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Sage 1891 CY stair i tartan TED “Mui 00 Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www. archive.org/details/cu31924000100341 THE FAUNA OF BRITISH INDIA, INCLUDING CEYLON AND BURMA. PUBLISHED UNDER THE AUTHORITY oF THE SECRETARY OF Starz ror Iwpra Iw Couwert. EDITED BY W. T. BLANFORD. BIRDS.—Vol. III. eo BY W. T. BLANFORD, F.R.S. LONDON: TAYLOR AND FRANCIS, RED LION COURT, FLEET STREET. OALCUTTA: BOMBAY: THACKER, SPINK, & CO. THACKER & CO., LIMITED. BERLIN: R, FRIEDLANDER & SQHN, 11 CARLSTRASSE. 1895. W PRINTED BY TAYLOR AND FRANCIS, RED LION COURT, FLEET STREET, PREFACE. In the Preface to the second volume, a change in the original plan of the ‘Birds’ was announced, It was sti proposed to complete the work in three volumes, but as the second was shorter than usual it was announced that the deficiency would be made good in the third, which would contain descriptions of all Indian birds except Passeres. As the work progressed, however, further modification became necessary, as it was evident that the proposed third volume would be‘of inconvenient size, and it has now been decided to divide it into two. The birds will therefore occupy four volumes instead of three, and of these the third is herewith published. The fourth volume is in preparation and a considerable portion is written. The publishing price of the last three is reduced, so that the cost of the whole work is only increased by a very small amount. Mr. Oates, after writing the two volumes containing the descriptions of the Passeres, was obliged to return to his appointment in India, as explained in the Preface to the second volume. The continuation of the ‘ Birds’ has been left in my hands, and I have endeavoured to keep the work uniform in general plan, and to render the change of author- ship as little conspicuous as possible; but I fear there are many, besides myself, who will see cause for regret that the able ornithologist who commenced the work was prevented by circumstances from finishing it. The birds of which descriptions appear in the present volume are the Eurylemi, the various groups known col- lectively as Picarian or non-Passerine perching birds, the Parrots, and the nocturnal and diurnal Birds of Prey. Thus the first three volumes of the present work correspond to the first: two of Jerdon’s, and contain the same families of Birds, though differently arranged. The question of the system to be employed in dividing the Birds of India into Orders did not present itself in the first two volumes, which were occupied by the Passeres, now iv PREFACE. regarded by all ornithologists as a distinct order, and the highest of the class. But in the present volume a general scheme of classification became a necessity: the arrangement hitherto adopted in the majority of works on Indian Ornith- ology—Legge’s ‘Birds of Ceylon’ and Oates’s ‘ Birds of Burmah’ being the most important exceptions—has been that of Jerdon’s great work, and was taken from G. R. Gray’s, which again was but slightly modified from that of Cuvier. This classification, proposed in the early part of the present century, when the anatomy of birds had received but little attention, was founded exclusively on the characters of the beak and feet. It was soon found that there were defects in the Cuvierian system, one of the leaders in the path of reform being Edward Blyth, the pioneer of Indian scientific ornithology ; but it was long before a satisfactory natural system could be devised, and even now birds are by no means so clearly arranged, or divided into orders so well defined, as mammals and reptiles are. Still some of the later attempts to arrange the intricate groups of birds have been fairly successful in consequence of their depending not on one or two characters but on several, of their taking into consideration both internal anatomy and external structure, and of their making use of. such clues to affinity as are afforded by nidification, oology, and the changes of plumage in the young. The system adopted in the present work is, in the main, identical with those of Sharpe and Gadow, and differs in no important point from the classifications of Sclater and Newton. References will be found on page 15. The chief difference between the plan here followed and those proposed by the ornithologists named, is that no attempt has been made in the present work to arrange in larger categories the groups here termed orders. This is due to the circumstance that there is a much wider general agreement as to the distinctness of the smaller ordinal or subordinal groups than as to their relations to each other. The principal anatomical characters by which the different orders are distinguished are furnished by the bones of the palate, shoulder-girdle and sternum, and the vertebre; by the occurrence of cca in the intestines, the presence or absence of particular museles in the thigh, and the characters of the deep plantar tendons. Amongst the external cha- racters, pterylosis, or the disposition of the feathers with regard to the clad and naked tracts of the body (pteryle and PREFACE. v apteria), the presence or absence of an aftershaft on the body-feathers, the occurrence of down, the presence or absence of a uropygial oil-gland, and its being tufted, i. e. partially surrounded by a circlet of feathers, or naked, and the number of remiges and rectrices, are amongst the points of importance. Latterly, since the late Mr. R. S. Wray, in the ‘ Proceedings of the Zoological Society ’ for 1887, showed that, in several orders, the fifth secondary quill or cubital, counting from the distal extremity of the ulna, is wanting, some importance has been. attached to the fact, and those birds have been termed quincubital which retain the remex in question, whilst those forms in which it is absent are dis- tinguished as aquincubital. Most of the terms employed are easily understood, but four diagrams are added for the explanation of the names applied to the bones of the palate and the muscles of the thigh. The two figures illustrative of the former, which are used by permission of their author, the late Professor Huxley, and are taken from his classical paper in the ‘ Proceedings of the Zoological Society’ for 1867, serve to explain the two most important types of palatal structure in carinate birds— the “ schizognathous” and “ desmognathous.” In the des- mognathous palate the maxillo-palatines are united across the median line, and the vomer is either small and slender or rudimentary. In schizognathous skulls the maxillo- palatines are usually elongate and lamellar and do not unite either with the vomer or with each other. In both the vomer, if present, is pointed in front, not broadly truncated as in the egithognathous type, represented by the Raven (Vol. I. p. 4). There are other distinctions in these three types of bony palate, but those mentioned are the most con- spicuous. The fourth principal type, the dromzognathous, is not found in any Indian birds. The muscles of the thigh are shown in the two figures taken from the works of Garrod and Forbes, the former of whom attached great importance to them as evidence of affinity. The ‘ambiens’ muscle was regarded by him as affording a clue to the whole system, and by means of it he divided all Carinate birds into Homalogonate, in which the muscle (with a few aberrant exceptions) was present, and the Anomalogonate, in which it was absent. The other thigh- muscles, to the presence or absence of which he attached importance, were the femoro-caudal, accessory femoro-caudal, semitendinosus, and accessory semitendinosus. vi PREFACE, The parts of the sternum occasionally mentioned in the descriptions of orders are well known, with perhaps the ex- ception of the manubrium or manubrial process, called by some writers the rostrum. This is a simple or compound process, projecting forward at the middle of the anterior border, just where the keel of the sternum joins the body, and in front of the inner terminations of the coracoids. It comprises a distal spine (spina externa) and a proximal one (spina interna), either of which may be wanting. The spina externa is either simple or forked. The descriptions in this, as in other volumes of the Fauna of British India, are taken from the magnificent series of Indian Birds in the British Museum (Natural History), and every facility and assistance has been afforded to Mr. Oates and myself by Sir W. H. Flower, the Director of the Natural History Museum, and Dr. A. Giinther, Keeper of the De- partment of Zoology. Especially we are under the greatest obligations to the officers in charge of the bird collection, Dr. R, B. Sharpe and Mr, W. R. Ogilvie Grant, for aid of every kind most freely and kindly afforded during the pro- gress of the present work. Mr. Oates, when he left England, made over to me all the notes he had prepared for the con- tinuation of the work, and they have been of very great service. I have also to express my obligations to Dr. J. A. Waddell for a proof in advance of his excellent notes on Sikhim birds prepared for the ‘Gazetteer’ of that province; to Col. C. T. Bingham and Mr. Hauxwell for information about Burmese species; and to Dr. Warth and Mr. W. M. Daly for lists of birds obtained in the Shevroy Hills. Whilst I regret that this is not the last of the series of volumes containing the descriptions of Indian Vertebrata, I hope the final part will not be long delayed. W. T. BLANFORD. August 1st, 1895. Figures to illustrate Structure of Palate. Under view of the skull of Charadrius plu- Under view of the skull of Cuculus canorus, vialis, to illustrate the schizognathous type to illustrate the desmognathous type of of palate. palate. These two figures are copied by permission from the late Prof. Huxley’s paper on the Classification of Birds (P. Z. 8. 1867, pp. 427, 444).—Pmz, the premaxilla; Mx, the maxilla; Mzp, its maxillo-palatine process ; Pl, the palatine bone; Vo, the vomer; P?, the pterygoid ; Qu, the quadrate bone; x the basipterygoid process; x the prefrontal process. ‘Tn the large assemblage of birds belonging to the Cuvierian orders Gallinw, Gralle, and Natatores, which may be termed Schizoguathous, the vomer, sometimes large and sometimes very small, always tapers to « point anteriorly; while posteriorly it embraces the basi- sphenoidal rostrum, between the palatines. “The maxillo-palatines are usually elongated and lamellar; they pass inwards over the anterior processes of the palatine bones, with which they become united, and then bending backwards, along the inner edge of the palatines, leave a broader or a narrower fissure between themselves and the vomer and do not unite with it or with one another.”— Hoxuey, P, Z. 8. 1867, p. 426. “In Desmognathous birds the vomer is often either abortive, or so small that it dis- appears from the skeleton. When it exists it is always slender and tapers to a point anteriorly. “The maxillo-palatines are united across the middle line, either directly or by the inter- mediation of ossifications in the nasal septum. “The posterior ends of the palatines and the anterior ends of the pterygoids articulate directly with the rostrum, as in the preceding division” [and not with the diverging posterior ends of the vomer as in Dromzognathous birds and generally in Ratite].—_Huxuy, /. ¢. p. 435. In the Byithognathous type of palate (figured Vol. I. of the present work, p. 4), “the vomer is 2 broad bone, abruptly truncated in front, and deeply cleft behind, embracing the rostrum of the sphenoid between its forks. The palatines have produced postero-external angles, The mazxillo-palatines are slender at their origin, and extend inwards and backwards =obliquely over the palatines, ending beneath the vomer in expanded extremities, which do not become united by bone, either with one another or with the yomer.”—Huxtey, 1, ¢. p, 450. Figures to illustrate Muscles of Thigh. Outer view of right thigh of Oommon Fowl, partially dissected. (Copied from Garrod’s figure, P. Z. S. 1873, p. 627.) ‘ s, sartorius; ve, vastus externus; bo and bi, biceps, origin and insertion; ¢/, tensor fascis (gluteus primus) ; fc, femoro-caudal ; afc, accessory femoro-caudal ; st, semitendinosus; ast, accessory semitendinosus ; 877, semimembranosus; Ad, adductor; P, pubis; 2, rectrices. Thigh of Touraco (Corythaix) viewed from the inner side, to show the ambiens muscle, arising from the prepubic side of the pelvis (P) and running along to blend with one of the tendons of origin of the flexor perfor. digitorum (f.p.).—F, femur ; Pz, patella; LC., inner condyle of femur; T, tibia; 6, biceps (cut short); s, sartorius (also cut); é, ¢, extensor femoris; s, semimembranosus ; add, adductores. i N.B.—The surrounding parts have been somewhat distorted from their natural positions to show better the course of the ambiens. (Oopied from Forbes’s figure, Ibis, 1881, p. 9.) SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Order EURYLZMI Fam. EuRYLZMIDZ&...,.... 1. Eurylemus, Horsf...... 1. javanicus, Horsf. .... 2. ochromelas, Raffles... 2. Corydon, Lesson 1. sumatranus (Raffles) .. 3. Cymborhynchus, Vigors.. 1. macrorhynchus (Gm.) 2, affinis, Blyth ........ 4, Serilophus, Swains....... 1. lunatus (Gould)...... 2, rubripygius (Hodgs.) . 5. Psarisomus, Swains. .... 1, dalhousize (Jameson). . 6. Calyptomena, Raffles .... 1. viridis, Raffles Order PICI..............4. Fam, Picipm rr or ay Subfam. Picine emer e rene eee 1. Gecinus, Bowe .......... 1. squamatus (Vigors) .. 2. gorii, Hargitt........ 3. striolatus (Blyth) .... 4. viridanus (Blyth) .... 5. occipitalis (Vigors) .. 6. chlorolophus (Viel... . 7. chorogaster (Jerdon).. 8. puniceus (Horsf) .... 9. nigrigenis, Hume .... 2. Chryeophlegia, Gould .. 1. flavinucha (Gould) 2. humii, Hargitt VOL, ITI. Page 3. Callolophus, Salvad. .... 29 1. malaccensis (Zath.) .. 29 4, Gecinulus, Blyth ....... 380 1. grantia (McClell.) .... 30 2, viridis, Blyth ........ 81 5. Hypopicus, ae on : . 3 1. hyperythrus (Vigors) . & 6. Teneo us Koch...... 33 1. himalayensis (Jard. & Selby). vce ccccscees 34 2. cabanisi (Malh.) .... 35 8. sindianus (Gould).... 36 4, darjilensis (Blyth).... 37 5. catpharue (Hodgs.).. 37 6. pyrrhothorax (Hume).. 38 7. macii (Vieill.) ...... 39 8. atratus (Blyth) ...... 40 9, auriceps (Vigors)..... 40 10, pectoralis (Blyth) .... 41 11. andamanensis (Blyth). 42 7. Liopicus, Bonap......... 43 1. mahrattensis (Zath.).. 48 8. Iyngipicus, Bonap....... 44 1. semicoronatus (Malh.) 45 2. pygmeous (Vigors).... 45 3. canicapillus (Blyth) .. 46 4, hardwickii (Jerdon) .. 47 5. gymnophthalmus -+ (Blyth) wo... . ae 48 9. Pyrrhopicus, Math. .... 49 1. pyrrhotis (Hodgs.).... 50 2. rubiginosus (Swains.).. 51 10. Miglyptes, Swains....... 52 1, grammithorax (Math.) 52 2. tukki (Lesson) ...... 53 3. jugularis (Blyth) .... 54 1]. Micropternus, Blyth .... 54 1. phxoceps, Blyth...... 56 2. Ninchytecd (Vieill.) .. 57 3. gularis (Jerdon)...... 57 b Page 12. Brachypternus, Strickl. ;. 58 1. aurantius (Zinm.)..... 58 2, erythronotus (Viedll.).. 60 18, Tiga, Kaup ........0085 61 1. javanensis (Zjung) 61 2. shorei ( Vigors) ...... 62 14. Gauropicoides, Malh..... 68 1. rafflesi (Vigors) ...... 63 15. Chrysocolaptes, Blyth.... 64 1. festivus (Boddaert) .. 64 2. gutticristatus (Zickel). 65 3. stricklandi (Zayard).. 67 16. Hemicercus, Swains..... 68 1. sordidus (Zyton)...... 68 2. canente (Less.) ...... 69 17. Hemilophus, Swains..... 70° 1. pulverulentus (Temm.) 71 18. Thriponax, Cab. § Heine. 72 1. hodgsoni (Jerdon).... 72 2. feddeni (Blanf.) .... 73 3. ser (Horsf.) .... 74 4. hodgii (Blyth). ...... 75 Subfam. Picumnine ........ 75 1, Picumnus, Temm. ...... 75 1. innominatus, Burton.. 76 2. Sasia, Hodgs. .......+0+ 77 1. ochracea, Hodgs...... 77 Subfam. Iyngine .......... 78 1, Iynx, Linn. ........ vara 78 1 torquills, Linn. 0.45. 78 Order ZYGODACTYLI .... 80 Fam. InpIcATORIDZ ...... 81 1. Indicator, Vietll......... 81 1. xanthonotus, Blyth .. 81 Fam. CaPITONIDE ......4. 82 1, Calorhamphus, Lesson .. 83 1. hayi (Gray) ......4. 83 2. Megalema, G.R. Gray .. 84 1. marshallorum, Swinh.. 84 9. virens (Bodd.) ...... 86 3, Thereiceryx, Blanf...... 86 1. zeylonicus (Gmel.),... 86 2, lineatus ( Veetll.)...... 88 3. viridis (Bodd.) ...... 89 4, Chotorhea, Bonap....... 90 1. mystacophanes(Temm.) 91 5, Cyanops, Bonap.,.....++ 92 1 asiatica (Lath.)...... 92 Suborder CoRACIZ& Fam. MErorDz SYSTEMATIC INDEX. 2, davisoni (Hume) ...- 3. incognita (Hume)..... 4. flavifrons (Cuvier).... 5. cyanotis (Blyth) .... 6. franklini (Blyth) .... 7. ramsayi ( Walden).... 6. Xantholema, Bonap..... 1. hematocephala (P. L. BS ME ctcacroace 2. malabarica (Blyth)... 8. rubricapilla (Gmel.) .. Order ANISODACTYLI.... Fam. CoRACIADZ.......... 1. Coracias, Linn.......... 1. indica, Linn. ........ 2. affinis, McClelland .. 3. garrula, Linn........ 2. Eurystomus, Vieill....... 1. orientalis (Zinn.) ..., Suborder MEROPES...... 1. Merops, Linn. .... eo 1. viridis, Zinn. ........ 2. philippinus, Linn. .... 8. persicus, Pall......... 4, apiaster, Zinn. ...... 2. Melittophagus, Bote .... 1. swinhoii (Hume) .... 3. Nyctiornis, Swains....... 1. athertoni(Jard. § Selb.) 2. amictus (Temm.) .... Suborder HALCYONES 1. Ceryle, Bote............ 1. varia, Strickl..... ae 2. lugubris (Temm.) .... 2. Alcedo, Linn. ........45 1. ispida, Linn. ........ 2. beavani, Wald. ...... 3. meninting, Horsf. .... 4, grandis, Blyth ...... 5. euryzona, Lemm. .... SYSTEMATIC INDEX, 8. Ceyx, Lacép. ..,,.... ie 1. tridactyla (Pail.) .,.. 4, Pelargopsis, Gloger..,... 1. amauroptera (Pearson) 2. leucocephala( Gime.) .. 8. gurial (Pearson)...... 5. Halcyon, Swaima......... 1. smyrnensis (Zimn.) .. 2. pileata (Bodd.) ...... 6, Callialcyon, Bonap.,..... 1. lilacina (Swains.) .... 7. Sauropatis, Cab. ......4. 1. chloris (Bodd.) ..,... 2. occipitalis (Blyth) ,... 8. Caridagrus, Cab,...,.... 1. concretus (Temm.).... 9. Carcineutes, Cud....,...+ 1, pulchellus (Horsf,) .. Suborder BUCEROTRES.... Fam. BUCEROTIDE ......., 1. Dichoceros, Gloger...... 2. Anthracoceros, Reich.... 2. subruficollis (Blyth) .. 3. narcondami, Hume ., 4, Aceros, Hodgs.....senes 1, nepalensis (Hodgs.) ., 5, Anorrhinus, Reich. ,...++ 1. galeritus (Temm.),... 6. Ptiloleemus, Grant ...... 1. tickelli (Blyth) .,.... 2. austeni (Jerdon),.,... 7,. Berenicornis, Bonap, ..., 1. comatus (Raffi.)...... 8. Lophoceros, Hemp, §& Ehr. 1. birostris (Scop.).,..., 2. griseus (Lath.) ...... 3, gingalensis (Shaw)... 9. Rhinoplex, Gloger 1. vigil (Forster) Suborder UPpup a” Fam. UpUPIDEH ;......... oa 1, Upupa, Linn, ....... wes 1. epops, Linn. ........ 2. indica, Reich. ...... er 127 128 128 129 129 131 182 183 134 134 185 135 137 188 138 188 189 140 140 142 142 148 . 144 148 149 149 149 150 151 151 151 153 153 153 154 155 156 157 158 158 159 159 159 159 161 xi Page Order MACROCHIRES ..., 162 Suborder OYPSELI ...,..- 162 Fam. CypsEnipa.....,.... 1638 Subfam. Cypseline ....... . 163 1. Cypselus, Zitiger...... .. 164 1. melba (Linn.)........ 164 2. apus (Linn.) ........ 168 8. murinus, Brehm....,. 166 4, pacificus (Zatham).... 167 5. leuconyx, Blyth.,..., 167 6. affinis, Gray ,..,.... 168 7, subfurcatus, Blyth. ... 169 2. Tachornis, Gosse.,.,.,.. 170 1. batassiensis (Gray) .. 170 2. infumatus (Selater) .. 171 Subfam: Cheturine ........ 172 1. Chestura, Stephens ...... 172 1. nudipes, Hodgs....... 172 2. indica, Hume........ 178 3. sylvatica (Tickell).... 174 A. leucopygialis (Blyth)., 175 2. Collocalia, G. R. Gray .. 175 1. fuciphaga (Thunb ., 176 2, brevirostris (McClel- ee ,. 177 3. innominata, Hume.... 177 4. franciea, (Gmel.)...... 178 5. linchi, Horsf. & M. .. 178 Subfam. Macropterygina .... 179 1. Macropteryx, Swains..,.. 179 1, ae (Tickell)..... 180 2. longipennis(Rayinesque) 181 3. comata, Blyth ..... 182 Suborder CAPRIMULGI.... 182 Fam. CaPRIMULGIDZ ...,., 183 1. Caprimulgus, Linn, .... 183 1. mahrattensis, Sykes .. 184 2. monticola, Franklin .. 185 3. asiaticus, Lath. ...... 186 4. europeeus, Linn....... 187 5. macrurus, Horsf. .... 188 6. andamanicus, Hume .. 180 7. indicus, Lath....... .. 190 2. Lyncornis, Gould ...... 192 1. cerviniceps, Gould .,.. 192 xii SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Page Suborder PoDARGI ...... 198 Fam.-PoDarGip#........++ 198 1. Batrachostomus, Gould .. 194 T. hodgsoni (G. R. Gray). 194 2. affinis, Blyth ........ 196 8. moniliger, Layard.... 196 Order TROGONES ..... ».. 198 Fam. TROGONID#.........- 198 1. Harpactes, Swains...... 199 1, fasciatus (Pennant) .. 199 2. erythrocephalus(Gould) 200 3. duvauceli (Temm.) .. 201 4. orescius (Temm.) .... 202 Order COCCYGES ........ 203 Fam. CucvuLw@ ...... vee 203 Subfam. Cuculine .........- 204 1, Cuculus, Linn. .......- 204 1. canorus, Zinn. ...... 205 2, saturatus, Hodgs. .... 207 3. poliocephalus, Lath... 208 4. micropterus, Gould .. 210 2. Hierococeyx, S. Miill, .. 211 1. sparverioides (Vig.) .. 211 2. varius (Vahl)........ 213 8. nisicolor (Hodgs.) .... 214 4, nanus, Hume........ 215 |. 8. Cacomantis, S. Mill. .... 216 1. passerinus (Vahl) .... 216 2, merulinus (Scop.) ..,. 218 4, Penthoceryx, Cab. ...... 219 1, sonnerati (Zath.) .... 219 5. Chrysococcyx, Bote .... 220 1, xanthorhynchus , (Morafi) cvcreecees 221 2. maculatus (Gmel.).... 222 6. Surniculus, Lesson ...... 223 1. lugubris (Horsf.) .... 223 7. Coccystes, Gloger ...... 224 1. jacobinus (Bodd.) .... 225 2. coromandus (Linn.) .. 226 Subfam. Phenicophaine .... 227 1. Eudynamis, Vig. §& Horsf. 228 1, honorata (Zinn.) .... 228 2. Zanclostomus, Swains, .. 280 1. javanicus (Horaf.).... 230 Page 8. Rhopodytes, Cab. §& Heine. 230 1. viridirostris (Jerd.) .. 2381 Q. tristis (Less.) ....05- 232 3. diardi (Less.)........ 233 4, sumatranus (Raff.) .. 233 4, Phoenicophaés, Vieillot .. 234 1. pyrrhocephalus (Forster)... 10 cene 5. Rhamphococcyx, Cab. .. pitta inehnanndelaie 235 6. Rhinortha, Vig. ........ 236 1. chlorophesa (Raff.) .. 236 7. Taccocua, Less. ......+5 237 1. leschenaulti, Zess..... 237 8. Centropus, IMiger ...... 239 1. sinensis ‘(Steph.)...... 239 2. chlororhynchus, Blyth. 242 3. andamanensis, Tytler.. 242 4. bengalensis (Gmel.) .. 243 Order PSITTACI.......... 245 Fam. PsirTacip# ........ 245 1. Palsornis, Vig. ........ 246 1. eupatria (Zinn.)...... 247 2, nepalensis, Hodgs..... 248 3. imobunieaiene DC) 249 4, magnirostris, Ball.... 249 5. torquatus (Bodd.) .... 250 6. cyanocephalus (Zann.) . 251 7. rosa (Bodd.) ........ 252 8. schisticeps, Hodgs.... 253 9. tinschi, Hume ...... 254 10. columboides, Vig..... 255 11. calthrope, Layard... . 256 12. fasciatus (Miill.) 256 13. caniceps, Blyth ...... 258 14. erythrogenys, Blyth .. 258 16. tytleri, Hume........ 259 2. Psittinus, Blyth ........ 259 1. incertus (Shaw)...... 260 8. Loriculus, Blyth........ 260 1. vernalis (Sparrm.) .. 261 2. indicus (Gmel.) ...... 262 Order STRIGES .......... 263 Fam. Srrigip#............ 264 1. Strix, Linn. ... eee eee 264 1. flammea, Linn. ...... 264 2. candida, Tickell...... 266 SYSTHMATIO INDEX. ‘xiii Page Fam. Asionipa............ 267 | Order ACCIPITRES ...... Subfem. Photodtline eS ee . 268 Fam. -PANDIONIDZ by ora ds Photodilus, Is. Geof. ., 268 1. Pandion, Savigny ...... 1. badius (Horsf.)...... 268 1. haliaétus (Linn.) .. 2. assimilis, Hume...... 269 ‘Subfam. Asioning......... . 270 Fom. VOLTURIDR......., 7 Be Baia Bre seers cn ga) ee nee TE lotus (Zinnm.) ........ 270) 9 Oto; ps, G PR Gray. “"" 318 2. accipitrinus (Pall.) .. 271 1 Galvud (Scop.) **" 318 2, Syrnium, Savigny ...... 273 | 93 Gyps Savigny inc wala te 319 ‘l.-nivicola (Hodgs.) ..., 278 haa (Gopal : \ 1, fulvus (Gmel.) ...... 820 2, biddulphi, Scully wee. 274 D} himalayensis Hume 321 8. indrani (Sykes) ...... 275 8. indicus (Scop.) ** 399 ' 4, ocellatum, Zess....... 277 4. tenuirostris, Hodos. 393 5. seloputo (Horsf.) 278 ge ee 6. butle ni (Ewen YES oa 4. Pseudogyps, Sharpe ..., 324 . SON, 1. bengalensis (Gmel.) ., 324 5. Neophron, Sav. ....... . 825 Subfam. Bubonine ........ 280 1. ginginianus (Lath.) .. ae 1. ee Less, ‘ sation ) is ny i ele 1, zeylonensis (Gmel.) ... 28 . 2. fanines (Hodgs.) \... ses Fam. Fatconipz...... were 827 8, javanensis, Less..... . ay 2, Bubs, Thiet once 993 | Subfam. Gypaétine ........ 328 1. ignavus, Forster...... 284 | 1, Gypaétus, Storr ........ 328 2. bengalensis(Franki.).. 285 1: barbatus (Zinn.) .... 398 3. coromandus (Lath.) .. ae : 3. Huhua, Hodgs. ........ y 1. nepalensis (Hodgs.) 1. 287 a one ee 330 2. orientalis (Horsf.).... 289 | 1, Aquila, Briss......... .. 8382 4. Nyctea, Stephens......., 289 1. chrysaétus (Linn.).... 883 1, scandiaca (Zinn.) ..., 290 2. heltaca, Sav. ........ 334 5. Scops, Savigny ........ 290 3. bifasciata, Gray ...... 336 1, giu (Scop.) .......... 291 4, vindhiana, Franklin .. 387 2. feud (Hume) ...,.. 294 5. fulvescens, Gray .... 839 3. spilocephalus (Blyth).. 295 6, maculata (Gmel.) .... 340 4, balli (Hume) ...... .. 296 7. hastata (Less.) ...... 341 5, sagittatus (Cass.) .... 206 | 2, Hieraétus, Kaup........ 342 6. tabbauoeda (Pennant) 297 1. fasciatus (Vieill.) .... 848 7. semitorques (Sehi.) .. 300 2. pennatus (Gmnel.) .... 344 6, Athene, Bote .......... 300 38. Lophotriorchis, Sharpe .. 345 1, brama (Temm.) ...... 301 1. kieneri (Sparre)...... 345 2. blewitti (Hume) .... 308 | 4, Ictinaétus, Jerd........, 846 3. bactriana, Blyth..... . 3803 1. malayensis (Reinw.) .. 347 7. Glaucidium, Boe ...... 304 | 5, Spizaétus, Veedll......... 348 1. cuculoides (Vig.) .... 305 1. cirrhatus (Gmel.) .... 849 2. radiatum (Tick.) .... 306 2. limnaétus (Horgf.).... 351 38. castanonotum (Blyth) . 807 3. ba anage (Hodgs.) .. 352 4. brodiei (Burton) .... 307 A. kelaarti, Legge ...... 354 8. Ninox, Hodgs........... 309 5, albiniger (Blyth) .... 354 1. scutulata (Raff.) .... 309 | 6. Circaétus, Vreill......... 355 2, obscura, Hume ...... 311 1. gallicus (Gimel.)..... 355 VOL. III. ¢ xiv 7, 18. 14. 15. 16. 17. SYSTEMATIO INDEX, Page Spilornis, G. R. Gray,... 357 1. cheela (Latham)...... 367 2. minimus, = Rrcehiinasy a 3. elgini tler) ws... 36 . Butastur, ea esa era 362 1. teesa (Franklin) .... 362 2. liventer (Temm.) .... 364 8. indicus (Gmel.)...... 365 . Haliaétus, Sav. ........ 366 ]. leucoryphus (Pall.) .. 866 2. leucogaster (Gmel.) .. 368 3. albicilla (Zinn,)...... 369 , Polioaétus, Kaup ...... 369 ‘1. ichthyaétus (Hor 3 370 2, humilis (Mill, § cht) 371 . Haliastur, Selby ...... . 372 1. indus (Bodd.). . . 872 . Milyus, Cuv. .......eee 374 1, govinda, Sykes ....., 374 2. melanotis, Temm, & Schleg. 0... reevses 377 8. migrans (Bodd.) .... 378 Elanus, Sav....... es 74) 1. cxwruleus (Desf. < wee. 379 oe Lacép, oc. cvveee 380 1. macrurus (8. G. Gmel.) 381 2. cineraceus (Montagu). 383 8. cyaneus (Linn.)...... 884 4, melanoleucus (Forster), 385 5. eruginosus (Linn.) .. 387 6. spilonotus, Kaup .... 388 Buteo, Cuv. ........6-4 389 1. ferox (8. G. Gmel.) .. 390 2, leucocephalus, Hodgs. . . 892 3. desertorum (Daud.) ., 393 Archibuteo, Brehm ..., 395 1. hemi: et aa Blyth .. 395 Astur, Lacép. , 396 1. palmberie (Linn) «. 397 18, 19. 20. 21. 22, 28. 24, 25. 26, 27, 28, = badius \Gimel.) ...... 3. soloensis (Hors7.) .... Lophospizias, Koup...... 1. trivirgatus(Temm.) . Accipiter, Briss......... 1, nisus (Zinn.) ....0.6+ 2, virgatus (Reinw.) .... Pernis, Cuv.........0068 1. cristatus (Cuv.) ,...+. Macherhamphus, Wes- LEVMVATE ve povcescren 1, aleinus, Westerm. .... Baza, Hodgs. ......... . 1. lophotes (Temm. ) ascie' 2. jerdoni (Blyth) ...... 3, ceylonensis, Legge .. Falco, 5 0 ee peregrinus, Tunst..... eregrinator, Sundev.. 3. betharue Dann. ...... 4. jugger, Gray .......- 5. cherrug, Gray ....., 6. milvipes, Hodgs...... 7. subbuteo, Linn. ...... &. severus, Horsf. .:.... Erythropus, Ben. esate itu 1, amnurensis, Gurney... Atgalon, Kaup.....-.055 1. regulus (Pall.) ...... 2. chicquera (Daud.)., Tinnunculus, Vieill, 1. alaudarius (Gmel.) 2. cenchris (Naum.) , Microhierax, Sharpe .... 1, eutolmus, Hodgs. .... 2. melanoleucus, Blyth . . 3. fringillarius (Drap.) .. Poliohierax, co i Dieses 1. insignis, Wald. Fig. 1.—-Psarisomus dalhousie and nest (from Hodgson’s drawing). ’ Order IJ. EURYLA/MI. Palate »githognathous (Vol. I, p. 4). The deep plantar tendons differ from those of the Passeres in the flewor longus hallucis being connected by a vinculum with the flewor profundus digitorum, .as shown in the accompanying figure (fig. 2). Syrinx mesomyodian (Vol. I, p. 6) and oligomyodian as in Pittide (Forbes, P. Z. 8. 1880, p. 384). The sternum, as in the Passeres, has but one notch on each side of the hinder border (Sclater, Ibis, 1872, p. 179, also p. 370), but the manubrium sterni (spina externa) is unforked, as in most non-Passerine birds. Oil-gland present but nude. VOL. III. B 2 EURYLEMIDA. The relations of the Hurylemi or Broadbills to other birds have long been in dispute. At one time members of the present group were referred to the neighbourhood of Coracias. But, chiefly through the researches of Blanchard, Garrod, and Forbes, the close alliance between the Eurylemi and Passerine birds has now been Fig. 2.—Left foot of Cymborhynchus macrorhynchus, from behind. The skin has been turned aside and the superficial flexors removed, so as to show the deep plantar tendons. I, II, III, IV, first, second, third and fourth toes ; SLA. flecor longus hallucis; f.p.d., flexor profundus digitorum ; V, vinculum. (Forbes, P. Z. 8. 1880, p. 382.) ascertained, and the only question remaining is whether the Broadbills should be included in the Passerine group as a distinct section, or whether they should form a suborder or order apart. The latter is the view advocated by Seebohm and Sharpe, and accepted, as a provisional arrangement, in the present work. There is but a single family, confined to the Oriental region. Family EURYLZMIDZ. Bill normally broad and flat as in some Muscicapide. Feet adapted for perching ; hind toe large, anterior toes joined at the base, the outer and middle toes (third and fourth) having only the last phalanx free (fig. 2). Tarsi reticulated behind, transversely scutellated in front, the scutellation often ill-marked and in some genera disappearing entirely on the inner anterior side of the tarsus. Tail generally rounded, often graduated, EURYLEMUS. 8 The Broadbills are forest birds living generally in small flocks amongst high trees, and feeding as a rule on insects. They are often remarkably tame, some of them being, itis said, so unwilling to move that several out of the same flock may be shot one after the other, without the survivors being alarmed. They build large round nests of grass and fibres, somewhat resembling those of the Nectariniide, suspended from a fine twig and with an opening at the side (fig. 1). The eggs as a rule are white or cream-coloured, much speckled, especially towards the larger end, but occasionally they are spotless. The genera in this family are more distinct than is usually the case amongst Birds, each being distinguished by a peculiar type of coloration. No species occur in the Peninsula of India, nor in Ceylon, but the range of the family extends from the Western Himalayas to the Philippines and Borneo, the majority inhabiting the Malay Peninsula. 4 Key to the Genera. a. Nostrils exposed. a’, Tail shorter than wing. a", Sides of upper mandible convex and overhanging. a®. Region below eye feathered .... EURYLaMUS, p. 3. 8, Region below eye nude; bill very Broad icciae so suiae os vinee ena siale o Corypon, p. 5. &". Sides of upper mandible straight, not overhanging. ce, Nostrils elongate, about 3 length of bill from forehead .......... CYMBORHYNCHDS, p. 7. @, Nostrils rounded, at base of bill.. SrrriopHus, p. 8 b', Tail longer than wing ...........006 Psanisomus, p. 11. b. Nostrils concealed by loral plumes ...... CaLyPTomEna, p. 12. Genus EURYLEMUS, Horsfield, 1821. Bill large, broad and flat, culmen very blunt, sides of upper mandible overhanging and convex near the gape. Nostrils rounded, exposed, at base of bill. Wings and tail rounded, the wing much longer than the tail. Rictal bristles present but small. Scutellation of tarsus in front almost obsolete, inside of tarsus covered with an undivided lamina. Upper plumage chiefly black and yellow ; lower plumage wholly ‘or in part vinaceous red. Two species are known, ranging from Tenasserim to the Malay Archipelago. Key to the Species. ‘Larger; head and neck dark vinaceous red ...... E, javanicus, p. 4. Smaller; head and throat black .......... secees 4 ochromelas, p. 5. BQ : 4 BURYLEMID A. 937. Eurylemus javanicus. . Horsfield’s Broadbill. Eurylaimus javanicus, Horsfield, Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 170 (1821) ; Blyth, Cat. p. 195; Horsf. § M. Cat. p. 116. me Enurylamus javanicus, Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 125 ; Hume, S. F. iy . 470; id. Cat. no. 189 ter ; Davison, S. F. v, p 456; Hume § av. 8. F. vi, pp. 89, 499; Bingham, 8. F. ix, p. 157; Oates, B. B. i, p. 427; id. in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. p. 294; Sclater, Cat. B. M. xiv, p. 468. Coloration. Male. Whole head and neck deep purplish red, lores blackish, crown and nape very dark, ear-coverts much brighter; a very narrow. white line below. the eye; hind neck brownish, back and upper tail-coverts mixed black and bright yellow, basal portion of interscapulary feathers white; wings black, each primary with a yellow spot at the base, each secondary with a long yellow spot on the outer web, inner webs of all quills whitish near the base; tail black, all feathers except the middle pair with a subterminal fulyous white spot or band. Lower parts vinaceous red, the throat washed with dusky bronze, a narrow black band across the breast and a distinctly bronzed gorget behind it, lower breast and- abdomen brighter red; under wing-coverts mostly yellow, edge of wing the same, thigh-coverts dark brown. Female. Similar, but without the black pectoral band. Young birds have the head and nape yellowish brown, the shafts of the feathers brighter yellow; lower plumage yellowish throughout. Upper mandible bright blue to within one-third of tip; rest of upper mandible pale sea-green; lower mandible pale greenish blue ; both mandibles edged and tipped with brownish red; irides bright blue; legs and feet fleshy ; claws brown (Davison). Length 9 inches; tail 2:9; wing 4:3; tarsus 1; bill from gape 1:6. The female is slightly smaller. Distribution. Karennee; Tenasserim as far north as Moulmein, probably farther north on the hills to the eastward; Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java, and Borneo. Habits, Jc. This species feeds on insects and small reptiles, and has the typical habits of the family, living in forests in small parties. Davison found it breeding\near Bankasun in March ; the CORYDON, 5 mest was a massive structure composed of moss, fibres, roots, dry leaves, bits of wood, and small twigs, suspended to the extreme tip of a very tall bamboo overhanging a stream. T'wo fresh eggs were in the nest, dull white, thickly speckled with minute spots of dusky brown, more thickly towards the large end: size 1:09 by -76. 938. Euryleamus ochromelas. The Black-and-yellow Broudbill. Eurylaimus ochromalus, Raffles, Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 297 (1822) ; Blyth, Cat. p. 195; Horsf. §& M. Cat. p. 116. Eurylemus ochromelas, Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 125; Hume, 8. F. ii, p. 470; 7d. Cat. no. 189 tera; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, p. 91; Oates, B. B. i, p. 426; Sclater, Cat. B. M. xiv, p. 465; Hartert, J. f. Orn. 1889, pp. 358, 391. Coloration. Male. Whole head black, except a few white fea- ‘thers below each eye; a white collar round the neck, narrow behind; upper parts from neck black, with a bright yellow stripe down the middle of the back, rump, and upper tail-coverts, and a shorter stripe on each side on the outer scapulars ; basal portion of interscapulary feathers white; middle of outer webs of secondary quills yellow; near the base almost all wing-feathers have a whitish inner border; a small yellowish spot on each primary near the base; tail-feathers with a subterminal yellowish-white spot on inner web, becoming a band on.the outer feathers; a broad black gorget below the white collar, lower breast and abdo- men pale vinous purple ; under wing- and tail-coverts, vent, flanks, and edge of wing yellow; thigh-coverts black. Female. Similar, but the black gorget is interrupted in the middle. The young have the forehead and supercilia yellowish white; the throat whitish, breast and abdomen yellowish grey. Lower mandible and base of upper bright smalt-blue, rest of upper mandible bright green; edges of both mandibles black ; irides bright yellow; legs and feet dark but fieshy-pink; claws brown (Davison). Length 6-5; tail 2:2; wing 3:3; tarsus ‘8; bill from gape 1°1. Distribution. South Tenasserim as far north as Yay, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and Borneo. Genus CORYDON, Lesson, 1828, Bill very large, much deeper, broader at the base and more hooked than that of Zurylemus, the upper mandible more over- hanging, and with the edge more convex near the gape; but the eulmen is comparatively much shorter and more prominent. Rictal bristles replaced by plumules, which are situated in a nude area between the eye and bill. Wings and tail rounded; wing longer than tail, Tarsus distinctly scutellated in front. Sexes alike. , The plumage is mostly black. Only a single species is known, 6 HURYLEMIDE. 939. Corydon sumatranus. The Dusky Broadbill. Coracias sumatranus, Rajfles, Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 303 (1822). Corydon sumatranus, pth A, M.N. EH. vi, p. 417 (1841); Blyth, . Cat. p. 195; id. Birds Burma, p.125; Horsf. § M. Cat. p. 117; Hume & Dav. 8. F, vi, p. 97 ; Hume, Cat. no. 139 sex ; Bingham, S. F. ix, p. 157; Oates, B. B.i, p. 480; Sclater, Cat. B. M. xiv, p. 466. Fig. 4.—Head of C. sumatranus. Coloration. Black throughout with the following exceptions :—a concealed interscapulary patch crimson (or occasionally yellow) and white, consisting of the basal parts only of the feathers, the tips being black ; a broad white band across the primaries close to the coverts; a subterminal white spot or band on all tail-feathers except the middle pair; the throat and upper breast, which are dirty brownish white, the edges of the feathers in places darker. Female the same. , Young duller black, without an interscapulary patch, and with the white of the throat ill-defined. Upper mandible varying from dark reddish brown to pale horny brown, lower mandible pale fleshy-pink with a dark median streak, tips of both whitish ; orbital skin and gape dark fleshy-pink ; legs, feet, and claws black; irides deep brown. Length 10°5 ; tail 4-2 ; wing 5:4 ; tarsus 1-1; bill from gape 1-6. Distribution, Apparently fnsihont Tenasserim, except in the deciduous forests, as far north as Karennee ; also the Malay Penin- sula, Sumatra and Borneo. Habits, ge. This bird is found in pairs or small parties in forests. It is somewhat crepuscular according to Tickell, and during the day very sluggish. It has an oft-repeated mellow, rather musical note; also a clear whistle, which it utters when flying from tree to tree. The nest and eggs do not appear to have been recorded. CYMBORHYNCHUS. 7 Genus CYMBORHYNCHUS, Vigors, 1830, Bill not differing much in form from that of Hurylemus, but narrower, with a somewhat higher culmen, and with the upper mandible straight-edged, not overhanging. The nostrils are elongate, and open in a longitudinal depression a considerable distance from the frontal feathers, about 3 to 4 the length of the bill from the pase. Rictal bristles long. Tarsi indistinctly scu- tellated in front. Coloration above mostly black, below deep crimson. «Two species are known, ranging from Arrakan to Borneo. Key to the Species. Wing about 4; no red spots on tertiaries .. C. macrorhynchus, p. 7. ‘Wing about 3°6; red terminal spots on ter- Uarles: csnccciscorswemsieveesnans.e C. affinis, p. 8. 940. Cymborhynchus macrorhynchus. The Black-and-red Broadbill. Todus macrorhynchus, Gm. Syst. Nat. i, p. 446 (1788). Todus nasutus, Lath. Ind. Orn, i, p. 268 (1790). Cymborhynchus macrorhynchus, Gray, Gen. B. i, p. 66; Horsf. & M. Cat. p. 119; Blyth, Birds Burma, p. 126; Stoliczka, J. A. S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 285; Davison, 8. F. v, p. 457; Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, p. 92; Hume, Cat. no. 189 quint.; Sharpe, Ibis, 1876, p. 48; 1877, p. 22; 1879, p. 264; Bingham, S. F. ix, p. 157 ; Oates, B. B. i, p. 428; Sclater, Cat. B. M. xiv, p. 468; Hartert, J. f. Orn. 1889, pp. 358, 393; Oates in Hume's N. & £. 2nd ed. ii. 294, Gen ichynchus nasutus, Viyors, Mem. Raffles, p. 654 (1880) ; Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xv,p. 811; td. Cat. p. 195. C sibarheynthas malaccensis, Salvad. Atti R, Ac. Sc, Tor. ix, p. 425 (1874); Oates, 8. F. iti, p, 336. Coloration. Upper parts except the scapulars, rump, and upper tail-coverts black; chin, upper throat, and a broad pectoral band also black; a white longitudinal band on each side of the back, formed by the outer half of the scapulars; rump and upper tail-coverts, ear-coverts and the throat between them, lower breast, abdomen, flanks, and lower tail-coverts deep crimson, sometimes mixed with orange on the belly; wings black, the edge orange- yellow, under wing-coverts in part, and basal portion of inner web of most wing-feathers white, axillaries yellowish white ; tail black, a variable number of the outer feathers with a white sub- terminal spot on the inner web. Young dusky instead of black, white spots on tips of wing- coverts, rump mixed red and black ; lower plumage dark brown with traces of transverse bars. Upper mandible and a bordering along the edge of the lower mandible brilliant blue, remainder of the latter yellowish, 3 » EURYLEMIDZ, edges of both transparent white; irides emerald-green, shot with gold; legs ‘and feet ultramarine-blue; claws horny (Bingham). Inside of mouth bright blue (Davison). Length 9°5; tail 3:5; wing 4; tarsus ‘95; bill from gape 1:25. Females rather smaller. Distribution. From Tenasserim through Siam, Cambodia, and the Malay Peninsula to Sumatra and Borneo. This Broadbill was obtained as far north as the Dawna range near Kokarit, east of Moulmein, by Bingham. Habits, gc. Similar to those of Hurylemus, except that this species, according to Davison, is found in gardens and near villages. Ti lives entirely on insects. It breeds in Tenasserim from April to June, making the usual large globular Broadbill’s nest of grass, roots, &c., suspended to’ the end of a bough, and containing 3 or 4 eges varying from white to salmon-buff in colour, and densely spotted or speckled, especially about the larger end, with black or brownish red. The eggs measure about 1°06 ‘by *75. 941. Cymborhynchus affinis. Zhe Arrakan Black-and-red Broadbill. Cymborhynchus affinis, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xv, p. 312 (1846); id. Cat. p. 195; id. Birds Burma, p. 126 ; Oates, S. F. iii, p. 336; x, p. 188; td. B. B. i, p. 429; Hume, Cat. no. 139 quat.; Sclater, Cat. B. M. xiv, p. 470. Coloration. Similar to the last except that the red of the rump is mixed with black; there are always white subterminal spots on all tail-feathers except the middle pair, and these spots become bars on the three outer rectrices on each side; the white at the base of the primaries appears from beneath the outer wing-coverts, and each tertiary has a long red spot at the end. Length 8-2; tail 3; wing 3°6; tarsus ‘86; bill from gape 1. Distribution. Arrakan from about lat. 19° southward to Cape Negrais, also the Irrawaddy delta as far east as Rangoon. Nothing is known of the habits. Genus SERILOPHUS, Swainson, 1837. Bill very much smaller than in Hurylemus, sides of upper mandible straight, not overhanging. Tail much rounded. Second- aries and inner primaries truncated, and emarginate at the ends of the shafts. ictal bristles present. Nostrils and tarsi as in Eurylemus. Plumage soft, greyish or brownish above, ashy below; a white gorget in females only. Two species, ranging from the Himalayas to Tenasserim. Key to the Species. Head above pale greyish brown,.........0e00.00, S. lunatus, p. 9. Head above hak OSAY BTCY - ese ee ceseveveceues 8. Ra eA p.9. - SERILOPHUS. 9 942. Serilophus lunatus. Gould’s Broadbill. Eurylaimus lunatus, Gould, P. Z. 8. 1833, p.183. Serilophus lunatus, Swainson, Class. B. ii, p. 262; Blyth, J. A. S. B. KV, p. 811; ids Cat. p. 196; id. Birds Burm. p. 125; Horsf. § M. Cat. p. 118; Hume, 8. F. ii, p. 470; iii, p. 53; id. Cat. no. 139 bis; Wardi. Ramsay, Ibis, 1875, p. 852 ; Davison, S. F. v, p- 455 ; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, pp. 89, 499 ; Oates, 8. F. viii, p. 164; x, p. 188; id. B. B.i,p. 424; Bingham, 8. F. ix, p. 157 ; Salvador, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) v, p. 574 ; Sclater, Cat. B. M. xiv, p. 460; Oates in Hume's N. § £. 2nd ed. ii, p. 291. Primary quills, especially 3rd and 4th, sharply pointed, the worn inner web of the two feathers named having the edge concave near the tip. Coloration. Male. Forehead pale ashy, crown and nape pale greyish brown, back darker, passing into chestnut on the rump and upper tail-coverts; a broad black supercilium extending back to the nape; lores pale rufous with black hairs intermixed, ear- coverts greyish rufescent; wings black, basal portion of outer webs of almost all quills greyish blue, a large white spot on the inner web of each, 3rd and 4th primaries with broad white tips, tertiaries and tips of inner webs of all quills except the first five pale chestnut, tips of the outer webs of the same feathers and of the fifth primary white ; tail-feathers black, the outer 3 pairs with broad white tips; lower parts ashy grey, whitish on the throat zi abdomen ; lower wing-coverts and thighs black, edge of wing white. * Female similar, but with a glistening silvery white gorget. Bill light blue, paler on the culmen; gape and base of both mandibles orange; mouth orange; eyelids greenish vellow; iris dark brown; legs greenish orange ; claws light blue (Oates). Length 7 ; tail 2:8; wing 3:4; tarsus -8; bill from gape -92. Distribution. Evergreen forests of Pegu hills, also Karennee and throughout Tenasserim. Not at present recorded outside British territory. Habits, gc. This Broadbill occurs in smal] flocks in forests, and is apparently strictly arboreal. It feeds chiefly on insects, It is described as very stupid and not easily alarmed. It breeds from April to July inclusive, making a globular nest, about six inches in diameter, of coarse grass, vegetable fibres, twigs, moss, rootlets, cocoons, and similar materials. The nest is lined with broad leaves, some of them occasionally green; it has a side entrance protected by a rude porch, and hangs from the end of a small branch. The eggs, generally four in number, are thin and delicate, pure white with a slight gloss, marked with purplish- black specks and minute spots towards the larger end, and measure “95 by *67. 943. Serilophus rubripygius. Hodgson’s Broadbill. Raya rubropygia, Hodgs. J. A. 8. B. viii, p. 36 (1839). Serilophus rubropygius, Bp. Consp. i, p. 169; Blyth, J. A. S. B. xv, 10 EURYLEMIDZ. p. 811; id. Cat. p. 196; id. Birds Burm. p. 125; Horsf. & M. Cat.i, p. 119 ; are. B.1.i, p. 238; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. Be pt. 2, p. 95; xlv, pt. 2, p. 69; Hume, Cat. no. 189; zd. 8. Fix, p. 247; xi, p. 49; Oates, B. B. i, p. 425; Selater, Cat.{B. M. p. 461; Hartert, J. f. Orn, 1889, p. 395; Oates in Hume's N. & £. Qnd ed. ii, p. 293. The Red-backed Broadbill, Jerdon; Ra-i-suga, Nepal; Rab-kyul, Lepcha. Fig. 5.—Head of S. rubripygius, 2. Tips of outer primaries rounded. Coloration. Male. Head above, nape, and upper back dark ashy grey ; a long black supercilium to the nape; back browner, passing into the ferruginous-red tertiaries, ramp, and upper tail- coverts. Wings black, outer webs of almost all feathers dull blue near the base, corresponding to a white spot on the inner web; extreme tips of first 5 primaries white, of the remaining primaries chestnut, bordered inside with bluish grey; most of the wing- feathers except the first five with a small white spot on the outer web near the tip. Tail black, the three outer pairs of feathers with broad white tips. Lower parts ashy grey, under wing-coverts and thighs black; edge of wing whitish. . Female with pure white tips to some of the neck-feathers, forming a narrow collar at each side but interrupted in the middle. Bill blue, paler towards the tip, a green spot, in the male only, in the middle of the lower mandible; iris greyish brown, naked skin round the eye dark yellow, narrow ring of the eyelid green feet yellowish green, whitish-blue spots on the toes, nails whitish blue (Hartert) ; iris brown speckled with gold (Hume). Length 7-25; tail 28; wing 3:3; tarsus 85; bill from gape°9. Distribution. Eastern Himalayas, below about 5000 feet, as far west as Nepal; Assam and the hills to the southward as far as Arrakan and Manipur. Habits, fc. Very similar to those of S. lunatus, but this bird is less tame. It feeds on insects, and Hume shot one in Manipur that had eaten small land mollusca. The nest and eggs, which PSARISOMUS. 11 resemble those of the last species, have been described by Mr. Gammie in Sikkim, and by Mr. Baker in Cachar. The eggs measure about -95 by ‘66. Genus PSARISOMUS, Swainson, 1837. Bill similar to that of Hurylemus, but smaller, edge of upper mandible straight, not overhanging ; no rictal bristles; loreal feathers directed forward. Tarsi indistinctly scutellated in front outside, the scutellation becoming obsolete inside. Tail greatly graduated, longer than the wing. General colour bright green. Sexes alike. A single species. 944. Psarisomus dalhousia. The Long-tailed Broadbill. Eurylaimus dalhousie, Jameson, Edinb. N. Ph. J. xviii, p. 889 (1835) ; Royle, Iii. Bot. Him. 1, p. Ixxvii, pl. vii, fig. 2. Psarisomus dalhousie, Blyth, Cat. p.195; id. Birds Burma, p. 126; Horsf. § M. Cat. p. 117; Jerdon, B. I. i, p.236; Godwin-Austen, J. A. S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 95; xlv, pt. 2, p. 69; Walden, 1bis, 1875, p. 460; Hume, S. F. iii, p. 52; v, p. te xi, p. 48; id. Cat. no. 188; Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, pp. 88, 499; Bingham, S. F. viii, p. 1983; ix, p. 156; Oates, 8. F. x, p. 188; id. B. B.i, p. 423; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) v, p.574; Sclater, Cat. B. M. xiv, p. 458; Oates in Hume's N. & EF. 2nd ed. ii, p. 289. Raya sericeogula, Hodgson, J. A. S. B. viii, p. 36 (1889). Psarisomus assimilis, Hume, S. F. iii, p. 53. The Yellow-throated Broadbill, Jerdon; Rai-i, Nepalese ; Dang-mo- mith, Lepcha. Fig. 6.—Head of P. dalhousic. Coloration. Crown and nape with the sides of the head behind the eyes black ; a large bright blue patch on the crown; a narrow frontal line; an elongate spot behind the eye, lores and chin bright yellow, passing into orange-yellow on the throat; this colour is continued behind the black cap as a collar, the nuchal portion of which, sometimes difficult of detection in skins, is bright blue. Upper plumage from neck to tail-coverts inclusive bright grass- green; tertiaries and outer webs of secondaries the same; inner webs of wing-feathers black, outer webs of primaries bright blue near the base, dark bluish green towards the tip, a large white spot 12 BURYLEMID XE. on inner web of each primary near the base ; tail blue above, black below; lower plumage from breast bright bluish green. - Female the same. In some skins the spot behind the eye is greenish yellow or white; the collar, too, has in many birds a satin-white hinder border. Bill green in general, but sometimes brownish yellow, gape and tip bluish or whitish; iris brown; orbits yellow or greenish; legs and feet dull light green; claws horny. ; Young birds have the whole head green or greenish. Length 10:5; tail 5; wing 4:1; tarsus 1°1; bill from gape 1:3. ' Distribution. Throughout the Himalayas as far west’ as Dehra Dun and Mussooree, from a low level to about 6000 feet elevation ; also Assam, Manipur, Cachar, and Burma generally, in hilly parts of the country, and through the Malay Peninsula to Sumatra and Borneo. Habits, &c. This beautiful Broadbill is found usually solitary or in pairs, but sometimes in small flocks, and is restricted to thick forest. It feeds entirely on insects, which it sometimes captures on the wing. The nests (fig. 1) are like those of other Broadbills, large globular structures of grass, roots, fibres, &c., with a lateral entrance, which is sometimes protected by an overhanging portico. This nest is suspended from a fine twig; the egg-cavity is lined with green leaves; the eggs, 3 to 5 in number, are laid in April or May, and are of two types—the one pure white and glossy, the other white or pinkish, blotched, chiefly about the large end, with red and pale reddish purple, and almost without gloss. Average size 1 by °7. Genus CALYPTOMENA, Raffles, 1822. Bill smaller than in other Hurylemide, and the culmen higher. Nostrils at the base of the beak, and concealed, as is the greater part of the upper mandible, by the feathers of the lores, which are large and directed forward. No rictal bristles. Tail short and nearly square. Tarsi distinctly scutellated in front. Plumage harsh, bright green nearly throughout. This is the most aberrant member of the group, and has been by many writers placed in a different family or subfamily. Three species are now known, two of which are peculiar to Borneo. 