of this specimen is about 45 inches long, and the elevated plates of the maxillary bone are thin, leaving a broad space between them, in front of the blowers, and as high as the frontal crest. By the kindness of my friends, Mr. Pearson, of the Hull Philosophical Society, Mr. Ball, of Dublin, and Mr. W. Thompson, of Belfast, who have sent me various detailed drawings of the head of the Hyperoodons taken off the Bri- tish and Irish coasts, in their possession ; they appear all to belong to one species, the same as Hunter's spe- cimens in the College of Surgeons, and the skull fi- gured by Camper and Cuvier. These materials have made me quite satisfied that the skull of H. latifrons must be the remains of a perfectly distinct species : it not only differs from this in the thickness and solidity of the crest, but in the crest being much higher than the hinder part of the skull, while in all the heads referred to, the crest is of the same height with the frontal ridge. The skeleton which has lately been added to the Anatomical Museum of Paris agrees with the above-named specimens in these particulars. Var. 3. Blackish gray, paler on the belly and round the eyes; upper part of lower jaw yellowish marbled; teeth none ; the edge of the lower jaw shuts into a correspond- ing groove in the upper jaw ; blowers lunate, with the concavity in front, exactly over the eye, 6 in. by 3. Hyperoodon, " Voighfs Mem. t. " F. Cuv. Cetac. 245. Inhab. North Sea, Kiel. Skull, Kiel. Bot. Card. feet. Length, entire, 20-6 1 „ of beak, 1-9 » to eye, „ fr. blower to dorsal 4-2 120 „ of dorsal, 1-8 „ of pectoral, „ fr. dorsal to caudal 210 6-2 Breadth of beak, 10 „ of pectoral, „ oftail, 0-8 6-2 Height of dorsal, 1-4 Circumference, 130 The dorsal fin is said to be 12 feet from the blower, but that makes the body too long for the measurement. Desmarest and Lesson have mistaken the upper for the lower jaw, in Chemnitz' description, {Desm. Mam. 520. Lesson, Mam. 427. Cetac. 120) ; and M. F. Cuvier has not well understood it, as pointed out by M. We.smael, /. c, and Illiger makes the same mistake with regard to his species. This species has been well described by M. Dumortier and by Mr. W. Thompson, of Belfast, in the ' Annals and Magazine of Natural History,' 1846. Physeter bidens (Sowerby) has been refeiTcd to this ge- nus, but the form of the head and position of the fins, the teeth, and the form of the skull, show it is a Ziphiiis. The CoESiCAN Hyperoodon. Hyperoodon Doumetii. Hyperoodon, Doumet, Bui. Soc. Cuvier. 1842, 207, t. l,/2. Jaws paved with acute tubercles ; dorsal % the length from the tip of the jaws : blowers lunate, with the convex- ity in front. Inhab. Corsica. " Jaws toothless, but paved with small, long and acute tubercular granulations; lower jaw with 2 rather longisb, acute, slightly arched and longitudinally grooved teeth in front ; larynx with a kind of funnel at the base of the tongue, like the beak of a duck, or rather of a spoonbill, 5f inches long ; gape small ; beak conical ; eyes small, near middle of head ; blowers lunate, with the points directed backwards; pectoral fin 19 inches long, 6f wide; dorsal nearly 8 inches high, 49^: inches from the tail ; the tail is broad, lobes equal." Doumet. According to this description the dorsal fin of this spe- cies must be further back than in any other of the genus, and the pavement of the jaws is quite peculiar. It agrees with Dale and Baussard's descriptions in the fonn of the blower, but differs from them in the position of the dorsal. 27 *** Dorsal Jin posterior, oblong, truncated at the end ? Jaws curved up. Diodou, Lesson. Desmarest's Hyperoodon. Hyperoodon Desmarestii. Delphinus Desmarestii, Risso, Europ. Merid. iii. 24, /. 2,/ 3. F. Cuv. Cetac. 159. Inhab. Nice, common, March and September. " Steel-gray, with numerous, irregular, white streaks, beneath while ; body thicker in the middle ; tail slender, long, keeled, rounded on the belly; head not swollen, end- ing in a long nose ; upper jaw shorter, toothless, lower much longer, bent up, and with two large conical teeth at the end ; teeth nicked near the tip ; the eyes small, oval ; blowers large, semilunar ; pectoral fins short, dorsal rather beyond the middle of the back, nearly above the vent; the caudal fin broad, festooned. Length nearly lO feet. It differs from D. Diodon of Hunter in the forehead not be- ing swollen, and in the lower jaw being produced and bent up, the pectoral being pointed, the dorsal more obtuse, and the body being white-streaked." This species is only known by the above account ex- tracted from Risso. F. Cuvier placed it in the restricted genus Delphinus. Risso appears more correctly to have compared it with Hijperoodon, but it diff'ers from that ge- nus in several particulars, especially in the form of the forehead and of the dorsal fin. Lesson (Tab. R. A. 200) forms of this species, with Physeter hidens, Sowerby, the subgenus Diodon. The Heavy-headed Hyperoodon. Hyperoodon latifrons. Tab. Skull large, heavy, solid, the reflexed part of the maxil- lary bones very thick and thickened internally, so as nearly to touch each other in front of the blower, much higher than the hinder part of the skull. Inhab. North Sea. Orkneys, Brit. Mus. This head is so different from any of those figured by Camper, Cuvier, Baussard &c., that I am inclined to con- sider it as distinct. Its measurements are as follows : — Length of skull (wanting the end) 62 inches. Height of skull behind, .... 42 inches. Delphinus densirostris, Desm. Nouv. Diet. N. ix. 178. Mam. 522, note. Only described from a fragment of a jaw, 9 inches long, 2-1- inches high, and 2 inches broad at the widest part, straight, pyramidical, triangular at the end, and without any teeth or cavity for any tooth in the lower jaw. It is very heavj' and dense. Probably the end of a Hyperoodon. One of these species may probably be the Goose-beaked Whale of Pontoppidan, Hist. Nat. Norway, chap. v. 123, 124,/. ZiPHius, Cuvier, Oss. Foss. Diodon, Lesson, Bell. Anodon, Lesson. Head contracted behind ; nose produced, not separated from the forehead ; eyes moderate ; blowers on crown lu- nate ; teeth two, large, compressed, in the middle of the lower jaw ; throat with two diverging furrows ; body elon- gate; pectoral fins small, low down, oval, tapering; dorsal falcate, behind the middle of the body ; skull-nose elongat- ed, produced, keeled on each side ; skull-cavity small ; fore- head high ; hinder wing of the maxilla ex]3anded, hori- zontal; palate smooth ; lower jaw broad behind, narrowed and bent down in front of the large lateral teeth. This genus is very like Delphi norhynchus, but is easily known by the peculiar form and large size of the teeth in the middle of each side of the lower jaw. Cuvier esta- blished the genus on three fossil fragments of heads : 1. Z. curvirostris, Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 350, t. 27,/. 3. 2. Z. latirostris, Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 352, /. 27, /". 4—8. 3. Z. longirostris, Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 356, t. 27,/. 9, 10. Cuvier remarks, describing the first head, that " cette tete a, comme on voit, de grands rapports avec le Cachalot, et encore de plus grands avec I'Hyperoodon. Elle ne dif- fere de ce dernier que parce que les maxillaires ne redres- sent point sur les cotes du museau en cloisons verticales, et que I'espece de mur de derriere les narines ne se borne pas a s'elever verticalment, mais qu'il se recourbe pour former un demi dome au dessus de les cavites." — Oss. Foss. v. 352. Sowerby's Ziphius. Ziphius Sowerbiensis. Tab. Physeter bidens, Sowerby, Brit. Mis. t. Icon. ined. Mus. Brit. t. Diodon bidens, Bell, Brit. Quad. ^91, fig. cop. Sowerby. Delphinus Sowerbii, Jardin, Nat. Lib. t. 12, cop. Sow- erby. D. Sowerbiensis, Blainv. D. Sowerbeyi, Desm. Delphinorhvnchus bidens, Gray, Ann. Hg Mag. N. H. 1846. Black, gray beneath ; lower jaw moderately broad be- hind, and gradually narrower and slightly bent down in front of the teeth. Inhab. North Sea. Elginshire, Brodie, 1800. Length of entire animal 16 feet, circumference 11 feet. Besides the beautiful figure engi-aved in Sowerby's ' British Miscellany,' there is a drawing of the head as sent by Mr. Brodie, made by Mr. Sowerby, and exhibited by him at one of Sir Joseph Banks's Sunday-evening parties, now preserved in the Banksian collection in the British Museum. The skull was preserved in Mr. Sowerby's Museum, in Mead's Place, and when distributed at his death, Mr. James Sowerby informs me it was jjurchased by the Rev. Dr. Buckland, the Dean of Westminster, and sent to one of the museums in Oxford. I have examined these collections with Mr. Hugh Strickland, but have not been able to discover it. Fortunately, while in Mr. Sowerby's possession, M. De Blainville, when on a visit to England, made a slight sketch of the skull, which I dis- covered in his portfolio, and he has kindly sent me a tracing of this sketch (which has been reduced in tab. ), which has enabled me to determine that it be- longs to the genus Ziphius of Cuvier, before only known in a fossil state. Before I was so fortunate as to discover the drawing of the skull, I was induced to regard this species, from the lateral position of the teeth, to be the same as the Delphinorhynchus microp- 28 tents, of tlic coast of France and Belgium (see Ann. & Mag. N. H. 1846), believing that the difference in the size of the teeth, (which Mr. James Sowerby remarks appear to indicate) to be only a peculiarity produced probably by the age of the specimen, instead of being, as it has proved to be, a distinctive character of the genus. I have ventured, in reducing M. De Blainville's tracing, to reverse the position of the skull, as the part now upper- most, appears to me evidently to be the top of the head. The Secuelle Ziphius. Ziphius Sechellensis. Tab. Fig. Ziphius de Sechelles {M. Le Due, 1839), Mus. Paris. The skull is very like that of Delphinus micropterus, but the nose-bones are thicker, heavier and higher. The teeth in the middle of the lower jaw, as in micropterus, but larger and compressed. The hinder part of the lower jaw is very broad, the iront half much narrower and bent down in an arched manner. Inhab. Sechelles. Exactly like the fossil form, D' An vers. Delphinorhynchus, Blainv. part, F. Cur. Delphinus, Desm. Aodon, Lesson. Heterodon, Lesson, Mam. Head attenuated, contracted behind. Nose produced, bald, not separated from the forehead. Eyes moderate. Lower jaw fitting into a groove in the edge of the upper. Teeth lew, small or rudimentary, in middle of lower jaw, not developed till late. Throat with 4 parallel slits beneath. Body elongate, rather swollen behind. Pectoral tin low down the side, oval, narrow, small. Dorsal falcate, behind the middle of the body, about f from the nose. Blowers on the crown, curved, with the concavity in front. Tail with 2 falcate lobes, flat, without any central promi- nence. Sexual organs under middle of dorsal. Skull tri- angular. Forehead very high in front and swollen behind. Intermaxillaries curved in front. Nose very long, com- pressed at the hinder end, very nanow, slightly keeled on each side. Hinder wing of the maxilla expanded hori- zontally over the orbits. Nasal boneencased in the frontal and intermaxillaries. Temporal pit very small. Palate smooth. Lower jaw-bones elongate, tapering, slender, nearly straight. This genus, which is in character intermediate between Phdanisla and Delphinus, has been confounded with Hy- peroodon by M. F. Cuvier, but it is easily known from that genus, as was pointed out by his brother, by the structure of the skull, which agrees with Delphinus. The ear-bone is attached by an apophysis to the base of the skull. Ver- tebra; 33; 6 cervical separate, 10 costal, 11 lumbar, 11 true caudal. Metacarpal bones cartilaginous. — Dumortier, Mem. Brux. xiii. /. 10. This genus has been confounded with Hyperoodon by many of the French authors, but it is easily known from that genus by the head not being rounded in front, and by the teeth being in the middle of the side of each jaw. Mr. Bell, following Lesson, has considered this as a dis- tinct genus from Hyperoodon ; but he observes, " whether the generic distinction of the two be correct, appears very doubtful." — Brit. Mam. 499. Blainville, when he first saw the animal on the coast of France, considered it the same as Dale's Hyperoodon, and F. Cuvier followed him : but M. Cuvier pointed out, in the ' Regno Animal,' the difference in the form of the skull of the French animal. Blainville's Whale. Delphinorhynchus micropterus. Delphinorhynchus micropterus, Dumortier, Mem. Acad. Bru.t. xii. /. 1—3, good. F. Cuv. Cetac. 114, t. 9,/. 1, not good, t. 7, skull. Delphinus micropterus, Cuv. Reg. An. i. 288. Heterodon Dalei, Lesson, Mam. Mem. 419, from Blain. Dauphin de Dale, Blainv. N. Bull. Soc. Phil. 1185. 329, F. Cm: Mam. Lith. t. bad. Teeth none ; body deep ash, beneath white (\\'hen alive brownish ash-colour, belly whitish ash) ; forehead taper- ing; dorsal fin |, pectoral fin f, from end of nose; blowers before the eyes. Inhab. Coasts of Europe. Havre, 1825, Blainv. Os- tend, 1835, Dum. Blainv. 2 Dum. 2 Length , entire, .. 15-0 ft. 3-45 metr( of head, .. 2.7 (nose) 33 to blowers, . .. 2-3 44 to pectoral, .. .. 3-4 91 of pectoral, .. .. 1-6 30 to dorsal. .. 9-1 2-04 of dorsal, 10 27 to eye, 49 to the vulva,. 2.21 Circumference, .. 7-6 20 Width of pectoral, .. 6 12 ?j of caudal, ... 3-0 68 Height of dorsal. 11 27 Breadth of blower, . 10 M. Dumortier found, near the middle of each side of the lower jaw, a large alveolus, as if for a tooth. His fi- gure represents the pectoral as ^, and the dorsal as 4- from the end of the nose. b. Upper and lower jaw with few or deciduous teeth. Wings of the ma.villary hones expanded and shelving downicards. The beak short, dejie.red. Forehead con- re.v. Head rounded, without any beak. Monoceratina. Synopsis of the Genera. a. Lower jaw toothless. 1. MoNODON. Upper jaw of males with one or two very long, projecting, spirally twisted tusks. Dorsal none. " 2. Anaknachus. Upper jaw with two small, conical, slightly curved, blunt teeth in front, dorsal none." b. Upper and lower jaw with conical, early decidttous teeth. 3. Beluga. Dorsal fin none. c. Upper and lower jaw with compressed, permanent teeth. 4. Neomeris. Dorsal none. 5. Phoc^na. Dorsal triangular, in the middle of the back. 29 * Teeth none. Upper jatv with tusk. MoNODON, Fah., Linn., not Swain. Ceratodon, Brisson, Pallas. Diodoii, Storr., not Linn. Narwalus, Lacep. Head round and convex in front; dorsal fin none; lower jaw not so wide as the upper. The Narwhal. Mouodon monoceros. Monodon Monoceros and M. unicornu, Linn. M. Narwhal, Dlumh. Narwhaliis Andersonii and N. microcephalus, Lacep. Scoreshij, Arct. Reg. i. 486 — ii. t. 12, f. 1, 2. Fleming, Went. Trans, i. 131. Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. t. 22, /. 7. Home, Anat. Camp. ii. t. 42. Albers, Icon. t. Alton, Osteol. ix. t. 6. Narwal, Camper, Cetac. t. 29, 30. Klien, Pise. t. 2,/. c. from spec, at Dresden, taken in the Elbe, 173G, cop. Lacep. t. 4,/. 3. Black ; when old whitish marbled. Inhab. North Ocean, Scotland. Right tusk generally not developed. Female generally without tusk, but sometimes has one; see Linn. Trans. xiii. 620. 1. Narwalus microcepalus, Lacep. t. b, f. 2, from draw- ing of Mr. W. Brand, is only a bad representation of this species. 2. Narwalus Andersoniaiuis, Lacep. Cetac. 1C3, from Anderson, described from same specimen, as figured by Lacep. t. 4,/. 2. Skull, length entire 216 .... 20-6 „ of nose 9 9 .... 9-3 Width of orbit 146 .... 14-0 „ of notch 8-0 .... 7-9 „ intermJxillaries 3'0 .... 3'6 In the Museum of the College of Surgeons there are se- veral Hunterian preparations of the skull of this animal, Nos. 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, showing the two rudi- mentary teeth inclosed in the cavity, in the female, and the single one in the male skulls. Narwal female skulls have two rudimentary teeth in upper jaw, which are rarely protruded, Kno.v. In the foetus, on each side the upper jaw, in the usual place, are two hollow teeth, obviously the extremities of the spiral permanent teeth of the male ; they are completely imbedded in the jaw, and if the ani- mal is a male the left tooth continues to grow, the right after a time fills up, its central cavity for containing the pulp disappears, and after attaining a growth of five or six inches, the jaw elongates to correspond with the growth of the animal and the other tooth, and the abortive tooth re- mains imbedded in the jaw for life. — Kno.v, Trans, R. Soc. Edin. ii. 413. Scoresby gives a very good account of this animal, Arct. Reg. i. 131. The best figures are those oi Score shy, t. 15, then Sow- crhy, Brit. Misc. t. , but this has a second horn errone- ously added. Bonnaterre's figure is far too ventricose. It has been copied by Lacep. t. 4, f. 3, Bliimenbacli, t. and others; on the other hand, DuhameVs Pecli. \\i.t. 26,/. 1, is too slender, and with too small a head. Anarnacus, Lacep. Monodon, Fab. Ancylodon, lin- ger. Heterodon, part, Desmarest, Cue. Upjier jaw with only two small, conical, sliglitly curved, blunt teeth, prominent in front ; lower jaw toothless ; body elongate, roundish ; pectoral distinct ; dorsal minute. The Anarnak. Anarnacus Grcenlandicus. Anarnakus Grojnlandicus, Lacep. Cet. 164. Monodon spurius (Anarnak), O. Fab. Fauna Groen. 31. Bonnat. Cetol. 11. Delphinus anarnacus, Desm. Mam. 520. Black ; teeth scarcely an inch long. Inhab. Greenland. Tins species is only known from Fabricius' description ; he is so accurate an observer that I am loath to doubt the existence of anything he has described ; especially as he appears to have seen it himself. I am inclined to believe (hat Lacepede and Illiger were right in considering it as a distinct genus. M. Cuvier {Oss. Foss.) regards it as a Hyperoodon, and he only believed in the existence of one species of the genus. M. F. Cuvier, who misunderstood the description of Chemnitz willi respect to the teeth of Balaina rostrata, is inclined to unite it to that species, with which it agrees in being all black, but observes they differ greatly in size. — F. Cuv. Cetac. I'-iQ. It cannot be the young Narwhal, for the back is finned. ** Teeth of tipper and lower j ate conical, deciduous. Beluga, Gray [Spic. Zool.), Lesson, Bell, 1837. Ph}'- seter, Linn. part. Catodon, Artedi, part. Cetus, Brisson, part. Cachalot, Lacep. Delphinapterus, Lacep. Del- phis, Wagler. Phocsena, part, F. Cuv. Teeth conical only on the front half of the jaw, oblique, often truncated, and the upper often deciduous ; head rounded ; forehead convex ; dorsal fin none ; skull with the nose and the hinder wing of the maxilla bent down on the orbits, making the forehead very convex ; lower jaw not so wide as the upper, with the condyle low down below the middle of the hinder edge ; pectoral sub-oval. The genus Delphinapterus was formed by Lacepede to contain this animal, which he before described as a Cato- don, and the D. Senedette, which is probably a Catodon. There is a great similai-ity in general form between the skull of the Phocmna, Beluga and Monoceros, but inde- pendent of the size and teeth, they differ in the form of the convexity in front of the blower ; in Beluga the front of the blower is flattish, in Monoceros there is a broad, half- oblong convexity, and in Phoccena a squarish tuberosity. The Northern Beluga. Beluga Catodon. Physeter Catodon, Linn, from Balaena minor, Sibbald. Phal. ?. Balajna albicans, Muller. Delph. leucas, Pallas, Zool. Ross. Asiat. t. 32, 2 . Mem. Wern. Soc. iii. 17, S. Cuv. Oss. Foss. x. t. 22, /. 5, 6. Bell, Brit. Quad. 491, Jig. Catodon Sibbaldii, Fleming, B. A. 29. B. borealis, Lesson. Physeter macrocephalus, S. Gmelin, S. N. 30 Delphinaptems Beluga, Lacep. Scoreshi/, Arct. Reg. i. 500, ii. t. 14. Catodon albicans, Lacep. White ; young black ; the nose of the skull nearly j the entire length, U the length of its width at the anterior notch ; teeth |-|. Inhab. North Sea. Greenland. Scotland, Sibbald. Skull in B. M. from Greenland, length entire 20-0, of beak 9-6, width at notch 6," at orbit I'.S. Mr. Barnston informs me the Beluga is called Keela hiak by the Esquimaux. In the St. Lawrence they rarely exceed 15 feet long. The male specimen he procured for the British Museum was 12^ feet long, 6 feet 8 inches in circumference at the thickest part. The Australian Beluga, Beluga Kingii. Tab. 7. Skull. Delphinus Kingii, Gray, Ann. Phil. 1827, 325. Nose of the skull short, not half the entire length, scarcely longer than its width at the notch ; teeth '^°, small, hooked. Inhab. Coast of New Holland, Capt. P. P. King. Skull in Brit. Mus., length entire, 13-6, of beak 5-9, width at notch 4'6, at orbits 8'0. This may be the Jacobite tursio corpore ngentis ex- tremitatibus nigricantibus, Commerson MSS. D. Com- mersonii, Lacep. 317, from Cape Horn, cited by Cuv. R. A. i. 291, and Oss. Foss. v. 289. According to Desmarest {Mam. 521), Raffinesque notices a Dolphin without any dorsal, and with rounded teeth in the lower jaw only, under the name of Epiodoti Urganantus (Desmarest calls it Delph. Epiodon), from Sicily. *** Teetli in both jaws permanent, compressed. Neomeris, Gray. Teeth numerous, compressed, nicked, acute, extending nearly the whole length of the jaw ; dorsal fin none ; nose of skull short, rounded at the end, flat, shelving above. The Neomeris. Neomeris Phocagnoides. D. Phocasnoides, Cuv. Reg. Anim. i. 291. Delphinus melas, Temm. Faun. Japan, t. 25, t. 26. Delphinaptems melas, Temm. Faun. Jap. 7. Black ; teeth 44- Length 4 feet. Inhab. Indian Ocean, Japan. The figure in the ' Fauna Japanensis ' is from a drawing made by a Japanese artist luider Burger's insjjection. The skull in the Leyden museum is more swollen and broader than that of Phoccena ; the nose is shorter, broad- er, more rounded at the end and nearly flat, not shelving above ; teeth \^, larger and stronger ; skull ^ the entire length, (in Phocaena \). Nameno-juo, Japan. The short description of the D. PhocoBnoides of Cuvier, which Dussumier discovered at the " Cape of Good Hope," agrees with this species. There is in Mus. Paris, a skull of " D. Phocwnoides " brought from Malabar by Dussumier, in 1837. It is broader and shorter than Pho- ccena communis; teeth spathulate, rounded, oblique, ff; palatines, bones and intermaxillaries broad, as seen in the roof of the beak. Length of skull 7'0 „ nose 2'6 Width at notch 2-5 Phoc^na, Gray, Spic. Zool. Cuv. and F. Cuvier, part. Delphinus, part. Linn. Lacep. Teeth numerous, spathulate, compressed, extending nearl}' the whole length of the jaw ; dorsal fin in the mid- dle of the body ; skull-nose depressed, broad, the hinder part of the maxilla slightly shelving downwards over the orbits ; the intermaxillaries and vomer forming part of the palate. Common Porpoise. Phocaena communis. Phocaena communis. Lesson, F. Cuv. Celac. 172. Delphinus phoca;na, Linn. S. N. i. 108. Cuv. Oss. Foss. V. t. 21, f. I, 2. Skull. Inhab. North Sea. Mouth of Rivers — Thames and Severn. Common. c. Upper and lower jaw with many teeth, rarely deci- duous with age. Wings of the jaw-bone horizontally pro- duced over the orbits. Delphinina. Synopsis of the Genera. a. Head rounded in front, not beaked. Nose of skull scarcely so long as the brain cavity. Dorsal distinct. 1. Grampus. Teeth conical, truncated, early decidu- ous. Intermaxillaries broad. Pectoral ovate. 2. Globiocephalcs. Teeth conical, deciduous when old. Intermaxillaries very broad. Pectorals narrow, linear. 3. Orca. Teeth conical, acute, permanent. Intermax- illaries moderate. Pectorals ovate. b. Head beaked. Nose of skull as long as or longer than the brain cavity. 4. Lagenorhynchus. Head shelving in front. Dorsal rather posterior. Nose of skull depressed, expanded. 5. Delphinapterus. Plead rather convex in front. Dorsal none. Nose rather depressed, convex above. 6. Delphinus. Head rather convex in front. Dorsal medial. Nose of skull rather depressed, convex above. 7. Steno. Forehead rather convex. Dorsal medial. Nose of skull compressed, higher than broad. Symphysis of lower jaws rather elongate. a. Head rounded in front, not beaked. Nose of skull scarcely as long as the brain cavity. Grampus, Gray. Head rounded, forehead rather convex. Teeth conical, often truncated only in the front half of the lower jaw. Dorsal distinct, low, rather behind the middle of the back. Pectorals ovate, rather elongate ; skull depressed ; inter- maxillaries dilated, covering great part of the maxilla above, rather swollen behind in front of the blowers, the 31 Length entire to blowers hinder wing of the maxilla horizontal and rather thicken- ed and bent up over the orbit, and slightly dilated and re- flexed just in front of the notch. Cuvier's Grampus. Grampus Cuvieri. Grampus Cuvieri, Gray, Ann. N. H. 1846. Cat. Ost. B. M. 36. Delphinus griseus, Cuv. R. A. i. 290. An7i. Mus. xix. t. \,f. 1, not good, cop. Sclireb. t. 345,/. 1. Oss. Foss. v. /. 2-i,/. 1, 2. F. Cucier, Ceiac. 182, t. 12,/. 2. Marsouin, Duhamel, Peck. iv. t. d,f. 5. Bluish black ; beneath dirty white, passing into the black on the sides ; nose of the skull broad at the base, naiTow in front and concave on the sides, not quite half the entire length of the skull. " Teeth 9," Schlegel. Inhab. North Sea. Coast of France, Rochelle, UOr- hignij, 1822. Isle of Wight, Hampshire, Rev. C. Bury, 1845. D'Orbigny. DOrbigny. Adult. Young. lO'O feet 7-0 „ to pectoral fin 3'6 „ of pectorals 30 „ of dorsal .... 5 ? Width of tail Height of dorsal .... 1'2 Skull. Length entire .... 17.6 „ of nose .... 80 „ teeth, series 1. j. 2"3 „ of lower jaw 12'0 Width at notch .... 7 0 „ at orbit .... ITO „ at middle of nose 3'10 „ of intermaxillary 3"3 Height at occiput .... 9'0 It loses its upper teeth at an early period and preserves only a few of its lower ones. The dorsal fin is lower and further back than in D. orca, Cuv. R, A. M. F. Cuvier {Cetac. 193) has referred the Marsouin of Duhamel [Peek. iv. t. 9, /. 5) to D. Globiceps, and M. Duhamel particularly observes that the pectoral and dorsal were nearly equidistant from the head, and that the under side is paler than the back, golden green, not white, which does not agree with Melas. It agrees in both these points better with this species. This species was first described from a skeleton and drawing sent from Brest to Paris. The bad colouring of the drawing induced M. Cuvier to call it D. griseus, but it is black and not gray. M. F. Cuvier regards it as distinct from D. aries of ilisso, which his brother thought was the same. F. Cuv. Cetac. 184. The young, 7 ft. long, had eight conical, acute teeth. The older, two male and one female, 10 ft. long, had only six or seven blunt, carious teeth. — D^Orbignij. The up- per jaw longest (4 inches), without any indication of teeth, even in the young one, but with a slight groove for the reception of the edge of the lower jaw. M. D'Orbigny says that this species has " most affinity in the external form to the Grampus of Hunter, t. 17, which Lacepedc called D. ventricosus, but differs essentially in the total ab- sence of teeth in the upper, and by the number in the low- er jaw." Hunter does uot figure any teeth in the upper and only a few in the lower jaw. In D'Orbigny's speci- mens the dorsal was injured, and in two of them nearly destroyed. Risso's Grampus. Grampus Rissoanus. Delphinus Rissoanus, Laur. F. Cuv. Mam. Lithog. t. Cetac. 196, t. 12,/. 1. Schlegel. Abh. 33. D. de Risso, Cnv. Ann. Mus. xix. 12,/! 4, cop. Schreb. t. 345, / 4. Risso, Ann. Mus. H. N. xix. /. 1, 2. Europ. Merid. 23. Delphinus aries, Risso. G. Rissii, Jard. Nat. Lib. vi. 219, t. 18. Bluish white, with irregular, brown-edged, scratch-like lines in all directions. Females uniform brown, with simi- lar scratches. Var. Dorsal, pectoral and tail, and hinder part of the body below, varied with black. F. Cuv. I. c. /. 13, /. 1, Male. Inhab. Nice. Risso, Laurillard. Teeth conical, early deciduous, especially of the upper jaw, Laur. Length entire 9 0 according to Laurillard. „ of head 1 Q^ Height of dorsal 0 9 Lesson refers this species to the genus Globiocephalus, but the position of the dorsal and the form of the pectoral, as well as the description of the teeth, make me believe it rather belongs to this genus. M. Cuvier observes that his D. griseus is only described from a bad drawing of this species, but M. F. Cuvier, who had a new description, and M. Laurillard, consider them as distinct. Reg. Anim. i. 290. F. Cuv. Cetac. 184. Grampus ? Lower jaw straight, regularly diverging, scarcely bulg- ing on the side behind, united by a rather long, wide sym- physis in front. Obliquely truncated in front, with a ra- ther prominent, tuberous gonyx. Teeth 4-4, rather large, far apart, conical, tapering at the tip, but subcylindrical at the base. Inhab. . British Museum, from Haslar Hospital. This jaw appears to differ from the lower jaw of G. Cu- vieri in being much thicker at the symphysis, very ob- liquely truncated in front, and rather projecting below. Teeth 4-4, large, conical, rather acute and recurved ; the upper edge behind the teeth round, with many minute holes on the edge. Length entire .... .... 16 0 inches. „ front truncation .... 2 0 „ of teeth series .... 2 0 Breast, near condyle .... 4 0 „ in front .... .... 1 0 Width at condyles .... 11 6 The Sakamata. Grampus sakamata. D. Orca, Schlegel, Faun. Jap. 25. Inhab. Japan. 32 M. Schlegel {Faun. Japan. 25), described a Dolphin found on the coast of Japan, and called Saka mata kuzira. It is said to have a high dorsal, and to be black with white spots on the belly, back and sides, near the ))cctoral fin. The eyelids and lips pale purple, the latter often white spotted ; the head is rounded, the upper jaw point- ed and toothless ; the lower short and narrow and toothed. Schlegel, who refers this species to D. orca, says the wanting teeth in the upper jaw is a mistake, but I should say that it is probably a Grampus, which often wants them in that jaw. I do not see why one part of the description should be relied on and not the other. Globiocephalus, Lesson. Physeter, Risso. Globioce- phala. Lesson, 1842. Head round, forehead very prominent. Teeth conical, large only on the front half of the jaws ; deciduous in the old one. Upper jaw largest ? Pectoral narrow, linear-ovate, low down. Dorsal falcate, about the middle of the back. Skull flattened and concave in front of the blower. Nose broad, flattened, rugose above. Intermaxillary bones very broad, covering the greater part of the upper surface of the upper jaws; the hinder wing of the jaw-bone horizontal and bent up on the edge over the orbits and slightly ex- panded and reflexed just in front of the orbit notch. The sucking young have no visible teeth ; the adults have teeth in each jaw, but the aged individuals have ge- nerally lost them in both. — Flem. The Pilot Whale. Globiocephalus Svineval. Petit Cachalot, Daub. Acad. Sci. 1782, i. 1, cop. Bonat. Cetol. t. Cachalot Svineval, Lacep. Narwal edente, Camper, Cetac. t. 33, 34. Ca'ing Whale, Neil, Orkney and Shetland, 1836, 221. Delphinus Melas, Trail, AicJiol. Jour. xxii. 21. D. deductor, "Trail," Scoreshy, Arct. Reg. i. 496, t. 13, / 1- D. globiceps, Cuv. Ann. Mtis. xix. t. 1, /. 2, (cop. Schreh. t. 345,/ 2, 3). Oss. Foss. v. t. 21,/. 11. Delphinus grampus, Cat. Mus. Col. Surg. n. 1137. Black, streak from throat to vent (sometimes dilated in- to a cross baud), white ; teeth ^\ to ^^, rarely f|, Fleming. The upper surface of the maxillaries and intermaxillaries rugose in front ; intermaxillaries form a triangular patch in front of the palate. B. M. M.C.S. 1137. M. C. S. 1138. Width at notch 11 6 11 0 9 0 „ at orbit .... 