Glen,
The southern common planetary catalogues are;
1) Wray Catalogue. Published in 1966 as a hydrogen emission listing,
it contains emission nebulae and planetaries roughly from 08h to 18h and -64 deg to +23 deg. Msagnitude limit goes down to 18th, though several are above 11th magnitude.
2) Another is the second catalogue of Sanduleuk, Sand or Sa2, and this contains 512 planetaries south of the declination of -20 deg.
3) The third catalogue is that of the Second H (HEN in SIMBAD) or ‘He2’ produced in 1961 - that also includes his seven PNe in the ‘He1’ being
mainly northern objects in an initial survey. The He2 is mainly “new” southern PNe, which mainly concentrates along the Milky Way in the mid- to far southern portions of the sky. "He3" contains additional southern objects in his third catalogue, but this one contains few PNe. It was made in 1977.
The papers are;
He1 : K.G. Henize 1st Catalogue (1963)
He2 : K.G Henize 2nd Catalogue (1967)
He3 : K.G Henize 3rd Catalogue (1976)
HEN(x)- : All Henize Catalogues as used by SIMBAD Database
Other important southern catalogues of include;
MyCn : Mayall and Cannon (1940)
Lo : Longmore (1977)
LoTr : Longmore / Tritton (1980)
RCW : Rodgers, Campbell and Whiteoak (1960)
Sa2 : Sanduleuk (1975)
Sa3 : Sanduleuk (1976)
Karl Gordon Henize was an interesting fellow.
Born on 17th October 1926, in Cincinnati, Ohio and was interested in astronomy at an early age. He first received his BA degree in Mathematics in 1947, master degree in Astronomy in 1948 from the University of Virginia; then was awarded a doctorate of philosophy Astronomy by the University of Michigan in 1954. He became a full professor in 1964. He was also awarded the NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement medal (1974), but received merit for his planetary work with the "Robert Gordon Memorial Award" during 1968
Henize became an observer for the University of Michigan Observatory from 1948 to 1951. Stationed at the Lamont-Hussey Observatory in Bloemfontain, Union of South Africa, he conducted an objective-prism spectroscopic survey of the southern sky for stars and nebulae showing emission lines of hydrogen. [This was later partly used for the future planetary nebula work, but much of it was really done in Canberra at Stromlo.]
One of the first significant astronomical works was on the H-alpha catalogues was the "Emission of Stars and Nebulae in the Magellanic Clouds" A.J.Suppl.., 2, 315 (1956), where he discovered many nebula and bright shells nebulosities like N 70 and N120. (Both SMC and LMC)
Again between 1961 and 1962 he used, for example, the 74-inch Reynolds Telescope and Uppsala 20/26-inch Schmidt at Mt. Stromlo Observatory near, Canberra, measuring planetary sizes. Much of his useful planetary nebula and training here. He co-authored, for example, the paper Westerlund, Beng. & Henize. ; "Dimensions of Southern Planetary Nebulae"; A.J. Suppl., 14, p.154 April (1967) , which was produced from images and observations made between November 1961 and June 1963, during the time when Henize was visiting Mt. Stromlo (1961-1962) from Dearborn Observatory, of the American Northwestern University. His main interest was in Hydrogen-alpha objects of which the southern ones were discovered from imaging plates.
He joined NASA during the 1967, and made studies into various ultraviolet optical systems and astronomical systems suited to the manned space flight program - tested during the end of the Gemini space project. He later became an astronaut himself as a scientist-astronaut, being back up for Apollo 15 and the Skylab missions. Henize travel once into space in July 1985 on the Challenger STS-51 as a mission specialist with Spacelab.
He sadly died just after midnight on the 5th October 1993 while climbing the north face of Mount Everest from a high altitude pulmonary edema.
Another extensive bio (with picture of him) appears at;
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/henize.html
Nyx
NOTE: I have the modern list of the He2 PNe (in Excel) if you want it.