945, Calyptomena viridis. The Green Broadbill. Calyptomena viridis, Raffles, Trans, Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 295 (1822) ; Blyth, Cat. p. 196; td, Birds Burm, p. 124; Horsf. § 7 Cat. p. 120; Stoliczha, J..A, S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 284; Hume & Dav. 8. F. vi, pp. 86, 499; Hume, Cat. no. 187 bis; Oates, B. B.i, p. 422; Sclater, Cat. B. M. xiv, p.456; Oates in Hume's N.& E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 288. Coloration. Male. Bright green throughout, slightly paler on the abdomen; a minute yellow spot in front of the eye; sides of forehead (greatly concealed by loral feathers), a large spot behind CALYPTOMENA. 13 the ear-coverts, three bands across the wing-coverts, and the wing- feathers (except the outer webs of the secondaries and the basal portion of the outer webs in the primaries) black. Female duller and paler green throughout, especially below ; no black marks; wing-feathers brown. Young birds are like the females, but duller in colour. Fig. 7.—Head of C. viridis. Upper mandible pale horny to brown or even black, the tip and the lower mandible light reddish horny or brownish orange; gape orange; iris dark brown; legs pale dirty or horny green, sometimes tinged with bluish, sometimes with purplish grey. Males, length about 7° 5; tail 2; wing 4:2; tarsus 8; bill from gape 1:1. ‘Females are , rather larger, wing "about 4-4. Distribution. Tenasserim from Amherst southward, also the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and Borneo. Habits, gc. According to Davison this beautiful Broadbill lives entirely on fruit. It keeps to the forests and frequents the tops of the trees singly, in pairs, or in small parties. It is only active in the mornings and evenings. The note is a soft whistle. Several nests have been taken in Tenasserim by Mr. J. Darling, and are egg-shaped, measuring about 9 inches by 4, pinched flat at the top, along the twig from which each is suspended, and ending in a tail, sometimes 3 feet long. The nest is large, com- posed chiefly of fine grass, sometimes mixed with roots &c., and contains about 3 very pale yellow or creamy Bes unspotted, ‘with little or no gloss, and measuring about 1°15 by ‘8 Fig. 8.—Brachypternus awrantius and nest-hole. Order III. PICI. With the Woodpeckers we commence a series of bird-families sometimes combined under the general name of Picarie, but exhibiting such complicated relations with each other and with other groups of birds that their classification is by no means finally settled. In the present work it appears best to leave them in a number of small orders, each frequently consisting, as in the present instance, of a single family. The Woodpeckers were formerly associated under the name Scansores with Barbets, Cuckoos, Parrots, and other birds having two hind and two fore toes, the fourth digit being directed back- wards as well as the first or hallux. But the Parrots have long been known to differ from the others widely in structure, and were classed apart by Blyth in his Catalogue in 1849. Huxley, in his important paper ‘On the Classification of Birds’ (P.Z.S. 1867, pp. 448, 467), distinguished the Woodpeckers as a group called Celeo- morphe, equal in rank to the Accipitrine birds or the Parrots, and P1OI, 15 the distinction was emphasized by Kitchen Parker, who separated Woodpeckers and Wrynecks as Saurognathe, on account of what he regarded as the reptilian characters presented by the bones of the palate. The view that Woodpeckers and Wrynecks form a separate group has been accepted by many recent writers, notably by Sundevall *, Sclater +, Newton t, Sharpe §, and Gadow ||, though not by Garrod], by Firbringer **, nor by Seebohm tt. The following are the principal characters :— Vomer represented by several distinct paired lateral rods; maxillo-palatines small, widely distant from each other (fig. 9). fig. 9—Palate of Gecinus viridis (Huxley, P.Z.S. 1867, p. 448). Pmaz, premaxille ; Map, maxillo-palatine; P/, palatine ; Vo, the ossicles. which appear to represent the vomer. The flexor longus hallucis, after sending off a vinculum to the flexor perforans digitorum, is divided, one branch going to the fourth toe, the other being again divided to supply the first; and second, whilst the flexor perforans digitorum runs to the third alone (see fig. 22, p. 80). The same arrangement is found in the Barbets, Indicators, Toucans, and some other families. Sternum with two notches behind on each side of the keel; the manubrial process bifurcate as in the Passeres. The femoro- caudal and semitendinosus muscles present ; ambiens and accessory femoro-caudal absent.. -Czca wanting or quite rudimentary. In pterylosis, the spinal feather-tract is well defined on the back and forked on the lower, not on the upper back. Oil-gland tufted, not nude as in Passeres. . ze * ©Tentamen,’ p. 72. t ‘Ibis,’ 1880, pp. 350, 402. + Article “ Ornithology,” Encyclopsdia Brit. p. 47. § ‘Review of Recent Attempts to Classify Birds, p. 84. (The Neotropical Buccones and Galbule are here associated.) || Bronn, Klassen u. Ordn, des Thier-Reichs, vi, 4, p. 301. { P.Z.8. 1878, p. 935. ** ‘Untersuchungen,’ ii, p. 1392. tt ‘Classification of Birds,’ p. 6; Supplement, p. 23. 16 PICIDR. Family PICIDZ. Tail-feathers always 12, the outermost pair in the majority of the genera short and often completely concealed by the coverts, so that these two feathers are difficult to find. Bill generally strong and in many forms modified into a cutting weapon, the end of the upper mandible being vertical and chisel-shaped. With this weapon Woodpeckers cut away the bark of trees to look for insects, and make holes in the trunks or branches for nests. Many species by tapping on trees make a noise that may be heard a considerable distance. The nostrils are basal; above them, in several genera, a ridge known as the nasal ridge commences, and runs, parallel to the culmen, to join or nearly to joi the com- missure. The tongue is excessively long, worm-like, and capable of great protrusion ; it is supplied with viscid mucus from the large salivary glands, so that insects, their larve and eggs adhere to it. The point of the tongue is horny and barbed. The hyoid cornua, which are of enormous length, slide round the skull, passing in a sheath from the side of the gullet round the occiput to the base of the upper mandible. All Indian Picide are insectivorous, a large proportion of them feeding mainly and some entirely on ants. All lay glossy white eggs, and all, with the exception of one genus, make holes in trees and lay their eggs in them, the eggs resting on the chips without any other lining to the hole. The exception is the genus Micro- pternus, which lays its eggs in ants’ nests. The Picide are not found in Madagascar, Australia, or Poly- nesia, but range through all other temperate and tropical regions. They are divided into three subfamilies, thus distinguished :— Shafts of tail-feathers stout and rigid ...... Picine, p. 17. Shafts of tail-feathers flexible. Tail (in Indian forms) less than 2 length of wing ; nostrils concealed by plumes .......... Picumnine, p. 75. Shafts of tail-feathers flexible. Tail 2 wing or more; nostrils not concealed by plumes, but partly covered by a membrane .... Jyngine, p. 78. Woodpeckers are known as Kat-tokra, H., in Northern India, Lakhor-phor in the South; Kat-barya at Mussooree ; Katparwa in Oude; Lohdr, Maréthi; Manu-tolachi, Telugu; Marram-tolashi, PICINA. 17 Tamul; Tatchan-kurwi, Tam. in Ceylon; Kerella, Cingalese ; Thit-touk, Burmese ; these names being applied to all kiads. The Lepchas of Sikhim, as Jerdon observes, alone appear to have names for different species. _ Subfamily PICINA. This contains the true Woodpeckers, with very stout shafts to the tail-feathers, the points of which are pressed. against the bark of trees when the birds are climbing or tapping to get at insects. The tail is frequently much worn, and hence varies considerably in length. "Woodpeckers seldom perch, they cling to the stems and branches of trees with the tail always downward, and they usually ascend and descend diagonally. They have'a peculiar undulating flight easily recognized. The Indian genera are numerous. Key to the Genera. a, Primaries spotted or banded. a’, Nostrils concealed by plumes. al. Toes 4, sail a>, Mantle wholly or partly green, back not bareed, ace e*, Culmen nearly straight, a dis- tinct nasal ridge ............ Gucinvs, p. 18. %, Culmen curved, nasal ridge oab- SOlebe. cad wwerwiaerawanee nee CHRYSOPHLEGMA, p. 27. 6®, Mantle chiefly crimson, back barred across ........ cphanada geen CALLOLOPHUS, p. 29. ce, Mantle black and white. ct. Nasal ridge less than half length of bill, and at base nearer commissure than cul- ah eaifocotciniay Gud GC apaaaela aces Hyporicus, p. 32. commissure than culmen. a’, Second primary shorter than sixth, a’, Primaries exceed second- aries by length of culmen or more ...... asevinicruasae DENDROCOPUS, p. 33. 6°, Primaries. exceed. .second- aries by less than length of culmen.......+..004- Laoprcvus, p. 48. 6°. Second primary longer than sixth......... Beira sahara Tynerprcus, p. 44. b". Toes 3. d’, Mantle green or red......... ... GxcrnvLvs, p. 30. . & Mantle golden olive............ GavROPICOIDES, p. 63. VOL. UT. 0 18 PICIDA. 8’. Nostrils exposed. ce. Mantle rufous or crimson, more or less banded. f°. Culmen nearly straight, tip trun- CALM nrc ucdcce rene rencentos PyRRHopicus, p. 49. g®. Culmen curved, tip pointed...... MicroPreRnvs, p. 54. d". Mantle wholly or partly golden olive or crimson, not banded. 3, Toes 4. e*. Hallux well developed, half length of second digit ...... CrnysocoLaPtss, p. 64. f*. Hallux small, about 3 second Cigit.. sawevedededs new eras . BRacHYPTERNUS, p. 58. 8, VOCS Ba viac ieee tienss a Hewes Ties, p. 61. e"’. Mantle black or brown and buff.... Miauyprzs, p. 52. 4. Primaries without spots or bands. c'. Tertiaries with large spots; size small. Hemicercus, p. 68. d', All quills unspotted ; size large. Jf". Plumage mostly ashy grey........ Hemitoputs, p. 70. g'. Plumage mostly black .......... THRiPonax, p. 72. Genus GECINUS, Boie, 1831. Nostrils concealed by harsh plumes; culmen slightly curved, a distinct nasal ridge, nearer to the culmen than to the commissure at the base of the bill. Four toes to each foot, the 3rd (outer anterior) toe longer than the 4th (outer posterior); tail less than two-thirds the wing in length ; outermost tail-feather on each side very short, not nearly so long as the upper tail-coverts. . Upper plumage green wholly or in part: sexes distinguished by portions of the head, generally of the crown, being red in males and not in females. This genus, of which the type is the common European G. viri- dis, ranges almost throughout the Palearctic and Oriental regions, and is represented by nine species within our area. Members of this genus obtain their insect-food more frequently on fallen trunks of trees and on the ground than Woodpeckers in general are wont to do. Key to the Species. a. Rump green or yellow. . a’, Lower parts with longitudinal markings ; male with crimson, female with black cap. a", Pail barred throughout. a, Dark bars on middle tail-feathers broader than white bars .......... G. squamatus, p. 19. b%, Dark bars narrower than white.... G. gorti, p. 20. 6". Tail not barred throughout. c’, White predominating on lower parts. G. striolatus, p. 20. @. Dark ee on lower parts, G. viridanus, p. 22. &'. Lower parts almost uniformly coloured ; crown crimson and occiput black in male, both black in female..............4. G. occipitalis, p, 22. GECINUS. 1¢ e', Lower parts with transverse bars or spots; a yellow nuchal crest. ec”, Outer surface of wing green, tinged with red. e°, Whole occiput never crimson ; wing about 5:4, a‘. Forehead, each edge of crown and of occiput and malar stripe crimson. G. chlorolophus 3, p. 28. b+. Sides of occiput only crimson .. G. chlorolophus Q,p. 23. J*. Whole occiput crimson; wing about 46. c*, Crown and malar stripe crimson. G. chlorogaster 3, p. 25. d', Only occiput crimson .......... |G. chlorogaster 9 , p. 25. a", Outer surface of wing red .......... G. puniceus, p. 26. &. Rump bright red ....... 0. cece eee eee G. nigrigenis, p. 26. 946. Gecinus squamatus. The West-Himalayan Scaly-bellied Green Woodpecker. Picus equamatus, Vigors, P. Z. S. 1830, p.8; Blyth, J. A. S. B. xii, . 998. . Genus squamatus, Blyth, Cat. p.57; Horsf. & M. Cat. p. 659; Jerdon, B. I.i, p. 286; id. Ibis, 1872, p.9; Tytler, Ibis, 1868, p. 202; Stolicxka, J. A. 8S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 20; Beavan, Ibis, 1869, p. 414; Cock § Marsh. S. F. i, p. 8350; Hume. Cat. no 170; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 49; Scully, Ibis, 1881, p. 480; Hargitt, Ibis, 1888, p. 158; id Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 48; Oates in Hume's N. & £. 2nd ed. ii, p. 297; Sharpe, Yarkand Miss., Aves, p. 108. The Scaly-bellied Green Woodpecker, Jerdon; Tuktola, Chamba. Coloration. Male. Crown and occipital crest crimson; mantle, including sides of neck, back, scapulars, and secondary wing-coverts, green, rump aud upper tail-coverts strongly tinged with yellow; a broad yellowish-white supercilium extending to the nape with a black line above continued: across the forehead, and another black line below from the eye to the nostril; a black spot behind the eye; another broad yellowish-white streak from the base of the bill below the eve, below this streak the malar region is black mixed with greenish white ; ear-coverts greenish grey; wing- feathers brownish black, inner webs. of all with imperfect white bands, in the primaries towards the base only; outer webs of primaries with equidistant yellowish-white spots; outer webs of secondaries and tertiaries greenish dusky barred: with whitish ; primary-coverts dusky, with white spots; tail-feathers above brownish black with white bars rather narrower than the inter- spaces ; below, the dark bars are pale and the whole feathers tinged with yellow ; throat and breast pale greyish green, some- times varying to pale ashy ; abdomen and flanks with lower wing- and tail-coverts greenish white, each feather with a black intra- marginal band producing a scale-like marking, and with sometimes a black shaft-stripe. _ Female. Crown and occiput black instead of crimson, the bases of the feathers leaden grey, and the sides of the frontal and coronal feathers greenish grey. 02 20 PICIDE. In young birds the upper plumage is dusky, the feathers being edged with green, and the breast-feathers bear scale-like marks like those of the abdomen. . Tris a circle of darkish pinkish red surrounded by a second ring of light pink ; upper mandible horn-coloured at the base, the tip and the whole lower mandible brightish yellow (Beavan); legs greenish plumbeous (Jerdon), Length 14; tail 5:3; wing 6°5; tarsus 1-1; bill from gape 1-9. Distribution. The Himalayas from Gilgit and Kashmir to Kumaun and probably Western Nepal, at elevations from about 5000 to 9000 feet. A skin was obtained in Afghanistan by Griffith. ee Habiis, Jc. This Woodpecker is often seen feeding on the ground. It lays generally five, sometimes six eggs in a hole excavated in the stem of a tree, in March, April, or May. The eggs are white and very glossy, and measure on an average 1:28 by ‘93. The nest- hole is generally placed at a considerable height from the ground, as a rule more than 20 feet. 947. Gecinus gorii. Hargitt’s Scaly-bellied Green Woodpecker. Gecinus gorii, Hargitt, Ibis, 1887, p. 75, 1888, p. 159; id. Cat. B. M, xviii, p. 45; St. John, Ibis, 1889, p. 158; Aitchison, Trans. Linn. Soe, (2) Zool. v, p. 88, pl. vi, fig. 1. This is paler throughout than G. sqguamatus, but otherwise very similar. The pale spots and bars on the wing- and tail-feathers are larger, the pale bars on the tail-feathers and the white spots on the outer webs of the primaries being broader than the dark interspaces ;. the scale-like markings on the abdomen are narrower and fainter. Dimensions the same. Distribution. South Afghanistan. Only known from two speci- mens, one from Quetta, the other from the Helmand River. Sir O. B. St. John saw G. gorii on the Kwaja Amran hills, and probably in the juniper forests of Ziarat. I suspect that this.is merely a pale variety of G. squamatus. 948. Gecinus striolatus. The Little Scaly-bellied Green Woodpecker, Picus striolatus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xii, p. 1000 (1843); Jerdon, Mad. Jour. L. &. xiii, pt. 2, p. 188. Gecinus striolatus, Blyth, Cat. p. 57; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 660; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 287 ; Stoliczka, J. A. S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 21; Blanf, Ibis, 1870, p. 464; Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p.9; Legge, 8. F. i, p. 488; ad. Birds Ceyl. p. 194; Bail, S. F. ii, p. 891; v, p. 418; vii, p: 206; Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm. p.76; Hume & Oates, 8. F. ii, p. 68; Butler, S. F. iii, 5 458 ; Coton Await. J_ A. S, B. xlv, pt. 2, p. 70; xlvui, pt. 2, p. 14; Inglis, 8S. Fv, p. 26; Fairbank, 8. F. v, p. 896; Anderson, Yunnan Exped, Aves, p. 685; Cripps, 8. F. vii, p. 262; Hume, Cat. no. 171; Seully, S. F. viii, p. 247; GECINUS. 21 Butler, 8. F, ix, p. 386; Oates, 8. F. x, p. 191; wd. B. By ii, p. 49; Davison, 8. F. x, p. 355; Terry, ib. p. 471; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 116; Hume, 8. F. xi, p. 62; Hargitt, Ibis, 1888, p. 171; ae B. M. xviii, p. 50; Oates in Hume’s N. & E. Qnd ed. ii, p. 298. The Small Green Woodpecker, Jerdon. Coloration. Male. Crown and occipital crest crimson, posterior crest-feathers sometimes orange ; mantle olivaceous green; rump bright gamboge-yellow or sometimes orange; a greyish-white superciliary stripe bordered with black above, beginning above the eye and extending back to the nape, the black extends forward to the base of the forehead and to the brownish-black plumes over Fig. 10.—Head of G. striolatus. the nostrils; lores and a stripe under the eye and ear-coverts ‘brownish white ; ear-coverts grey, faintly streaked with whitish ; malar band white, streaked with black; wing-feathers as in G. squamatus brownish black with white spots; tail-feathers brownish black, imperfectly barred towards the base with light brown, outermost pair but one barred throughout; lower parts greenish white, breast greener and with a yellowish tinge; chin and throat striped ; feathers of remainder of lower parts with intramarginal bands and occasional shaft-stripes of olive or brown. : Female. The crown and occiput black, the sides of the crown- feathers brownish ashy. Otherwise like the male. Tris red, surrounded by white; eyelids plumbeous ; upper man- dible and tip of lower horn-colour, remainder of lower mandible yellow ; legs olive-green (Oates). Length 11:5; tail 3-8; wing 5:2; tarsus 1; bill from gape 1-4, ' Distribution. The range of this Woodpecker is somewhat peculiar. It is found throughout the Himalayas as far west as Mussooree, and is generally distributed throughout the countries south of the Eastern Himalayas as far south as the Irrawaddy delta and Toungngoo. Anderson obtained it at Momein. There is also in the British Museum a skin from Siam. It also occurs, though sparingly, throughout the forest country between the Ganges and Godavari; east of long. 80° East, and in the forests of Malabar and of 22 PICIDE. the Western Ghats as far north as the neighbourhood of Belgaum, in Mysore, and in other forest-clad tracts of Southern India; also, but rarely, in Ceylon. In the Bombay Presidency north of Bel- gaum and in Central and North-western India it is excessively rare or wanting except on the Aravalli Range near Abu. Habits, fe. Breeds from March to May, in holesin the stems or branches of trees, laying generally five glossy porcellanic white eggs, that measure on an average 1:05 by ‘8. 949. Gecinus viridanus. Zhe Burmese Scaly-bellied Green Woodpecker. Picus viridanus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xii, p. 1000 (1848); xiii, p. 394. Gecinus dimidiatus, apud Blyth, Cat. p. 58, nec Temm. Gecinus viridanus, Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 660; Walden, P. Z. 8. 1866, p. 589; Beavan, Ibis, 1869, p. 414; Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm. p. 76; Oates, B. B.ii, p. 48; Hargitt, Ibis, 1888, p. 166; id. Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 47; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) v, p. 566; vii, p. 432, Gecinus vittatus, apud Hume &§ Oates, 8. F. iii, p. 68; Armstrong, S. F. iv, p. 810; Hume §& Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 186; Hume, Cat. no. 171 bis; Bingham, S. F. ix, p. 163, nec Vieill. Very similar to G. striolatus, but larger, the bill and tail longer, the malar band much more marked, owing to the feathers having much broader black median stripes, the scale-like markings on the lower parts much broader, so that the lower coloration is alto- gether darker, the greenish brown predominating over the white on the abdomen and especially on the lower tail-coverts, whilst the reverse is the case in G. striolatus. As a rule in the present species the rump is greenish yellow, not clear yellow or orange. The upper parts are generally green as in G. striolatus, but are sometimes darker and sometimes bronzy green. Irides dull lake; bill above dark, below yellowish, orbits slate~ lavender ; legs greenish (Wardlaw Ramsay). Length 18; tail 4-2; wing 5:6; tarsus 1-1; bill from gape 1-6. Distribution. Throughout Arrakan, Pegu and Tenasserim, and down the Malay Peninsula to Salanga and into Siam. 950, Gecinus occipitalis. The Black-naped Green Woodpecker. Pieus occipitalis, Vigors, P. Z. 8. 1830, p.8; Blyth, J. .A. 8. B. X, p. 922; xii, p. 1002; xiv, p. 191. ice ae Gray in Hardw. Ill. Ind. Zool. i, pl. xxxi, fig. 2 Gecinus occipitalis, Blyth, Cat. p.58; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 661: Jord, BEG pe BST; GodtoAuat J of 2, xxxix, p. 267; xlv, p. 70; Cock § Marsh. S. F. i, p. 350; Hume, S. F. iii, p. 70; ¥, p. 26; xi, p. 62; id. Cat.no. 172; Blyth §& Wald. Birds Burm’ p. 76; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, p. 187; Oates, 8. F. viii, p. 165; Scully, ibid. p. 248; Bingham, 8. F. ix, p. 164; Oates, B. B ii, p. 61; Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p.410; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ, GECINUS. 23: Gen. (2) iv, p. 579; v, p. 566; Hargitt, Ibis, 1888, p. 6; id. Cat. B. M, xviii, p. 56; Oates in Hume's N. § FE. 2nd ed. ii, p. 299; Sharpe, Yarkand Miss., Aves, p. 109. Mong-chok, Lepcha. Coloration. Male. Forehead and crown crimson; plumes over nostrils, upper lores, a line above the grey supercilium, occiput and short occipital crest, and a broad malar stripe from the lower mandible black ; the occiput and malar stripe more or less mixed with grey; sides of head, including lower lores, supercilia, area below eye, and ear-coverts, ashy grey; sides of neck, hind neck, and back moderately bright green, generally tinged with bright yellow on the rump and occasionally with orange, but sometimes only brighter green; secondary wing-coverts, tertiaries, and outer webs of secondaries yellowish olive ; quills dark brown, the inner webs, except near the tips, with imperfect white bars, the outer webs of the primaries with equidistant white spots, primary-coverts barred ; tail-feathers black, with greenish edges near the base, the median pair with imperfect greenish-drab bars; breast green, duller and more olivaceous than the back, passing into greyish white on the throat and chin, and into ashy grey or sometimes brownish grey on the abdomen ; lower wing-coverts banded white and brown. Female. Whole forehead, crown, and nape black, the sides of the feathers grey, producing a striped appearance. The young is duller in colour and the lower plumage and tail- feathers are barred. Bill dull blackish brown; eyelids purplish brown ; iris dull red; legs dull green ; claws greenish horn-colour (Oates). Length 12:5; tail 4:7 (3°8 to 5-1); wing 5°6; tarsus 1:2; bill from gape 1:7. Distribution. Fram Murree and Kashmir throughout the Hima- layas to Assam and Yunnan at moderate elevations, up to about 8000 feet to the westward and 5000 in Sikhim ; also the countries between Assam and Burma, throughout Burma and in Siam. Habits, §c. Breeds in the Himalayas from the middle of May to the middle of June, laying four, five, or sometimes six white eggs, moderately glossy or very polished, in a hole, usually bored in the stem of a tree, but much nearer the ground than in the case of G. squamatus. The average size of the eggs is 1-14 by °88. 951. Gecinus chlorolophus. The Small Himalayan Fellow-naped Woodpecker. Picus chlorolophus, Veil. Nouv. Dict. @ Hist, Nat. xvi, p.78 (1818). Picus nepaulensis, Gray in Hardw. Il. Ind. Zool. i, pl. xxxi, fig. 1 (1880-82). a Gecinus chloropus, Blyth, Cat, p. 68; Tytler, A. M. N. H. (2) xiii, p. 367 (1854). Chrysophlegma chlorolophus, Horsf. § M. Cat. p. 662; Jerdon, B. Ii, p. 289; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 97; xlv, 24 . PICIDE. pt. 2, p. 70; Hume, S. F. iii, p. 71; v, p. 26; xi, p. 625; i. Cat. no. 174; Blyth & Wald, Birds Burm. p. 76; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 188; Ball, 8. F. vii, p. 206; Scully, 8S. F. viii, p. 249; Bingham, S. F. ix, p. 164; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 45; C. H. T. Mar- shail, Ibis, 1884, p. 410; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. 2, iv, p. 578; v, p. 565; vii, p. 379. Gecinus chlorolophus, Hargitt, Ibis, 1888, p. 184; id. Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 59; Oates in Hume's N. & LE. ii, p. 800. The Lesser Yellow-naped Woodpecker, Jerdon. Coloration. Male. Nasal plumes and a line above lores black; forehead, a stripe from the forehead on each side of the crown to the nape, and the tips of the feathers forming a malar stripe on each side of the lower mandible crimson; crown of head olive- green, some of the occipital feathers occasionally tipped crimson ; nuchal crest of loose-textured feathers ending in filaments golden to orange-yellow ; back, wing-coverts, rump, and upper tail-coverts bright yellowish green ; lores and a band beneath the eye and ear-coverts, also a narrow line over the eye, whitish ; ear-coverts pale olive; quills dark brown, the inner webs, except near the tips, with squarish white spots; outer webs of primaries near their base, and outer webs of secondaries throughout red bordered with green; a few small white spots (sometimes wanting) on outer webs of primaries; tail black, the median feathers with bronzy-green edges near the base; lower parts olive; chin, throat, abdomen, under wing-coverts, and lower tail-coverts barred with white or greenish white. Female. No crimson on the forehead, sides of head above the eye, nor on malar stripe, but there is a band on each side of the occiput ; otherwise the plumage resembles that of the male. The young are duller, the lower parts dusky, not green, and barred or spotted throughout. Bill yellowish-green horny, culmen and tip dark plumbeous ; irides carmine-red ; orbital skin bluish plumbeous; tarsi dingy yreen ; claws pale horny (Scully), Length 10°5; tail 4; wing 5:4; tarsus -9; bill from gape 1:25. Distribution. The lower Himalayas up to about 10,000 feet, as far west as Chamba, also Assam, Cachar, Tipperah, Manipur, Arrakan, Burma generally, and Tenasserim. A specimen referred to this species has been obtained from Perak. This Woodpecker has been reported from Orissa, but its occurrence in the Indian Peninsula must be regarded as doubtful. Habits, gc. Like other members of the genus, this green Wood- pecker sometimes feeds on the ground. In Burma it is found both in thick forests and open tree-jungle. The nest has been taken in Sikkim in April, and contained three eggs, one measuring 1-14 by ‘72. The nest-hole was 14 feet from the ground in the stem of a dry tree, the eggs white and glossy. GECINUS. 25 952. Gecinus chlorogaster. The South-Indlian Yellow-naped Woodpecker. \ 3 Brachylophus mentalis, apud Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. S. xi, p. 21 (1840), nec Picus mentalis, Temm. Mlgue, chlotigaster; Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. S. xiii, pt. 2, p. 189 1844). Pikus (Chloropicus) xanthoderus, Matherbe, Rev. Zool. 1845, p. 402. Gecinus chlorigaster, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xv, p. 16; Hargitt, Ibis, 1888, p. 180; zd. Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 62. Gecinus chlorophanes, Blyth, Cat. p. 59; Layard, A. M. N. H. (2) xiii, p. 448 (1854). Chrysophlegma chlorophanes, Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 290; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p, 428; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 15, 1875, p. 288; Bourdillon, 8. BE iv, p. 390. Chrysophlegma xanthoderus, Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 197. Chrysophlegma chlorigaster, Hume, S. F. vii, p. 517 ; id. Cat.no. 175 ; Butler, 8. F. ix, p. 886 ; Davidson, 8. F. x, p. 298; Davison, ibid. p. 855; Taylor, wid. p. 457 ; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 117. The Southern Yellow-naped Woodpecker, Jerdon;. Pachcha keralia, Cingalese. Coloration. Male. Nasal plumes brownish black; forehead, crown, occiput (feathers elongated), and malar stripe crimson, only the tips of the feathers red and the dusky bases conspicuous ; nuchal crest yellow, the feathers loose-textured ; back, scapulars, rump, and upper tail-coverts green; wing-coverts yellow bronze- green, tinged with red towards the shafts; quills brownish black, the inner webs, except near the tips, with round white spots: outer webs of primaries near base and of secondaries throughout red, bordered with bronze-green, a few small white spots on outer webs of primaries; tail black or brownish black; lores whitish; sides of head and neck and all lower parts dull olive, spotted or barred with white on the chin, throat, and abdomen, or in the young almost throughout, but generally the breast is unspotted. Female. Forehead and crown dark olive, the occiput alone being crimson, and there is no malar stripe; otherwise as in the male. Bill slaty greenish, yellow beneath; legs dull green; irides reddish brown (Jerdon). Length 9°5; tail 3:25 (varying from 2:9 to 5°5); wing 4°65; tarsus °85; bill from gape 1-05. Distribution. The hills in the neighbourhood of the Western coast of India as far north as Khandesh, also in the greater part of Ceylon. This Woodpecker is not found above 5000 feet on the Nilgiris. It occurs in the Wynaad and Mysore, but not to the eastward. Habits, fe. This bird has a plaintive call, which it frequently utters when perched on the upper branch of a high tree. It often, like other Gecini, feeds on fallen trees on the ground, and according to Layard breaks into dried cowdung in search of insects. Legge found ants besides coleoptera in the stomach of those he examined. 5 26 PICIDA. 953. Gecinus puniceus. The Crimson-winged Green Woodpecker. Picus puniceus, Horsf. Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 176 (1821). : Gecinus puniceus, Blyth, Cat. p. 59; Hargitt, Ibis, 1888, p. 176; id. Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 64. : Venilia punicea, Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 664. Chrysophlegma puniceus, Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 77; Hume, 8. F. iil, p. 824; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 44. ; Callolophus puniceus, Hume ¢ Dav. S. F. vi, p. 189; Hume, Cat. no. 175 ter. Coloration. Male. Nasal plumes and a line over the lores brownish black ; forehead, crown, nape, and broad malar stripe crimson, this colour descending for some distance behind the ear- coverts ; nuchal crest of loose-textured feathers yellow ; back and scapulars green, more or less olivaceous; lower back and rump the same, the feathers edged with pale yellow; wing-coverts, whole outer webs of secondaries, and basal portion of outer webs of primaries deep crimson; tips of secondaries and_ tertiaries green ; remainder of quills dark brown, outer webs of primaries sometimes with a few white spots; inner webs of all with larger white spots or imperfect bars; tail black ; sides of head dull olive; chin and throat light brown or brownish olive; sides of neck and lower parts olive-green ; the flanks spotted with white. The female has no malar band, but otherwise precisely resembles the male. Young birds are duller‘in colour and have the lower parts browner and spotted more or less throughout. Upper mandible black; lower mandible and edges of upper at gape dark greenish yellow; iris crimson; orbital skin lavender- blue ; legs and feet pale green (Davison). Length 10°5; tail 2-75; wing 5°15; tarsus ‘9; bill from gape 1-4, Distribution. The Malay Peninsula, extending into Southern Tenasserim as far north as Tavoy; and to the southward to Sumatra, Java, and Borneo. Habits, gc. According to Davison this Woodpecker inhabits evergreen forests. It is very noisy in the evening and has a peculiar note, which it utters from the top of a high tree. It is usually seen singly and has not been observed on the ground. 954. Gecinus nigrigenis, The Red-rumped Green Woodpecker. Gecinus erythropygius, apud Wardl. Ramsay, P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 212, 1. xxxv; Walden, Ibis, 1875, pp. 148, 463; id. in Blyth’s Birds urm. p. 76; Oates, S. F. x, p. 191; id. B. B. ii, p. 52; Hargitt, Ibis, 1888, p. 189, nec Elliot. Gecinus nigrigenis, Hume, P. A. S. B. 1874, p. 106; id. S. F. ii, p. 444, 471; zd. Cat. no. 171 ter; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 136; Ginghan: S.F. ix, p. 168; Hargitt, Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 67; Oates in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. ii. p. 300, Coloration, Male. Cap including the sides of the head and CHRYSOPHLEGMA. 27 nuchal crest black, except an area of variable size on the crown, which is crimson; back, scapulars, wing-coverts, and upper tail- coverts yellowish green; rump bright scarlet, sometimes mixed with yellow (the latter may show immaturity); quills dark brown, the inner webs with white bands, outer webs of primaries with white spots, outer webs of secondaries through- out and of primaries near the base yellowish green; tail black, the median feathers with green edges towards the base; chin, throat, sides of neck, and upper breast yellow, shading off on the lower breast into the colour of the abdomen, which is whitish with scale-like brown markings formed by intramarginal bands and shaft-lines to the feathers, these markings being broader on the lower tail-coverts. The female wants the red of the crown, but otherwise resembles the male. In some specimens of both sexes there is a white or yellow line behind the eye. Bill dark horny ; iris sulphur-yellow ; legs and feet dark green; claws horny (Bingham), The basal portion of the lower mandible is yellow to a variable extent. Length 12:75; tail 5; wing 6:3; tarsus 12; bill from gape 1°6. Distribution. From Karennee and Toungngoo in the north: to Southern Tenasserim. A specimen has also been received at the British Museum from Siam. The true G. erythropygius, from Cochin China and Laos, has a white bill. Habits, gc. This beautiful green Woodpecker keeps to the drier and more thinly wooded Tenasserim hills, and is chiefly found in eng- (Dipterocarpus) and bamboo-jungle. According to Bingham its note is peculiar and consists of 12 to 15 whistled notes, the first high and shrill, the others descending in the scale. The nest, containing two glossy white eggs measuring 1°18 by -93, was found by the same observer in a pynkado-trec (Xylia) on March 18th. Genus CHRYSOPHLEGMA, Gould, 1849. Bill more curved than in Gecinus; culmen blunt, nasal ridge almost obsolete. A moderately long nuchal crest. The coloration above is similar to that of Gecinus, green being the prevailing tint, the crest is yellow and the quills barred with rufous. Below, except on the throat, the colour is nearly uniform. The sexes are distinguished by difference of colour in the chin and malar region, not on the crown. This genus ranges from the Himalayas to Borneo and Java. Key to the Species. Upper surface of wings green .........+++4. C. fravinucha, p. 28. Upper surface of wings red .....++.s0ese00s Ch Aumit, p. 28. 28 PICIDE, 955. Chrysophlegma flavinucha. The Large Yellow-naped Woodpecker. Picus flavinucha, Gould, P. Z, S. 1833, p. 120; Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xii, p. 1003. : Dryotomus flavigula, Hodgson, J. A. S. B. vi, p. 106. Gecinus flavinucha, Blyth, Cat. } 58. ; : Chrysophlegma flavinucha, Gould, B. Asia, vi, pl. xxxvi; 1 orst. & M. Cat. ii, p. 662 ; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 289; id. Ibis, 1872, p. 9; Hume & Oates, S. F. iii, p. 71; Hume & Inglis, 8. F. v, p. 26; Godw-Aust. J.A.S. B. xxxix, pt.2, p. 97; Blyth & Wald. Birds Burm. p. 76 ; Hume & Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 137; Hume, Cat.no. 178; id. 8. F. xi, p- 62; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 48; Hargitt, Ibis, 1886, p. 262; id. Cat, B. M. xviii, p. 127. Mong-kli-ong, Lepcha. Coloration. Male. Top and sides of head olive, more or less passing into rufous-brown on the forehead and crown and some- times on the occiput, ear-coverts a little paler; nuchal crest of loose-textured feathers orange or golden yellow; whole back and outer surface of wings glossy yellowish green; quills dark brown, broadly banded on both webs, except towards the tips, with pale chestnut ; tail black, the middle feathers with olive fringes towards the base ; malar region, chin, and throat pale yellow; sides of neck deep olive; feathers of fore neck white, each with a large terminal olive spat, forming a mixed pattern of olive and white; breast olive, passing on the abdomen into ashy grey or ashy brown. Female. The malar region, chin, and throat rufous brown instead of yellow. Bill dusky bluish white; iris red; eyelids and gape greenish blue; legs dusky blue; claws horn-colour (Oates). Length 13; tail.5; wing 6:5; tarsus 1:1; bill from gape 1°6. Distribution. The Himalayas as far west as Mussooree, chiefly between about 2000 and 7000 feet. This bird has not been recorded further west, but to the eastward it ranges through Assam, Cachar, Arrakan, Pegu, Karennee, and Northern Tenasserim to a little south of Moulmein. Habits, $c. This Woodpecker inhabits forests and feeds fre- quently on the ground. The nidification has not been observed. 956, Chrysophlegma humii. The Chequered-throated Woodpecker. Gecinus mentalis, apud Blyth, Cat. p. 59 (nec Picus mentalis, Temm.). Chrysophlegma mentalis, apud Blyth, Birds Burma, p. 76. Callolophus mentalis, apud Hume Dav, S. F. vi, p. 188; Hume, Cat. no. 175 bis ; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 46. Chrysophlegma squamicolle, apud Hargitt, Ibis, 1886, p. 269 (nec Picus squamicollis, Lesson), Chrysophlegma humii, Hargitt, Ibis, 1889, p. 281; id. Cat. B. M. xviil, p. 126, Coloration. Male. Top and sides of head olive-green ; occipital CALLOLOPHUS. 29 crest of Joose-textured feathers bright yellow; back, scapulars, tertiaries, and rump olive-green, paler than the head; wing-coverts, outer borders of secondaries throughout, and of primaries near base dull red; remainder of wing-feathers brown, secondaries broadly barred on the inner webs and primaries on both webs, except near the tips, with rufous ; tail black; a broad malar band from the lower mandible dark olive, sometimes brown, spotted with white; feathers of the chin and throat white, each with a broad brown shaft-stripe; sides of neck, fore neck, and upper breast bright chestnut, this colour passing round to the hind neck behind the crest; lower parts from breast olive-green, rather more olive than the back. Under wing-coverts barred brown and pale rufous or dirty orange. In the female the chin and malar band are chestnut like the breast and not spotted. Upper mandible dull black, lower mandible and edges of upper near nostrils pale plumbeous ; irides deep red; orbital skin green ; legs and feet green; claws plumbeous. Length 11 ; tail 3-9; wing 5°25; tarsus 9; bill from gape 1°5. Distribution. Malayan Peninsula, Borneo and Sumatra, extend- ing north into the southern extremity of the Tenasserim provinces, where this Woodpecker is rare. The true C. mentale, long sup- posed to be identical with the present species, is peculiar to Java. Genus CALLOLOPHUS, Salvadori, 1874, This genus was proposed for three species: C. puniceus, which belongs to Gecinus, C. mentalis (Chrysophlegma humii), and C. malaccensis, no type being named. The last-named species has been placed in Chrysophlegma by Hargitt, but it and its near ally C. miniatus, which is confined to Java, exhibit a widely different coloration from that characteristic of Chrysophlegma, the plumage being barred both above and below. This is, I think, especially amongst Woodpeckers, a more important generic distinction than slight differences in the form of the bill. Callolophus has a long and broad occipital crest, and the bill is shorter, more curved, and broader at the base than that of ‘Chrysophlegma. 957. Callolophus malaccensis. The Banded Red Woodpecker. Picus malaccensis, Lath. Ind. Orn. i, p. 241 (1790); Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xiv, p. 192. ote Gecinus malaccensis, Blyth, Cat. p. 59. Chrysophlegma malaccensis, Hume, S. F. iii, p. 324. Callolophus malaccensis, Salvad. Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. v, p. 50; Hume §& Dav. 8. F. vi, pp. 140, 501; Hume, Cat. no. 175 quat. ; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 47. Chrysophlegma malaccense, Hargitt, Ibis, 1886, p. 276; id. Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 122. 30 PICIDE. Coloration. Male. Nasal plumes brown; forehead, lores, crown, occiput, and upper part of long occipital crest dull crimson ; lower and longer feathers of the crest pale yellow; on the sides of the head the feathers are brown, tipped with crimson, sometimes with terminal whitish spots; hind neck and back dull olive-green with wavy buff or yellow cross-bars; the feathers of the lower back and rump edged with pale yellow ; upper tail-coverts brown with a few buff spots; sides of neck and of back more or less tinged with crimson; scapulars and whole outer surface of wing dull crimson like the head; quills dark brown, the inner webs of all with pale rufous bars, outer webs of primaries with rufous spots; chin, throat, and sides of neck light rufous brown, sometimes speckled with buff and dusky, and passing on the breast into the colour of the remaining underparts, which are marked with alter- nate undulating bars of dark brown and rufous white. In the female there is no crimson on the forehead or on the sides of the head in front of the ear-coverts, these with the chin and throat are dark brown and speckled, each feather tipped dusky with a terminal white spot. Young birds are dull pale brown beneath with ill-marked dark bars. Upper mandible black, lower bluish white; irides red ; eyelids grey ; legs and feet pale dingy green (Davison). Length 10; tail 2-6; wing 5; tarsus ‘9; bill from gape 1-2. Distribution. Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo, extending into Southern Tenasserim as far north as Tavoy. Habits, ge. According to Davison this Woodpecker is found in evergreen forests and mangrove swamps. Itis never seen on the ground, and is generally solitary. Genus GECINULUS, Blyth, 1845. Only three toes present, the hallux or inner posterior digit wanting. Bill short, compressed; culmen blunt, nearly straight ; nasal ridge obsolete; nostrils close to base of bill; nasal plumes short. ‘Tail-feathers broad, not acuminate; outer pair longer than coverts, but much shorter than the rest, which are regularly graduated. Orest short, inconspicuous. i Plumage of head pale and yellowish, of upper parts red or green of lower parts uniform olive or brown. Males with a red crown, females without. Two species, both within our area. Key to the Species. Above dull red. ...... cc. cece eee eeeee G. grantia, p. 30. Above green. ......c. cc ese vee eeeseees G. virides, aL 958. Gecinulus grantia. The Northern Pale-headed Woodpecker, Picus (Chrysonotus) grantia, McClelland, P. Z. 8. 1889, p. 165, GECINULUS. 31 Gecinulus grantia, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xiv, p. 192; id, Cat. p. 60; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 663 ; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 292; Bulger, Ibis, 1869, p. 157; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. B. xliii, pt. 2, p. 165; xlv, pt. 2, p. 70; Hume & Inglis, 8. F. v, p. 26; Hume, Cat. no. 177 ; id. S. F. xi, p. 68; Hargitt, Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 184. The Pale-headed Woodpecker, Jerdon; Ka-ter, Lepcha; Koria, Dafla. Coloration. Male. Forehead, lores, cheeks, and chin light brown ; crown. pink, the feathers edged with deeper red ; occiput and nape with the ear-coverts dull olivaceous yellow; upper. parts from neck dull red, tail-feathers edged with the same; primary-coverts dull yellow; quills and tail-feathers brown, barred or spotted on both webs with rufous white; lower parts dark olive, paler and yellower on throat and light brown on the chin; under wing- coverts and axillaries dusky brown with rufous spots. In the female the red of the crown is wanting, and the whole head is dull yellow. Bill bluish white, darker blue at the base; irides red; legs pale dusky green (Jerdon). ; Length 10; tail 3-7; wing 5; tarsus ‘95; bill from gape 1:1. Distribution. Common in the Eastern Himalayas, chiefly between 2000 and 5000 feet as far west as Nepal; found also in Assam, the hill-ranges to the south, Cachar and Manipur. A specimen is also recorded from Laos (Siam). Habits, gc. According to Jerdon this Woodpecker has a squeaking note. Hume met with it in Manipur in pairs. 959. Gecinulus viridis. The Southern Pale-headed Woodpecker. Gecinulus viridis, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xxxi, p. 341 (1862); Hume, S. F. ii, p. 472, ix, p. 112; id. Cat. no. 177 bis; Hume § Oates, S. F. iii. p 71; Blyth & Wald. Birds Burm. p. 77; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, p. 144; Bingham, 8. F. ix, p. 164; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 41 ; Hargitt, Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 136. Coloration. Male. Forehead, lores, and sides of head yellowish brown; sides of neck more yellow, this colour extending round the neck behind the occipital crest, which, with the crown, is bright crimson; back, scapulars, wing-coverts, and outer margins of wing- feathers, except of primaries towards their tips, yellowish olive, the rump-feathers the same, but narrowly. edged and tipped with scarlet or orange; quills brown, with white spots on the inner webs, and sometimes indistinct pale spots on the outer; tail- feathers brown,-the outer webs bordered with olive-yellow near the base, the inner webs of all but the middle pair spotted’ with white ; lower parts dark olive-green to greenish brown; throat more yellow. Female. No red on head, which is yellowish brown throughout, much yellower on the nape, so as to have a broad yellow collar. Bill pale bluish white, strongly tinged with blue at base ; irides brown ; legs, feet, and claws pale dirty green (Davison). 3 32 PICIDA. Length 10°5; tail3-9; wing 5:2; tarsus 1; bill from gape ‘1:2. Distribution. Common in the Pegu hills between Thayet Myo and Toungngoo, also throughout Tenasserim. The most southern locality recorded is Kussoom, a little north of Junk Ceylon. Habits, fc. This Woodpecker inhabits both deciduous and ever- green forest, but is chiefly found on and amongst bamboos. According to Davison it occurs singly or in pairs, never in parties. Genus HYPOPICUS, Bonap., 1854. Bill slender, compressed, truncated ; culmen straight, angulate ; nasal ridge strongly marked, but low down near the commissure and not extending more than halfway along the bill; nostrils basal, nasal plumes short; gonys long, chin-angle near to the gape, much concealed by bristles ; fourth (outer posterior) toe slightly longer than third (outer anterior). Head scarcely crested. Outer pair of tail-feathers shorfer than coverts. Plumage soft, black and white above, chestnut below; crown of head red in males, black spotted with white in females. Only two species are known, one inhabits the Himalayas, the other Northern China. 960. Hypopicus hyperythrus. The Rufous-bellied Pied Woodpecker. Picus hyperythrus, Vigors, P. Z. 8. 1831, p. 23; Blyth, J. A. S. B. xiv, p. 196; 7d. Cut. p. 63; Blanford, J. A. S. B.xli, pt. 2, p. 48. Hypopicus hyperythrus, Bonap. Consp. Voluer. Zygod. p. 8; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 675; Jerdon, B. 1.1, p. 276; zd. Ibis, 1872, p. 7; Godw.~Aust. J. A. S. B. xiii, pt. 2, p. 155; Hume, Cat. no. 161; id. S. F. xi, p. 59; Hargitt, Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 199; Oates in mer N. § £, 2nd ed. ii. p. 301; Sharpe, Park, Miss., Aves, p. 109, Fig. 11.—Head of H. hyperythrus, 9. Coloration. Male. Nasal plumes black, white at the base; base of forehead, sides of face, and chin grey (mixed black and white) ; lores, a stripe below the eye and a spot above and behind the eye pure white; crown and nape crimson ; upper plumage from neck to rump broadly barred black and white; quills black, spotted on both webs and tipped with white, inner webs of primaries unspotted near the tips; four middle tail-feathers black, the next DENDROCOPUS. 