19 6 19 C 15 6 „ of intermaxillary 9 0 7 0 „ of middle of nose 9 6 6 6 Height at occiput 15 0 Length of animal entire 19 6 Fleming. „ of pectoral 3 6 „ of dorsal 2 3 Width of pectoral 1 6 „ of tail 5 0 Height of dorsal 1 3 Circumference .... 10 0 B. M. M.C.S. 1137. M. C. S, 1138. Skull, length of, entire 28 0 29 0 24 0 „ of nose 15 0 15 0 12 0 „ of teeth, series 9 0 8 6 7 0 „ lower jaw 19 0 Female suckling, with the young, 4 ft. 6 in. long in De- cember, TVa/son, and 7 ft. long in January. The Delphinus globiceps, Risso, Europ. Merid. iii. /. 1, /. 1. F. Cuv. 223. Black, with a gray band on each side from the throat to the vent ; head large, round, swollen ; jaws equal; teeth ^, round, conical, curved. Inhab. Nice, Risso. Is probably the same as D. Svineval, but M. F. Cuvier regards it as distinct. The Delphinus intermedins, Harlan, Jour. Acad. Sci. Phil ad. vi. 51, ^ 1. D. Harlani, Schim. Globiocephalus Melas, Dekay. Phoca3na globiceps, Sampson, Silliman, Amer. Jour. Sci. 23-301, ». Inhab. coast of North America. May be distinct from the European species, but the spe- cimens have not been examined with sufl!icieut care. Smaller Pilot Whale. Globiocephalus affinis. Delphinus Grampus, Cat. Mus. Col. Surg. n. 1138. Hunterian Col. n. 686. Delphinus Melas, Owen, British Fossil Matnmalia. Teeth \^, small, conical, curved, very acute ; nose ex- actly half as long as the head, rather tapering, and rather concave on the sides ; intermaxillary nearly as wide as the jaw ; lower jaw obliquely truncated in front. Inhab. — ? Mus. Col. Surg. Skull, length entire „ ofnose ,, teeth line „ lower jaw .... Width ofnose at notch „ of middle of nose .... „ at orbits This is probably a young specimen of Globiocephalus Svineval. The skull differs in being rather slenderer in front and in the intermaxillary not being rugose in front. In the Catalogue of the Mus. Col. Surg., 165, it is called "the skull of a small Grampus," Hunterian, and n. 1136 the skull of a large Grampus, Hunterian. This appears to be the skull which Mr. Owen gives the measurement of, under the name of D. Melas, in his account of Phocmna crassidens, in the work on British Fossil Mammalia. The Naiso-GOTA. Globiocephalus Sieboldii. Didelphis globiceps, Temm. Fauna Japan, t. 27. M. Siebold brought with him a figure of a very young specimen, 5 ft. 6 inches long, of this species, made by M. Villeneuve, which is copied in the ' Fauna Japonica,' and a complete skeleton. Mr. Temminck regards it as undoubtedly the same as the European, but yet allows that there are some diffe- rences between it and the adult specimen observed on the 24 0 12 3 7 0 19 0 9 0 6 6 15 6 33 European shores. The forehead is less swollen, and the pectoral fins are rather larger than in CI. Siiiieml of Eu- rope. This species is called Naiso goto. The Japanese distinguish two other species r 1. Sibo golo, which is purple, with a white spot behind the dorsal fin, and the lower jaw furnished with many plaits. 2. Ohanan golo, black, with a larger muzzle and more spa- cious mouth ; the dorsal -]- from head, back edge before the middle ; pectoral i from head ; pectoral \ length ; length of skull 15-0 ; beak 69 ; widlh at notch 4-9. The Del]5hinus globiccps {(7yrt«/, iVoc. Zool. Soc. 18.33, 65), brought by Capt. Delvitte from the North Pacific, which Schlegel thought might be this species, is an Orca. The Large-headed Pilot Whale. Globiocephalus macrorhynchus. Killer or Blackfish, J. Beiuiet, MSS. Mits. Col. Surg. Nose of skull short and broad, rounded in front, nearly as broad in the middle as at the preorbital notch. Teeth subcylindrical, -|. Lower jaw rounded in front. Inhab. South Seas. Mus. Col. Surg. Presented by J. Bennett, Esq. Skull, length entire 24 0 „ nose .... .... .... 11 6 „ from top of nose to back of palate .... .... 14 6 „ teeth line .... .... 5 6 „ lower jaw .... .... 16 6 Breadth at preorbital notch .... 9 6 „ at middle of nose .... 9 0 „ at temple .... .... 17 0 „ of intermaxillary .... 6 0 Delphinus feres, Bonnat. Cetac. 27. Blackish ; teeth \%, large and small, curved, compressed before and behind ; crown oval, rounded and divided in two lobes by a groove, which extends their whole length. Inhab. Mediterranean, Malta. Length, 14 feet. Skull, length 1 foot 10, breadth 1 ft. •5 inches ; length of teeth, 1 in., breadth of line ^ inch. Cuvier thinks this is probably 0)-ca gladiator. Orca. Rondel. Teeth conical, acute, large, occupying the whole edge nearly to the notch, permanent ; forehead flattened. Dor- sal fin high, falcate, in the middle of the back. Pectoral broad, ovate. Skull rounded ; the hinder wing of the maxilla horizontally spread over the orbits, the interraaxil- laries only half the width of the jaw-bones. Palate convex. The Killer. Orca gladiator. Delphinus orca, Linn. S. N. 108. Grampus, Hunter, Pliil. Trans. 1787, t. 16, cop. Bell. Brit. Anim. Bonnat. Cetac. t. 12,/. 1. Cachalot D'Anderson, Du/iamel. D. Duhamelii, Lacep. Pise. t. 9, f. 1. good. D. Orca, Mag. Nat. Hist. iv. -329, jig. 2. Schlegel. Ahh. ii. t. 7, 8. from life. Cut. Oss. Foss. v. /. 22,/. 3, 4, R. A. i. 289. ? Delphinus gladiator, Lacep. Cetac. .302, /. 5, /. 3. D. Gram])us, JJesui. Black ; circumscribed spot behind ej'e, spot on belly, and under side of tail white. Nose of skull twice as long as the width of the notch. Teeth 44j I'H'ge, conical, slight- ly hooked. B. M. Skull, length entire .... 33'0 „ ofnose .... 16"6 „ of teeth line 14'6 „ of lower jaw 27'3 Breadth at notch .... 10-6 „ at orbit .... IS'O „ at temple .... ISO ,, at middle of beak 96 „ of intermaxillary „ in front .... 40 „ in middle .... 3"6 M.C. S. No. 11.3(5. 41-6 22-6 200 350 140 GO .3-6 The skull, n. 1136, of the Museum of the College of Surgeons, is of most colossal size. It formed part of the Hunterian collection. It may probably be the skull of the large specimen, 31 feet long, killed at Greenwich, in 1793. — Banks in Lacepede. It is called the Large Grampus, D. Grampus in the catalogue, the Globiocepha- lus affinis being called the " Smaller Grampus" (n. 1138), and the Cape Killer, n. 1139; the Globe-headed Dolphin, JJ. glohiceps, Cuvier. There is a skull in Mr. Bell's museum, from a male 19 feet long, taken in Lynn harbour, Nov. 1830. The animal was described in Loudon s Mag. Nat. Hist. v. The fol- lowing are the measurements of this specimen : — Length along curve .... .... 2r3 „ straight .... .... .... 19'0 „ to dorsal fin .... .... 8'2 „ to pectoral fin .... .... 4'0 Height of dorsal .... .... 4"0 „ to dorsal .... .... 13'1 Length of dorsal .... .... 2'4 „ of pectoral .... .... 4"0 Breadth of pectoral .... .... 2'8 We have a beautiful skeleton of this species, 20 feet long, taken on the Hampshire coast, presented by R. Pearce, Esq., and a large skull from the coast of England. Delphinus orca, Linn. S. Nat. 108, is evidently from Orca, Belon, Pise. 18, Bond. Pise. 483, Jig. copied by Gesner, Aqiiat. 748. In the Mantissa, i. 523, the refe- rence to the Schwerdt Jisehe of Anderson and some other whalers is added, and probably from them there is added " Bellum gcrit cum Phocis, quas ope gladii dorsalis c lapi- dibus detrudit ; Balasnarum Phocarumque tyrannus, qua turmatim adgreditur. Pinna dorsalis est spina ensiformis, sex pedalis, cute vestita, basi latior. — Mant. ii. 523. O. Fabricius never saw this animal. Bonnaterre gave the name oi Del ])hi mis gladiator to Anderson's figure, which repre- sents the dorsal fin as near the nape. Cuvier believed that the Orca of the ancients was pro- bably a Cachalot, and that the Killer is the Aries marinus of Pliny, Julian and the Latins, who compared the white streak behind the eye to a horn. Desmarest, K 34 Mam. 515, confines the name Delphiims Orca to the ani- mal intended by the ancients, and cliaracteiizes it " Museau coiiforme connne celui de Dauphin vulgaire ; dents larges et crenulecs, sur lenvs bords," being a translation of Arte- di (Gen. Piscium, 76, 3) " D. rostro sursum repando, den- tibiis latis sevratis." Professor Eschricht believes the Physeier microps of O. Fdh. to be the Killer, Dan. Trans, xii. The Lincolnshire Killer. Orca crassidens. Phoca;na crassidens, Owen, Brit. Fossil Mam. 516, f. ■213, 216, 214. Intcrniaxillaries rugose in front. Teeth \%, large, coni- cal, rather acute (all but the front lower false), near to the preorbital notch. Lower jaw verj depressed and broad in front at the symphysis. luhab. Fens of Lincolnshire, Fossil, Mus. Stamford (now Mus. Col. Surg. ?) Skull, length entire .... 23 or 24-0 „ nose 12'6 „ teeth line .... .... lO'O „ lower jaw .... .... 21*0 Breadth at notch .... .... 86 „ at middle of beak .... 80 „ of intermaxillaries .... 5*6 In the figure the beak is, \j the length of the base at the notch and exactly the length of the skull. The Cape Killer. Tab. 9. Orca Capensis. Skull. Delphinus globiceps. Cat. I\Ius. Col. Surg. 165, /(. 1139. Grant, Proc. Zool. Sac. 1833, 65. D. Orca, Owen, Brit. Fossil Mam. 516. Skull flattish above, rather concave in the middle before the blowhole. Nose rather convex on the side, rather ta- pering in front. Teeth \\, very large, thick, nearly to the preorbital notch, concave on each side, for the reception of the opposite teeth, of the front upper small, acute, front lower large, worn down, rounded. Intermaxillaries rather dilated, and broader over the front of the nose, contracted behind. Inhab. Southern Ocean. Cape of Good Hope, M. Vi- toe (1818), Mus. Col. Surg. n. 1139. Northern Pacific Ocean, Capt. Delvitte, R. N. Skull, length entire .... 37'0 .... 36-6 „ of nose .... 18-0 .... 18-0 „ of teeth line 14-6 .... 14-6 „ of lower jaw 29'6 Breadth at notch .... 126 .... 12-0 „ at orbit .... 21.0 .... 21-0 „ at temple above 20'0 „ at middle of beak 100 ,, of intermaxillaries 3'9 „ in front 4'6 „ in middle 3'3 The skull in the College of Surgeons appears to be the one which Mr. Owen gives the measurement of as D. orca, in his account of P/ioctcna crassidens. SxMALL Killer. Orca intermedia. Tab. 8. Skull. Delphinus interraedius, Gray, Ann. Phil. 1827, 396, not Harlan. Nose of skull half the entire length. Teeth 4-r long) conical. Inhab. Skull, British Museum. This skull, which has all the appearcince of being that of a full grown animal, is just one quarter the length and breadth of the skull of the common Killer. Skull, length entire 14"0 inches and lines. „ of nose .... 7'0 „ of teeth line .... 5'6 „ of lower jaw 11 '0 Breadth at orbits .... 8'3 „ at notch .... 46 „ at middleof beak '9 B. Head beaked. Nose of skull longer than the brain- cavity. Lagenorhynchus, Gray. Head rather convex, gradually sloj)ing into the beak in front. Beak short, tapering in front. Lower jaw rather longest. Body elongate, tapering behind, largest at the pectoral fins. Pectoral fins rather far back, rather elon- gate and slightl}' falcate. Dorsal fin high, falcate, rather behind the middle of the back. The back with a low, rounded, fin-like ridge near the tail. Tail-lobes rather nar- row, elongate. Skull rather depressed, the hinder ends of the maxillary bones expanded, horizontal, and rather thickened on the edge. The nose is short, broad, flat above and rather narrowed in front, and scarcely longer than the length of the brain-cavity. The triangle in front of the blowers is elongate, and reaches beyond the middle of the nose of the skull, and the intermaxillaries arc separated by a deep groove filled with cartilage. This genus is easily known from Delphinus by the low- ness of the forehead, the short and depressed form of the beak, the posterior position of the dorsal fin, and the body being attenuated behind. It is at once known by the breadth, and flat, expanded form of the nose of the skull. The OS hyoides of L. leucopleurus is large and broad. * Beak very short ; nose of skull only as long as head ; teeth nearly to the notch. White-sided Bottle-nose. Lagenorhynchus leucopleurus. Tab. 6. Foetus, 12. Skull, t. 26,/. 3, tongue. Delphinus leucopleurus, Rasch, Mag. Jul. 1843, 869. Above bluish black, beneath white, with a large, ob- lique, gray or white longitudinal streak on hinder part of each side. Teeth f 4' small, acute, curved. Skull : brain-cavity large, high at the top behind the blow-hole ; nose nearly as long as the brain-cavity, gradu- ally and regularly tapering on each side ; triangle in front 35 of the blower flattened and concave beliind, with a slightly raised, lozenge-sliaped space in the front half. Inhab. North Sea, Gulph of Christiania. FcEtal specimen and skeleton, Brit. Mus. The skull of the skeleton in the British Museum is at once known from the skull of the L. (ilbirostris, at Nor- wich, by being smaller, and the nose rather narrower, and espcciall}' by the hinder part of the intermaxillaries, which form the triangle in front of the blower, being flattened and concave instead of swollen and convex. Skull, length entire ... Ifi'O inches & lines. „ of nose .... 8'G „ of lower jaw 13'0 Breadth at notch .... 8'3 ,, notch .... .... 4'0 „ middle of beak 2"9 ** Beak moderate ; nose of skull only as lovg as head ; teeth not quite to the notch. White-beaked Bottle-nose. Lagenorhynchus albirostris. Tab. 10. Animal, 11. Skull. Delphinus Tursio, Brighlwell, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1846,21, /. 1, 2. Delphinus albirostris. Gray, Ann. Si' Mag. N. H. IBiC. Upper part and sides very rich, deep-velvet, black, ex- ternal cuticle soft and silky, so thin and delicate as to be easily rubbed off"; nose, a well defined line above upper jaw, the whole under jaw and belly cream-colour, varied with chalky white ; fins and tail black ; teeth -|| small, curved ; jaws moderately elongate, lower rather the longest ; blowhole horse-shoe-shaped and convex to- wards the head ; nose of skull as long as the head cavity, gradually and evenly tapering to a rather rounded point in front, the edge rather reflexed on each side behind ; the triangle in front of the blower convex and swollen on each side behind, smooth in front. Inhab. North Sea, coast of Norfolk. Mus. Norwich. — Skeleton. Through the kindness of Mr. Brightwell, I have been en- abled to examine the skull of this species, and to copy the beautiful drawing of the animal made by his daughter. Animal, length entire „ of mouth .... 9'6 inches & lines. „ of nose to eye 13"0 „ to pectorals .... 20'0 „ of pectoral .... 15"0 „ lo dorsal .... 41 '0 „ of dorsal .... 11.6 Height of dorsal .... lO-Q Width of tail .... 220 Skull, length entire .... 18"0 „ of nose .... 8.6 Width at orbit .... 9-5 „ at notches 5'6 „ of middle of beak3"6 „ of lower jaw at condyles 8'0 The fcGtus of this species has six bristles on each of the upper lips, the hinder one being rather farther from the rest than the others are apart, which are equally placed, and of the same size. The tongue (tab. 20, /'. 3 ), is flat on the top and as wide as the space between the sides of the jaws, with a regular sharp denticulated edge on each side, and with a rather larger, conical, separate tubercle in front. The teeth are not developed through the gums. The nose is nearly \ the length of the distance between the end of the nose and the eye. The hinder part of the back has a rather thick convexity, like a long low rounded, second dorsal fin just before the tail ; the same part of the fojtus of Delphinus (/)e //;//«« ?), and Steno? fuscus has the part very much compressed, and fined off to a very thin, knife- like edge. ** Nose of skull longer than the length of the brain- cavity ; teeth-line some distance from the notch. The Electra. Lagenorhynchus Electra. Tab. 13. Skull. Skull rather depressed ; nose flattened above, expand- ed and reflexed on the side behind, rather shelving in front ; sides rather contracted in the middle, rather long- er than the head and If the length of the width at the notch ; intermaxillary broad, flattened, nearly § of the width, with a large, wide groove for the greater part of its length ; triangle flat, rather concave behind, with a lo- zenge-shaped, rather raised, rugose space in the front half; teeth -II-, rather small, cylindrical, conical, slightly curved, acute, four in an inch ; the lower jaw regularly converg- ing, straight on the sides in front, rather swollen behind, and shortly obliquely truncated in front, the gonyx rather produced. Inhab. : Skull, British Museum. This skull is very like the former, but it is considerably larger, and the nose is longer in proportion, and the head is much more depressed in the middle and spread out on the sides. Skull, length entire .... 17"6 inches & lines. „ of head .... 8-3 ,, of nose 9-9 7-0 14-6 10-3 5-7 at middle of beak 4'0 of intermaxillary 2"6 „ of teeth line .... „ of lower jaw Width of temple „ at notch The Asia. Lagenorhynchus Asia. Tab. 14. Skull. Skull nose rather depressed, broad, flattened, rather con- tracted in the middle of each side ; triangle concave, with a .slightly raised, flat, rugose space in the front half; teeth 4-|., small. Inhab. : Skull, British Museum. This species is only known from a skull without teeth. It very much resembles in the depressed and expanded 36 form of tlic Ijrain-cavily and form of tlic beak, the skull of L. Electrii, but it differs from it in tlie beak being rather more acute in front and more contracted on tlie middle of the sides, and in being rather smaller in size. It may only be a variety of that species. Skull, length entire .... 16'9 inches & lines. „ of nose .... 9'0 „ of lower jaw 12"6 Width at orbit .... 8-9 „ at notch .... 4"9 „ middle of beak 3.4 The EscHRiCHTS. Lagenorhynchus acutus. Delphinus acutus, Gray, Spec. Zool. 1, 2, from a skull. D. Eschrichtii, Schleyel, Abh. 2.3, t. 1 k %f- 4, t. 4,/. 5. Body ? Teeth 44 i nose of skull half its length and nearly twice as long as wide at the notch ; lower jaw obliquely truncat- ed in front. Inhab. North Sea, Faroe Islands, Eschricht. Skidls and skeleton in the Leyden Museum — Length entire 7 2 inches and lines. „ of skull 0 16 This species was first described by me from a skull in Brooks' museum, which is now at Lcydcn, and Mr. Schlegel has described it from a skeleton sent from the Faroe Is- lands. It differs from the other species of the genus in the nose of the skull being more slender and the teeth more numerous. The teeth series, as in L. Electra and L. Asia, do not reach to the notch which separate, the beak of the skull from the brain-cavity. Professor Eschricht informs me this species is very like 1). leiicopleurus. Delphinapterus, part. Blainv. not Lacep. Delphinus, Lacep. Head rather convex, shelving towards the nose. Nose rather produced, obscurely divided from the forehead. Dorsal fin none. Back rounded. Pectoral oblong, rather slender. Skull moderate. Beak broad, depressed, tapering, rounded above. The triangle before the blower, elongate, extending nearly to the middle of the beak. Palate flat. Teeth conical, tapering, acute, curved. Symphysis of the lower jaw short. The Peron. Delphinapterus Peronii. Tab. 15. Delphinus Peronii, Lacep. Delphinapterus leucorhamphus,PeroH, Lesson,Voy. Coq. i. 9, /'. 1, cop. F. Cuiier, Cetac. t. Jardine, N. Lih.\. Cuv. Oss. Fosn. v. t. 21,/. 5, 6, skull. D. bicolor, Stephenson, MSS. Icon. ined. Teeth |4 -jS j black ; beak, pectoral fins, under part of body white. Skull in Mus. Paris. Length 18.3, of beak 10.0, of teeth line B'G, of lower jaw 14'6. Width at orbit 90, at notch 4'7, at middle of beak 2'7 ; teeth i|, small, slender, six in an inch ; beak broad, depressed, rather tapering in front, the sides spongy, the centre hollow, filled with cartilage. broader in front, flattened behind ; triangle extending nearly to the middle of the length of the beak ; orbit rather shelving above and slightly thickened on the edge; palate flat in front, rather convex behind, without any groove on the sides; lower jaw gradually tapering, angularly shelving and flat on the sides in front ; symphysis short, not two inches. There is a second skull, brought by M. Eiousard, in 1822, which is rather more depressed in the middle in front, and with the triangle reaching near to the middle of the beak ; teeth ^4' lengtli entire, 17'6, of beak Q'G, of lower jaw 14*6, width at notch 4'3, at middle of the beak 2'6. Orbits rather shelving above and slightly thickened on the edge. Cuvier justly observes the beak of Lesson's ( Voy. Coq. t. 9) figures is too pointed. Lesson also represents the black as only occupying the upper part of the back, as re- presented in figure 4, copied from his plate. 1 have therefore given a new figure of the species, copied from a drawing, -^ the natural length, kindly given to me by W. AVilson Saunders, Esq., of Lloyd's, which was made by Dr. Stevenson, during the voyage of the ship Glenarn, Capt. Guy, inlat. 46° 48' S., long. 142° west, Jan. 12, 1844. Delphinus, Linn. Delphinorhynchus, part. Lesson. Cephalorhynchus, F. Cuv. Forehead rounded. Nose produced, bald. Dorsal fin falcate, in the middle of the back. Skull with the hinder wings of maxilla horizontal, sometimes thickened on the edge over the orbit. Nose elongate, tapering, depressed, broader than high, convex, roundish above, and slightly concave in front of the blowers, nearly parallel on the sides and rounded in front. Teeth small, conical, extend- ing the greater ]iart of the length of the jaw. Most maritime persons call these animals Bottle-noses, Bottle-heads, Flounder-heads, Grampuses, Porpoises or Porpusses, sometimes adding Whale to the name. They generally confine the name of Dolphin (most used by lands- men) to the Scomberoid fish {CoryphcBna), which changes colour in dying. A. Head shortly leaked. Nose of skull moderate. Tri- angle elongate, produced before the teeth line. Palate flat. * Beak scarcely produced. Nose of skull rather depress- ed, scarcely longer than the brain-cavity. Cephalorhyn- chus, F. Cuv. The Hastated Dolphin. Delphinus Heavisidii. Delphinus Heavisidii, Gray, Spic. Zool. t. 2, /. 6. Schlegel. Abh. t. 3,/. 1—4, t. 4,/. 6. D. Capensis, Cuv. R. A. 289. D. Dussumieri, Fischer. D. Cephalorhynchus, F. Cuv. Cetac. 158. Marsouin du Cap, F. Car. Mam. Leth. 3. D. hastatus, F. Cuv. Cetac. 161. Bapp. Cet. t. 3. Ph. Hora( i, and D. tridens, A. Smith. Black, with a streak, and two diverging white lines be- neath ; teeth ^\ ; nose of skull nearly- half the length of head ; lower jaw truncated in front. Inhab. S. Sea, Cape of Good Hope. 37 There is a skull, D. Cephalor/n/nchus, in the Paris Mu- seum. Beak flat ; palate flat, rather concave behind ; teeth rather blunt 4-| ; orbits rather shelving ; symphysis of the lower jaw very short, rather keeled below. Skull, length .... ITS inches and lines. Beak 4J) Width at notch .... 2-7 M. Quoy's description and figure, on which F. Cuvier founded I), haslatus, was from the specimen originally described by me, and now transferred from the College of Surgeons to the British Museum. This species has some character intermediate between Phoc(vna and Delphinus. DusKV Dolphin. Delphinus obscurus. Tab. 16. Skull. Delphinus obscurus. Gray, Spic. Zool. t. 2,/. 2, 3. D. superciliosus, Garnot, Lesson, Voy. Coq. t. 9,/. 2 ? Sf F. Ctiv. Cetac. 149? Schlegel, Abh. 22, t. 1, 2,/. 3, /. 4,/. 4. D. Fitzroyii, Waterhouse, Zool. Beagle, t. 10, Jun. D. obscurus (var.). Quay, Voy. Aslrol. 151, /. 28. Dauphin a museau courte, Joy. Pole Slid, t. 22, y. 1. ? D. superciliosus. Lesson, Voy. Coq. t. 9,/. 2 ? ? Black, with oblique, diverging streaks on the side, and beneath whitish ; teeth %^-l^ ; nose of skull about |. of its length and nearly 2j the length of its width at the notch ; lower jaw truncated in front. Inhab. Southern Ocean, Cape Heaviside. Skull, length entire ,, of nose „ of lower jaw Width at orbit „ at notch „ at middle of beak Body, length entire .... 5' 1 feet & inches. „ to dorsal fin 2'1 Width of tail .... 1-2 M. Garnot's description, as given by F. Cuvier, is veiy short, but it appears to fit this species. The D. a museau court of the Voy. a Pole Sud is said to have 4^ teeth. It is evidently this species as determined by the examination of the skull at Paris, and there is a skull named D. hivitta- lus, D'Orbigny, 1830. Beak quite flat above; triangle to near the middle of the beak ; which appears to be only a variety of this species. Length of skull .... 14'0 inches and lines. ,, beak .... 7-0 Width at notch .... 4.1 The skull, Dauphin d museau court, in the Paris Mu- seum, has teeth -^ ; triangle extends much in front of the tooth-line ; nasal gi-ooves wide in front. Skull, length .... 14-6 Beak .... 80 Width at notch .... 3-6 The skull of this species is intermediate in form between the Lagenorhynchus and Delphinus. The CoMPRKSSED-TAiLED DoLPHiN. Delphinus compressicauda. Phoca^na compressicauda. Lesson, Cetac. 199. F. Cuv. Cetac. 186 (from Garnot MSS.). Teeth ^, small, conical, hooked ; head coloured ; belly whitish ; pectoral short ; upper jaw longest ; nose short ; base of the tail compressed on each side. Inhab. 4° south lat., 26° east long, of Paris. Animal, length to pectoral I'S feet & inches. Expanse of tail \7 ft Beak short. Nose of skull thick, conical, convex above, half as long as the head. Tursio. X Beak of skull rather thick and rather swollen on the sides. Bottle-nose Dolphin. Delphinus Tursio. Tab. 10. Animal. Delphinus Tursio, O. Fab. Faun. Groen. 49. JVriqht, Mag. N. H. ii. 1838, 609. Bonnat. Cetol. 2\. D. Nesarnak, Lacep. (Desm. from O. Fab.). Delphinus truncatus, Montague, IVern. Trans, iii. /. 5, /. 3. Skull. Bottle-nose, Hunter, Phil. Trans. Ixxxvii. t. 18, cop. Bonnat. Cetol. t. 11,/. 1. L'Oudre, Bellon. D. Vulgaire, Camper, Cetac. 35, 40. Var. ? D. Tursio, Schlegel, Abh. t. b,f. 1, 2, /. 4,/. 9. Black (whitish beneath ?) ; teeth |4) truncated when old; skull-nose |- of entire length ; intermaxillaries very con- vex, forming a strong rib on each side above ; intermax- illa and vomer forming part of the palate. Inhab. North Sea. Mr. R. Templeton has sent me a most accurate drawing of a specimen caught on the south of Ireland, in November, 1828: he named it Z>. -DeZ/j/iw. Copied tab. 10. The following are its measurements : — Length entire .... 7 6 0 feet, inches & lines. „ eyes .... 10 0 „ ear 12 5 „ pectoral .... 16 9 „ end of the pectoral 2 6 7 „ front of the dorsal 3 2 5 „ end of dorsal 4 2 5 „ genital organ 5 3 0 „ to the vent .... 5 6 3 „ to base of tail 7 0 0 „ to end of middle of tail .... 7 6 0 „ to end of tail fin 8 13 The following are the measurements of four skulls, the first being Montague's specimen : — Length entire 216 210 210 210 „ ofno.se 11-6 120 120 116 „ of teeth line 99 100 100 „ of lower jaw 18"6 Width at notch 5-9 50 5-6 59 „ at orbit 103 106 106 „ at middle of beak 3'6 4'6 L 38 In the skull of Montague's specimen, in the British Mu- seum, the 4tli and 10th teeth from the front on each side appear by the hole to have been larger than the rest. We have a second imperfect skull of the same measurement. M. F. Cuvier {Cetac. 2-23), as usual, complains of Monta- gue's figure of the skull of this species : he does not recog- nize in it the D. Tiirsio, and thinks it most resembles D. Delphis ! The skull on the skeleton presented by Mr. Houship, in Mus. Col. Surg. (n. 11-25), taken below the Nore, in June, 18-28, has the teeth 44, the two hinder upper without any opposite, the 4, 5, 6 upper are largest, the middle lower are truncated, the lower jaw obliquely truncated, with a rather prominent gonyx. The elongated intermaxilla and the vomer are visible in the palate. In the old skulls the intermaxillaries are ^ width above, and the sides of the maxillaries are shelving. In skull n. 11-26 (Mus. Col. Surg.) the teeth are very oblique and truncated at the end. In all the skulls I have seen of this species the teeth are more or less worn down, but Mr. Bell says he has two skulls in which they are acute. — Brit. Quad. 47-2. There is some difficulty about the colour of this species, which may arise from two being confounded under one name. Bonnaterre, Montague and Wright describe it as black above and whitish beneath ; O. Fabricius as all blackish, the belly a little whiter and the young paler ; Schlegel figures it as all of a uniform deep black colour. The Abusalam. Delphinus Abusalam. Delphinus abusalum, Rupp. Mus. Senk. 1842, t. 12, f. 1 " 3 1, ^, o. Black, below white, with small dark spots ; teeth f^-ys- Nose of skull about |- of length, 23- its width at the notch. Intermaxillary bones very convex, forming a strong ridge on each side. Lower jaw tapering in front. Inhab. Red Sea. Only known from Dr. Riippell's description and figure. It has been said to be the same as D. Tursio, but it ap- pears very different. Delphinus aduncus. Hemp. slender, conical, incurv- ed, acute; lower jaw, slender, very obliquely truncated ; palate rather convex in front, tapering, shortly grooved behind. Inhab. ? Skull, Brit. Mus. Skull, length entire, 17"4 inch. „ of head, 7-3 „ of nose, 10-1 „ of teeth-line. 92 „ of lower jaw. Width at temples, 7-9 „ at nostrils, 4.4 „ at middle of beak. 2-4 „ at intermaxillaries, 11 This species, in the slenderness and length of the beak forms the passage between this and the next section. The Bridled Dolphin. Delphinus frenatus. Delphinus frenatus, F. Cuv. Mam. Lith. t. Cetac. t. 1, 158. Blackish, paler on the sides, the belly white, end of tail black beneath ; head black ; sides ashy, with a dark band from the angle of the mouth under the eye. Inhab. Cape Verd, from Dussumier's description and drawing. Skull in the Paris Museum, from Cape de Verde, sent by Dussumier. Length 18"0 inches, of beak 8"3, width at notch 3'5, of middle of beak I'll ; teeth ^, rather larger than D. diibius ; palate smooth ; intermaxillaries large, expanded; nasal convex beneath; triangle rather extended in front of the teeth-line, rugose, and rather more so than D. dubius. There is a second skull marked D. fratnalus. No. 2, width at notch 37 ; teeth W or |4 ; palate flat; nasal very convex, especially behind ; triangle extending rather in front of the teeth line, very rugose ; jaws rather strongly reflexed in front of the notch. B. Head longly beaked; nose of skull slender, light, rather depressed, especially in front, much longer than the head. Delphinus. * Skull flattened behind; triangle to the teeth line; palate flat, not grooved on the side. The Metis. Delphinus Metis. Tab. 18. Skull. D. Metis, Chay, Cat. Ost. B. M. 36. Skull rather depressed, the hinder part slightly convex ; nose rather depressed, shelving on the sides ; intermaxil- laries convex, with an elongated groove between them in front, 4 tlie entire length, twice and a half the length of the width at the notch ; the triangular impression in front of the blower rather elongate, produced a little beyond the line of the hinder tooth, rugose in front, oblique, grooved on each side ; teeth ^, small, slightly incurved, acute, six in an inch. Inhab. ? Skull, Brit. Mus. Skull, length entire, 15'7 inches & lines. „ ofhead, 6'3 „ of nose, 9'4 „ of tooth-line, .... 7"4 Width of temple, 6'10 „ at nostril, 3"7 „ at middle of back, 2'2 „ of intermaxillaries, I'O This species is like the D. Doris in size, but has more teeth, and the skull behind the frontal ridge is much flat- ter, and gradually shelving to the foramen magnum, and the beak is more depressed. D. Metis, var. In the museum of the Bristol Insti- tution there is an imperfect skull, apparently of this spe- cies, which differs in the nose being about f of an inch shorter, and rather narrower. It has 36 teeth in the upper jaw. Skull, length of nose .... 8 7 Width at notch .... 