In 1973, English
ornithologist Daniel T. Holyoak described some small parrot bones that he had discovered among a collection of
broad-billed parrot (
Lophopsittacus mauritianus)
subfossils in the
Zoology Museum of Cambridge University. These remains had been collected in the early 20th century by French amateur naturalist Louis Etienne Thirioux, who had found them in a cave on
Le Pouce mountain, on the
Mascarene Island of
Mauritius. They were placed in the zoology museum by 1908. Apart from their size and robustness, Holyoak did not find the bones to be distinct from those of the Mascarene parrot
genera Lophopsittacus,
Mascarinus (the Mascarene parrot),
Necropsittacus (the Rodrigues parrot), and
Psittacula (which had two or three other species inhabiting the Mascarene Islands). Because of their similarities, Holyoak considered all these genera to be closely related. The species has since been excavated from the
Mare aux Songes swamp on Mauritius, from which subfossils of most of the other endemic bird species have been identified as well. Old, vague accounts of several different now-extinct Mascarene parrots have created much confusion for the scientists who subsequently examined them. In 1967, American ornithologist
James Greenway speculated that 17th- and 18th-century reports of then-unidentified grey parrots on Mauritius referred to the broad-billed parrot. In 1987, English
ecologist Anthony S. Cheke correlated the
L. bensoni subfossils with the grey parrots reported from Mauritius and
Réunion, which had previously been ignored, or considered references to broad-billed parrots. Further study of contemporary accounts indicates that the broad-billed parrot was not grey, but had multiple colours. The
IOC World Bird List instead used the common name "Mascarene grey parakeet". The population of grey parrots described from the island of Réunion (referred to as
Psittacula cf. bensoni by Hume) is thought to have been
conspecific with that on Mauritius. In the 1860s, French naturalists
Charles Coquerel and
Auguste Vinson suggested these could have been parrots of the genus
Coracopsis, but fossils of neither that genus nor
Psittacula have ever been found on Réunion. Whilst
Coracopsis parrots are known to have been introduced to that island in the 1700s, a population did not become established. While no live or dead Mascarene grey parakeets are known with certainty to have been exported, Hume has suggested that a brown parrot specimen—once housed in
Cabinet du Roi but now lost—may have been a discoloured old Mascarene grey parakeet, or perhaps a
lesser vasa parrot (
Coracopsis nigra). This specimen was described by French naturalist
Comte de Buffon in 1779. To solve the issue, the German ornithologist Michael P. Braun and colleagues proposed in 2016 and 2019 that
Psittacula should be split into multiple genera. They therefore placed the echo and Newton's parakeets, from which
DNA could be extracted, in the genus
Alexandrinus instead, and retained the Mascarene parrot in
Mascarinus. ==Description==