3d pair black with fulvous-white spots on the outer webs; the two outer large feathers on each side barred black and fulvous white ; sides of neck and lower parts from throat bright chestnut; vent and lower tail-coverts light crimson; thigh-coverts and under wing-coverts banded black and white ; axillaries white. Female. The crown and nape black, spotted with white. In young birds there are bars on the lower plumage. Bill black above, whitish beneath; legs plumbeous (Jerdon). Bill pale yellow beneath (Godwin-Austen). Length 8; tail 3:5; wing 5; tarsus 0°85; bill from gape 1. Distribution. Throughout the Himalayas from Murree to Sikhim and probably to Eastern Tibet, also in the Khasi, Néga, and Manipur hills, at 4000 to 5000 feet elevation. This Woodpecker has been obtained in Cochin China, but not in Burma. It ranges to a con- siderable elevation on the Himalayas, and is the commonest Woodpecker in the pine-forests of Sikhim, at 9000-12,000 feet above the sea. Habits, §c. The nest has been observed by Col. C. H. T. Marshall at Murree, and the eggs taken towards the latter end of April. The nests were as usual mere holes in trees, and the eggs, de- osited on the bare wood, were regular ovals, pure white, measuring about -87 by °67. Genus DENDROCOPUS, Koch, 1816, Bill wedge-shaped, upper mandible compressed towards the end ; culmen angulate, straight or very slightly curved, nasal ridge com- mencing halfway between culmen and commissure and extending more than half the length of the bill; nostrils concealed by plumes, chin-angle similarly concealed; gonys sharply angulate ; fourth (outer hind) toe longer than third (outer fore); occiput slightly crested, more in some species than in others; wing rather pointed, the primaries exceeding the secondaries by about the length of the culmen. Upper plumage black and white, more or less in bars; lower plumage white or fulvous, generally streaked brown or black. Crown and occiput wholly or partly red in males, black or brown in females. A large genus, of which the type is the European Picus major, and which ranges over almost the whole of Europe, Asia, and North America. Ten species occur within Indian limits. Key to the Species. a, Middle tail-feathers entirely black, outer barred white. a’. Back entirely black. a", Lower parts not striated. a, Scapulars black. a*, Under tail-coverts red, not ab- domen; crown red in 0, black Ui. agua # ewe seu saseees D. himalayensis, p. 34, D VOL, III. 34 PICIDA. b¢, Abdomen and under tail-coverts red; crown always black; occi- put red in males ‘only...... see. D. cabanisi, p. 35. b?, Scapulars white .........es00e+> D. sindianus, p. 36. b". Lower parts striated ; occiput red ing, black in 9. c. Larger, wing 5; no red gorget.... D. darjilensis, p. 37. d?. Smaller, wing 4; no red gorget .. D. cathpharius, p. 37. e, Smaller, wing 4; a red gorget .... D. pyrrhothorar, p. 38- b'. Back transversely barred with white. ' ce’. Crown and occiput crimson in dy black in 9. f?. Throat and fore neck uniform ; breast spotted .......ceeeee eer eee D. macii, p. 39. g°. All lower parts except chin striated D. atratus, p. 40. d'', Crown umber-brown in both sexes ; occiput crimson and yellow in ¢, dull yellow in 9 .........- aos ss D, auriceps, p. 40. . All tail-feathers parti-coloured black and white. ec’, Small spots on breast. e', Crown ved... ce cece eee e cee r ee eeeee D. pectoralis §, p. 41. f'. Crown black.....-..ceeeee serene D. pectoralis Q, p. 41. d’. Spots on breast broader than white spaces between. g''. Crown and occiput red ............ D. andamanensis § , p.42. A’. Crown and occiput brown.......... D. andamanensis 9 , p.42. 961. Dendrocopus himalayensis. The Western Himalayan Pied Woodpecker. Picus himalayensis, Jard. § Selby, Ill. Orn. ii, pl. exvi (c. 1835) + Hume, Cat. no. 154; Wardl. Rams. Ibis, 1880, p. 50; Biddulph, Tois, 1881, p. 48; id. S. F. ix, p. 813; Scully, Ibis, 1881, p. 429; id. S. F. x, p. 101; C. H. T. Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 410. Picus himalayanus, Gray, Gen. B. ii, p, 435 (1845) ; Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xvi, p. 466; id. Cat. p.62; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 670; Adams, P. Z.8. 1858, p. 475, partim ; 1859, p. 173; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 269; Stoliceka, J. A. 8. B, xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 20; Cock §& Marsh. B F. i,. p. 850; Beavan, Ibis, 1869, p. 412; Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p. 6; Hume & Henders. Lah, to Yark. p. 179; Brooks, S. F. iii, p. 282 ; Wardl. Rams. Ibis, 1879, p. 447. , Dendrocopus himalayensis, Hargitt, Cut. B. M. xviii, p. 220; Oates mn re iis N. & #. 2nd ed. ii, p. 8301; Sharpe, Yark. Miss., Aves, p. 110. The Himalayan Pied Woodpecker, Jerdon ; Turkén, Chamba. Coloration. Male. Nasal plumes black, white at base; forehead brownish white ; crown and occiput crimson, the feathers dark grey at the base, then black and tipped with red; lores, a narrow supercilium, and the sides of the face and neck white, often ful- vescent, and the ear-coverts in part black; a black band from the lower mandible down each side of the neck, joined to the nape by a cross black band behind the ear-coverts; hind neck, back, sca- pulars, rump, and upper tail-coverts glossy black; wings and most of the wing-coverts black, the innermost median and greater DUNDROCOPUS. 3 coverts wholly or chiefly white, and the quills spotted with white on both webs, the spots forming interrupted bands; the four median tail-feathers black ; the others banded fulvous white and black, and sometimes having the outer webs almost or entirely Fig. 12.—Head of D. himalayensis 3. white; lower parts light brownish grey, sometimes almost white ; the lower abdomen more fulvous; vent and lower tail-coverts pale crimson. In the female the crown and occiput are black, like the back. Bill leaden grey; upper mandible blackish; irides red-brown ; legs and feet dark greenish brown. Length 9°5; tail 3°5; wing 5-2; tarsus ‘9 ; bill from gape 1°35. Cashmere birds are much paler beneath than those from other localities, and are often almost white below. A male skin in the Hume Collection from Kotgarh has the lower parts from the breast suffused with red. Distribution. The Western Himalayas from Kumaun to Murree, also Gilgit to the north, and Kuram in Afghanistan to the west. This Woodpecker breeds according to Hume between 3000 and 8000 feet, but Jerdon found it common up to 10,000, Biddulph met with it between 9000 and 10,000 in Gilgit, and Stoliczka up to 11,000 in Chini. Habits, &c. Breeds from the middle of April to the end of May in holes in trees as usual, trunks of oaks being often selected. The eggs are 4 or 5 in number, glossy and white, and measure about 1 inch by *75. 962. Dendrocopus cabanisi. The Chinese Pied Woodpecker. Picus cabanisi, Malherbe, J. f. Orn. 1854, p. 172. Picus mandarinus, Math. Bull, Soc. d Hist. Nat. Moselle, viii, p. 17 (1857) ; Godw-Aust. J. A. 8. B. xlv, pt. 2, p.194; Hume, 8. F. v, p. 58, xi, p. 56; zd. Cat. no. 155 bis. Dendrocopus cabanisi, Hargitt, Cat. B. M., xviii, p. 218. This resembles D. himalayensis on the upper surface, except in having the crown of the male black and the crimson confined to D2 36 PICIDZ. the occiput. Below there is more difference. In the present Species the black malar band is much broader, and continued to the side of the breast, the feathers of the breast between the ends of the black bands are tipped with red; the chin, throat, and breast are fulvous brown ; abdomen and under tail-coverts crimson ; edge of wing, under wing-coverts, and axillaries white. Bill dark plumbeous (G.-A.). Length 8; tail 3-4; wing 5; tarsus ‘95; bill from gape 1:3. Distribution. Throughout China; two male specimens were ob- tained by Godwin-Austen at Gonglong in the Manipur hills. This ‘Woodpecker appears not to have been observed elsewhere within Indian limits. 963. Dendrocopus sindianus. The Sind Pied Woodpecker. Picus assimilis, Waté., Bonap. Consp. Volucr. Zygod. p. 8 (1854; descr. nulla). Picus scindeanus, Gould, Horsf. § M. Cat. ii. p. 671 (1856-58) ; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 273 ; Hume, Ibis, 1870, p. 529; Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p- 7; Hume § Henders. Lah. to Yark. p. Tr9, pl. ii; Hume, S. Fi, p. 170; Barnes, 8, F. ix, pp. 215, 453; Murray, Vert. Zool. Sind, p. 113; St. John, Ibis, 1889, p. 157. Picus sindianus, Blanf. East. a ii, p. 182; Hume, Cat. no. 158; Doig, S. F. viii, p. 370; ix, p. 279; Swinhoe, Ibis, 1882, p. 102; va Birds Bom. p. 112; Oates in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. ii, Diaconis scindeanus, Hargitt, Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 227. Coloration. Male. Nasal plumes white with black tips ; forehead white, sometimes buff or light brown ; crown and occiput crimson ; a malar band from lower mandible down the neck, back of neck, back, rump, and upper tail-coverts black; lores, supercilia, sides of head and neck, scapulars and innermost median and greater wing-coverts, together with the lower parts from the chin to the abdomen, under wing-coverts and axillaries, white ; lower abdomen, vent, and under tail-coverts crimson. Wings and tail similar to those of D. himalayensis, except that the wing-feathers are brown, that the white spots on both webs are much larger, and the unspotted tips of the primaries shorter. In some specimens too the three middle. pairs of tail-feathers are entirely black. The wing is differently shaped, being shorter and rounder. In the female the crown and occiput are black. Bill bluish plumbeous; irides dark maroon; legs and feet greyish plumbeous (Butler); irides crimson (Barnes). Length 85; tail 3-1; wing 4:5; tarsus °8; bill from gape 1-1, Females slightly smaller, and with a somewhat shorter bill. Distribution. Throughout Sind, Baluchistan, and the Western Punjab as far north as Peshawar, Murree, and Sirsa, and westwards to Bampur in 8.E. Persia. St. John obtained specimens, now in o Sa Museum, in the Khwaja Amran range north-west of uetta. DENDROOOPUS. 37 Habits, fe. This species is chiefly found in tamarisk scrub, which abounds in Sind and the neighbouring countries. It breeds in holes in tamarisk and babul (Acacia arabica) trees in March and April. 964. Dendrocopus darjilensis. The Darjeeling Pied Woodpecker. Dendrocopus majoroides, Hodgs. in Gray’s Zool. Mise. p. 85 (1844 ; descr, nulla). Picus yoo darjellensis, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xiv, p. 196 (1845). Picus darjellensis, Blyth, J..A. 8. B. xvi, p. 466; id. Cat. p. 62. Picus majoroides, Gray, Cat. Mamm. &c. Coll. Hodgs. pp. 115, 155 (1846) ; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 671; Jerdon, B. Li, p. 270; cd. Ibis, 1872, p. 7; Bulger, Ibis, 1869, p. 156; Godw.-Aust. J. A.S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 97; Scully, 8. F. vii, p. 244; Hume, Cat, no, 155. Dendrocopus darjilensis, Hargitt, Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 221. The Darjeeling Black Woodpecker, Jerdon ; Sadyer-mong-prek, Lepcha. Coloration. Male. Nasal plumes black; forehead, lores, narrow supercilium, and sides of face, including the ear-coverts, whity brown; sides of neck behind the ear-coverts the same, washed with orange or golden yellow; crown and upper surface generally glossy black, except the occiput and nape which are light crimson, and the innermost median and greater wing-coverts which are mostly or wholly white ; wing-feathers black with white spots on both webs; tail-feathers black, the median two pairs uniform, the others more or less barred with fulvous white; chin whitish, ends of bristles black, throat light brown unstriped ; breast and abdomen yellowish fulvous, with longitudinal black streaks, becoming bars on the flanks ; vent and under tail-coverts light crimson. In the female the occiput and nape are black instead of red. In a young male, described by Scully, all the feathers of the crown were tipped with dull crimson. Upper mandible slaty black, lower grey horny; orbital skin plumbeous; irides reddish brown to deep crimson; feet dingy green (Scully). Length 9-5 ; tail 3°75; wing 5; tarsus ‘9; bill from gape 15. Distribution. Himalayas in Nepal and Sikhim, from about 3000 to 12,000 feet elevation, and eastward to Moupin and Western Se- chuan. This Woodpecker was also obtained in the North Cachar and Anghdémi Néga hills by Godwin-Austen. Habits, fc. The breeding does not appear to have been recorded. This species was observed by Scully on moss-covered oaks, usually singly or in pairs high up on the trees. 965. Dendrocopus cathpharius. The Lesser Pied Woodpecker. , Picus (Dendrocopus) cathpharius, Hodgs., Blyth, J. A. S. B. xii, p. 1006 (1843). Picus cathpharius, Blyth, Cat. p. 63; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, p. 673. 38 PICIDE. Jerdon, B. 1. i, p. 271; Blanford, J. A. 8. B. xli, pt. 2, p. 155; Godw.-Aust, J. A. S. B. xliii, pt. 2, p. 154; Hume, Cat. no. 186; id. S. F, xi, p. 57. - Dendrocopus cathpharius, Hargitt, Cat. B. M. xviii, p. 223; Oates in Hume's N. & £. 2nd ed. ii, p. 302. The Lesser Black Woodpecker, Jerdon. Coloration. Male. Upper parts glossy black with the following exceptions :—the forehead is brownish white, the ends of the nasal bristles being black; the occiput, nape, and sides of the neck are . Larger: plumage hawk-like; tail with 3 or 4 black cross-bands .. Hrerococcyx, p. 211. 6, Smaller, not larger than ‘a Thrush ; tail without cross-bands or with far more than 4, a, Plumage without metallic colours. a’, Young and adult differently coloured; bill compressed ; tail-feathers the same length throughout ............06.. Cacomantis, p. 216. b°, Young and adult similar; bill stout, not compressed; tail- feathers narrower behind .... PENrHocrRyYx, p. 219. 4, Plumage partly metallic green or VIOlOG. tsiaises-wartiircas wate aiaereiats Curysococcyx, p. 220. b’. Tail square or forked; plumage DDL ACH ace sere ct Ris ates osayieit sai onaiocea-n SurRnicutus, p. 228. 6. Head crested; tarsi almost naked ........ Coccystss, p. 224. Genus CUCULUS, Linn., 1766. Wing long and pointed, third quill longest and exceeding the secondaries in the closed wing by almost half the length of the wing. ‘The first primary is. about two-thirds the length of the wing. ‘Tail shorter than wing, graduated, the outer feathers falling short of the middle pair by one-fourth to one-third the CUOCULUS. 205 length of the tail. Bill moderate. In adults the upper plumage is almost uniform dark ashy or brown, the chin and throat ashy, abdomen white barred with black; the wings barred on the inner webs. The young undergo two or three changes, one phase being chestnut above barred with dark brown. The true Cuckoos have a wide range, being found in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia, and comprise about nine species, of which four inhabit the Indian area. Key to the Species. Wing 8 to 9 in., no subterminal black band on tail; edge of wing mixed white and brown. C. canorus, p. 205. Wing 6'5 to 7'8; edge of wing white........ C. saturatus, p. 207. Wing 5:7 to 61; edge of wing ashy ........ C. poliocephalus, p. 208. Wing 7°5 to 8:5; a subterminal black band on HALL peatcnararasngureeseteaa case Set nating nea ae C. micropterus; p. 210. Cuckoos are birds of swift flight and peculiar habits. All have resonant call-notes, distinctive of the particular species. The true Cuckoos are more or less migratory; they feed chiefly on cater- pillars and soft insects, and, as is well known, do not pair, but indulge in promiscuous intercourse, and the females deposit their eggs in the nests of other birds *. The female Cuckoo sometimes, at all events, perhaps always, lays her egg on the ground and conveys it in her mouth to the nest selected. Some of the eggs already in the nest are often broken, whether intentionally or by accident is not quite clear, but it is certain that the young Cuckoo when hatched ejects from the nest the callow young of its foster- parents, and is fed by the latter until full-grown. When two Cuckoo’s eggs are laid in the same nest, the stronger young Cuckoo turns out the weaker. 1104. Cuculus canorus. The Cuckoo. Cuculus canorus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 168; Blyth, Cat. p. 71; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 702; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 322; id. Ibis, 1872, p.12; Stoliczha, J. A. S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 22; Blanford, J. A, S. B. xxxviii, pt. 2, p. 168; Godw-Aust. J. A. S. B. xxxix, t. 2, p. 267; McMaster, J. A. S. B. xl, pt. 2, p. 209 ; Cock & Marsh. . Fi, p. 351; Adam, ibid. p. 373; Hume, 8. F. iv, p. 288; xi, p. 69; zd. Cat. no. 199; Butler, 8. F. vii, p. 181; Ball, 2bid. p. 206 ; Scully, S. F. viii, p. 253; id. Ibis, 1881, p. 480; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 221; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 49; Swinhoe, Ibis, 1882, p- 103; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 103; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 124; St. John, Ibis, 1889, p. 159; Oates, wbid. p. 355 ; td. in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 879; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 245. The European Cuckoo, Jerdon; Phuphu, H., Dehra Din; Kupwah, Kumaun ; Kukku, Lepcha; Akku, Bhot. Coloration. Adult male. Whole upper plumage dark ashy, the rump and upper tail-coverts rather paler; wings browner, with a * A remarkable instance of a Cuckoo (C. canorus) hatching her own egg and feeding her young is related in the ‘Ibis’ for 1889, p. 219. 206 CUCULID. gloss; quills barred with white on the inner webs except near the tips; chin, throat, sides of the neck, and upper breast pale ashy ; lower breast, abdomen, and flanks white, with narrow blackish cross-bars ; under tail-coverts the same, but more sparingly barred ; edge of wing mixed white and black; tail blackish brown, tipped with white, the inner webs notched with white, and some white spots along the shaft of each feather. The adult female only differs in having the upper breast, and sometimes the sides of the neck, rufous. The young pass through two well-defined stages of plumage before arriving at maturity. In the first or nestling stage, the colour is dark brown above, indistinctly barred with rufous, each feather margined with white; a white nuchal spot is present from the earliest age; the lower plumage is broadly barred brownish black and white, black preponderating on the throat and upper breast. When the bird is fully fledged, the white edges to the Fig. 60.—Head of C. canorus, }. feathers wear off to some extent, and the rufous bars are lost on all parts except the wings ; the tail is very similar to that of the adult, but browner. In the second stage the black bars on the lower plumage become narrower; the whole upper plumage, wings, and tail are barred with pale rufous, the white margins still remaining; the nuchal spot is retained nearly to the end of the second stage, and disappears only when the birds begins to acquire ashy patches on the upper plumage. The transition from one stage of plumage to the other is gradual, and every intermediate form occurs. The chief distinctive character in the young of this species is the white nuchal spot, which is seldom wanting. In the nearly allied C. saturatus this spot very rarely if ever occurs; and in the small C. poliocephalus a white nape-patch is only present in one stage, the second, and is often accompanied by a white half-collar extending round the hind-neck. The above changes are effected without any moult, by a change of colour.in the feathers. The adult plumage is assumed in the spring of the year after birth, but apparently the birds do not moult till in their second autumn. The same is the case with the next two species. CUCULUS. 207 Bill dusky horn, yellowish at the base and edges; gape orange- yellow; iris and legs yellow: the young have the iris brown, and the lower mandible pale green. Length about 13; tail 6-7 to 7°3; wing 8 to 9, and occasionally longer ; tarsus *8; bill from gape 1:25. Distribution. A migratory bird found at one season or another throughout the greater part of the Old World and even in Australia. The Cuckoo, in the months from July to April, may be found in almost any part of India, Ceylon, or Burma, but fo the southward is of rare occurrence. Jt is common throughout the Himalayas and the hills of Afghanistan and Baluchistan in the breeding-season, May and June, but it has been found at the same period, April, May, and June, by several observers, by myself amongst others, in the forest country between Chutia Nagpur and the Godavari, so that it probably breeds there. Col. McMaster observed it at the same season near Saugor, Kamptee, and Chik- alda, and Mr. Adam at Sémbhar. Captain Butler believes that it breeds on Mount Abu. Wardlaw Ramsay found this species common in Karennee in March, and Oates shot a very young bird in Pegu on August 8th, so it probably breeds in the Burmese ills. Habits, ge. The food of the Cuckoo consists of caterpillars, grubs, worms, and soft-bodied insects. The flight is switt and singularly like that of a Hawk. The bisyllabic call, from which the bird derives its name in many languages, is only heard in the breeding-season, and is peculiar to the male bird. At times the first half of the call is uttered by itself, occasionally a treble note is produced, but both are exceptional. The breeding-season, in India, is in May and June, and eggs of this bird have been found in the nests of Pipits (Oreocorys sylvanus and Anthus similis), Bush-Chats (Pratincola caprata, P. maura, Oreicola ferrea), and the Magpie-Robin (Copsychus saularis), The eggs vary greatly in colour, some are much pinker than others; the ground-colour varies from white to pink, spotted, streaked, and mottled with brownish or yellowish red and pale purple. The size is about -97 by °72. 1105. Cuculus saturatus. The Himalayan Cuckoo. Cuculus saturatus, Hodgson, Blyth, J. A. 8S, B. xii, p. 942 (1848); xv, p. 18; Blanf. P. Z. S. 1898, p. 819. Cuculus himalayanus, apud Blyth, Cat. p.71; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 704; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 823; id, Ibis, 1872, p. 12; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 50; Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 410; nec Vigors. Cuculus striatus, apud Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 859 ; Bulger, Ibis, 1869, p. 157; Hume, 8. F. ii, p. 190; iv, p. 288; xi, p. 70; td. Cat. no. 200; Blyth, Birds Burm. p.79; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, p. 156; Scully, S. F. vili, p. 254; Davison, 8. F. x, p. 859; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 105; dd. Ibis, 1889, p. 356; nec Drapiez. Cuculus intermedius, apud Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 252; Oneal in Hume's N. & FE. 2nd ed. ii, p. 8381; nee Vahl. Tong-ting vyang, Lepcha. 208 CUCULIDE. When adult similar to C. canorus, except that the upper parts are much darker, pure blackish ashy ; the lower parts are generally pale buff with the black bands broader and more regular, and the edge of the wing is pure white. The size is always smaller and the bill a little stronger. The young pass through two stages, in neither of which is there a white nuchal spot. In the first stage the upper plumage is blackish brown, the feathers margined with white; chin and throat almost entirely black ; rest of the lower parts white, broadly banded with black. In the second stage the whole upper plumage with the tail is blackish barred with chestnut, the lower banded white and black, throat and breast tinged with rufous. The transition from each stage to the next is gradual, and every intermediate plumage may be found. Upper mandible and tip of lower horny green, rest of lower yellowish horny ; iris, feet, and gape yellow. Young birds have the iris brown. Length about 12; tail 6; wing 6°6 to 7°8; tarsus -75; bill from gape 1:15. Distribution. During the breeding-season this Cuckoo is found in various parts of Eastern Asia, from the Himalayas to Siberia. Tt has also been shot in the cold season at Lucknow and Jodhpur, and in May in Fatehgarh, but is rare in India south of the Hima- layas *. It is more common in Burma, the Andamans and Nico- bars, and throughout the Malay Peninsula, ranging to New Guinea and Australia. Habits, gc. The ordinary call of this bird in the breeding season, which begins later than that of C. canorus, is of four syllables, and, according to Jerdon, resembles that of the Hoopoe repeated, hoot- hoot-hoot-hoot, with a higher note at the commencement, only heard when the bird is very near. Hume (8. F. xi, p. 70) gives a somewhat different account, but Jerdon’s statement has been con- firmed by other observers. According to Swinhoe’s observations in Formosa and Seebohm’s in Siberia, C. saturatus also utters a monosyllabic note, but this has not been noticed in India. The breeding-season is in June, and the eggs, in the Himalaya, are commonly laid in the nest of Trochalopterum lineatum. An egg taken from a female shot in Kashmir is white, sparsely speckled with olive-brown and purplish grey, and measures -89 by °6. According to Captain Hutton, the young Cuckoo, after it leaves the nest, is fed by the adults, he having shot one of the latter in the act. 1106. Cuculus poliocephalus. The Small Cuckoo. ? Cuculus intermedius, Vahl, Skriv. Nat. Selsk. iv, p. 58 (1789). Cuculus poliocephalus, Latham, Ind. Orn. i, p. 214 (1790) ; Blyth, * Davison (S. F. x, p. 359), states that it occurs in the Wynaad, but I have elsewhere (P. Z. 8. 1893, p. 818) shown that there must, I think, have been a mistake. CUCULUS. 209. Cat. p.71; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, p. 704; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 324; ad. Bis, 1872, &; 18; Stoliezka, J. A. S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 23; Bulger, Ibis, 1869, p. 157; Godw.-Aust. J. A. &. B. xliii, pt. 2, p. 155; Fairbank, S. F. iv, p. 255; Davidson & Wend. 8. F. vii, p. 78; Hume Cat. no. 201; td, S. F. xi, p. 71; Legge, Birds Ceyl. . 231; Vidal, 8. F. ix, p. 54; Davidson, S. F. x, p. 299; Barnes, Finds Bom. p.124 ; Oates, Ibis, 1889, p. 357 ; td.in Humes N.§ E. Qnd ed. ii, Pi 882; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 255. Cuculus bartletti, Layard, A. M. N. H. (2) xiii, p. 452 (1854), Dang-hlem, Lepcha ; Pichu-giapo, Bhotia. Adults similar to C. canorus, but much smaller, with the lower plumage, and especially the lower tail-coverts, tinged with buff, and with broader black bars on the breast. The young pass through three stages before arriving at maturity. The first resembles the corresponding plumage of C. saturatus, and at this period the two can only be distinguished by size. The second stage resembles the first of C. canorus in many respects. The white margins on the upper plumage are reduced, a white nuchal spot and sometimes a half-collar are assumed, and the chin and throat are partially cross-barred with white and tinged with dark rufous. In the third stage the upper parts, wings, and tail are bright chestnut barred with black; the black bars in the older birds disappear on the neck, rump, and upper tail-coverts, and nearly so on the head; the lower plumage is very regularly barred with black, and the throat and breast are tinged with chestnut; there is no nuchal patch nor collar. From this stage the adult plumage is assumed gradually, ashy patches appearing on the upper parts and the rufous bars disappearing on the wing and tail. The throat and breast at the same time turn ashy. Bill blackish, base of lower mandible, gape, and eyelid yellow; iris brown ; feet yellow (Legge). Length about 10; tail 4:9 to 5-4; wing 5:7 to 6:1; tarsus 0-68 ; bill from gape *95. Distribution. Throughout the Himalayas from April till October, and farther north in China and Japan. In the cold season this Cuckoo is found in various parts of the Indian Peninsula and Ceylon, also in the Malay Peninsula, Java, and Borneo. It occurs in the hills south of the Assam valley, but has not been recorded from Burma. It also inhabits Madagascar and Africa south of 6° N, lat. Habits, gc. This species begins to breed even later than C. satu- ratus, being rarely heard at Darjiling, according to Jerdon, “ before the end of May and continuing till the middle of July. It is a very noisy bird and has a loud peculiar unmusical call of several syllables, which it’ frequently utters. The Bhotias attempt to imitate this in their name for the species.” The eggs are not known with certainty. VOL, III. P 210 QUCULID&. 1107. Cuculus micropterus. The Indian Cuckoo. . Cuculus micropterus, Gould, P. Z. S. 1837, p. 187; Jerdon, B. 1. i, p. 826; id. Ibis, 1872, p. 138; King, J. A. S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p- 214; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 267 ; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 480; Walden, Ibis, 1873, p. 304; Hume, 8S. F. ii, p. 191; iii, p. 79; ix, p. 248; xi, p.71; Blyth §& Wald. Birds Burm. p. 79 ; Hume, Cat. no. 203 ; Fairbank, 8. F.iv, p. 255; David- son & Wend. S. F. vii, p. 79; Ball, ibid. p. 207 ; Cripps, ibid. p. 264 ; Vidal, 8. F. ix, p.55; Bingham, ibid. p. 167; Butler, ibid. p. 388 ; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 228; Davison, 8. F. x, p. 359; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 104; Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 411; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 125; oi Jour. Bom. N. H. Soc. i, p. 180; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, Gieuina affinis, Hay, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xv, p. 18 (1846). Cuculus striatus, apud Blyth, Cat. p. 70; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, p. 708; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 828. : Boukotako, Beng.; Takpo, Lepch.; Kankatong, Bhot.; Kyphulpakka, Mussooree ; Kupulpukki, Chamba. Bill stronger than in the other Indian species. Coloration. The head and neck above and at the sides dark ashy, remainder of upper plumage rich brown; the quills barred with white on their inner webs; tail with a broad subterminal black band and white tip; a series of alternating white and black marks along the shafts of the rectrices and white or rufous indenta- tions on both edges; chin, throat, and upper breast pale ashy ; rest of lower parts creamy white, with black cross-bars about half as broad as the white interspaces ; under wing- and tail-coverts and vent with narrower and more distant cross-bars. The female only differs in having the throat and breast browner. The young bird has the head and neck above broadly barred with rufescent white (in some these parts are chiefly white) and each feather of the upper plumage tipped with rufescent; the whole lower plumage buff, broadly barred with dark brown, and the tail more banded than in adults and with the spots more rufous. Immediately after this, the nestling garb,-has been assumed, the white and rufous margins to the upper plumage commence to disappear, the throat and upper breast turn to ashy, and the bars on the lower plumage grow more defined. Birds that leave the nest in May are almost in adult plumage in October, retaining only the rufous tips to the upper wing-coverts and secondaries, and they acquire a rufous band across the upper breast, which is ultimately lost except by females. Upper mandible horny black, lower mandible and a patch under the nostrils dull green; iris rich brown, eyelids greenish plum- beous, the edges deep yellow; gape and legs yellow (Oates). Length about 13; tail 6 to 6-5; wing 7:5 to 8-5; tarsus ‘8; bill from gape 1:3. Distribution. Common throughout the Himalayas and extending into China, Japan, and Eastern Siberia in summer. Found also generally distributed over the Peninsula of India and Ceylon, not in the Punjab, Sind, or Rajputana, rarer in the south, but not HIWROCOCCYX. 211 uncommon in the forests of the Eastern Central Provinces and Bengal, and extending through the hill countries south of Assam and the Burmese territories to Malacca, Java, Borneo, and the Moluccas. Habits, §c. Scarcely anything appears known about the migra- tion and breeding of this Cuckoo. It certainly breeds in the Himalayas and Assam hills and. probably in other hill-ranges, perhaps in the plains also. Its call is a fine melodious whistle, represented by the names Boukotako and Kyphulpakka. In flight, habits, and food it resembles C. canorus. Genus HIEROCOCCYS, S. Miiller, 1842. Structurally this genus only differs from Cuculus in having rather shorter wings, with the primaries extending from one-fifth to one-third the length of the closed wing beyond the ends of the secondaries ; sometimes the third primary is longest, sometimes the fourth. The coloration is remarkable, even amongst Cuckoos, for its close imitation of Hawks and Falcons ; not only is the adult garb Accipitrine in character, but the plumage of the young resembles. that of several immature birds of prey. The resemblance in plumage and flight to Hawks is quite unexplained, though, as it is sufficient to cause great alarm to small birds in general, it is probably connected with breeding-habits. In all species of Hierococcyx the tail is broad with distinct dark cross-bars ; the plumage above is uniform or nearly so in adults, mixed with rufous bars in the young; below it is spotted in the young, but generally becomes nearly uniform or transversely banded in the adult stage. Sexes alike. This genus ranges throughout Eastern Asia from Siberia to India. and the Malay Peninsula; it is also found in all the Malay islands. Four species inhabit India or Burma. Key to the Species. a. No distinct dark cheek-band from the eye. a'. Abdomen transversely banded in adults. a". Back in adults brown: wing over 8'5.. H. sparverioides, p, 211. 6". Back in adults ash-grey: wing 7 to 8.. H. varius, p. 218. b’. Abdomen never banded; back in adults blackish grey: wing 6°7 to'7°4 ........ H. nisicolor, p. 214. é, A distinct dark cheek-stripe ...........4.. HH. nanus, p. 215. 1108. Hierococcyx sparverioides. The Large Hawk-Cuckoo. Cuculus sparverioides, Vigors, P. Z. 8.1831, p.173; Blyth, LAS. B.. xi; p. 898; xii, p. 240; 1d. Cat. p. 70. : Hierococcyx sparvericides, Bonap. Consp. Av. i. p.104; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 699; Jerdon, B. I.i, p. 831; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 362 ; Stoliezka, J. A. S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 28 ; Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p. 14; Hume, 8. F. iii, p. 80; ix, p. 248; xi, p. 72; 2d. Cat. no. 207; Armstrong, S. F. iv, p. 811; Godw.-Aust. J. A. 8. B. ny pt. 2, p. 70; P 212 CUCULID&. Hume & Dav.8. F. vi, p. 157; Ball, 8. F. vii, B 207 ; Scully, S. F. viii, p. 256 ; Davison, 8. F. x, p. 859 ; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 108 ; Marshall, Lbis, 1884, p. 411; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) iv, p. 581; vii, p. 380; Oates in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. ii. p. 884; Shelley, Cat. B. M, xix, p. 232, Cuculus strenuus, Gould, P, Z. S. 1856, p. 96. Hierococcyx strenuus, Hume, P. A. S. B. 1872, p. 71. Bara Bharao, Nepal ; Nimbin-piyul, Lepch. Coloration. The adult has the lores whitish; crown, nape, and sides of head and neck ashy, varying from rather pale to blackish, passing into the colour of the back, which with the remainder of the upper parts is rich brown with a purplish gloss; quills barred with white on the inner webs; tail brown above, pale brownish grey below, tipped with white or rufous white, and crossed outside the coverts generally by 3, sometimes by 4, black or dark brown bands, the last the broadest, and the last but one the narrowest and separated from the last by a narrow space ; beneath the chin is dark ashy, with a whitish moustachial stripe on each side; throat white, more or less streaked with ashy and rufous and passing into the more rufous upper breast, which also has ashy shaft-stripes; lower breast, flanks, and abdomen white, more or less suffused with rufous and transversely banded with brown ; vent, lower tail-coverts, and edge of wing white. The young is brown above, the feathers margined and faintly banded with rufous, and the lower parts are rufescent white, with large streaks and drops of dark brown, becoming arrowhead marks on the flanks; the chin is blackish and there is a slight rufous collar. As the bird grows older the head becomes dark ashy, the markings on the flanks and abdomen assume the appearance of bands, and there is a gradual passage into the adult. Upper mandible dark brown, lower greenish; gape and orbit yellow ; iris yellow or orange in the adults, brown in the young; legs deep yellow; claws paler yellow. Length about 165 ; tail 8-25 to 9-25; wing 8-5 to 10; tarsus 1-05; bill from gape 1:4. Females are smaller than males, and Burmese specimens larger than Himalayan, which again exceed Nilgiri birds ‘in size. Distribution. Throughout the Himalayas as far west as Chamba, ascending in summer to elevations of 9000 ft. or more; probably ‘scattered here and-there over the better wooded parts of the Indian Peninsula in the cold season, but only recorded from Raipur in the Central Provinces. Common on the Nilgiris in Southern India, but not observed on the Palnis, the Travancore ranges, nor the Ceylon hills. To the eastward this Cuckoo is found throughout the hills south of Assam and Burma, ranging to China, Japan, the Philippines, the Malay Peninsula, and Borneo. Habits, jc. Probably a resident in the Himalayas and Nilgiris and in Burma, though it may be found at higher elevations in the summer. It has a loud melodious call, similar to that of Z. varius, and heard about Darijiling from April to June. Its flight is swift HIEROCOCOYX. 218 and graceful. Its food, partly atall events, consists of caterpillars. According to Mr. Hodgson’s notes, the female lays her eggs in the nests of Trochalopterum nigrimentum and Iaops nepalensis amongst other birds; but on the Nilgiris this bird is believed to have been observed by both Miss Cockburn and Mr. R. H. Morgan to build its own nest, of sticks, without lining, and to lay 3 or 4 nearly white slightly speckled eggs, measuring 1°39 by 1-05. 1109. Hierococcyx varius. The Common Hawk-Cuckoo. Cuculus varius, Vahl, Skriv. Nat..Selsk. iv, p. 61 (1797); Blyth, Cat. p. 70; Layard, A. M, N. H. (2) xiii, p. 462. i Cuculus lathami, Gray in Hardwicke’s Ill. Ind. Zool. ii, pl. 84, fig. 2. Hierococcyx varius, Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 700; Jerdon, B. L. i, p. 829; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 361; Adam, S. F.i, p. 873; Butler, S. F. iui, p. 460; Bourdillon, S. F. iv, p. 892; Farbank, 8. F. v, p. 897; Vidal, 8. F.vii, p. 65; Ball, ibid. p. 207; Cripps, ibid. p. 264; Hume, Cat. no. 205; Scully, 8S. F. viii, p. 255; Legge, Birds Ceyl. . 240; Reid, S. F. x, p. 27; Davison, &. F. x, p. 359 ; Barnes, Birds a, p. 126; Davidson, Jour. Bom. N. H. Soc. i, p. 182; Oates in Hume's N. & E. Ind ed. ii, p. 883; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, . 234. Tilevoeoeays nisoides, Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 362; Hume, S. F. vii, p. 371. Kupak or Upak, Pupiya, H.; Chok-gallo, Beng.; Bim-pi-yul, Lepcha ; Kutti-pitta, Tel. ; Zakkhat, Deccan ; Irolan, Mal. This is the “ Brain- fever bird” of Anglo-Indians, Fig. 61.—Head of Z. varius, {. Coloration. Upper plumage ash-grey ; quills browner, their inner webs broadly barred with white, some white on outer upper tail- coverts ; tail grey, tipped with rufescent and usually with 4 bars (occasionally 5) beyond the coverts, the terminal bar broadest, the others each with a pale or rufescent posterior border, and the penultimate much nearer to the last than to the antepenultimate ; occasionally the penultimate band is faint or wanting; sides of head ashy, lores and cheeks whitish ; chin and throat white, more or less tinged with ashy ; fore-neck and breast rufous mixed with pale ashy, lower breast with bars; abdomen white, anteriorly tinged rufous and with transverse grey bars, posteriorly like the under tail-coverts pure white; edge of wing the same. The young above dark brown with rufous cross-bars ; lower parts 214 CUCULIDZ. white, tinged with rufous in places and spotted with brown except on the lower abdomen and lower tail-coverts ; tail marked asin the adults, but more rufous. The sides of the neck soon become rufous and form a partial collar, the spots on the flanks change to arrowhead marks and interrupted bars, then the breast grows rufous and the cap grey. From this there is a gradual passage into the adult plumage. Culmen and tip of bill black, the rest greenish ; iris yellow or orange in adults, brownish in the young; gape, orbit, feet, and claws yellow, pale or bright according to age. ‘ Length about 13:5; tail 7; wing 6°75 to 8; tarsus -95; bill from gape 1:25. Distribution. The whole of India and Ceylon, extending to Eastern Bengal (Dacca, Furreedpore), but not to Assam, the Garo hills, nor Cachar, and west to Mount Abu, Rajputana, but not to Sind nor the Punjab. This Cuckoo occurs along the base of the Himalayas from Kumaun to Bhutan, ascending the hills in summer to about 7000 feet. It is found to a similar elevation on the Nilgiris and on the Ceylon hills, but on the Palnis and Travan- core ranges it is said not to ascend beyond about 1000 feet. Reported occurrences of this bird in Assam and Burma are probably due to error. . Habits, fe. A resident throughout its range, except in Ceylon, where this Hawk-Cuckoo is described by Legge as arriving in November. It is more common in well-wooded country, but is generally distributed throughout the Indian Peninsula, and is well known by its call, or, as Jerdon terms them, “its loud crescendo notes,” which, as he says, sound something like pipeeha, pipeeha, each repetition higher in the scale. In the breeding-season from April till June this is frequently heard by night as well as by day. Hf. varius feeds partly on caterpillars, but largely, it is said, on fruits and buds. Its eggs are chiefly laid in the nests of various Babblers and have been taken in those of Crateropus canorus, C. ai and Argya malcolmi; they are blue and measure 1:05 by 79. 1110. Hierococcyx nisicolor. Hodgson’s Hawk-Cuckoo. Cuculus nisicolor, Hodgson, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xii, p. 943 (1848), Hierococcyx nisicolor, Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 380; iii, p. Rial ; id. Ibis, 1872, p. 14; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 361; Hume, S. F.v, ae 96, 347 ; xi, p. 72; ad. Cat. no. 206; Hume § Dav. 8. F.vi, p. 157 ; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 109; id. in Hume's N. & FE. Qnd ed. ii, p. 388. Hierococcyx fugax, apud Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 236, partim ; nec Cuculus fugax, Horsf. Ding-pit, Lepcha. Coloration, Whole upper plumage, except the tail, uniform dark ashy; quills browner, with white bars on the inner webs; tail with alternating bands of brownish grey and black, the last black band broad, the last but one very narrow and close to the last one’; extreme tip of tail rufous; sides of head and neck and the chin HIHROCOCCYX. 215 dark ashy ; throat and front of neck white, sparingly streaked with ashy ; breast, abdomen, and flanks ferruginous, streaked with (pale ashy and frequently mixed with white; vent and under tail-coverts white. In the young birds the upper plumage, sides of head and neck, chin, throat, and upper breast are very dark brown, with narrow rufous edges to the feathers, the quills are barred on both webs with rufous; tail as in adults; the breast, abdomen, and flanks white with broad black spots. The blackish brown of the throat and breast is soon lost, and the upper parts become barred with rufous, as in the young of H. varius and H. sparverioides, and there is the same gradual change to the adult plumage. At no time are there any cross-bands on the abdomen. Upper mandible horny black, lower mandible and around nostrils pale green, gape greenish yellow; iris orange-red ; eyelids, legs, feet, and claws bright yellow. Length about 11:5; tail 56; wing 6-7 to 7-4; tarsus*75; bill from gape 1:2. Distribution. The Himalayas as far west as Nepal, and through- out Assam and Burma to the Malay Peninsula, but not apparently in the Malay Archipelago, where this species is replaced by H. fugax, a form with a larger bill and the bands on the tail as in . varius. Habits, fc. Apparently a resident species. Nothing is known of its breeding except that an egg, extracted from the oviduct of a female by Mandelli on June 5th, was olive-brown and measured “89 by °64. 1111. Hierococcyx nanus. The Small Hawk-Cuckoo, Hierococcyx nanus, Hume, 8. F.v, p. 490; td. Cat. no. 205 bis; Hume §& Dav. S. F. vi, pp. 157, 502; A. Miill. J. f. Orn. 1882, p: 405; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 110; Sharpe, Ibis, 1890, p. 11; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 288. Coloration. Head above and nape dark brown to blackish ashy. A well-marked dark grey stripe from the anterior lower border of the eye down the cheek, separated by the whitish lower ear- coverts from the dark grey side of the head behind the eye; above this again, better marked in some specimens than in others, a line of white or rufous feathers forms a border to the crown; a rufes- cent collar round the hind-neck ; rest of upper parts brown, more or less barred with rufous ; quills with large bars of buff on inner webs, the whole inner webs near the base rufescent buff. Tail eyish brown, tipped white and with equidistant black bands, the last the broadest, the others subequal. Lower surface rufescent white, with dark brown shaft-stripes. It is doubtful whether the adult is known, the plumage above described resembling the immature dress of other species. Upper mandible and tip of lower dull black; lower mandible and base of upper greenish yellow; irides brown; eyelids, legs, feet, and claws orange-yellow (Davison). 216 OUCULIDE. Length about 11; tail 5:5; wing 5°7; tarsus °8; bill from gape 1-1. : Distribution. Only known from South Tenasserim, the island of Salanga (Junk Ceylon) and Northern Borneo. Genus CACOMANTIS, S. Miiller, 1842. This is a genus of small-sized Cuckoos resembling Cuculus in the changes of plumage, and to some extent in the coloration of the young and adult; but distinguished by much shorter wings, with the primaries only extending about one-third the length of the wing beyond the end of the secondaries, and by having the tail as long as the wing or longer. About 10 species are known, ranging from India to Australia. and the Fiji Islands ; two of these are Indian. Key to the Species. a. Upper parts dark ashy. a’. Abdomen white or grey............ C. passerinus, adult, p. 216, 6’. Abdomen rufous ........0e.eeceees C. merulinus, adult, p. 218. b. Upper parts brown and chestnut. e. Geta and rump chiefly rufous, not regularly barred .......eseeeeees C. passerinus, juv., p. 216. d', Upper parts barred throughout ...... C. merulinus, juv., p. 218. 1112. Cacomantis passerinus. The Indian Plaintive Cuckoo. Cuculus passerinus, Vahl, Skriv. Nat. Selsk. iv, p. 57 (1797); Legge, Birds .Ceyl. p. 285. Cuculus tenuirostris, J. Z. Gray in Hardw. Ill. Ind. Zool. ii, pl. 34, fig. 1 (1833-4) ; Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xiii, p. 391; xviii, p. 805; id. Cat. p. 72, partim; Layard, A. M. N. 4. (2) xiii, p. 453. Polyphasia tenuirostris, Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 698. Polyphasia nigra, apud Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 338; ad, Ibis, 1872, p. 14; Stimson, Ibis, 1882, p. 87; nec Cuculus niger, L. ‘Cacomantis passerinus, Cab. § Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p. 18 (1862); Ball, 8. F. vii, p. 207 ; Cripps, ibid. p. 265; Hume, Cat, no. 208 ; Vidal, 8. F. ix, p. 55; Butler, ibid. p. 388; Davison, S. F. x, p. 360; Barnes, Birds Bom. ie 127; Oates in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 385; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 277. Polyphasia passerina, Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, pl. 1; Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 481. angen passerinus, Butler, S, F. iii, p. 461; Fairbank, 8. F. iv, Pp. 409. : Pousya, Mahr.; Chinna hatti pitta, Tel.; Koha, Cing. Coloration. In the adult the upper parts are dark ashy; the wings throughout brown, glossed outside with greenish bronze; inner webs of the quills with a white patch near the base; tail nearly black, tipped with white, the outer feathers obliquely banded with white on the inner webs, the white bands most developed on the CACOMANTIS. 217 outermost rectrices ; lower parts ashy, paling on the abdomen; edge of wing, vent, and lower tail-coverts white. Occasionally there is no white and the bird is dark ashy throughout, as figured by Jerdon in the ‘ Ibis.’ The young at first are dark glossy brown above, each feather with a rufous edging; the lower parts are white with brown bars, and the throat and breast tinged with rufous; the tail is black, with broad white and rufous bars and markings. In the second stage the whole upper plumage, with the sides of the head and neck, is bright chestnut, the back and wings broadly barred with black, the head, hind-neck, rump, and upper tail- coverts with merely a few black spots, and the tail with some irregular black shaft-marks, a larger subterminal black patch and a white tip to each feather. The lower plumage is white, narrowly banded with black ; the chin, throat, and upper breast more or less suffused with chestnut. In older birds of this stage, the head, hind-neck, back, rump, and tail-coverts become immaculate, the bars on the wings are resolved into spots; only the subterminal black patches remain on the tail-feathers, and many of the bars on the throat and breast fade away, these parts becoming bright chestnut. After this the adult plumage is rapidly assumed by the acquisition of ashy patches. Gy Fig. 62.—Head of U. passerinus, }. Bill dark brown; mouth salmon-colour; iris reddish brown or sometimes yellowish ; legs dingy yellow or brownish grey. Length about 9; tail 4:5; wing 45; tarsus°7; bill from gape 1. Distribution. The greater part of India from the Himalayas to Ceylon inclusive, rare in the north-west, and although found at Mount Abu, wanting elsewhere throughout Rajputana and the Indus plains. This Cuckoo occurs in the Himalayas from Simla to Sikhim, ascending the hills to the westward up to about 9000 feet, according to Jerdon ; and its range extends to Eastern Bengal, where it meets the next species. In the peninsula of India it is chiefly found in forest-regions, and is most abundant in Bengal, Orissa, the wooded tracts west of the latter, and on the hills in the neighbourhood of the Malabar coast. Habits, &c. Jerdon describes this Cuckoo as haunting forests, groves, gardens, and low bush-jungle, wandering much, and having a plaintive call, which was represented by Elliot as whé-whéw, whe-whé-é-w. In Ceylon and at Mount Abu this bird is said to migratory, but elsewhere it is believed to be resident. The eggs 218 CUCULIDE. have been taken in September by Miss Cockburn on the Nilgiris, in the nests of Prinia inornata. The young have been found in Dehra Din by Mr. R. Thompson in nests of Pyctorhis sinensis and Lanius erythronotus. C. passerinus also lays in the nest of Molpastes bengalensis. The eggs are pale blue, blotched and spotted towards ns large end with reddish brown and purple, and measure about 8 by *55. ; 1113. Cacomantis merulinus. The Rufous-bellied Cuckoo. Cuculus merulinus, Scop. Del. Flor. et Faun. Insubr. ii, p. 89 (1786) ; Strickland, J. A. S. B. xiii, p. 891; Blyth, Cat. p. 72. Cuculus flavus, Gmel, Syst. Nat. i. p. 421 (1788). Cuculus sepulchralis, 8. Mill. Verhand. Land- en Volk. p. 177, note (1839-1844). Polyphasia merulina, Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 697. Cacomantis threnodes, Cab. & Heine, Mus. Hetn. iv, p. 19 (1863) ; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 158; Hume, &. F-. vii, p. 307 ; xi, p. 72; id. Cat. no. 209; Cripps, S. F. vii, p. 265 ; Bingham, S. F. ix, p. 167 ; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 111; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) v, p- 568; vii, p, 428, Cacomantis merulinus, Cab. § Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p.21; Walden, Tr. Z. S. viii, p. 54; ix, p. 160; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 268. Polyphasia tenuirostris, apud Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 385; CodeiaAud J. A, S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 98 ; Simson, Ibis, 1882, p. 87; nec Cuculus tenuirostris, Gray. Polyphasia rufiventris, Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p. 15. Cacomantis passerinus, Blyth §& Wald. Birds Burm. p. 80; nec Cuculus passerinus, Vahl. Cacomantis rufiventris, Armstrong, S. F. iv, p. 312; Wardl. Rams. Ibis, 1877, p. 458; Anderson, Yunnan Exped., Aves, p. 587. Chota bhrou, Beng. Coloration. In the adult the head and neck all round are ashy, rather darker above; back, scapulars, and wings brown, slightly glossed with bronze; inner webs of quills with a white patch near the base ; upper tail-coverts blackish and glossy, with ashy edges ; tail black, tipped white and with oblique white bars on the inner webs of the outer feathers, most marked on the outermost; on the lower surface the pale ashy generally extends to the upper breast, but sometimes not so far; rest of lower parts, including the wing- lining, varying from rufous buff to ferruginous red, edge of wing whitish. Some birds (C. threnodes) are much darker than others. The young bird is brown above, at first with a few rufous bars and tips to the feathers, but later with all the upper plumage and tail-feathers barred chestnut and black; lower parts white or rufous, with narrow brown bars throughout. This changes gradu- ally into the adult plumage. In the last stage before the adult the whole under surface to the chin is rufous buff; this is the form known as C. sepulchralis. As so frequently occurs in Cuckoos, the changes are gradual and intermediate forms common. Upper mandible and tip of lower dark horny, remainder of lower brownish orange; iris pale yellow, sometimes brown and occasion- ally crimson ; feet brownish yellow or deep yellow. PENTHOCERYX. 