3 8 „ middle of nose 2 0 (There is a lower jaw fitted to it, which has no teeth and a short gonyx, but it is doubtful if it belong to the same animal) ; lower jaw 12'3, symphysis \'b. There is a second skull in the same collection, very .si- milar, which has -|4 teeth. Skull, length entire .... 15 0 „ of nose .... 9 0 Width at notch .... 3 4 „ at middle of nose 1 10 This skull only differs from the former in the lower jaw being slenderer and united by a longer symphysis in front. Lower jaw 12 6 long. Symphysis 2 0 wide. They are probably indications of two other species. The hinder part of the skull of the latter is also rather more convex than the same part in D. Metis. The Styx. Delphinus Styx. Tab. 21. Skull. Skull roundish, rather flattened behind ; nose rather de- pressed, rather convex in the middle, shelving on each side, rather longer than the head, 4 the entire length, 40 twice and nearly a half as long as the width at the notch ; the triangular impression just to the line of the hindermost teeth; teeth ^^, slender, subcylindrical, acute, about five in an inch ; palate nearly flat ; lower jaw rather produced and rounded in front. Tnhab. W. Africa, Capt. W. T. W. Owen, R. N. Mus. I'll i led Service In.st. Skull, length entire 18-0 17-6 „ of nose 10-3 10-3 „ of lower jaw 14-9 14-3 Width at the notch 4-6 4-3 „ at the orbit 8-6 7-6 Teeth 42 ^1 ^ This species is very like D. Euphrosyne, but is rather smaller and the beak rather shorter : it may prove only a variety. The Euphrosyne. Delphinus Euphrosyne. Tab. 22. Skull. Skull round, rather flattened behind ; nose rather broad and rather tapering in front, depressed, flat at the base, shelving on the sides and rounded in the middle above, about half as long again as the head, or \ the entire length, and 24: times the length of the width at the notch ; teeth ~J, slender, elongate, slightly curved, acute. Inhab. ? Skull, Mus. Norwich. Skull, length, entire, „ of head, „ of nose, „ of lower jaw, „ of temple, Width of notch, „ at middle of beak, „ at temples, intermaxillaries are convex and rounded above, wide groove between them for half their length in 18-6 7-4 11-3 160 96 4-6 2-4 8-3 inches & lines. The with a front. Var. Rather smaller. Skull in British Museum only differs from the one at Norwich in being rather smaller in all its dimensions. This and the former species are very like D. Metis, but are rather broader and rather more depressed ; the intermaxillaries are rather more convex, especially behind, and form a regular defined front edge to the triangle, which is rough in front, and marked with ob- lique, cross grooves, while in D. Metis, the triangle is furnished with an acute, raised margin on each side in front. Skull in Mus. Col. Surgeons (Delphinus Delphis, Cat. Mus. Col. Surg. 161, n. 1117), with the palate convex, not grooved on the side ; intermaxillary and vomer forming part of the palate ; teeth ^. Skull, Length, entire, 160 inches. „ of nose, 10 „ of lower jaw, .... 133 Width at notch, 3'6 : obtained from the Leverian Museum in 1806. May be another variety. Dau])hin a petit pectoral, Voy. Pole Snd, t.1\, f. 2, t. 23,y; 7, 8, not described. Skull in Mus. Paris. Palate flat, rather convex behind ; triangle extended rather in front of the teeth line. Teeth J-| ; nose narrowed in front, \ the length and 2f times the length of the breadth at the notch ; lower jaw slender in front ; nasal rather high and convex. Is this a Steno \ D. dubius, Cuv. R. A. i. 288. F. Cuv. Mam. Lith. t. Cetac. 154. Ann. Mus. xix. 14. Nose depressed, like T>. Delphis, but rather shorter ; the teeth small and .sharp, \y, thin, pointed. Inhab. Coast of France. I found three skulls under this name in the Paris Museum. 1. "D. dubius, Cuv. n. 10." Mus. Paris. Skull, length IS'S, of beak 100, width at notch 2-9, at middle of beak 17; teeth ^|^ or ^ ; palate flat, rather convex ; lower jaw flat, obliquely in front and keeled in front beneath. 2. " D. dubius, Cuv. n. 2." Mus. Paris. Skull, length 16-6, of beak 100, of teeth line 8-6, width at notch 3'8, at middle of beak \'7^ ; teeth ^-J or ^ %, small, hooked ; palate flat, rather convex ; beak tapering in fi'ont, reflexed before the notch, intermaxillaries rather convex ; triangle extending rather in front of the teeth line, rugose in front. 3. " D. dubius, Cuv. n. 7." Mits. Paris. Skull, from the Cape de Verds, length 16"0, of beak 9*4, of teeth line 7'6, width at notch 3'7|^, at middle of beak r4; teeth ^T-li j triangle scarcely extended in front of the teeth-line ; palate flat ; lower jaw oblique, compressed and flat on the sides, rather turned up at the tip ; inter- maxillaries convex behind, nose tapering in front. This last is perhaps D. frontalis, Dussum. Cuv. R. A. i. 288. " Black, belly white, with a lead-coloured band from angle of mouth to pectoral. Inhab. Cape Verd." ** Skull roundish ; triangle just to the tooth-line ; pa- late icith a deep groove on each side, and a high, central ridge behind. t Beak moderate, Ig- the length of the brain-cavity. The Dolphin. Delphinus Delphis. Tab. 26. Foetus and tongue. D. vulgaris, Lacep. D. antiquorum, Kay, Will. Pise. 28, t. A \,f. 1. Delphinus Delphis, Linn. F. Cuv. Cetac. 123. Cuvier, Mam. Lithog. t. Schlegel, Abh. i. 20, t. 4, /. 2, teeth. Cuvier, Oss. Foss. v. /. 21,/. 9, 10. Black, sides gray, beneath white ; the dorsal moderate ; teeth 1^4, (4-f , Schlegel) ; nose of skull half as long again as the length of the brain cavity. Inhab. North Sea. Atlantic Ocean. 41 Measurement of different skulls in the British Museum. The particular localities are unknown. w a-3 W ^ a. 'o O p ^ S"^ o ^ ? Q >- B O a ■5 ° = 3§ s — * ... 46 / ... ... ... ... ... ff 17 0 11 0 3 5 2 2 3 0 45 h 17 0 10 (5 3 9 2 9 2 J 46 i 18 0 11 6 3 8 2 2 3 0 50 k 17 6 10 6 3 6 2 2 3 0 48 / 16 6 10 3 3 6 2 2 2f 46 m ... 17 6 11 6 3 7 2 2 3 0 48 n 18 0 11 0 3 7i 2 9 3 0 43 The most prominent difference between the specimens was in the width of the upper jaw in front of the notch, just over the commencement of the teeth-series ; but I could not find any other character in connexion with it. There is also a slight difference in the form of the palate ; in a, the central ridge is narrow and rounded above be- hind ; in b, it is broad, flat, sharp-edged, and very deeply concave on the sides, under the edges, but the different specimens vary in this particular. In d and ff the hinder part of the palate, near the entrance of the inner nostrils, is sharply keeled ; and in a the two ridges are rounded. I am by no means certain that with a larger series of skulls in a perfect condition, and with the animals they be- longed to, it might not prove that there are more than one species amongst these skulls. In all these skulls the intermaxillaries are seen below, forming a slender, elongated, triangular space in the front of the palate, and in some the vomer is also more or less seen in the middle of the palate ; but the absence and pre- sence of this bone in the palate, which Mr. Owen appears to regard as important in the distinction of species (see ' British Fossils,' p. ), is of very little consequence, at least in this species. In the British Museum there is a foetus, figured with its tongue in detail at (Tab. 26.), which probably belongs to this species ; it formed part of the collection of Sir Hans Sloane. It differs from the foetus oi Lageuorhijnchus acxtiit in the nose, being more i)roduced (nearly J the length of the dis- tance from the end of the nose to the eye), it has seven black rigid bristles on each side, the two front, rather the largest, are on the side of the u]iper ))art of the nose, and the five hinder forming a descending line nearly parallel to the groove which separates the beak. The tongue is con- vex on the sides, with a rather narrow flat space on the hinder part separate from the under sides by a sharp en- tire edge, the front is rather dilated, sharp-edged and ob- scurely crenated. The Janira. Delphinus Janira. Tab. 23. Skull. Del])hinapterus Peronii, Mus. Bristol Tnstitution. Skull roundish ; nose depressed, half as long again as the head ; triangle rather in front of the tooth-line ; inter- maxillaries very convex behind, with a wide groove be- tween, above in front ; palate with verj' wide, deep grooves on each side, extending § of the length, centre ridge flat- tened in the middle, the intermaxillaries forming a long triangle in front ; teeth ^l- Inhab. Newfoundland. Presented to the Bristol Institu- tion by G. Thome, Esq. Skull, length entire Head Nose Lower jaw .... Width at orbit .... Notch Middle of beak 17-10 inches & lines. 61 11-9 12-6 7-8 4-3 2-5 This skull differs from the D. Delphis of the /Vtlantic, in the beak being much shorter and narrower. The New Zealand Dolphin. Delphinus Novse Zelandias. Delphinus Noveb Zelandite, Qnoy et Gaim. Voij. Astrol. 49, /. 28. Teeth i| ; body elongated, rounded in front ; nose cy- lindrical, rather flattened above ; black-brown, edge of the upper jaw and beneath dull white, a yellow band from the eye along the side to below the dorsal ; tail slate ; pecto- ral and dorsal dull white, the latter dark-edged. Inhab. New Zealand and Cape Gable. Length, entire, „ to blowers, „ to eye, .... „ to dorsal,.... „ to pectoral, Width of caudal, .... „ of pectoral. Height of dorsal, .... Circumference, 5' 10 inches. 11 10 2-8J 1-5 1-2J . 4-6 8i 211 The following is probably the same. Dauphin a band fauve, Voij. Pole Sticl, t. 21,/. 1, t. 23, /. 1, 2, not described. Skull in figure rather suddenly contracted behind ; nose T^ of the entire length of skull, and 2|- times the breadth at the notch; intermaxillaries convex; teeth ^J-^^. Skull in Mus. Paris. Palate with a deep groove on each side ; triangle to the teeth line. Inhab. Van Diemen's Land. The Sao. Delphinus Sao. Skull. Length 17-0, teeth-line 8-9, beak 10-6, width at notch 3'7 ; beak elongate, shelving on the sides, with central cartilage near half its length in front ; triangle to M 42 the teeth line ; teeth 44 ttj small, cylindrical, hooked ; palate flat in front, with a broad groove extending nearly half its length beliind ; intermaxillaries and palatine dis- tinct, former broad in front ; lower jaw slender, shelving, and flat-sided in front. Inhab. Madagascar, Dussumier, 1838. Mus. Paris. Forster's Dolphin. Delphinus Forsteri. Tab. 24, from Forster, Icon. Delphinus Delphis, Forster, Descrip. Anim. 280. Icon, ined. Brit. Mm. t. 31. Greenish brown or rust-coloured, beneath white; a small white spot on the disk of the dorsal and pectoral fin ; teeth -ii= 176, acute, erect, conical, incurved. Skull, ? Inhab. Pacific Ocean, between New Caledonia and Nor- folk Island, Forster, 1774. "Body straight, round, thickest behind; the pectoral fin tapering at both ends ; head rounded, shelving in front, beaked; beak straight, pointed, cylindrical, depressed, at- tenuated and blunt at the tip; upper jaw shorter, both blunt, toothed ; eyes small, lateral, oblong, nearly in the middle of the side, near the gape of the mouth, a small hole (the ears) above and behind the eyes; blower single, between the eyes in crown, lunate ; a linear abdominal slit a little behind and beneath the dorsal fin, the front part the vulva, the hinder the vent ; teats 2, one on each side the vulva, with a nipple the size of a pea; tail compressed on the sides, keeled above and below, and attenuated to- wards the tip ; pectoral fin lanceolate, scarcely so long as the beak ; dorsal fin in the middle of the back, nearly 3- sided, falcate behind, as long as the beak ; tail horizontal, 2-lobed, each lobe oblong, lateral, subfalcate. " Gregarious, swimming very rapidly around the ships and boats. " Length 6 feet from nose to tail." — Forster. This species resembles, in the distribution of its colour- ing, X)««/j/(/« a band fail ve (Voy. Pole Sud), but the band on the side is whitish, not fulvous. The Blue-and- WHITE Dolphin. Delphinus casrnleo-albus. Delphinus CEeruleo-albus, Met/en, Act. Nat. Cur. xvi. 609, /. 43,/. 2. Teeth ^; white, back bluish, with oblique streaks on the sides, belly white. Skull t Inhab. East Coast of South America, Rio de la Plata. Length 5 feet 6 in. Skeleton in Mus. Anat. Mus. Berlin. tt Beak of skull twice as long as the brain-cavity. The Cape Dolphin. Delphinus longirostris. Delphinus longirostris, Gray, Spic. Zool. t. Cuv. R. A. i. 288, from Dussumier, MSS. Schleyel, Ahh. t.1,2 &. 4, ./'. 1. Faun. Japon. t. 24. D. Capensis, Gray, Spic. Zool. t. 2,/. 1, not Cuv. nor Rapp. Black ; dorsal fin large, high ; teeth, ||-^§ ; nose ^ of entire length ; skull nearly 3\ times the length of its breadth at the notch. Inhab. Southern Ocean. Cape of Good Hope, Gray. JajDan and Ceylon, Schleyel. Malabar, Dussumier. Length, entire, 81 inches. „ of beak, 7 „ to angle of mouth, 13 „ to blowers, 7\ „ to dorsal fin, .... 38 5, to pectoral fin, .... 21 „ of dorsal, 12 „ of pectoral, 13 Breadth of pectoral, 5 „ of tail, 26 Circumference, 42 The figure in the ' Fauna Japonica ' is from a drawing by a Japanese artist, made under Mr. Burger's direction. Skull in the Paris Museum (n. 4), from Malabar, brought by M. Dussumier, 1827. Skull, length .... 2-0 „ of beak .... 13-9 Width at notch .... 3-2 „ of middle of beak 1-7 Palate with a deep groove on each side of a central ridge in the hinder half, slightly keeled behind near blower; beak very long, very tapering ; nasal very convex, rounded ; teeth \^, small, slightly curved ; triangle exactly to the teeth line. *** Skull rotmd ; triangle not reaching to the teeth-line ; palate conve.v, with a very concave line on the hinder part of each side ; beak twice as long as headi The Small-headed Dolphin. Delphinus microps. Tab. 25. Skull. Skull small, subglobular ; palate convex ; nose very long, slender, twice as long as the length of the brain-ca- vity, nearly four times as long as broad at the notch ; in- termaxillary convex above, with a broad cavity between them in front, rather contracted in front of the blowers ; teeth ^l ; maxillaries very spongy ; the triangle in front of the blowers short, not nearly reaching to the line of the hinder tooth. Inhab. .' Dimensions of skulls in inches and lines. Mus. Norw. Mus. Brit. M.C.S. Length, entire, 17'6 in. 156 in. 150 in. „ of nose, .... 9'6 „ of teeth-line, .... 8 „ oflowerjaw, .... 14'9 13-0 12-6 Width at notch, 2-7 2-6 „ at orbits, ... 5'3 „ ofmiddleofbeak, .... 2-3 2'7 2-6 „ of intermaxillaries 8 9 Var. 1. Head smaller, and the nose rather shorter, only If the length of the brain-cavity, but quite as long as compared with the width of the notch. This skull resembles Schlegel's figure of the skull of D. 43 lonr/iroslris in general form, but the beak is rather more slender, and the orbits more obliquely truncated in front. Steno. Gtai/. Head convex. Forehead convex. Beak moderate, ta- pering. Body elongate, fusiform. Pectoral fin moderate, ovate, falcate. Dorsal falcate, in the middle of the back. Skull round, subglobular. Forehead erect. Beak elongate, compressed, higher than broad, tapering in front, convex above. Triangle elongate, deep, produced rather beyond the teeth-line. Palate convex, not grooved on the side. Lower jaw elongate, compressed in front. Symphysis elon- gate, about J the length. Tliis is at once known from Lagenorhynchus and Del- phinus by the length, compression, and tapering form of the beak of the skull. " * Beak scarcely separated from the forehead.''^ The Steno. Steno rostratus. Delphinus rostratus, Cuv. Ann. Mas. xix. 9. /?. A. i. •289. F. Cuv. Mam. Lith. t. . Cetac. 156, 1. 10,/. 2, not Shaiv. Dauphin de Breda, Cuv. Oss. Foss. 278, 296, v. 400, t. 21,/. 7, 8. Delphinus Bredanensis, "Cuv." Fischer, Syn. 505, from Cuvier. D. oxyrhynchus, Jardine, Nat. Lib. t. 27, cop. F. Cuv. Vert. Nederl. Hist. 1829, 236, t. 1, 2. D. planiceps, Breda, Schlegel, Ahh. t. 4,/ 8. " Forehead gradually shelving to the beak" [Cuv.) ; the skull with the nose as long as the brain-cavity ; teeth 44- |-|-, rather large. Black, lower lip and body beneath rosy white, not separated by distinct lines, lower part of the sides black-spotted. luhab. North Sea. Holland, Breda. Brest, D'Orbigny. " M. Blainville, who observed a skull of this species in the museum of Mr. J. Sowerby, says it had 22 teeth in each jaw, and the symphysis f the entire length," Desm. Diet. H. N. ix. 160. Now, if this is not a mistake for \, it will at once separate it from the other Stetios. ** Beak separated from the forehead by a cross groove. The Malay Dolphin. Steno Malayanus. Delphinus Malayanus, Lesson, Voi/. Coq. t. 9,/. 5. Hist. Cetac. 152. Schlegel, Abh. i. t. 1, 2,/ 2, t. 4,/ 3. D. Capensis, Rapp. Cetac. t. 1,f. 1, not Gray or Cur. D. plumbeus, Cuv. iJ. J. i. 288. F. Cuv. Cetac. 151. Mam. Lithog. t. D. a ventre roux, Voy. Pole Sud, t. 22,/ 2, t. 23,/ 3, 4. Grey ash above and below ; nose of skull about | of the entire length ; teeth -fl- Inhab. Indian Ocean. Length, entire, 5'llin. 80 in. „ of pectoral, .... 11 Width of tail, 11 1 The Skull of Dauphin a ventre roux, in the Paris Mu- seum, belongs to this species. The nose is very slender, attenuated. Palatal bone and intermaxillaries distinctly seen below ; intermaxillaries very convex, dense ; lower jaw very compressed in front; palate flat, rather convex on each side behind, very spongy. It came from Molucca. The skull in the Paris Museum marked D. plumbeus, Ma- labar, Dussumier, also belongs to this species; itmeasures as follows : — Length, 220, beak, 136, teeth-line, 12-0, width at notch, 4'4|^, symphysis of thelower jaw, 5" 6'", teeth, IJ-jt-, large ; beak, elongated, higher than wide, compressed in front ; triangle extending rather before the teeth-lines. Tliere is, in the Anatomical Museum of tlie Jardin des Plantes, also a skull of a fcetal specimen of this species, from Malabar, which is 12 inches long, with the beak 8 inches 4 lines long, and 2o wide at the notch. The bones are not united, the u])])er teeth are 36, they are as large as those of the adult skull, and all inclosed in a cartilage, and very close together. From this skull it is evident that these animals are born with the full number of teeth, which only elongate as they gradually develope. The symphysis of the lower jaw is 2" 6'" long. The Fronted Dolphin. Steno frontatus. Delphinus frontatus, Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. t. 21, f. 7, 8, t. '22, f 8. R. A. i. 288. D. Reinwardtii, Schlegel, Abh. i. 21, t. 2,/. 3, 4, t. 4,/ 7. Nose of skull about | of its entire length, three times as long as its width at the notch, rather compressed, rounded in front ; lower jaw subangular, and bent up at the end, united about ^ of its length ; teeth ^-^, often rather ru- gose. Inhab. Indian Ocean. Dimensions of skull in the British Museum. Length, entire, 20'6 inches & lines. „ of nose, 12"0 „ teeth-line, lO'O Width at notch, 310 „ at orbit, 7'9 „ of middle of beak, .... 20 „ of lower jaw, 17'0 „ of symphysis, 5'6 Var. 1. Lower jaw rather straighter below, and rather wider behind, teeth -If- Var. 2. Nose much compressed on the side and depress- ed above, rather larger, rather more than three times as long as wide at the notch, teeth, 14- Var. 3. Tooth-series rather longer, 10" 6"'; teeth i^, lower jaw like var. 1. D. Geoffroyi, Desm. An Inia has been confounded with this species. The Compressed-beaked Dolphin. Steno compressus. Delphinus compressus, Gray, Cat. Mam. B. M. Tab. 27. Skull. Nose of skull much compressed, attenuated at the tip, 4 the entire length, 2\ times as long as its width at the 44 notch ; teeth conical, acute, ||- ; head narrow, and rather compressed at the orbit. rnhab. ? We possess two skulls of this species, which is easily known from the former by being much more slender and more attenuated in front, and by the liead, though longer, being 2^ inches narrower over the orbit ; lower jaw nearly straight below, united for more than ^ its length. Length, entire, 20'6 inches and lines. „ ofnose 13 „ of lower jaw, .... 17 „ of symphysis, .... 64- Width of notch, "^ 3-6 „ at orbit, 6'9 This may be the same as D. rostiafiis, but the teeth are more numerous ; and Cuvier's figure, which he thought might be Breda's species, certainly much better repre- sents a common Indian species than this. Var. 1. Nose rather shorter and more depressed. The Attenuated-beaked Dolphin. Steno attenuatus. Tab. 28. Skull. Delphinus attenuatus, Gray, List Mam. B. M. Nose of skull -| of entire length l-^ the length of the skull, 2| the length of the width of the notch, slender, ta- pering in front ; intermaxillaries forming a long triangular part of the front of the palate ; vomer elongate, in middle of palate ; teeth ^. luhab. ? a. b. c. Length, entire, 15"9 in. 16'6 in. 15'6 in. „ ofnose, 8-9 100 9-3 „ of lower jaw, .... 13-3 .... 13-0 Breadth of temples, 6-0 6-5 6-1 „ of notch, 3-3 3-3 3'6 „ of middle of beak, \Q 1-7 I'S „ of intermaxillaries, O'Ol "1 I'lO The Cuban Steno. Steno fuscus. Tab. 26. Fig. 1. Foetus and Tongue. Black above and below, in spirits. Head conical ; gradually tapering into a rather long nose, without any separating groove, with five black whiskers on each side. Teeth ? Lihab. Cuba, W. S. MacLeay, Esq. This species is only known by a festal specimen in spirit, not in a very good state. Presented to the British Museum by W. S. MacLeay, Esq. Tt is very peculiar for the elongated tapering head, the pectoral fins are rather large, strongly falcate ; the dorsal rather beyond the middle of the back. The tongue is flat on the top, and nearly as broad as the space between the sides of the jaws ; it is entire on the edges of the sides, and slightly dilated in front, crenulated on the edge, and with a larger flat lobe in the middle of the tip. See t. 26,/. 1, a,l),c. Mr. Branston has sent me a specimen oi Beluga catodon, with the tongue in the head, in salt. The tongue is oblong, with a simple, slightly raised edge. It is figured in Plate 29, fig. 3. The tongue ap]3ears to have been drawn towards the gullet when the head was separated. It thus appears, that each of the different genera has a peculiar kind of tongue ; this is worthy of further investigation. The foetus of Phoca-na has two bristles on each side of the nose; as the animal grows, these bristles fall out, and each leaves a small pit on the side of the nose, which Klein {Hist. Piscium, i. 24) mistook for the nostrils, as has been well observed by Prof. Eschricht, 250. The following species require further examination. 1. Delphinus pseudodelphis, Weigm. Schreh. t. 378, skull. Teeth 44 or i|. Inhab. ? Mus. Leyden. " Skull in the form of D. Malayanus, but beak shorter, and teeth shorter and thinner, very like those of D. Del- phis. Palate not grooved. Symphysis of lower jaw rather long." This may be the same as the Steno attenuatus, but our copy of Schreber does not contain the plate referred to. 2. D. velox, Dussum. Cuv. R. A. i. 288. F. Cnv. Man. Lith. t. Cetac. 154. Teeth -|4 ; grey, lips and lower jaw whitish, F. Cuv. Teeth, ^4 ; nose rather more elongated. Cuvier. Inhab. Ceylon. 3. Delphinus Boryi, Desm. Mam. 515. Diet. Clas. H. N. t. m,/. 2. Inhab. Madagascar. (Coast of New Holland ?) 4. ? D. Bertini, Desm. from Duham. Pech. t. 3,/. 10. Cachalot? Bhiinv. No teeth in lower jaw, but has a beak. Inhab. .? 5. D. Chinensis, Desm. from Osbeck, Voy. Shining white. Inhab. Chinese seas. The following species have been named and figured by the sight caught of them when swimming ! D. cruciger, Quoy ^ Gaim. Voy. Uran. t. 12, f. 3, 4. D. albigenus, Quoy, I. c. t. \\,f. 2. D. rhinoceros, Quoy, I. c. t. 11,/. 1, all from New Holland. D. bivittatus. Lesson, perhaps the same as D. cruciger. D. lunatus, Lesson, Voy. Coq. t. \\,f. 4. D. leucocephalus. D. minimus and D. maculatus, Lesson, Voy. Coq. i. 183. The following species have been named onlv from fi- gui'es or very slight descriptions. 45 D. Senedetta, D. Commersouii, D. niger and D. Per- nettii, Lacep. D. Epiodon and D. uiongitori, Raffinesque. B. compressed. Symphysix of the lower jaw very long. Dorsal none. Teeth in both jaws. Fluviatile. d. Skull with the maxillary bones bent up in front of the blowers, and formiity a vault. The teeth compressed. The paddles fan-shaped, truncated at the end. Platanis- lina. Platanistina, Gray. Head convex, back compressed, curved up at the end. Teeth compressed. Dorsal none ; back keeled in the place of the fin, and obliquely truncate behind. Pectoral fan-shaped, truncated. The Son Sou. Platanista Gangetica. Delphinus Gangeticus. Lebeck, N. Schrift. Berlin, Aatur. iii. -280, t. 2. Home, Phil. Trans. 1818, 417, t. 20. Roxbu ryh , Asiatic Researches, vii. 170, t. Cuvier, Oss. Fos. V. t. 22, f. 8—10. Delphinorhynchus gangeticus, Lesson. Platanista gan- geticus. Gray, Illust. Indian Zool. t. F. Cue. Cetac. 252. Delphinus Shavvensis, Blainv. Jour. Phys. Desm. Diet. H. Nat. ix. 153, from spec, in Mus. Col. Sury. D. rostratus, Shaw, 514, from same specimen. Blackish lead-colour, rather paler beneath. Inhab. India, Ganges. Skull and specimen, British Museum. As the animal increases in age, the ends of the jaws become more turned up, and the teeth enlarge and become thicker at the base. e. Skull with the maxillary bones simple, expanded over the orbit. Teeth conical. Paddles ovate or oblony. Iniana. Synopsis of the Genera. 1. Inia. — Teeth rugose, the hinder ones with a rounder tubercle on the inner side. 2. PoNTOPORiA. — ■ Teeth cylindrical, conical, acute, curved. Inia, D'Orbigny. Delphinus, Desm. Delphinorhynchus, F. Cuv. Head rounded, convex. Nose produced, nearly cylindrical, hairy. Blowers oblique, nearly above the pectoral fins. Ear-hole distinct. Teeth numerous, ru- gose, grooved, permanent ; the front, hooked ; the hinder, close at the base, with a large rounded tubercle on the inner side. Dorsal fin none. I3ack keeled, sub-triangular behind. Body compressed behind. Pectoral fin large. The skull depressed, with the nose twice as long as the brain-cavity, compressed, with a groove along each side. Temporal cavity very large, edged above by a strong crest, and the orbital hole very short, roundish. Muzzle of the young hairy. The Inia. Inia GeofTroyii. Delphinus Geoifroyii, Desm. Mam. 512. D. Geoffroyensis, Blainv. Desm. N.Dict. H. A^. ix. 151. " D. a bee mince," Cuvier, Desm. Delphinorhynchus frontatiis, F. Cuv. Cetac. 121. Inia Boliviensis, D'Orbiyny, N. Ann. Mus. vii. t. 22, f. 3; cop. /'. Cuv. Cetac. lO'O, t. 10*, t. 11. Pale blue, reddish beneath ; fins and tail olive, some reddish, others blacker ; teeth 4I"tt- Inhab. Upper Peru or Bolino, River Moxos. Animal and skull Mus. Paris. Length, entire, 1 met. 4 centini. „ of muzzle, 23 „ to eye, 34 „ to blower, 40 „ to ears, 43 „ to pectoral fin, 52 „ to dorsal fin, 1 met. 30 „ ofjjecloral, 42 Breadth of pectoral, 18 „ of caudal, 50 Height of dorsal, 9 Circumference of thickest part, 1 met. 4 The specimen in the Paris Museum, which Desraarest described as Delphinus Geoffroyii, is evidently this spe- cies. It was taken from the Lisbon Museum, and is co- vered with paint. It has no dorsal, and it shows the teeth sufficiently to exhibit their rugose state, and the large and peculiar tubercle on the inner side of the hinder ones, which is characteristic of this genus, and which appear to have been overlooked by M. Desmarest, who describes them as " couique, obtuse, avec une sort de collet inferieure- ment et entre leur surface est rugueuse." The skull in the Paris Museum from M. D'Orbigny, has a prominent tubercle behind the blowholes ; eyebrows con- vex and rugose on the top ; beak with a slight groove on each side above ; lower jaw with scarcely any ridge on the sides ; the sj'mphysis long, occupying more than 5- the length of the lower jaw ; teeth large, regidar, hinder ones with a rounded, regular tubercle on the inner side. Length of skull .... 19-0 „ beak .... 120 „ symphysis .... 9'0 „ teeth line .... IPO Canadian Dolphin. Inia Canadensis. Tab. 5. Animal. Delphinus Canadensis, Desm. Mam. 516. Dauphin blanc du Canada, Duham. Pesch, ii. x. t. 10, /. 4. Inhab. Canada. Dr. Richardson informs me he has seen many pure white dolphins as high as Quebec, on the St. Lawrence, and he has also seen a white doljihin, about 6 feet long, in Hud- son's Bay ; the latter was probably a Beluga. M. Dc Blainville accidentally purchased in Paris the N 46 original drawing from which Duharael copied the front luilf of tlii.s aniniah It shows the appearance of a keel in the middle of the back, which replaces the dorsal fin. Tab. 5, is a copy of a tracing of this drawing, kindly sent me by M. De Blainville. It can scarcely be a Beluga. The external figure of this animal greatly resembles the Hyperoodon, and it agrees in the hinder position of the blower ; but the large size of the pectoral, and the absence of the dorsal, prevent it being regarded as a spe- cies of that genus. PoNTOPORiA, Graij. Skull roundish. Beak very long, compressed, with a strong groove on each side above. Eyebrow with a long, cylindrical crest. Lower jaw compressed, with a deep groove on each side. Symphysis very long. Teeth small, subcylindrical, smooth, rather hooked, acute. The PoNTOPORiA. Pontoporia Blainvillii. Tab. 29. Skull. Delphinus Blainvillii, Fremenville, Mus. Paris. White, with a black dorsal streak ; skull, with the tubercles behind the blowholes, broad, slightly convex ; eye-brows with a strong, longitudinal crest ; upper and lower jaw with a deep, well-defined ridge on each side ; teeth 44' small, conical, hooked, smooth ; symphysis more than J the length of the lower jaw. Inhab. Monte Video. Skull, Mus. Paris. 480 inches and lines. V2-6 8-0 .5-9 ~ 5-4 Length of animal „ skull „ beak „ symphysis „ teeth line According to Desmarest, Fremenville saw a dolphin on the coast of Brazil, which was 15 feet long, with a very convex forehead ; ashy, with a white streak on each side of the head, on the back, throat and belly. The Delphinus macrogenius, Fischer, Cuvier, 0.s.i. Fos.s. v. 312, t. 23, /. 4, 5, /. 9—11, appears to belong to this tribe. APPENDIX. During the time the Plates have been engraving, and the text printing, the following new materials have come into my hands, which I think may be a useful addition to the knowledge of these difBcult animals. Bal^enid.e. From the examination I have been able to make of the baleen of BaUeiioptera ro.strata, and of different masses of small blades of Bahcna australis, it would ap- pear as if there was, at least, in those two species, two series of Baleen on each side of the palate ; the external series being formed of large triangular blades placed at a certain distant apart, and the internal, in BaUcnoptern rostrata, foi'med of smaller, much thinner, triangular pieces, placed much closer together and forming a very dense screening apparatus; and in Balmna (uisiralis, the inner series is formed of numerous separate narrow strips of Whalebone, each ending in a pencil of hairs, which vary in size from that of small twine to that of tape, half an inch wide ; these are placed behind the others, and gradu- ally increase in size from the innermost, to the broad ex- ternal series. The Baleen or Whalebone, has generally been con- sidered as the teeth of the whale ; but this must be a mistake, for Professor Eschricht lias shown that the foetus of Mef/aptera Boops [Danish Trans. 