NESTOR NOTABILIS N S, Gord. Kea Parrot. Nestor notabilis, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., part xxiv. p. 94.—G. R. Gray Mus., pt. i. sec. i1., Psittacide, p. 100. St of Spee. of Birds in Coll. Brit. Iv must be remembered that we are indebted to Mr. Walter Mantell for the of the Notornes : and second only in importance to this extraordinary remarkable species of Parrot, a bird equally as rare as the Notornis, and apparently equally as near its extine tion. When writing on any of the birds of the New Zealand and : : ee ; ae ree = adjacent group of islands, it soon becomes 7 | oO Ww A rams . B eS eee ‘ evident that we are dealing with the few remaining members of an extremely ancient fauna, the remnants, in fact, of genera and species which in the lapse of a few years will be entirely effaced from the surface of our globe. The Philip Island Parrot (Nestor productus) is already gone ; and the Kaka (A must soon follow, but not so soon, probably, as the present bird. acquisition of a recent specimen and almost extinct bird, is the present ‘estor hypopolius) With what care, then, should such relics be preserved in our museums ; to none but hermetically sealed cases should they be consigned. Let it be remembered how great are our regrets that the evidence of the former existence of the Dodo comprises only a single foot and head and a few dried bones. Imbued with the importance of recording the history, and giving a portraiture of these nearly extinct birds, I have endeavoured to be most accurate in their delineation, especially with regard to the four species of Nestor. I have nothing to add to the few remarks respecting the history of the present bird accompanying my original description in the “ Proceedings of the Zoological Society ;” and therefore I cannot do better than transcribe them here :— “The Nestor notabelis, which is called “Kea” by the natives, is the largest of the four species of the form now known, and is certainly one of the most interesting of the ornithological novelties lately discovered. It not only differs from its near allies NM. Aypopolius and N. productus in its greater size, but in the greater uniformity of its colouring, in the yellow toothed markings of the inner webs of the primaries and seconda- ries, and in the orange toothed markings of the inner webs of the tail-feathers ; the yellow colouring of the under mandible is another of the peculiarities by which it may be distinguished. “Mr. Mantell informed me that he first heard of the existence of the Aca about eight years ago, from some old natives whom he was questioning as to the birds of the Middle Island. They said the Aea some- what resembled the Kaka (Nestor hypopolius), but that, unlike that bird, it was green; and added that it used formerly to come to the coast in severe winters, but that they had not seen it lately. Mr. Mantell has only obtained the two specimens exhibited of this fine bird: they were shot in the Murihiku country ; and for one of them he was indebted to Mr. John Lemon of Murihiku. “General hue olive-green; each feather tipped in a crescentic form with brown, and having a fine line of the same colour down the shaft ; feathers of the lower part of the back and the upper tail-coverts washed near the tip with fiery orange-red; primaries brown, margined at the base with greenish blue; tail dull green; inner webs of the lateral feathers brown, toothed on their basal two-thirds with orange-yellow ; all the tail-feathers crossed near the extremity with an indistinct band of brown, and tipped with olive-brown ; feathers of the axillz fine scarlet ; under wing-coverts scarlet tipped with brown, the greater ones banded with brown and with yellow stained with scarlet ; basal portion of the primaries and secondaries largely toothed with fine yellow, which is not perceptible on the upper surface unless ae wings are very widely spread ; upper mandible dark horn-colour; under mandible yellow, becoming richer towards the point ; feet nearly yellowish olive. “ Total length, 18 inches ; bill, 2; wing, 12;; tail, 725 tars, 13. “ Habitat. The Middle Island, New Zealand.” The figure on the accompanying Plate is of the natural size.