219 Length about 9; tail 4:2 to 55; wing 4:3; tarsus °75; bill from gape °95. Distribution. Two specimens were obtained by Hume from Raipur; no other occurrences of this species have been recorded from the Indian Peninsula (one is labelled Madras in the British Museum, but evidently by mistake). This Cuckoo is found about Calcutta, throughout Eastern Bengal, Assam, and the bills to the southward, the Eastern Himalayas from Nepal, also in Burma, Southern China, and the Malay Peninsula and islands, including the Philippines. Habits, §c. The Rufous-bellied Cuckoo is found chiefly in brush- wood and about clearings. It has a less plaintive call than C. pas- serinus and is a very noisy bird. The eggs have not been identified with certainty; Captain Feilden found what he took for them at Thayetmyo in the nests of Tailor-birds. Genus PENTHOCERYX, Cabanis, 1862, This genus resembles Cacomantis in structure and size, the only structural distinctions being that the bill is much stouter and broader up to the tip, which is blunt when seen from above, and that the tail-feathers become narrower behind instead of remaining of the same breadth. The wing is shaped as in Cacomantis, the primaries only exceeding the secondaries by one-third the length. But the present form is distinguished from all other true Cuckoos by undergoing no change of plumage and by retaining in the adult stage a barred livery that in the other genera is confined to the young. This appears to meastronger reason for adopting Cabanis’s enus than the slight structural distinctions mentioned; but I think that the only species of the present. group, if not classed separately, should be referred to Cacomantis rather than to Cuculus. 1114. Penthoceryx sonnerati. The Banded Bay Cuckoo, Cuculus sonneratii, Latham, Ind. Orn. i, p. 215 (1790) ; Blyth, Cat. p. 72; Layard, A. M. N. H. (2) xiti, p. 452; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 325; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 860; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 430; Walden, Tr. Z.'S. viii, ” 55; Blyth & Wald. Birds Burm. p. 80; Fairbank, S. F. iv, p. 255; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, p. 156; Anderson, Yunnan Exped., Aves, p 587; Hume, S. F. vii, p. 207; ad. Cat. no. 202; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 233; Vidal, S. F. ix, p. 54; Butler, ibid. p. 888; Oates, B. B.ii, p. 107; id. in Hume's N.& E. Qnd ed. ii, p. 882; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 125; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 262. Gags ravata, Horsf. Tr. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 179 (1821) ; Strickland, J. A. S. B. xiii, p. 390. Cuculus venustus, Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. S. xiii, pt. 2, p. 141 (1844). Polyphasia sonnerati, Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 699. Pencrouseys sonnerati, Cab. §& Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p.16; Walden, Ibis, 1872, p. 367. Ololygon tenuirostris, apud Hume, S. F. ii, p. 472; iii, p. 80; nee Cuculus tenuirostris, Gray. Basha katti pitta, Tel.; Punchi koha, Cinghalese. 220 CULULIDZ. Coloration. Upper plumage throughout alternately barred with rufous and blackish brown, the latter glossed with green; on the forehead the rufous is partly replaced by white; wing-feathers dark brown, the outer webs narrowly, the inner broadly indented with rufous ; tail-feathers dark brown, tipped with white, margins indented with rufous, the rufous edges increasing on the outer feathers till the outermost are rufous with imperfect black bars and a subterminal brown band; lower plumage throughout buffy white, with numerous narrow dark brown cross-bars; sides of head and neck the same, the ear-coverts rufous and brown. In very old birds the rufous on the upper parts is reduced and the colour becomes darker. The young differ in no important particular from adults. Upper mandible and tip of lower black, rest of lower greenish yellow ; iris brown of different shades; legs and feet brownish slaty or greenish. Length about 9:5; tail 4°75 to 5:2; wing 4°6 to5; tarsus -7; bill from gapé1*1. Malay specimens (P. pravatus) are smaller, the wing measuring 4 to 4-6 inches. Fig. 63.—Head of P. sonnerati, }. Distribution. A resident species, common in Ceylon and in the forests near the Malabar coast, rare in the Bombay Konkan, and very rare elsewhere in the Indian Peninsula and in the Western Himalayas, though recorded from Mussooree, Kumaun, Manbhoom, and Raipur; less rare in the Eastern Himalayas, but still far from common, and ranging throughout Burma and the Malay Peninsula to Sumatra, Borneo, and Java. ; Habits, gc. A shy bird with, according to Legge, a curious far- sounding whistle, syllabized as wh2, whip-whiwhip, and a peculiar call-note, commencing in a low key, then suddenly changing to a higher, and then dying away. This Cuckoo feeds chiefly on cater- pillars. Eggs supposed to belong to it have been found in the nest of Otocompsa fuscicaudata, measuring 82 by *62. Genus CHRYSOCOCCYX, Boie, 1827. This is a genus of small Ouckoos distinguished by the sexes differing in plumage, and by the male exhibiting brilliant colours with a metallic lustre. The structure presents few peculiarities ; CHRYSOCOCCYX. 221 the tail is short and slightly rounded, the wings long and pointed, the primaries exceeding the secondaries by more than one-third the length of the closed wing. The tarsus is feathered almost throughout. In the British Museum Catalogue the African forms are placed in a separate genus, but I do not think them entitled to distinction, The genus in the sense here accepted inhabits the Ethiopian, Oriental, and Australian regions and extends to New Zealand. Key to the Species. Upper parts green ............0.., C. maculatus, 3 ad., p. 222. Upper parts violet ............00.. C. xanthorhynchus, 3 ad., p. 221. Upper parts coppery bronze ........ C. maculatus, 9 & juv., p. 222. Head above light rufous, mantle green. C. xanthorhynchus, 9 & ae p. 221 1115. Chrysococcyx xanthorhynchus. The Violet Cuckoo. Cuculus xanthorhynchus, Horsf. Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 179 (1821); Walden, Ibis, 1876, p. 346. Chrysococcyx xanthorhynchus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi, p. 919; id. Cat. p. 73; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 706; Walden, Ibis, 1874, . 187; Godw.-Aust. J. A. 8. B. xiii, pt. 2, p. 155; Blyth, Birds prone p. 80; Wardl. Seay Ibis, 1877, p. 458; Heme, Cat. no. 211 bis; ed. S. F. ix, p. 248; xi, p. 75; Oates, S. F. x, p. 198; ee B. ii, p. 114; Salvadori, Ann. Mus, Civ. Gen. (2) vii, . 432. Gtnlencoseyx xanthorhynchus, Cab. & Heine, Mus. Hein, iv, p. 15; Hume, 8. F. ii, p. 191; iii, p. 81; Hume & Dav. S&S. F. vi, pp. 161, 506; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 289. Chrysococcyx limborgi, Tweeddale, P. Z. 8S. 1877, p. 866; id. S. F. vii, p. 319; Hume, Cat. no. 211 quat.; Bingham, S. F.ix, p. 168 ; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 116. Lamprococcyx malayanus, Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, p. 503. Chrysococcyx malayanus, Hume, Cat. no. 211 ter; id. S. F. xi, p. 76, Coloration. Male, Head and neck all round and upper breast with all the upper parts glossy violet ; quills blackish brown; outer tail-feathers tipped white and the outermost pair with about three interrupted white bars; lower breast, abdomen, wing-lining, and under tail-coverts marked with alternating broad cross-bars of white and violet or green, Female. Above greenish bronze with a coppery tinge, a little white on the forehead; tips of wing and tail-feathers greener ; uills brown, their inner edges chestnut except near the tips ; all tail-feathers except the middle pair banded green and chestnut and tipped white, on the outer pair the chestnut on the outer web is replaced by white ; lower parts with sides of the head and neck alternately banded white and bronze-green, the bands wider behind. The nestling is rufous except on the breast and abdomen; the head and neck with broad dusky longitudinal streaks ; body above 222 CUCULIDA. and below and the tail barred with dark brown, but not the quills. This passes into a phase of plumage that is barred throughout rufous and glossy green above, white and green below; in some male specimens the upper parts are chiefly green, but usually some violet feathers appear. The plumage of the young is never the the same as that of the adult female, but at one stage the two sexes only differ in the barring on the lower parts being broader in males. In males the bill is orange-yellow; iris red; eyelids green, the edges red; mouth orange; legs brownish green ; claws black. In females and young birds only the base of the bill is orange, terminal portion dark brown (Oates). aes Length about 6:5 ; tail 2°8; wing 4; tarsus ‘6 ; bill from gape *75. The type of C. limborgi, now in the British Museum, has a broad pure whité nuchal collar. It is probably an accidental variety, but may possibly belong to a distinct form. It was obtained at the base of Muleyit, Tenasserim. Distribution. From Dibrugarh in Assam, Cachar and Tipperah, throughout Burma and the Malay Peninsula to Sumatra, Borneo, and Java, but nowhere common. Found also in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Habits, gc. According to Oates this Cuckoo is found in dense groves, and lives mainly on caterpillars; it is a silent bird and quiet in its movements. Its egg is unknown. 1116. Chrysococcyx maculatus. The Emerald Cuckoo. Trogon maculatus, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i, p. 404 (1788). Chrysococcyx lucidus, apud Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi, p. 917; xiii, p. 890; zec Cuculus lucidus, Gm. Chrysococcyx smaragdinus, Blyth, J. A, S. B. xv, B 53 (1846). Chrysococcyx chalcites, apud Blyth, Cat. p. 73; nee Cuculus chalcites, Ilzger. Chrysococcyx hodgsoni, Moore, Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 705 (1856-8) ; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 838; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. B. xii, pt. 2, p- 142; Davidson, S. F. x, p. 299. Lamprococcyx maculatus, Walden, Ibis, 1869, p. 334; Hume § Dav. S.F. vi, pp. 161, 502 ; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) iv, p. 581. Chrysococcyx maculatus, Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm. p. 80; Walden, Ibis, 1876, p. 345; Wardl. Ramsay, Ibis, 1877, p. 458; Hume, Cat. no. 211; td. 8. EF ix, p. 248; xi, p.74; Bingham, S. F. ix, p. 167; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 118. Cuculus maculatus, Walden, Ibis, 1876, p. 345; Legge, Birds Ceyl. . 238. Giialeos ous maculatus, Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 291; Oates in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 387. : Ang-pha, Lepcha. Coloration. Male. Head and neck all round and upper breast with all the upper parts glossy green, tinged in parts with bronze; tips of primaries bluish ; quills brown, inner webs with an elongate white patch, forming on all but the first three the basal part of the inner margin ; outer tail-feathers tipped white, outermost pair with three white bars; lower breast, abdomen, and wing-lining SURNICULUS, 223 broadly banded alternately with white and metallic green or bronze ; under tail-coverts green, with a few white bars. Female and immature male. Crown and back of neck pale tufous, generally with white and dark brown bars; back, wings, and tail metallic green, much tinged with yellow or coppery bronze ; quills brown, each with a rufous patch on the inner web ; median tail-feathers broadly tipped with coppery brown; outer tail-feathers barred chestnut and black and tipped white, on the outermost pair the chestnut is partly replaced by white; lower parts barred white and copper, more broadly on the abdomen. ta young has the head and neck rufous all round, but barred below. Bill bright orange-yellow, tipped black; irides red-brown; legs and feet dark brownish green. Length 7; tail 2°9; wing 44; tarsus °6; bill from gape -85. Distribution, The Himalayas, below about 4000 feet, as far west as Kumaun, also Assam and the hills to the southward, Manipur, throughout Burma, Siam, and the Malay Peninsula to Sumatra and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands; almost every- where rare. Although the species is said to have been originally brought from Ceylon, and is stated by Blyth and Jerdon to have been procured in Central India (probably Chutia Nagpur), its occurrence in the Indian Peninsula and Ceylon must be regarded as very doubtful. ss, Habits, ge. According to Davison this Cuckoo has a fine clear whistling call of three notes, rapidly uttered. It feeds entirely on insects (in Assam, according to Mr. Cripps, on ants), it keeps to high branches of trees in forests, and calls on moonlight nights as well as in the day. Hume attributes to the present species a nearly uniform pale pinkish chocolate egg, found in the nest of Stachyrhidopsis ruficeps, and measuring ‘8 by 62. Genus SURNICULUS, Lesson, 1831. The present genus is remarkable for its extraordinary resem- blance in structure and coloration to a Drongo or King-Crow (Dicrurus). The plumage is almost entirely black, and the tail forked, owing to the lateral rectrices being turned outwards; the extent to which they diverge is variable, and the median rectrices are straight. All the tail-feathers are nearly equal in length, except the outermost pair, which are much shorter. In other respects there is no important difference from Cacomantis, except that the young only differ from the adults in having a few white spots and less glossy plumage. The genus ranges throughout the greater part of the Oriental region, a single species occurring in India. 1117. Surniculus lugubris. The Drongo Cuckoo. Cuculus lugubris, Horsf. Tr. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 179 (1821). Pseudornis dicruroides, Hodgs. J. A. S. B. viii, p. 136 (1889). Cuculus dicruroides, Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. 8. xi; p. 221 (1840) ; 224 CUCULIDA, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi, p. 915; xii, p. 244; Layard, A. M,N, H. (2) xiti, p. 453. Surniculus dicruroides, Blyth, Cat. p. 72; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 696; Jerdon, B. 1. i, p. 336; Helincorth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 481; Godw.-Aust. J, A. S. B. xlvii, pt. 2, p. 14. Surniculus lugubris, Blyth, Cat. p.72; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 695; Blyth §& Wald. Birds Burm. p. 80; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, pp. 159, 602; Anders. Yunnan Exped. ‘Aves, p. 587; Ball, 8. F. vii, p. 207; Hume, Cat. no. 210; zd. S. F. ix, p. 248; xi, p. 74; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 248; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 128; Oates, B. B. ii, p.112; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) vii, p. 380; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 227. Kar-rio-vyem, Lepcha. Coloration. Black throughout, with a changeable green and purple gloss, brightest above; usually, but not always, there are two or three white feathers on the nape, not unfrequently a few white spots remain on the upper tail-coverts; there is always a white spot on the inner web of the first primary and an oblique band formed by patches on the inner webs of the other quills; part of the thigh-coverts and markings on the lower tail-coverts are white, and there are white bars, generally imperfect, on the outermost tail-feathers and a few spots on the next pair. In the young there is less gloss on the feathers, and small terminal white spots are irregularly dispersed over the plumage; the white markings are more developed on the tail-feathers, and the under wing-coverts are partly white. Bill black; iris brown ; legs plumbeous; claws blackish (Oates). Length about 10; tail 5-25; wing 5°5; tarsus °65; bill from gape 1-1. Distribution. Apparently very rare in the Peninsula of India, having been observed only near Raipur, on the Godavari below Sironcha, and perhaps at another locality in the Southern Central Provinces (Jerdon’s locality in “Central India”), also in the Wynaad and Malabar coast-land. This bird is more common in Ceylon, but is locally distributed. It is found at low elevations in the Himalayas as far west as Nipal, and from the Eastern Himalayas throughout Assam, Burma, and other countries east of the Bay of Bengal to Borneo and Java. Probably it is more widely distributed in India, but its extraordinary resemblance to a King-Crow causes it to be overlooked. Habits, /c. According to Legge, this is a tame, quiet bird, with a straight flight, and a remarkably human whistle of six ascending notes, as if some one were practising a musical scale. Its food consists of caterpillars and beetles with various seeds. It is supposed to deposit its eggs in the nests of Dicrurt; and Davison has seen two King-Crows feeding a young Surniculus. Genus COCCYSTES, Gloger, 1834. Unlike any of the preceding genera of Cuckoos, the present is distinguished by possessing a pointed occipital crest of some length ; the tail is much longer than the wing, and the tail-feathers COCCYSTES, 225 graduated; the wing is short and rounded, the primaries only extend one-fourth to one-fifth the length of the closed wing beyond the secondaries; the tarsus is bare except at the base. Bill compressed, culmen much curved towards the tip. Sexes alike. No distinct plumage in the young. The six species belonging to this genus range throughout Africa, Southern Europe, and Southern Asia. Two are Indian. Key to the Species. Upper parts entirely black ........ ese neta. sm C. jacobinus, p. 225. A white collar; wings mostly chestnut ........ C. coromandus, p. 226. 1118. Coccystes jacobinus. The Pied Crested Cuckoo. Cuculus jacobinus, Bodd. Tabl. Pl. Enl. p. 58 (1788). Cuculus melanoleucus, Gm, Syst. Nat. i, p. 416 (1788). Oxylophus melanoleucus, Blyth, Cat. p. 74. Coccystes melanoleucus, Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, p. 694; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 3389; td. Ibis, 1872, p. 15; Stoliczka, J. A, S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 23; King, ibid. pe 214; Godw-Auat. J. A. S. B, xiii, pt. 2, p. 155; Cordeaux, Ibis, 1888, p. 224. Coccystes jacobinus, Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 482; Hume, 8. F. i, p. 173; xi, p. 76; 2d. Cat. no. 212; Morgan, Ibis, 1875, p. 815; Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm. p. 81; Butler, S. F. v, p. 3a7 ; vii, . 181 ; Davidson & Wenden, ibid. p.79; Ball, ibid. p. 207; Cripps, bid. p. 265; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 246; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 50; Davison, S. F. x, p. 360; ibs B. B. ii, p.118; zd, in Hume’s N.§ £. 2nd ed. ii, p. 388; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 129; Norman, Ibis, 1888, p. 402; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 217. Pupiya, Chatak, H.; Kola bulbul, Beng.; Gola kokila, Tangada gorankah, Tel. ey Fig. 64.—Head of C. jacodinus, }. Coloration. Upper plumage throughout and the sides of the head black glossed with green ; quills dark brown, with a broad white band near the base across the inner webs of all except the three innermost, and across the outer webs of all primaries except the first; tail-feathers with white tips, very broad on the outer, narrow on the middle pair; lower parts white, sometimes grey- brown, the basal part of the feathers showing. Young birds are VOL, IIT. re) 226 CUCULIDZ. brown above, buff below, the chin and throat grey at first, wing- bar and spots at end of tail-feathers buff. Bill black, irides red-brown ; legs leaden blue (Jerdon). Length 13; tail 68; wing 6; tarsus 1-1; bill from gape 1°2. Distribution. Throughout India from the lower Himalayas, and in Ceylon, ranging from Sind, the Punjab, and Kashmir, to Assam, Cachar, Manipur, and Upper Burma, but not yet observed in Lower Pegu, nor east of the Irrawaddy valley. To the westward this Cuckoo is found almost throughout Africa south of the Sahara. Habits, Jc. Although there is no reason to suppose that this bird migrates at any time of the year out of India, it moves about a good deal at different seasons, and in some parts, as in Sind, Indore, parts of the Deccan, around Calcutta, at Faridpur in Eastern Bengal, and at Shillong in the Khasi hills, it is either met with only during the rains or more abundantly at that period. It feeds on insects, which it not unfrequently takes on the ground. The breeding-season is in July, August, and September, and at this time C. jacobinus is very noisy, frequently uttering its peculiar call, which Jerdon terms a “high-pitched wild metallic note.” The female lays in the nest of various species of Crateropus and Argya; the eggs resemble those of the Babblers, being blue in colour and measuring about ‘94 by °73. 1119. Coccystes coromandus. The Red-winged Crested Cuckoo. Cuculus coromandus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 171 (1766). Oxylophus coromandus, Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. 8. xi, p. 222; Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xi, p. 920; ad, Cat. p. 74; Layard, A. M. N. H. (2) xiii, p. 451. Goacvetes coromandus, Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 693; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 841; Holdsworth, P, Z. 8.1872, p.432; Godw.-Aust. J..A.S. B. xliii, pt. 2, p. 156; Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm. p. 81; Hume, S. F. ii, p. 82; xi, p. 76; 2d. Cat. no. 213; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 162; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 249; Scully, S. F. viii, p. 257 ; Vidal, 8. F. ix, p. 55.3 Oates, B. B. ii, p. 117; td. in Hume's N. § E. Qnd ed. ii, p. Ql; Baynes, Birds Bom. p. 130; Norman, Ibis, 1888, p. 400; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 214. Yerra gola kokila, Tel.; Tseben, Lepcha, Coloration. Crown, nape, and sides of head black, the crest- feathers brightly glossed with bluish green; a white half-collar round the back of the neck; back, scapulars, lesser wing-coverts near the forearm, innermost greater coverts, and tertiaries black, richly glossed with green ; remainder of wings, both coverts and quills, chestnut, tips of quills dusky ; rump and upper tail-coverts black, with a bluish gloss; tail more purple, the outer feathers slightly tipped white ; chin, throat, and fore-neck pale ferruginous ; breast white, abdomen and flanks ashy brown, under tail-coverts black, with violet gloss like the tail. The young has most of the feathers in the upper plumage PHO@NICOPHAIN SE. 297 tipped with pale rufous, the chin and throat white, under tail-- coverts and edges of tail-feathers buff. -- -- Bill black ; mouth inside salmon-colour; iris pale reddish brown ; eyelids plumbeous ; legs plumbeous, claws horny. Length about 18:5; tail 9°5; wing 6-4; tarsus 171; bill from gape 14. Distribution. This is a very.rare bird in India. Jerdon states that he saw it in Malabar and the Carnatic, and that it has been found in Central India (?-Chutia Nagpur). There are skins in the Hume collection from Madras, Trichinopoly, and the Nilgiris. The only other recorded occurrence I can find is at Sdwant Wari, where Mr. Vidal obtained a specimen. The species appears to be rather more common in Ceylon. It is found at the base of the Himalayas in Nepal and farther east, in Assam, Eastern Bengal,. Tipperah, the Garo hills, and throughout Burma, being common in Pegu, and its range extends to the Malay Peninsula, Southern China, the Philippines, Borneo, and Celebes. Habits, Je. In Ceylon this Cuckoo is migratory, according to- Legge, arriving on the western coast (probably from India) about October, and leaving in April. Elsewhere it is believed to be resident. In Pegu, as observed by Oates, it is seen singly or in pairs in thick jungle, and is entirely arboreal, feeding on cater- pillars. An egg obtained from the oviduct of a female in Tip- perah was uniform greenish blue, and measured 1:05 by °92. The eggs are probably deposited in nests of Crateropus or Garrulaz,. or their allies. Subfamily PHORNICOPHAIN A. The present subfamily contains a group of Cuckoos of very inferior powers of flight, and for the most part inhabitants of thick bush. Many of them feed on the ground, a few are fru- givorous. Only one genus, Zudynamis, which is in other respects. aberrant, has parasitic nesting-habits and lays coloured eggs; all the others make nests and hatch their eggs like other birds, and have white eggs. The tarsus in this subfamily is always naked, the wing short. and rounded, the tail generally long, well graduated, and broad. In many of the genera the plumage of the head and neck is spiny. The accessory femoro-caudal muscle is present, and the pectoral tract of feathers on each side divides, opposite the articulation of the humerus, into two branches, which terminate separately. Key to the Genera. a, Tail and wing subequal in length; head- feathers not spiny .......... eee ee ene Eupynamis, p, 228. 6, Tail much longer than wing; head-feathers apnty. a’, Claws of all toes similar. a'', Feathers of back and breast not spiny. Q2 228 CUCULIDZ. a°, Bill red throughout ; general colour Bbove Prey... ..c eee eee e cece ZANCLOSTOMUS, p. 230.. 88, Bill partly or wholly green. a‘, Culmen much curved throughout: sexes alike in plumage. a’, Tail-feathers with white tips. a’, Naked sides of face not united across forehead ...... .... RaHopopyTss, p. 230. 5°. Naked sides of face united .. PuanicopHaés, p. 234. 6°. No white on tail-feathers...... Ruampuococerx, &*. Culmen almost straight except at . 235. tip: sexes dissimilar .......... RyINORTHA, p. 286. 6". Breast and back-feathers spiny, colour brownish ........ ccc cere cease eee Taccocna, p. 237. 3’. Claw of hallux’ much lengthened and nearly straight............00.ce seco CENTROPUS, p. 239. Genus EUDYNAMIS, Vig. & Horsf., 1826. Sexes dissimilar ; the adult male being black, the adult female spotted or barred. The changes in the young are peculiar, the nestling, in the only species in which the various phases have been studied, having the coloration of the adult male, then changing into a garb resembling that of the female. The bill is stout, the culmen rounded and much curved; the wing and tail subequal in length, the latter moderately graduated, the rectrices broad. No crest. Legs stout; tarsus strongly scutellate in front, only plumed at the extreme base. The genus ranges throughout the Oriental region to New Guinea and Australia. About six species are known, only one of which inhabits India. 1120. Eudynamis honorata. The Indian Koel. Cuculus honoratus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 169 (1766). Cuculus orientalis, apud Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi, p. 918, nec Linn. Eudynamis orientalis, Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. 8. xi, p. 222; Pearson, J. A.S. B. x, p. 657; Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xii, p. 245 ; xvi, p. 468 ; id. Cat.p.73; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p.707; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 842; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 863; A. Anderson, Ibis, 1873, p. 74. Eudynamis honorata, Walden, Ibis, 1869, p. 388; Hume, N. & E. p. 189; id. SF. i, p. 178; Adam, ibid. p. 373; A. Anderson, Ibis, 1875, p. 142; Hume, S. F. iv, p. 468; Butler, S. F. vii, p. 182; Ball, eid. p. 207; Hume, Cat. no. 214; Scully, S. F. viii, . 257 ; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 251; Reid, 8. F. x, p. 27 ; Barnes, irds Bom. p. 130; Oates in Hume’s N. § E, 2nd ed. ii, p. 892; Shelley, Cat. B. M, xix, p. 316. Eudynamis malayana, Cab. § Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p. 52 (1862) ; Walden, Ibis, 1869, p. 389; Hume, 8. F. ii, p. 192; xi, p. 77; ed. Cat. no. 214 bis; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 162; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 119; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) iv, p. 581; v, p. 569. ee chinensis, Cab. § Hein, 1. c. note; Blyth, Birds Burm. p- 81. Koel, H.; Koktl, Beng.; Kokila, Nallak 3, Podak Q, Tel.; Kusii, Koel, Tamul (Ceylon) ; Kaputa Koha 3, Gomera Koha 9, Cing.; Ou-au, Burmese. : EUDYNAMIS. 229 Coloration. Male black throughout with a bluish-green gloss. Female. Above brown with an olive gloss; head and neck spotted with white all round, more closely below ; back and wing- coverts also spotted; quills and tail-feathers barred with white ; the spots of the fore-neck pass gradually into equal bars of white and glossy brown, which cover the breast and abdomen. _ The nestling is black throughout at first, but it soon assumes 2 livery much like that of the adult female, but with the spots and bars rufous, the head with broad rufous shaft-stripes, the throat Fig. 65.—Head of E. honorata, 3, }. with broad whitish streaks, the breast with large white spots, and the abdomen with dark arrowhead marks. From this both sexes appear to pass into the adult plumage without moulting. Some young males are found almost without rufous spots or bars. Probably the changes that take place vary. Bill dull green, dusky at the gape; iris bright ectnnanels legs plumbeous, claws dark horny. / Length about 17; tail 7 to 8:5; wing 7 to 8:25; tarsus 1:3; bill from gape 1:6. oy Distribution. Throughout India, Ceylon, and Burma, except on the Himalayas above the tropical zone. This bird is rare in Sind and the Punjab, and not known to occur farther west; to the eastward its range extends to China, and to the south-east throughout the Malay Archipelago to Flores. Mr. Hume found it in the Laccadive Islands, and it is common on the Andamans and Nicobars. The race from the countries east of the Bay of Bengal has been distinguished as E. malayana on account of rather larger size and a little stronger bill, the female, too, is said to be more rufous, but the differences are neither well marked nor constant. Habits, gc. The Koel is one of the familiar Indian birds, well known to every resident in the country. In the breeding-season, from March or April till July, its cry of ku-il, ku-il, repeated several times, increasing in intensity and ascending in the scale, is to be heard in almost every grove. It has another call, like ho-y-o, uttered by the male alone. This Cuckoo keeps much to groves of trees in cultivated tracts, and is rare in large forests. In Pegu and Tenasserim, according to Oates and Davison, it makes its appearance in February and disappears about July, ‘230 CUCULIDA, but it probably does not migrate to any great distance, and in India generally it is a resident. It feeds entirely on fruit. It lays in May and June in the nests of Crows, generally Corvus splendens, leas frequently in those of C. macrorhynchus, and not unfrequently two or more Koel’s eggs may be found in the same nest. The eggs.much resemble those of Crows, but are smaller ; they are dark green, blotched and spotted with reddish brown, and measure about 1:19 by 92. The Crows bring up the Koel, which at times, at all events, ejects the young Crows, after they are hatched. Koels are often kept caged by natives of India, who admire the bird’s rich melodious call-notes, ; Genus ZANCLOSTOMUS, Swainson, 18387. Bill compressed, moderately deep; culmen much curved, red in colour ; nostril elongate, longitudinal, a small naked space round the orbit. Feathers of forehead and throat spiny. Wing short, rounded, primaries scarcely longer than secondaries; tail very long, greatly graduated, the outer tail-feathers half or less than half the length of the median pair. Tarsus naked. Only one species is included in this genus. 1121. Zanclostomus javanicus. The Lesser Red-billed Malkoha. Phecenicophaus javanicus, Horsf. Trans, Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 178 (1821). Zanclostomus javanicus, Stans. Class. Birds, ii, p. 323; Blyth, - JA. 8. B. xi, p, 1097 ; id. Cat. p. 76; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, p. 688 ; Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 81; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, pp. 167, 506 ; Hume, Cat. no. 216 quint.; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 125; Shelley, Cat. B. M, xix, p. 380. Coloration. Upper parts, except the tail, ashy grey, strongly glossed with green on the wings, rump, and upper tail-coverts ; quills brownish grey; tail blackish, glossed with purple, varying to green, the rectrices tipped white; chin, lores, cheeks, throat, and fore-neck pale ochraceous; breast grey washed with rufous; abdomen. rusty red. Bill in adults coral-red; irides brown, naked space round eye blue; legs and feet dark plumbeous. Length about 17; tail 10°75; wing 5-5; tarsus 14; bill from gape 1°6. Distribution. Java, Sumatra, Borneo, and the Malayan Penin- sula, extending. into Tenasserim as far north as Tavoy, but very rare. Genus RHOPODYTES, Cab. & Heine, 1862. Bill deeper than in Zanclostomus and of a pale green colour; nostril small, rounded or oval and oblique; a large naked space round the orbit, separated from the bill by a narrow band of feathers. No eyelashes. Otherwise as in Zanclostomus, from which Rhopodytes is doubtfully separable. RHOPODYTES. 281 This genus ranges almost throughout the Oriental region, and four species occur within our area. Key to the Species. a, Abdomen grey or blackish. . a', Orbital skin blue: length about 155 .. RB. viridirostris, p. 231, b'. Orbital skin red. a’. Length about 23............ noses R. tristis, p. 232. 6". Length about 15 to 16 ............ R, diardi, p. 233. b. Abdomen ferruginous red .....-.0..e es | BR. sumatranus, p. 238. 1122. Rhopodytes viridirostris. The Small Green-billed Malkoha. Zanclostomus viridirostris, Jerdun, Madr. Jour. L. 8. xi, p. 228 (1840) ; id, Il. Ind. Orn. pl. 3; id. B. I. i, p. 846; Blyth, Cat. p. 76; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 690; Layard, A. M. N. £. (2) ait ry Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 482; Legge, Birds eyl, p. 258. Pheenicophaus jerdoni, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi, p. 1095 (1842). Rhopodytes viridirostris, Cub. § Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p. 683; Dav. & Wend. 8. F. vii, P 79; Ball, ibid. p. 207; Hume, Cat. no, 216; Vidal, S. F. ix, p.55; Butler, ibid. p. 389; Davison, S. F. x, p. 3605 Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 181; Oates in Hume’s N.§& E. ond. ed. ii, p. 899; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 885. Kappra Popya, H.; Wamana Kaki, Tel.; Kusil, Tam. (Ceylon) ; Mal-kendetta, Cing. Feathers of throat and fore-neck bifurcate, there being no web to the terminal portion of the shaft, and the plumage of those parts looking as if wet or partially stuck together. Coloration. Upper parts dark ashy with a green gloss, which becomes much stronger and metallic on the wings and tail; the remiges and rectrices glossy above and below, and the latter broadly tipped with white; underparts pale ashy, throat and fore-neck streaked, owing to the structure of the feathers ; breast whitish, more or less tinged with rufous. Bill bright apple-green; naked skin around eyes cobalt-blue ; irides blood-red ; legs blackish green (Jerdon). Length about 15°5 ; tail 8°75 to 10 ; wing 5:1 to 5:4; tarsus 1°35 ; bill from gape 1:4. Distribution, The Peninsula of India as far north as Ratndgiri and Belgaum to the westward, Sironcha on the Godavari, Cuttack, and, according to Ball, Midnapore to the eastward; also Ceylon in the low country. This Cuckoo does not ascend the hills. Habits, Je. A haunter of bamboo- and bush-jungle, often found in hedges and other thickets about cultivation. This bird lives, according to Jerdon, on various large insects—grasshoppers, man- tides, caterpillars, &c. In Ceylon, according to more than one observer, it feeds chiefly on fruit. Like its allies, it has a very weak flight. The nest has been taken on the’ 10th March by Mr. Cardew in North Arcot, and by Mr. H. Wenden in July at 232 CUCULID. Nulwar Station (G.I. P. Ry.), and is cup-shaped, roughly con- structed of twigs and lined with green leaves. It contained in each case two chalky white eggs, measuring about 1-12 by ‘87. 1123. Rhopodytes tristis. The Large Green-billed Matkoha. Melias tristis, Less. Traité d’ Ornith. p. 182 (1831) ; id. Voy. Bélanger, Zool, p. 231, Ois. pl. i. : Phcenicopheus longicaudatus, Blyth, J. .A.S. B.x, p. 923 (1841) ; xi, p- 1095; xii, p. 246. » Zanclostomus tristis, Blyth, Cat. p. 76; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p- 691; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 845; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 98; Blyth & Wald, Birds Burm. p. 81. Rhopodytes tristis, Cab. § Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p. 64; Oates & Hume, S. F. v, p. 144; Hume & Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 162; Ball, 8. F. vii, p. 207 ; Hume, Cat. no. 215; id. S. F. xi, p. 77; Scully, 8. F. viii, p. 258; Bingham, S. F. ix, p. 168; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 121; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) iv, p. 582; v, fe 569; vii, p. 881; Oates in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. ti, p. 397 ; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 386. Ban-kokil, Beng.; Sanku, Lepcha; Bamura, Assam; Wapalat, Burmese. Coloration. Some black bristles scattered over the forehead and chin and around the gape; lores black, a band above the lores and naked orbital area black and white mixed; head and neck above ashy grey, with a greenish wash, which passes on the back into glossy green; wings and tail black, richly glossed with green both above and below; some blue gloss on the quills; tail-feathers broadly tipped with white ; chin and cheeks whitish, feathers black- shafted, passing into colour of throat, which is pale brownish ashy, becoming darker on the breast and passing into dark ashy on the abdomen. Bill pale green, tinged at gape and about base with red; irides brown or reddish brown; orbital skin dull dark to bright crimson ; legs and feet dark greenish plumbeous (Davison). Length about 23; tail about 15; wing 6-5; tarsus 1-6; bill from ape 1°6. : Distribution. The outer Himalayas below about 8000 ft. elevation as far west as Kumaun; also Bengal and, according to Jerdon, Chutia Nagpur and the Northern Circars (this needs confirmation); common in Assam, the hill-tracts to the south- ward, throughout Burma, except to the extreme south of Tenas- serim, and in Siam, Cambodia, and Cochin China. Habits, gc. This bird, like others of the genus, keeps singly or in pairs to thick scrub, and is but rarely seen on the wing; its flight is slow and heavy, and when flushed it escapes into bush or forest as quickly as it can, and makes its way with great rapidity through dense cover. It feeds on the ground upon insects of all kinds. It has a low clucking note, called by Davison a cat-like chuckle. It breeds in Sikhim about May, in Burma from March till RHOPODYTES. 233 July; the nest is a loose platform of twigs, with two or three white chalky eggs, measuring about 1°46 to 1°05. 1124. Rhopodytes diardi. Diard’s Green-billed Malkoha. Melias diardi, Lesson, Traité d’ Ornith, p. 182 (1881). Phoenicophzous tristis, apud Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi, p. 928; xii, p. 246. Zanclostomus diardi, Blyth, Cat. p.76; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, p. 690; Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 81. Rhopodytes diardi, Cab. § Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p. 61; Sharpe, P. Z, 8. 1878, p. 604, fig. 9; Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, p. 163 ; Hume, Cat. no. 215 bis; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 122; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 390. Coloration. Almost the same as that of 2. tristis. The narrow line of feathers on the lores black; head and neck dark ashy grey ; lower hind-neck, back, rump, wings, and tail, the latter two both above and below, rich glossy metallic green, passing into blue; all the tail-feathers tipped with white, less broadly than in R. tristis. Lower parts ashy, chin whitish, the rest dark, becoming blackish on the abdomen. Bill pale green ; irides dark brown ; bare orbital space crimson ; edges of eyelids black; legs and feet dark plumbeous green (Davison), Length about 15; tail 9; wing 5; tarsus 1:25; bill from gape 1-4. Distribution. From the neighbourhood of Mergui throughout Southern Tenasserim and the Malay Peninsula to Sumatra. Habits, gc. Similar to those of &. tristis, which this species replaces south of Mergui. 1125. Rhopodytes sumatranus. The Sumatran Green-billed Malkoha. Cuculus sumatranus, Rafi. Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 287 (1822). Zanclostomus sumatranus, Blyth, Cat. p. 76; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, . 689. Hibopodiytes sumatranus, Cab. § Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p. 62; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, p. 164; Hume, Cat. no. 215 ter ; Brelley, Cat. B, M. xix, p. 391. Poliococcyx sumatranus, Sharpe, P. Z. 8. 1873, p. 606, fig. 14; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 123. Nostrils long, oblique. Coloration. Narrow band of feathers on lores black, a few white feathers sometimes, not always, present above the bare orbital area; head above dark ashy grey, passing on the neck into metallic green, which covers the remainder of the upper surface ; quills and outer tail-feathers steel-blue above and below; all the tail-feathers with moderate white tips. Chin and throat ashy ; breast darker, with a wash of glossy green; abdomen and lower tail-coverts deep bay. Shafts of head- and neck-feathers black, but not conspicuous. 234 CUCULIDZ. Bill pale green; irides pale blue; bare orbital space orange, palest round the eye, shading to blood-red at the posterior angle ; legs and feet plumbeous green (Davison). Length about 16; tail 9-5; wing 5:5; tarsus 1:4; bill from gape 1°5. Distribution. Tenasserim, south of Mergui (common on the oe of Mergui), the Malay Peninsula, Java, Sumatra, and orneo. Genus PHOENICOPHAES, Vieillot, 1816. Bill stout, wide at the base, compressed in front; culmen curved throughout, upper mandible very high; nostril a narrow longitudinal slit, parallel to the commissure and close to it. Sides of the head naked and papillose, the bare skin extending across the forehead all round the base of the upper mandible ; no eye- lashes. ‘Tail long, broad, and graduated; wingrounded. Feathers of crown and throat with stiff projecting shafts. Sexes only differing in the colour of the iris. A single species. Fig. 66.—Head of P. pyrrhocephalus, }. 1126. Pheenicophaés pyrrhocephalus. The Red-faced Malkoha. Cuculus pyrrhocephalus, Forster, Ind. Zool. p. eee vi (1781). Pheenicophzus pyrrhocephalus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi, p. 927; id. Cat. p. 75; Layard, A. M, N. H. (2) xiii, p. 453; Holdsworth, P. ZS. 1872, p. 438; Legge, 8. F.i, p. 346. Phosnicophaés pyrrhocephalus, Walden, Tr. Z. S. viii, p. 52, fig. 8; Sharpe, P. Z. S. 1878, p. 605, fig. 11; Hume, Cat. no. 216 bis; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 255, pl. x1; Parker, Ibis, 1886, p. 184; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 896, Mal-kendetta, Warreliya, Cingalese. (The first-named appears to have been the origin of the term Malkoha, quoted by Forster, and applied to several Ground-Cuckoos by European ornithologists.) Coloration. Crown, hind neck, and sides of neck black, with RHAMPHOCOCCYX. 2385 a greenish gloss, narrowly streaked with white; rest of upper parts metallic bluish green; quills more blue; tail-feathers with long white tips, longest on the outer rectrices; chin and cheeks white with black shaft-marks ; throat-and fore-neck glossy black ; rest of lower parts white. , Bill apple-green; irides brown in males, white in females ; whole sides of face crimson; legs and feet bluish slate (Legge). Length about 18; tail 11; wing 6-25; tarsus 1:4; bill from gape 1°6. Distribution. Peculiar to Ceylon, found in the forests of the lower tracts almost throughout the island. Habits, §c. According to Legge this is a shy bird, generally keeping to forests with much undergrowth. It is often seen in small flocks. As a rule it is silent, but at times utters a low monosyllabic call when flying about. It lives chiefly on fruit, but occasionally eats small insects, and its flesh is said to be well- flavoured. Genus RHAMPHOCOCCYX, Cabanis, 1862. Bill similar to that of Phenicophaés, the nostrils at the base varying inform. A large naked area round the eye, extending to the base of the bill, but not across the forehead; small eyelashes present. No white on the plumage. Otherwise this genus closely resembles Phenicophaés. Ido not regard Rhinococcyx, Dryococcyx, and Urococcyx as generically distinct] from Rhamphococcyr, the differences in the shape of the nostrils, on which these genera were founded, not being by themselves of sufficient importance. The genus Rhampho- coceyx, as here understood, comprises five known species, and ranges from Tenasserim to Celebes. One species only occurs in Burma. 1127. Rhamphococcyx erythrognathus. Pheenicophaés erythrognathus, Hartlaub, Syst. Verz. Mus. Brem. . 95 (1844); Walden, Tr. Z. 8. viii, p. 58, fig. 7; Blyth, Birds urm. Pe 81; Hume & Dav. 8. F. vi, pp. 165, 506. Phoenicophaus curvirostris, apud Blyth, Cat. p. 75; id. J. A. &. B. a, p- 278; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, p. 687 ; nec Cuculus curvirostris, aw. Rhamphococeyx erythrognathus, Cab. § Heine, Mus. Hein. iv, p. 67; Hume, Cat. no. 216 ter; Oates, B. B. ii. p. 124. Urococcyx erythrognathus, Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 898. Coloration. Upper parts metallic green; head greyer and less glossy; quills bluish green above, purple beneath ; terminal 3 or 4 inches of each tail-feather almost always dark chestnut (very rarely green); in some specimens there is a narrow white super- ciliary line above the naked orbital area; chin and cheeks ashy grey (whitish in some individuals); throat, breast, and lower 236 CUCULIDE. tail-coverts dull chestnut; abdomen darker and duller; flanks and thigh-coverts blackish with a green gloss. Bill pale green; both mandibles maroon-red near the base; irides blue in the male, yellow in the female; legs and feet dark . plumbeons. Length about 18-5; tail 11; wing 6-75; tarsus 1°6; bill from gape 1:9. Distribution: The Malayan Peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo, ranging into Southern Tenasserim as far north as Yay. Habits, gc. According to Tickell and Davison, very similar to those of its allies. Tickell observed that this species fed on “Coleoptera, Hemiptera, and very large caterpillars.” Genus RHINORTHA, Vigors, 1830. ‘ Bill longer than in the preceding genera and compressed, the culmen almost straight till near the tip ; nostri] oval, longitudinal ; naked area around the eye not separated from the bill by feathers on the lores. Wings and tail as in Zanclostomus. Feathers of head spiny. Sexes different. A single species. 1128. Rhinortha chlorophea. Raffles’s Green-billed Malkoha. Cuculus chloropheus, Raff. Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 288 (1822). Rhinortha chlorophea, Vig. App. Mem. Raff. p. 671; Blyth, J. A. S. B, xi, p. 924; xii, p. 246; xiv, p. 199; xvi, p. 468; id. Cat. . 76; Horsf. & M. Cart. ii, p. 692; Sharpe, P. Z. S. 1873, p. 603, ig. 8; Walden, in Blyth’s Birds Burm. p.82; Hume & Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 166; Hume,Cat. no. 216 quat. ; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 120; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 398. Coloration. Male. Head and neck above chestnut, back and wings rather darker, quills broadly tipped dusky ; rump and upper tail-coverts and tail dull black, with narrow grey cross-bars, not quite so close together on the tail ; all tail-feathers broadly tipped white, the pale bars wanting near the white tip; chin, throat, and sides of head and neck pale chestnut, growing paler on the breast and then passing into dull brown with close faint cross-bars on the abdomen, flanks, and lower tail-coverts. Female. Head and neck above and on the sides ashy grey ; back, rump, wings, and tail deep chestnut, the quills with dusky tips, the TACOOOUA. 237 tail-feathers tipped with white and with a subterminal black band ; lower parts to the breast pale grey, sometimes washed with buff, becoming more rufous on the breast and abdomen ; flanks and lower tail-coverts chestnut. Bill apple-green ; orbital skin pale green, inclining to bluish ; irides dark brown ; legs and feet dark plumbeous (Davison). Length about 13; tail 7; wing 4-5; tarsus 1-05; billfrom gape 1-4, Distribution. In Tenasserim as far north as Lemyne, a little north of Yay, also throughout the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo. Habits, §c. According to Davison, this Ground-Cuckoo fre- quents the densest parts of evergreen forests and cane-brakes. In all its habits it resembles Rhopodytes, but has a different note, a peculiar cat-like mew, not a chuckle. It is almost invariably found in pairs and feeds on insects. Genus TACCOCUA, Lesson, 1831. Bill shorter and deeper than in Zanclostomus and Rhopodytes ; upper mandible distinctly festooned near the base. Wings short and rounded; tail long, broad, and graduated, upper tail-coverts more than half as long as the tail. The plumage of the head, neck, upper back, and breast spinous, shafts of the frontal feathers pro- jecting. A row of coarse bristles nearly surrounds the eye except behind. Tarsus strong. Claws short and curved. Plumage above Tey. - single species, peculiar to India and Ceylon. 1129. Taccocua leschenaulti. The Sirkeer Cuckoo. Taccocua leschenaultii, Less. Tratté, p. 144 (1831) ; Blyth, J..A. 8S. B. xiv, p. 201; td. Cat. p. 77; Jerdon, B. Ii, p. 352; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8, 1872, p. 433; Hume § Butler, 8, £. iii, p. 461; v. p. 218; Hume, Cat. no. 219; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 266; Vidal, 8. F. ix, . 56; Butler, ibid. p. 889; Davison, 8. F. x, p.361; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 184; Oates in Hume's N. & E, 2nd ed. ii, p. 408. Centropus sirkee, Gray in Hardw. Ill. Ind. Zool. i, p\. 28 (1880-32). Taccocua infuscata, Blyth, J. 4. S. B. xiv, p. 201 (1845) ; dd. Cat. p. 77 ; Horsf. & M, Cat. ii, p. 687; Jerdon, B. Ii, p.853; Hume, Cat. no. 221 ; Scully, S. F. viii, p. 258. Taccocua sirkee, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xiv, p.201 ; id. Cat. p. 77 ; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p.687 ; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 853 ; id. Ibis, 1872, p. 16; McMaster, J. A. S. B. xl, pt. 2, Me 209 ; Stoliczka, J. A. S. B. xli, pt. 2, p. 284; Hume, Cat. no. 220; Marshail, Ibis, 1884, p. 411; Oates in aie N.