1845, xi. t. 4), has numerous teeth on the edge of the jaw, though they are never developed. I am inclined to regard the Baleen as a peculiar development of hair in the palates of these ani- mals, and somewhat analogous to the hair found in the palates of the genus Lepus. The Baleen or AVhalebone, affords good characters for the separation of this family into sections. The Whalebone of the smooth-bodied whales without any back fins, is elongate, much longer than broad at the base, and gradually attenuated, and edged with a iringe of equal, lengthened, fine, soft bristles. The Baleen is inter- nally formed of a thin layer of fibres covered on each side with a thick coat of ' enamel,' when dr}- and out of tlie whale they are flat. The Whalebone of the plaited bellied whale with a hunch (Megaptera) or a dorsal fin (Bala^nop- tera), is short, broad, triangular, not much longer than broad at the base, and rapidly attenuated, and is edged with a series (sometimes, rather crowded) of elongate rigid unequal bristles like fibres, which become much thicker and more rigid near and at the tip, the Baleen is internally formed of one or two layers of thick fibres, covered on each side with a thin layer of enamel, and when dry and out of the palate they are curled up and somewhat spirally twisted. The Baleen of the Bahenw is alone called Whalebone (or rather If'halc-Jin, as it is usually called) in counncrce. The Baleen of the other genera of this family is called Finner-Jin 47 or Hiniipbnck-fiii. Thn wholesale dealers in Baleen, in the 'London Directory,' are called ]l'luite-Jin Mercltants, and whalebone occurs under tl»c name of Whale-tin in the Price-current. In the 'London New Price-current' for 1843, the South Sea Whale-Jin varied during that year from X'200 to £305 per ton, and there is no price named for Greenland IVh ale-Jin. Bal.ena. The Baleen or Whalebone, is narrow, elongate, linear, or very gi-adually tapering, fringed on the inner edge with numerous fine, soil, flexible fibres of a nearly imiform length, consisting internally of a thin series of several scries of fibres, covered on each side b_y a thick coat of enamel. Scoresby describes these animals as having a slight beard, consisting of a few scattered white hairs, surmounting the anterior extremity of both jaws. — Arct. Regions, i. 458. The fins or bones of each series together, are called a " side of bone," the largest are in the middle, from whence they gradually diminish away to nothing at each extremity: the largest fin on the side is called the " sample blade." Through the kindness of Messrs. Smith and Simmonds, and Mr. Smith of Messrs. W. Westall & Co., Whale-fin Merchants, I have been enabled to examine and compare ninnerous species of the Baleen received from the different countries, and to compare their peculiarities as exhibited during its preparation. The)' know in the trade three distinct kinds. I. The Greenland, from Greenland, Davies' Straits and various parts of the North Sea, whicli is the best. 2. The South Sea, or Black Jish whale-Jin brought by the South Sea Whalers. And, 3. The North West Coast, or American whale-Jin, which was first imported about five years ago, and at first sold for a high price, but it has now fallen, and is considered as only a large kind of South Sea ; but from the examination I have been able to make, 1 should be- lieve that these three kinds are each produced by very different species of whales. The Greenland has the hair on its edge generally strip- ped off, and is clean and bright when it is brought here ; but this may be from the care the North Sea whalers take in collecting and cleaning it (as described by Scoresby, Arctic Regions,!. 418), and the bones arebi'ought home in bundles about 100 weight each. On the other hand, the North West Coast and the South Sea, has the hair left on the edges, appears to be brought home in bulk, and is always covered with an ashy white soft laminar coat, looking like the rotted external layers of the enamel. This coat has to be scraped off with large knives before it is used or prepared, — and the surface after the scraping is not so po- lished and resplendent as that of the Greenland " fins." The three kinds are very different in shape. The outer edge of the Greenland is curved considerably; in that of the North-uest coast, it is much more straight ; and in that of the South Sea, almost quite straight. Figs. 3, 4 and 5, in Plate I, represent the three difl'ereut kinds in the same position, and on the same scale, being one-four- teenth of the natural length and breadth. The fil)res on the edge in the Greenland and Margined Wliales are \ cry fine, flexible and long, forming only a thin series; in the South Sen, they arc rather coarser; but in the North-tcest Coast, much tliiekcr and coarser ; quite bristly, and much more so towards the apex ; and they are more erect, and form a thicker series. The Whalebone is boiled for about twelve hours, to ren- der it soft before it is divided into strips — it then divides very easily. The smaller pieces, when softened, are split by a small machine into very narrow strips like bristles, and used for bristles to make brooms, &c. &c. For every purpose the Greenland " fins " are preferred, and last much longer, this is even the case with tlie false bristles ; and they will alone do for the finer work, such as the strips for platting for bonnets, the platting to make ladies riding-whips, or the covering of telesco])es and other tubes; the white strips for these purposes being taken Irom pale longitudinal lines on the enamel of the Greenland fins. The Right Whale. Balaena Mysticetus. Tab. \,f. 4. Baleen. The Baleen is very long, varying from 9 to 12 feet, linear, tapers very gradually, and of nearly the same mode- rate thickness iioui end to end, and covered with a po- lished grey or greenish black enamel. The internal fibres occupy a small part of the substance and are of a fine uniform texture, and are black ; while the enamel which forms by far the greater part of the substance is generally' blackish ; but it is sometimes, especially on the inner side of the " fin," paler in longitudinal stripes. The fibres on the edge, like the internal fibres of which it is a continuation, are very fine and black. The " fins" or pieces of Baleen, are flat, or as the merchant calls them "kindly," so that they produce straight pieces fit for the better kind of parasols and umbrellas, &c., when cut into strips. Some twenty-five years, a ship arrived with the " fins " taken from one " fish," which was peculiar for all being of a yellowish white colour, and for having the fibres as well 'as the enamel of this pale colour. There is a single " fin" of this animal, nearly 9 feet long, now in possession of Mr. Brunies, (6, Percy Circus, Spafields). It agrees in every other respect with the common Greenland Baleen, so that probably the fish was an albino. A .specimen of the Greenland whale, 41 feet long, was stranded in Caernarvon Bay, May 4, 1846, and towed into Liverpool. The North West Whale. (Balaena Japonica) .' Tab. \,f. 2. Baleen. The Baleen is nearly as long as the Greenland, varying from 7 to 12 feet long, and is slender ; but for the same length it is nearly twice as thick in the substance, and it gradually diminishes in thickness towards the ends. The enamel, when the outer coat is removed, is not so polished as that of the Greenland, and when cut through, the centre fibres are thicker, tubular, and occupy about ■J to ^ of the thickness, much more in proportion than they do on the Greenland fins, and the enamel and fibre are coarser in texture and much more brittle. The fins or blades of this Whalebone are generally 48 llexiious, or " nol kindly," so that when cut into strips, th{;y have the defect of being variously bent, and taj:)ering towards tlie end, which, with their brittleness, greatly re- duces their value. The Cai'E Whale, Baliena australis. Tab. 1,/. 3. Baleen. The Baleen is about 6 feet long, elongate triangular, rather ra]iidly tapering to a fine point. The internal fibres are rather coarse, but much finer than the former. 1'here are sometimes imported with these Baleen, a few yellowish white " fins," which seldom exceed 2 feet in length ; in these, the fibres as well as the enamel is white, they are not so transparent as the white Greenland fins before referred to, but have the same coarse texture, and are brittle like the black southern specimens, and as they do not take so good a polish, they cannot be used for making shavings for platting, &c. There has lately been brought by the South Sea ships, several hundred weight of a very small kind of Whalebone, which is implanted in the remains of the palate, in three or four series gradually diminishing in size towards the inner- most series ; each piece is linear, compressed, almost t to g^ of an inch wide, rounded on the edge, varying from 5 to 8 inches in length, and ending in a tuft of black hair-like fibres ; in texture, colour, and external appearance it ex- actly agrees with the Baleen of the Southern Whales, and 1 suspect it must form the inner part of the " screening apparatus " of that animal ; and if that is the case, the ex- istence of these separate pieces near the middle of the roof of the mouth will form a very peculiar character in this kind of whale. I am further strengthened in this belief b)' perceiving amongst some short pieces of " Southern Whale-fin," probably forming the end part of a side, at the inner or shorter or palatine edge of each blade, two or three small separate linear processesof Whalebone eudingaparcel of hairs similar to the pieces and form, above described, but of a smaller size and rather more v\'avy. Scoreshy, who gave a very detailed account of the position of the Baleen in Greenland Whales, [Arcl. Reg. i. 457, and ii. 415), does not mention anything of the kind in that animal. The Baleen of this animal is sometimes called the Whale- fin of the " Black Fish," the name that is sometimes ap- plied to the PJiyseier Microps. It may be this species that Beale and other South Sea whalers refer to under the name of Black Fish. M. Schlegel and F. Cuvier, are much distressed because in describing the Delphimis Capensis, I wrote by mistake shortness instead of length, [seeFtniii. Japan, 13; F. Cuvier, Cetac. 147). Yet, M. Schlegel is liable to the same mis- take. Thus in p. 23, he has evidently written B. Antarc- liqiie for B. Arclique, and the Plates 26, Bahcnoplera Ant- arctica, though it is the same animal as Balaiiia Antarc- tica, in p. 27 ; but if such oversights are to be constantly referred to, we should have little else to do, — and as to M. F. Cuvier, Schlegel has pointed out many important mis- takes in his description of the Cape Whale. — Faun. Jap. 2. In the translation of Cuvier's Animal Kingdom, published by Henderson (which is a reprint of the American transla- tion), the account of fishing for the Cape Whales at Table Bay, is placed under the Manate or Sea-Cows, ap- parently because " Cow or female whale are principally taken!" p. 182. In the Museum of the Bristol Institution, Mr. Stutchbury informs me there are two lower jaws of the "Cape Whale," one 15 the other 16 feet long — and the ribs and scapula. Mr. WaiTvick prepared the skeleton of the young one mentioned in the text, and sold it to M. Boissenaux of Paris. Mr. Warwick has kindly sent me a measurement of a female whale of this species taken at False Bay Fishery, said to be full-grown, and considered by the whalers as of large size : — Ft. In. " Total length .... 68 0 Height of the body .... 14 0 Length of head .... 16 0 Width of tail .... 15 6 Length of ribs .... 10 6 Diameter of gullet .... 2 I could not pass my hand through it. Number of vertebrae 52. From all the conversations I have had with the whalers, I do not think the Cape Whale ever attains the size of the Greenland species. These whales of the Cape, I constantly found covered with TuhicineUa Balce- iiarum and Coronula Bahenaris ; but the Spermaceti Whale was seldom or never so covered : they occur prin- cipally on the head, where they are crowded, and but rarely on the body, and then only single scattered ones." Western Australian Whale. Balasna marginala. Tab. 1,/". 1. Baleen. The Baleen very long, slender (nearly eight times as long as wide at the base), pure white, thin, with a rather broad black edge on the outer or straight side. Inhab. W. Australia. This species is only known from three laminae of Baleen which have been kindly given to me by Mr. Warwick. It is so much smaller and broader, compared with its width at the base, and so differently coloured from the Baleen of any of the other species, that I feel called on to consider it as distinct. Length, 20 inches, width at the base, 2 inches 6 lines. The following are the measurements of the samples of the different kinds of" Whale -Jin''' in the British Museum. Greeuland. North Western. Southern. In. L. In. L. In. L. Length of blade, entire 144 0 .... 112 0.... 90 0 Widthatba.se .... 11 0.... 10 0.... 9 0 „ at middle .... 6 0 .... 4 0 .... 3 6 „ at f length 2 4 .... 2 0 „ of hair at end 10 0 .... 7 0 .... 7 0 Thickness at base .... 4 4 .... 4 5 .... 0 ^ ,, at middle „ I the length .... Bal.enoptera. The Baleen of this genus, and of the hump-back, is short. 4 4 .... 0 4i... 0 n 0 2^... 0 3^.... 0 2 49 broad, triangular, rather longer than broad at the base, and edged with a series of elongate, unequal, bristle-like fibres, which become nnich thicker and more rigid near the upper tip. It is internally formed of one or two crowded layers of thick tubular fibres, covered on each side with a thin coat of enamel, which becomes thinner and thinner near the edge, where the fibres are free ; it is always twisted, and is only used to split into false bristles, but in this they are inferior to the Southern or lowest kind of Baleen of the Balanuc. These animals arc often called Razor-backs, by the sailors. Balaenoptera sulcata Jacob, {Dublin Journ, Science, 1825, 333.) Dr. Jacob attempts to prove that Balmm Boops, B. ros- trata, B. musculus, and B.jnbaries, are but one species; and he has taken considerable trouble to bring together the measurements and proportions of the different specimens which have been described. Hegives an outlineof his specimens, andcontrastsit" with an outline of Hunter's Piked Whale, drawn according to the measurements given by him;" and he observes, " that the proportions of the body (of these two specimens) vary in a remarkable manner, not only as to the situation of the umbilicus and other parts, but in the breadth of the tail, the length of the fin and arms. This, however, is what should be expected, supposing Mr. Hunter's to have been a j'oung animal, because such proportional superiority in size of the extremities is characteristic of the earlier periods of life." In the following table (observes Dr. Jacob), the first column contains the dimensions of each part in feet and inches ; the second, the proportion which each measure- ment bears to the entire length of the animal, which is sup posed to be 1,000. Breadth of tail Hunter, 17 feet. Scoresby, 17 ft. 6 in. Neils, 43 feet. Sibbald, 46 feet. Dr. Jacob, 70 feet. Sibbald, 78 feet. 5 0 1 2 4 8 0 4 4 49 3 3 0 5 ; 1 0 2 6 1 0 294 137 470 254 279 194 24 58 147 58 4 6 2 0 4 6 3 6 0 6 1 3 3 0 0 9 257 114 257 200 28 71 171 42 10 6 5 0 12 0 14 0 1 6 2 6 2 6 232 116 279 34 58 58 9 6 5 0 14 0 8 6 10 0 6 8 206 108 304 184 217 144 14 0 7 0 30 0 20 0 20 0 15 0 3 0 2 6 3 6 1 6 200 100 428 285 285 214 42 35 50 21 18 6 10 0 13 0 3 0 ' 2 0 3 0 237 128 166 38 25 38 Length of arm Navel to tail Anus to tail Gape Horny plates Breadth of fin Bladebone to snout Eye to ear Height of fin Professor Eschricht of Copenhagen, who has devoted much time to the study of the anatomy and development of the Northern species of this genus, and has published several papers in the Danish language on the subject, in 'Transactions of the Danish Academy' for 1845-1846, has kindly translated for me the following passage in his last published paper, as the then result of his examinations : — " Of all that has been communicated in this chapter, it appears to me to be proved, that amongst the Fin whales, at least, three different species have their abode in the Northern Seas : — I. In the Group of tite Longimana. 1. The Greenland Keporkak. B. Boops, 0. Fab. B. longimana, Rudolphi. II. In that of the Short-handed. 2. The Norwegian Vaaga kval, B. minor ; and 3. The common great short-handed, B. Boops. To be almost proved that besides there exists, 4thly. A peculiar large short-handed species. The Ba- Icenopterus Musculus. And, at least, it is highly probable, that — Stilly. Tlie Greenlandian Kepokartrak is the represen- tative of a particular form : and even that — 6lhly. The Greenlandian Tikagalik or Balcena rostrata, O. Fab., may be a different species from the Norwegian " Vaagekval'."— Eschricht, Ath Mem. p. 157." M. Eschricht is now engaged in examining the speci- mens of Balcenoptera, to be seen in the different Museums of Northern Europe, to attempt to settle the synoniraa of o 50 the species. He has found most distinct characters of the species in the formation of the bones of the neck, the ribs, the colour of tlie body, and the arms. The account of this genus, in the former part of this paper, was only derived from the examination of a single specimen, and the comparison of the descriptions and remarks of preceding authors. Since that time, by the ex- amination of Professor Eschricht's paper, and from per- sonal communication with him, and the examination of the several skeletons of this genus, in diiferent collections, I am satisfied that there are several distinct species which may be thus distinguished. * The pectoral, ^, the dorsal, f the length from the nose. Vertebra, AG or 48, lateral process of second vertebra ring-like. Bala;noptera. Pike Whale. Balsenoptera rostrata. Tab. 2. Skull, t. 1,/. 5. Baleen. 'QaXsana.rosiTdXdi, Midler, Prod. O. Fab. Faun. Groen. 40. Hunter, Phil. Trans. Ixxvii. t. 20—23, cop. E. m. t. Rorqualus rostratus, Dekay, Zool. New York Mus. 7-30, t. 30,/. 1. B. musculus, part. Flem. B. A. 30. B. Boops, part, Flem. B. A. 31. Balffinoptera acuto-rostrata, Lacep. Scoresiy, Arct. Reg. i. 485, t. 1.3,/. 2. Balaenoptera microcephala, Brandt. Rorqualus minor, Knox, Jardine, Nat. Lib. 142, t. 7. B. borealis rostrata, Fischer, Sijn. s. 25. B. Boops, Cat. Col. Surg. 171, n. 1,199, skeleton. Rorqualus Boops, F. Cur. Cetac, 321, t. 20. Balaenoptera Physalus, Gray, I. c. 18. Vaagekral, Eschricht's Danish Acad. xi. t. 1, 2, and p. 286 — 299. Foetus and anat. Black, beneath reddish white. Pectoral fin, white near the base above. Baleen, broadly triangular, " white," Fab. " White and short," ^ho.i-.— Length, 20—30 feet. Inhab. North Sea. New York Bay, De Kay. Valognes, France, Geoffroy. Greenland, called Tikagulik. Norway, called Vaagekval. Scoresby says, " the Baleen of the Spitzbergen specimen is thin, fibrous, of a yellowish white colour, and semitrans- parent, almost like lantern-horn," Arct. Reg. i. 486. The Greenland skull here figured, is 46"6 inches long, 2B'0 at the beak, 23'0 inches wide at the orbit, 15'6 at the notch, and 10'6 in the middle of the nose. The nose is rather wider in proportion than in the skull of the whale figured by Ctivier, Oss. Fos. v. t. 26,/ 1, 2, 3. The nose of the skull is elongate triangular, with straight regularly con- verging sides, not quite twice as long as the width at the notch. ** Pectoral Jin \, dorsal Jin f, the length from the nose; back gray. Vertebra;, 54, lateral process of nuchal ver- tebra ring-like [pierced). Physalus. The Razor Back. Balaenoptera antiquorura. Razor-back of the Whalers. " B. Physalus, Linn. B. Gibbar, Lacep.'" — Scoresby, Arct. Reg. t. 479. ? Great Northern Rorqual, Kno.v. Jardine, Nat. Lib. t. 6, skeleton. Rorqual de la Mediterranea, Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 370, t. 26,/ 5, skull. Balaena antiquorum, Fisher, Syn. 525. Balcenoptcra musculus, F. Cuv. Cetac. 335. Eschricht's MSS. (not Linn). Balein de Sainte Cyprien, Companyo Mem. 4to, 1830. Carcassonne and Farines Mem. F. Cuv. I. c. 337. ? Balaena rostrata. Rudolphi, Abhand, K. Akad. Berlin, 1822, 27, t. 1—5. Skeleton, &c., (31 feet). ? B. Boops, Albers, Iron, Anat. t. 1, (skeleton, 29 feet). Camper ate, 74, t. 11, 13. Skull. Slate-gray, beneath whitish. Baleen slate-coloured, under edge blackish, inner edge pale streaked. Inhab. North Sea. Berwick, 1831, Dr. King. Ham- burg, Rudolphi. Coast of Hampshire, 1842. Skeleton at Black-gang Chine. Its colour is a pale bluish black or dark bluish gray, in which it resembles the suckling of B. myslicetus, [Act. Reg. 479). Bluish black on the back, bluish gray on the belly. Baleen, 4 feet long, thick, bristly and narrow. Length 105 feet, fins, long and narrow. Act. Reg. 481. There is a nearly perfect skeleton of this species (which I have lately visited in company with Professor Eschricht) exhibited at Black-gang Chine, the Isle of Wight, which was caught in April, 1842, near the Needles. It was, when first found, dark gray above, and whitish beneath. The Baleen is slate-coloured with white streaks, on the near or inner side ; nearly black and with a few darker sti'eaks near the outer or straight side. It was 75 feet long. The skull is 16 feet 7 inches long, 5 feet wide at the notch, and the edge of the beak from the notch is 12 feet long. The lower jaw, 16 feet 9 inches ; the upper arm-bone, 2 feet, and the larger fore-arm bone is 33 inches long. In this skeleton, the scapula and the chest-bones are wrongly placed, and the bones of the carpus and finger; and the lower processes of the vertebrae as well as some of the smaller parts of the head are deficient. There are seven cervical vertebrae; the first, very broad, with a very large lateral process, on each side pierced with a hole near the body ; the second is higher than it ; and the three following have a ring-like or pierced lateral process, which Professor Eschricht re- gards as one of the best characters of the species. There are 14 thoracic vertebrae. The ribs are long; the first, simple, shortish and broadish, the rest almost of equal size and length, the last being very nearly as long as the others. The lumbar vertebra? are fifteen, with considerably thicker bodies than the others. Caudal vertebrae eighteen, ex- clusive of those contained in the fin of the tail, which is preserved entire. Professor Eschricht has two heads of this species at Copenhagen from Greenland. There is a head and some vertebrae at Paris, and some vertebrae at Berlin, and the St. Cyprian specimen, which was at Lyons in 1835. M. Cuvier refers the drawing made from a specimen caught at Isle St. Marguerite, near Cannes, in March, 1797, which is engraved by Lacepede, [Cetac. t. '5), to this spe- 51 cies ; it was CO feet long. The upper part, and pectoral fin, are represented as black with gray reflections, and beneath white, Lacepi'de, /. C & 7 ; and Cuvier, Oss. Foss. t. 2G, /". 5, represents the head of this specimen. M. Companyo described the animal as deep siatc-gray, the throat and lateral part of the pectoral fin glistening white. Vertebroe 60, the 15 lumbar are very large. The skeleton was at Lyons in 1835. From the form of the first vertebra; in the figure, I am inclined to believe that Knox's Great Rorqual belongs to this species. The colour of Albert and Rudolphis specimen is not stated, but they differ from Hunter's and Knox's account of the B. rostrata, in having 34 & 35 lumbar and caudal vertebra;. Professor Eschricht considers Albert's specimen the same as Hunter's. I have in the text (p. 20), re- garded Rudolphi's specimen as the type of a species which I have called B. laticeps. It may be only a syuo- nyma of B. rostrata, but the skeleton requires to be com- pared. *** Pectoral Jin \, dorsal fin f , t]ie length from nose. Back black, lateral process of two nuchal vertebrce entire. Vertebrw, 62, 64. Rorqualus. The Boops. Balajnoptera Boops. 1. Balaena tripenni quae rostrum acutum habet, Sib- bald, Paheog. 29, t. \,f D. Pike-headed Whale,' Penn. B. Zool. iii. 40. B. Boops, Linn. S. N.'i.lQG. B. borealis Far. Boops, Fisher, Syn. 524. Balasnoptera jubartes, Lacep. 2. Balaena tripenni que maxillum inferiorem rotundum, &c. Sibbald, Palaog. 33, t. 3. [Edit. 1792), 78, t. 3, Round-lipped Whale, Pennant, Quad. iii. 42. B. musculus, Linn. S. N. i. 106. B. borealis musculus, Fisher, Syn. 524. B. rorqual, Lacep. 3. Fin-whale, Neil, IVern. Trans, i. (1811), 201. Bala;na sulcata. Walker. MSS. ? Neil, Wern. Trans. i. 212. Balcena sulcata arctica, Schlegel, Veshand Nederl. Ins. i. 1828, t. 1,2. Abhand, t. 6. 4. Baleinoptere d' Ostende, Van der Linden. Bahenop- tere Bru.vell, 1828. Duhar. Osteographia, ^c. Brii.v. 1828, t. Van Breda en letter bode, 1827, 341, Scharjfs drawing of Ostend JVfiale, t. copied. Great Northern Rorqual, R. borealis, " luesson," Jardine, N^at. Lib. 125, t. 5, firom Scharff. B. borealis, Fisher Syn. 524. Above, black ; beneath, whitish ; pectoral, ^ the length; black, above. " Baleen, black," Sibbald. Length .... 78 feet. Pectoral .... 10 " Back, deep black, where the epidermis had separated; belly and round the se.xual parts white. End of the nose with a small tuft of 9 much-divided hairs, connected by a membrane at the base." Inhab. North Sea. Scotland, Sibbald, Neil. Ostend, Van Breda. The description in Jardine, is compiled from the ac- counts of Knox, Scoresby andLacepede; and hence in- cludes several species. Var. ? " Black above, beneath white. Pectoral black. Dorsal and caudal with white scar on the edge. Baleen of the first part of the series, white ; of the rest, blackish blue, the colour changing suddenly from one to the other. Balenoptera a bee. Ravin. Ami. Set. Nat. x. 266, ^ 11, XV. 337, t. 9, young male. Inhab. coast of France, Somme," Ravin. The Southern Finner. Baloenoptera australis. Lesson, {Tab. Reg. Anim. i. 202), gives the name of Balcenoptera australis, to the " Fin-back of the Whalers of the South Sea." It is not possible to know if he intends this species or the Megapleron Poeskop. There has lately been imported from New Zealand a quantity of finner-fins which are all yellowish white ; this doubtless indicates a different species, which may be called Balmnoptera antarctica. I have also received from Mr. Smith, specimens of what is called in trade Bahai Finner. This Baleen is black, the fibres on the edge of the larger fins are purplish brown, and of the smaller or terminal ones paler brown. They are 35 inches long by ll^- inches wide ; and the smaller, 10 inches long, and 4 inches wide at the base. This is so different in appearance fi-om the other Baleen of this genus, that I propose to call it Bal 1 2 6 4 1 8 1 8 Length from tip of lower jaw to anterior part of flipper .... .... 5 „ of flipper .... .... 2 Width of flipper .... .... .... 0 Length from anterior part of flipper to vent 8 „ from end of tail to posterior part of dorsal fin „ from end of tail to posterior part of dorsal fin Breadth of dorsal fin Length of dorsal fin Breadth of tail Depth of tail Length of orifice of vent Fig. 2. is the detail of the tail. Fig. 3. the blowers. The skeleton of this specimen is preserved in the Bristol Institution. Mr. W. Thompson has given in the Ann. Sj May. Nat. Hist. 1846, 150, t. 4, iv. 375, the following description and measurement of a recently caught specimen; he calls it H. Bulzkopf. " Blackish lead hue, merely a lighter shade beneath, and not white. Teeth, two on each side, in front loosely covered by the gums ; the front pair smaller ; blower, slightly cres- centic, pointed directly towards the head, and the eyes on the same vertical plane ; eyes round ; " a male." no. 1. 3- Length, entire, straight .... 20*4 „ over curve .... 23"4 „ of nose .... "11 „ of gape .... 1-7 „ to eye .... 31 „ to pectoral fin .... 5' 11 „ of pectoral fin .... 2'2 „ to dorsal fin .... 10"9 „ of dorsal at base .... \7 Girth, greatest .... .... ir6 Width of pectoral .... .... 7 „ of caudal .... .... 5"6 Length of dorsal .... .... I'O Dr. Jacob, in his description of Cetodiodon Hunteri, Dublin Phil. Jour. 1825, observes, there are no teeth in the palate. There is a skeleton in Mus. Col. Surg. Dublin ; a skull. Royal Dublin Society ; and a skull in the Museum of the School of Anatomy, Peter's Street, Dublin. He further remarks — The four skulls in Dublin belong to one spe- cies, and have two teeth in lower jaw, hid in the gums. Fig. 4 and 5 of the same plate, represent one of the skulls of this species in the Dublin Museum, from a drawing kindly communicated by R. Ball, Esq. There is a skeleton in the Museum of the Edinburgh University. Mr. Thompson (Mag. Nat. Hist. 1838, 221), considers Hunter's and Boussard's cetacean as identical, and Dai's the male of the same species. He describes a specimen stranded near Hull, in 1837; it has two strong, robust teeth at the extremity of the lower jaw, covered and 53 entirely concealed by the gums. The skull coiTcsponded in its general form with the figures in Bell's work ; but the rise of the back part of the head is larger in proportion to the anterior rise than in that figure. The skull measures from the snout to the base of the front rise 9 inches ; from thence across the rise to the base of the second rise 1 foot ; from thence across the hinder rise to the neck, 1 ft. 11 inches. The length of the skeleton was 17 ft. 6 in.; ver- tebra', 39 ; viz., 2 cervical, 9 dorsal, with ribs ; 20 lumbar and 8 caudal. The skeleton of this specimen is in the Museum of the Hull Philosophical Society. The Sowerby's Ziphius. Ziphius Sowerbiensis. 1 find the following description of the skull of this spe- cies, under the name of D. So/rerfiieiisis, Blainv. "Tele osscus la machoire superieure est plus courte et in- fininient plus etroite que Finferieure quilarecoit; en outre cette machoire inferieure est arrae a chaque cote et au mi- lieu de son bord d' un seul dent tres fort confirme et di- rige obliquement en arriere. L'orifice de le vent est en croissant dont les cornes sont tournee en avant." — Blaiii. Desw. Diet. H. N. xx. 177. Catodon. The figure of the Sperm Whale in Duhamel, Pes. iv. /. 15,/. 3, is good for the form and blower, and has the " taqiiet " marked ; but a fin has been added below, be- tween th(^ vent and tail, in the jjosition of the anal fins of fishes ! in /. Tiiis author lias figured and describeit. Deser. Amm. p. 68, et Icon. ined. interrupted white bauds; breast and upper part of abdo- 36, 37 a/?rf 38. , , ^ r. • ., , , > ™6" rufous brown, spotted with rufous white ; abdomen New Zealand Falcon, Lath. Geii. Syn. i. 57 [not pi. 4). ^nd under tail coverts rufous white. F. Novae Zealandia?, Gmel. Sy.st. Nat. 268: Lath. hid. Yuiuuj. Upper surface blackish brown, with the back Inn. 1. 