High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The Mascarene Parrot (Mascarinus mascarinus or Coracopsis mascarinus) is an extinct species of parrot known from bones, specimens and descriptions to have occurred in the Mascarene island of Reunion, and possibly Mauritius. The bird was first described by Dubois in 1674. During the latter half of the 18th century, a number of birds were exported alive to France and kept in captivity; the species was described after these examples came to the attention of the taxonomists of that time, like Brisson, Linnaeus and Buffon. Three stuffed specimens were preserved at that time. Today, two remain, accompanied by a number of bones found later. One, the sole remaining of the three extant around 1800, is in the Museum national d´Histoire naturelle in Paris, the other, dated 1806 and of unknown provenance, in the Naturhistorisches Museum in Vienna. The affinity of this species to other Indian Ocean island species has been debated for a long time but was...