§& E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 408; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 381. Cee affinis, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xv, p. 19 (1846) ; 2d. Cat. p. 77; Jerdon, B. I.i, p. 354; King, J. A. S. B. xxxviii, pt. 2, p. 214; Blanford, J. A. 8S. B. xxviii, pt. 2, p. 168; id. 8. F. v, p. 245; Hees S. F. iv, p. 255; Baill, 8. F. vii, p. 208; Hume, Cat. no. 222, . The Southern, Bengal, Northern, and Central Indian Sirkeers, Jerdon ; Jangli tota, H.; Adavi chilluka, Potu chilluka, Tel. 238 CUCULIDA. Coloration. Upper parts light earthy brown, varying in tint from olive-grey to pale sandy or yellowish brown, always with more or less of a green satiny gloss on the wings and middle tail- feathers, and generally with some on the upper surface throughout ; quills hair-brown ; all tail-feathers except the middle pair black with broad white tips, middle tail-feathers narrowly and subobsoletely banded; chin and throat pale buff, fore-neck and upper breast varying from greyish brown more or less tinged with rufous to buff like the throat; lower breast and abdomen, with the wing- lining, rufous, varying in depth of tint; shafts of head, neck, back, and upper breast-feathers shining black. Bill cherry-red, yellowish at the tip; irides reddish brown; feet Iumbeous (Jerdon). : Length 16-5 to 17-4; tail 8:5 to 10; wing 5 to 6°5 ; tarsus 1-7 ; bill from gape 1-4. Fig. 68.—Head of T. leschenaulti, 1. Distribution. The Peninsula of India and Ceylon. This species inhabits the lower Himalayas from the Bhutén Duars to Chamba, and is found, though very rarely, in Sind andthe Punjab on the west, and throughout Bengal on the east, but not beyond; it is generally distributed in the peninsula, but is not common; and in Ceylon it is rare and local ; it ascends the hills in Southern India to 5000 or 6000 feet and those of Ceylon to about 4000. As with many other Indian birds there are three fairly marked races: (1) a large dark-coloured form (7. infuscata) inhabits the base of the Himalayas ; (2) a paler race, not quite so large (7. surki), is found in Upper India, the N.W. Provinces, Punjab, &c. ; whilst (3) the birds of Southern India and Ceylon are smaller and darker (7. leschenaulti). Skins from Bengal and the Central Provinces (I. affinis) are intermediate in character. Hume has shown that of the four supposed species of Blyth and Jerdon only two can be distinguished at all, and these pass into each other, and Shelley has, I think, rightly united the whole. The English name “ Sirkeer” was used by Latham, Hist. Birds, iii, p. 267. The origin of the term, a supposed Indian name “ Surkool” or “ Sircea,” has not been traced. As it is impossible to say which of the specific CENTROPUS. 239 names sirkee and leschenaulti was first published, I give the prefer- ence to the less barbarous of the two. Habits, fc. This, like its allies, is a Ground-Cuckoo, found chiefly in thickets or long grass, very shy and rarely seen. It feeds on the ground, chiefly on grasshoppers and other insects, such as beetles and termites, occasionally on lizards. Its flight is very feeble. It breeds in Northern India from May to August, but on the Nilgiris and Malabar coast in March and April, and makes a loose cup- shaped nest of twigs lined with green leaves, in which are laid usually three chalky white eggs, measuring about 1°39 by 1:07. Genus CENTROPUS, Illiger, 1811. This genus is distinguished from all other members of the family by having on the hallux a long nearly straight hind claw, very much like a Lark’s. The other claws are but little curved. The tarsus is strong and naked. The bill is deep, moderately large, with the culmen much curved ; the nostrils are partly covered by a membrane. There is a row of bristles above the eye. The wing - is short and rounded, the primaries scarcely exceeding the second- aries in length ; the tail is graduated, long and broad. The feathers of the head, neck, and breast are harsh and spinous. Sexes alike. About 30 species, of which 4 occur within our area, are comprised in Centropus, which ranges almost throughout the Ethiopian and Oriental regions, Papua and Australia. Key to the Species. a, Under wing-coverts black or grey or mottled. a’. Head and body black. a”, Bill black. .............cccaaeee « C. sinensis, p. 289, b”. Bill green or yellow ........ cesses C. chlororhynchus, p. 242, b'. Head and body foo or buff ........ C. andamanensis, p. 242. b. Under wing-coverts chestnut ........ -» C. bengalensis, p. 248. 1180, Centropus sinensis. The Common Coucal or Crow-Pheasant. Pelophilus sinensis, Steph. Gen. Zool. ix, p. 51 (1815). Centropus bubutus, Horsfield, Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, ys 180 (1821). Centropus castanopterus, Stephens, Gen. Zool. xiv, p. 215 (1826). Centropus philippensis, apud Blyth, J..A. S. B. xi, p. 1099; xii, p. 246; xiv, p. 202; td. Cat. p. 78; Layard, A. M,N. H. (2) xiii, p. 450, nec Cumer. Centropus sinensis, Blyth, J. .A.S. B. xii, p. 247 ; xiv, p. 202 ; td, Cat. Add. p. xix; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 343. Centropus rufipennis, apud Blyth, Cat. p. 321; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, ‘p. 681; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 348 ; id. Ibis, 1872, p. 15; Hume, S. F. i, p. 173; Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm. p. 81; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p- 260; Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 411; Barnes, Birds Bom, p. 182, Oates in Hume's N, & E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 400; nec Iliger. 240 CUCULID. Centrococcyx rufipennis, Cab. & Heine, Mus, Hein. iv, p.115; Bait, 8. F. vii, p. 207; Hume, Cat, no. 217; Oates in Hume's N.G E. 2nd ed. 1i, p. 400. Centropus eurycercus, apud Hume, S. F. ii, p. 196; nec Hay. Centrococcyx eurycercus, apud Hume & Oates, S. F. iii, p 83. Centrococcyx intermedius, Hume, S, F. i, p: 454; xi, p. 77; td. Cat. no. 217 quat.; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 168; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 126; 2d, in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. ti, p. 404. } Centrococcyx maximus, Hume, S. F. i, p. 454; id. Cat, no. 217 quint. ; Oates in Hume's N. & E. Qnd ed, ii, p. 405. Mahoka, H.; Kuka, Beng.; Jemudu-kaki, Tel.; Kalli-kaka, Tam.; Chembigum, Tam. Ceylon; tti-kukkula, Cing.; Bote, Burmese ; Crow- Pheasant of Europeans in India. Fig. 69.—Foot of C. sinensis, }. Coloration. Whole plumage, except the wings, black with a green gloss, varying to steel-blue and purple, especially on the upper back ; the tail generally dull green; shafts of the feathers on the head, neck, and breast shining black; wings with their coverts and scapulars chestnut, tips of quills dusky; wing-lining black. In the young there is much variation; the upper parts are black with rufous or white bars and spots ; the wings and coyerts are barred chestnut and black ; tail dark brown, with narrow wavy whitish bars; lower parts dull black, with greyish-white bars. The change to the adult plumage is gradual. Bill black ; iris crimson; legs black (Jerdon). Length about 19; tail 9 to 11; wing 7 to 9:4; tarsus 2; bill from gape 1°8. Females are larger than males. ’ Distribution. Throughout India, Ceylon, and Burma, with the exception of the Himalayas, in which this species is rare and CENTROPUS. DAE confined to low elevations; also China, Siam, and the Malay Peninsula and islands. \ Hume, who has been followed by several writers, has divided the Indian Coucals into three species thus distinguished :— Interscapulars black; wing 7 to 8. 1. C. rufipennis: Indian Peninsula and. Ceylon. Interscapulars chestnut. Wing 73 to 8:25 .......... 2. C. intermedius: EHastern Befigal Assam, Burma, &c. : Wing 9 to 95... cceceeeeeee 3 ae Sind and Northern. ia. And unquestionably these are three well-marked races. The differ— ences between C. intermedius and C. maximus are, however, not so- clear as was at first supposed. I find Delhi and Sikhim male speci- mens, referred to the latter by Hume, with wings of 8-3, whilst wings of Tenasserim males measure 7°75; and as Manipur birds are inter- mediate in size, I regard this as one of the numerous instances in- which there is a diminution of size to the southward. The dis- tinction of the Peninsular and Ceylonese form I should accept,. but that several South Indian and Ceylonese specimens in the British Museum have the interscapulary area chestnut as in Burmese birds. I therefore agree with Shelley in uniting all: these races. I should add that the form called C. intermedius by Hume is identical with the Chinese bird C. sinensis, and that the name C, rufipennis, Illiger, does not belong to this species, but to- the Philippine C. viridis: those who require a distinct term for the Indian Peninsular bird should call it C.castanopterus. C. eury-- cercus, with a broad blue tail, 12-13 inches long, from the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra, appears to me distinct from C. sinensis, though Shelley has united them. ‘ Habits, gc. This is one of the common birds of India. It is. found in cultivated ground, waste land, or bush-jungle, less com- monly in forest; it is frequently seen in bushes on the banks of stream-beds and in hedge-rows. Its flight is slow and laboured. It feeds on the ground on insects, and occasionally on lizards and small snakes. It may often be seen walking on the ground, and. both on the ground and on trees it has a trick of raising its large tail over its back. It has a peculiar sonorous call like hoop, hoop,. hoop, repeated slowly several times. It breeds chiefly in June, July, and August, earlier in Southern India, and makes a huge globular nest of twigs, green and dry leaves, and coarse grass, generally, but not invariably, with a lateral entrance, and placed’ in @ thick and often thorny bush or tree. The eggs are broad. regular ovals, white and covered with a chalky layer; they are usually three in number, and measure about 1:44 by 1°16. Coucals are regarded as a great delicacy by Indian Mahomedans. and by some Hindoo castes. VOL, III, R 242 OUCULID, 1181. Centropus chlororhynchus. The Ceylonese Coucal. Centropus chlororhynchus, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xviii, p. 805 (1849) id. Cat. p. 78; id. Ibis, 1867, p. 298; Layard, A. M. N. H. (2) xiii, p. 450; Holdsworth, P, Z. S. 1872, p. 483; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 263, pl. xiii; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 342. reels chlororhynchus, Hume, 8. F. vii, p. 372; id. Cat. no, ter. Hiti-kukkula, Oingalese. Coloration. Head, body, and tail black, glossed with purple, passing on the neck, upper back, and breast ‘into coppery bronze ; wings, coverts, scapulars, and interscapulars deep bay, tips of guile dusky; wing-lining blackish. The young does not differ in colour. Bill pale apple-green ; inside of mouth black; iris deep red or dull crimson; legs and feet black; claws dusky (Legge). Length about 17; tail 95; wing 6-4; tarsus 1°9; bill from gape 1°7. Distribution. Throughout the forests of the South-west hill region of Ceylon. Habits, Jc. Very similar to those of C. sinensis, but this species appears, from Captain Legge’s account, to frequent thicker and damper forest and to have a rather different note. The call of the male is a sonorous long-drawn hoo-whoop, whoop, which can be heard with distinctness for many miles around, and by which the presence of the bird is easily detected. There is also a peculiar monosyllabic sound made by both sexes. The breeding-season is from about April or May till July. 1132. Centropus andamanensis. The Andaman Coucal. Centropus andamanensis, Tytler, Beavan, Ibis, 1867, p. 321; Ball, S. Fi, p. 64; Hume, 8. F. ip. 194, Centrococcyx andamanensis, Walden, Ibis, 1873, p. 305, pl. xi; card Cat. no. 217 bis; Oates in Hume's N. §& E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 404. Coloration. When freshly moulted, the head and neck, upper back, rump and lower parts throughout, including the under wing- coverts, are greyish brown; wings, scapulars, and a narrow band across the back between them deep bay; tips of quills infuscated ; tail dark greyish brown glossed with purple. The colours fade, the head and neck become light brown, almost buff, and the edges of the tail-feathers, especially towards the base; isabelline, whilst all gloss is lost. In some specimens, apparently young, traces of barring remain on the lower parts. Bill black; irides crimson; legs and feet black. Length about 19; tail 10; wing 6°5; tarsus 2°1; bill from gape 1°7. Distribution. Only found in the Andaman Islands and Cocos. Habits, gc. A forest bird fond of coming into gardens, and CENTROPUS, 243 much resembling C. sinensis in its ways. It breeds about May and June; a nest was found by Captain Wimberley in a high tree, and contained two white eggs measuring about 1:32 by 1:12. 1133. Centropus bengalensis. Zhe Lesser Coucal. Cuculus bengalensis, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i, p. 412 (1788). Centropus bengalensis, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi, p. 1104; Blyth & Wal. Birds Burm. p. 82; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. B. xlv, pt. 2, PB, 70; Gammie, 8. F. v, p. 885; Hume & Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 171; ingham, S. F. ix, p. 169; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 188; Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 352. Centropus viridis, apud Blyth, Cat. p. 78; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 685; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 850; Godw.-Aust. J. A. 8. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 98; nec Cuculus viridis, Scop. Centrococcyx bengalensis, Home & Oates, S. F. iii, p. 84; Hume, 8. F. v, p. 28; xi, p. 78; zd. Cat. no, 218; Ball, 8. F. vii, p. 2083 One abid. p. 266; Davison, S. F. x, p. 361; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 127; id. in Hume’s N. § E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 406. Centropus javanicus, Shelley, Cat. B. M. xix, p. 854, partim. Nyong, Lepeha ; Kyok-Kyok, Bhot.; Ulu Kukuha, Assam. Coloration. Head and neck all round, upper back, rump, and lower parts black with purplish gloss ; tail black with green gloss ; wings and their coverts both upper.and under, scapulars, and interscapulary region deep chestnut; tips of quills more or less infuscated. The nestling is dark brown, with large rufous spots on the head and neck, and rufous bars on the kack, wings, and tail; lower parts rufescent white, with dark spots on the throat and dusky bars on the lower abdomen and flanks. The bird then passes without a moult into a second plumage: the head and neck above and at the sides, the back, scapulars, and wing-coverts are brown, with pale shaft-stripes and white shafts ; the rump and upper tail- coverts, two of which extend nearly to the end of the tail, are narrowly barred black, glossed with green and rufous; the wings and tail as in adults, but the wings more infuscated and the tail- feathers with rufous tips; lower parts rufescent-white, throat speckled with dark brown; flanks, lower abdomen, and lower tail- coverts with narrow dark bars. This plumage is assumed gradually, and the change to the adult plumage, partly at all events by a moult, generally takes place in March or April; the white shafts to the scapulars and coverts being longer retained. The second garb is called the winter or seasonal plumage by most authors, but I can find no evidence that it is ever assumed by birds that have once attained adult coloration, and there are several winter birds in the British Museum collection with the adult dress. The long upper tail-coverts appear peculiar to the immature plumage. Bill and legs black, iris crimson in adults; in the young the bill is yellowish, dark on the culmen, iris brown to yellow; legs plumbeous. . B 244 CUCULIDZ. Length of males about 13; tail 7; wing 5:4; tarsus 1:6; bill from gape 1-1: in females, length about 14:5; tail 8; wing 6-7; tarsus 1°75; bill from gape 1:25. Some specimens from Assam and Burma are referred by Shelley in the British Museum Catalogue to a distinct species C. javani- cus, but I am unable to separate them from C. bengalensis. Distribution. The Lesser Coucal has been found very sparingly in the Peninsula of India in Travancore, the Wynaad, Mysore, Orissa, and Singhbhoom ; not, so far as I can ascertain, in the Central Provinces, Bombay Presidency, North-west Provinces, nor Punjab, nor in Ceylon. Jerdon (Madr. Jour. L. 8. xiii, pt. 1, p--172) states that Elliot found it in the Southern Mahratta country ; but this was probably a mistake, as the locality was not mentioned in the ‘ Birds of India.’ It is more common in Bengal, and is found about Calcutta and up to about 5000 feet in Sikhim, and ranges from Assam through Burma to the Malay Peninsula and Southern China. Habits, gc. Very similar to those of C. sinensis, but this bird is chiefly found in high grass, not in forest nor scrub. The call of the female is said by Gammie to be double—first a series of sounds like whoot, whoot, whoot, &c., ventriloquistic, appearing to come from a distance; then, after an interval, Lurook, kurook, &e., no longer ventriloquistic. Gammie did not observe the male calling. This species feeds on grasshoppers. It breeds from May to August, in different localities, making a domed nest of coarse grass, the living blades being bent over and incorporated. The eggs are two or three in number, white, chalky, and about 1:17 by 1:01 inches. Order IX. PSITTACI. Whilst several of the groups here classed as orders, because ornithologists have not yet agreed how they are to be arranged in larger divisions, are really of subordinal rank, the Parrots ‘by “general consent stand apart from all other birds, and undoubt form an Order by themselves: distinguished by opisthoccelous dorsal vertebre, combined with zygodactyle feet, and by the upper mandible being loosely articulated to the skull, so as to be mo able. The bill is short, stout, and strongly hooked. The By a is desmognathous. There is a distinct fleshy cere at the base of the bill, as in Birds of Prey. The tongue is thick and fleshy. The deep plantar tendons are galline, as in Coceyges. The ambiens muscle is variable, and so are the carotids. The furculais weak and sometimes incomplete. There are no cexca, and the gall-bladder is generally wanting. The feathers are furnished with an aftershaft; the spinal feather-tract is well defined on the néck’ind forked on the upper back. ‘The oil-gland is usually present and tufted, but is wanting in a few genera. There are twelve tail-feathers except in the Papuan Oreopsitiacus, which has 14. Primaries 10. _ All Parrots lay white eggs in a hole, generally excavated by the -parent birds, in the trunk or a branch of a tree. There is no nest, the eggs being laid on the wood. Some species, occasionally at all events, make use of hollows not excavated by themselves. The young are hatched naked, and the feathers remain in the sheaths until the birds are nearly full-grown. ’ The Parrots have been very variously divided by different ornithologists, and Garrod (P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 594) made the common Indian genus Paleornis the type of a family: — But generally Palewornis has been classed in the same family with Psittacus, and this is the arrangement adopted by Salvadori in the British Museum Catalogue. Only three genera are found within Indian limits, and these all belong to one family and subfamily. Family PSITTACID A. Key to the Genera. a. Tail long and graduated, longer than wing ,,.. PaLorwnis, p. 246, %. Tail much shorter than wing. a’, Bill swollen at sides, deeper than long .... Psrrrinvs, p. 259. b’. Bill compressed, longer than deep ........ Loricuxus, p. 260, 246 PSITTACIDE, Genus PALEORNIS, Vigors, 1825. Tail very long and graduated, the median feathers narrow, much exceeding the others in length: bill thick, deeper than long; upper mandible swollen at the sides, culmen convex, much curved; lower mandible short. Birds of this genus are common throughout India, Ceylon, and Burma. Their prevailing colour is green, except in a few species. They are deualliy seen in flocks, which feed sometimes on the fruit of trees, sometimes on seeds, which they not unfrequently pick up from the ground. All have a rather swift arrowy flight, and a more or less harsh screaming note. All are favourite cage- birds. Species of Puleornis are found throughout the Oriental region, in the Seychelles, Mauritius, and Rodriguez, aud in parts of Tropical Africa. Key to the Species*, a, Head (except chin and mandibular stripe in males) and body green ; bill deep red; a rose collar in males, wanting in females. a’, Large red patch on wing-coverts; wing exceeding 7°5. a". Smaller: length 17-195; tarsus veenish grey. .sseseceseeseee oe. DP. eupatria, p. 247, 6”. Larger: length 20-22; tarsus dull orange. a, Nape and sides of head suffused with glaucous grey ........ ++. 2. nepalensis, p. 248. &, Nape and sides of head without grey tinge. [p. 248. a‘, Bill 0°85 high at base.......... P. indoburmanicus, 6*. Bill an inch high at base ..... . P. magnirostris, p. 249. 8’. No red patch on wing-coverts ; wing less than7 ......5- tigate a-c.ateiois #'s hates s P. torquatus, p. 250. b. Head partly or wholly not green. ce’. Head red in male, slaty in female; back green: wing about 6°5. ce’. Under wing-coverts bluish green.... P. cyanocephalus, p. 251. a, Under wing-coverts green, not bluish. P. rosa, p. 252. d', Head dark slaty in both sexes; back green: wing 6-6°5. e”, Terminal portion of tail bright yellow. LP. schisticeps, p. 253. f'. Terminal portion of tail dull pinkish. P. finschi, p. 264. ce, Crown and upper back grey; breast green. e’, An emerald-green collar .............. P. calthrope, p. 256. Fe NO COURT: 6.00 ye site y siergiain te eee os G48 P. caniceps, p. 258. d, Crown and upper back grey; brest grey or greyish green..........65 Siena sao aresese P. columboides, p. 255. e. Crown and nape pinkish or bluish grey ; breast red vce se ceedeeeeeesesereeseee P. fasciatus, p. 256. * The young of several species, like P. torquatus 9, are green throu hout, but the bill is black or brown or pols red, not deep By nfhrese young’ birds are difficult to distinguish’ at first, but they soon acquire the distinctive coloration of adults. nse . PALAORNIS. «BAT Jf. Crown and nape green; sides of head including ear-coverts brick-red. g'. Upper mandible red. g''. Breast yellowish green .......... P. erythrogenys 3 ,p. 258. hi”. Breast fond miles bluish tinge .... P. tytlors ae bes, h'. Upper mandible black. a". TTiandibulae band. chiefly black ...... P. erythrogenys Q ,p. 258. k"~. Mandibular band dark green........ P. tytlert Q ,p. 259. 1134, Palwornis eupatria. The Large Ceylonese Paroquet. Psittacus eupatria, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 140 (1766). Paleornis alexandri, apud Layard, A. M. N. H. (2) xiii, p. 262; nec Psittacus alexandri, Linn. Paleornis eupatria, Hume, 8. F. i, p. 483; ii, p. 9; td. Cat. no. 147 ; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 168; Parker, Ibis, 1886, p. 183; Oates in Hume's N. & E, 2nd ed. iii, p. 82 (partim) ; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 485. Labu girawa, Cing. Coloration. Male. Above grass-green, much brighter on the forehead and lores, and rather darker on the wings; a dark line from nostril to eye; a rose-pink collar round the back and sides of neck, nape just in front of collar more or less tinged bluish grey ; chin (thinly feathered) and a stripe from the lower mandible to the rose collar black; a large deep red patch on the secondary wing-coverts ; rump rather brighter green than the back; median tail-feathers passing from green at the base into verditer-blue, and then into yellowish at the tips ; throat and breast dull pale green ; abdomen brighter ; lower surface of quills and larger under wing- coverts greyish brown, lesser under wing-coverts bright green; tail- feathers below dull yellow. Female and young without either rose collar or black mandibular stripe. nan deep red; iris pale yellow, with a bluish-grey inner circle ; feet plumbeous. j Length about 19; tail 11:5; wing 8 ; tarsus ‘8; bill from cere at gape to point 1; depth of upper mandible (culmen to gape) ‘75. Females a little less. Distribution. Throughout the greater part of Ceylon. Whether the Paroquets observed in the Carnatic by Jerdon, and in Mysore ‘by Taylor, and the individual taken from a Shahin faleon by Jerdon in Malabar, belonged to this or the next species is uncertain. There is no specimen from Southern India in the British Museum (including the Hume) collection. The measure- ments given by Jerdon agree with P. nepalensis, the cinereous feet with P. eupatria. — This and the following three species are merely races or sub- species of one well-marked form. JP. eupatria is smaller than the ‘others and has a smaller bill. _ : Habits, ge. The habits of all four races are precisely similar. They keep to well-wooded tracts, and are social birds living in ‘colonies and generally flying in flocks, often uttering a shrill call 248 PSITTACIDA, when flying. They feed on grain and fruit. They lay from 2 to4 white eggs in a hole made by themselves in the trunk of a tree or in a large branch. Average size of fifty eggs 1°2 by ‘95. These Parrots are less commonly kept tame than P. torquatus, and are Jess frequently taught to talk. 1135. Paleornis nepalensis. The Large Indian Paroquet. Paleornis nepalensis, Hodgs. As. Res. xix, p. 177 (1836); Rainey, S. F. iii, p. 882; Hume, S. F. vii, p. 458; id. Cat. no. 147 ter; Scully, S. F. viii, p. 239; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 487. Palwornis alexandri, apud Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. 8. xi, p. 208; “Blyth, Cat. p. 4, partim; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 610, pt.; Adams, P.Z. 8. 1 OB 178; Jerd. B. I. i, p. 256, pt.; Blyth, Ibis, 1868, p.1, pt.; McMaster, J. A. 8S. B. xl, pt. 2, p. 208; nec Psittacus alexandri, Z. Paleornis sivalensis, sacer, punjabi, and vindhiana, Hutton, S. F. i, p. 335-388 (1873). Paleornis sivalensis, Hume, S. F. ii, p. 9; vi, p. 117. Paleornis eupatrius, apud Ball, 8. F. ii, p. 389; vii, p. 205; David- son, S. F.x, p. 296; Taylor, S. F. x, p. 457; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 108; Oates in Hume's N. § E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 82, partim; nec Linn. The Alexandrine Parrakeet, Jerdon; Chandana, B.; Chanda-ban-i, H, (Mussooree) ; Karan-suga, Kararia, Nepal; Ne-tso, Lepcha ; Rai Tota, H.; Pedda chilluka, Tel.; Perta kilt, Tam. Coloration of both sexes the same as that of P. eupatria except that the black mandibular band is very broad, and that the occiput, nape, and cheeks are more or less washed with bluish grey. The size is considerably larger and the bill conspicuously more massive. Length about 21; tail 125; wing 85; tarsus 8; bill from cere 1; depth of upper mandible °8. Females rather smaller. The tarsus in Himalayan birds is dirty flesh-coloured or yellowish. Distribution. Northern and Central India, from the Lower Himalayas to the Central Provinces (Kamptee, Raipur, Sambalpur) and the Northern Circars, and from Kéngra, the Jhelum district of the Punjab, and Mount Abu to Bengal (Rajmehal hills and, according to some, Calcutta). Rare or wanting in the Bombay ‘Presidency south of the Sdtpura range in Khandesh. It is uncertain whether the Sundarban rose-band Paroquets should be referred to this or the next form. Habits, Jc. Those of P. eupatria, The breeding-season varies somewhat in different parts of the country, being usually from December, or even earlier, till March; but in Hume’s ‘ Nests and Eggs,’ 2nd ed., either this species or the next is said to breed in the Eastern Sundarbans from March to May. In the Kangra valley P. nepalensis breeds in April. An egg taken there by Major Cock measured 1°52 by °95. 1136, Paleornis indoburmanicus. The Large Burmese Paroquet, Paleomis alexandri, apud pig tie Cat. Py 4, partim ; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 256, pt.; Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 54; nee Linn. Palxornis eupatrius, apud Wald. in Blyth’s Birds Burm. p. 55; Anders, Yunnan Exped., Aves, p. 567; nee Linn, PALEORNIS, 249 Palzornis magnirostris, apud Hume § Oates, 8. F. iii, p. 55; Hume § Armstr. S. F.iv, p. 307 ; Wardlaw Ramsay, Ibis, 877,. p. 453 ; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 17; nec Ball. Palzornis indoburmanicus, Hume, S. F. vii, 459 (1878); xi, p. 54; td, Cat. no. 147 quat.; Bingham, 8. Fi ix, p. 159; Oates, B.B. ii, p. 189; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) i iv, De 578 ; v, p. 559; dd. Cat. B. M. xx, p. 488. Kyet-tau, Kyet-tu-yuay, Kyay-hpounkah, Burm. Coloration. Both sexes similar to those of P. eupatria, but considerably larger in size and more brightly coloured through- out. The throat is much yellower, sometimes pure yellow; and the tarsi are yellow, not grey. From P. nepalensis the present species is distinguished by brighter coloration; by having the occiput and sides of the head green like the forehead, not washed with bluish (there is sometimes a narrow bluish-grey band above the rose collar); and by the much narrower black mandibular stripe. tas bright yellow; cere yellow ; bill bright red, the tip yellow; eyelids pale pink, the edges orange; legs yellow-orange (Oates). Length 22; tail 13; wing 8-5; tarsus ‘85; bill from cere 1:1; depth of upper mandible -85, Female rather smaller. Distribution. From the base of the Eastern Himalayas to the Salween valley, but not in Tenasserim south of the neighbour- hood of Moulmein and Kaukarit. This species is found also in Cambodia. Specimens from the Sikhim Terai and Bhutén Duars have the broad mandibular band of P. nepalensis, and are coloured like that species on the breast; they are clearly intermediate between P. nepalensis and P. indoburmanicus. ; Habits, gc. Similar to those of P. eupatria and P. andl: P. indoburmanicus keeps chiefly to the plains and the neighbour- hood of cultivation, it does not ascend the hills to any height, and never frequents dense forests. It breeds in December, January, and February, and the eggs measure about 1:35 by 1:02. 1137. Paleornis magnirostris. The Large Andaman Paroquet. Palzornis alexandri, apud Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xxviii, p. 418; a. Ibis, 1863, p. 369; Ball, S. F. i, p. 60; nec Linn, Paleornis magnirostris, Ball, JA. 8. B. xli, pt. 2, p. 278 (1872) ; Hume, S. F. ii, pp. 9,176; zd. Cat. no. 147 bis ; ” Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 440. Palzornis eupatrius, apud Walden, Ibis, 1873, p. 297; nec Linn. This race is distinguished from P. indoburmanicus by its enor- mous bill, and generally by having the red patch on the wing- coverts brighter red; the narrow blue collar above the rose collar in males is very distinct as a rule. Length about 23; tail 14; wing 85; tarsus -85; bill from cere 1:2; height of upper mandible 1. Distribution. The Andaman Islands ; Cocos Islands. Habits, 4c. Similar to those of the allied races. ‘ 250 . PSITTACIDAL, 1138. Palmornis torquatus. he Rose-ringed Paroquet. Psittacus torquatus, Bodd. Tab. Pl. Enl. p. 82 (1783). Paleornis torquatus, Blyth, Cat. p. 4; Layard, A. M. N. H. @) xiii, p. 262; Horsf. §& M. Cat. ti, p. 611; Jerd. B. I. i, p. 257; - Stoliczka, J.-A. 8. B. xli, pt. 2, p. 282; Hume, S. F.i, p.170; ii, p. 13; xi, p. 54; id. Cat. no. 148; Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 65; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, p. 118; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p.171; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 141; id. in Hume’s N.& E. 2nd ed. ii, p. 85; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 108; Newnham, Jour. Bom. N. H. Soc. iv, p. 54; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 433. Tota, Lybar Tota, HL; Gallar,in N. W. P.; Tiya, Tiya tota, Beng. ; Ragu, Mahr.; Chilluka, Telegu; Killi,Tam.; Rana girawa, Cing.; Kyay- gyot, Burm, Fig. 70.—Head of P. torquatus, }. Coloration. Male, Very similar to P. eupatria, except that there is no red wing-spot. General colour bright green ; a fine blackish line from nostril to eye; occiput, nape, and cheeks tinged with pale greyish blue; a rose collar round the neck except in front; chin and a band from the mandible to each side of the rose collar black; smaller and middle upper wing-coverts considerably paler green than the greater coverts and quills; median tail-feathers green at the base, then bluish grey; other tail-feathers green on the outer webs, yellow on the inner, all tipped with yellow and dull yellow beneath ; lower parts paler and yellower than upper surface ; wing-lining greenish yellow. Female, No black band nor rose collar, but an indistinct emerald- green ring round the neck. Young birds resembles females. Bill cherry-red; irides pale yellow; feet cinereous (Jerdon). Upper mandible red, lower varying from red to black in different localities (Hume). et ok Length about 16:5; tail 10; wing 6°75; tarsus 65; bill from cere °85. Distribution. Throughout India and Ceylon, and from Assam to Pegu, but not in Tenasserim. This Paroquet is found to the east- ward in Cochin China, but statements of its occurrence in the Malay Peninsula and China are probably due to caged individuals PALZORNIS. 251 having been taken thither. In India, P. torquatus extends to the wooded parts of the Punjab, Sind, and Cutch, and to the base of the Himalayas, where the country is open; but itis not found as a rule on hills nor in large forests. It has been seen at Quetta. A closely allied form, a geographical race in fact, P. docilis, inhabits tropical Africa. Habits, fc. This is by far the commonest and most familiar of Indian Parrots, abounding about towns and villages in most parts of the country, and keeping to open and cultivated land. It is often seen perched on houses and buildings of various kinds, such as temples or machdns about fields, and it does much damage by pilfering grain and fruit. It occurs in large flocks at times, and these often collect in great numbers towards sunset-and perch for the night on trees near towns and villages, with Crows and Mynas. Sometimes bamboos are selected for perching on. The cry of this Parrot, often uttered during the bird’s swift arrowy flight, is shrill and rather harsh. ’ The breeding-season extends from January to May ; the majority of the eggs, usually four in number, being laid in February te the southward, and in Marchin Northern India. In Upper Assam this bird is said by Mr. Cripps to breed in June. The eggs are white and glossless, and measure about 1:2 by -95. This is the Parrot most commonly kept tame in India; it is a docile bird and imitates the human voice well. 1139. Palwornis cyanocephalus. The Western Blossom-headed Paroquet. Psittacus cyanocephalus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 141 (1766). Psittacus purpureus, Mill. Natursyst. Suppl. p. 74 (1776) ; Walden in Blyth’s Birds Burm. p. 56. Palzornis bengalensis, apud Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. S. xi, p. 208. Palzornis cyanocephalus, Wagl. Mon. Psitt. (Abh. k. bayer. Ak. Wiss. i,) p. 517; Blyth, Cat. p. 5 (part.); Horsf. §& M. Cat. ii, p- 616 (part.) ; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 174; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 448, Puleais rosa, apud Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 259; Beavan, Ibis, 1865, p. 409; Blyth, Ibis, 1870, p. 162; Gould, Birds of Asia, vi, pl. 2 (pt. xxvi). . Palsornta pups Hume, N. & E. p. 116; id. Cat. no. 149 ; Scully, S. ¥. viii, p. 241; Vidal, 8. F. ix, p. 51; Butler, wid. . 884; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 109; Oates in Hume's N. & £. Bad ed. iii, p. 87. The Rose-headed Parrakeet, Jerdon; Tuia Tota, H. (in 8. in Faraida, Beng.; Tui-suga, Nepal; Kir, Mahr.; Rama chilluka, Tel.; Batu girawa, Malitchia, Cing.; Kili, Tam. Ceylon. Coloration. Male. Head above and at the sides red, tinged with blue (like the bloom on a plum) on the lower cheeks, occiput, and nape, most strongly near the narrow.black collar that includes the chin and extends from the lower mandible round the neck; hind- neck and sides of neck, behind the collar, verdigris-green; rump the same; back and scapulars yellowish green; wings green ; 252 , PSITTACID.A. quills pale-edged ; coverts edged with verdigris; a deep red patch on the middle secondary-coverts; median tail-feathers blue, greener towards the base, broadly tipped white, the next pair with the outer webs blue, the others green on the outer, yellow on the inner webs, all except the median pair tipped with yellow, all yellowish below ; lower parts light yellowish green ; axillaries and under wing-coverts bluish green. Occasionally the wing- spot is orange, not red. Female. Head dull bluish grey (plum-blue), cheeks and chin greyer and paler; no black nor verdigris collar, but a yellow ring .roung the neck, broader on the side and covering the throat. Young birds are green throughout, and assume the cap gradually. Upper mandible orange-yellow, lower black or blackish ; iris white or yellowish white ; feet dusky sap-green. Length about 14; tail 8°5; wing 5:25; tarsus ‘6; bill from cere to tip ‘6. Females rather less. Distribution. Throughout the Peninsula of India and Ceylon in suitable tracts, extending west to Mount Abu, Sémbhar, and the Eastern Punjab, and throughout the lower Himalayas (according to Hume) to near Murree. This bird is found on the Western Himalayas up to about 5000 feet. This species and the next both occur in the Terai of Eastern Nepal, Sikhim, and the Bhutén Duars, and perhaps in parts of Bengal. The statement (S. F. vii, p- 261) that this species occurs in Dibrugarh, Assam, appears due to some mistake. Mr. Cripps’s specimens in the Hume collection are all P. rosa. Habits, fc. This is far more a forest-bird than P. torquatus, though it is found in well-wooded cultivated districts as well as in forest. It is somewhat migratory, retiring to the denser woods and often to hill-forests to breed, and visiting more open country in the rains. Its flight is even swifter than that of P. torquatus, and its cry is softer and more musical ; otherwise its habits are the same. The breeding-season is from February to May; and the eggs, which are usually four in number, are white when fresh, broader in proportion than those of P. torquatus, and much smaller, the average measurements being 1 by ‘81. This Paroquet is less frequently kept tame than P. nepalensis and P. torquatus. There can be no question that the Indian, not the Burmese, species was the Psittacus cyanocephalus of Linneus. There was a mistake, as Legge pointed out, in Gould’s ‘ Birds of Asia,’ and the names of the two were exchanged. This was also noticed in Gould’s letterpress under P. rosa. ‘‘ Blossom-headed Parrakeet” is Latham’s name, and more than 100 years old. 1140. Palzornis rosa. The Eastern Blossom-headed Paroquet. Psittacus rosa, Bodd. Tabi. Pl. Eni. p. 53 (1783). Psittacus bengalensis, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i, p. 325 (1788). PALZORNIS. 253 ’ Paleornis cyanocephalus, a Blyth, Cat. p. 5 (part.); Gould, Birds o vaste, P pl. 3 a th §& Wald. Bi Bao p. 55; Hume §& Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 118; Anders, Yunnan Exp., Aves, p. 568; Hume, Cat. no. 149 bis; id. 8S. F. xi, p. 55; Bingham, S. F, ix, p. 160; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 145; id. in Hume's N. & EB. 2nd ed. iii, p. 88; nec Psittacus cyanocephalus, L. ae Jerd, B. I. i, p. 259 (part.) ; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 458. Paleornis bengalensis, Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p. 6; Hume, S. F. ii, pp. 9,16; iii, p. 56; v, p.21; Armstrong, 8. F. iv, p. 808. Kyay-ta-ma, Burmese. Coloration very similar to that of P. cyanocephalus. In the male the forehead and cheeks are rosy pink, not red, passing on the occiput into greyish lilac; the rump and hind-neck like the back ; the red spot on the wing-coverts darker; the tail paler blue; the tips of the middle tail-feathers yellowish. In the female the head. is greyer and paler, the yellow collar less distinct, and the red spot on the wing-coverts is present as in the male, though smaller. In both sexes the plumage above and below is a purer green and less yellow, and the axillaries and under wing-coverts are green and not bluish green. Length about 13-5; tail 7; wing 5:5; tarsus ‘55; bill from cere to tip -65. In the female the tail is generally rather shorter. Distribution. From the base of the Himalayas in Eastern Nepal, Sikhim, and Assam to Tavoy, but not apparently further south. To the eastward this species ranges into Cochin China, Siam, and Southern China. Habits, §c. Similat to those of P. cyanocephalus. The eggs white, four in number, and measuring about ‘96 by ‘82, are laid in February and March. Psittacus rosa of Boddaert was founded on the “Perruche de Mahé” of the ‘Planches Enluminées,’ and this figure, like the “‘Rose-headed Ring Parrakeet” of Edwards, the type of Gmelin’s P. bengalensis, was clearly taken from the present species, not from the Western bird. 1141. Palzornis schisticeps. The Slaty-headed Paroquet. Palxornis schisticeps, Hodgs. As. Res. xix, p. 178 (1886); Blyth, Cat. p. 5; id. J. A.S. B. xix, p. 2382; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 615; Jerdon, B. Ii, p. 261; Stoliceka, J. A, 8. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 20; Beavan, Ibis, 1869, p. 411; Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p. 6; Hume, 8. F. ii, p. 17; xi, p. 56; td. Cat. no. 150; Scully, S. F. viii, p. 242; Oates in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 89; Sharpe, Yark. Miss., Birds, p. 114; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 456, Paleornis hodgsoni, Finsch, Papag. ii, p. 50 (1868). Pahéri tuiya, H. (Mussooree); Madana Suga, Nepal; Gagi of Calcutta bird-dealers. Coloration. Male, Head dark lavender (bluish slaty); chin and 254 PSITTACIDA. narrow ring round neck black; hind-neck and sides of neck behind the black ring bright verdigris-green, passing into the green with a slight yellowish tinge of the back, scapulars, and coverts; rump a little brighter; a dark red patch on median secondary-coverts ; greater coverts and quills darker, the latter yellow at the edges; bend of wing yellow; median tail-feathers blue in the middle, green at the base and along their edges, and clear yellow for the terminal quarter to half, the other rectrices green on outer webs, yellow on inner and at the tips, all deep yellow beneath; lower parts from throat light green, lesser and median under wing- coverts bluish green. The female wants the red wing-patch. The young is green at first and assumes the cap gradually. Upper mandible yellow, tinged with coral-red; tip and lower mandible yellow; irides straw-yellow; orbital skin slaty; legs dusky green (Jerdon). Length about 16; tail 9-5; wing 6°5; tarsus -6; bill from cere to tip °75. Females a little less. Distribution. Throughout the Himalayas, below about 8000 feet, from Murree to Bhutén ; more common to the westward. Young specimens from the Khasi hills were referred to this species by Godwin-Austen, but after examining them I do not think they belong either to P. schisticeps or P. finschi. Habits, §c. This is a mountain bird, ascending in summer as high as 10,000 feet, but descending to a low elevation in winter, and breeding in the last half of March, in April, and early in May. The nest is often in natural hollows in trees, but sometimes in holes cut by the bird. The eggs are white, four or five in number, apd measure about 1°21 by -92. 1142. Paleornis finschi, The Burmese Slaty-headed Paroquet. Paleornis finschi, Hume,. 8. F. ii, p. 509; td. Cat. no. 150 bis; Wald. in Blyth’s Birds Burm. p. 55; Hume §& Dav. S. F. vi, . 119; Bingham, 8. F, ix, p. 160; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 142; artert, J. f. Orn. 1889, p. 481; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 458. Coloration of both sexes similar to that of P. schisticeps, except that the head is paler, the mantle a much yellower green, and the terminal portion of the median tail-feathers dirty pinkish white instead of clear yellow. The middle tail-feathers are, much narrower, and duller in colour throughout. Length about 17, tail 11, wing 6 in males; in females, tail 8, wing 5°8. Distribution. Eastern Pegu and Tenasserim ; Oates found what was doubtless this Paroquet abundant in the Pegu hills, it was also found in large numbers by Hartert near Sadiya in Assam. It is probably this species, and not the last, that occurs, according to Blyth (Birds Burm. p. 55), in the Arrakan hills. Habits, gc. Nothing particular recorded. The eggs have not been observed. © | ‘ PALZORNIS, 255 1143, Paleornis columboides. The Blue-winged Paroquet. Paleornis columboides, Vigors, Zool. Journ. v, p. 274 (1835) ; Jerdon, Madr. Jour, L. 8. xi, p. 209, pl. iii; a. ‘th. Ind. Orn. pl. xviii ; ie yth, Cat. peg 5, 316; ‘Horsf. M. Cat. ii, p. 614; Jerdon, B. I. p. 261; , S. Fi ii, p. 21; 2d. Cat. no. 151; Walden, Ibis, isr4, p 292; Fairbank, &. Fi iv, p. 255; v, >. 895 ; ere SF ee - 388 ; Vidal, S. EF. ix, p. 52; utler, ‘ibid, Layard, Ibis, 1880, p. 284; Davison, S. E x, p. 358; fis Birds Bom. p. 110; Oates in Hume's N. § E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 89; Davidson, Jour. Bom. N. H. Soc. vi, p. 334. Paleornis melanorhynchus, apud ies, P. Z, 8. 1832, p. 96, 9 (nec Wagl.). Paleornis | pala Finsch, Papag. ii, p. 74 (1868); Salvador?, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 460 Madangour tota, H. Coloration. Male. Head, neck, upper back, and breast dove- grey (grey with a lilac tinge); forehead, lores, and sides of head around eyes bright bluish green; the frontal band passing upwards into blue; chin and complete narrow collar black, with a bright bluish-green ring, broadest on the throat, behind the black one ; coverts and secondary-quills dark green, the former with pale edges; first primary black, the others blue with green édges; lower back and rump bluish preen; middle tail-feathers blue, green at the base, tipped pale yellow, the next pair blue on the outer web, green near the base, the others green on the outer, yellow on the inner webs, all tipped with yellow, and all yellow beneath, dusky yellow on the median pair and on the outer webs of the “others ; abdomen green or bluish green. Birds from Khandala are bluer throughout the green parts of the plumage than more Southern specimens. Females want the green collar and forehead, they have a bluish tinge on the lores and a little green round the eye, the back and breast are tinged with green. Young birds are green throughout. In adult males the upper mandible is red, whitish at the tip; in females black; lower mandible dusky in both sexes; in young birds the bill is generally orange-brown (Hume); irides in adults creamy yellow ; legs and feet glaucous green (Davison). Length of males about 14:5; tail 8-5; wing 6; tarsus °63 ; bill from cere to point ‘8. Females are rather less. Distribution, Forests along the Malabar coast, from the extreme south to Khanddla near Bombay, chiefly on the hills up to 5000 feet elevation, sometimes higher on the Nilgiris. A supposed occurrence of this bird in Ceylon is on record, but must be regarded as doubtful. Habits, gc. A forest bird, generally found on high trees. Its cry; according to Jerdon, is mellow, subdued, and agreeable. It feeds chiefly on fruit. It breeds in January and February, and the eggs, two to four in number, are white, roundish, and slightly polished, and measure about 1-12 by -92. 256 PSITTACIDA. 1144, Palzornis calthrope. Layard’s Paroquet. Palzornis calthrape, Layard, apud Blyth, J. A, S, B. xviii, p. 800 (1849) ; id. Cat. p. 340; cd. L678, 1867, p. 294. Paleornis calthrops, Layard, A. M. N. H. (2) xiii, p. 263 (1854) ; Holdsworth, P, Z. 8. 1872, p. 426; Hume, Cat. no. Ps bis ; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p.177, pl. vi; Layard, Ibis, 1880, p. 282; Oates in aigte NN. R E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 90; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 461, Allu-girawa, Cingalese. Coloration. Male. Forehead, lores, and area around each eye bright green ; crown, nape, and sides of head greyish blue; back and scapulars the same, but paler, sometimes with a greenish wash ; a broad. collar round the neck and the lower parts from the throat bright green ; vent and lower tail-coverts yellowish ; chin and a band to the side of the neck, not extending to the back of the neck, black; the rump is much bluer than the back, and this colour passes gradually into the deep French-blue of the tail-feathers, which are all yellow at the tips and dusky yellow beneath ; outer tail-feathers with a narrow green exterior border; wings green outside, the smaller coverts to the secondaries paler and yellower. Female, The green on the face duller and less extended, other- wise like the male. The young is green throughout at first, except that the tail is blue above, then the rump takes a bluish tinge. — mandible in males coral-red, yellowish at tip, black in females, lower mandible dusky red; irides yellow or greenish white or white; legs and feet dusky greenish or plumbeous green or plumbeous (Legge). Length about 12; tail 6; wing 5:5; tarsus °6; bill from cere to point °7. Distribution. Peculiar to Southern and Central Ceylon up to 5000 or 6000 feet: above the sea, keeping to the hills and to the forests adjoining them. Habits, fc. Very similar to those of the last species, but the cry is said by Legge to be harsh. The breeding-season commences in January; the eggs do not appear to have been described. 1145, Paleornis fasciatus. The Red-breasted Paroquet. Psittacus fasciatus, Mill. Natursyst. Suppl. p. 74 (1776). Paittacus vibrissa, Bodd. Tabl. Pl. Enl. p. 30 (1783). Psittacus pondicerianus, Gm. Syst. Nat. 1, p. 325 (1788). Psittacus mystaceus, Shaw, Gen. Zool. viii, 2, p. 436 (1811). Paleornis igs ake Wagler, Abh. k. bayer. Ak. Wiss. i, p. 511 (1882); Finsch, Papag. ii, p. 70; Walden, Ibis, 1873, p. 297; 1874, p. 290; 1875, p. 270; Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm. p. 57; Armstrong, S. F. iv, p. 808; Hume, 8. F.v, p.21; Wardl. Rams, Ibis, 1877, p. 453; Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, p. 120; Anders, Yunnan Exped., Aves, p. 568. Psittacus nigrirostris, Hodgs. Gray’s Zool. Misc. p. 85 (1844), descr. nulla; Cale. Jour. N. H. vii, p. 560. PALAORNIS. 257 Palzornis barbatus, apud Blyth, Cat. p.6 (partim); id. J. A. S. B. xix, p. 233 (partim) ; nec Psittacus barbatus, Gm. Paleornis oshecki, apud Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 622 (partim); nec: Psittacus osbecki, Lath, Palzornis vibrisca, Blyth, Ibis, 1870, p. 163; 7d. Birds Burm. p. 56. Paleornis javanicus, apud Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 262; Blyth, Ibis, 1863,. p. 5; 1866, p. 853 pace) Godw.