28. ^f neck, back, wings and tail banded with greyish or ru- F. brunnea, Gould, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1837, p. 139. foyg ^.jjite . ti^.o^j „.i,jie ; breast rufous white with oblon.' F. austrahs, Homb. et Jacq. Ann. des Set. 1841, p. 312: gp^js ^f brown ; sides brown spotted with white ; abdo" Voy. de la Pole Slid. Ots. f. 1. uien while with oblong brown marks ; thighs pale rufous Blackish brown ; eyebrows, line on each cheek and with dashes of brown. B Length, 1 foot 5| inches; hill from gape, 11 lines; wings 10| inches ; tarsi 2\ inches. Length of female, 1 foot 7^ inches ; bill from gape, 15 lines; wings llf inches ; tarsi 2| inches. Forster's specimens were taken in Queen Charlotte's Sound and Dusky Bay : according to him, the young is called Kari-area. The native names of Kahu and Kauaua are also referred to this bird. Great confusion has hitherto existed in regard to this species, owing to Latham having given a figure (with doubt) of the Milvago leucurus, or Falco australis of Gme- lin, which has caused that bird to be considered the Falco Novaj Zealandia;, but this is not the case. Latham took his description from the three figures of Forster referred to above. The sexes vary much in size, and the adult spe- cimens of each sex lose the transverse interrupted bands on the back and wings ; and become of an uniform dark chocolate black. The Expedition brought several speci- mens of this bird, both from New Zealand and Auckland Island, which enable me to identify the description and drawings. Mr. Percy Earl obtained specimens at Otago, South Island. Subfamily 2. CircincB. Circus assimilis. Circus assimilis, Jard. and Selbifs III. Orn. pi. 51. GohUVs B. of Aitstr. pi. Black brown, feathers of the head and back of neck broadly mai-gined on the sides, and the tips of those of the back, rufous white ; greater wing-coverts silvery grey bar- red with black ; quills black, with the outer webs silvery grey barred with black ; tail-coverts white, marked on each feather near the tip with a bar of rufous ; tail silvery grey with six bars of brown black ; under surface rufous white, marked down the middle of each feather with brown, es- pecially on the breast. Female. Brown, with pale edges ; feathers of the head and back of neck margined with rufous ; quills and ter- tials blackish brown, with the outer webs silvery brown ; tail-coverts white with an irregular mark of rufous on each feather ; tail silvery grey tinged with rufous, with six iiTe- gular bands of dark brown, margined above and below with rufous white, the silvery gvey becoming rufous on the out- er feathers; under surface rufous brown, margined on the sides of each feather with rufous white ; under side of tail buflf. Young. Dark auburn brown, with pale edges ; back of neck varied with white, slightly tinged with rufous ; upper tail-coverts rufous : under surface paler than the upper ; quills black. Length, 1 foot 9 inches ; bill from gape, 1 inch 2 lines ; wings, 1 foot 4 inches ; tarsi, 3 inches 5 hnes. Length of female, 1 foot 11 inches; bill from gape, 1 inch 7 lines; wings, 1 foot 4f inches; tarsi, 3 inches 9 lines. The Expedition's collection contains three specimens of this bird, all marked as obtained in New Zealand. The descriptions of the male and of the young were ta- ken from specimens brought by Mr. Percy Earl. They were shot at Waikouaiti and Otago, and were considered rare birds; they are now deposited in the British Museum. Family, Steigid.e. Subfamily 1. Surninm. Athene Nov^ Seelandi^e. Strix fulva, Forst. Descr. Anini. p. 71, ef Icon. ined. 39. New Zealand Owl, Lath. Gen. Si/n. Siippl. 48. S. nova; Seelandise, Gmel. Syst. Nat. 296 : Latli. Ind. Orn. i. 65. Noctua Zealandica, Quay et Gaim. Voy. de VAstrol. Zool. i. 168. Ois. t. 2,/. 1. Brown, feathers of nape spotted with fulvous ; wing- coverts, interscapulars spotted with white or pale fulvous ; quills brown, spotted on the outer webs with white and banded on the inner with greyish brown ; tail brown, banded and tipped with the greyish brown; under tail-co- verts pale fulvous ; forehead and eyebrows streaked with fulvous ; round the bill white ; throat and breast dark brown streaked with fulvous ; side feathers banded with white. Length, 11 inches; bill from gape, 10 lines; wings, 8 inches ; tarsi, 1 inch 5 lines. Forster gives Queen Charlotte's Sound as the habitat of this species, and the name of Herooroo. Quoy and Gai- mard's specimen was taken in Tasman's Bay, and they re- cord the native name as Eou Hon. Kou Kou, Kao Kao, and Ruru Ruru have been published as the names of these birds by other authors. Specimens of this bird were procured by the Expedition during their stay at New Zealand. Athene albifacies. Plate 1. Dark brown, each feather margined on the sides at the tip with fulvous ; quills and tertials brown, spotted on the outer webs with white and marked on the inner with obso- lete bands ; tail dark brown, with five bands and the tip of each leather rufous white ; forehead and cheeks white, with the shaft of each feather black ; tarsi covered with white feathers slightly tinged with rufous ; toes covered with scattered white hairs. Length, 1 foot 3|- inches ; bill from gape, 1 inch 4 lines; wings, 11 inches ; tarsi, 2 inches 5 lines. The specimen formed part of Mr. Peixy Earl's collec- tion; and is now deposited in the British Museum. It was obtained at Waikouaiti, South Island ; where it was known to the natives by the name of Wekau. It is sup- posed, by Mr. P. Earl, not to exist in the North Lsland. Family, Alcedinid^. Subfamily 1. Halcyonlncc. Halcyon vagans. Plate 1*. Alcedo cyanea, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 76, et Icon, ined. 59. Sacred Kingfisher, Lath. Gen. Syn. ii. 612. A. sacra, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i. 453 : Lath. Ind. Orn. 251. Halcyon sanctus? Vigors et Hor.sf. Linn. Trans, xv. 206. A. vagans. Less. Voy. de la Coq. Zool. i. 694 : Id. Man. d'Orn. ii. 89. Crown of the head, back and wing-coverts deep sea- green ; ]ower part of back, tail-coverts, and a broad line from the eye to the hind head, vcrditer-grcen ; quills and tail black, more or less margined with bright blue ; broad collar round the neck white, slightly tinged with buff, and some of the leathers narrowly mai'gined with black, which colour also forms a half collar both above and below the white one ; breast and all the under surface rufous white, the feathers of the breast slightly margined with black. Bill black, lower part of the under mandible white. Total length, J)f inches ; bill, 25- inches ; wings 4 inch- es ; tarsi, C lines. " Habitat in insula Australi Novae Zeelandia3, victitat pisciculis, hclicibus, chamis et cancris littore ab a3stu ma- ris relictis ; Forsler. The native name of this bird has been variously given by different authors, viz., Ghotarre, Kotoretare, Kotaritari, Kotare-popo. The Expedition's specimen was marked as from the Bay of Islands. Halcyon cinnamominus. Halcyon cinnamominus, Swains. Zool. Illustr. ii. pi. 67. Voy. de la Coqu. Zool. i. /). 696. Delicate fawn colour; back, wings and tail changeable blue green; ears sea green and dusky, united to a narrow black nuchal collar. Length, 10 inches; bill from ga])e, 2^ inches; wings, 4 inches. This species was originally recorded by Mr. Swainson as from New Zealand ; Mr. Gould considers it as an Aus- tralian species ; while M. Lesson remarks that " Get oi- seau parait habiter toutes les parties boreales et orientales de la Nouvello Hollande, les iles de la Nouvelle Zelande, de la Caledonie, des Hebrides, de Salomon, la Nouvelle Guiuee et les Moluques." Family, Upcpid^. Subfamily 1. UpupiiKe. Neomorpha Godldu. Neomoqjha acutirostris, et N. crassirostris, Gould, Syn. Austr. Birds : Birds of Australia, pt. \ii. pi. N. Gouldii, G. R. Gray, List of Genera of Birds, 2nd edit. p. 15. Uniform black, glossed with green, with a broad band of white at the end of the tail. Each gape furnished with a rounded orange wattle. Length, 1 foot 9^^ inches ; bill from gape, 4 inches 3 lines ; wings, 8 inches 3 lines ; tarsi, 3 inches 2 lines. Length, 1 foot 7j inches ; bill from gape, 2 inches 3 lines ; wings, 8 inches ; tarsi, 3 inches 2 lines. Through information furnished by a friend of Mr. Gould, we learn that " these birds, which the natives call Elba (or Huia), are confined to the hills in the neighbourhood of Port Nicholson [i. e. the Torirua range of mountains], whence the feathers of the tail, which are in great request among the natives [being highly prized as ornaments for the ear], are sent as presents to all parts of the island. The natives regard the bird with the straight and stout beak as the male, and the other as the female. In three specimens shot this was the case, and both birds are al- ways together. These fine birds can only be obtained with the help of a native, wlio calls them with a shrill and long-continued whistle, resembling the sound of the native name of the species. After an extensive journey in the hilly forest in search of them, I had at last the pleasure of seeing four alight on the lower branches of the trees near which the native accompanying me stood. They came quick as lightning, descending from branch to branch, spreading out the tail, and throwing up the wings. Their food consists of seeds and insects. Of their mode of nidification the natives could give no information. Tlie species is apparently becoming scarce, and will probably soon be exterminated." Gould's Birds of Australia. Family, MeliphagidjE. Subfamily, Meliphngince. Peostiiemadera nov.e Seelandle. Certhia cincinnata, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 78, et Icon, ined. 61. Poe Bee-eater, Lath. Gen. Syu. ii. 682. Merops novaj Seelandia;, Gmel. Syst. Nat. 464. M. cincinnata, Lat/i. lud. Orn. i. 275. Sturnus crispicollis. Baud. Elem. d'Orn. Meliphaga cincinnata, Temm. Philemon cincinnatus, Vieill. Ency. Metli. 613. Leiaill Ois. d'Afr. pi. 92. Bluish black, with shining green reflections, especially on the lower part of back and under tail coverts ; back of neck shining green, each feather curled and with a white line down the shaft ; back bronze ; wings with a band of white between the lesser and greater coverts ; throat orna- mented in front with two tufts of curly white feathers. Length, 12i- inches; bill from gape, 1 inch 3 lines; wings 6 inches 4 lines ; tarsi, 1 inch 5 lines. " Habitat ubique in Novai Zealandise insulis, et ab in- colis appellatur Roghee Etooee, et quod incolae insularum maris pacifici vitreos globulos, pro collaribus usitatos Pohe appellare soleant, nautse Angli banc avem 'the Pohe Bird' uominarunt, quod pluma; juguli cincinnata), quandam in- aurium vel globulorum vitreorum candidorum similitudi- nem habeant. Avis haec plerumque gregaria est, victitat insectis et florum nectare ; capta pane et saccharo. Imi- tatrix, irrequieta, in arena pulveratus, in aqua se lavat, pugnax, ganula, dulce canit voce fistulari. Volatu gravi et strepero, ex avbore in arborem se proripit, ajstus impa- tiens. Nidificat in fruticetis. Nidus ex virgultis minimis et muscis ; ova ponit plerumque quatuor." Forster. It is the Toui and Tui of the natives of North Island. " In January," says Mr. P. Earl, " the Phormium tenax is in full flower. The Koko, the name given to the bird by the natives of the South Island, now has his feast ; the bird inserts his long hairy tongue into the flower to extract the korari or honey, of which it is very fond : at this time it is ensnared with great facility by the Maori boys." Mr. Earl kept one alive for two months on nothing but su"-ar and water ; he brought one to England, but having had him from the nest, he would readily eat potatoes or rice. B 2 Their food usually consists of insects and various small berries, such as those of the lUpogoiium parrijloriim. Several specimens of this bird were brought by the Ex- pedition from New Zealand and Auckland Island. They vary much in size. Ptilotis cincta. Meliphaga cincta, Dubus, Bull. Acad. Sc. Brux. 1839, pt. l,p.2 95, pi. Ptilotis auritus, LaJ): Rev, Zool. 1839, 257. Mag. de Zool. 1840, Ois. t.W. Shining black ; back varied with yellow ; lower part of back greyish yellow ; lesser wing-coverts bright yellow ; greater coverts black, narrowly margined with yellow, a large spot of pure white near the middle of wing and back; quills and tail black, margined with yellow ; lower part of breast bright yellow ; abdomen brownish white, marked with darker in the middle of each feather ; a tuft of pure white feathers behind each eye. Length, 7 inches 9 lines ; bill from gape, 9 lines ; wings 4 inches ; tarsi, 1 inch 2 lines. Young. Olivaceous black ; wing-coverts black margined with dull yellow ; some of the medial coverts white ; quills and tail brownish black, margined with dull yellow ; under surface pale brown, washed with dull yellow. This remarkable bird is the Kotihe or Ihi of the natives. Specimens were obtained in North Island by Mr. P. Earl, who remarks that wlien surprised these birds spread their ear-tufts, and elevate their tails, which gives them a strikingly beautiful appearance. Their flight is_,rapid, and they feed on benies and larva; of insects. AiNTHOKNIS MELANUKA. Certhia olivacea, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 79 ; et Icon, ined. 62. Mocking Creeper, Lath. Syst. ii. 73.5. Certhia melanura, Sparr. Mus. Carl. t. 5. C. sannio, Gmel. Syst. Nat. 471 : Lath. Ind. Orii. 735. Philedon Dumerilii, Less. Voy. de la Coq. Zool. 644, /. 21,/. 2, (young). Anthomyza caeruleocephala, Swains. Classlf. of Birds, ii. 327. Philedon sannio. Less. Compl. Buff. xi. 165. Olivaceous, with violet reflections on the head ; lower part of back and abdomen yellow ; quills and tail glossy black, slightly margined with yellow. Young. Olivaceous, beneath greenish yellow ; cheeks with a line of white from the gape ; quills and tail slightly margined with yellow. Length, 7 inches 3 lines • bill from gape, 10 lines ; wings 3 inches 4 lines ; tarsi, 1 inch 1 line. " Habitat in utraque insula Novas Zeelandia;, iisdem lo- cis cum Certhia ciucinnata. Suaviter cantillat instar Cur- rucae, at ita variata et modulata voce, ut omnes silvarum aves imitetur; unde ipsi nomen apud Anglos ha?sit ab imitatione, (the Mocking Bird). Iisdem pene moribus et victu ac Certhia ciucinnata." Forster. Found in Queen Charlotte's Sound, according to Fors- ter's drawings, and is there called He-ghobarra. It is the Koho-i-mako, Kohorimako and Korimako of the natives. Two specimens of this bird were brought from the Bay of Islands. Two others were also in the collection, mark- ed from Auckland Island : these diflfer in being somewhat larger in all their proportions. Anthoenis melanocephala. Plate 2. Anthomis melanocephala, G. R. Gray, App. to Dieff. Voy. to New Zeal. ii. p. 188. Yellowish olive, with the base of the feathers plumbeous; head steel black, tinged with the same colour on the neck, breast, and on the upper coverts of the tail ; wing-coverts steel-black, deeply margined with yellowish olive ; larger coverts, quills and tail blackish brown, margined with paler or yellowish olive, the latter probably deep black, margined with steel-black, in the adult Total length, 11^ inches; bill, 13 lines ; wings 4j inch- es ; tarsi, Ij inch. The specimen was brought by Dr. Dieffenbach from Chatham Island ; where it was called Mako mako. Family, Certhiad.e. Subfamily 1. Sittinee. ACANTHISITTA LONGIPES Plate 3, f 1. Motacilla longipes, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 88, et Icon, ined. 165. Long-legged Warbler, Lath. Syn. iv. 465. M. longipes. Gmel. Sy.st. Nat. 979. Sylvia longipes. Lath. Ind. Orn. ii. 529. Green ; forehead brown ; eyebrows, and a spot beneath each eye white ; throat white ; abdomen cinereous ; vent greenish cinereous ; tail and thighs green. Total length, 3i- inches ; bill, 5- of an inch ; legs 1 inch. This is the E tectee tee pomou of the natives, according to Forster's drawing ; from which the figure is taken. ACANTHISITTA CHLORIS. Sitta chloris, Sparrm. Mus. Carls, pi. 33. Acanthlza teuuirostris, De Lafr. Rev. Zuol. 1841, 242. Acanthisitta tenuirostris, De Lafr. Mag. de Zool. 1842: Ois. t. 27. Green ; forehead and top of head tinged with brown ; wing-coverts and quills black, margined with green ; be- tween the coverts and quills a band of yellow ; greater co- verts and tertials black, with large broad marks of greenish white ; throat, sides of neck, breast and eyebrows white, tinged with brown ; abdomen white, tinged with yellow ; tail black, tip of each feather yellowish white. Length, 3 inches ; bill from gape, 7 lines ; wing, 1 inch 9 lines ; tarsi, 9 lines. Female, (Plate 3, f 2). Motacilla citrinella, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 89, et Icones ined. 164. Citrine Warbler, Lath. Syn. iv. 464. M. citrina, Gmel. Syst. Nat. 979. Sylvia citrina, Lath. Ind. Orn. ii. 529. Brownish white, marked with black streaks ; the throat. breast and eyebrows white ; quills brown-black, margined exteriorly, their base traversed by a band, and the tips of the two last tertials, yellow ; inopygimn, abdomen and tips of tail-feathers brownish white. Length, 3 inches 1 line ; bill from gape, 7 lines ; wings 1 inch 9 lines ; tarsi, 9 lines. Young male. Sitta punctata, Quoi/ et Gaim. Voij. de I'AstroL i. 221, t. 18,/. 1. Head varied with black and fulvous ; throat and breast white, spotted with brown ; the abdomen brownish white, tinged with yellow ; back olive ; uropygium yellow tinged with green ; quills black, slightly bordered outwardly with greenish olive ; some of the tertials with broad lines of white ; tail black, tinged with gi-een, tij) of each feather brownish white. Length, 2 inches 10 lines; bill from gape, 5 lines; wings, 1 inch 9 lines ; tarsi, 9 lines. The Museum collection contains four specimens of this curious little bird ; two of which are the young. In this state the bill is shorter and thicker than that of the adult. Dr. Dieffenbach states this species to be the Piwauwaw of the natives ; while Mr. P. Earl says, it is called Miru rairu at Port Nicholson, and that it feeds on larvas of insects. Dr. Sparrman gives the Cape of Good Hope as the habitat of his bird, which must be considered a mistake. Subfamily 2. Ottho)iycin/ et Gaim. Voy de l\4-^fro/. Zool.l-2-2S,pl.\7. Orthonyx icterocephalus, De Lafr. Rer. Zoo/. 1839. Orth. heteroclitus, De Lafr. Mag. de Zool. 1840, Ois. t. 8. Mohoua — , Less. Compl. Buff. ix. 139. Head bright yellow ; back, wing-coverts and tail yellow- ish brown ; breast and abdomen yellow ; sides and under tail-coverts yellowish-white, with dashes of rufous ; quills blackish brown, margined with brownish yellow. Length, (5 inches ; bill from gape, 7 lines ; wings, 4 inches 1 line ; tarsi, 1 inch 1 line. MM. Qnoy and Gaimard tell us that " Get oiseau doit grimper le long des arbres pour y prendre des insectes ; cependant nous n'avons trouve dan son estomac que de petites graines." They also inform us that the natives of Tasman's Bay called this bird the Mohoua houa ; while Dr. Dieffenbach says it is the Popokatea of the natives of Cook's Straits. Family, Luscinid.e. Subfamily 1. MaluritKP,. Sphenojacus punctatos. Synallaxis punctata, Quoy et Gaim. Voy. de lAsirol. i. 225^ /. 18, / 3. . Blackish brown, broadly margined on each feather with fulvous ; forehead rufous, with a black streak in the mid- dle of each feather ; wing-coverts, quills and tertials black, slightly bordered with fulvous ; throat and breast white, each feather with a black spot near the tip ; abdomen ful- vous, marked down the shaft of each feather with brown black ; tail brown, margined on the sides with fulvous. Length, 7 inches ; bill from gape, 9 lines ; wings 2^ inches ; tail, 4 inches ; tarsi, 10 lines. Dr. Dieffenbach says this bird " lives in the Typha- swamps and amongst ferns. Its flight is very short and heavy ;" and that it is the Mata or Matata of the natives. According to Mr. Percy Earl, it is the Toetoe of the na- tives, and " low bushes in marshy grounds or flax-swamps are its usual haunts ; flight very weak, and never seen above three feet from the ground. Builds its nest on the ground, formed of moss and grass, and lays four or five eggs of a greenish white, with spots of a dark colour." The collection of the Expedition contains specimens. Subfamily 2. Accentorince. Gerygone igata. CuiTuca igata, Quoy et Gaim. Voy. de r Astral, i. 201, t. 1, 2,/. 2. Olivaceous ; eyes surrounded with white ; uropygium rufous ; under surface white, tinged with yellow, and with green on the sides of breast ; quills brown, slightly mar- gined with yellowish white ; tail black, with a white lunule bordered with black on the side. Length, 3j inches. Inhabits Tasman's Bay, Cook's Straits ; where it is call- ed by the natives Igata. Gerygone flaviventrts. Plate 4, f 1. Olivaceous above, with the base of the feathers plum- beous ; wings brownish black, slightly margined outwardly with yellow ; tail with basal portion brownish olive and the apical part black, with an apical white spot on the in- ner web of each feather, and the outer one banded across near the tip white ; front, throat and breast greyish white, abdomen white tinged with yellow. Total length, 4 inches 3 lines; bill, 6 lines; wings, 2 inches 3 lines ; tarsi, 9 lines. The specimen was brought by the Expedition from the Bay of Islands. The Museum possesses a specimen from Mr. Percy Earl's collection, with which he informed us, that it is named " Titiripienamu" by the natives of Wai- kouaiti, South Island. It is always found on low bushes, feeding on small insects. Gerygone? albofrontata. Plate 4, f. 2. Yellowish brown, with the base of the feathers dark plumbeous ; forehead, streak over eyes, throat and breast, white ; abdomen and sides white, tinged with yellow ; wing-coverts and quills deep brown, margined with yellow- ish brown ; tail with the lateral feathers black, with an oblique band of rufous white, the tips brown ; two middle feathers nearly of an uniform brown, except a blackish 6 brown band near the lips ; upper tail-coverts pale rufous brown, under coverts buff. Length, (> inches 3 lines ; bill from gape, 6 lines; wings, •2 inches 8 lines ; tarsi, 10 lines. This fine species was brought by Dr. Dieffenbach from New Zealand. Subfamily 3. Parina;. Certhipaeus nov.e Seelandi^. Plate 5, f. 1. Parus urostigma, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 90, et Icon. ined. 166. New Zealand Titmouse, Lath. Gen. Si/fi. iv. 5.58. P. novcE Seclandiic, Gmel. Syst. Nat. 1013. Certhiparus novte Seelandiae, De Lafr. Rev. Zool. Pale cinereous red, mixed with brown ; forehead and top of head rufous ; eyebrows white ; sides of head and nape dark cinereous ; under surface pale rufous grey ; quills pale brown ; tail like the back, but brighter, middle feathers rufous, the lateral ones marked on the inner webs with a square black spot near the middle of each feather. Length, 5 inches ; bill from gape, 7 lines ; wings, 2^ inches; tarsi, 11 lines. Toe toe of the natives of Dusky Bay, according to the drawing of Forster ; while Dr. Dieffenbach looks upon it as the lliro riro of the natives of the Northern Lsland. As we become better acquainted with the birds, I have no doubt that MM. Quoy and Gaiinard's P. Zelandicus may eventually prove the same as the present species. Certhiparus maculicaddus. Parus Zelandicus, Quoy et Gaitti. Voy. de F Astral, i. 210, /. ii,y: 3. Reddish brown, mixed with ashy ; front, throat and ab- domen fawn ; tail rufous, marked in the middle of each with a broad brown spot. Length, 4 inches. MM. Quoy and Gaimard give the native name of Mo- mohoua to this species. Certhiparus albicillos. Plate 5, f. 2. Fringilla albicilla. Less. Voy. de In Coqu. Zool. i. p. 662. Parus senilis, Dubus, Bull. Acad. Sc. Bru.v. 1839, pt. 1, 297. Certhiparus senilis, De Lafr. Rev. Zool. Head, neck, breast, and middle of abdomen white, slightly tinged with rufous ; back and wing-coverts ru- fous brown, paler on the tail-coverts ; quills blackish brown, slightly margined outwardly v^'ith grey, and interi- orly with yellowish white ; tail pale brown, tinged with yellow. Length, 6 inches 4 lines ; bill from gape, 6| lines ; wings, 2 inches 10 lines; tarsi, 1 inch 1 line. A specimen of this species was brought by the Expedi- tion from the Bay of Islands. According to Mr. P. Earl, this bird is the Popokotea of the natives of Port Nicholson, North Lsland. Its food consists of seeds and larvae of insects. Subfamily 4. SaxicoUiue. Petroica macrocephala. Turdus minutus, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 83, et Icon, in- ed. 149. Great-headed Titmouse, Lath. Gen. Syn. iv. 557, pi. 55. Parus macrocephalus, Gmel. Syst. Nat. 1013: Lath. Lid. Orn. 571 : Lath. Hist. vii. pi. 110. Rhipidura macrocephala. Swains. Nat. Libr. Flyc. p. 122. Miro Forsterorum, G. R. Gray, App. to Dieff. Trav. in N. Zeal. ii. p. 191. Pachycephala? australis, Steph. Upper surface and fore part of neck deep black ; spot on forehead, base of tertials and of some of the quills, and an oblique broad band on the three outer tail feathers, pure white ; under surface pale yellow, brightest on the breast. Female. Upper surface cinereous black ; tail and quills black, base of tertials and of some of the quills, and an ob- lique band on the three outer tail feathers, white ; throat white, spotted with black ; breast and abdomen yellowish white. Length, 5g- inches; bill from gape, 7 lines ; wings, 35- inches; tarsi, 13 lines. Forster has placed the name of MiiTO mirro upon his drawing, while I)r. Dieffenbach states it to be the Pirangi- rangi of the natives. The specimen brought by the Expedition, was marked as from Auckland Island. Petroica Dieffenbachii. Plate 6, f. 1. Miro Dieffenbachii, G. R. Gray, App. to Dieff. Trav. in N. Zeal. p. 191. Shining black ; the wings tinged with brown, the base of the secondaries, spots of the primaries near the base, and the greater part of the three outer tail-feathers, white; the lower part of the breast and abdomen yellowish white, rather darker on the breast. Total length, 4f inches ; bill, 6 lines ; wings, 3 inches ; tarsi, 11 lines. The present species is very like the preceding, but it is altogether smaller in size, and with the small and narrow bill of the P. toitoi. Petroica toitoi. Muscipeta toitoi. Gam. Voy. de la Coqu. Zool. i. p. 590. Ois. t. 15, f. 3. Black ; spot on forehead, base of tertials and of some of the quills, breast, abdomen, and an oblique broad band on the three outer tail-feathers, pure white. Length, 5 inches ; bill from gape, 6 lines ; wings, 2 inches 10 lines; tarsi, 11 lines. This species is considered the Nirungiru, Ngirungiru, Miro-miro and To-i-toe of the natives. It is very common, says Mr. P. Earl, at Port Nicholson, flying about the gar- dens near the houses. Petroica albifrons. Plate 6, f. 2. Tardus oclirotaisus, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 82, et Icon, ined. 148. Wliitc-fronted Thrush, Lath. Gen. Sijn. iii. 71. Turdus albifrons, Gmel. Sijst. Nat. 822 : Lath. Ind. Orn. 354. Upper surface and fore part of neck sooty black ; under surface pale rufescent ; front with a small spot of white. Length, 7 inches. " Habitat in australi insula Novae Zeelandia3, victitat insectis et minutis cancellis ad littora maris, suaviter can- tillat; homines non formidat, scd ubique ob insccta inam- bulando inter frutices excussa el circumvolitantia sequitur, ssepius manu captus vel pileo." Forster. The original of this description is contained auiong the drawings of Forster, and it is very like Petroica longipes, [Gam.) The figure of Forster differs, however, from the bird refen'ed to, by the white extending from the fore part of the breast to the base of tail, leaving the throat of the same colour as the back. I have subjoined a figure, for the purpose of making known the original drawing from which Latham took his description, that it may assist in elucidating the species, should it hereafter be discovered. It may eventually prove to be the same species of bird as the following. Petroica australis. Turdus australis, Sparrm. Mu.s. Carh. t. 69. Muscicapa longipes, Garnot, I oij. de la Coq. Zool. 594 : Ols. t. 19,/. 1. Myiothera novae Zelandiae, Less. Miro longipes, Le.^s. Tr. d'Orn. 389. Slaty black, shafts of the feathers white, throat and breast greyish white, margined broadly with slaty black ; abdo- men white, mixed with slaty black ; greater wing-coverts, quills, secondaries and tertials, brownish black, the base of inner webs of secondaries with a spot of white on each; tail black ; a small spot above the bill pure white. Length, 8 inches ; bill from gape, 10 lines; wings, 5 inches ; tarsi, 1 inch, b\ lines. The female and young are tinged with brown on the up- per surface, throat and breast lighter coloured and without the prominent white spot over the bill. Garnot informs us that this bird is the Miro miro of the natives, and that it " vit dans les broussailles qui entourent I'immense baie des iles a I'extremite nord de la Nouvelle Zelande." The settlers call this bird the Robin, which Mr. P. Earl supposes is from its tameness; if you sit down but for a minute in the bush in any part of New Zealand, one or more of these birds will make their appearance, hopping round you without showing the slightest symp- tom of fear. It is mostly seen on or near the ground. He further remarks that the native name is Totoara. Two specimens of this species were brought by the Expedition. Subfamily 5. Motacillinw. Anthus nov/E Zealand!^. Alauda littorea, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 90, et Leon. ined. 14.3. New Zealand Lark, Lath. Gen. Syn. iv. 384, 51. Alauda nova Zealandiae, Gmel. Syst. Nat. 799 : Lath. Ind. Orn. ii. 497. Head and back brownish grey ; from the nostrils and above the eyes a line of white ; from the car through the eyes a black line ; cheeks white, spotted with brown ; the throat white, breast pale ferruginous, spotted with brown ; abdomen white, with brown streaks on the sides ; quills brown, margined with grey ; tail blackisli brown margined with grey, especially on the two middle feathers, the outer feathers white, the last but one white, with a line down the shaft and the inner web margined with blackish brown. Length, 7 inches; bill from gape, 8 lines ; wings, 3| inches; tarsi. Hi- lines; middle toe, 10^ lines. " Habitat ad littora maris in insula australi Novae Zee- landiae, victitans cancris pulicibus inter Fucos in littore ejectos viventibus." Forster. According to Forster, this is the Kogoo-aroure of the na- tives ; while Dr. Dieffenbach gives it the name of Kataitai. The specimen brought by the Expedition, was from the Bay of Islands. In the same collection were also three other specimens, from Auckland Island, which may even- tually prove a distinct species, with a triflingly larger foot. It agrees in this respect, as well as general appearance, with Anthus australis of Vigors and Dr. Horsfield. Anthds Alauda ■ .' Forst. Desc. Anim. p. 91. Upper surface and tail-feathers ferruginous, with longi- tudinal streaks of brown ; fore part of neck and breast whitish brown ; al)domen nearly white ; sides, thighs and vent ochraceous white ; a line from each nostril over each eye to the nape white; quills deep brown, with testaceous grey margins. Length, 7 inches. " Haecce Alaudae species est affine Motacillis, sed ob rostrum magis cylindricum ad Alaudas spectare videtur : at digitus posticus erat rectiusculus et vix digito.longior : semper inter fruticeta latebat et celenime cursitabat in in- sula vulgo Longa appellata in ^Estuario Reginae Charlottae." Forster. Family, Turdid^e. Subfamily I. Timalina. Turnagra crassirostris. Loxia turdus, Forst. De.^cr. Anim. p. 85, et Leon. ined. 145. Thick-billed Thrush, Lath. Gen. Syn. iii. '34, pi. 37. Tanagra capensis, Sparrm. Mas. Carls, t. 45. Turdus crassirostris, Gmel. Sy.st. Nat. 815 : Lath. Ind Orn. i. 335. Tanagra macularia, Qiioy et Gaim. Voy. de I'Astrol Zool. i. 186, t. 7,/. 1. Keropia crassirostris, G. R. Gray, List of Genera, Isf ed. Olivaceous brown ; front, cheeks and sides of neck with 8 a few spots of rufous ; quills black, margined with oliva- ceous brown ; wing-coverts with two transverse bands of rufous ; breast, abdomen and under tail-coverts brown, with longitudinal broad rufescent white spots ; tail rufous, with the two middle feathers and margins of others oliva- ceous brown. Length, 10^ inches; bill from gape, 11 lines; wings, 4| inches ; tarsi, 1 inch 2 lines. Forster placed the name of Golobieo on his drawing. It is also said to be the Pio pio, Keropia and Koho Eou of the natives. According to Mr. P. Earl, it is the Kakaroeo of the natives of South Island. It haunts low bushes, or is seen on the ground, searching for seeds, which consti- tute its chief food. Their flight is only extended for a short distance at a time. Family, Muscicapid^. Subfamily 1. Muscicapin. i. 252. Psittacus pacificus, var. &. Gniel. Syst. Nat. i. 329. Psittacus novas Seelanrlia), Sparrni. Mas. Carls, t. 28. Platycercus novae Seelandise, IVagl. Monogr. Psitt. p. Platycercus pacificus, Vigors, Zool. Journ. i. 529, pi. suppl. 