-Aust. J. A. 8S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 97; Ball, J. A. S. B. xli, pt. 2, p. 279; id. 8S. F. i, p. 60; Walden, Ibis, 1876, p. 343; nec Psittacus javanicus, Osbeck. Palezornis fasciatus, G. R. Gray, Hand-list, ti, p. 143; Hume, N. & E. p. 118; 2d. 8. F. ii, pp. 20, 180, 526; ini, p. 264; vii, p. 164; xi, p. 55; zd. Cat. no. 152; Scully, S. F. vill, p. 243; Bangham, S. F. ix, p. 160; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 148; td. in Hume's N. & E- 2nd ed. iil, p. 90; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) iv, p. 574; v. p. 559; vii, p. 876; ¢d. Cat. B. M. xx, p. 464. Madna, Kdjla, Gour Tota, H.; Imrit Bhela, Nepal. Coloration. Male. A narrow frontal band extending to each eye and a broad stripe from the base of the lower mandible to each side of the neck black, the latter not prolonged to form a collar; chin sullied white; rest of head purplish grey, washed with greenish on the lores above the frontal band and round the eyes ; hind-neck and sides of neck bright green; back, scapulars, and rump duller ; wings green ontside, with a large yellow patch on the median and greater secondary-coverts; first primary black, the others green, all with narrow yellow borders on both sides; middle tail-feathers blue, with broad green edges towards the base and yellowish-green extreme tips ; outer tail-feathers bluish green ; throat and breast vinaceous red, more or less tinged with blue anteriorly; abdomen bluish green; vent and lower tail-coverts. yellowish green, tail dusky yellow beneath. The female has the head duller and more tinged with green and the breast is without any bluish wash. Young birds are green throughout. Upper mandible in males coral-red, the tip yellow; in females and young birds black, lower mandible always brownish black, except, according to Hume, in very young (nestling) males, which have sometimes, at all events, both mandibles orange-red (perhaps a few very young females also have reddish bills), Inrides light yellow; legs dusky greenish yellow. Length about 15; tail 8°5; wing 65; tarsus °*7; bill from cere °85. Distribution. Throughout the lower Himalayas up to about 5000 feet, as far west as Kumaun, also in Assam and the ranges to the southward, Tipperah, Cachar, Manipur, the whole of Burma, the Andaman Islands (not the Nicobars), Cambodia, Cochin China, and parts of Southern China. This species is represented in Java by an allied form, the true P. alexandri, distinguished chiefly by having the whole bill red in both sexes, and by smaller size. Habits, fc. An inhabitant of well-wooded tracts of country, visiting clearings, rice-fields, &c. in quest of food. Its cry is much less harsh than that of P. torquatus or P. eupatrius. It VOL. III. 8 258 PSITTACID A, breeds in the sdl-forests of the Sub-Himalayan ranges abou March and April, and lays four white glossless eggs, measur: about 1:15 by 97. Major Bingham found this Paroquet breeding in Tenasserim in February. 1146, Palzornis caniceps. Blyth’s Nicobar Paroquet. Paleornis caniceps, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xv, pp. 23, 51, 368 (1846) id. Cat, p. 6; Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 621; Bail, S. F. i, p. 61; Hume, S. F. ti, p.178; viii, p. 51; td. Cat. no. 151 ter; Salvadort, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 470, . Coloration. Male. Forehead and a broad stripe to each eye, also chin and a wide mandibular band to each side of the neck, black; remainder of head, with back and sides of neck, brownish grey (isabelline), slightly washed with bluish behind and passing gradually into the green of the upper parts, which is yellower on the coverts and darker on the quills; primaries and their coverts black, only bordered with green on the outer webs, bluish towards the base; middle tail-feathers greyish towards the tips, sometimes bluish near the base; lower plumage green like the back; tail- feathers dark dingy yellow below. The female has the grey of the cap tinged with bluish. Upper mandible red in the male, black in the female, lower mandible black in both; iris orange-red ; feet plumbeous green. Length about 24; tail 14; wing 85; tarsus ‘8; bill from cere Ll. ; Distribution. Nicobar Islands. A skin brought by Cantor from Penang was probably, like some other specimens of Cantor’s, both of birds and mammals, derived from a caged individual. Habits, §c. Davison, the only naturalist: who has had good oppor- tunities of observing this bird wild, says it is usually found singly or in very small parties, that keep much to high trees, and tre- quently utter a peculiar wild screeching note. The flight is very rapid. 1147. Palewornis erythrogenys. The Red-cheeked Nicobar Paroquet. Palxornis erythrogenys, Blyth,’ J. A. 8. B. xv, pp. 28, 51, 368 (1846); id. Cat. p. 6; Horaf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 620; Blyth, Ibis, 1863, PP 5, 465 (partim); Ball, 8S. F. i, p. &6 (partim) ; Hume, N.& E. p. 119; id. 8. F. ii, pp. 23, 181. Palzornis nicobaricus, Gould, R of Asia, vi, pl. 6 (1857); Ball, J. A, S. B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 80 na) ; Hume, Cat. no. 152 bis ; Oates in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 91; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 472. Coloration. Male. Crown green; a black band, the feathers tipped with dark green, from nostril to eye; lores and sides of head, including ear-coverts, light brick-red ; chin and broad man- dibular stripe to each side of neck black; nape yellowish green, below the ecciput slightly washed with lilac, sometimes so as to form an indistinct collar ; upper back pale greenish yellow, suffused with grey, becoming bluish on the interscapulary region; wing- coverts yellow-green, except the greater primary-coverts, which, with the quills, are blue with green outer edges; the inner webs PSITTINUS. 259 of the quills black except at the tips, which are dark green; rump and upper tail-coverts bright green; middle tail-feathers blue, edged and tipped green, outer feathers green with some blue along the shafts, all dull yellow below; lower parts green, the breast and throat yellower. Female. Head and body above nearly uniform green, the red cheeks duller than in the male, and the mandibular stripes in part tinged with green; otherwise as in the male. Young birds resemble the female. In males the upper mandible vermilion, yellow at tip, lower horny black, yellowish horny, or dingy red; in females both mandibles are blackish, in very young birds of both sexes dull red. Irides yellow, creamy white, or pale brown; orbital skin greenish brown ; legs dull earthy or brownish green (Hume). , Length about 19; tail 11; wing 7°5; tarsus ‘75; bill from gape °9. Distribution. The Nicobar Islands. Habits, gc. This Paroquet abounds throughout the Nicobar group, chiefly in small flocks. Young birds were found in the nest-holes by Davison in February and early in March. 1148. Palwornis tytleri. The Red-cheeked Andaman Paroquet. Paleornis erythrogenys, apud Blyth, Ibis, 1860, p. 99; 1868, p. 182; 1873, p. 79, note; Beavan, Ibis, 1867, p. 319 ; Baus, J, A. 8. B. xii, t. Zap. 279; id. S. F. i, p. 60 (part.); Walden, Ibis, 1873, p. 298. Palwornis nicobaricus, apud Walden, P. Z. S. 1866, p. 555; Ball, J. A, S, B. xxxix, pt. 2, p. 241; nec Gould, Palwornis affinis, Tytler, Beavan, Ibis, 1867, p. 320; Blyth, Ibis, 1868, p. 1382; Hume, S. F. ii, pp. 9, 24, 184; nec Gould, 1858. Paleornis tytleri, Hume, Proc, A. S. B. 1874, p. 108; id. 8. F. ii, p. 454; zd, Cat. no. 152 ter; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 474. The male only differs from that of P. erythrogenys in being of a less yellowish green; the upper back and interscapulary tract are much bluer, and there is a bluish tinge on the breast. In females the mandibular stripe is green throughout. The size of P. tytleri is rather less. Length of males 15:5 to 18:5, tail 9 to 10°5, wing 7; of females, length 15, tail 7, wing 6°75. Distribution. The whole Andaman group, including Barren Island, Narcondam, the Cocos, and Preparis ; common everywhere. This and the last species are only just separable, but the distinctions, small as they are, appear to be quite constant. P. longicauda, from the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo, is an allied species; and a still more nearly related form is P. modesta, from Engano, off the 8.W. coast of Sumatra. Genus PSITTINUS, Blyth, 1842. Size small. Tail less than half as long as wing, and rounded at the end; bill as in Paleornis, This genus consists of a single species found in the Malay Peninsula and islands, and ranging into Tenasserim. 82 260 PSITTACID A. 1149. Psittinus incertus. The Little Malayan Parrot. Psittacus incertus, Shaw, Nat. Mise. xviii, pl. 769 (c. 1807). Psittacus malaccensis, apud Lath. Ind. Orn. i, p. 180 (1790); nee Gimel. (1788). Psittinus malaccensis, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xi, B 789 (1842); Horsf. & M. Cat. ii, p. 608; Blyth, Ibis, 1863, p. 6; id. § Wald. Birds Burm. p. 58. Tanyguathus malaccensis, Blyth, Cat. p. 3. Psittinus incertus, Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, pp. 121, 500; Hume, Cat. no. 153 ter; Oates, B. B.ii, p. 147; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 501. Coloration. Male. Head and neck bluish grey, becoming bright cobalt-blue on the forehead and vertex; upper back and scapulars blackish brown with an olive tinge ; wings outside green, a large deep red patch on the smaller secondary-coverts, most of the other coverts and the quills conspicuously edged with greenish yellow ; outer greater primary-coverts blue, edge of wing yellow, winglet- feathers with bluish edges; first primary and inner webs of the others blackish brown; lower back, rump, and upper tail-coverts cobalt-blue; median tail-feathers dark green, the other feathers: yellowish green above, yellow beneath ; chin whitish; breast olive- grey, passing into blue on the middle of the abdomen and green round the vent; wing-lining and axillaries crimson. Female, Head and neck ruddy brown, yellowish at the sides and below ; remainder of upper plumage green, washed with blue on the rump; lower parts yellowish green ; wings, including wing- lining and axillaries, and tail as in males, but the red patch on the wing-coverts is smaller. Young birds are deep green above and below, with the exception of the crimson wing-lining and a blue patch on the lower back. In adult males the upper mandible is orange-vermilion, lower dusky or dull reddish brown, in females both are usually whitish ; irides creamy white, eyelids and cere greenish brown or dusky green ; legs and feet pale dirty green (Davison). Length about 7-5; tail 1:9; wing 5; tarsus -55; bill from cere ‘7. Distribution. Throughout the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo, ranging into Southern Tenasserim as far north as Tavoy and Nwalabo. Habits, &c. To parts of Tenasserim this Paroquet is a seasonal visitant, arriving about April. It probably, however, only moves from one part of the country to another at no great distance. It goes about in small flocks, and has a sharp whistling note. The nidification has not been observed. Genus LORICULUS, Blyth, 1849. Bill much smaller and longer comparatively than in Paleornis and much more compressed, the culmen less curved ; the depth ae the two mandibles together less than the length from cere to point; tail short, slightly rounded. LORICULUS. 261 This genus ranges throughout the greater part of the Oriental tegion and into part of the Papuan. Two species out of about twenty that are known occur within our limits. Key to the Species. @, CYOWN BYOEN ...ee cece cece enc eeeensectees .. LZ, vernalis, p. 261, . Crown ved se iasi coun stamciiiivaes aeva edie sea L. indicus, p. 262. 1150. Loriculis vernalis. The Indian Loriquet. ” Psittacus vernalis, Sparrm. Mus. Carls. no. 29 (1787). Loriculus vernalis, Blyth, Cat. p.10; Horsf. § M. Cat. ii, p. 627; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 265; Blyth, 1bis, 1868, p. 6; Walden, P. Z. 8. 1866, p. 588; 1878, p. 298; Beavan, Ibis, 1867, p. 320; 1869, p.412; Hume, 8. F. ii, pp. 185, 471; iil, p. 57 ; iv, p. 888; v, p. 25; xi, p. 56; id. Cat. no. 158; Blyth & Wald. Birds Burm. p. 58; Hume & Dav. S. F. vi, pp. 120, 500; Vidal, S. F. ix, p. 52; Bingham, ibid. p.161 ; Butler, ibid. p. 884; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 146 ; id. in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iti, p. 92; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 111; Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 517. Coryllis vernalis, Finsch, Papag. ii, p. 721 (1868). Bhora, Bho-ara, H. in 8. India; Latkan, H. in Bengal; Kyay-thatah, Kyun-hio, Burm. Coloration, Male. Upper parts green, except the rump and upper tail-coverts, which are rich crimson; crown rather lighter green, outer webs of quills above and upper surface of tail-feathers darker, back tinged with yellow; lower’ parts also green, bat paler and yellower, especially on the breast ; a patch of blue on the throat; inner webs of quills inside and larger under wing-coverts, also lower surface of tail-feathers, verditer-blue. ANS The female is a little darker in colour, and Fig. 71. wants the blue on the throat partially or ‘Head of L, vernalis,t. wholly. In young birds the crimson of the rump is mixed with green. Bill dull coral-red, yellow at tip, cere red; iris pale yellowish white; legs pale orange (Oates, Pegu): bill dark yellow; feet leaden (Jerdon, Malabar). Length about 5:5; tail 1:7; wing 3°7; tarsus -45; bill from cere *5. Distribution. The neighbourhood of the Malabar coast from Cape Comorin to the latitude of Bombay, also east of the Bay of Bengal. This bird is found on the Nilgiris up to about 6000 feet, also in Western Mysore, and in Dharwar, Belgaum, &c., but only near the Sahyddri; it is unknown throughout the rest of India south of the Himalayas, and in the Himalayas it has not been recorded west of Sikhim andthe Bhutan Duars, where it is found, also in Assam, Sylhet, Cachar, Khdsi hills, Manipur, and through- out Burma, extending to the Malay Peninsula, in the southern portion of which it is replaced by Z. galgulus. It is common in the 262 PSITTACID A, Andaman Islands, but has not been observed in the Nicobars. It is replaced by the next species in Ceylon. Habits, gc. In some parts of the Western Ghdts this is said to be a cold-weather visitant, above the Ghats it is only found in the rains ; it probably, like other Parrots, shifts its quarters with the seasons, but to no great distance. It is swift of flight, and utters a screaming call when flying. It is found chiefly in clearings amongst forest, in gardens, and especially in groves of fruit-trees. It feeds on fruit of various kinds and on flower-buds, and is said to be particularly fond of cocoanut-palm juice—so much so as often to be captured in a stupified state after indulging. in the intoxicating liquid. In the case of the allied Z. indicus the juice of the wild palm Caryota urens is said by Legge to intoxicate the birds. This Loriquet is often caged, and, like other species of the genus, becomes very tame, and has the habit of sleeping with its head downwards, hanging from its perch. It breeds from March to May, in Tenasserim in February, and lays 3 to 5 eggs in a hole or hollow in a tree without any nest. The eggs are white and measure about *74 by °6. 1151. Loriculus indicus. The Ceylonese Loriquet. Psittacus indicus, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i, p. 349 (1788). Pasittacus asiaticus, Lath. Ind. Orn. 1, p. 180 (1790). Psittacula coulaci, pt., Less. Traité. p. 202 (1881). Loriculus phillipensis, Blyth, Cat. p. 10; nec Psittacus phillipensis, Mill. Loriculus asiaticus, Blyth, Cat. p. 812; id. J. A. S. B. xviii, p. 801; xix, p. 2386; Layard, A.M. N. H. (2) xiii, p. 261; Horsf. §& MM. Cat. ti, p. 628; Walden, Ibis, 1867, p. 468. Loriculus coulaci, Blyth, Ibis, 1863, p. 7; 1866, p. 226. Loriculus edwardsi, Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 295. Loriculus indicus, Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 426; Hume, 8S. F. vii, p. 368; 2d. Cat. no. 153 bis; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 180, pl. vis Salvadori, Cat. B. M. xx, p. 526. Gira-malitchia, Pol-girawa, Cing. Coloration. Precisely similar to that of ZL. vernalis, except that the crown is deep red like the uropygium ; this red passes into: orange on the nape, and the hind-neck and interscapulary region are tinged with orange-yellow. Sexes alike. In the young the colours are duller and the head is green above. Bill light orange-red; cere yellow; iris white; legs and feet dusky yellow (Legge). Length about 5°5; tail 1°75; wing 3-7; tarsus -45; bill from cere °5. Distribution. Ceylon, generally distributed, up to about 3500 feet, but much less common in the north part of the island. Habits, gc. Precisely similar to those of the last species. Nidi- fication not recorded. Order X. STRIGES. The Owls form almost as natural an order as the Parrots, and occupy, both in external characters and in their anatomy, a posi- tion between the Psittact and the Accipitres. Although long regarded as a suborder of the Accipitrine or Raptorial birds, they have of late years been generally placed in a distinct ordinal oup. Amongst the more conspicuous characters are the reversible outer toe, the position of the eyes, which are always directed for- ward and are generally very’ large, and the short curved and hooked bill, the basal portion covered with a cere in which the nostrils are pierced, the cere being almost entirely concealed by the mass of bristly feathers on the lores and forehead. In most of the genera the head is large and the facial portion covered with feathers radiating from the eyes and forming the facial disk, the outer margin of which is surrounded by a ruff of close-textured feathers forming a conspicuous border. From the margin of the ruff above the eyes there arise in many Owls aigrettes of lengthened feathers, known also as horns or ear-tufts, the last term being incorrect. The plumage is soft, and the coloration. generally brown or rufous, the feathers in some genera being deli- cately vermiculated or stippled as in the Caprimulgi. The feet are strong and furnished with short claws; a hallux is always present. The oil-gland is nude. The spinal feather-tract is well defined on the neck. There is no aftershaft. There are always 11 primaries. The flewor longus hallucis leads to the hallux, and the flewor perforans digitorum to the remaining three digits, but the two tendons are united by a broad vinculum. There is no ambiens muscle; the femoro-caudal is present, but the accessory femoro-caudal and the semitendinosus and accessory semitendinosus are wanting. Basipterygoid processes are present and the palate is desmognathous, or, according to Gadow, schizo- gnathous with a desmognathous tendency. Both carotids are present and the ceca are large. Cervical vertebra 14. All Owls lay white and very round eggs, and the majority, like Parrots and most Picarian birds, take possession of a hole or hollow in the trunk or a branch of a tree for the purpose of nidi- fication, and use little or no lining. A few lay their eggs in holes amongst rocks, or on the ground, or in abandoned nests of other birds, and some are said to build their own nests of sticks. The young are hatched helpless and covered with down. The female, in some Owls, exceeds the male in size, but not to the degree that prevails amongst Accipitrine birds, whilst in many cases there is no difference in size between the sexes. Owls are nocturnal or crepuscular and carnivorous and live for ‘264 STRIGID.A. the most: part on mammals, on other birds, or on reptiles; a few subsist on fish, and many of the smaller kinds on insects. The indigestible portions of the food—bones, hair, scales, &c.—are disgorged as pellets. It is not an uncommon thing to find masses of small bones in a hollow tree, thus accumulated. The Owls comprise two families, both Indian. These families are well distinguished by osteological characters, but present no external differences of any importance. Skull long and narrow, breadth much less than % of length; furcula united to keel of ster- SAUL sa fa di savngaavn din idvcerorenectzera nye disiapaisv tae Strigide, p. 264. Skull broad, generally about 2 of length ; furcula not in contact with keel of sternum ..... ... Asionidz, p. 267. Family STRIGIDA. Hinder margin of sternum with a single shallow notch on each side ; furcula anchylosed to keel of sternum ; no manubrium sterni. Skull long and narrow. Second joint of third toe considerably longer than the basal joint. (Beddard, Ibis, 1888, p. 340.) Only two genera are known—Striz, which is almost cosmo- politan, and Heliodilus, peculiar to Madagascar. Genus STRIX, Linn., 1766 *. No aigrettes (ear-tufts). Facial disk well developed and large, and entirely surrounded by a ruff of stiff feathers. Bill straight at the base, compressed and weak; nostrils oval. Legs long, the upper part of the tarsus clad with feathers, which pass into bristles on the lower tarsus and upper surface of the toes; middle toe scarcely longer than the inner, middle claw expanded and pectinate on the inner side. Wings very long and pointed, exceeding the tail, 2nd quill longest, Ist subequal; tail moderate. Key to the Species. a, Upper surface speckled ; tarsus less than 3 inches S. flammea, p. 264. 6. Upper surface with small spots but not speckled ; tarsus over Sinches ..........seeee eens .. &. candida, p. 266. 1152. Strix flammea. The Barn-Owl or Screech-Owl, Strix flammea, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 183 (1766); Blyth, Cat. p. 41; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 291; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 164; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 167. * Newton has shown (Yarrell, ed. 4, i. p. 150, and Ibis, 1876, p. 94) that he type of the Linnzan genus Sériz is clearly the Tawny Owl (6. stridula v. aluco), and that Fleming’s generic name Aluco should be used for S. fammea and its allies ; but Sharpe (Ibis, 1875, p. 324) has given reasons, which, though not so stroug as Prof. Newton’s, serve as a sufficient excuse for adhering to the usual nomenclature. STRIX. 265 Strix javanica, Gm. Syst. Nat. i, p. 295 (1788); Blyth, J. A. S. B. xix. p. 613; Horsf. § M.i, Cat. p.81; Jerdon, B. I.i,p.117; Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm. p. 68; Butler, S. F. iii, p. 449; ix, p. 875; Hume & Dav. 8S. F. vi, p. 26; Ball, S. F. vii, p. 200; Croppa, 2d. P. 253; Hume, Cat. no. 60; Scully, S. F. viii, ie 229; Vidal, S. . ix, p. 34; Davidson, S. F. x, p. 290; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 60; id. Journ. Bom, N. H. Soc. iii, p. 220; Hume, S. F. xi, p. 18; Oates, in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 93. Strix indica, Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 250 ; 170, B. 160; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 342; ed. S. F. i, p. 163; iii, p. 87; Rainey, S. F. iii. p. 832; nec Gmel. Beis dercepstorffi, Hume, S. F. iii, p.890; iv, p. 283; zd. Cat. no. 60 is. The Indian Screech-Owl, Jerdon ; Kuraya, Karail, Biri churi, H. ; Bhutum pecha, B.; Ghubdd, Mahy. ; Chaao pitta, Tel.; Chaao kuravt, Tam. Fig. 72.—Head of S. flammea, }. Coloration. Facial disk white (occasionally, but rarely, tinged with ferruginous), orbital feathers and a broader spot in front of the eye dark ferruginous; ruff milky white, the ends of the outer feathers generally buff and the tips dark brown; back and upper parts pale grey, tinted or mixed with ochreous, the feathers yellowish buff except at the ends, which are finely vermiculated with black and white, each feather tipped with a small elongate black and white spot or ocellus; quills mottled -buff-and dark brown, with irregular dark cross-bands ; inner webs mostly white; tail buff, mottled, especially at the end, with dark brown and crossed by dark bands, the feathers white beneath ; lower parts white or buff, with scattered small dark spots on the breast, abdo- men, and wing-lining. Bill fleshy white, cere flesh-colour; iris black; bare portions of tarsi and feet fleshy brown, claws brown (Legge). Length about 14 inches ; tail 5; wing 11:5; tarsus 2°5-2:8 ; bill from gape 1-5. I think Sharpe right in uniting the various races of Barn- Owls under one specific heading. At the same time the Indian form, S. javanica, is distinguished from that of Western Europe by having much more robust legs and feet, and by being always spotted beneath. But specimens from intermediate localities tend to unite the two forms. S. dereepstorfit is founded on a very small tawny specimen from 266 STRIGIDA. the Andaman Islands with the wing only 9°8, the face suffused with ferruginous, and even the spots on the back dark tawny instead of white. No other skin of this race has been obtained, but all the points of difference are repeated in other insular races of S. flammea. Distribution. Almost all tropical and temperate regions. The Barn-Owl is found throughout the greater part of India and Burma, though it is rare in forest-regions, on the higher hills, and in desert tracts. It has not been observed in Tenasserim, and in Ceylon has been obtained only in the north of the island. Habits, §c. From its habit of haunting roofs of buildings, out- houses, wells, and ruins, the Barn-Owl, though thoroughly noc- turnal, is one of the most familiar species of the order. It lives almost entirely on rats and mice. Its cry, a peculiarly weird shriek or screech, chiefly uttered at the pairing-season, sometimes on the wing, has caused the Barn-Owl to be looked upon as a bird of evil omen in many countries. Several of the Indian names mean “ bad bird” or “ death-bird.” The eggs are more oval and less spherical than those of other Owls, white with a creamy tinge, and measure about 1°69 by 1-28. The number varies from 3 to 6; and they are generally deposited in holes in buildings or trees, or occasionally in the ground, and are frequently laid and hatched at intervals of several days. The breeding-season in the Indian Peninsula and Burma is from November to January, in Northern India from February to June. 1153. Strix candida. The Grass-Owl. Strix candida, Tickell, J. A. S, B. ii, p. 572 (1888) ; Jerdon, Ill. Ind. Orn, pl. 80; id. B. I. i, p. 118; Cidion duel J. A. S. B. xxxix, t. 2, p. 93; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii. p. 308; Blyth & Wald. Birds urm. p. 68; Fairbank, §. F. iv, p. 253; Hume §& Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 27; Ball § Hume, 8. F. vii, p. 200; Hume, Cat. no. 61; Reid, S. F. x, p.14; Davison, ibid. p. 341; Terry, ibid. p. 469; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 168; td. in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iti, p. 95; Hume, 8. F. xi, p. 18. . Strix Tpapimiont bri Jerdon, Madr. Jour, L. 8. x, p. 86 (1889). Glaux javanica, Blyth, Cat. p. 42 (1849); nec Strix javanica, Gel, Glaux candida, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xix, p. 513; Hume, N.& E. p. 60. Scelostrix candida, Kaup, Tr. Z. 8. apes 248 ; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, ote p. 251; 1870, p. 160; Hume, Rough 8, p. 845; A. Anderson, 8. F. iii, p. 888. Coloration. Disk either white or suffused with pale pinkish ferruginous, a blackish-brown spot in front of each eye; ruff dark brown above, white or buff at the sides of the head and below, some of the feathers often tipped with brown; upper plumage dark brown, each feather with a minute white spot; basal portion of feathers orange-buff,—this colour is conspicuous in places, es- pecially on the neck ; smallest wing-coverts orange-buff, with small brown spots; quills buff, tipped with brown, mottled above the tip and with some imperfect dark bars farther up, inner webs mostly ASIONIDE. 267 white ; tail-feathers white, the middle pair generally and the outer webs of the others often buff above, all, except sometimes the outermost, with brown cross-bars; lower parts from chin white or buff, with several scattered brown spots that are seldom or never entirely wanting. The buff lower parts and the pink disk may be signs of youth (they are not so in S. flammea); they are certainly not sexual. Bill and cere pinky: white; irides deep brown; legs and feet blackish brown; claws horny, tinged bluish (Davison). Length about 14; tail 5; wing 13; tarsus 3-2-3-8; bill from gape 1°6. Distribution. The grassy plains near the base of the Himalayas as far west as Dehra Dan, also parts of Bengal, the Eastern Cen- tral Provinces (Bédlaghdt, Raipur), and Southern India (Nellore, Carnatic, Nilgiris), but not Ceylon. Fairbank thought he saw this Owl in the Bombay Deccan, but I agree with Butler that pro- bably some other species may have been taken for it. To the east- ward it has been found in Assam, the Khasi hills, Manipur, and at Toungngoo in Burma, and as far as Formosa in one direction, and Queensland in another, but it appears to be rare as a rule and very locally distributed. Habits, Jc. This species has generally been found in long grass, but Davison says that on the Nilgiris he has flushed it from grass scarcely a foot high. Very little is known of its habits. The nest, a very slight one, if any, is made on the ground; the eggs, 4 or 5 in number, are white, and measure about 1°63 by 1:27. They have been taken from October to December. Family ASIONIDZA. Hinder margin of sternum with two deep incisions on each side ; furcula free, not attached to the keel of the sternum, imper- fect in some genera; a small unforked manubrium (spina externa) is present. Skull broad. Basal and second joints of third (middle) toe subequal in length. The Asionide may be divided into 3 subfamilies, thus distin- guished :— a. Facial disk and ruff well-marked. a’, Ear-orifice smaller than eye; no oper- culum ; middle claw pectinate...... Photodiline, p. 268. b'. Ear-orifice larger than eye and fur- nished with an operculum; middle claw simple .........-.....e eens Asionine, p. 270. b. Facial disk and ruff ill-marked or obsolete ; ear-orifice smaller than eye; middle claw simple .......-.. eee eeeee ... Bubonine, p. 280. 268 ASIONID.A, Subfamily PHOTODILIN A. The characters are given under the only genus. Genus PHOTODILUS, Geoffr., 1830. Size small. Disk very distinct, but ruff not complete above the eyes, Bill weak, compressed. ar-orifice of mederate size, smaller than the eye; no operculum. "Wings rounded, 4th and 5th quills longest; tail short. Tarsus feathered throughout ; inner toe longer than middle toe; middle claw pectinate on the inside as in Stria. Owing to its well-developed disk and pectinate middle claw, this genus was long placed with Strix. Schlegel first, then Blyth, and subsequently, from an examination of the skeleton, Milne- Edwards, showed that the present form should be assigned to the Asionide, and this has been confirmed by Beddard’s additional observations on the anatomy (Ibis, 1890, p. 293). He, however, shows that Photodilus is, in several respects, intermediate in structure between the Strigide and the typical Asionide *. There are two species of Photodilus, both found within our area. Key to the Species. a. Feathers of upper parts chestnut, spotted, but not speckled, with black; inner webs of primaries chestnut barred with black ...... P. badius, p. 268. bd. Feathers of upper parts speckled or mottled with black; inner webs of primaries brown.. P. assimilis, p. 269. 1154, Photodilus badius. The Bay Owl. Strix badia, Horsf. Res. Java, pl. 37 (1824). Phodilus badins, Is. Geog. St.-Hil. Ann. Sci. xxi, p. 201 (1880) ; Blyth, Cat. Pp. 41; Horsf. § M. Cat. i, p. 80; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 119; Blyth, Idis, 1866, p. 251; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 346 ; Jerdon, Ibis, 1871, p. 344; Hume, S.F. iii, p. 37; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 809; Blyth § Wald. Birds Burm, p. 67; Hume, Cat, no. 62; Hume § Inglis, S. F. ix, p. 245; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 166; Hume, &. F.xi, p. 18; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) vii, pp. 376, 487. Phodiins nipalensis, Gray, apud Hume, S. F.i, p. 429; iii, p. 37; nec Gray. The Bay Screech-Owl, Jerdon. Coloration. Broad frontal tract and the facial disk vinous pink ; =I* Beddard (7. c. p. 294) and Sharpe (P. Z. 8. 1879, p. 175) were under the impression that the middle claw in Photodilus was not pectinate. The absence of pectination in the single specimen examined by each was probably due to wear ; the serration or pectination in good specimens, of which there are now between 30 and 40 in the British Museum, is precisely. similar to that of Strix. PHOTODILUS. 269 feathers round eye chestnut; ruff white, the feathers tipped chestnut and black ; crown and nape chestnut with, in the middle, a few (usually 3 to 5) buff feathers, each with a small black spot, remainder usually spotless, but sometimes with a small black spot on each feather; sides of neck ochreous buff with black spots ; upper plumage slightly paler chestnut than the crown, and with a few black spots, the feathers yellowish buff except at the ends, and the buff showing especially on the neck, the scapulars, and some of the wing-coverts ; the black spots on the scapulars and some of the larger wing-coverts double, and with a white spot between, or bordered with white; quills, winglet, and tail-feathers chestnut, with imperfect black bars, the first two or three quills, the outermost feather of each series of primary-coverts, and the terminal feather of the winglet with large white spots on the outer webs ; lower parts pale vinous pink, more or less tinged with buff from the base of the feathers showing ; some small brown spots, sometimes with white borders, on the breast and abdomen ; wing- lining whitish, with a chestnut patch at base of the primaries. Bill yellowish ; iris black; toes brown, claws yellowish. Length 11:5; tail 3:8; wing 8°75; tarsus 2; bill from gape 1:5. Distribution. The Eastern Himalayas as far west as Nepal at low elevations (perhaps farther west, for Mr. R. Thompson told Mr. Hume he had shot this species in Dehra Dan), also Assam, Cachar, Manipur, Burma (where it is rare), and the Malay countries, including Java and Borneo. Habits, gc. A very nocturnal bird, living in forest, and conse- quently very rarely seen. Nothing is known of the nidification. 1155. Photodilus assimilis. The Ceylon Bay Owl. Phodilus badius, Hume, S. F.i, p. 429; Whyte, S. F. v, p. 201; nec Strix badia, Horsf. Phodilus assimilis, Hume, S. F. v, p. 188; id. Cat. no. 62 bis; Whyte, S. F. v, p. 858; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 161, pl. v. This is very similar to the last, but darker above, the chestnut colour not being uniform on the crown, but marked with black shaft-lines, enclosing pale rufous spots, and on the upper parts generally the chestnut is much mottled with black, the buff on the back and scapulars is more marked, and there is a large buff patch formed by the median wing-coverts; the black bars on the quills and tail-feathers are more numerous and extend quite across the feathers, and are nearly or quite as broad as the chestnut bars intervening ; the inner webs of the primaries are brown instead of chestnut; the patch on the wing-lining at the base of the primaries is dark brown, and the spots on the lower surface are double, one behind the other on the shaft of each feather. Bill greenish white; iris dark brown; feet pale whitish green, claws pale ash (Whyte) ; cere probably olivaceous (Legge). Dimensions about the same as those of P. badius. 270 ABIONID.A, Distribution. Only found as yet in the Ceylon hills, near Kandy, where this bird appears rare, as very few specimens have hitherto been obtained. Habits, §c. Like P. badius this is a thoroughly nocturnal species, living in dense forest. It appears to breed about the end of the year; makes a nest of dry twigs, moss, and feathers in a hollow tree, and Jays, in the only instance yet recorded, 3 eggs. Subfamily ASIONIN A. Ear-orifice large, exceeding the eye in size, lunate or ovoid in shape, and furnished with an operculum. Facial disk well-marked and nearly as high above the eyes as below them; ruff distinct. The Owls of this subfamily are of moderate or large size, with feathered tarsi. ‘Two genera are Indian. Key to the Genera, a. Aigrettes present : 2nd quill longest; iris yellow. Asto, p. 270. b. No aigrettes: 3rd, 4th, or 5th quill longest ; iris Gark ac esis oc swale a dee ei auled ss eaeaice SyRnIuM, p. 273. Genus ASIO, Brisson, 1760. Aigrettes or ear-tufts present, but varying in size; ear-orifice very large, furnished with an operculum. Bill short and strong, the part covered by the cere is longer than that beyond the cere measured in a straight line from base to front. Tarsus and upper surface of toes thickly covered with feathers. Ruff complete or nearly so; facial disk well-marked, and extending nearly as far above the eye as beneath it. Wings long and pointed, 2nd quill longest, 3rd subequal; tail moderate, rounded. Iris yellow. Key to the Species. a. Transverse dark markings as well as longitu- dinal stripes on abdomen ............ -» A. otus, p. 270, b. Only longitudinal shaft-stripes on abdomen . A. aceiprtrinus, p. 271. 1156. Asio otus. Zhe Long-eared Oul. Strix otus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 182 (1766). Otus vulgaris, Fleming, Brit. dn. p. 56 (1828); Horsf. § M. Cat. p. 79; Jerdon, B. 1.1, p. 125; Stoliceka, J. A. S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, . 17; xli, p. 281; Hume, Rough Notes, B 861 ; Jerdon, Ibis, 871, p. 845; Doig § Butler, 8. F. vii, p. 608. Asio otus, Lesson, Man. d’ Orn. i, B 116; Blyth, Cat. p. 35; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 227; Hume, Cat. no. 67; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 45; Scully, ibid, p. 424; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 68; St. John, Ibis, 1889, p. 154. ASIO. 271 Coloration. Lores and anterior portion of disk whitish, bristly ends of feathers black; round eye and streak from front of eye to gape blackish brown; posterior portion of disk tawny, tinged with brown; ruff dark brown inside, speckled brown, white, and buff outside ; aigrettes blackish brown, with the basal outer border buff, the inner border white; upper parts dark brown, mottled with white on the crown, back, rump, scapulars, wing-coverts, and tertiaries, the buff bases of the feathers showing here and there throughout; the neck is buff, broadly streaked with dark brown, the dark streaks slightly mottled at their edges ; quills tawny buff, the terminal half greyish, mottled with brown, and barred with mottled dark brown; tail-feathers buff, mottled with dark brown near the ends and with dark bars throughout; lower parts buffy white, with broad brown shaft-stripes, and with imperfect, narrow, wavy and broken cross-bars on the abdomen only, some buff from the bases of the feathers showing; tibial and tarsal feathers and under tail-coverts unstriped buff; wing-lining buffy white, with a brown patch at the base of the primaries. Bill blackish brown ; cere fleshy ; irides bright yellow to orange ; claws horny black, ‘paler at base (Hume). Length 14:5; tail 6-5 ; wing 11:5; tarsus 1-6; bill from gape 1. Distribution. The Palearctic region, visiting N. Africa, the Himalayas, and North-western India in winter. This Owl probably breeds in the higher Himalayan forests, and has been obtained from Kashmir to Sikhim. It is not rare in winter in the Punjab, and has been collected in Sind by Butler and Doig, in Cutch by Stoliczka. Habits, ge. The Long-eared Owl is migratory in Northern India, ‘but not throughout its range; it is found in woods and feeds on mice, insects, and small birds. It breeds usually in the deserted nest of another bird, often a Buzzard’s or Crow’s, and lays about 4 white eggs in March or April. 1157. Asio accipitrinus. The Short-eared Owl. Strix accipitrina, Pall. Reis. Russ. Reichs, i, p. 455 (1771). Strix brachyotos, Forster, Phil. Trans. \xii, p. 384 (1772). Asio brachyotus, Blyth, Cat. p. 85; Scully, Ibis, 1881, p, 425. Otus brachyotus, Horsf. § M. Cat.i, p.79; Jerdon, B. Li. p. 196; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 364; A. Anderson, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 81; Butler, 8. £. iii, p. 449; v, p. 226; Hume & Bourd. 8. F. iv, . 872. golius brachyotus, Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 66. Asio accipitrinus, Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 284; Wardl. Ramsay, Ibis, 1877, p. 454; Hume § Dav. 8. Ff. vi, p. 80; Davidson § Wend. S. F. vii, p. 75; Hume, ibid. p. 162; Ban ibid. p. 180; ix, p. 376; Ball, S. F. vii, p.-200; Cripps, ibid. p. 253; Hume, Cat. no. 68; Davison, S. F. x, p. 343; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 45; Oates, B. B. ii, p.163; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 64; Hume, S. F. xi, p. 20. Coloration. Facial disk white, more or less tinged with tawny 272 ASIONIDZ. buff, especially behind the eye; orbital feathers and tips of loral shafts black; ruff rich buff, streaked and speckled with dark brown; upper plumage throughout buff, broadly streaked with dark brown, the colours somewhat intermixed and mottled on the scapulars, tertiaries, and wing-coverts; some large buff or white spots on the scapulars, greater and median coverts; primaries buff, with the tips and two or three irregular cross-bands near the end dark brown, the brown bands occurring higher on the outer than on the inner webs; secondaries banded buff and brown, basal portion of inner webs of all quills white; tail banded tawny buff and dark brown ; the buff in the middle feathers mixed with Fig. 73.—Head ot A, accipitrinus, 4. brown ; lower parts buff, longitudinally streaked with brown shaft- stripes, broadest on the breast, growing narrow behind and dis- appearing on the legs, lower abdomen, under tail-coverts, and under wing-coverts; a brown patch on the latter at the base of the primaries. In some skins from North-western Indian and the desert, the parts usually buff are nearly white, especially the lower surface. Bill and claws blackish ; irides deep yellow. Length 15; tail5-75; wing 12; tarsus 1:6; bill from gape 1-2. Distribution. Almost world-wide except in high latitudes. A migratory bird, that may be found during the cold season in all parts of the empire in suitable localities; common in the grass- plains of Northern India, less common to the southward and, so far as is known, in Burma, and not hitherto recorded from Ceylon or Tenasserim. Habits, §c. This Owl is usually in India found in long grass, and is often seen when grass-plains are beaten for game. Occa- sionally it haunts low bush or cultivation. It lives mainly on small mammals, which it hunts, chiefly by night, but sometimes by day. It flies well and strongly, and was formerly a favourite uarry for ‘trained Falcons. It does not breed in India, but farther north lays about 4 eggs on the ground. SYRNIUM. 273: Genus SYRNIUM, Savigny, 1810. No aigrettes (ear-tufts); ear furnished with an operculum. Bill stout. Tarsus thickly feathered throughout; toes feathered above in all Indian species to base of last phalanx; claws strong. Ruff narrow, incomplete above; facial disk well developed, extending almost as far above the eyes as below. Wings rounded, 3rd, 4th, or 5th quill longest ; tail of moderate length, rounded. Irides. always dark. The Owls of this genus are of moderate size, and are generally found in trees during the day; all are thoroughly nocturnal. In Sharpe’s ‘ Catalogue’ 27 species were enumerated, scattered over the greater part of the world, and two or three have since been described ; six are Indian. Key to the Species. a. Lower surface with longitudinal as well as transverse markings. a’, All tail-feathers with pale cross-bands : WUD LS see os as Soy 6 alan S44 uaa @ Fates S. nivicola, p. 278. b'. Middle tail-feathers not banded: wing UBD: aos a snacacdiareccuhis eG Raa DRI 0G lal BelRun 8. biddulphi, p. 274 6. Lower surface with transverse bars alone. ce’. Bars on abdomen } inch or more apart. WSs ee Deer abana calesiecntiglnswiastactencen oookae's S. ocellatum, p. 277 bo”. Upper parts with white spots, but not MOET ERE. o csos scat shache, ccduae eord ae aide §. seloputo, p. 278. d'. Bars on abdomen much less than } inch C4 ree Corea ee ee . 8. tndrani, p. 275. c. Lower surface with longitudinal shaft-stripes BONG se i's seas 24 Ga em ewe SeEe eS ceseeee S&S, butleri, p. 279. 1158. Syrnium nivicola. The Himalayan Wood-Oul. japon aa nivicola, Hodgs. in Gray's Zool. Mise. p. 82 (descr. nulla). Syrnium nivicolum, Hodgs., Blyth, J. A. 8S. B. xiv, pp. 185, 550° (1845); xv, p. 9; xvi, p. 464; zd. Cat. p.41; Horsf. §& M. Cat. i, p. 84; Jerdon, B. Ii, p. 124; Stohezka, J. A. 8S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 16; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 359; Jerdon, Ibis, 1871, p. 345; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 250; Hume, Cat. no. 66; id. S. F. ix, p. 87; C. H. T. Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 407. Kashi-op tak-pum, Lepcha ; Uko, Bhot. Coloration. Loral feathers white or fulvous, with black bristly ends; facial disk greyish or fulvous, white-shafted, indistinctly barred with brown; a white or fulvous supercilium ; ruff indis- tinct, dark brown, more or less banded and spotted with white or fulvous ; middle of crown dark brown, uniform in old birds ; upper parts dark brown, vermiculated and speckled with whitish or VOL. III. T 274 ASIONID, fulvous, with larger whitish or buff markings on the hind-neck, and large white or buff spots on the outer webs of the scapulars and of the median primary wing-coverts; quills brown, with mottled tips and broad whitish bars, more or less mottled, inter- rupted at the shafts, and closer together on the secondaries ; tail- feathers brown, mottled at the tips and sometimes on the outer edges, and all with pale mottled or clouded cross-bands ; lower parts white or yellowish fulvous, pure in the middle of the throat, elsewhere broken up by dark brown shaft-stripes and cross-bands, closer together on the chin and breast ; feathers on legs and toes with brown markings forming irregular bars. Young birds are somewhat indistinctly barred with brown and fulvous almost throughout. Bill pale fleshy yellow; cere brown, ill-marked; irides dark brown ; ends of toes dull plumbeous, claws brown (Hume). Length about 17; tail 7; wing 12; tarsus 2; bill from gape 1:35. Distribution. Throughout the Himalayas from Murree to Sikhim, and probably farther east at considerable elevations, 6000—14,000 feet. This Owl is also found in China. Birds from Sikhim and Nepal are always fulvous and rufescent, those from the N.W. Himalayas greyish, the difference far exceeding that between S. newarense and S. indrani, and very like that between Capri- mulgus europocus and C. unwini. Habits, gc. Very little known. The cry, according to Davison, is a double hoot. The nest and eggs have not been observed, but probably resemble those of the allied European species 8. aluco, the Tawny Owl, which lays 3 or 4 eggs in the hollow of a tree, or sometimes amongst rocks or in an old rook’s nest. Another allied form is S, david: from Moupin (Sharpe, Ibis, 1875, p. 256). 1159. Syrnium biddulphi. Scully’s Wood-Oul. Symium biddulphi, Scully, Ibis, 1881, p. 428, pl. xiv; id. 8. Fx, p. 95. Similar to the last, but rather larger, still greyer than the north-western variety of S. nivicola, and intermediate in markings between that species and S. aluco, there being a tendency to dark median bars on the hind-neck, back, and scapulars, though less than in the European form. The vermiculation or mottling of the upper parts is finer than in. S. nivicola, and the present species may be immediately distinguished by having the middle tail-feathers and the outer webs of the next pair mottled through- out and almost or entirely destitute of cross-bands. Bill green, yellow at tip ; cere olive; iris dark brown; toe-scales pale green ; claws black, slaty at base (Scully). Length about 18-5; tail 8:5; wing 13°5; tarsus 2:5; bill from gape 1°45, Distribution. Two specimens were obtained by Scully at Gilgit SYRNIUM, 275 in forest. I find two more in the Hume collection—one from Peshéwar, the other from Murdan, close to Peshiwar. It was probably this bird that was seen in Afghanistan by Wardlaw Ramsay (Ibis, 1880, p. 48) and taken for S. nivicola. Nothing is known of the habits. 1160.-Syrnium indrani. The Brown Wood-Owl. Strix indranee, Sykes, P. Z. S. 1832, p. 82. Ulula newarenis, Hodgson, As. Res. xix, p. 168 (1886). Bulaca newarensis, Hodgson, J. A. 8. B. vi, p. 872; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 252; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 348; id. N.G HE. p. 60; Blanford, S. F. v, p. 483. Bulaca monticola, Jerdon, Mad. Jour. L, S. xiii, p. 167 (1844). Syrnium newarense, Gray, Gen. B. i, p. 89, pl. 14; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 122; Stoliczka, J. A. S, B. xxxvii, pt.'2, p. 16; Jerdon, This, 1871, p. 844; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 281; Hume, Cat. no. 64; Scully, 8S. F. viii, p. 229; Sharpe, P. Z. 8. 1887, pp. 484, 471 ; Hume, S. F. xi, p. 19; Oates in Hume’s N. §& E. 2nd ed. iii, . 116. Bhiaa indranee, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xvi, p. 468; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 347. Syrnium indrani, Blyth, Cat. i, p.40; Horsf. § M. Cat. i, p.83; Jerdon, B.I. i, p. 121; Hume, S. F.i, P. 429; Legge, 8. F. ii, p. 342; Butler, 8. F. iii, a 439; ix, p. 875; Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 67; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 282; Fairbank, 8. F. iv, p. 253; Hume & Dav, 8. F. vi, p. 27; Hume, Cat. no. 63; Vidal, S. F. ix, p. 35; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 155, pl. v; Davison, S. F. x, p. 342; Taylor, ibid. p. 455 ; Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 407; Sharpe, P. Z. 8. 1887, Pp. 477 ; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 62. Symium ochrogenys, Hume, S, Fi, p. 481 (1878). Syrnium hodgsoni, Scully, S. F. viii, p. 231 (1879). . The Brown Wood-Owl, The Nepal Brown Wood-Ouwl, Jerdon; Bulaka, Nepal; Mik-dab-bru, Lepcha; Ulama, Cing. Coloration. Bristly loral feathers mixed black and white; feathers around orbits black or blackish brown, passing into whitish, whity brown, brownish buff, or even orange-buff, more or less barred with dusky, on the facial disk, a white or whitish super- ciliary band continuous across the forehead; ruff proper and chin chocolate-brown, upper parts the same; crown and nape often much darker than the hack. Scapulars and wing-coverts more or less barred paler, some of the outer scapulars white with narrow brown bars; rump and upper tail-coverts also barred with white or whitish in ‘some birds, and the back barred paler in young individuals ; quills with pale cross-bars, not always corresponding on the two webs, much closer together on the secondaries; tail- feathers brown, with narrow pale brown or white bars and white tips; throat pure white; remainder of lower parts, except chin, white or fulvous, closely barred with dark brown, most: closely on the legs and toes; the breast in some old birds (chiefly Hima- layan) nearly or quite uniformly brown. Young birds have broad whitish edges to the feathers, especially T 2 276 ASIONIDE, on the crown and nape; all the upper parts are barred; the lower parts are white at first, and gradually assume the barring. BiH greenish horny, bluish near base; cere plumbeous ; irides deep brown (yellow irides have twice been recorded); ends of toes pale leaden ; claws dusky plumbeous, paler at their bases. Toes feathered above, except close to the claws. Length of Himalayan birds about 21 inches, tail 8-9-5, wing 13°3 to 16:6, tarsus 2°3 to 2°75, bill from gape 1°45-1°6; length of South-Indian and Ceylon birds about 18°5, tail 6°5-8, wing 11°75-13°'5. Males average less than females. i. I do not think the Peninsular and Ceylon form, S. indrani, can be separated from the Himalayan S. newarense, except as a race or subspecies. The Southern race is considerably smaller, as usual, and the facial disk is as a rule distinctly ochreous, whilst in the Himalayan bird it is whitish ; but the difference is not absolutely constant, as Hume has shown, and ochreous or rufous coloration is a common form of variation in Owls. Very often, too, the superciliary band is less pure white, and the crown and nape are darker and paler in the Southern than in the Northern variety. Birds from the Assam hills and Burma resemble those from Southern India in colour. The Malaccan S. maingayi (Hume, 8. F. vi, p. 27) is rather more distinct, but only entitled, I think, to subspecific separation. Distribution. Throughout the Himalayas from near the base to a considerable elevation (18,000 feet in Sikhim), also on the Western Ghats from Mahableshwar southward and throughout Ceylon. Blyth received a specimen from Goomsur, and there is one from the Shevroy hills in the Madras Museum. To the eastward this bird has been found in the hills south of Assam, in Manipur, and, very rarely, in Burma, a specimen from the Thoung- gyen valley, east of Moulmein, having recently been sent to me by Mr. Hauxwell, and I find another from the same neighbourhood, collected by Mr. Limborg, in the Tweeddale collection. Swinhoe obtained this species in Formosa. Habits, gc. A forest bird, keeping much to the higher hill- ranges, except in Ceylon. The ordinary call is, according to Davison, a quadruple hoot; according to Legge a sound like to-whooo: the diabolical shrieks attributed to this species by Layard and others are probably produced by another Owl. Legge has given an excellent account of the bird in captivity. His captives devoured small birds, lizards, and fish with equal zest. The Owl grasped. its food, just as a parrot does, in one foot, with the inner toe turned backwards, and after nibbling at various parts, as if to taste, jerked the whole headforemost into its mouth and swallowed it. Hume found a nest of sticks belonging to this species on June 6th, in a precipitous valley near Simla, placed on a rocky shelf, and containing three very young birds; and Mandelli obtained a white subspherical egg, measuring 2:07 by 1:76, from a female on March 6th. No more is known of the breeding. SYRNIUM. 