1. Green ; forehead, region of the cars, and some of the side feathers margined with crimson ; beneath yellowish green ; quills black, with the outer webs blue and margined with yellow. Length, 9 inches ; bill from gape, 6 lines ; wings, b\ inches ; tarsi, 8 lines. Length, 12 inches; bill from gape, 9 lines ; wings. Sc- inches ; tarsi, 9 lines. " Habitat in tota insula australi Nova; Zselandiae, vic- titat baccis, nam in arboribus et fructicibus bacciferis plerumque obvius: praecipue in Coccoloba australi et Phy- tolacca completa." Forster. Kakiriki, Powaitere, or Po-e-tere are the names by which this species is known to the natives. Tt is found in New Zealand, Auckland and Chatham Islands. Platycercus adriceps. Psittacus auriceps, ifwA^, Nov. Act. Acad. C(bs. Cur. x. p. 46. Platycercus auriceps. Vigors, Zool. Journ. 1825, 531, pi. suppl. 2. Psittacus pacificus, var 5'. Lath. Ind. Orn. i. 104. Green ; beneath yellowish green ; frontal band and some of the side feathers margined with scarlet ; vertex of the head golden yellow ; quills black, the outer webs blue, margined with yellow ; tail green, margined with yellow. Length, 9 inches ; bill from gape, ^ an inch ; wings, 4 inches ; tarsi, 7 lines. Length, 1 1 inches ; bill from gape, 7 lines ; wings, 4 inches, 5 lines ; tarsi, 8J lines. This species inhabits various parts of New Zealand. Trichoglossus aurifrons. Psittacus (Lathamus) aurifrons. Less. Cent. Zool. t. 18. Trichoglossus aurifrons, Wagl. Monogr. Psitt. p. Upper surface lively green ; urojjygium, forehead, and all the under surface golden yellow, tinged on the abdo- men with gi-een ; quills azure blue, with the extremities black. Length, 7 inches 4 lines, (French). This species is given, as found in New Zealand, on the authority of M. Lesson. Subfamily 2, Cacatuince. Nestor meridionalis. Psittacus hypopolius, Forst. Descr. Anim. p. 72. Icon, ined. 50. Southern Brown Parrot, Lath. Sgn. i. 264. Psittacus meridionalis, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i. 333. Psittacus nestor, iMth. Ind. Orn. i. 110. Psittacus australis, Shaw, Mus. Lev. pi. p. 87. Nestor hypopolius, Wagl. Monogr. Psitt. p. Olivaceous, each feather margined with brown ; fore part of the neck and breast greyish brown, margined with dark brown ; nape rufous brown, margined with yellow and black ; uropygium and abdomen purplish blood red, banded with black ; crown of head and lores gi"ey, mar- gined with dark brown ; region of the ears golden yellow, margined with brown ; feathers projecting over the lower mandible obscure red, streaked with grey in the middle ; tail greenish brown, ban-ed on the inner margins of the inner webs with pale red. Length, 1 foot 1^ inches; bill fi-om gape, 1 inch 7 lines; wings, 11 inches; tarsi, 1 inch 2 lines. " Habitat in insula utraque Novae Zeelandia;, victitat baccis et nucibus, garrulus, fistilat voce alta et clamosa, praesertim mane et vesperi. Maxime australis congenerum quippe vivens in 46° Lat. Austr." Forster. This bird is the Kaka of the natives. Family, Cuculid^. To this family, says Dr. Dieffeubach, probably belongs the bird known to the natives by the name of Kakapo, and judging from some tail-feathers of a green metallic lustre, which were obtained in the interior, the bird may belong to the genus Centropus[}). Dr. D. further remarks that the living birds, nor even an entire specimen, have not been seen by any of the missionaries, nor by the natives, for manj' years past. Its destruction he considers to be ow- ing to the introduction of cats and dogs, as the bird used to perch only on the lower branches of trees, and therefore was easily obtained by those animals. The natives caught it by means of the glare of a torch during the night. Mr. P. Earl is induced, from iuformation which he ob- tained during his recent travels, to suppose that this rare bird still exists in the southern parts of the South Island, and that it seldom visits the northern portions. He was informed by Mr. Gerard, many years resident in New Zea- land, that he had seen the bird in the bay in which he lived, and described it as a climbing bird ; and by Mr. Hughes, a whaling master at Moiraki, that he had had a living spe- cimen in his possession some years ago. Mr. H. said that it had a long tail ; the bill was hooked like a hawk or a parrot's ; and that it was very strong on the wing, and would attack other birds, even the Nestor meridionalis, to which it was little inferior in size. Subfamily, Cuculinw. EUDYNAMIS TAITEXSIS. Cuculus fasciatus, Forst. Desc. Anim. p. 160. Icon, ined. 56. C 10 Society Cuckow, Lath. Si/ii. ii. 514. Cuculiis taitensis, Sparrm. Mus. Carls, t. 32. Voy. de la Coq. Zool. i. ;). 623. Cuculiis taitius, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i. 412. Brown, liansvcisely banded and longitudinally streaked on the head and neck, with rufous ; under surface white with longitudinal streaks down the middle of each feather of brownish black ; wing-coverts brown, banded with ru- fous and tipped with white ; quills brown, banded with rutbus ; tail brown, numerously banded with rufous and tipped with white. Length, 1 foot 4Hnches; bill from gape, 1 inch 10 lines; wings, 7j inches ; tarsi, 1 inch 3 lines. When young, the feathers of the back, quills and se- condaries are tipped with white, and the under surface is tinged with rufous. This bird is the Kohepuroa or Koekoea of the natives. It is migratory, says Dr. Dieffenbach, and appears on the coast in the month of December. Forster has neither in his MSS. or drawings recorded it as a native of New Zealand. From Mr. P. Earl's note we learn that it comes from the north to the neighbourhood of Port Nicholson in the month of October, and returns in April. They are also found as far south as Otago in the South Island, but they are scarce and very shy. Chrysococcyx lucidus. Cuculus nitens, Forst. Desc. Anim. p. 151. Icon. ined. 57. Shining Cuckow, Lath. Syn. ii. 528, pi. 23. Cuculus lucidus, Gmel. Syst. Nat. \. 421. Temm. PI. Col. 102,/. 1. Shining bronzy green ; forehead, cheeks and beneath the body white, transversely banded with shining bronzy green ; tail shining bronzy green, with some of the lateral feathers spotted on the sides and tipped with white. Length, 7 inches ; bill from gape, 8 lines ; wings 4j inches ; tarsi, 9 lines. " Habitat ad ^Estuarium Eeginae Charlotlag in sylvis (et ad Caput Bonaj Spei (.?)." Forster. This bird is closely allied to the Australian species, but appears larger in all its proportions ; the transverse bands of the under surface are wider ; the outer tail-feathers have four large spots and one small spot at the base ; while the Australian species has five spots, which are all large, and equal in size : the feathers of the back are more of a gold- en green than in the Australian bird ; and other differen- ces are also distinguishable by comparison. It is the Poopoo arouro or Pipiwawarou of the natives. Dr. Dieffenbach remarks, that like the former bird, it is migratory, and apjiears near the coast in the same month. He also observed that it lays its eggs in the nests of smaller birds, especially in that of the Fan-tailed Flycatcher {Rhi- pklura JIabeUifera). It arrives, says Mr. P. Earl, at Port Nicholson, in the beginning of October, returning north in March : it possesses a very strong flight and is exceedingly shy ; its notes are like the sound of Kui kui tioro. He ex- amined the stomach of one, and found several caterpillars in it. Family, Colcmbid.e. Subfamily, ColumbiiKB. Carpophaga nov^ Zealandi^. Columba argetrsea, Forst. Desc. Anim. p. 9iQ. Icon, hi- ed. 137. New Zealand Pigeon, Lath. Syn. Columba nova; Zealandia;, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i. 773. Columba zealandica, Lath. hid. Orn. Columba leucogaster, Wayl. Top of the head, back and sides of the neck, upper part of the back and wing-coverts, coppery purple ; head, fore part of the neck, breast and outer portion of the wings, se- condaries and lower part of the back, rich coppery green ; abdomen and lower part of the breast pure white ; quills bluish green, with lengthened spots of grey on the outer webs near the base, the tips of the inner ones black ; tail black, tinged with blue green, tipped with pale brown. Length, 1 foot 7 J inches; bill from gape, 1 inch 3 lines; wings, lOj inches ; tarsi, l^- inch. " Habitat in insula Australi Novte Zealandiae. Victitat baccis Coriariae sarmentosa; et Coccolobse australis." — Forster. According to Forster's drawings it is the Hagarreroo, but by other writers it is said to be the Kuku or Kukupa of the natives. This fine bird is closely allied to the Australian Carpo- phaga spadicea, but which differs by the wings and lower parts of the back being silvery grey, more or less tinged with green. In the young birds the purplish ferruginous is more or less wanting. MM. Hombron et Jacquinot have described a species with the name of Columba spadicea leucophaa (Ann. des Sci. Nat. 1841, 319), in the following terms. " Back and wing-coverts undulated with rufous ; head, occiput, cheeks and back of neck, grey, marked with paler; quills and tail sooty grey, the latter tipped with white ; under part of the throat and breast brownish grey, traversed with grey more or less pure ; belly and luider tail-coverts white." This description most likely refers to the very young bird of this species. Latham has recorded two other species of pigeons, as found in New Zealand, namely, Columba cenea, var. 0. and Columba brunnea ; it is extremely doubtful whether these birds are inhabitants of that f)art of the world. Among the notes of Mr. P. Earl I find the following de- scription of a species of pigeon. " Head and neck white, the former crested ; scapulars very light brown ; the belly and breast white." Several specimens of this were seen at Tautuku, and near the Molyneux River. Family, Teteaonid^. Subfamily, Perdicinw. COTUENIX NOV.E ZeALANDI^. Plate 8. Coturnix novae Zealandiae, Qtioi/ et Gaim. Voy. de PAs- trol. Zool. i. 242. Ois. t. 24,/. 1, (femelle). Male. Upper surface brownish ferniginous varied with black, with a narrow white streak down the shaft of each 11 feather ; a line over each eye, cheeks and throat rufous ; with two short hues on the cheeks and margin beneath, black ; breast ferruginous wliite, each feather with a broad irregular band of black, and tipped with white ; feathers of the sides pale ferruginous marked with black, and a white streak down the shaft ; abdomen wliite, with black marks. Length, 85- inches ; bill from gape, 8 lines ; wings, 4f inches. The female is similar to the male, but wants the rufous throat. It is closely allied to the Cotnrni.v pecforalis of Mr. Gould. MM. Quoy and Gaimard tell us that " II ha- bite la bale Chouraki (riviere Tamisc de Cook), a la Nou- velle-Zelande. Nous n' avons pas pu nous procurer un seal male." Mr. Percy Earl informs me, that this bird is termed by the natives Koreke, and that it is found, but not in abundance, in the open fera lands on the South Island. He never saw one on the North Island, although he does not state positively that they do not exist there. The flesh of this quail is of a delicate flavour. The egg is of a yel- lowish white, irregularly spotted with umber brown. This species was observed by Dr. Dieffenbach on the Northern Island. Family, Strdthionid.e. Subfamily, Apferi/c/iiKe. Afteryx australis. Apteryx australis, Shmv, Nat. Misc. pi. 1057, 1058. Gould's B. of Austr. pt. 11. pi. Dromiceius nova; Zealandia3, Less. Man. cT Orn. ii. 210. Chesnut brown, margined on the sides of each feather with blackish brown ; head', fore part of neck and under surface lighter, tinged with grey. Length of male, 2 feet 6 inches ; bill from gape, 6f inches ; tarsi 3 inches. Length of female 2 feet; bill from gape, 5^ inches; tarsi 2 inches 8 lines. This singular bird (which is the Kivi or Kiwikiwi of the natives) is scattered over various parts of New Zealand, es- pecially those covered with extensive and dense beds of ferns, which aflbrd it a place of concealment, when hunted by the natives, who highly prize the feathers as an article to decorate their persons. It runs with swiftness, and sometimes hides itself in holes of rocks or hollow trees. Its food is supposed to consist of snails, insects and worms, which it mostly seeks for during the night ; the latter are obtained by beating the earth with its foot, it seizes them with its bill the instant they appear above the ground. The nest is usually placed at the base of a hollow tree, or in deep holes excavated in the ground. It is composed of fern and grasses, but the number of eggs is unknown. Family, Charadrid.e. Subfamily, Charadriiiw. Charadrius virginianus. Charadrius virginianus, Pr. Bonap. Charadrius maruioratus, Wagl. Charadrius xanthocheilus (Wagl.), Jard. 1^ Selbi/s III. of Orn. pi. 85. Blackish brown, spotted with yellowish white or deep yellow ; feathers of the head and nape margined with yel- low ; greater wing-coverts and quills blackish brown, the former margined, and the basal part of the .shafts of the lat- ter, white ; under surface yellowish white, with the abdomen varied with blackish brown bands ; fore part of the neck and breast yellowish grey, with triangular spots and bands of pale blackish brown; under tail-coverts yellowish white, tinged with yellow; tail blackish brown, spotted with yel- lowish white. Length, 10 inches. The native names of this bird are Tuturiwhata, Takihi- kaki or Tuturuata. Charadrius obscurus. Plate 9. Charadrius glareola, Forst. Desc. Anim. p. 109. Icon, ined. 122. Dusky Plover, Lath. Syn. v. 211. Charadrius obscurus, Gmel. Si/st. Nat. i. 686. Blackish brown, with the feathers margined with rufous grey, especially on the nape ; front, streak over each eye, throat and abdomen rufous white ; breast and upper part of abdomen rufous ; under tail-coverts white, slightly tinged with rufous ; quills black, base of the inner ones and the shafts of the others white ; tail blackish brown, with the lateral feathers white. Length, 10 inches; bill fi-om gape, 1 inch 5 lines; wings 6w inches ; tarsi, 1 inch, 8 lines. "Habitat ad littora glareosainsulae australis Novas Zee- landiai." Forsier. The young bird is of a lighter colour, especially on the under surface, where it is white, slightly tinged with ru- fous ; and the throat and sides of the breast spotted with blackish brown. This is called, according to the drawing of Forster, Ha- poho-era, by the natives of Dusky Bay. These birds, says Mr. Percy Earl, I never observed but at Waikonati, and then only during the month of Septem- ber. They are usually six or eight together, but are very shy, and are very fat at that time, and of exquisite flavour. He further marked, that this species is the Moakura of the natives. Thinornis. Bill long, slender, scarcely swollen at the apex, which is acute; the nostrils lateral, basal, placed in a nasal groove that extends for two-thirds of the bill. Wings long, point- ed, and with the first and second quills nearly equal and longest. Tail long and rounded. Tarsi as long as, or shorter than, the middle toe, and strong. Toes long, strong, united at the base and margined on the sides, the hind toe wanting. These birds difler from Hiaiictilii, in the length and slenderncss of their bills, and in the strength and shortness of their tarsi, and also in the strength of their toes. c 2 12 Thinornis Rossii. Plate 11. Blackish brown, lighter on the wings ; forehead, cheeks, sides, fore part of neck, and a narrow collar round the neck brownish black ; band across the head, over the eyes and extending down to the nape, breast and abdomen, margins of secondaries, some of the tertials margined or entirely, and the outer tail-feathers, pure white ; sides of the breast and abdomen varied with blackish-brown feathers. Length, 8 inches; bill from gape, 11 lines; wings, 5 inches ; tarsi, 9J lines. A single specimen of this bird was brought by the Expe- dition from Auckland Island. Thinornis nov.e Seelandi^. Plate 11.* Charadrius torquatula, Forst. Desc. Aiiim. p. 108. Icon, ined. 121. New Zealand Plover, Lath. Syn. v. 206, pi. 83. Charadrius nova; Seelandise, Gmel. Sysl. Nat. i. 684. Charadrius dudoroa, Wagl. Syst. Av. Greyish brown ; forehead, cheeks and fore part of neck, and a ring round the nape, black; throat varied with white ; band across the head, extending over the eyes to the nape, breast and abdomen, pure white; quills blackish brown, with a white mark down the shaft of each ; margins of the secondaries and some of the tertials margined or en- tirely white ; middle feathers of the tail blackish brown, lateral feathers white, with the second and third with a black spot near the end. Length, 7| inches ; bill from gape, 1 inch ; wings, 4| inches ; tarsi, 1 1 lines. " Habitat ad ostia rivulorum et littora maris glareosa in insula australi Nova; Zeelandiae in Portu Obscuro." Forst. According to Forster's drawing it is called by the natives Doodooroo attoo, and was found at Queen Charlotte's Bay. Mr. Percy Earl found a pair of this, what he terms very rare, species, on the coast between Tairi and Otago, South Island. It was called by the natives Kukuruatu. This species differs from the other by the lightness of its general colour, and by the toes being rather shorter. HiATICOLA BICINCTA. Charadrius bicinctus, Jard. 8f Selby^s III. Orn. pi. 28. iEgialites bicincta, Gould, Syn. Austr. Birds, p. pl.f. Chesnut-breast Plover, Lath. Hist, of Birds, ix.324. Upper surface greyish brown, greater wing-coverts and some feathers of the back, margined with ]3ale yellowish brown; quills black brown, with the shaft of the first quill white ; forehead and beneath the body white, with a broad black band on breast, and a broad ferruginous band on the fore part of abdomen ; tail with the middle feathers black- ish brown, the lateral ones paler and the outer one entirely white. Length, 7 inches ; bill from gape, 9 lines ; wings, 5| inches ; tarsi , 1 inch 2 lines. Anarhynchus frontalis. Anarhynchus frontalis, Quoy et Gaim. Voy. de r Astral. Zonl. i. 252. Ois. t. 31,/. 2. Pale cinereous ; forehead and the under surface of the body pure white ; quills brown. Length, 6 inches 2 lines; bill, 13 lines ; tarsi, 13 lines, (French). " Get oiseau a les mcEurs de tons ceux de sa famille. 11 habite les bords vaseux de la mer, et vit en troupes dans les canaux d' eau salee qui entourent la bale Chou- raki, a la Nouvelle Zelande." Subfamily, HfBtnatopodinw. H^MATOPUS LONGIROSTRIS. Haematopus longirostris, Vieill. N. Diet, d' Hist. Nat. XV. 410. Hsematopus picatus, Vigors, King's Voy. Austr. Append. Haematopus australiasianus, Gould, Proc. Z. S. Back of neck, back, wings and tail black, glossed with green; the latter with the base white; fore part of neck, breast and thighs cinereous black ; beneath the body, uro- pygium, and the outer portions of the secondaries, white. Length, 1 foot 7j inches; bill from gape 2 inches 10 lines ; wings, 11 inches ; tarsi, 2 inches 1 line. The native name of this bird is Toria. H^MATOPUS UNICOLOR. Plate 10. Hsematopus unicolor, Forst. Desc. Anim. p. 112. Wagl. Isis, 1832,/;. 1230. General colour black, with a tinge of green ; bill and legs crimson. Length, 1 foot Gg- inches ; bill from gape, 4^ inches ; wings, 10 J inches ; tarsi, 3 inches. " Habitat in scopulis, ad quos fluctus algas fucosque ejiciunt. Insectis marinis, cancris, testaceis victitat. Gre- garia semper a me visa. Vox fistulans fere Scolopacis arquatae. Natat et urinatur." Forster. Differs from the Australian species, H. fuliginosus of Mr. Gould, by wanting the red ring round the eyes. Family, Ardeid^. Subfamily, Ardeinw. HeRODIAS FLAVIROSTRIS. Ardea flavirostris, Wagler, Syst. Av. Entirely white ; bill yellow and the legs black. Length, (female ?) 2 feet 8^- inches ; the bill from gape, 6 inches; wings, 1 foot 4f inches; tarsi, o| inches. This bird, says Mr. P. Earl, is unknown in the North Island. It is called in the South Island (Tairi river) Ka- tuka by the natives, who consider it very rare and extreme- ly shy. They hold this bird in gi-eat estimation for its feathers to decorate their persons. An old chief offered Mr. Earl a large pig for the skin. Specimens of this bird were first observed by Capt. Cook, as inhabiting New Zealand. 13 Herodias matook. Ardea jugulavis, Forst. Desc. Anim. p. 172. Icon. ined. 114. Wagl. Syst.Av. Blue Heron, Lath. Syn. v. 79. Ardea carulea, var. y. Gmel. Si/st. Nat. i. 631. Ardea Matook, Vieill. N. Diet. Hist. Nat. xiv. 416. New Zealand Heron, Lath. Hist, of Birds, ix. 128. Ashy blue ; throat and a line down the middle of the fore part of neck, white. Length, 1 foot llj inches; bill from gape, 4 inches; wings lOl^ inches ; tarsi, 3| inches. " In nova Zeelandia ad ^Estuarium Reginse Charlottae." It is known to the natives of Queen Charlotte's Sound by the name of Matook. BOTAUBUS MELANOTOS. Botaurus melanotus, G. R. Gray, App. in Bieff. New Zealand, ii. p 196. Ardea (Botaurus) australis, Cuv.? Less. Tr. d" Orn. 572. Blackish brown on the back, with some of the feathers and wings reticulated with yellowish white ; head, neck, quills, secondaries and tail dirty brown ; sides of the head, throat and streaks down some of the feathers and beneath the body yellowish white, the two latter with blackish brown streaks, more or less perfect, down several of the feathers. Length, 2 feet 2 inches ; bill from the gape, 3j inches ; wings, 12j inches ; tarsi, 3f inches. Young. Blackish brown, reticulated all over with yel- lowish white. This species is the Matuku or Matuku urepo of the na- tives, and the Crane of the Missionaries. It is also found in Australia. Family, Scolopacid.e. Subfamily, Limosin — o n 2. Falco subxiger. Falco subniger, Gray; Buller, B. N. Zeal., p. 16. The evidence of this rare Falcon's capture in New Zealand is by no means satisfactory, and I regard the occurrence of this species as far more improbable than that of the Sea Eagle. All that is known about it is that M. Jules Verreaux assured J.Ir. Gurney that a New Zealand s])ecimen had passed through his hands. At the same time F. suhiifjer is a sufficiently striking Ijird, and jM. Verreaux' knowledge was so excellent that there ought to be no nnstaking the species, but I am at present aware of no actual specimen of F. suhniger from New Zealand in any European collection. The following sentence in Dr. Buller's work, however, deserves consideration : " I may state that the account sent to me by Dr. Haast, of a Hawk ol)served by him in the Southern Alps, although unfortu- nately not secured, seems to accord with that given by Captain Sturt of the Australian Fidco sulnijcr." 3. Circus gouldi. Circus assimilis. Gray, anted, f. 2. Circus gouldi, Bp.; Finscli, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 93; Buller, B. N. Zeal, p. 11, pi. 2. Circus approximans, Fcale; Finseli, J. f. 0. 187-4. p. 176. The name of C. assimilis proposed by Jardine and Selby is really applicable to the large spotted Harrier of Austra- lia, G. jardinii of Gould; and the New Zealand bird must therefore be called C. rjouldi. In his introduction to his great work Dr. Buller is inclined to sej)arate C. wolfi of New Caledonia, as a good species and distinct from the jR-esent bird. Without having seen the birds themselves, there is nothing in the remarks of ]\Ir. Gurney or Dr. Buller which would convince me that these two Harriers are specifically distinct, and I incline to the view taken by Drs. Finsch and Hartlaub {Farii. Centralpohjn. p. 7) that C. yoiddi is the ]\Iarsh Harrier of Australia and Oceania, where it represents the ordinary Marsh Harrier {C. ceru- yinosus) of the Pahcarctic and Indian regions. Although Dr. Finsch is most proljably correct in styling this species by Peale's name of appro.cimans, I wish to examine specimens from the Fiji Islands, as it is not even yet certain that the new Caledonian bird, C. wolji, is absolutely the same. 4, Haliaetus leucogaster. Icthyaetus leucogaster, Buller, B. N. Zeal, p). 16. Dr. Buller writes as follows concerning this bird {I. c.) : — " Mr. Gould has presented me with a beautiful specimen of the wliite-bellied Sea Eagle, which was said to have been procured in New Zealand. This species has been observed along the whole southern coast of Australia, from Moreton Bay on the east to Swan Eiver on the ^\■est, including Tasmania and all the small islands in Bass's Straits ; and as it is a powerful Hier, there is no physical reason why it should not occur sometimes as a straggler on the New Zealand coast. Mr. Goidd has satisfied himself that this specimen was obtained there, although unable to ascertain tlie precise locality. In corroboration of its presumed occurrence, I may mention that an oflicer of the 14th Regiment, who was a good sportsman and a tolerable naturalist, assiu-ed me that lie had actually seen and fired upon a "Sea Eagle" on the rocks near the entrance to Wellington Harbour." I may add that there would be nothing improbable in the occurrence of this Eagle on the shores of New Zealand, and it is a bird to be looked for. Besides the localities mentioned by Dr. Buller, it is found aU over the Malayan Archipelago to the Philippines, and occurs in suitable localities throughout the ]\Iala3'an Peninsula, Burmali, and India. It has even been said to inhabit South Africa, though at present on dealers' authority, which must be received with a certain amount of suspicion, as the speci- mens I have seen from tlie Cape were marked H. hlayrus, the latter title being founded on the Blayre of Levaillant, who said he had found it in the above-named locality. The account of the latter has, however, always been discredited, apparently with reason, though at the same time it must be remembered that tlie late ilr. Cassin did not hesitate to refer one of l)u Chaillu's Gaboon specimens to the present bird. 5. LOPHOICTINIA ISURA. Milvus isurus, Buller, B. N. Zeal., p. 16. The history of this species in New Zealand, as at jH'esent l:nown, is comprised in'the following remarks of ]\Ir. Gurney [Ibis, 1870,7?. 536): — "The Norwich Museum possesses a specimen which I obtained from Mr. A. D. Bartlett, who as.5ured me, at the time, that he bad received it from New Zealand, and had satisfied himself that it had been killed in that country." Sub-order, Striges. 6. Spiloglaux nov.e zeal.vxdi.e. Athene novre zealandite, Gm.; Gray, anted, 2>- 2 ; Finseh, J. f. 0. 1872, i^ 94, et 1874, p. 177. Spiloglaux nov;e zealandia?, Buller, D. N. Zeal., p. 17, pi. 3. Figured by Dr. BuUer (/. c). 23 7. SCELOGLAUX ALBIFACIES. Plate 1. Athene albifacies, Gray, anted, ]j. 2; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 95, d 1814, p. 177. Sceloglaux albifacies, ^kZ/c?-, I. c, j). 21, _^jZ. 3.,/. 2. The original edition of the present work contains the first description of this remarkable Owl, tliough the accom- ])anying pLite by llr. Wolf is now for the first time issued. In the meanwhile Dr. Buller has published a good figure of the s]iecies. The name albifacies is not very appropriate for this species ; only one of the three in the British Museum has a light-coloured aspect, and I suspect that the young birds are darl^er visaged tlian the adults to judge from the living examples in the possession of Mr. Ct. Dawson Eowley, both of which were quite young and had dusky faces when I saw them. 8. Scops nov^ zealandle. Scops novK zealaudite, Bj). Consp. i, p. 47. I feel constrained to include the present bird, although on somewhat negative evidence. Dr. Buller will not admit it into his work, and this unfortunate little Owl has at present no abode in the New Zealand list, notwithstanding its orthodox title. The type is at present in Leiden, and although no one has proved the presence of a Sco'ps in New Zealand, the species, as Professor Schlegel remarked to me, seems to agree with no other member of the genus, and may, after all, really come from the country whose name it bears. At the close of his article on the two larger Owls Dr. Buller writes: — "The natives are acquainted with another species, which they describe as being very diminu- tive in size and strictly arboreal in its habits. This is no doubt the bird indicated by EUman as Strix 2}arvissima {Zoolorjid, 1861). Mr. J. D. Emys informed me that he once captured an Owl ' standing only live inches high,' and that it was perfectly tame and gentle. Mr. Potts records, on hearsay evidence, several instances of the occurrenfe, in Canterbury, of an Owl ' about the size of a Kingfisher.' This bird may prove to be the same as Bonaparte's Scops novce zcalandice, as suggested by Dr. Finsch ; but, till it has been luore accurately determined, it is impossible to give it a place in our list of species." The follriwiug is a description of the type which I made in the Leiden Museum : — Adult (Type of species). — Upper sm-face brown, very minutely vermiculated with darker brown, sometimes forming an in-egular spot, and varied with a few wa^y lines of dull fuh'ous, rather brighter and more ochrnceous on the outer margin of the scapulars, wliere the alternate bars of dark brown and fulvous are a little more regular ; greater wing-coverts mottled with ashy-grey, especially towards the tips ; primaries darker brown, externally notched with fulvous, these marks tolerably distinct, except towards tiie tips, where tliey are obscured by gi'eyish mottling, the secondaries more ashy-brown mottled profusely with darker brown and with indications of five lighter and more fulvous bars across them ; under surface of wing uniform brown with slight ashy mottlings towards the tip, the under wing-coverts almost entirely ochraceous, this shade extending some way along the inner web of the quills, whicli are also barred with greyish-brown ; tail brown, mottled with darker brown, witli indications of seven fulvescent bands ; crown and hind neck as well as sides of face and ear-tufts darker brown than the back ; lores and ear-coverts rufescent ; an indistinct superciliary line indicated by fulvous mottling, which also appears on the inner webs of the ear-tufts ; round the hind neck a narrow collar produced by fulvous mottling; under surface of body rufous ochre, becoming paler and more fulvous on the abdomen, thighs and under tail-coverts ; feathers of lower breast mesially streaked -witli blackish-brown, a little varied with whitish and mottled with darker brown ; the throat and chest blacker, much mottled with irregular wavy lines of this colour, especially on the sides of the Ijreast. Total length 10 inches, culmen 0-8.5, wing 7'0, tail 3'8, tarsus 1"2, middle toe G'8, ear-tufts 11. 9. Aluco delicatula. Dr. Finsch is inclined to include this species on the authority of the late Mr. G. E. Gray, but I fancy some mistake has occurred, as I cannot find any mention in print of the latter stating that this Owl is an iidiabitant of New Zealand, and the British ]\Iuseum contains no speci- men from that country. Dr. Buller is tlierefore right, in my opinion, in refusing it a place in his work. Order, PSITTACI. Family, Steisgopid.^5. 10. Stkixgops habroptilus. Plate 7. Stringops habroptilus. Gray ; Buller, B. A^. Zeal., 'p. 27, pi. 4; hmch, J. /. 0. 