277 1161. Syrnium ocellatum. The Mottled Wood-Owl. Syrnium ocellatum, Less. Rev. Zool. 1839, p. 289; Blanford, J. A.S. B. xxxviii, pt. 2, p. 167; Sharpe, Cat. B. Mi, p. 263; Butler, 8. F. v, p. 208 ; vii, p. 179; ix, p.3876; Davidson & Wend. 8. F. vii, p. 75; Ball, ib. p. 200; Hume, Cat. no. 65; Vidal, S. F. ix, p. 85; Reid, 8S. F. x, p. 14; Hume, ibid. p. 343; Barnes, Birds Bom. p, 62; id. Journ. Bom. N. H. Soc. iii, p. 220; Littledale, Jour. Bom. N. H. Soc. i, p. 195; Oates in Hume's N. & £E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 115. Bulaca sinensis, apud Jerdon, Mad. Jour. L. 8. x, p. 88; nec Lath. Syrnium sinense, apud Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xi, p. 162; 1d. Cat. p. 40; Horsf. § M. Cat. i, p. 82; Jerdon, B. 1.1, p. 128; iii, p. 870; McMaster, J. A. S. B. xl, pt. 2, p. 207. Bulaca ocellata, Blyth, Ibis, 1865, p. 29; 1866, p. 2538; King, J. A, S. B. xxxvii, pt. 2, p. 213; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 358 ; id. N.& E. p. 61; A. Anderson, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 80; Adam, &. F. i, p. 869; Fairbank, 8. F. iv, p. 253. Fig. 74.—Head of S. ocellatum, 4. Coloration. Loral feathers mixed black and white, a vertical ferruginous stripe behind the eye, remainder of facial disk greyish white, barred with dusky and white-shafted ; forehead and super- cilia white with black bars; ruff chocolate-brown, narrow and inconspicuous; feathers of upper parts ferruginous tawny except at the ends, those of the crown, nape, and sides of neck tipped black, spotted or barred with white, those of the rest of the upper surface finely mottled black and white, with broader wavy black pars and shaft-stripes; terminal portion of quills dark brown, with numerous broad pale clouded and mottled cross-bands and mottled tips, basal portion buff, sometimes with dark cross-bars ; upper surface of outer web much mottled; middle tail-feathers mottled and with irregular cross-bands, buff towards the base, becoming dark near the end ; outer tail-feathers the same near the tip and on the outer web, but buff with dark bands inside towards the base; point of chin greyish white, the feathers very bristly, followed by dark brown buff feathers with white edges and chestnut at the base; middle of throat white; lower parts from 278 ASIONID, throat white, tinged with ochreous buff, and with narrow blackish cross-bars, which are much closer together on the legs and toes. Bill black; eyelids orange; irides dark brown; claws dusky ; soles of the feet yellowish (Jerdon). Length about 18-5; tail 8; wing 14; tarsus 2:25; bill from gape 1°6. Distribution, Throughout the Peninsula of India as far south as the Carnatic and the base of the Nilgiris, at all events, but not in Ceylon. To the northward the range extends in, places to the Sutlej, and perhaps to the Indus on the west, to the base of the 2 es on the north, and to Lower Bengal on the east, but not eyond. Habits, gc. The Mottled Wood-Owl is chiefly found in well- wooded districts, but not in forests, and is especially partial to mango-topes and large trees about villages. It lives chiefly on small mammals, such as rats, mice, and squirrels, and its call is a loud harsh hoot. It breeds in the N.W. Provinces and Punjab in February and March, but in the Central Provinces from November till January, and lays usually 2 eggs, occasionally 3, in a cavity or hollow of some large tree, very often a mango, banyan, or peepul, there being little or no lining. According to Anderson it fre- quently builds a nest, but this is not confirmed by other observers. The eggs are very round ovals, white or slightly creamy, measuring about 1:99 by 1°67. 1162. Syrnium seloputo. Zhe Malayan Wood-Oul. P Strix sinensis, Lath. Gen. Syn., Supp. ii, p. 368 ; id. Ind. Orn. Suppl. ‘p. xvi (1801). Strix seloputo, Horsf. Tr. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 140 (1821). Strix pagodarum, Temm. Pl. Col. pl. 230 (1828). Syrnium seloputo, Horsf. §& M. Cat.i, p.84; Hume, S. F. ii, p. 150; iii, p. 37; 2d. Cat. no. 65 bis; Blyth & Wald. Birds Burm. p. 67; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 28. Bulaca sinensis, Blyth, Ibis, 1865, p. 29; 1866, p. 253; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 357. : Syrnium sinense, Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 261; Oates, B. B. ii, p- 164; id, in Hume’s N. § E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 114. Coloration. Facial disk, including lores and forehead, dull ochreous buff; ruff narrow, dark brown; upper parts chocolate-brown, darker on the head and nape.and spotted throughout with white spots and imperfect bars of irregular size and shape, more or less surrounded by black rims ; outer scapulars white, with brown cross- bars; quills and tail-feathers brown, with pale cross-bands and tips, the cross-bands growing broader and becoming buff on the inner webs of the quills towards the base; chin buff, middle of throat white; lower surface from throat, with sides of neck and under wing-coverts, white, with dark brown cross-bars, narrow on the abdomen and close together on the legs, Young with the upper plumage mostly banded white and dark brown. SYRNIUM, 279 Bill and cere greenish black; irides dark brown; claws and visible portion of tges horny (Davison). Length about 18°5; tail 7-5; wing 13°5; tarsus 2:25; bill from gape 1°5. Distribution, Pegu, Tenasserim, Siam, Cochin China, the Malay Peninsula, Java, and probably Sumatra and Borneo. The reported. occurrence of this Owl in Assam and the Nicobar Islands is probably due to error. Habits, §c. This is more of a forest bird than S. ocellatum, but keeps similarly to large trees, and the young birds were found on bare wood in the fork of a peepul tree by Oates in March and April. The hoot is said by Davison to be very peculiar, com- mencing with a sort of rolling hoo-hoo-hoo and ending with a pro- longed and deep-drawn hoo. A bird killed by this naturalist had fed upon beetles. This bird does not agree well with Latham’s description of Strix sinensis, and as it is not known to occur in China the name is objectionable. 1163, Syrnium butleri. Humes Wood-Owl, Asio butleri, Hume, 8S. F. vii, p. 316; id. Cat. no. 67 bis. Syzmium butleri, Tristram, S. F. viii, p. 417. Coloration. Facial disk white, tinged with tawny behind, some of the loral feathers black-tipped ; ruff greyish brown, the feathers tipped with cream-colour or buff; upper plumage brown, banded irregularly, clouded, arid intermixed with dull brownish buff, a few large white spots on the secondary, median, and greater coverts ; quills and tail-feathers banded brown and brownish buff above, brown and whity brown beneath, tips of the quills mottled greyish brown ; tips of tail-feathers white, the buff bars on the median tail-feathers replaced by irregularly-shaped spots; lower parts creamy white, the feathers edged with rufous brown, and with narrow brown shaft-stripes on the breast and upper abdomen ; wing-lining white, a brown patch at the base of the primaries. Length 14, or rather less; tail 5-75; wing 10; tarsus 2; bill from gape 1-2. The tarsi, feet, and claws are very small. In the wing the 3rd quill is longest and the 4th very little shorter. Distribution. Only two specimens are known—one, the type in the Hume collection, was obtained, there is every reason to believe, at Omé4ra on the Mekran coast ; the other was procured by Canon Tristram from Mt. Sinai. This Owl is somewhat intermediate between Syrnium and Asio, but appears more allied to the former, as it has a rounded wing and no aigrettes. 280 ASIONIDE. Subfamily BUBONIN A. ' Ear-orifice not exceeding the eye in size; no operculum. Facial disk generally ill-marked, and never extending as far above the eye as below; ruff nearly or quite obsolete. This subfamily is much larger than the last two, and contains several Indian forms, varying in size from the great Eagle-Owls to species scarcely larger than a Skylark. Key to the Genera. a. Aigrettes well developed. a’, Size large; wing exceeding 13. a", Tarsi partly or wholly naked .......... Kerupa, p. 280. 6”. Tarsi feathered throughont. a, 1st quill longer than 7th; irides yellow. Buso, p. 283. &°, Ist quill shorterthan 10th; irides brown. Huxua, p. 287. '. Size small; wing under 8...... scandens Fa eeaon Scoes, p. 290. 4. Aigrettes small or wanting. ce’. Cere not inflated, colour mainly or wholly WHITES: sacs babys saeacnes seseccresees NyYCTEA, p, 289, ad’. Cere inflated; colour brown or rufous. ce. Plumage more or less spotted with white ADO VO: 6: siovere sca. bne, baie eneg sey cue oe tales ATHENE, p. 300. d", Plumage barred above (in Indian forms). Guaucriprum, p. 304. e’. Plumage uniformly brown above (in Indian forms) .......... Soares seaieats Nrnox, p. 309. Genus KETUPA, Lesson, 1831. The Fish-Owls comprise three species, all occurring within Indian limits. They are large and powerful birds, with the tarsus partly or wholly naked and granular, much like that of the Osprey, and the soles of the feet covered with prickly scales. The claws are large, well curved, each with a sharp cutting-edge beneath, and the middle claw with a sharp keel on the inside also. Aigrettes are present, long and pointed. The bill is large and strong. The facial disk is ill-marked, especially above. The wings are rounded, and do not reach the end of the tail, 4th quill generally the longest, 3rd and 5th subequal ; tail moderate. Key to the Species. a, Tarsus naked behind and usually more than halfway up in front. a’. Lower surface with shaft-stripes and finely barred across throughout ............05 K. zeylonensis, p, 281, b'. Lower surface with shaft-stripes, but without Cross-barring ... 6. eee e eee eee eee XK. javanensis, p. 283, than halfway down in front .............. K. flavipes, p. 282. KETUPA, 281 1164, Ketupa zeylonensis. The Brown Fish-Owl. Strix zeylonensis, Gmel. Syst. Nat. i, p. 287 (1788). Strix leschenaultii, Temm. Pi. Col. pl. 20 (1824). Strix dumeticola, Tickell, J. A. S. B. ii, p. 571 (1888). Strix hardwickii, Gray in Hardw. Ill. Ind. Zool. ii, pl. 31 (1838-4). Cultrunguis nigripes, Hodgson, J. A. 8. B. v, p. 864 (1836). Ketupa ceylonensis, Gray, Gen. B. i, p. 88; Blyth, Cat. p. 37; Horsf. § M. Cat.i, p.77; Jerdon, B. Ii, p. 183; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 254; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 879; Hume, S. F. i, p. 481; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 4; Blyth & Wald. Birds Burm. p. 96; Armstrong, S. F. iv, p. 800; Blanford, 8. F. v, p. 245; Fairbank, wid. p. 892; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, pp. 33, 497; Ball, S. F. vii, p. 201; Cripps, ibid. p. 255; Hume, Cat. no. 72; Legge, Birds Ceyl. P. 127; Vidal, S. F. ix, p.36; Butler, ibid. p.376; Reid, 8. F. x, p. 15; Davison, ibid. p. 343; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 148; ¢d. in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 96; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 68; ma S. F. xi, p. 21; Littledale, Journ. Bom. N. H. Soe. i, p. 195. Amrai ka ghughu, Ulu, H.; Bhutum, Beng.; Hidi, Assamese; Baka- muna, Cing.; Tee-dote, Burm. Fig. 75.—Left foot of K. zeylonensis, 3. Coloration. Lores white or fulvous, with black shafts; cheeks and ear-coverts the same, but more fulvous; upper plumage throughout rufescent brown to dull rufous, with broad black shaft- stripes ; lower back and rump with narrow shaft-lines; the scapu- lars and tertiaries much mottled, and the neck-feathers very often marked with close and subobsolete cross-bars; outer webs of outer gcapulars white, and some white or buff spots on the larger and median wing-coverts ; quills and tail-feathers dark brown, with 282 ASIONIDE. paler mottled whity-brown bands and tips; throat white; remainder of lower parts whitish, narrowly and closely transversely barred with brownish rufous, each feather, including those of the throat, with a fusiform dark brown shaft-line ; larger under wing-coverts white, with dark brown ends. Bill dusky yellow-green, dark brown on the culmen; cere pale dusky green ; iris bright yellow; legs dusky yellow (Oates). Length about 22; tail 8; wing 16; tarsus 2°75; bill from gape 2. Males are generally smaller than females, and Himalayan birds are considerably larger than those from Southern India, Ceylon, and Southern Burma. Distribution. A common bird throughout India, Ceylon, and Burma in well-wooded tracts near the sea, rivers, or large pieces of water. This Owl is rare in the Himalayas, where it is replaced by. the next species; but it has been found on the tops of the Nilgiri and Palni hills in Southern India. It is, of course, rare or wanting in the drier parts of Rajputana, the Punjab, Sind, &c.; but I shot one by a stream in the Western Sind hills. It does not appear to range south of Tenasserim, though it occurs to the eastward in China and far to the west near Acre in Palestine. It has not yet been observed in Persia or Arabia. Habits, Jc. The Common Indian Fish-Owl generally passes the day in a thick tree, and wings its way at sunset to the water’s edge to search for food. It lives chiefly on fish and crabs, but also kills birds and small mammals at times. It has a loud dismal cry, like haw, haw, haw, ho. 1t breeds from December to March, and lays usually two white broad oval eggs, measuring about 2°38 by 1-88, in a hollow tree, the deserted nest of a Fishing-Kagle, or occasionally on a ledge of rock, a small stick nest being made in the latter case. 1165. Ketupa flavipes. The Tawny Fish-Owl. Cultrunguis flavipes, Hodgson, J. A. S. B. v, p. 364, pl. 25 (1836). Ketupa flavipes, Gray, Gen. B: ey 38; Blyth, Cat. p. 37; Horsf. & M. Cat. i, p. 76; Jerdon, B. I. eo 185; td. Ibes, 1871, p. 346; Bulger, Ibis, 1869, p. 155; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 385; id. S. F. lii, pp. 827, 416; xi, p. 21; dd. Cat. no. 73; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p.5; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. B. xvii, pt. 2, p. 12. Lak-kyo-o-mung (the Kyo-o-calling Devil), Lepcha. Coloration. Lores white; cheeks and ear-coverts orange or brownish buff, all with black shafts; feathers of the upper parts with broad blackish-brown median bands and rich orange-buff edges, the orange-buff in parts forming indentations or spots on the dark brown; outer scapulars and some of the larger wing- coverts with the outer webs chiefly buff; quills and tail-feathers dark brown, with buff bars and tips ; lower parts rich orange-buff, with dark brown shaft-stripes, broadest on the breast; usually a white patch in the middle of the throat. BUBO. 283 Bill horny black ; cere dirty greenish ; irides gamboge-yellow ; legs yellowish grey (Jerdon). Bill greenish horny (Chennell). Length about 24; tail9; wing 18; tarsus 3; bill from gape 1:8. The tarsi covered with downy feathers for some distance below the upper end behind, and more than halfway down in front. Distribution. Throughout the lower Himalayas as far west as Kashmir, at elevations not exceeding about 5000 feet, also in the ranges immediately south of the Assam valley, and in China. Habits, Jc. This fine Owl is found on the banks of Himalayan rivers, and like K. zeylonensis is said to subsist principally on fish and crabs. The nest and eggs do not appear to have been described. 1166. Ketupa javanensis. The Malay Fish-Owl. Strix ketupu, Horsf. Tr. Linn. Soc. xiii, p. 141 (1821). Ketupa javanensis, Less. Traité, p. 114 (1881); Blyth, Cat. p. 87; Horsf. § M. Cat.i, p.76; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 384; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p.9; Blyth & Wald. Birds Burm. p. 66 ; Armstrong, 8 F, iv, p. 300; Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, pp. 33, 497; Hume, Ca.. no. 73 bis; Bingham, S. F. ix, pp. 146, 471; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 149; id. in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 98. Coloration. Similar to that of K. flavipes, except that the present species is browner and less orange, especially above; the buff borders to the upper plumage frequently wanting altogether in old birds, whilst white or buff spots on the dark parts of the feathers are more numerous. Chiefly, however, the species is dis- tinguished by having the tarsus entirely naked behind up to and including the joint, and not, as a rule, clad in front so much as half- way down, and by much smaller size. Bill dusky ; cere dark slate-colour ; irides light yellow; legs and feet dusky yellowish brown. Length about 18:5; tail 6-5; wing 13'5; tarsus 2°75; bill from gape 1°75. Distribution, Arrakan, the Irrawaddy delta, and throughout Te- nasserim, the Malay Peninsula, Java, Sumatra, and Borneo. Habits, gc. Very similar to those of the other species, except that K. javanensis appears to feed largely on insects, but it probably eats fish and crabs as well. It sees well by day and has a low soft whistling note. Major Bingham found the nest, containing a single white egg, in a fork of a large peepul tree, on February 27th. The egg measured 2°21 by 1°17, and was, as usual, a broad oval. Genus BUBO, Duméril, 1806. This and the next genus contain the Eagle-Owls, birds of large size, with aigrettes and with the tarsus fully feathered; the claws are powerful and well curved, the inner (2nd) claw being the longest, much exceeding the hind (1st) claw in length. The wing 284 ASIONIDE. is rounded, the 3rd primary longest, 4th subequal ; tail moderate, slightly rounded at the end. This is a large genus, found over the greater part of the world, except in Australia. Three species are Indian. Key to the Species. a, General colour buff and blackish brown. a’. Toes completely feathered: wing 17~20 .. B. ignavus, p. 284. b'. Last joint of toes naked: wing 14:75-16.. B. bengalensis, p. 285. 5. General colour greyish brown, toes half naked. B. coromandus, p. 286. 1167. Bubo ignavus. The Great Horned Owl or Eagle-Oul. Strix bubo, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 181 (1766). Bubo ignavus, Forster, Syn. Cat. Brit. Birds, p. 3 (1817); Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 14; Hume, 8. F. vii, p. 346; id. Cat. no. 68 ter; S. F. ix, p. 311 note ; Scully, Ibis, 1881, p. 425; St. John, Ibis, 889, p. 154. Bubo aeeani, Fleming, Brit. An. p. 57 (1828); Blyth, Cat. p. 34; Selater, P. Z. S. 1860, p.99; Jerdon, B. I. iii, p. 870; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 874; id. 8. F. iii, p. 827; Scully, S. F. iv, p. 129. Strix turcomana, Eversm. Add. Pall. Zoog. p. 3 (1885). Strix sibirica, Lecht. Susemihl, Abbild. Vog. Eur. pl. 44 (1846-52), Bubo hemachalana, Hume, S. F. i, p. 315 (1878). Bubo turcomanus, Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 17 (B. ignavi subsp.) ; Hume, 8. F. vii, p. 348; id. Cat. no. ? 68 quat.; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 45; Menzbier, Ibis, 1885, p. 262. Coloration. Lores and anterior portion of cheeks white or pale fulvous, with black shafts; ear-coverts and hinder part of disk tawny, with indistinct brown cross-bars, the outermost disk- feathers sometimes black-tipped ; aigrettes black, the inner or both margins buff, especially towards the base; upper plumage black, varied and mottled with buff, there being broad black shaft- stripes on the head and neck, the broad buff edges of the neck- feathers less mottled with black than elsewhere; much buff on the outer scapulars ; upper tail-coverts tawny buff, with narrow wavy blackish cross-bars; primaries orange-buff, barred and. tipped with dark brown; secondaries brown, with mottled buff bars, beecomin entirely buff on the inner web and on both webs at the base; tail barred buff and dark brown, both colours mottled on the middle feathers. Chin and below the throat pure white, remainder of lower surface buff; the throat with black median stripes and cross- bars, and the breast with broad black median stripes; abdomen and flanks with narrow dark brown shaft-lines and wavy cross-bars, the cross-bars alone remaining on the vent, legs, under tail- coverts, and wing-lining. Typical B. ignavus, from Europe, has more black on the back and the middle tail-feathers, the pale cross-bars on the latter being very narrow; but there is a complete passage into the Asiatic B. turcomanus, with broad mottled buff edges to the back-feathers, and the buff or white cross-bars on the median rectrices as wide BUBO, - 285 as the dark. Some Asiatic birds are very pale, especially beneath, others as rich an orange-buff as European skins; the difference depends probably on the bleaching action of the sun in dry open tracts. Both races have been brought from the Himalayas. Bill dark slate-colour ; irides golden orange ; claws dusky at base, black at tips (Scully). The toes are completely covered and con- cealed above by feathers, which overhang the base of the claws. Length of female about 26; tail 10; wing 19; tarsus 3; Dill from gape 1:9. Males run a little smaller. Distribution. Throughout the Palearctic region. This noble Owl has occasionally been killed in Tibet and the higher Hima- layas as far east as the Ganges (Bhagirati). Both Biddulph and Scully obtained it in Gilgit, and St. John at Quetta and Candahar. Habits, gc. The Great Eagle-Owl is bold and powerful, living on game birds, hares, rabbits, and even fawns of deer, and especially, it is said, on crows. The call is a loud, deep, dissyllabic hoot. The eggs have not been taken in India; in Europe they are generally two or three in number, white, and rounded oval as usual, and are laid about March on a ledge of rock or in a hollow tree. 1168. Bubo bengalensis. The Rock Horned Owl. Otus bengalensis, Frankl. P. Z. 8. 1831, 5a 116. Bubo cavearius, Hodgs. As. Res. xix, p. 169 (1836). Urrua cavearia, Hodgs. J. A. 8. B. vi, p. 872. Urrua bengalensis, Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. 8. x, p. 87; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 128; Butler, S. F. iii, p. 450. : Bubo bengalensis, Blyth, Cat. p. 35; Horsf. § M. Cat. i, p. 73; Stolicaka, J. A. 8. B, xli, pt. 2, p. 231; Hume, 8. F. i. p. 163; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 25; Davidson §& Wend. S. F. vii, p. 76; Ball, ibid. p. 200 ; Butler, ibid. p. 180 ; ix, p. 876 ; Hume, Cat. no. 69; Vidal, S. F. ix, p. 35; Reid, 8S. F. x, p. 14; Davison, ibid. p. 343; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 150; td. in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 99; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 65 ; id. Journ. Bom. N. H. Soe. iii, p. 221. Ascalaphia bengalensis, Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 253; Hume, Rough Notes, p. 366; id. N. § £. p. 62; A. Anderson, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 81; Hayes Lloyd, Ibis, 1878, p. 405; Ball, S. F. ii, p. 381; Blyth, Birds Burm. p. 65. Ghight, H.; Ghubdd, Mahr.; Yerra gudla guba, Tel.; Kotang, Tam. Coloration. Lores whitish with black shafts; cheeks and ear- coverts tawny with black streaks, and bordered behind by a black rim to the facial disk; aigrettes black, with buff margins towards the base; forehead buff, passing into the crown and nape, which are blackish brown, the feathers with buff spots on the edges; hind-neck and sides of neck nearly pure buff, with broad black shaft-stripes; rest of upper parts blackish brown, spotted and mottled with buff and white; the buff spots on the outer scapulars are very large, and the rump and upper tail-coverts are chiefly buff; primaries rich orange-buff, barred and tipped with brown ; secondaries brown, with mottled buff bars, becoming entirely buff on the inner web and towards the base ; tail barred buff and brown, 6 ASIONID.&. th colours mottled on the middle feathers; chin and below the roat white, rest of lower surface buff; upper throat with fusi- rm black shafts; breast with broad black stripes passing into the row -dark shaft-lines and wavy cross-bars of the abdomen, aft-lines disappearing and the cross-bars growing fainter or casionally dying out on the legs, vent, and lower tail-coverta. Bill horny black; irides orange-yellow; claws dusky (Hume). Length 22; tail 8; wing 15-5; tarsus 3; bill from gape 1°7. Distribution. The Rock Horned Owl is almost, if not entirely, mfined to the Indian Peninsula, being one of the commonest wls of Northern and Central India, except in desert tracts ; less mmon in the south, wanting in Ceylon. It is found, though not mmonly, in Rajputana, Sind, and the Western Punjab, and has ‘en reported to occur in Afghanistan ; it inhabits Kashmir and e lower Himalayas to the westward, though not Nepal or khim; it is very rare in Lower Bengal and apparently unknown the eastward, though Blyth states that it occurs in Arrakan. Habits, §c. This fine Owl haunts rocky hills and ravines, luvial cliffs, and brushwood, beside rivers and streams, and in 4 country groves of trees. It is by no means exclusively noc- rnal, and it lives on rats and mice, birds, lizards, snakes, crabs, d large insects. Its cry is a loud dissyllabic- hoot. The eeding-season is from December to April, and from two to four rite oval eggs are laid on a rocky ledge or in a cave, or on the ound under a bush or tuft of grass. The eggs measure about L by 1°73. 1169. Bubo coromandus. The Dusky Horned Owl. Strix coromanda, Lath. Ind. Orn. i, p. 58 (1790). Urrua coromanda, Hodgs. J. A. S. B. vi, p.873; Jerdon, B. 1.i, p. 180; id. Ibis, 1871, p. 345; Hume, N. § £. p. 63; Butler, 8. F. iii, p. 450; v, p. 217; Godw.-Aust. J. A. S. B. xlvii, pt. 2, p. 12. Urrua umbrata, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xiv, p. 180 (1845). Bubo umbratus, Blyth, Cat. p. 35. Bubo coromandus, Horsf. & M. Cat.i, p.75; Hume, S. F.i, p. 164; Adam, ibid. p. 369 ; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p.385; Butler, S. F. vii, p. 180; Ball, ibid. p.201 ; Cripps, bid. p. 254; Hume, Cat. no. 70; Reid, S. F. x, p. 15; Davidson, ibid. p. 291; Taylor, ibid. p. 455; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 151; td. in Hume's N. & E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 101; C. H. T. Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 407 ; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 66. Ascalaphia coromanda, Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 253 ; Hume, Rough Notes, . 871; A. Anderson, P. Z. S..1872, p. 81; 1876, p. 316; Blyth, rds Burm. p. 65. Coloration. Whole plumage above and below greyish brown th dark shaft-stripes, the feathers finely mottled and vermi- lated with whitish ; more white on the lower surface, which is ler than the upper in consequence; a few white or buff spots the outer webs of the outer scapulars and on some of the ger and median primary-coverts ; lores white, with black shafts ; rettes darker than crown; quills and tail brown, with pale ittled cross-bands and tips. HUHUA. 287 Bill greyish white or pale lavender, the tips and culmen pale yellowish horny; irides deep yellow (not orange); claws black (Hume). ; Length 23; tail 8; wing 16; tarsus 2°5; bill from gape 1°65. Distribution. The greater part of the Indian Peninsula. This Owl is common in the North-west Provinces and throughout the eater part of the Gangetic plain, being far from rare in Eastern Bengal. It has been obtained, though rarely, from the Punjab and Sind, but not farther west. To the eastward it has been recorded from the N. Khési hills, Assam, Tipperah, and Arrakan, but not Manipur, nor farther south. Sharpe found a specimen in the Paris Museum from China. It occurs in the better watered parts of Rajputana, in Khandesh, Raipur, Chutia Nagpur, the Carnatic, and Mysore, but not in the Bombay Deccan or Concan, Western Ghats, Malabar coast, nor in Ceylon, Habits, gc. This dull-plumaged bird inhabits well-wooded and watered tracts, where it lives on small mammals, birds, frogs, lizards, &c. A. Anderson mentions seeing one pursue a heron. It also kills and eats crows. Like its congeners it is by no means exclusively nocturnal. The call is characteristic, resembling, ac- cording to Butler, wo, wo, wo, wo-o-o-0, and is chiefly heard in the rains. It breeds from December to February, depositing generally two eggs in a stick nest, more or less lined with green leaves and a few feathers or a little grass. Sometimes the deserted nest of an Eagle or some other bird is utilized, and occasionally the eggs are laid in a hollow tree. They are creamy white (Anderson once obtained a coloured pair), and measure about 2°33 by 1:89. Genus HUHUA, Hodgson, 1837. This genus is distinguished from Bubo by the important character of the young having a perfectly distinct plumage, an exceptional case amongst Owls. The birds moult from the immature into the adult garb. The present type is further distinguished by having the irides dark brown instead of yellow, and by the wing being more rounded, the 4th and 5th quills being longest. The inner claw is very large. Only two species are known ; both occur within our limits. Key to the Species. a. Back and scapulars unbarred, more or less edged and mottled with buff: wing 15-19........ HH. nepalensis, p. 287. b. Back and scapulars with wavy rufous cross- bars: wing about 185 1... ...cceeeseeee HH. orientalis, p. 289. 1170. Huhua nepalensis. The Forest Hagle-Owl. Bubo ew Hodgson, As. Res. xix, p. 172 (1836) ; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 87 ; Hume & Dav, S. F. vi, p.80; Hume, Cat. no. 71; 288 ASIONID Scully, S. F. viii, p. 281; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 181; Davison, S. F. x, p. 848; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 152; Hume, 8. F. xi. p. 20. Huhua nipalensis, Hodgson, J. A. S. B. vi, p. 862; Jerdon, B. 1.i, p. 181; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 254; 1872, P. 89; Beavan, P. Z. 8. 1868, p. 400; Heme, Rough Notes, p. 878; Jerdon, Ibis, 1871, p. 846; Hume, 8. F. i. p. 481; Blanford, J. A. S. B. xii, pt. 2, p. 154; Blyth & Wald. Birds Burm. p. 65; Godw.-Aust. J.A.8. B. xlv, pt. 2, Ne 68 ; xlvii, pt. 2, p.12; Gurney § Fitzgerald, Ibis, 1878, p. 119; Gurney, P. Z. S. 1884, p. 558, pl. ii. Huhua pectoralis, Jerdon, Madr. Jour. L. 8. x, p. 89, pl. i; Holds- worth, P. Z, 8. 1872, p. 416. . : Bubo orientalis, Blyth, Cat. p. 84; Sclater, P. Z. S. 1878, p. 790; nec Strix orientalis, Horsf. Ptiloskelos amherstii, Tickell, J. A. S. B. xxviii, p. 448 (1859). Huhu, Huhu Chil, Nepal; Migdori, Bhot.; Uman, Malayalim ; Loho, Bakamiina, Cing. ; Peria-anda, am. (Ceylon). Coloration. Lores, cheeks, and ear-coverts greyish or brownish white, shafts and tips of lores and ear-coverts blackish brown; long-pointed aigrettes blackish brown, the inner webs or some- times the whole barred with white or buff; upper plumage throughout dark brown, the feathers barred, edged, and mottled with buff, least, and frequently not at all, on the crown, back, and smaller wing-coverts, most on the neck, scapulars, and larger wing- coverts ; sides of neck, outer scapulars, and upper tail-coverts buff, barred with brown, the scapulars forming a distinct buff band on each side; quills and tail-feathers dark brown, with pale bars and tips, more distinct on the secondaries than on the primaries, the pale bars on the inner webs near the base, except on the middle pair of tail-feathers, very broad and nearly or quite white; lower plumage white, often tinged fulvous, the feathers broadly barred with dark brown, the subterminal bar on each feather forming a crescentic or heart-shaped spot. Young birds are white or buff, with crescentic dark brown bars on all feathers of both the upper and lower surface; the quills and tail-feathers as in adults. Even after a change of plumage (by a moult) the aigrettes are barred throughout at first and the dosral feathers have more buffy bars and markings than those of older birds. Bill yellow; irides brown; toes yellow; claws dusky at the end, pale at base. Length about 24 inches (21-5-27); tail 9; wing 17 (15°3-19); tarsus 2°75; bill from gape 2. Females are generally larger than males and Himalayan birds than those from Southern India and Ceylon. Distribution. This Owl is found in the forests of the Himalayas as far west as Kumaun, and probably farther, at elevations not ex- ceeding 7000 feet, also in the hill-forests of the Nilgiris and Malabar and in the higher parts of Ceylon. To the eastward it has been obtained in the Assam hills, and in Burma near Toungngoo, in Karennee, and from Bilugyun Island oppositeMoulmein. There can now be no question that Jerdon’s Huhua pectoralis, from Malabar, NYCTEA, 289 is the same bird, as Davison found the present species on the Nilgiris. The description by Tickell of Ptiloskelos amherstii appears. to me to agree better with the young of this bird than with that of B. orientalis, and Blyth (Ibis, 1872, p. 89), who saw Tickell’s original specimen, identified it with B. nepalensis without hesi- tation. Habits, fc. A forest bird, shy and seldom seen. Very little is known of its food, though from its size and powerful claws it probably lives on birds or mammals, and it is said to kill pheasants, hares, young deer, &c. It is somewhat diurnal in its habits, and I heard one calling and saw it shot about 3 o’clock in the afternoon. The call is, as described by Jerdon, “a low deep and far-sounding: moaning hoot.” The nidification is unknown. 1171. Huhua orientalis. The Malay Eagle-Owl. Strix orientalis, Horsf. Tr. Linn, Soe. xiii, p. 140 (1821), Strix sumatrana, Raff. Tr. Linn, Soc. xiii, Ve 279 (1822). Strix strepitans, Temm. Pl. Col. pls. 174, 229 (1828). Bubo orientalis, Horsf. & M. Cat. i, p.72, part; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii,. p. 89; Hume, 8. F. iv, p. 228; Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, p. 31; Hume, Cat. no. 71 bis; Bates, B. B. ii, p. 153. Huhua orientalis, Blyth, Ibis, 1863, p. 25, pt.; Jerdon, Ibis, 1871,. p- 846, pt.; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8S. 1872, p. 416. Coloration. ores, cheeks, and ear-coverts pale brown or brownish white, the lores black-shafted; blackish supercilia ; aigrettes blackish brown, some barred on the inner webs or throughout with white or pale rufous; upper plumage dark brown, narrowly and irregularly barred with dull rufous; outer webs of the outer scapulars partly or wholly white; quills and tail-feathers dark brown with pale mottled bars and tips, the bars, except on the middle tail-feathers, broader and white on the inner webs towards the base; lower parts white, more or less tinged fulvous, the feathers narrowly barred with dark brown, the bars. much closer together as a rule on the upper breast. Young whitish, barred with brown above and below, the bars. narrow, closer and paler than in the young of H. nepalensis. Bill, cere, eyelids, and feet: yellow; irides dark brown (Davison). The toes are almost naked above. Length about 18; tail 7; wing 13°75; tarsus 2; bill from gape 1°75. Distribution. The Malay Peninsula and the islands of Sumatra, Java,and Borneo. Very rare in Southern Tenasserim, where Davison obtained a single specimen. Nothing is known of the habits or nidification. Genus NYCTEA, Stephens, 1826. The Snowy Owl forms a genus differing from Bubo chiefly in plumage and in having aigrettes so small that they are not easily VOL, III. U 290 ASIONID A. detected. The feathers of the facial disk and those of the legs are peculiarly dense and hairy, and so long that the bill and claws are ‘almost concealed. Wings and tail as in Bubo; the under tail- coverts extend nearly to the end of the tail. There is a single ‘species, which has once been obtained within Indian limits. 1172, Nyctea scandiaca. The Snowy Owl. Strix scandiaca and S. nyctea, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 182 (1766). Strix nivea, Thunb. Kon. Svensk. Vet.-Ak. Hand, xix, p. 184 (1798). Nyctea nivea, Hume, Ibis, 1871, p. 410. : Nyctea scandiaca, Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 125; Hume, S. F. vii, p. 345; ad. Cat. no. 68 bis, Coloration, Pure white, a few brown bars remaining here and there, even in old males, more in old females. In young birds the facial disk, a narrow collar on the back of the neck, the chin and throat, wing-lining and azxillaries, feathers on the legs and feet, vent and under tail-coverts are pure white; the rest of the plumage, including the quills and tail, barred with brown, the bars being broad, rather distinct from each other, -crescentic or subcrescentic in shape, and not continuous from feather to feather either above or below, Bill black ; irides golden yellow. Length about 23; tail 9°25; wing 17; tarsus 2°3; bill from gape 1°7. Distribution. The northern portion of both hemispheres, some birds migrating into the temperate zone in winter. A single ‘specimen was once received by Mr. Hume from Mardén in the North-west Punjab, not far from Peshawur. The bird was obtained by Dr. Johnson on March 3rd, and other specimens were said to ‘have been seen by the shikari. So far as is known this Owl has not since been observed within Indian limits. Genus SCOPS, Savigny, 1810. The Scops Owls are of small size and furnished with aigrettes ‘usually of considerable length. The head is: rather large, the nostrils round and pierced in the anterior margin of the cere, which is slightly prominent. The wings are long, but vary much in shape, being far more rounded in some species than in others ; the tail is moderate in length and rounded at the ends. The tarsus is feathered more or less completely. The plumage of the young -differs from that of adults. The members of this genus generally have the plumage minutely vermiculated or stippled with delicate markings, and the distinction of the species is rather difficult, several of the forms showing con- siderable variation. The number of species has, however, certainly been overrated; only two were admitted by Jerdon, whilst in Hume’s Catalogue no less than 18 names are enumerated, but of these three are regarded as not worthy of distinction, and one as -of doubtful validity. Anyone, however, who reads Hume’s notes SCOPS. «991 will recognize how very doubtful many of the nominal species are, and I think the 14 remaining species may with advantage ‘be reduced by one-half. : All species of Scops are thoroughly nocturnal, and generally make their presence known in the dusk of the evening or after nightfall by a peculiar monotonous, monosyllabic or dissyllabic call, repeated at regular and rather long intervals, generally from inside a bush or tree with thick foliage. These Owls are insectivorous as a rule, though they occasionally capture and eat small birds or mammals. They are found in most tropical and temperate regions, but are wanting in Australia. Key to the Species. a, 8rd. quill longest, 1st longer than 8th. a', Feathers on tarsus stop short at base of toes ; spots on scapulars white ........ S. giu, p. 291. 6’. Feathers extend on to base of toes; spots on scapulars buff ........ cece cree eee S. brucit, p. 294. 5. 4th or 5th quill longest; 1st much shorter than 8th. c'. No distinct collar on hind-neck; pale spots on upper surface; no black shaft- stripes. a", Size moderate: wing about 5:5, tail about 3. a'", Tarsus feathered to base of toes.,.. S. spilocephalus, p. 295. 5'"', Lower third of tarsus bare ..... .. S. balli, p. 296. 6". Size large: wing over 7, tail 4'8...... S. sagittatus, p. 296. @', A distinct pale collar on hind-neck ; black shaft-stripes usually distinct. eM. Toes naked: sc.cscisvewniwei ned era . &S. bakkamena, p. 297. ad". Toes feathered above ........++.00- S. semitorques, p. 300, 1173. Scops giu. The Scops Owl. Strix scops, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, P 182 (1766). Strix giu, Scop. Ann. i, p. 19 (1768). Strix zorca, Gimel. Syst. Nat. i, p. 289 (1788). Scops aldrovandi, Flem. Brit. An. p. 57 (1828); Blyth, Cat. p. 36. Scops sunia, Hodgs, As. Res. xix, p. 175 (1836); Blyth, J. A. S. B. xiv, p. 182; Jerdon, Ill. Ind. Orn. pl. 41; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii. p. 67; Legge, Birds Ceyl. p. 1389; Hume, S. F. vii, p. 201; td. Cat. no. 74 bis; Reid, S. F. x,p. 16; C. H. T. Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p- 408; Davidson, Jour. Bom. N. H. Soc. i, p. 179. Scops pennatus, Hodgs. J. A. S. B. vi, z 369 (descr. nulla) ; ‘Blyth J. AS. B. xiv, p. 183 (1845); Hume, N. §& EF. p. 65; id. S. F. iii, p. 38; Sharpe, Cat. B. M1. ii, p. 53 (subsp.) ; Hume § Dav. S. F. vi, p. 34; Butler, 8. F. vii, p. 180; ix, p. 376; Ball, S.F. vii, p. 201 ; Cripps, bid. p. 255 ; Hume, Cat. no. 74; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 46; Scully, ibid. p. 426; Bingham, S. F. ix, p. 147; Hume & Dav. S. F. x, p. 348; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 154; ad. in Hume's N. & E, 2nd ed. iii, p. 103; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 70; Littledale, Jour. Bom. N. H. Soc. i, p. 196; Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen, (2) iv, p. 578 ; v, p. 557 ; vii, p. 375; Hume, S. F. xi, p. 21. u2 ‘ 292 ASIONIDE. Scops gymnopodus, Gray, Cat. Accip. B. M. 1844, p. 44 (deser. nulla); Sharpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 65, pl. iv, fig. 2; Hume, Cat. no. 74 ter A. Scops malayanus, Hay, Madr. Jour. L. 8. xiii, pt. 2, p. 147 (1845) ; arpe, Cat. B. M. ii, p. 58, pl. iv, fig. 1 (subsp.) ; Hume, 8. F. vi, p.355; 7d. Cat. no. 74 sex. 0... sna my t Fig. 80.—Left foot of P. haliaétus, 4. Coloration. Head and neck white, the feathers along the middle of the crown and nape, and sometimes at the sides, with conspi- cuous brown shaft-lines and tips; a broad dark brown band from each eye down the side of the neck; upper parts glossy brown ; tail the same, the rectrices more or less distinctly barred with paler brown above, with white below, especially on the inner webs of all except the middle pair ; in old birds the bars tend to become obsolete; quills blackish ; lower parts white, except on the upper breast, where the feathers are brown with dark shafts and white edges, that are sometimes very broad, but. occasionally wanting ; wing-lining brown, mixed with white or fulvous. In the young the dark feathers of :the dorsal surface are pale-edged, the tail is more closely and more distinctly barred, and the breast either unmarked or only slightly spotted with brown. Bill black; cere, gape, and eyelids dull greenish blue; irides bright yellow ; legs pale greenish or yellowish; claws black. VULTURIDA, 315 _Length of females about 22 inches ; tail9 ; wing 20; tarsus 2°2 ; bill from gape 16. Male slightly smaller. Distribution. Almost world-wide; found in suitable localities throughout India, Ceylon, and Burma. Habits, gc. Ospreys live on fish, and haunt, in India, the coast, backwaters, rivers, and large pieces of water of all kinds. They are generally seen perched on trees, occasionally on a stone, or else circling or flying over water in search of food. They capture fishes near the surface of the water by dropping on them from a height with a great splash, and often carry off prey of considerable size, but instances are on record of their being drowned by large fish, so that sometimes at all events they are unable to extricate ‘their claws. Though nests have been seen in the Himalayas by Hume and others, and by Jerdon in an unrecorded part of the country, no eggs have been taken, and most Indian Ospreys are cold-weather visitants and do not breed in the country. They lay generally three eggs, white, much spotted and blotched with dull red, and measuring about 2°4 by 1-77, in a large nest of sticks mixed with various materials and placed on a tree or rock. Family VULTURIDA. Head and neck more or less bare or only clothed with short stubby down; never any true feathers on crown of head (Share). The above appears the only really distinctive character by which Vultures are distinguished from Falcons, Eagles, and Hawks. Vultures have the crop covered with short feathers, and generally a more or less distinct elongate ruff round the neck at the end of the naked portion. The bill (except in Neophron) is strong, deep, and compressed, with the culmen much curved; the tip is always hooked, and the cere large and horny. There are 15 cervical vertebrae, or one more than is usual in Falconide. The wings are long; tail-feathers 12 or 14, with strong shafts, that, owmg to wear, always project at the ends. The tarsi are partly feathered, the naked portions covered with granular scales, with larger transverse scutes on the distal :phalanges‘of the toes; the inner and outer toes are subequal; and the middle and outer united by membrane; claws blurit, not much curved. Typical Vultures (the genus Neophron differs in some respects) resemble each other closely in habits. As is well-known, they feed on dead animals, and congregate in an extraordinary manner wherever a carcase is exposed. The way in which they assemble, apparently from all parts of the air, in a place where a few minutes previously not one was in sight, is a wonderful spectacle, When in search of food, Vultures and some other Accipitrine birds soar and wheel slowly in large circles, very often at an elevation far 316 VULTURIDA, beyond the reach of human vision, as was shown by the observa- tion of Colonel Tennant, who at Roorkee in 1875 (8. F. iii, p. 419) noticed that birds at a height of some miles often passed across ‘the field of his telescope. As Jerdon and other writers have pointed out, the Vultures are dependent for the discovery of their food upon their eyesight, the more distant birds being attracted by ‘seeing those nearer to the carcase flying in a manner that shows them to have found out its position. The actual discovery is doubtless generally made by Crows or Kites, and the Vultures obtain information from the movements of the smaller birds. On the ground Vultures are clumsy, heavy, and ungainly, as foul in aspect as in smell; but on the wing no bird has a grander or more powerful flight, and none affords a -better opportunity of studying the position and movements of a bird when flying. Amongst the rocky crags to which Vultures resort to roost and, in many cases, to breed, it is often easy to stand on the edge of a cliff where they pass by within a few feet, and as each great bird sweeps past, regulating its course by its tail, and occasionally moving’ its head slightly as it investigates the different objects that present themselves, to notice how steady and unchanging is the position of the extended wings and flight-feathers, and to observe how entirely the support of the bird is due to the resist- ance of the air. Vultures are confined to the tropical and warm temperate regions of Asia, Europe, and Africa; their American representatives, the Condors and their allies, being now placed in a distinct order by most ornithologists. The family is represented in India by species of all known genera except Lophogyps. By some writers Neophron is regarded as forming a distinct: subfamily, but the difference is scarcely more than generic. Key to the Genera. a, Bill stout; heightof upper mandible approxi- mately the same as length of cere on culmen. a’. Nostril round or oval; tail-feathers 12. a", Noneck-wattle .........scceeeeeeee VoLror, p. 316. &", A fleshy wattle on each side of the neck. Oroeyps, p. 318. b'. Nostril a vertical narrow slit. oe’, Tail-feathers 14.............cceeeee .. Gyps, p. 819. __@", Tailfeathers 12.1... cece cee eae Psrupoeyxps, p. 324, 5, Bill slender; nostril elongate, horizontal .... NEopHron, p. 325, Genus VULTUR, Linn., 1766. Bill short, strong, and deep, curving from the end of the cere; nostrils round or slightly curved ; head broad, covered with down, which is longer on the nape; neck naked, ruff very small, ascending on the back of the neck. A single species. VULTUR, . 31% 1190. Vultur monachus. The Cinereous Vulture. Vultur monachus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i, p. 122 (1766); Blyth, Cat p. 82; Horsf. §& M. Cat. i, p.1; Jerdon, B. I. i, p.6; id. Ibis ‘1871, p. 284; Hume, Rough Notes, p.1; A. Anderson, P. Z. 8 1871, p. 675; Adam, 8, F, i, p..367; Sharpe, Cat. B. M.i, Wy 3. Butler, S. F. iii, p. 441; v, P 226 ; Blanford, S. F. v, p. 245; Hume, 8. F. vii, p- 821; id. Cat. no.1; Scully, 8. F. viii, p. 217 ; Barnes, S. F. ix, pp. 214,450; C.H. T. Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 405; Barnes, Birds Bom, p. 2; St. John, Ibis, 1889, p. 149. _ Great Brown Vulture, Jerdon; Kéla-gidh, H.; Gut panom, Lepcha. Fig. 81.—Head of V. monachus, 3. Coloration. Blackish brown throughout, with, in freshly moulted plumage, a ruddy gloss on the mantle; under surface sometimes darker than upper; quills and tail almost black, occiput and lower tail-coverts paler. Young birds are paler and browner. Bill blackish. brown; cere pale mauve; irides brown; naked skin of neck livid flesh-colour ; legs and feet creamy. or pearl- white. Length about 42 inches; tail 17; wing 30; tarsus 5. Distribution, Southern Europe, Northern Africa, and eastward through South-western Asia and parts of Central Asia to India and China. In India this bird is resident in Afghanistan and the Himalayas, and visits North-western India in the cold season, having been observed in the Punjab, Sind, North-west Provinces, and Oude, Guzerat near Ahmedabad, Mhow, and Saugor. It ranges in the Himalayas as far east as Bhutdn. Habits, gc. Those of the family. The nesting does not appear to have been recorded within Indian limits, though there can be no doubt that this bird breeds in the Himalayas. In Europe it breeds about February or March, sometimes on cliffs, more often in trees; builds a huge nest of sticks, and lays a single egg (very rarely two) richly marked with dark red, and measuring about 3:7 by 2°6. 318 VULTURIDE. Genus OTOGYPS, Gray, 1841. Head and neck bare, without any down in adults; a wattle of skin on each side.of the neck behind the ear; ruff very small ; bare neck extending farther down than in Vultur, to which genus the present is very similar. Two species, one African, the other Indian. 