1872, p. 9(3, ct 1874, p. 178. In the foregoing list of Mr. Gray's this species does riot appear, and the description was not published till 1847. Tlie accompanying plate, which is now issued for the first time, was prepared to accompany the original work, but as Dr. Buller has given an excellent illustration of the typical bird (/. c.) I have here had Mr. Wolf's original figure modified by Mr. Willis, tiie artist, to represent the Stringops 'jreyi of Mr. G. E. Gray, which has never liefore been figured. The bird in the back-ground represents the normal coloration, and I am not quite convinced that S. ijrcyi is not specifically distinct from S. hohroptilns. However, Dr. Buller regai-ds it as a variety only, and he will have proved his point if no fiuther specimens tui'u up. Family, Psittacid.e. 11. Nestor meridioxalis. Nestor meridionalis, Gray, anted, p. 9 ; Buller, 1. c, p. 40, pi. 5, /. 1 : Fimch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 98, et 1874, p. 179. 24 A full account of the various varieties prevalent in this species is given by Buller. H. montamis, Haast, N. s^qmr- hus, Buller, and N. essliiujii, Souanc^, are all considered to belong to this category. A very fine figure of the variety called by Buller N. supcrhus is given in Mr. Dawson Rowley's " Ornithological Miscellany " (pi. 8). 12. Nestor occidentalis. Described, but not figured, in Dr. Buller's work {p. 50.) Dr. Finsch is not yet persuaded that it is a good species. 13. Nestor notabilis. Nestor notabilis (Gould) ; Buller, I. c, f. 52, fl. 5, /. 2 ; Fbiscli, J.f. 0. UT2,p. 101, et 1874, p. 180. A good figure is given in the above-mentioned work. 14. Platycercus nov^ zealandle. riatycercus novre zealandiae (Sparrm.); Gray, anted, p. 9 ; Fiiisch, J. /. 0. 1872, p. 97 ; Buller, I. c, p. 5S^pl. 6, /. 1. 15. Platycercus auriceps. Platycercus auriceps {Kuhl*) ; Gray, anted,, p. 9 ; Finscli, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 97; Bailer, I. c, p. 61, ijI. 6, /. 2. 16. Platycercus alpinus. Although not admitted by Buller in the body of his work, a notice of this species, which appears to be a per- fectly good one, will be found in the Introduction {p. xvi). Cf. also Finsch, J.f. 0. l^1i,p. 178. Order, PICARII^. Family, Cuculid^. 17. EUDYNAMIS TAITENSIS. Eudynamis taitensis (Sparrm.) ; Gray, anted,, ^j. 91 ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, 2J. 102 ; Buller, l. c, p. 14,, pi. 8. 18. Chrysococcyx lucidus. Chrysococcyx lucidus (Gm.) ; Gi-ay, anted, p. 10 ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, ^J. 104; Buller, I. c, p. 11. Family, Alcedinid^. 19. Halcyon vagans. Plate 1.* Halcyon vagans (Less) ; Gray, anted, p. 2 ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872,^;. 104; Buller, I. c, p. 69. 20. Order, PASSERES. Family, Meliphagid^. PrOSTHEMADERA NOV^E ZEALiVXDIiE. Prosthemadera novre zealandice (Gm.) ; Gray, anted, p. 3 ; Finsch, J. f 0., 1872, ^j. lOG ; Buller, I. c„ p. 87, pi. 9. 21. POGONOENIS CINCTA. Ptilotis cincta, (Du Bus.) ; Gray, anted, p. 4. Pogonornis cincta, Buller, I. c, pi. 10 ; Finsch, J. f. (>. 1872, p. 107. 22. Anthornis melanura. Anthornis melanura (Spam-m.) ; Gray, anted, p. 4; Buller, I. c, p. 91 ; Fi7isch, J. f 0. 1872, ^j. 107. 23. Anthornis melanocephala. Plate 2. Anthornis melanocephala. Gray, anted, p. 4 ; Buller, I. e., p. 96; Finsch, J. f 0. 1^12, p. 107. 24. ZosTEROPs lateralis. Zbsterops lateralis (Lath.) ; Buller, I. c, p. 80 ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 108. Family, Troglodytid^e. 25. Acanthisitta chloris. Plate 3, f. 2. Acanthisitta chloris (Sparrm) ; Gray, anted, ij. 4 ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 109 ; BuWir, I. c, p. 112. Dr. Finsch (./. /. 0. 1874, p. 183) points out the possi- bility of there being a second species of Acanthisitta, which will be the Motaeilla citrina of Graelin. In case this turns out correct, Acanthisitta citrina will have to be added to the New Zealand list. 26. Xenicus longipes. Plate 3, f. r. Acanthisitta longipes. Gray, anted, p. 4. Xenicus longipes, Buller, I. c, p. 115, pi. 12, figs. 1, 2 ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, ^a 189. 27. Xenicus gilviventris. Xenicus gilviventris, (Pelz) ; Buller, I. c.,p. 117, pi. 12, This species is now universally recognised as distinct figs. 3, 4 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 109. from the Australian H. sancta. This new species was discovered by Dr. Haast " in the * Trichoglossus aurifrons. Gray, antea, p. 9, is an American bird, and stands as Bolhorhynchus aurifrons. (Cf. Finsch, Papag. ii, p. 127.) 25 Southern Alps, during a topographical survey of the Can- terbury Province," according to Dr. BuUer, who also described the species as JLenicus haasti. 31. Familj^ Sylviid^. SpHENjEACUS punctatus. 28. Family, MENUEiDiE. MOHOUA OCHROCEPHALA. 10, Mohoua ochrocephala, (Chyi.) ; Gray, anted, p. 5. Orthonyx ochrocephala, Buller, I. c, p. 103, fl. jig. 2. Clitonvx ochrocephala, Finscli, J. f. 0. 1873, ja 39G, ct 1874, 7;."l8-i. Not only Dr. Finsch in Europe, but that good observer Mr. Potts, in New Zealand, have given their opinion that this bird is not congeneric with Certhiparus albicillus, and the former separates it entirely from typical Orthonyx of Australia, and proposes to revive Reic'ienbach's genus Clitonyx in jilace of the less classical MoJiova of Lesson. For the present, until the common consent of ornithologists drives ungrammatical names from the natural system. Dr. Finsch will forgive me for resuscitating the latter title. The German naturalists who set the example of suppressing unclassical names still hold their own on the Continent, and the way in which thej' are Ijeiug followed liy Italian and other ornithologists renders it by no means improbable that ere long a modification of the British Association rules will require to he made in this direction. Family, Paeid^. 29. Certhiparus albicillus. Plate 5, f. 2. Certhiparus albicillus (Less.) ; Gray, anted, p. 6. Orthonyx albicilla, Bullcr, I. c, p. 100, pi. 11, /. 1 ; Finscli, J. / 0. 1872, p. 110. Phyllodytes albicQla, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1873, p. 398, ct 1874 p. 171. Dr. Finsch has written an interesting account of the structure of tliis bird to shew that it is not an Orthonyx, but is really congeneric with Certhiparus nmct zealandice, and he proposes to change the barbarous generic name of the latter into the more classical one of Phyllodytes. I am not purist enough to suppress the old-fashioned name of Certhiparus, and Dr. Finsch will have once more to change the genus himself, as Phyllodytes was bestowed by Wagler on a genus of Rcptilia in 1830. 30. Certhiparus nov^ zealandle. Plate 5, f 1. Certhiparus novte zealandise {Gm). ; Gray, anted, p. G ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, 'p. 110 ; Buller, I. c, p. 105. Phyllodytes nova zealandice, Finsch, J.f. 0. 1873, ». 397, et 1874, ». 171. Sphenreacus punctatus {Q. & G.), Gray, anted, p). 5; Finsch, J. f. 0 1872, p. Ill ; BiUler, I. c, p. 128, pl. 13, /. 1. 32. Sphenreacus fulvus. Sphenseacus fulvus. Gray, Ibis, 1862, p. 221 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. Ill ; Buller, I. c, p. 130. 33. SPHEN.ffiACUS rufescens. Sphenreacus rufescens, Buller, Ibis, 1869, p. 38 ; id. B. N. Zeal. p. 131, pl. 13, /. 2; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, ^x 112, et 1874, p. 185. I am glad to see that Dr. Finsch admits this species. The Museum contains a pair collected in the Chatham Islands by Mr. Travers, and there is no cpiestion as to its distinctness. 34. MiRO loxgipes. Petroica longipes (Gam) ; Gray, anted, p. 7. Myioscopus longipes, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p>- 112, ei 1874, p. 186. Miro longipes, Bidlcr, B. K Z., p. 118. 35. MiRO albifeons. Plate 6, f 1. Petroica albifrons [Gm?) ; Gray, anted, p. 7. Myioscopus albifrons, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 160, et 1874, 2^- 187. Miro albifrons, Bullcr, B. N. Z., p. 122. 36. GERYGONE FLAVn^NTEIS. Plate 4, f 1. Gerygone flaviventris, Gray, anted, p. 5 ; Bvllcr, I. c., p. 107; Fijisch, J. /. 0. 1872, p. 160, ct 1874, ^j. 186. 37. Gerygoxe igata. Gerygone igata (Q. & G.) ; Gray, anted, p. 5 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1862, p. 162, et 1874, p. 187; Buller, B. K Z. Int. p). XV. Dr. Buller considers that this species, wliicli was said to have been obtained by llie "Astrolabe " in Tasman's Bay, Cooks' Straits, should be struck out of the New Zealand list ; l)ut Dr. Finsch thinks tliat it may yet very possibly be identified, as he says he has seen a specimen of Gerygone which agrees better with G. igata than with G. flavivcntris, but, as he justly remarks, a comparison of types will best settle the matter. During a recent \'isit to Paris I examined, in company with Dr. Oustalet, the type of this species which still exists in the Jardin des Plantes. The little bird bears tlie 26 following label in the handwriting of the original dis- coverer : — " Nile Zelande. Baie Tasman. CEil noir, avec un i^etit cercle blanc, igata." The figure in the atlas to the voyage of the " Astrolabe " is certainly very bad indeed. We compared the type with Dr. Buller's figure and with specimens of G. fiaviveyitris, and we could not believe that the two species were identical. I take the following ob- servations from my note-book : — " It is very close to G. fiavivcntris, but instead of being grey on the throat, the latter is whitish, washed with yellow, a shade of which is also apparent on the cheeks ; sides of the breast washed with brown ; abdomen white, the flanks washed with yellow ; wing, 1'95 ; tarsus, 0-75." The tail is imperfect, but on the feathers which remain the white spot is de- cidedly more correctly described as terminal instead of subterminal. I mention this latter character a propos of the following remarks made by Di\ Buller in his great work : — " In some examples the measurements are slightly larger; there is an absence of the yellow tinge on the abdomen, and the white spot on the lateral tail-feathers is terminal." The last-named author does not seem to allow this difference to be specific, but I think that further investigation by the field-observers in New Zealand may prove Gertjgone igata to be a good species, and I leave the matter in their hands. 38. Gekygone albifeontata. Plate 4, f. 2. Gerygone albofrontata, Gray, anted, ^j. 5 ; Bidlcr, I. c, p. Ill ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1874, p. 188. Gerygone frontata, Potts, Tr. Z. S. vi., ^j. 144 (lapsu). 39. Gerygone sylvestris. Gerygone sp.. Potts, Ibis, 1872, p. 326. Gerygone sylvestris, Potts, Tr. Z. S. vi., p. 144 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1874, p. 188. This species was fully described by Mr. Potts (/. c), but Dr. Buller was inclined to refer it to G. alhifrontata. Mr. Potts, however, dissenting from this view, has named it G. sylvestris. Family, Motacellid^. 40. Anthus nov^ zealandle. Anthus novas zealaudiaj, Gm. ; Gray, anted,, p. 7 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, x>- 162, ct 1874, p. 189 ; Buller, B. K Z., p. 132. Family TURDID.'E. 41. TUENAGRA HECTOKI. Otagon tanagra, Schl. K T. D. iii,, p. 190 (1865). Turnagra hectori, Buller, Ibis, 1869, ». 39, et B. N. Z p 135, pi. 14, /. 1. Turnagra tanagra, Gray, Eandl. B. i., p. 284. Keropia tanagra, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1870, p. 320, ct 1872, p. 166, ct 1874, p. 191. Tlie cori-ect position of these curious birds in the natural system is stUl a doubtful point. Gray {anted, p. 7) puts Turnagra in the Timalincc, Buller in the Turdidoc, and Finsch first in the Glaiocopince, and lastly (following SuudevaU) in the Ptilonorhijnchidcc. He proposes in his last excellent essay to strike out the family Corvidce from the New Zealand Avifauna, and to place Glaueopis in a separate family, Glaueopidce. At present I think with Dr. Buller that Turnagra is a thick-billed form of Thrush, but should it be proved ultimately to belong to the Bower- birds it will form a very interesting link between the Avifauna of New Zealand and Australia, by admitting into the former country one of the most typical representative families of the Australian sub-region; 42. Turnagra crassirosteis. Turnagra crassirostris, {Gm) ; Gray, anted, p. 7 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 138, pi. 14, /. 2 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 166, et 1874, p. 19. Dr. Buller remarks that tlris species, which is confined to the South Island, and is the representative of T. hectori of the North Island, is becoming very rare, owing to its destruction by dogs and wild cats, being now 'almost unknown in places where it was formerly abundant. Family HiEUNDiNiDiE. 43. Hylochelidon nigricans. Hylochelidon nigricans ( V.) ; Buller, B. A^. Zeal., p. 140. Hirundo nigiicans, Finsch, J. /. 0. 1872, p. 162, ct 1874, p. 171. This species has been twice obtained in New Zealand according to Dr. Buller, but from the quantity seen on one occasion it doubtless occurs in some numbers, though probably it is not a regular emigrant ; it comes from the Australian continent. Family, MusciCAPiD^. 44. Myiomoira toitoi. Petroica toitoi, {less) ; Gray, anted, p. 6. Myiomoira ioitoi', Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872. p. 163, et 1874, p. 189 ; Buller, B. N. Zeal. p. 124. 45. Myiomoira macrocephala. Petroica macrocephala {Gm); Gray, anted, p. 6. Myiomoira macrocephala, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 163, et 1874, p. 188 ; Buller, B. K Zeal, p. 126. Petroica dieffenbachii, Gray, anted, p. 6, pi. 6, /. 2. Dr. Buller has already pointed out that P. dieffenbachii of Gray is not distinct from P. macrocephala, and in this determination, which seems to me perfectly correct. Dr. Finsch coincides. 27 46. Myiomoira tkaveesi. Miro traversi, Buller, B. K Z., p. 123 {-Time, 1872), et Ibis, 1874, p. 116. Petroica traversi, Hutton, Ibis, 1872, ;;. 245 {Jnly). Myiomoira traversi, Finsch. J. f. 0. 1874, p. 189. This new species was discovered by Mr. Travers in the Chatliam Islands. A specimen is now in the national collection. 47. PiHIPIDURA FLABELLIFERA. Ehipidura flabellifera (Gm.) ; Gray, anted,, p. 8, pi. 6, /. 2; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 164, et 1874, p. 190; Buller, B. N. Z. p. 143. 48. Ehipidura fuliginosa. Ehipidura fuliginosa [Sparrm) ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 165, ct 1874, p. 190 ; Buller, B. N. Z. p. 146. Ehipidura melanura, Gray, cmtea, p. 8. 49. Family, Laniid^. Geaucalus paevieostris. Graucalus parvirostris,G-'oi6M; Finsch,!. f. 0. 1874, p. 190. Colluriocincla concinna, Hutton, Cat. B.. N. Z. p)- 15. Graucalus melanops, Buller, B. N. Z., p. 148. This bird has twice occurred in New Zealand, and Captain Hutton named it C. concinna when it was first observed. Dr. Buller, however, identified it as a Graucalus, and re- ferred it to G. melanops of Gould. More recently, however, Dr. Finsch has examined one of Capt. Hutton's types, and says that it is G. parvirostris. It is probably only an occasional visitant from Australia. Family, Sturnid^. 50. Heteralocha acutirostris. Neomorpha gouldii. Gray, antea, p. 3. Heteralocha acutirostris, Gould ; Buller. I. c., p. 64, pi. 7 ; Fiiiseh, J. /. 0. 1872, _2J. 105, et 1874, p. 192. In the " Introduction " to his book Dr. Buller gives Mr. Garrod's notice on the structure of this bird, and correctly refers it to the Sturnidm instead of to the Upupiclm, as he had done in the body of the work. I believe that the nearest ally of this singular form is Falculia of Madagascar. 51. Creadion caeunculatus. Creadion carunculatus (Gm.); Gray, cmtecl, p. 8; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 167, et 1874, p. 192 ; Buller, B. K Z. p. 149, pi. 15. This is one of the peculiar New Zealand forms, and although it has been known to science ever since the time of Forster its proper position remains imsettled. Dr. Buller, like most of his predecessors, considers it to be a Starling, but Dr. Finsch, whose views on classification are generally most acute, puts it along with Glaucopis in the Glaucopidcc. At present, however, I think it is a Sturnine form. Family, CoRVlDiE. 52. Glaucopis wilsoni. Glaucopis wilsoni, Bp. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 167, et 1874, p). 172 ; Buller, B. N. Z. p. 152, pi. 16, /. 1. This species was not known to science when Mr. Gray wrote the foregoing Memoir on the " Birds of New Zealand." It replaces the well-known G. cinerea in the North Island, being distinguished from that species by its blue wattles and white superciliary line. 53. Glaucopis cinerea. Calkeas cinerea, Gm. ; Gray, anted,, p. 8. Glaucopis cinerea, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, pi. 167, ct 1874, p. 191 ; Buller, B. N. Z. p. 155, pi. 15, /. 2. This species, to wluch Dr. Buller has given the excellent distinguishing name of " Orange- wattled Crow," is found only in the South Island. Order, COLUMByE. Family, CoLUMBiDiE. 54. Carpophaga ^oym zealandle. Carpophaga novte zealandia; {Gm.) ; Gray, cmtea, p. 10 Finsch, J f^O. 1872, p. 168, et 1874, p. 192 ; Buller, B. K Z. p. 157, pi. 17. Order, GALLINJE. Family, Peedicid^. 55. COTUEXIX NOV^ ZEALANDIiE. Plate 8. Coturnix novte zealandite, Q. & G. ; Gray, anted, p. 10. pi. 8 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 168, et 1874, p. 193 ; Buller. B. N. Z., p. 161, pi. 18. This species is now nearly extinguished m. New Zealand, although very common in the memory of the present gene- ration of colonists. Mr. Dawson Eowley exhibited at a late meeting of the Zoological Society a male specimen, obtained in Blue Skin Island, and he is one of the fortu- nate possessors of this rare bird. Order, GEALL^. FamUy, E.\xlid^. The members of the genus Ocydromus are in a very con- fused state, and at present the series in the Museum is too small to allow me to investigate the matter. There would be few birds of which 1 should more like to see a complete set, but without a critical examination of this it will be 28 impossible for me to do more than notice the genus cur- sorily. Dr. Buller, in his " Birds of New Zealand," admits three species, viz., — 1, 0. australis ; 2, 0. carli ; and 3, 0. fuscus; but more recently Captain Hutton has written a paper on Oci/dromus and admits six species, as follows : — 1, 0. troglodytes (Gm.) ; 2, 0. hectovi, Hutt ; 3, 0. australis, Sparrm ; 4, 0. fuscus, Du Bus ; 5, 0. finschi, Hutt. ; 6, 0. earli, Gray. Of all these he gives characters. Dr. Finsch in his late essay {J. f. 0. 1874, p- 197) admits the six species, which he discusses in his own masterly manner, but he refers the bird figured by Dr. Buller as 0. earli to the true 0. australis (Sparrm) : he gives synonymy of each. 56. OCYDROMUS TROGLODYTES. Ocydromus troglodytes (Gm.) ; ITutton, Tr. N. Z. Inst, v., p. 110 ; Fiiisch, J. f. 0. 1874, ^j. 197. Ocydromus australis, Bidkr, B. N. Zeal. j). 170, pi. 19, /. 1. " The distinguishing marks of this species are its large size, the general olivaceous tint of its plumage, the middle tail-feathers having generally a black streak down the shaft, and the primary feathers of the wing tapering towards the point. Height of Middle toe, wing. Tail. Culmen. bill Tarsus. without at base. claw. "Male ... 7-8 4-8 2-0 -83 2-5 2-4 Female.. 67 44 17 7 2-1 2-15" (Hutton, I. c.) .57. Ocydromus hectori. Ocydromus hectori, Hutton, Tr. K Z. Inst, v., j). 110 ; Finsch. J. f. 0. 1874, p. 198. " In size and style of colouring this bird resembles 0. troglodytes, but its bill is more rolmst, its general hue is Isabella brown, or fawn-coloured ; the primary feathers of the wing are rounded at the tip, and the brown bauds on the webs are very narrow, sometimes becoming obsolete. The tail is coloured as in 0. troglodytes. Height of Middle toe. Wing. Tail. Culmen. bill Tarsus. without at base. claw. "Male ... 7-8 4-8 2-3 -93 2-3 2-2 " This species is described from a single specimen only, and more must be obtained before we can feel sure whether it should stand as a separate species, or only as a sub- species of 0. troglodytes. This specimen was obtained by Mr. Morton, near the Te Anau Lake, in Otago." (Hutton, I. c). Dr. Finsch (I. c.), who has examined the type specimen, believes this to be a well-marked species. 58. Ocydromus australis. Plate 14. Ocydromus australis (.^9fM-?-wi.); Gray, anied,p. 31; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, jj. 178, ct 1874, |). 198 ; IIutto7i, Tr. K Z. List. v., p. 111. " Distinguished from the two former by its smaller size, the rust-red tint of its plumage, the grey colour of the throat and lower part of the breast (especially in the male bird), the more strongly marked pectoral band, and in the primary feathers of the wing tapering towards the point. Height of Middle toe, wing. Tail. Culmen. bill Tarsus. without at base. claw. "Male ... 6-5 44 17 -69 2-0 2-0 Female.. 67 44 1-8 -68 2-0 2-0 " The middle tail-feathers are generally barred, but this is very variable. Except by the size, this species is not always easy to recognise from 0. troglodytes, and it is pos- sible that it may prove to be a variety of it." (Hutton, I.e.) Dr. Finsch unites with 0. australis Dr. Buller's figure of 0. earli. I have compared the type of the latter species with Sparrman's figure, and it does not agree at all, whereas it is like the bird figured by Dr. Buller, but has not such a distinct breast-band as is represented by him. 59. Ocydromus earli. Ocydromus earli. Gray ; Hutton, Tr. N. Z. Inst, v., p. Ill ; Flnseh, J. f. 0. 1874, p. 199. As before mentioned. Dr. Buller's identification of this species has been doubted by Dr. Finsch, but I must wait for a larger series before being able to settle this question. 60. Ocydromus fuscus. Ocydromus fuscus, Dv, Bus; Buller, B. N. Zeal. p. 174; Finseh, J. f. 0. 1874, p. 199; Hutton, Tr. K Z. Inst., v., p. 111. Captain Hutton says : — " This species appears to be confined to the south-east of Otago, on the western side of the Alps." It is a well characterized bird and there is no doubt connected with its specific identification at present. 61. Ocydromus fixschl Ocydromus finschi, Hutton, Tr. iV. Z. Inst, v., p. Ill ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1874, jJ. 199. " Throat, abdomen, and thighs dark brownish-grey ; feathers of the rest of the body brownish-black, with spots of yellowish ferruginous on the outer margins of each web. Under tail-coverts, and feathers of the fiauks banded with yellowish ferruginous. Primary feathers of the wing acutely pointed, brownish-black, banded on each web with dull ferruginous ; secondaries with yellow ferruginous spots on the margins of each web. Middle tail-feathers brownish- black, the outer ones with spots of yellow ferruginous on the margins of the web. Bill dark Ijrown, getting reddish towards the base of the lower mandible. Legs brownish- red. Height of Middle toe. Wing. Tail. Culmen. bill Tarsus. without at base. claw. "Male ... 77 5-0 1-9 -8 2-35 2.25 Female.. 6-35 46 17 -64 21 2-0" (Hutton, /. c.) 29 Dr. Finsch has examined the type of this bird, but considers that a larger series will require to be examined, before it can be admitted as a species. 62. Eallus philippensis. Rallus assimilis, Gray, anted,, p. 14. Eallus pectoralis, Less. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 181, et 1874, p. 200. Rallus philippensis, L. ; Buller, B. N. Z. p. 176, pi. 20, /.I. I believe Dr. Buller to be quite right in assigning the name philippensis to this wide-spread species. (Cf. also Walden, Tr. Z. S. viii., p. 95). 63. Cabalus dieffenbachii. Plate 15. Ocydromus dieffenbachii, Gray, anted, p. 14, pi. 15. Rallus dieffenbachii {Gray) ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 182, et 1874, p. 200 ; Buller, B. N. Zeal. p. 179, pi. 20, /. 2. Eallus modestus, Mutton, Ibis, 1872, p. 247; Finsch, J. /. 0. 1874, p. 200. Cabalus modestus, Hutton, Tr. N. Z. Inst, v., p. 108. In his latest article on the " Birds of New Zealand " Dr. Finsch believes in Eallus modestus of Hutton being a dis- tinct species from R. dieffenbachii. I examined the type of Capt. Hutton's species and thoroughly believe it to be the young of the latter Rail. Perhaps Capt. Hutton is right in referring this Rail to a genus or sub-genus intermediate between Eallus and Ocydromus, and I have therefore for the present adopted his genus Cabalus. 64. Ortygometra affinis. Ortygometra affinis. Gray, anted, p. 14 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1871, p. 182, ct 1874, p. 201 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. im,pl. 21, /. 1. 65. Ortygometra tabuensis. Ortygometra tabuensis (Gm). ; Gray, anted, p. 14 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 183, et 1874, p. 201 ; Buller, B. K Z. p. 182, pi. 21, /. 2. in the British Museum, and no others are yet known to science. Like many New Zealand forms, it is the gigantic representative of a well-known genus of Swamp Hens, and the interest attaching to this bird has been recently en- hanced by the discovery that the White Swamp Hen of Norfolk Island has been found to be a true Notornis, thus increasing the range of this nearly, if not quite, extinct genus. (Of. Pelz, Ibis, 1874, p. 44 ; Salvin, I. c, p. 296, pi. 10.) Family, Charadriid.e. 68. Charadrius fultus. Charadrius virginianus. Gray, anted, p. 11. Charadrius fulvus, Gni. ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, p. 168, et 1874, p. 193 ; Buller, I. c, p. 212. Only found in New Zealand as a straggler and always in winter plumage. 69. Charadrius obscurus. Plate 9. Charadrius obscurus, Gm.; G)-ay, anted, p. 11; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, i?. 168, et 1874, i?. 193; Buller, I. c.,p. 208. 70. Charadrius bicinctus. Hiaticula bicincta, (J. & S.) ; G)-ay, anted,]}. 12. Charadrius bicinctus, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 169, et 1874:, p. 193 ; Buller, I. c.,p. 210. 71. ThINORNIS NOViB ZEALANDIiE. Plates 11, 11.* Thinornis rossii, Gray, anted,, p. 12; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, jj. 169. Thinornis novae zealandise, {Gm^ ; G)-ay, anted, p. VI: Finsch, J.f 0. 1812, p. 169, et 1874, p. 194; Buller, I. c, p. 21Z, pi. 23. This Plover is rare in collections. Dr. Buller after examining the type of Mr. Gray's Tliinornis rossi, considers it, with good reason, to be tlie young of T. novce zealandice. More recently it has been found on the Chatham Islands. 66. PORPHYRIO MELANONOTUS. 72. Anarhynchus frontalis. Porphyrio melanonotus, Temm. ; Gi-ay, anted, p. 14 ; Anarhynchus frontalis, Q & G.; Gray, anted, p. 12 ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 183. et 1874, p. 201 ; Buller, B. Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 169, ct 1874, p. 194; Bvller, I. c. N. Z. p. 185. 67. Notornis mantelli. Notornis mantelli, Owen; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, p. 184, et 1874, p. 201 ; Buller, B. K Z. p. 189, pi. 22. This species is represented by the two typical examples p. 216. A capital illustration of this " Wry-billed Plover " is given by Mr. Harting (Ibis, 1869, pi. viii.) 73. Strepsilas interpres. Strepsilas interpres, {£.); Finsch, J.f. 0. 1870, ;;. 349, 30 d lS12,p. 170, d 1874, p. 194 ; Buller, I. c, p. 221. 74. HjEmatopus longirostris. Hcematopus longirostris, V.; Gray, anted,, p. 12; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, j9. 170, d 1874:, p. 194; Buller, I. c.,p. TIZ. 75. HffiMATOPUS UNICOLOR. Plate 10. Hsematopus unicolor, Wagl.; Gray, anted, p. 12 ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, i?. 170 ; Buller, I. c.,p'. 22o. Family, ScolopaciDvE. 76. LiMOSA NOViE ZEALANDIiE. Limosa lapponica, var. novae zealandiae, Gray, anted, p. 13. Limosa uropygialis, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 173. Limosa baueri, Buller, B. N. Z.,p. 198. Limosa nova3 zealandite, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1874, p. 196. On reconsidering the question of priority of title for this species, I think it is perhaps better to follow Dr. Finsch in adopting that of Limosa novce zealandice, in preference to L. baueri, Natt., which was never described. 77. Eecurvirostra nov^ hollandi^. Eecurvirostra rubricoUis, Temm; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872,^. 173 c!: 1874,^5. 196. Eecurvirostra novae hollandiae, V. ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 201 ; Hariing, Ibis, 1874, p. 258. Dr. Buller has restored Vieillot's title for this species, and in this identification be is followed by Mr. Harting, who has studied the Limicolce more closely than any one living. 78. HiMANTOPUS NOV^ ZEALANDI^. Himantopus novaj zealandise, Gould; Gray, anted, p. 13; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1812, p. 173, d 1874, p. 196 ; Buller, B. N. Z.,p.204:. 79. Himantopus leucocephalus. Himantopus leucocephalus, Gould; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 174, d 1874, 2}. 196 ; Buller, B. K Z., p. 203. This species was not known to Mr. Gray when he wrote his foregoing list of New Zealand birds, nor liis subse- quent one {Ibis, 1862, p. 237). Dr. Finsch refers to this species, apparently with excellent reason, the lately described H. spicatus of Potts. 80. Teinga ganutus. Tringa canutus, {L.) ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 174, d 1874, p. 197 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 194. Dr. Buller writes : — " This cosmopolitan species is occasionally obtained in New Zealand, but only in its win- ter plumage. There are several specimens in the Canter- bury and Otago Museums, all of them obtained on the east coast. It has not yet been recorded in the North Island, but there is no reason why it should not occur there also." 81. Tringa acuminata. Tringa acuminata, Horsf. ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1874, p. 197. The occurrence of this species has been recorded since the completion of Dr. Buller 's work. It is a well-known Australian bird. 82. Gallinago augklandica. Plate 13. Gallinago aucklandica. Gray, anted, p.li; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 174, d 1874, p. 197 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 196. 83. Gallinago pusilla. GaUinago pusilla, Buller, Ibis, 1869, p. 41 ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, p. 174:. Dr. Buller, who first described this species, brought a specimen over to England, which he compared with the typical examples of G. aucklandica in the British Museum. His results are fully stated in his work (p. 197,) and he says : — " I have come to the conclusion that, notwithstand- ing the great difference in the length of the bill, they are referable to one and the same species, — or at any rate that till further specimens have been obtained, it would be unwise to separate them." Judging however, from the measurements of specimens recently obtained in the Chatham Islands, (Cf. Finsch, J. f 0. 1874, p. 197), I am inclined to regard G. pusilla as a smaller species than G. aucklandica, which, from its constantly lesser dimensions, may be well kept distinct. Family Ardeid^. 84. Ardea egretta. Herodias fla\'irostris, {Wagl) ; Gray, anted, p. 12. Ardea egretta, Gm.; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, jj. 172, et 1874, p. 194. Ardea s^Tmatophora, Buller, B. N. Z., p. 226. Dr. Buller refers the Great White Heron of New Zealand to the Australian species which Mr. Gould separated from the European bird. Dr. Finsch believes that it is A. egretta, and speaks so positively on the subject, that I have no option but to follow his identifica- tion. 31 85. Ardea sacra. 92. Anas superciliosa. Herodias matook, (F.) ; Gray, anted, -p. 13. ^^^^ supercUiosa, Qm. ; Gray, anted,, p. 15 ; Finsch, J. f. Ardea sacra, Gm. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 172, et 1874, 0. 1872, p. 185, ci! 1874, p. 202 ; ^itiJer, B. N. Z.,p. 244. jj. 195; Bullcr, B. N. Z.,p. 22?,, pi. 24,/. 1. Tliis widely distributed bird is found aU. over New 93 Zealand, and breeds there apparently, as Ur. Buller men- tions an egg of the species. Anas chlorotis. Plate 20. Anas chlorotis, Gray, anted,, p. 15; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 186, et 1874, p. 202 ; Bullcr, B. N. Z., p. 248. 94. Spatula rhynchotis. Spatula rhynchotis, {Lath.); Gray, anted, jp. 15. Rhynchaspis variegata, Gould; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 187. Spatula variegata, Buller, B. N. Z., p. 252, pi. 2G. Rhynchaspis rhynchotis, Finsch, J.f. 0. 1874,^. 202. Dr. Buller only separates this bird from the Australian species under the assurance of Mr. Gould, and he evidently A very good account of this species has recently been suspects their identity. I agree with Dr. Finsch in con- published by Dr. Buller {Tr. N. Z. Inst., vol. vi.), with a sidering the two species inseparable, plate. 95. Hymenol^mus malacorhynchus. 88. BOTAURUS PCECILOPTILUS. Hymenolccmus malacorhynchus, {Gm); Gi-ay, anted,' p. Botaurus melanotus. Gray, anted, p. 13. ^^ 'J'^'^'"oa/- ?' }^^h ^^ ^^^' '' ^^^'^' ^^ ^^^ ' ^''^^"'' Ardea poiciloptila, Wagl. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 172, et ^- ^- ^■' P- ^^^' ■?''• ^ ' ' /• ^• 1874, _p. 195. 86. Ardea novje hollandivE. Ardea novce hoUandiae, Lath. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 172, et 1874, p. 195 ; Bidlcr, B. N. Z., p. 231, pi. 24, / 2. "Sparingly distributed over New Zealand." Buller, {l. c.) 87. Ardetta maculata. Ardea pusilla, V. ; Finsch, J. /. 0. 1872, p. 172, et 1874, p. 195 ; Buller, B. iV. Z, p. 235. Botaurus poeciloptilus, Buller, B. N. Z., p. 238. Found in suitable places all over New Zealand, occurring also in the Chatham Islands. 89. Nycticobax caledonicus. Nycticorax caledonicus, {Lath.) ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872,^. 172, et 1874, p. 195 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 233. A straggler from Australia, it has been found once in the North Island, but several times in the South Island. {Of. Buller, I.e.) Family, ANATiD.iE. Sub-Family, ANATIN.E. 90. Dendrocygna eytoni. Dendrocygna eytoni, Gould; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, p. 184, et 1874:, p. 201 ; Buller, B. K Z.,p. 265. 91. Casarca variegata. Plate 16. 96. Querquedula gibberifrons. Anas gracilis, Buller, Ibis, 1869, p. 41. Querquedula gibberifrons, {Mull.) ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 188, et 1874,27. 173; Buller, B. N. Z.,p. 250. Sub-Family Fuligtjlin^. 97. Nyroca australis. Nyroca australis, Gould; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1812, p. 188, et 1874, p. 202 ; Buller, B. N. Z.,p. 257. 98. FuLIGULA NOVjE ZEALANDIiG. Plate 18. Fuligula novae zealandite, {Gm.); Gray, anted, p. Iti ; Fi7isch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 188, et 1874, p. 203 ; Buller, B. iV. ^.,^.259,27/. 27,/. 2. 99. Nesonetta aucklandica. Plate 17. Nesonetta aucklandica. Gray, anted, p. 17 ; Finsch, J. f. Casarca variegata, {Gm.); Gray, anted, p. 15; Finsch, J. 0. 1872, p. 188, et 1874,^. 203. / 0. 1812, p. 184, et 1874,^. 202; Buller, B. N. Z.,p. 241, Only known from the Auckland Islands and not yet pi. 25. procured in New Zealand. 32 Family, MeegiDjE. 100. Meegus austealis. Mergus australis, H. & J.; Gray, anted, p. 16 ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 19,12, p. 188, d 1814:, pp. 173, 203. (Inly known from the Auckland Islands. Family, Laeid^e. 101. Steecoeaeius catarractes. Lestris antarcticus (Less.) ; Gray, anted, p. 18. Lestris catarractes, III. ; Finseli, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 240, et 1814:, p. 203. Stercorarius antarcticus, Buller, B. N. Z., p. 266. The question of the identity of the northern and southern Great Skuas is one which wants settling by means of a good series. 102. Stercoraeius parasiticus. Lestris longicaudus, (Briss.) ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, p. 241, et 1874, p. 203. Stercorarius parasiticus, Buller, B. N. Z., p. 268. Only a single specimen has been obtained in New Zealand, having been shot by Dr. Buller himself on the sea-coast at Horouhemea in the Province of Wellington. Mr. Howard Saunders thinks it may belong to an unde- scribed species. 103. Larus dominicanus. Larus dominicanus, Liclit. ; Gray, anted, p. 18 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 241, et 1874, p. 203; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 269, pi. 28,/. 2. 104. Larus NOViE hollandle. Larus nov£e hollandife, Sfeph. ; Gray, anted, p. 18 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 241, et 1874, p. 203. Larus scopulinus, Forst. ; Buller, B. ]Sf. Z., p. 273. An excellent account of this species has been published by Dr. Finsch in the "Journal fiir Ornothologie," 1872, p. 241. 105. Larus pomaee. Icarus pomare, (Bruch); Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872,^. 248, et 1 874, p. 204. Larus biiUeri, Ilutt.; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 216, pi. 28, f. 1. Dr. Buller, in passing through Mayence, examined the types of Bruch's Larus jwmarc, and considered they were not the same as the New Zealand bird. Dr. Finsch, how- I'ver, having received a series of L. hulleri from New Zealand, sent for the types of L. pomare, and declares the identity of the two species. The young of L. pomare is, according to the same author, the immature Larus nova: hoUandicc. 106. Sterna caspia. Sterna caspia, Pall ; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 253, H 1874, p. 173 ; Buller, B. K Z., p. 279. 107. Sterna frontalis. Plate 20.* Sterna frontalis, Gi-ay, anted, p. 19; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 253, et 1874, p. 205 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 281. 108. Sterna Antarctica. Plate 21. Sterna antarctica, Forst. ; Gi'ay, anted, ^. 19 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1812, p. 254, et 1814:, p. 205; Buller, B. N. Z.,ip 283. Hydrochelidon albostriata, Gi-ay, anted, p. 19, pi. 21. The species figured as ff. albostriata in the plate accom- panying this book, is the true Sterna antarctica of Forster. 109. Sterna nereis. Sterna nereis, Gould ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 252, et 1874, p. 205 ; Buller. B. N. Z., p. 284. 110. Hydrochelidon leucopteea. Hydrochelidon leucoptera, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 254, et 1874, p. 206 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 287. • Family, PROCELLARIIDiE. 111. DiOMEDEA EXULANS. Diomedea exulans. Gray, anted, p. 18 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1812, p. 254, et 1874, p. 206 ; Btdler, B. K Z, p. 289. 112. DiOMEDEA MELANOPHRYS. Diomedea melanophrys, Boie; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, p. 254, et 1874, p. 206 ; Buller, B. K Z.,p. 292. Although not mentioned by Mr. Gray in the foregoing list of New Zealand birds nor yet in his second catalogue in the "Ibis" for 1862, this species is the commonest Albatros of New Zealand, five species altogether being now known to occur there. 113. DiOMEDEA CHLOROEHYNCHA. Diomedea cMororhyncha, Gm. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 254, et 1874, p. 173 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 294. 114. Diomedea culmin.wa. Diomeda culminata, Gould; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, p, 254, et 1874, p 206 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 295. 33 115. DiOMEDEA FULIGINOSA. Included by Dr. BuUer as a doubtful New Zealand species, but, as Dr. Finsch points out, specimens were r>iomedea fuliginosa, Gvi. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 254, obtained in the Novara Voyage in the New Zealand etlS'i4:,p.2Qia; Bullcr,B. N. Z.,p.2^&. seas. IIG. OSSIFRAGA GIGANTEA. 125. PrOCELLARIA COOKII. Procellaria gic^antea, Gm. ; Gray, anted,, p. VJ ; Finsch, Plate 35 J. f. 0. 1872, ^;.^255, et 1874, p 206. Ossifra^a gisantea, BuUer, B. N. Z., v. 297. Procellaria cookii. Gray, anted., p. 17 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 255, et 1874, ^^ 207 ; Bullcr, B. K Z.,p. 207. 117. Daptiox capensis. 12G. Procellaria c^rulea. Daption capensis, (Z.) ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p 256, ct proppihm PT^rulp-i Gm ■ Fin.rh T f 0 187'' » 255 1874, p. 208 ; Bullcr, B. K Z, p. 299. , Tq° , oaq ^ 7^' p \t v ' oi/'■ > > • > i will be found in Captain Hutton's paper entitled " Notes on some of the Birds inhabiting the Southern Ocean," 127. PUFFINUS GAVius. (7^,1865,^.276.) -d n • ■ t, , n , a io Procellaria gavia, Forst. ; Gray, anted, p. 18. Puffinus gavius, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 256 ct 1874, ;a 118. Procellaria paekinsoni. 208; BuUer, B. N. Z.,p. 316. Dr. Finsch has given a full account of the synonjTuy in Procellaria parkinsoni. Gray ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. j^ig latest article, (I. c.) 255, et 1874, p. 207 ; Bullcr, B. N. Z., p. 302. 119. Procellaria gouldl 128. Puffinus griseus. Puffinus major, Gixty, anted,, p. 17. Procellaria gouldi. Butt. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 255, Puffinus tristis, (Forst.) ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 256 ; et 1874, p. 207 : Fuller, B. N. Z., p. 308. Bullcr, B N. Z., p. 317. PufBnus gi-iseus {Gm) ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1874, p. 209. 120. Procellaria fuliginosa. On this bird also see Dr. Finsch's remarks, {I. c.) Procellaria fuliginosa, Kuhl ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1874, p. ]^2') Puffinus tenuirostris 207 ; BuUer, B. N. Z., p. 304, pi. 29./. 2. 121. Procellaria cinerea. Puffinus brevicaudus, Bullcr, B. N. Z.,p. 315. Puffinus tenuirostris, Teinm. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1874, p. 210. Procellaria cinerea, Gm. ; Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872, p. 254, et 1874,^. 174; BuUcr, B. K Z.,p. 305. 130. Pelecanoides urinatrix Pelecanoides urinatrix, {Gm); Gray, anted, p. 17; Bullcr, 122. Procellarla lessonl B. N. Z., p. 313. T, 11-1 • /7 TT- 7 7- ^ ^ iof,r. ^rr Halodroiua urinatrix, Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872,^. 256, ct Procellaria lessonl, Gar7i.; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 255, lo--, „ oin et 1874, p. 207 ; BuUer, B. N. Z., p. 303, pi. 29, /. 14. ' > F- - ■ 131. Pelecanoides berardl 123. Procellaria glacialoides. Pelecanoides berardi, BuUer, B. N. Z., p. 314. Procellaria glacialoides. Smith; BuUer, B. N. Z., p. 301. Halodroma berardi, Finsch, J.f 0. 1874, ». 210. Procellaria smithii, Schl. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 255, et 1874, p. 174. 132. Prion vittatus. 124 Procellaria mollis. Trion vittatus, {Forst); Gray, anted, p. 18; Finsch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 256, ct 1874, p. 211 ; Bullcr, B. iV. Z., p. 312. Procellaria mollis, Gould ; Fin,sch, J. f 0. 1872, p. 255, The lately described Prion australis of Mr. Potts {Ibis, et 1874, p. 207. 1873, p. 85,) is referred to this species by Dr. Finsch. 34 133. Prion banksi. Prion banksi, (Smith), Finscli, J. f. 0. 1872, ^j. 256, et 1874, p. 211 ; Bidlcr, B. N. Z., p. Sli. 134. Prion turtue. Plate 29. Prion tiirtur, (Kuhl) ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, j;. 257, d 1874, _?). 212 ; Bailer, B. N. Z.,2>. 309. 135. Thalassidroma feegata. Thalassidroma marina. Lath. ; Ch-ay, antm, j). 17. Thalassidroma fre^ata, L.; Fiiisch,\j. f. 0. 1872, p. 257, d 1874, |>. 212; i?wifer, i?. N. Z.,p. 321.' 136. Thalassidroma melanogastra. Thalassidroma melanogastra, Gould. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, j>. 257, d 1874, p. 212; Bulkr, B. N. Z.,ix 319. 141. Piialacrocorax chalconotus. Plate 21.* Gracalus chalconotus. Gray, anted, p. 20. Phalacrocorax clialconotus, Bid/r/r, B. A". Z., p. 334. Graculus chalconotus, Fhisch, J. f. 0. 1872, jj. 258, d 1874, J). 214. Only one specimen has at present been discovered, viz., the type in the British Museum. 142. Phalacrocorax purpuragula. Graculus sulcirostris, Brandt. ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 258, cn874,^. 214. Phalacrocorax sulcirostris, Bidler, B. N. Z. Intr., p. xv. Dr. Buller considers this a doubtful New Zealand species, but, as Dr. Finsch points out, Peale collected his Cormo- rant to wliich he gave the name of purpuragula in Manua Bay and the Bay of Islands. It is not yet quite certain whetlier this bird of Peale's is synonymous with the true P. sidcirostris {Brandt), and I therefore restore for the present Peale's title. {Gf. Finsch, I.e.) 137. Thalassidroma nereis. Thalassidroma nereis, Gould; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, j). 257, d 1874, p. 213 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 322. Family, Pelecanid^. 138. SULA SERRATOR. Sula serrator. Gray, anted,, p. 19; Bidlcr, B. N'. Z., p. 323. Dysporus serrator, Finsch, J./. 0. 1872, p. 257, d 1S74, p 213. . 143. Phalacrocorax varius. Gracalus varius. Gray, anted, p. 19. Phalacrocorax varius, Buller, B. i\^. Z.,p. 328. Graculus varius, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, j^. 258, et 1874,/;. 215. 144. Phalacrocorax punctatus. Gracalus punctatus, {Sparrm) ; Gray, anted, pi- 20. Graculus punctatus, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872,^. 259, d 1874, p. 214. Phalacrocorax punctatus, Buller, B. N. Z., 2'>- 335,^/. 31. 139. Phalacrocorax carlo. Gracalus carboides, Gould ; Gray, anted, p. 20. Phalacrocorax novte liollaudite, Stcph. ; Buller, B. N. Z., 1-). 325. Graculus carbo, (Z.) ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 257, d 1874,7). 21.3. I follow Dr. Finsch in believing that the Cormorant of South Africa and Australia is the same as the ordinary species of Europe. I have compared adult English speci- mens with others from the southern seas, and could iind no difference. 140. Phalacrocorax caetjnculatus. Gracalus cirrhatus. Gray, anted, p. 19, {nee. Gm.). Phalacrocorax caruncidatus, {Gm.) ; Buller, B. JV. Z., p. 332, pi. ?,0,f.l. Graculus carunculatus, Gm.; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872,?;. 274, d 1874, p. 213. 145. PHAL.iCROCORAX FEATHERSTOXI. Graculus, sp. n. Finsch, J.f. 0. 1872,^. 274. Phalacrocorax featherstoni, Bidlcr, Ibis, 1873, |j. 90, d B. N. Z., p. 338, 1)1. 32. Graculus featherstoni, Finsch, J.f. 0. 1874, jj. 216. 146. Phalacrocorax brevirostris. Gracalus brevirostris, {GoiUd) ; Gray, anted, p. 20. Graculus brevirostris, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 259, et 1874, p. 216. Phalacrocorax brevirostris, Buller, B. N. Z., p. 330, pi. 30,/. 2. 147. Phalacrocorax finschii, sp. n. Gracalus melanoleucus, {V.); Gray, anted, p. 20. Piialacrocorax melanoleucus, Buller, B. N. Z., p. 333. Graculus melanoleucus, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1874, p. 223. 35 Mr. G. R. Gray (I.e.) notices that the specimen of P. melanolcacus jivocurcil in New Zeahmd by the Antartic Expedition, "differs from the Australian specimens liy tlie white sjjot of tlie wing-coverts," and Dr. Finsch has gone into the intricate synonymy of the species. Dr. Ihiller does not seem to have examined the specimen in tlie Musenm, and I therefore hunted it up from the hirge col- lection wliich we possess of Cormorants in skin, and I tind that it constitutes a new species, which I name P. fiiiscMi in honour of Dr. Finsch, whose wonderfid. acquaintance ^\•ith New Zealand Ornitliology is displayed in aU lie ^\^•ites on the subject. It may be described as i'ollows : — P. similis P. melanokuco sed tectricibus alarum medianis exteriorilms albis, speculum vel fasciam alarem forniantil)Us; axillaribus tantum nigris, uec corporis lateribus ut in P. melanoleucvs nigris, distinguendus. 14R. Fhegata aqi'ila. Fregata aquila, (Z.) ; Bulhr, B. N. Z., p. 340. Tachvpetes aipiilus, Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 260, et 1874, p. 216. 149. Fregata mi\ok. Fregata minor, {Gm) ; Bulkr, B. N. Z., p. 342. Tachypetes minor, Finsch, J.f. 0. 1874,^). 216. 153. EUDYPTES AXTIPODU.M. Plate 27. Eudyptes antipodes, (//. c| J.); G-ray, anted, p. 17; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, pi. 262, et 1874, p. 218 ; Coucs, Pr. Phil. Acml, 1872,27. 199; BuHer, B. A". Z, p. 346. 154. Eudyptes vittata. Eudyptes vittata, Finsch, Ibis, 1875, p. 112. This new species lias onlj^ lately been described hy Dr. Finsch, who remarks "F. vittata, if indeed a true Eudyptes, is easily distinguislied from all other members of the Penguin gi-oup by its broad wliite superciliary streak, which runs from the liase of the bill to the back of the head, but wliich does not consist of elongated featliers." The single specimen at present known was j)rouured at Dunedin, and tiie description was communicated by Captain F. W. Hutton, one of tlie most enthusiastic of New Zealand naturalists, and particularly well-known as an authority on the sea-birds of the southern hemisphere. 155. Eudyptes atkata. Eudyptes atrata, Hutton, Ibis, 1875, p. 114. The same paper in which Dr. Finsch describes the fore- going bird, contains a description of tliis new species by Captain Hutton. Dr. Finsch says : — " This species canncjt be confounded with any other, regard being jjaid to the jet- black coloration of its under surface." Family, Colymbid.^;. 150. PODICEPS RUFIPECTUS. Plate 19. Podiceps rufipectus, Grat/, anted, p. 16, ^tl. 19 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, 2). 261, et 1874, ^j. 217 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 350. 151. Podiceps cristatus. Podiceps cristatus, X. ; Fitisch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 260, et 1874, p. 217 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 353. Family, Spheniscid^e. 152. Eudyptes chrysocoma. Eudyjites pach>-rhynchus, G^w?/, anted, p. 17; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 26]', ci 1874, p. 217. Eudyptes chrysocome, (Forst.) ; Cuues, Pr. PJiHad. Acad., 1872, p. 202. Eudj-jjtes chrysocomus, Buller, B. N. Z., pi. 345, id. 33, /.I. Dr. Finsch thinks that this bird is not tlie true Aptcnodiftcs chri/socoiHC of Forster and he retains CJray's later pulilished title. Dr. Coues, however, unites the two species in his Mouogi-aph, (/. c). 156. EUDYPTILA MIXOR. Spheniscus minor, Grai/, anted, p. 16 ; Coues, Pr. Philad. Acad., 1872, p. 207. Eudyi^tila minor, (Gm.) ; Finsch, J. /. 0. 1872, p. 262, et 1874, iJ. 218; Buller, B. N. Z, p. Ml, pi. 33,/. 2. 157. EUDYPTILA UXDINA. Eudyptila uudina, {Gould) ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 332. 158. Eudyptila ai.bo.sigxata. Eudyptila albosignata, Finsch, P. Z. S., 1874, ]}■ 207, et J.f. 0. 1874:, p. 219. Dr. Finsch writes of this new species, that it is " easily distinguishaljle from F. minor, Gm. {^=E. undina, Gould), by the liroad white edge which borders the wing anteriorly and posteriori}', and by the white patch on the upper tail- coverts. The bill is stouter and has a much more strongly marked and deeper sulcus." Family, Apterygid.e. 159. Apteeyx austiulis. Apten'x australis, Shavj; Gray, anted, p. 11 ; Finsch, J. f. 0. 187-2, p. 263, et 187-i,p. 220; Buller, B. A". Z, p. 364; Eowlei/, Orn. Mise.,jtl. iv. A young binl is figured Ijy Mr. Kowley, (/. c). 3G IGO. Apteryx maxtelli. Apteryx mantelli, Bartl. ; Fimch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 263 ; Bullcr, B. N. Z., p. 258, pi. 34 ; Roivlcy, Orn. Misc., p. 25. Dr. Buller separates this species from A. anstmlis, and I must say that, when I examined his series, I thought that he had made out his case. Dr. Finsch, Dr. Sclater, and lastly Mr. Dawson Eowley, unite them, so that it is a moot point as to wliether it is anything more than a race of the other bird. 161. Apteryx oweni. Apteryx oweni, Gould; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, p. 268, et 1874, p. 220 ; Buller, B. N. Z., p. 368, pi. 35 ; Rowley, Orn. Misc., pis. ii, v. A good plate of this species is given by Dr. Buller, and Mr. Dawson Eowley figures both adults and young. 162. Apteryx haasti. Apteryx haasti. Potts; Finsch, J. f. 0. 1872, ;;. 271, et 1874, p. 220 ; Bidkr, B. N. Z., p. 370 ; Rowley, Orn. Misc., pis. i, ui. I have examined the specimens of this splendid Aptenjx, which were exhibited by Mr. George Dawson Eowley at the Zoological Society, and have since been beautifully figured by him in his " Ornithological Miscellany." It speaks volumes for the enterprise of this gentleman that he, at his own expense, has kept a collector in New Zealand, and has not relaxed his energy until he has become the sole possessor in Europe of this little known bird. In compiling the foregoing review of New Zealand Ornithology, I must disclaim any idea of overlooking such works as Captain Button's " Catalogue " of New Zealand Bu'ds, or of Mr. Pott's numerous papers published in the various scientific journals. My first intention was to carry on the synonymy of the various species from the year 1844, when the foregoing portion of the " Voyage " was published, down to the present time. I soon found, however, tliat this had been most completely done by Dr. Finsch and that to do it effectually I should be obliged to copy direct from him. I have, therefore, only given references to Dr. Biiller's large work, as containing the best account of the life- histoiy of these bh-ds, and to Dr. Finsch's best-known papers in the " Journal fiir Ornithologie " where will be found a complete set of references to all the .species down to the commencement of the year 1874. In the most recent of his papers he also gives a list of the doubtful New Zealand birds with remarks on their history. Before finishing this portion of my subject I think it advisable to give a key to all the species mentioned by Mr. Gray in the original work, the nomenclature of which has been in any way altered since that date, with an indication of their exact titles in the appendix I have now wiitten. 1. Falco novffi zealandi?3.=Harpa novaj zealandiaj, p. 11. (Gm.). _ _ „ 12. 2. Circus assimilis. = C. Gouldi, (Bp.). 2. Athene novte zealandiie. = Spiloglaux novae zea- „ 12. Iandia3, (Gm.). „ 12. 2. Athene albifacies. = Sceloglaux albifacies, {Gray). „ 13. 3. Halcyon cinnamominus is not a New Zealand bird. „ 14. 3. Neomorpha gouldi. = Heteralochaacutirostris,(6-7rf.). „ 14. 4. Acanthisitta longipes.=Xenicus longipes, {Gm.). „ 16. 6. Certhiparus maculicaudus. = C. novte zealandiaj, „ 17. {Gm.). 6. Petroica dieffenbachii.=Myiomoira macrocephala, „ 17. {Gm). 6. „ toitoi.=^Myiomoira toitoi, {Less.). „ 17. 7. „ albifrons. = ]Miro albifrons, {Gm). 7. „ australis.=]\Iiro longipes, ((?ar?i.). „ 17. 8. Ehipidura melanura. = Ehipidura fuliginosa, „ 17. {kijMrrm). 8. CallaBas cinerea.=Glaucopis cinerea, {Gm). „ 17. 8. Aplonis zelandicus is not a New Zealand bird. „ 18. 8. Ajjlonis obscurus is not a New Zealand bird. „ 18. 9. Trichoglossus aurifrons is not a New Zealand bird. „ 19. Charadrius virginianus. = Charadrius fidvus, {Gm). Thinornis rossii. = Thinornis novte zealandite, {Gm). Hiaticula bicincta. = Charadrius bicinctus, {J. & S). Herodias flavirostris.=Ardea egretta, {Gm.). Herodias matook.=Ardea sacra, {Gm). Ocydromus dieffenbachii. = Cabalus dieffenbachii Eallus assuniLis.=Eallus philij^pinen.sis, (Z.). Spheniscus minor. =Eudyptula minor, {Gm.). Eudyptes pachyrhynchus.=Eudyptes chrysocoma, {For St). Eudyptes antipodes. = Eudyptes antipodum, {H. & J.). Puffinus ffiquinoctialis. Not known for certain as a New Zealand bird. Puffinus major. =Puffinus griseus, {Gm). Thalassidroma marina. = Thalassidroma fregata, Procellaria gigantea.=Ossifraga gigantea, {Gm,). ProceUaria gavia. = Puffinus gavius, {Forst). Lestvis antarcticus. = Stercorarius catarrhactes, {III). Hydrochelidon albostriata.= Sterna antarctica. 37 p. 19. Gracalus cirrliatus. = Phalacrocorax carunculatus. „ 19. Gracalus varius. = riialacrocorax varius, {Gray). „ 20. Gracalus chalconotus. = Plialacrocorax clialconotus, {Crrai/). „ 20. Ciracalus punctatus. = Plialacrocorax punctatus, (Sparrm.). p. 20. Gracalus carboides.=r Plialacrocorax carbo, (Z.). „ 20. Gracalus melanoleucus. = Plialacrocorax finschi, Shar2yc. „ 20. Gracalus brevirostris. = Plialacrocorax brevirostris, (Gould). The following is a List of the birds, not from New Zealand, but obtained in other parts of the southern ocean by the Antartic Expedition and figured in the present work. Family, ScoLOPACiDiE. Gallinago stricklandii. Plate 23. Gallinago stricklandii, Gray, Voij. Ereb. & Terror, Birds, p/. 23; id., List Grallce, B. M., p. 112; Scl. & Salvin, Ex. Orn., p. 19G ; Graij, Handl. B. iii, p. 55 ; ^Sb^. ^ Salv. Nomcnd., p)- 145. Scolopax meridionalis, Peale, U. S. Expl. Exp., p. 229 ; Cass. op. cit. ed. 2, jj. 310. pi. 35,/. 1. Scolopax spectabilis, Hartl. Naum. 1853,^. 216. A pair of this fine Snipe was obtained by the Antarctic Expedition at Hermit Island. Family, Anatid^. Cloephaga inornata. Plate 30. Anser inornatus, mas.. King, P. Z. S. 1830, p. 15. Branta inornata, Gray, Handl. B. iii, p. 77. Cloephaga inornata, Scl. & Salv. Nomencl. av. neotr., p. 128. The bird figured in the plate is the t}'j)e of King's Anser inornatus, and was received by the Museum from the Zoological Society. It is not referable, as far as I can see, to any of the allied species. Dr. Sclater, (P. Z. S., 1860, p. 388,) also writes : — " The bird described as A7ias inornatus, mas, by Capt. King, which is now in the British Museum, is decidedly different, in my opinion, from both Chloephar/a poliocephala and C. rahidiceps, most nearly resembling the male of C. magellanica, but bemg much smaller." Cloephaga rubidiceps. Plate 24. Bernicla inornata, Gi-ay, Voy. Ereb. & Terr. Birds, p/. 24. Cloepliaga rubidiceps, Scl. 'P. Z. S., 1860, j^- 387, pi. xxxiii; Gray, Handl. B. iii, j}. 77; Scl. & Salv. Nomencl. av. neotr, p. 128. Tliis sjiecies was first discriminated from G. poliocephala V>y Dr. Sclater (/. c), and the differences are duly set forth by him. He ajipears, however, to have overlooked the plate published (without text) in the present work, and has refigiired the species in the "Proceedings." The plate here given is not altogether exact, as the barred flank-feathers extend farther along the sides of the body to tlie vent. Mr. Wolf's excellent plate, accompanying 1 )r. Sclater's paper, is more accurate, and on comparing it witli the iUustration.s of C. poliocephala, (Zool. Sk. 1st series, pi. xlix) a very good idea of the differences between these two species can be formed. Two specimens from the Falkland Islands, male and female, were obtained by the Expedition. Family, Procellariid^. Pagodroma nivea. (Plate 34.) Procellaria nivea, (Gm.); Gray, Voy. Ereb. & Terr, Birds, pi. 34; id. List Grallm &c., B. jil, p. 104; Coues, Pr Phil' Acad., 1866, p. 160. Fulmarus niveus. Gray, Handl. B. iii, p. 107. Several specimens were procured by the expedition, and are duly enumerated in Mr. Gray's list, (l. c). PKIOCELLA ANTARCTICA. (Plate 33.) Procellaria antarctica, G7n. ; Gi-ay, Voy. Ereb. & Terr, jA 33 ; id. List Grcdlm dr., B. M„ p. 163. Thalassoica antarctica, Reich. ; Coues, Pr. Philad. Acad 1866, ;j. 31. Fulmarus antarcticus. Gray, Handl. B. iii, p. 105. Dr. Coues has separated this species as a Thala.ssoica apart from the Fulmarus, and I follow him as the best authority on this group of birds. But Eeichenbach's generic name must give way to Priocclla of Jacquinoi (Voy. Pole Sud, iii, p. 148),"and this species should be known as Priocclla antarctica. Family, SpheniscidjE. Aptenodytes longirostris. (Plate 32.) Aptenodytes pennantii. Gray, Ann. N. H, 1844, j:?. 31.".; id. List Grallce &c., B. M., p. 156 ; id. Handl. B. iii, p. 99 ;' Scl. & Salv. Nomencl, p. 151; Hyatt, Pr. Post. Soc, 1871, p. 11. Aptenodytes longirostris, Coues, Pr. Phil. Acad., 1872, p. 193. 38 Dr. Coues in his " Monograph " of the Spheiiiscidce revives Scopoli's name for this species, and in this I think he is justified, for, laying aside Gmelin's title of imtavlionica which confuses two species, the Apterodyta longirodris of Scopoli (Del Faun, et Flor. Insubr. ii. p. 91), seems to be the next in order of priority. It is founded on "Le Manchot de la Nouvelle Guinee " of Sonnerat, (Voy. K G. ]). 180, pi. 113), and although the figure in this plate is very bad, representing tlie black on the throat as extending far down to the centre of the breast, the description quite agrees. A single specimen was brought by the Expedition, sup- posed to be from Kerguelen Island, Aptenodytes patachonica. Plate 31. Aptenodytes patachonica, Forst. Comm. Soc. Reg. Gotting. iii, 1). 137, pi. -1, (1781) ; Coues, Fr. Fhil. Acad. 1872, ». 192. Aptenodytes forsteri, ffra?/, Ann. N.H., 1844, _p. 315; id. List arallm &c., B. M., p. 156 ; id. Handl. B. ui, p. 99. Several specimens were obtained by the Expedition, as mentioned in Mr. G. E. Gray's List of G-ndloc and Anseres, (I. c). Pygoscelis t^niata. (Plate 25.) Pygoscelis papua, IVagl. ; Grai/, Voy. Ereh. & Terr., Birds, pi. 25; id. List Gi'oMce, Sac, p. 153. Aptenodytes tasniata. Fcale, U. S. Expl. Exp. Dm., p. 264, (1848). Pygoscelis wagleri, Sclater, F. Z. S., 1860, ;;. 392. Eudyptes papua, Gray, Handl. iii, p. 98. Pygoscelis toiniata, Cowes, Fr. Fhil. Acad., 1872, p. 195. Two specimens procured at Kerguelen Island. Pygoscelis adelI/E. Plate 28. Eudyptes adelire, {H. & J.) ; Gray, Voy. Ereh. & Terr., pi. 28; id. Handl. B. ni, p. 99. Pygoscelis brevirostris. Gray, List Grallce, &c., p. 154. Pygoscelis adelias, Hyatt, Fr. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. 1871, p. 14; Coues, Fr. Fhil. Acad., 1872, j>. 196. Several specimens procured by the Expedition and enumerated in Mr. G. E. Gray's List of Grallce and Anseres. Pygoscelis Antarctica. (Plate 26.) Eudyptes antarctica, (Forst.) ; Gray, Voy. Ereh. & Terr., Birds, 2^1- 26 ; id. Handl. B. iii, pi. 98. Pygoscelis antarctica, Gray, List. Grallce dec., B. M., p. 154; Hyatt, Fr. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. 1871, p. 14; Coues, Fr. Fhil. Acad., 1872,^. 199. Two specimens procured by the Expedition. Finally it may not be out of place to give a list of the plates which accompany the now completed edition of the Ornithological portion of the Voyage of the " Erebus and Terror." A. Plates originally issued. Nesonetta aucklandica. Fuligula nova3 zealandiee. Podiceps rufipectus. Anas chlorotis. * Graculus chalconotus. = Phalacrocorax chalconotus. Hydi'ochelidon albostriata. = Sterna antarctica. Scolopax stricklandi (not mentioned in text). Bernicla inornata. = Chloephaga rubidiceps, {Scl). (not mentioned in text). Pygoscelis papua. = Pygoscelis tfeniata, (Fcale). (not mentioned iii text). Eudyptes antarctica. = Pygoscelis antarctica, (Forst.). „ adeli£e. = Pygoscelis adeliae, (H. & J.). (not mentioned in text). ProceUaria antarctica. = Priocella antarctica, (Gm). (not mentioned in text). „ nivea. = Pagodroma nivea, (Gm.). (not mentioned in text). cookii. L* Halcyon vagans. 17. 2. Anthornis melanocephala. 18. 3. Fig. 1. Acanthisitta longipes.=Xenicus longipes. 19. 2 „ chloris. ? 20. 4. Fig. 1. Gerygone flaviventris. XXL „ 2. „ albifrontata. 21. 5. Fig. 1. Certhiparus novte zealaudioe. 23. „ 2. „ albicillus. 24. 6. Fig. 1. Petroica dieffenbachii. „ 2. albifrous. 25. 8. Coturnix nova3 zealandise. 9. Charad rius obscurus. 26. 10. Hffimatopus nnicolor. 28. 11. Thinorj lis rossii.=Th. novae zealandise. junr. 11* » nova3 zealandiae. 33. 13. Gallinago aucklandica. 14. Ocydromus australis. 34. 15. Eallus dieffenbachii. = Cabalus dieffenbachii. 16. Casarca variegata. 35. 39 B. Plates now issued. 1. Athene albifacies. =: Sceloglaux albLfacies. 7. Strigops habroptilu!5. = Stringops liabroptilus. 20.* Sterna frontalis. 27. Eudyptes antipodes. = Eudyptes antipodiun. 2y. Prion turtur, ;]0. 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