1191. Otogyps calvus. The Black Vulture or Pondicherry Vulture. Vultur calvus, Sp. Del. Flor. et Faun. Insub. ii, p. 85 (1786); Hume, Rough Notes, p.8; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 289; Adam, 8. F. i, p. 367 ; A. Anderson, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 676; 1875, p.17; Blyth, Buds Burm. p. 64. Vultur ponticerianus, Lath. Ind. Orn. i, p.7 (1790); Sykes, P. Z. 8. ' 1832, p. 77; Jerdon, Mad. Jour, L. 8. x, p. 68; Gray in Hardw. I. Ind. Zool. i, pl. 15, fig. 1. Otogyps calvus, G. R. Gray, Gen. B. i, p. 6; Blyth, Cat. p. 82; Horsf. §& M. Cat.i, p.2; Jerdon, B. Ii, p.7; Stohezka, J..A.S. B. xii, pt. 2, p. 230; Hume, N. § £. p.1; Davidson, 8. F. ii, p. 336; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. i, P, 14; Brooks, S. F. iii, p. 228; Butler, S.F. iii, p. 441; vii, p. 179; ix, p. 869; Blanford, 8. Fv, p. 245; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p. 1; Davidson § Wend. 8. F. vii, p. 72; Gurney, ibid. p. 170; Ball, ibid. p. 196; Cripps, wid. p. 240; Hume, Cat, no. 2; Bingham, 8. F. viii, p.190; ix, p.142; Scully, 8. F. viii, p. 217; Doig, tid. p. 370; Vidal, &. F. ix, p. 29; Davison, 8. F. x, p. 331; Hume, 8. F. xi, p.2; Oates, B. B. ii, B 171; id. in Hume's N. § E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 209; Barnes, Birds om. p. 3; td. Jour. Bom, N. H. Soc. i, p. 88; iii, p. 206, Réj-gidh, Mulla-gidh, Bhaonra, H.; Lung-nong-loong, Lepcha: Raj Symua, Batis Neila Borawa, Tel. ; Bowman, ¥ eke si a Fig. 82,—Head of 0. caluus, 3. Coloration, Adult. Scattered black hairs on the nape and sides ofjthe head and on the throat, more closely set around the ear- orifice; head above and neck bare; plumage generally glossy. G@YPSs. 319 black, brownish on the scapulars, lower back, and rump; secondary quills brown with black tips; ruff inconspicuous, black, the feathers white at the base; crop-patch dark brown, surrounded, except anteriorly, by white down ; upper thighs and anterior part of flanks white and downy. The young are brown above and below ; feathers of the breast and abdomen with paler edges; under tail-coverts whitish ; the ruff of rather longer brown feathers. The crown of the head is covered with white down. Bill dark brown; cere, skin of head and neck deep yellowish red, a conspicuous naked patch on each side of the crop and a large naked oval area in front of each thigh the same; irides red- brown or yellow ; legs dull red (legs china-white, Oates). Length about 32; tail 10:5; wing 23; tarsus 4:5; mid toe without claw 3°5; bill from gape to tip 2°75. Distribution. Throughout India and Burma, but not in Ceylon, ranging to the south-east into the Malay Peninsula, Siam, and Cochin China. Rare in the Punjab and Sind, but found in the lower Himalayas. Habits, gc. This fine Vulture is nowhere very abundant, usually one or two come to feed on a carcase with scores of Gyps indicus, G. tenuirostris, or Pseudogyps bengalensis ; these, being smaller and weaker, give way before the present species, which is consequently known as the King Vulture. It breeds on trees from the latter end of January to the middle of April, making a large platform of sticks, and laying a pure white egg (spots and streaks are of very rare occurrence in this species) that measures about 3°34 by 2:6. Genus GYPS, Savigny, 1810. This genus contains several species, and includes several of the common Indian Vultures. The head is narrower and the bill longer than in the two preceding genera; the naked neck is longer, and there is a well-marked ruff at the base of the naked portion. The nostril is very narrow and vertically (transversely) or obliquely elongate. This genus, too, is distinguished from the other Vultures by having 14 tail-feathers. Species of Gyps are found throughout Africa, Southern and South-eastern Europe, South-western and Central Asia, India and Burma. Four species occur within our limits. Key to the Species. a. Larger: wing 27-31 inches. a’. Third primary longest; lower plumage with narrow shaft-stripes ............ G. fulvus, p. 320. '. Fourth primary longest; shaft-stripes on lower plumage very broad............ G. himalayensis, p. 321. b. Smaller: wing 22-25°5 ; bill more slender. ce’. Crown of head with scattered hairs .... G. indicus, p. 322. d’. Crown of head quite naked ............ G. tenutrostris, p. 328, 320 VULIURIDA, 1192. Gyps fulvus. The Griffon Vulture. Vultur fulvus, Gm. Syst. Nat. i, p. 249 (1788). Gyps fulvus, Blyth, Cat. p. 32, partim ; ed. Ibz2, 1866, p. 232; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 8, pt.; id. Ibis,1871, p. 285; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. i, p.5; Gurney, Ibis, 1875, p. 88; Blanf.. East. Pers. ii, p. 99; Butler, S.'F. iii, p. 441; v, p. 217; Ball, S. F. vii, p. 196; Hume, Cat. no. 3; St. John, Ibis, 1889, p. 149. Gyps fulvescens, Hume, Ibis, 1869, p. 356; id. Rough Notes, p. 19; ad. S. F.i, p. 148; id. N.§ E. p. 5; id. S. F. vil, p. 822; id. Cat. no. 8bis; Adam, S. F..i, p. 867 ; Scully, S. F. viti,p. 218; Butler, S. F. ix, p. 869; Barnes, ibid. p. 450; Davidson, 8. F. x, p. 285; Swinhoe, 1bis, 1882, p. 98; Barnes, Birds Bom. p.4; id. Jour. Bom. N. HH. Soe. iii, p. 207; Oates in Hume's N.& E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 208. Coloration. Head thickly covered all round with short white hair- like feathers, passing into white down on the neck ; feathers of ruff elongate, lanceolate, whitish, with rufous-brown or fawn-coloured edges, in very old birds dingy white throughout and disintegrated back and wing-coverts varying from brown with a pinkish tinge, through fawn-colour to pale brown, often particoloured, some feathers darker than others, but all with narrow pale shafts, more or less distinct ; rump and upper tail-coverts paler fawn, especially along the shafts and edges; major coverts, scapulars, and tertiaries dark brown with pale edges; quills and tail black or blackish brown; lower parts throughout, including wing-lining, pinkish brown. to ochreous buff, with narrow white shaft-stripes, the short crop-feathers generally rather browner. Younger birds are deeper coloured when freshly moulted, and are distinguished by having the feathers of the back, scapulars, and coverts pointed and the ruff-feathers dark and elongate. The buff-coloured birds appear to be either young or old in worn and faded plumage. Bill horny brown or dusky yellowish, paler on the culmen in adults, greenish horny in younger birds ; cere black ; iris brownish yellow ; legs and feet dirty yellow to greenish grey ; 3rd primary longest. — Length 41 to 47; tail 13; wing 26-29; tarsus 4:5; mid toe without claw 4°25; bill from gape to point 3:1. Amongst the series of G. fulvescens in the Hume collection I can match all European specimens of G. fulvus available for comparison. It should be remembered that many specimens of Vulture skins in European museums are faded and bleached b exposure ; but, so far as I can see, the Indian bird is absolutely identical with the European. Distribution. Southern and South-western Europe, Northern Africa, and South-western Asia; common in Afghanistan, Balu- chistan, the Punjab, Sind, and Rajputana, the range in India extending east as far as Nepal and Sikhim, and south to Khandesh and the Deccan. Ball records the species from Manbhoom, and I once saw a large Vulture, that must, I think, have been this species, on the banks of the Godévari near Dumagudem. GYPS. 321 Habits, ge. The Griffon generally breeds on rocky cliffs in colonies, and lays a single white egg, about February, in a loosely constructed nest of sticks. Occasionally, but very rarely, the egg is slightly spotted; the average measurement is 3°65 by 2°7. Solitary nests on trees have been observed in North-western India; but in Sind I have no doubt these Vultures breed on the cliffs of the Khirthar and other ranges, for I saw a pair in copuld on January 3rd on the crags, roaring in the most extraordinary way at the time, after the manner of Vultures. 1193. Gyps himalayensis. The Himalayan Griffon. Gyps fulvus, apud Blyth, Cat. p. 32, partim; id. J. A. S. B. xxiv,. p. 253, note; Horsf. § M. Cat.i, p.3; Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 8, pt.;. nec Vultur fulvus, Gime. Gyps himalayensis, Hume, Rough Notes, p. 12 (1869) ; id. N. & E. . 8; Jerdon, Ibis, 1871, p. 285; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. i, ¢.8; Vireats, S. F. iii, p. 228; Hume, 8. F. vii, p. 823; id. Car. no. 3 ter; Scully, S. F. viii, p. 218; Biddulph, Ibis, 1881, p. 38 Scully, ibid. p. 416; C. Z. 7. Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 405 ; Oates in: Hume's N. & £. 2nd ed. iii, p. 200. Gyps nivicola, Servertzov, Turkest, Jevotn. p. 111, pl. vii (1873). Coloration. Adult. Hair-like feathers on the head and down on neck white or yellowish white; feathers of ruff loose-textured, whitish along the shafts, pale brown on the sides; back and wing- eoverts whity brown, rather unevenly coloured, with traces of pale shaft-stripes ; lower back whitish or white; rump and upper tail- coverts buff; scapulars and greater wing-coverts dark brown with pale tips; quills and tail-feathers blackish brown, the inner quills with pale ends; crop brown, streaked paler; rest of lower parts. light brown or buff with broad whitish shaft-stripes ; under tail- coverts pale buff. Young birds are dark brown above and below, with strongly marked whitish shaft-stripes on all body-feathers and wing-coverts, the shaft-stripes being very broad on the ruff and the lower parts ; wing- and tail-feathers nearly black. Bill pale horny green ; cere pale brown ; irides brownish yellow ; legs and feet dingy greenish grey or white (Hume). The 4th primary is the longest. Length about 48; tail 16; wing 30; tarsus 4°6; mid-toe without claw 4°3; bill from gape 33. Distribution. Throughout the Himalayas from Cabul to Bhutdn,, but only observed on the mountains. This species is also found farther north in Turkestan and Northern Tibet, and probably in other ranges of Central Asia. Habits, gc. This is distinctly a mountain Vulture, and breeds from the end of December to the first week in March. It makes the usual platform of sticks, or sometimes occupies an old Eagle’s. nest, on the face of a cliff, and lays a single egg, sometimes greyish white, more often blotched and streaked with red-brown, and measuring about 3°76 by 2°75. VOL, IIl. x 322 VULTURIDE. 1194. Gyps indicus. The Indian Long-billed Vulture Vultur indicus, Scop. Del. Flor. et Faun. Insub. ii, p. 85 (1786); Sykes, P. Z. 8. 1832, p. 77. Gyps bengalensis, apud J. E. Gray in Hardw. Ill. Ind. Zool. i, pl. 15; nee Gm. s indicus, Blyth, Cat. p. 33, partim ; Horsf. & M. Cat.i, p. 4, pt. ; ia a B. I. 1, p. 9, “e id, Ibis, 1871, p. 235; aa Bough Notes, p. 21; id. N. & E. ee id. Cat. no. 4; Adam, S, F. i, p. 867; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. i, p. 10, Pine Davidson §& Wend. S. F. vii, p. 72; Vidal, S. F. ix, p. 29; Davison, 8. F. x, p. 882. Gyps pallescens, Hume, S. F. i, p. 150 (1878) ; vii, is 165, 325; zd. Cat. no. 4bis; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. i, p. 11; Butler, 8. F. iii, p. 442; ix, p. 869; Bingham, S. F. viii, p. 190; Davidson, 8. F. x, p. 285; Swinhoe & Barnes, Ibis, 1885, p. 54; Barnes, Birds Bom. p. 5; id. Jour. Bom, N. H. Soe. iii, p. 207 ; Oates in Hume's N.& E 2nd ed. iii, p. 203. Gidh, H. ; Gidad, Maha-dho, Mahr. Coloration. Adult. Short brownish-white hair-like feathers thinly sprinkled all round the head and on the nape; upper half of back and sides of neck, and all the front, with small tufts of white down scattered over them; ruff disintegrated, soft and white; back pale brown, upper wing-coverts still paler, all the feathers palest on their edges; lower back and rump brown, with broad white borders to the feathers, sometimes whitish throughout; upper tail-coverts darker brown, pale-edged; larger wing-coverts and scapulars the same; quills and tail-feathers blackish brown; crop generally uniform dark brown, but: sometimes light brown or even white; lower parts whity brown, with indistinct broad pale Shaft-stripes. Young very like that of G. himalayensis; the head and nape more thickly clad than in the adult; a ruff of long lanceolate feathers, whitish, with brown edges at each side; upper back, smaller scapulars, and wing-coverts dark brown, with narrow whitish shatt-stripes ; lower back and rump whitish; quills and tail nearly black; crop brown; abdomen and under wing-coverts light brown, with broad whitish shaft-stripes. Bill and cere pale greenish, yellowish horny on culmen; irides brown; bare skin of head and face dusky ashy leaden ; legs and feet the same; claws creamy horny (Hume). Length about 38; tail 11; wing 23; tarsus 3-75; mid-toe with- out claw 3:9; bill from gape 2°8. Distribution. Throughout the greater part of the Peninsula of India, south of the Indo-Gangetic plain—not in Sind nor in ‘Ceylon. Habits, gc. The Long-billed Vulture breeds from December to February in colonies on precipitous cliffs, laying a single ege, greenish white, generally unspotted, sometimes spotted or blotched with reddish brown, and measuring about 3°61 by 2-72, GYPS. 3238 1195. Gyps tenuirostris. The Himalayan Long-billed Vulture. beet tenuiceps, Hodgson in Gray’s Zool. Mise, p. 81 (1844), descr. nulla. Gyps_tenuirostris, Hodgson MS., Gray, Gen. B. i, p- 6 (1844), descr nulla ; Hume, S. F. vii, p. 826 (1878); id, Cat. no. 4 ter; Scully, S. F, viii, p. 219. Gyps indicus, apud Jerdon, B. I. i, p. 9, partim; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 282; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. i, p. 10, pt.; Blyth §& Walden, Birds Burm. p. 64; Hume & Dav. 8. F. vi, p.1; Hume, Cat. no. 4; ad, S, F. xi, p. 2; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 169; id. in Hume's N, & E. 2nd ed. iii, p. 202. Sdgiin, Beng. ; Gut, Lepcha. Fig. 83.—Head of G. tenwirostris, 2, Very similar to the last, but distinguished by having no feathers at all on the head and scarcely any down on the neck, by the general coloration of the plumage being darker, the legs and. feet somewhat longer, the bill more slender, the nostril apparently less elongate and broader, and the colours of the soft parts different, Bil brownish dusky horny, the culmen yellowish horny; cere horny black; irides deep brown; skin of head and neck dark muddy; tarsi and toes black ; claws dusky or horny black (Hume). Length about 38°5; tail 10°5; wing 24; tarsus 4; middle toe without claw 4°3; bill from gape 2°85. The Indian Peninsular form, and not the present species, must retain the name zndicus, for Sonnerat in his original description of “Le Grand Vautour des Indes” (to which the specific name indicus was applied by Scopoli) wrote that the head is covered with fine down resembling hair (la téte est couverte d'un petit duvet qui ressemble & du poil). Hume has distinguished the Himalayan Vulture, G. tenuwirostris, from that of Bengal, Assam, and Burma, on account of the slender bill and head of the former; but I feel doubtful whether the difference is constant. Distribution. Throughout the lower Himalayas and near their base as far west as Kashmir, also in Bengal, Assam, and Burma, x2 324 VULTURIDE. as far south as Moulmem; and according to Blyth in the Malay Peninsula also. The limits of this and the last species are not clearly known. Habits, §c. This Vulture breeds on trees in Bengal in January and February, making the usual large nests of boughs freshly broken off. The single egg is nearly pure white, and measures about 35 by 2°73. Genus PSEUDOGYPS, Sharpe, 1873. This genus is only distinguished from Gyps by having 12 tail- feathers like other Vultures, instead of 14. There are two species very similar to each other, one is African, the other Indian. 1196. Pseudogyps bengalensis. The Indian White-backed Vulture. Vultur bengalensis, Gm. Syst. Nat. i, p. 245 (1788). Vultur Bill, legs, and feet black; irides wood-brown; orbital skin plumbeous (Davison). Length of female 6°5; tail 2:25; wing 4; tarsus °75; Dill ‘from gape ‘55: a male measures—length 6, wing 3:7. Distribution. The southern portion of Tenasserim as far north as 14° N. lat.; also the Malay Peninsula, Cochin China, Sumatra, Borneo, and Java. Habits, fc. Similar to those of other species, but this, although smaller, is said to feed more on birds. It also lays white eggs in holes in trees. M. latifrons, Sharpe (Ibis, 1879, p. 237, pl. vii), which is very similar to M. fringillarius, but is distinguished by having the crown white, and a black line through the eye to the nape separating the “white crown from the white sides of the head, is said to have been ‘obtained from the Nicobars, the types being from Borneo. Although the Nicobar locality rests on fairly good authority (see 8. F. viii, p. 496, and Ibis, 1881, p. 274), the name of the discoverer is not known, and as the evidence is at second-hand, I do not think it wise to admit the species without clearer proof. Genus POLIOHIERAX, Kaup, 1847. Plumage very soft. . Bill small, strongly toothed; tarsus naked, almost throughout covered with rather large polygonal scales in front, and smaller behind; toes weak and short, claws very little POLIOHIERAX. 435, curved. Wing short and rounded ; tail almost as long as the wing, and greatly graduated, the outer tail-feathers in the Burmese species being short of the middle rectrices by nearly one-third the length of the tail. Sexes dissimilar in plumage. There are only two species of Poliohterax ; one inhabits Africa, the other Burma. The affinities of the genus are very obscure. 1270. Poliohierax insignis. Feilden’s Hawk. Poliohierax insignis, Walden, P. Z, 8. 1871, p. 627; id. Ibis, 1872, p. 471; Sharpe, Cat. B. M. i, p. 870; Sclater, 8S. F. iii, p. 417 5 Blyth, Birds Burm. p.59; Wardl. Rams. Ibis, 1877, p. 454; Hume § Dav. 8. F. vi, p.2; Tweedd. in Rowley’s Orn. Mise. iii, p. 169, pl.; Hume, Cut. no. 16 bis’; Oates, B. B. ii, p. 218. Lithofalco feildeni, Hume, P. A. 8S. B. 1872, p.70. , Polihierax feildeni, Hume § Oates, S. F. iii, p. 19. Coloration. Male. Crown, nape, and sides of head and neck light grey, with narrow black shaft-stripes; ear-coverts paler and silky ; back, scapulars, and wing-coverts blackish grey ; rump and upper tail-coverts white; quills black, with large white spots on their inner webs, larger towards the base; middle pair of tail-: feathers black throughout, all the others broadly barred black and white and tipped white ; lower parts white. Female. Head and nape above and at the sides chestnut; frontal band, narrow supercilium, and area below the eye grey with black streaks ; remainder of plumage as in the maie. Young birds have the head and back brownish grey with dark shaft-stripes ; the quills and tail dark brown, marked as in adults,. except that there are a few round white spots on the middle pair of rectrices ; lower parts pale rufous, with long brown shaft-stripes. on the breast and upper abdomen. Some of the immature mark- ings, such as a few streaks on the breast and white spots on the median rectrices, are sometimes retained by birds in adult plumage. : ; Anterior portion of bill bluish black; cere, gape, and both man- dibles as far as the nostrils orange-yellow ; eyelids and orbital skin orange; irides brown; legs orange; claws black (Oates). Length of male 10°5 inches ; tail 5; wing 5°5; tarsus 1:4; mid- toe without claw °9; bill from gape °75: of a female, length 11, wing 6. 2F2 436 FALCONIDA. Distribution. This curious Hawk has been found in Burma around Thayet Myo, where it is not rare, at Toungngoo, in Northern Tenasserim near Myawadee, and ‘in the Thoungyin valley. The only other recorded locality is Western Siam. Habits, &c. An excellent account has been given by Feilden, who discovered this bird at very nearly the same time as Wardlaw Ramsay. The flight is peculiar and jerky, and the movements resemble those of a Magpie. This species frequents dry open forest or scrub, perching on dead trees by preference, and teeding chiefly on insects, with an occasional mouse, snake, or lizard. The breeding-season is about March; the eggs are unknown, but Col. Bingham tells me that he has fuund the nest, which is built of sticks and placed in a tree. ALPHABETICAL INDEX. abessynicus (Cypselus), 168. Acanthylis, 172. Accipiter, 402. Accipitres, 312. ‘accipitrina (Strix), 271. accipitrinus (Asio), 271. Aceros, 149. acuticauda (Cypselus), 166. ‘egyptius (Merops), 112. celia (Cireus), 387. seruginosus (Falco), 387. /ésalon, 426. zsalon (Falco), 426. wsalon (Hypotriorchis), 42 zsalon (Lithofalco), 426, affinis (Accipiter), 404. affinis (Batrachostomus), 194, 196. affinis (Buceros), 145. affinis (Collocalia), 178. affinis (Coracias), 105. affinis (Cuculus), 210. affinis (Cymborhynchus), 8. affinis (Cypselus), 168. affinis (Hydrocissa), 145. affinis (Micropus), 161. affinis (Milvus), 375. affinis (Ninox), 310. affinis (Palzornis), 259. affinis (Podargus), 196. affinis (Taccocua), 237. audarius (Cerchneis), ‘429, alaudarius (Falco), 428. alaudarius(Tinnunculus), albicilla 369. ‘albicilla (Vultur), 369. albidus (Falco), 358. albiniger (Spizaétus), 354. (Haliaétus), albipes (Cuncuma), 366. albipes (Halisétus), 366. albirostris (Anthracoce- ros), 145. albirostris (Buceros), 145. en (Hydrocissa), a ai (Spizaétus), alee (Limnaétus), ae (Nisaétus), ae (Spizaétus), albonotatus (Caprimul- gus), 188. Alcedinids, 118. Aleedo, 122. alcinus (Macherham- phus), 408. aldrovandi (Scops), 291. alexandri (Palornis), 247, 248, 249, 257. Alophonerpes, 71. alpina (Hirundo), 164. alpinus (Cypselus), 165. amabilis (Carcineutes), 139. amauroptera (Pelargo- psis), 128. amorous (Halcyon), ‘121. amherstii (Ptiloskelos), 8. amicta (Alcemerops), “117. . amicta (Nyctiornis), 117. amictus (Merops), 117. amictus (Nyctiornis), 7. amurensis (Aquila), 336. amurensis (Oerchneis), 424, amurensis (Erythropus), 424. amurensis (Tinnunculus), 425, analis (Dendrocopus), 41, analis (Dendrotypes), 41. analis (Picus), 41. andamanensis (Centro- ’ eoceyx), 242, ‘ andamanensis (Centro- us), 242. andamanensis (Dendro- copus), 42. andamanensis (Limnaé- tas), 351, andamanensis (Picus), 42, andamanensis (Spizaé- tus), 351. * andamanicus (Caprimul- gus), 190. i Anisodactyli, 101. Anorrhinus, 150, Anthracoceros, 143. apiaster (Merops), 113. apus (Grpeclual, 165, apus (Hirundo), 165. apus (Micropus), 166. Aquila, 332. aquilinus (Buteo), 392, Archibuteo, 395. arenarius (Caprimulgus), 184, 188. armstrongi (Halcyon), 36. Ascalaphia, 285, 286. asiatica (Alcedo), 124, 125. asiatica (Cyanops), 92. asiatica (Megalama), 92. asiatica (Megalaima), 92. asiaticus (Buteo), 392. asiaticus (Caprimulgus), 186. asiaticus 262. asiaticus (Psittacus), 262, asiaticus (Trogon), 92, Asio, 270. : Asionidse, 267. Asioninz, 270. assimilis (Phodilus), 269.. a (Photodilus), 9. (Loriculus), 438 assimilis (Picus), 36. ape (Psarisomus), 11. Astur, 396. ater (Falco), 378. ater (Milvus), 375. Athene, 300, athertoni (Merops), 115. ae (Nyctiornis), 15. athertonii (Alcemerops), 116. atratus (Dendrocopus), atratus (Dendrotypes), 40. atratus (Picus), 40. atricapilla (Alcedo), 133. atricapillus (Halcyon), 188. atriceps (Falco), 415. atripennis(Caprimulgus), ‘1 aurantius (Brachypter- nus), 58. _aurantius (Picus), 58. ae hi (Dendrocopus), aurice ps (Picus), 40. aurocristatus (Picus), 43. austeni (Anorhinus), 153. ein (Ptiloleemus), 153. babylonicus (Falco), 417. bacha (Spilornis), 358, “361 bactriana (Athene), 303. ‘bactriana (Oarine), 303. badia (Strix), 268. badius in 398. badius (Falco), 398. badiue (Micronisus), 398. badius (Micropternus),57. badius (Phodilus), 268, 269. badius (Photodilus), 268. “padius (Picus), 57. badius (Scelospizias), 398 bakhamuna (Ephialtes), “998, bakhamuna (Scops), 297. “pakkameena (Ephialtes), 292. bakkameena (Otus), 297. bakkameeria (Scops), . 297, 298. “aelgeenele (Cypselus), ‘dy belli (Ephialtes), 296. ALPHABETICAL INDEX, balli (Scops), 296. barbarus (Falco), 417. barbatus (Gypaétus), 328 barbatus (Palezornis), 257 barbatus (Picus), 22. barbatus (Vultur), 328. barmanicus (Micropter- nus), 55. bartletti (Cuculus), 209. batassiensis (Cypselus), 170. bee (Tachornis), ‘Batrachostomus, 193. Baza, 408. beavani (Alcedo), 124. a (Alcedo), 2! bengalensis (Ascalaphia), 285. bengalensis (Bubo), 285. bengalensis (Centrococ- cyx), 243. a ai (Centropus), bengalensis (Cuculus), 243, ¢ Pan alensis (Gyps), 322, bengalensis (Ierax), 432. bengalensis (Otus), 285. bengalensis (Paleornis), 251, 253. bengalensis (Picus), 58. ben gmlenma (Enoudaeyps), Dengalensis (Psittacus), 252. - ; bepgaenele (Urrua), aed (Vul ‘bengalensis ultur), 324. ; Berenicornis, 153. besra (Accipiter), 404. bicornis (Buceros), 142, bicornis (Dichoceros), "142, bicornis (Homraius), 42. bicornis (Meniceros), 155. bicornis (Ocyceros), 155. bicornis (Tockus), 155. a (Chrysonotus), 6 ‘piddulphi (Syrnium), 274 bifasciate (Aquila), 335, 336. birostris (Buceros), 155. birostris (Lophoceros), 155. birostris (Ocyceros), 155. blagrus (Falco), 368. blagrus (Halixetus), 368. blanfordi (Picus), 43. blewitti,(Athene), 303. blewitti (Carine), 303. blewitti (Heteroglaux), 3. 303. blythii eT HeOpiseals 55. Blythipicus, 50. bonelli (Falco), 343. bonellii (Aquila), 343. bonellii (Eutolmaétug), 343, bonellii (Nisaétus), 343. bonellii (Pseudaétus), 343. bourdilloni (Lyncornis), 192. ‘brachyotos (Strix), 271. Brachyotae (Zigolius), 71 bracbyotus (Asio), 271. brachyotus (Otus), 271. Brachypternus, 58. brachypterus (Pernis), 406. ‘brachyurus (Micropter- nus), 57. brachyurus (Picus), 57. brama (Athene), 301. brama (Carine), 301. brama (Strix), 301. brevipes (Accipiter), 398, brevirostris (Collocalia), 176, 177. brevirostris (Hirundo), brodiei (Athene), 307. brodiei (Glaucidium), * 807. brodiei (Noctua), 307. brooksi (Haliaétus), 369. brucei (Ephialtes), 294. Dee (Scops), 294. runiceps (Halcyon 129, ps ( yon), brunneifrons (Dendro- copus), 41. began lepna(Deyotetee), brunneifrons (Picus), 40, a aan (Hemicercus), Peano (Meiglyptes), breaniiecn (Leiopicus), brunnifrons (Picus), 40. Bubo, 2838. bubo (Strix), 284. Buboninz, 280. bubutus (Centropus), 239. Bucerotes, 140. Bucerotide, 140. Bulaca, 275, 277, 278. burmanica (Ninox), 310. eee (Pelargopsis), Butastur, 862, Bubeo, 389. buteo (Falco), 393. butleri (Asio), 279. butleri (Syrnium), 279. cabanisi (Dendrocopus), cabanisi (Picus), 35. Cacomantis, 216. ceerulescens (Hierax), 434. exrulescens (Ierax), 433. czrulescens (Micro- hierax), 432. ceruleus (Elanus), 379. exruleus (Falco), 379. calidus (Falco), 414. caligatus (Falco), 351. caligatus (Limnaétus), 301. caligatus, (pisadeas) 351, calipyga (Aleyon), 134. Callialeyon, 134. Callolophus. 29. calonyx (Eurystomus), 108. Oalorhamphus, 83. ag ae (Hurystomus), 108. calthraps (Palzornis), 256. ealthrope (Paleornis), 256 alyus (Otogyps), 318. calvus (Vultur), 318. Calyptomena, 12. casiiiis (Glaux),.266. candida (Scelostrix), 266. candida (Strix), 266. eanente (Hemicercus), 9. canente (Picus), 69. canescens (Buteo), 390. anicapillus (lyngipicus), ‘anicapillus (Picus), 46. ALPHABETICAL INDEX. canicapillus picus), 46, caniceps (Bucco), 86. caniceps (Cyanops), 87. caniceps (Megalema), 87. caniceps (Megalaima), 87. (Palzornis), (Yungi- caniceps 258. canorus (Cuculus), 205. capensis (Halcyon), 129. Capitonide, 82. Caprimulgi, 182. Caprimulgide, 185. Caprimulgus, 183, Carcineutes, 138. Oaridagrus, 138. carinatus (Buceros), 151. Carine, 300. castaneonotus (Athene), 307. castaneus (Batracho- stomus), 194, castanonotum (Glauci- dium), 307. castanopterus (Athene), 307. pase pus), 23 castanotus aban 307. cathpharius (Dendroco- pus), 37, 38. cathpharius (Picus), 37, 38 (Centro- caudacuta (Acanthylis), 172, 178. cavatus (Buceros), 142. cavatus (Dichoceros), 142, cavearia (Urrua), 285. cavearius (Bubo), 285. cenchris (Erythropus), 430. cenchris (Falco), 430. cenchris (Tinnunculus), cenchroides (? Astur), 3 Centrococcyx, 240. Centropus, 239. cerviniceps (Hurosto- podus), 192. cerviniceps (Lyncornis), 192. Ceryle, 119. ceylanensis (Falco), 349. ceylonensis (Baza), 411. . si a (Ketupa), ceylonensis (Limnaétus), 349. 439 ceylonensis (Spizaétus iy (8p s (Upupa), seylenue( Beachy tecnns), ceylonensis 161. hog (Picus), 60. Ceyx, 12 Cheetura, 172. Cheeturins, 172. chalcites (Chrysococeysz), 222. cheela (Falco), 357. cheela (Hematornis), 357, 358. cheela (Milvus), 375. cheela (Spilornis), 357, cherrug (Falco), 420. chicquera (/Hsalon), 427, chiequera (Falco), 427. cues (Hypotrior- chis), 427. ia aia (Lithofaleo), 427. chicquera (Turumtia), 427. chinensis (Eudynamis), 228. ctlonigaater (Chryso- hlegma), 25. eb ariguiee (Gecinus), - cite ipsater (Pow ee 25. chloris (Alcedo), 13 chloris (Halcyon), 35. chloris (Sauropatis), 135. chlorogaster (Gecinus), chlorolophus (Chryso- phlegma), 23. chlorolophus (Gecinus), . 23, 24, chlorolophus (Picus), 23. chlorophza (Rhinortha), 236. chlorophzus (Cuculus), 236. chlorophanes (Chryso- phlegma), 25. a haa (Gecinus), 25. chloropus (Gecinus), 23. chlororhynchus (Centro= coccyx), 242. chlcorhyrdhus (Centro-= - pus), 24 Oe ee 90. chrysaétus (Aquila), 333, chrysaétus (Falca),: 333, Chrysococeyx, 220, 440 Chrysocolaptes, 64, chrysonotus (Brachy- pternopicus), 58. chrysonotus (Brachy- pternus), 58. Ohrysophlegma, 27. cineraceus (Circus), 383. cineraceus (Falco), 383. cinerareus (Falco), 383. cinerascens. (Caprimul- gus), 190, cinerascens (Circus), 383... cinereigula (Picus), 47. Circaétus, 355. Circus, 380. ciris (Acanthylis), 172. cirratus (Nisaétus), 349. cirrhatus (Falco), 349. ce (Limnaétus), cirrhatus (Spizaétus), 349, clanga (Aquila), 340. Coccyges, 203. Coccystes, 224. collaris (Alcedo), 135. collaris (Haleyon), 135. collaris (Todirhamphus), 135, 137. Collocalia, 175. columboides (Palzornis), 255. comata (Dendroche- lidon), 182. comata (Macropteryx), 182 i comatus (Anorrhinus), 153, comatus (Berenicornis), 153. comatus (Buceros), 153. comatus Cy peelue), 182. communis (Falco), 414 concolor (Oypselus), 176, concreta (Caridagrus), 138. concreta (Dacelo), 138. conereta (Haleyon), 138. concretus (Caridagrus), . 188. conan (Hemicercus), Coracix, 102. Ooraciadz, 102, Coracias, 103. coracina (Cheetura), 175, coracinus (Acanthylis), - 175. cordatus (Hemicercus), ALPHABETICAL INDEX. coromanda (Alcedo), 134. coromanda (Ascalaphia), 6. : coromanda (Callialcyon), 134, coromanda (Halcyon), 134 coromanda (Strix), 286. coromanda (Urrua), 286. coromandelianus (Hal- -eyon), 134, coromander (Halcyon), 4. coromandus (Bubo), 286. eoromandus (Coccystes), 226. coromandus (Cuculus), . 226. : coromandus (Oxylophus), 226. © coronata (Dendroche- lidon), 180. coronata (Hirundo), 180. coronata (Hydrocissa), 144, 145. . coronata (Macropteryx), 180. ; coronatus (Anthraco- ceros), 144. coronatus (Buceros), 144. Corydon, 5. coulaci (Loriculus), 262. coulaci (Psittacula), 262. crassipes (Aquila), 334. aa (Thriponax), cristata (Pernis), 406. cristatellus (Falco), 349. cristatellus (Limnaétus), 349 cristatellus (Nisaétus), 349. cristatellus (Spizaétus), 349 cristatus (Buteo), 406. cristatus eu cryptogenys (Archi- give) 395 COuculidss, 203. Cuculinz, 204. cuculoides (Athene), 305. cuculoides (Glaucidium), 305. cuculoides (Noctua), 305. Cuculus, 204. Cultrunguis, 281. cultrunguis (Ichthyaé- tus), 368. Ouncuma, 366. curvirostris (Pheenico- phaus), 235. cyaneus (Circus), 384. cyaneus (Falco), 384. cyanocephalus (Pale- ornis), 251, 253. cyanocephalus (Psitta- cus), 251. cyanogularis (Merops),. 116. Cyanops, 92. cyanotis (Bucco), 95. cyanotis (Cyanops), 95. mee (Megalema), cyanotis (Mesobucco), 95. eyanotis (Xantholema), 95. Oymborhynchus, 7. Cypseli, 162. Cypselide, 163. Cypselinz, 163. Cypselus, 164. dalhousie (Eurylaimus),, 11. dalhousiz (Psarisomus), darjellensis (Picus), 37. darjilensis (Dendroco- pus), 37. daudini (Merops), 111. davisoni (Cyanops), 93. davisoni (Halcyon), 136.. ce a (Megalema), . davisoni (Spilornis), 358. delesserti (Chrysocolap-. tes), 66. a edad (Indopicus), . Dendrochelidon, 180. Dendrocopus, 33. dercepstorffi (Strix), 265. ; ioe Nada (Buteo), 390,. desertorum (Falco), 393, diardi (Melias), 233. diardi (Rhopodytes), 233.. diardi (Zanclostomus), 233. , Dichoceros, 142. dicruroides (Cuculus), 223. dicruroides (Pseudornis),. dicruroides (Surniculus),, 224, : ae (Brachypternus),. 58, dimidiatus (Gecinus), 22. oubtmensa (Accipiter),. dumeticola (Strix), 281. dussumieri (Falco), 398. dussuceli (Harpactes), duvaucelii Trogon), 199, 201. agree) edwardsi (Loriculus), 262. Elanus, 379. elgini (Hematornis), 361. ; elgini (Spilornis), 361. ee (Dendrocopus), elliotti (Pernis), 406. Ephialtes, 292. epops (Upupa), 159. erithaca (Alcedo), 127. erithronothos (Picus), 60. erythaca (Ceyx), 127. erythrocephalus (Har- pactes), 200. erythrocephalus (Me- rops), 114. erythrocephalus (Tro- _ gon), 200. erythrogenys(Paleornis), _ 258, 259. : erythrognathus (Pheni-' cophaés), 235, erythrognathus (Rham- phococcyx), 235. erythrognathus (Uro- coccyx), 235. erythronotus (Brachy- pternus), 60. erythropterus (Athene), 306. Erythropus, 424, apereryeus (Gecinus), - Eudynamis, 228. eupatria (Palzornis), 246 eupatria (Psittacus), 246, eupatrius (Palzornis), 248, 249. europeus (Caprimulgus), 187. eurycercus (Centro- _coccyx), 240. a alae (Centropus), Eurylemi, 1. Birylemide 2. Eurylemus, 3. Eurystomus, 107. euryzona (Alcedo), 125, 126. Eutolmaétus, 343. ALPHABETIOAL INDEX. eutolmus (Hierax), 432. ee (Microhierax), Falco, 412. Falconidse, 327. Falconine, 330. fasciata (Aquila), 343. fasciatus (Harpactes), 199. fasciatus (Hieraétus), 34. fasciatus (Nisaétus), 343. fasciatus (Palsornis), 256, 257. fasciatus (Psittacus), fasciatus (Trogon), 199. feddeni (Hemilophus), 73 feddeni (Mulleripicus), 73 feddeni (Thriponax), 73. feildeni (Lithofalco), 435, feildeni (Polihierax), 435. ferox (Accipiter), 390. ferox (Buteo), 390, 392. ee (Merops), festivus (Chrysocolaptes), 64. festivus (Picus), 64. finschi (Paleornis), 254, flammea (Strix), 264. flavifrons (Bucco), 94. flavifrons (Cyanops), 94, a iced (Megalzema), flavigula (Dryotomus), 28 flavinucha (Chryso- phlegma), 28. flavinucha (Gecinus), 28. flavinucha (Picus), 28. flavipes (Oultrunguis), 282. flavipes (Ketupa), 282. flavus (Cuculus), 218, francica (Collocalia), 176, 178. francica (Hirundo), 178. franklini (Cyanops), 96. a (Megalema), franklinii (Bucco), 96. franklinii (Megalaima), 97 fraseri (Pelargopsis), 129. fringillarius (Falco), 434. fringillarius (Hierax), 434, 441 frigillarius (Micro- ; ae, 434. uciphaga (Oollocalia), ’ ae 177,178. uciphaga (Hirundo), 176, Phi (Hierococcyx), 214. fuliginosus ea 390. fulvescens (Aquila), 337, 339 fulvescens (Gyps), 320. ° pert as (Halisetus), 366. fulvus (Gyps), 320, 321. fulvus (Vultur), 320. fusca (Acanthylis), 172. fusca (Alcedo), 132. ° fusca (Aquila), 337, 341. fuscus (Halcyon), 182. galeatus (Buceros), 158. galeritus (Anorhinus), 153. : galeritus (Anorrhinus), 151. galeritus (Buceros), 151. gallicus (Circaétus), 355. gallicus (Falco), 355. garrula (Coracias), 106. Gauropicoides, 63. Gecinulus, 30. Gecinus, “a id gigantea canthylis), 173 gigantea (Chetura), 172, 178. (Hirundi giganteus irundin- apus), 173. gingalensis (Buceros), 156, 15 gingalensis (Lophoceros), 157. gingalensis (Ocyceros), 167. gingalensis (Tockus), 156, 157. ginginianus (Buceros), 155. ginginianus (Neophron), 326. ginginianus (Ocyceros), 155. (Vultur) inginianus ultur), 326. giu (Scops), 291. giu (Strix), 291. Glaucidium, 304. ra (Chrysocolaptes), 4., goensis (Picus), 64. gorii (Gecinus), 20. A42 gouldi (Orescius), 202. govinda (Milvus), 374, 377. grammithorax (Migly- ptes), 52. grammithorax (Phaio- picus), 52. grandis (Alcedo), 125. grandis (Nisaétus), 343. grandis (Spizaétus), 343. grantia (Gecinulus), 30. grantia (Picus), 30. griseus (Buceros), 156. griseus (Ephialtes), 297. anes (Lophoceros), griseus (Ocyceros), 156. griseus eal 297. griseus (Tockus), 156, gularis (Astur), 404. — (Micropternus), 5 gularis (Picus), 57. gurial (Halcyon), 129. gurial (Pelargopsis), 129. guttacristatus (Picus), 65. guttata (Ceryle), 121. guttatus (Alcedo), 121. gutticristatus (Chryso- colaptes), 65. gutturalis (Alophoner- pes), 71. gutturalis (Mulleripicus), 71. gutturalis (Picus), 71. ernie (Iyngi- picus), 48. gymnophthalmus (Picus), 48. gymnophthalmus (Yun- gi baled 4 sin hialten) gymnopodus (Ephialtes), 7395. gymnopodus Aaa 292. QGypaéting, 3: Gypaétus, 328. Gyps, 319. hhemacephala (Mega- lema), 98. hemacephala (Xantho- lema), 98. hematocephala (Xantho- lema), 98. hmmatocephalus (Buceo), 98. Halcyon, 131, Halcyones, 118. Haliaétus, 366. haliaétus (Falco), 314. haliaétus (Pandion), 314. ALPHABETICAL INDEX. Haliastur, 372. hardwickii (Iyngipicus), 47. hardwickii (Picus), 47. hardwickii (Strix), 281. hardwickii (Yungipicus), 47. Harpactes, 199, hastata (Aquila), 341. hastatus (Morphnus), 341, hastatus (Spizaétus), 341. ie (Oalorhamphus), 83, bag (Megalorhynchus), nen (Aquila), 334. hemachalana (Bubo), 284. hemachalanus (Gypaé- tus), 329. Hemicercus, 68. hemilasius (Buteo), 392. Hemilophus, 70. hemiptilopus (Archi- buteo), 395. hendersoni (Falco), 421. hendersoni (Hierofalco), 421. herbexcola (Faleo), 381. Heteroglaux, 303, Heteropus, 347. Hieraétus, 342. Hierax, 431. Hierococeyx, 211. Hierofalco, 420, 421. himalayanus (Ouculus), 207. himalayanus (Picus), 34 peeenhin (Dendro- copus), 34 him: yensis (Gyps), 321. himalayensis (Picus), 34. hirsuta (Ninox), 309, 310. hirsuta (Strix), 309. Hirundinapus, 173. hodgei (Mulleripicus), 75. hodgei (Thriponax), 75. hodgii (Thriponax), 75. hodgsoni (Batrachosto- mus), 194, mens (Chrysococcyx), hodgsoni (Cyanops), 89. hodgsoni + (Harpactes), 200. hodgsoni (Megaleema), 88. hodgsoni (Megalaima), 88. : hodgsoni (Mulleripicus), 72. hodgsoni (Otothrix), 194, hedeeen (Palzornis), hedgeart (Syrnium); 275, hodgsoni (Thriponax), 7 2. a oie (Hemilophus), ony Gas 72. homrai (Buceros), 1 honorata Cedsnamnis), 228. honoratus (Cuculus), 228, horsfieldi (Ichthyaétus), 370. horsfieldi (Limnaétus), 351. Huhua, 287. humii (Chrysophlegma), 28 humii (Halcyon), 136. humilis (Falco), 371. humilis (Haliaétus), 371. humilis (Pandion), 371. humilis (Polioaétus), 371. hyder (Astur), 362. npesene (Hypopicus), hyperythrus (Picus), 32. Hypopicus, 32. Hypotriorchis, 422, 423, 426, 427. ichthyzetus (Falco), 370, ichthyaétus (Pandion), 370. eee (Polioaétus), ichthyaétus (Pontoaétus), 376 Tetinaétus, 346. ignavus (Bubo), 284 igniceps (Bucco), 96 immaculatus (Glauci- dium), 308. a a (Aquila), 334, imperialis (Falco), 334. incertus (Psittacus), 260. incertus (Psittinus), 260. incognita (Baza), 411. incognita ee ve st ae (Mega alaima), incognitus (Picus), 41, indica (Cheetura), 173, indica (Coracias), 108. indica (Lophospiza), 401. indica (Noctua), 301. re ee ee ae indica (Strix), 265, 297. indica (Upupa), 161. ae (Xantholema), indica (Yunx), 79. Indicator, 81. Indicatoridx, 81. indicus (Astur), 401. indicus (Bucco), 98, indicus (Butastur), 365. ee (Caprimulgus), indicus (Falco), 365. indicus (Gyps), 322, 323, indicus (Loriculus), 262. indicus (Merops), 110. indicus (Poliornis), 365. indicus (Psittacus), 262. indicus (Scops), 298. indicus (Vultur), 322. indoburmanicus (Pale- ornis), 248. indranee (Bulaca), 275. indranee (Strix), 275. indrani (Syrnium), 275. indus (Falco), 3872, , indus (Haliastur), 372. a apes (Collocalia), infumata (Tachornis), infumatus selus), ar (Oypselus) infumatus (Tachornis),: 171. infuseata (Taccocua), * 237 inglisi (Cerchneis),' 430. innominata (Collocalia), 177. : innominata (Ninox), 310. innominata (Vivia), 76. innominatus (Picumnus), inornata (Megalema), 87. insignis (Poliohierax), 435. intermedia (Pelargopsis), 129. intermedia’ (Tiga), 61. intermedius (Brachypter- nus), 58.” intermedius (Centro- coccyx), 240. intermedius (Obrysono- tus), 61. intermedius (Cuculus), "207, 208. ; intermedius (Picus), 61. interstinctus (Falco), 429. : ALPHABETICAL INDEX, ispida (Alcedo), 122. Tynginz, 778. Iyngipicus, 44. Iynx, 78. jacobinus (Coccystes), 225. jacobinus (Cuculus), 225. japonicus (Buteo), 393. sapeuious (Falco buteo), javanensis (Ketupa), 283. javanensis (Pious), 61. jevanensis (Podargus), 196 javanensis (Tiga), 61. javanica (Glaux), 266. javanica (Strix), 265. javanicus (Centropus), * 243, javanicus (Eurylemus), 4, Jae (Paleornis), 257. javanicus (Phonico- phaus), 230. javanicus (Podargus), 6 javanicus (Zanclostomus), 230. ‘ javensis (Batrachosto- mus), 194. javensis (Hemilophus), javensis (Mulleripicus), 74. javensis (Picus), 74, javensis (Thriponax), 74. jerdoni (Baza), 411. ee (Ephialtes), 292, 297. jerdoni (Lophastur), 411. jerdoni (Pheenicophzus), 231. jerdoni (Thriponax), 73. jerdonii (Phaiopicos), 57, jotaka (Caprimulgus), 190 jugger (Falco), 419. jugularis (Meiglyptes), 54. jugularis (Miglyptes), 54. jJugularis (Picus), 54. kelaarti (Caprimulgus), 190. kelaarti (Limnaétus), 354. kelaarti (Spizaétus), 354. Ketupa, 280. ketupu (Strix), 283, kieneri (Astur), 345. 443 kieneri (Lophotriorchis), 345, 346. kieneri (Spizaétus), 345. kienerii (Limnaétus), 346. acts (Dendrochelidon), 1 klecho (Hirundo), 181. letior (Hurystomus), 107. lathami (Calorhamphus), 84. lathami (Cuculus), 213. lathami (Falco), 409, 411. lempiji (Ephialtes), 297, lempiji (Scops), 297. lempiji (Strix), 297. Lepocestes, 50. leschenaulti (Melittopha- gus), 114. leschenaulti (Taccocua), 237. leschenaultii (Merops), 114. leschenaultii (Strix), 281. leschenaultii (Taccocua), 237. léttia (Ephialtes), 297. lettia (Scops), 297. lettioides (Scops), 297. ah oeeenhale (Alcedo), 12! : leucocephala (Butaquila), 392, - leucocephala (Pelargo- psis), 129. leucocephalus (Buteo), 392. leucocephalus (Halcyon), 129. leucogaster (Blagrus), 368. leucogaster ‘(Buceros), 145. leucdgaster (Cuncuma), 368. leucogaster (Falco), 368. leucogaster (Haliaétus), 368. ‘ leucogaster (Picus), 74. leuconota (Vultur), 324. leuconyx (Cypselus), 167. leiconyx (Micropus), 167. leucoptera (Archibuteo), 395. leucopygialis (Acanthy- "lis), 175. leucopygialis (Chetura), 175. * : 444 leucopygialis (Rhaphi- dura), 175. leucorypha (Aquila), 366. leucoryphus (Haliaétus), , 366. " ) eucostigma ceros), 149, . oe lilacina (Callialcyon), 134. lilacina (Halcyon), 134, limborgi (Chrysococcyx), : 221. limneetus (Falco), 351. Limnaétus, 348. limnaétus (Falco), 351. limnaétus (Spizaétus), 349, 351. linchi (Collocalia), 178. lineata (Cyanops), 89. lineata (Megaleema), 89. lineata (Megalaima), 88. lineatus Sor ta 88. lineatus (‘Thereiceryx), 88. Liopicus, 43. Lithofaleo, 426. liventer (Butastur), 364. liventer (Falco), 364. liventer (Poliornis), 364. longicaudatus (Pheenico- pheus), 232. longimembris (Strix), 266. lon, ipennis (Dendro- ceeliton), 181. longipennis (Hirundo), 181 longipennis (Macro- pteryx), 181. longipes (Buteo), 390. sis (Upupa), 61. Lophocervs, 154. Lophospizias, 400. ° lophotes (Baza), 409. lophotes (Falco), 409. - Lophotriorchis, 345. Loriculus, 260. lucidus (Ohrysococcyx), 222, Juggur (Falco), 419. lugubris (Alcedo), 121. lugubris tConyley 121, lugubris (Cueulus), 223. lugubris (Ninox), 309. lugubris (Strix), 309. uenie (Surniculus), 23. lunatus (Eurylaimus), 9, lunatus (Serilophus), 9. Lyncornis, 192, ALPHABETICAL INDEX, macclellandi laima), 88. macei (Dendrotypes), 39. macei (Falco), 366. macei (Haliaétus), 366. macei (Picus), 39, Macherhamphus, 408. macii (Dendrocopus), 39. Macrochires, 162. Macropterygineg, 179. Macropteryx, 179. macrorhynchus (Cymbo- ~ rhynchus), 7. macrorhynchus (Todus), 7 (Mega~ macrourus (Accipiter), 81. macrourus (Caprimul- gus), 188. macrurus (Caprimulgus), 188, 190. macrurus (Circus), 381. maculata (Aquila), 340. maculatus (Chalcococ- eyx), 222. maculatus (Chrysococ- cyx), 222. maculatus (Cuculus), 222. maculatus (Falco), 340. maculatus (Lamprococ- cyx), 222. maculatus (Trogon), 222. ae a (Palzornis) , 4 mahrattensis (Caprimul- gus), 184, mahrattensis (Leiopicus), 43. mahrattensis (Liopicus), mahrattensis (Liopipo), 43 mahrattensis (Picus), 43. major (Milvus), 377. majoroides (Dendroco- * pus), 37. majoroides (Picus), 37. malabarica (Athene), 306. malabarica (Megalaima), 99. malabarica (Xantho- ’ Iema), 99. malabaricum (Glauci- dinm), 306. malabaricus (Anthraco- ceros), 145. malabaricus (Bucco), 99. malabaricus (Buceros), 144, 145. malabaricus (Hphialtes), 297. malabaricus (Harpactes), 199. malabaricus (Scops), 297. malabaricus (Trogon), malaccense (Chryso- phlegma), 29. malaccensis (Callolo- phius), 29. malaccensis (Chryso- phlegma), 29. malaccensis (Cymborhyn- chus), 7. malaccensis (Gecinus), 29. moalaccensis (Neopus), malaccensis (Nyctiornis), 117. malaccensis (Picus), 29. malaccensis (Psittacus), 260. malaccensis (Psittinus), 260, malaccensis (Tanygna- thus), 260. malaiensis (Ictinaétus), 347. malayana (Eudynamis), 228 malayanus (Chrysococ- cyx), 221. malayanus (Lamprococ- cyx), 221. malayanus (Scops), 292. malayensis (Falco), 347. malayensis (Ictinaétus), malayensis (Neopus), 47. mandarinus (Picus), 35. marginatus (Meiglyptes), 53 marshallorum (Megale- ma), 84, 86. maxima (Collocalia), 177. maximus (Bubo), 284. maximus (Centrococcyx), Megalema, 84. Bol er (Malaco- lophus), 58. melanogaster Cin 51. so Tasepantin (Venilia), melanoleucos (Ierax), 433. melanoleucus (Circus), 385, melanoleucus (Coccystes), 2. ‘melanoleucus (Cuculus), melanoleucus (Falco), melanoleucus (Hierax), 43 melanoleucus (Micro- hierax), 433. melanoleucus (Oxylo- hus), 225. sod acirtonus (Hlanus), 379. melanopterus (Falco), 379 melanorhynchus (Pale- ornis), 255, 256. melanoschistus (Accipi- ter), 402. melanotis (Buteo), 358. melanotis (Milvus), 377. melanotis (Spilornis), 358. melanotus (Picus), 64. melba (Cypselus), 164. -melba (Hirundo), 164. melba (Micropus), 165. Melittophagus, 114. Meniceros, 155. meninting (Alcedo), 124, 125 meniscus (Picus), 45. mentalis (Brachylophus), mentalis(Callolophus),28. mentalis (Chrysophleg- ma), 28. mentalis (Gecinus), 28. merguiensis (Collocalia), Meropes, 109. Meropide, 109. Merops, 109. merulina (Polyphasia), 218. merulinus (Cacomantis), 218. merulinus (Cuculus), 218. Mesobuceo, 95. Microhierax, 481. Micronisus, 396. Micropternus, 54. micropterus (Cuculus), 0. 210. Micropus, 164. micropus (Brachypter- nus), 58. microsoma (Gey), 127. Miglyptes, 52. aeate (Falco), 378. migraus (Milvus), 378. milvipes (Falco), 421. ALPHABETICAL INDEX. mailipes (Hierofalco), 421. milvoides (Spizaétus), 344. Milvus, 374. minimus (Spilornis), 361, minor (Spilornis), 358. a aa (Cypselus), 7 minutilla (Athene), 308. minutus (Scops), 292. mitchellii (Picus), 45. modestus (Scops), 296. mogilnik (Aquila), 334, 336. monachus (Vultur), 317, moniliger (Batracho- stomus), 196. montanus (Cypselus), 168 monticola (Bulaca), 275. monticola (Caprimulgus), 185. monticolus (Caprimul- gus), 185. Mulleripicus, 71. murinus (Cypselus), 166. murinus (Micropus), 166. mystaceus (Psittacus), 256. mystacophanes (Choto- rhea), 91. mystacophanes (Cya- nops), 91 mystacophanes (Mega- lema), 91. mystacophanos (Bucco), 91. mystacophanus (Choto- rea), 91. neevia (Aquila), 339, 340. nsevioides (Aquila), 337, 339 nanus (Hierococcyx), 215, nanus (Ichthyaétus), 371. ae (Iyngipicus), 47, 9. nanus (Pontoaétus), 371. nanus (Yungipicus), 47. narcondami (Rhyticeros), 149, narcondami (Rhytidoce- ros), 149. nasutus (Cymbirhyn- chus), 7. nasutus (Todus), 7. naumanni (Cerchneis), 430. Neophron, 325, 445 Neopus, 347. nepalensis (Aceros), 149. ee (Buceros), nepalengis (Bucia), 116, re (Cypselus), nepalensis (Huhua), 287. ca (Palzornis), 248. nepalensis (Spizaétus), 352. 5 nepaulensis (Picus), 23. newarense (Syrnium), 275 newarensis (Bulaca), 275. newarensis (Ulula), 275. nicobaricus (Ephialtes), 292. nicobaricus (Palzornis), 258, 259. nicobaricus (Scops), 292. nice (Collocalia), 176, 7 nigra (Polyphasia), 216. nigralbus (Buceros), 145. nigricans (Alcedo), 126. . nigrigenis (Gecinus), 26. nigripennis (Upupa), 161, eee (Cultrunguis), nigrirostris (Psittacus), - 256. Ninox, 309. nipalensis (Aquila), 336. nipalensis (Bubo),-287. a (Circeeétus), nipalonsis (Huhua), 288, en (Limnaétus), nipalensis (Ninox), 309. nipalensis (Nisaétus), 352, nipalensis (Phodilus), « , 295, nipalensis (Spizaétus), B 2, 354, » J nipalensis (Vivia), 76, -Nisaétus, nisicolor (Cuculus), 214, nisicolor (Hierococcyx), 214, nisoides (Accipiter), 404, a (Hierocoecyx), nisosimilis (Falco), 402. nisus (Accipiter), 402. nisus (Falco), 402. nivea (Nyctea), 290. nivea (Strix), 290. niveus (Falco), 351. 446 niveus (Limnaétus), 351. niveus (Nisaétus), 343. nivicola (Gyps), 321. nivicola (Mesomorpha), 3. nivicola (Syrnium), 273. nivicolum (Syrnium), ‘nudipes (Acanthylis), 172, nudipes (Chetura), 172. Nyctea, 289. nyctea (Strix), 290. Nyctiornis, 115. obscura (Ninox), 311. obscurus (Rhyticeros), 147. occipitalis (Gecinus), 22. a (Halcyon), 13 occipitalis (Picus), 22, occipitalis (Sauropatis), 7 occipitalis (Todiram- _ phus), 137. ocellata (Bulaca), 277, 278. ‘ocellatum (Syrnium), 277. ochracea (Comeris), 77. ochracea (Sasia), 77. ochraceus (Microcolap- tes), 77. ochrogenys (Syrnium), 275 ochromalus (Eurylai- mus), 5. ochromelas (Eurylxmus), 5. Ocyceros, 155. orescius (Harpactes), 202. oreskios (Harpactes), 202. “oreskios (Trogon), 202. orientalis (Aquila), 336. orientalis (Bubo), 288, 289. orientalis (Coracias), 107. orientalis (Ouculus), 228. orientalis (Eudynamis), 228. orientalis (Eurystomus), 107. _ orientalis (Huhua), 289. orientalis (Strix), 289. osbecki (Palmornis), 257. Otogyps, 318. Otothrix, 194. Otus, 270. otus (Asio), 270. ALPHABETIOAL INDEX. otus (Strix), 270. ovivorus (Ictinaétus) 347. ovivorus (Nisaétus), 347. Oxylophus, 225. pacifica (Hirundo), 167. pacificus (Cypselus), 167. pacificus (Micropus), 167. pagodarum (Strix), 278. Palzornis, 246. pallescens (Gyps), 322. pallidus (Circus), 381. pallidus (Cypselus), 166. pallidus (Nisaétus), 351. aa (Cypselus), 170. palumbarius (Astur), a ad (Faleo) umbarius alco), 397. ee (Milvus), 375. andion, 313. Pandionida, 313. passerina (Polyphasia), 216. passerinus (Cacomantis), 216 asserinus Cuculus), : 216, 218. : asserinus (Ololygon), P 216. We pectoralis (Dendrocopus), 41 pectoralis (Huhua), 288, pene (Meiglyptes), 3. pectoralis (Picus), 41. pekinensis (Oerchneis), 430 pekinensis (Oypselus), tees ekinensis (Erythropus Bae ( pus), pekinensis (Tichornis), 430. pekinensis (Tinnunculus), 430. 4 pelagicus (Haliaétus), 369. ) Pelargopsis, 128. pelegrinoides (Falco), 417. ees (Iyngipicus), pennata (Aquila), 344, pennatus (Ephialtes), 292. : pennatus (Falco), 344. pennatus (Hieraétus), 344, pennatus (Nisaétus), 344. pennatus (Scops), 291. Penthoceryx, 219. perenopterus (Neophron), 326, 327. perenopterus (Vultur), 327. peregrinator (Falco), 415. peregrinoides (Falco), 417. peregrinus (Falco), 413. peristerodes (Palornis), 255. ) perniger (Heteropus), 347. pernigra (Aquila), 347. Pernis, 405. persica (Athene), 303. persicus (Merops), 112. aoe (Micropternus), phaioceps (Micropter- nus), 55. philippensis (Buceo), 98, a aa (Centropus), philippensis(Megalaima), 98. philippensis (Merops), Th f ; philippinus (Merops), 111. phillipensis (Loriculus), 262. Phodilus, 268. Phenicophaés, 234. Pheenicophzeus, 234. Pheenicophaine, 227. Photodilinz, 268, Photodilus, 268. pica (Buceros), 144. Pici, 14. Picide, 16. Picine, 17. Picumnine, 75. Picumnus, 75. .pileata (Alcedo), 133. pileata (Halcyon), 133. plicatug (Aceros), 147. Plicatus (Buceros), 147, rie plicatus (Rhyticeros), 147. ; ee (Haliaétus), ad. phacbeus (Polioaétus), v1. plumipes (Athene), 303, plumipes (Buteo), 393. plumipes (Carine), 303. plumipes (Ephialtes), 300. 3 lumipes (Scops), 300. odargi, 193. Podargide, 193. Polioaétus, 369. poliocephalus (Cuculus), 208, Poliococcyx, 233. poliogenys (Falco), 365. poliogenys (Poliornis), 365. Poliohierax, 434. poliopsis (Astur), 398, poliopsis (Micronisus), 398. oliopsis (Scelos jizias), eo Poliornis, 362. Polyphasia, 216, pondicerianus (Falco), 372. pondicerianus (Paitta- cus), 256. ponticerianus (Vultur), 31 porphyromelas (Blythi- picus), 51. porphyromelas (Lepo- cestes), 51. porphyremelne (Venilia), if pravata (Cuculus), 219. Psarisomus, 11. Pseudaétus, 3438. Pseudofringilla, 81. Pseudogyps, 324, Pseudospiza, 81. Psittaci, 245. Psittacide, 245. Psittinus, 259. Ptilolemus, 151. Paenorayadia (Pernis), ptilorhynchus (Falco), 406. ptilorhynchus (Pernis), "406 Ptiloskelos, 288. pucoran ae 147. pulchella (Dacelo), 139. pulchellus (Carcineutes), 139. pulcher (Spizaétus), 352. pulchra (Athene), 301. pulchra (Carine), 301.- pulverulentus (Alopho- nerpes), 71. oe, pulverulentus (Hemilo- phus), 71, ALPHABETICAL INDEX. pulverulentus (Mulleri- picus), 71. pulverulentus (Picus), 71. pumilus (Iyngipicus), 46. pumilus (Picus), 46. punctata (Aquila), 337. punctatus (Batrachosto- mus), a unctatus izaétus), ai (Sp ) puncticollis (Brachypter- nopicus), 58. puncticollis (Brachypter- nus), 58. ‘ punicea (Venilia), 26. Se (Callolophus), puniceus (Chrysophleg- a), 26. puniceus (Gecinus), 26. puniceus (Picus), 26. punjabi (Palzornis), 248. purpurea (Alcedo), 127. ° purpureus (Palsornis), 251. purpureus (Psittacus), 251. pusaran (Buceros), 147. pygargus (Circus), 383. pygmeus (Buteo), 365. gmzus (Iyngipicus), Pye 5 pygmaeus Vee 45. ) pygmeus (Yungipicus), 4. Pp rhocephalus (Cucu-~ Mla 284, tus (Ph syrrhocephalus (Pheni- a haés), 234. pyrrhocephalus (Pheeni- cophzus), 234. Pyrrhopicus, 49. pyrrhothorax (Dendro- copus), 38. pyrrhothorax (Picus), 38 pyrrhotis (Blythipicus), 50. pyrrhotis (Gecinus), 50. pyrrhotis (Lepocestes), 50 pyrrhotis (Picus), 50. pyrrhotis (Pyrrhopicus), 50 pyrrhotis (Venilia), 50. quadricolor (Bucco), 91. quadricolor (Megalaima), ~ 91, quinticolor (Melittopha- gus), 114, 447 quinticolor (Merops), 114, ee) radcliffi (Indicator), 81. radiata (Athene), 306. radiata (Strix), 306. radiatum (Glaucidium), 306. . rafflesi (Chrysonotus), 63. aa (Gauropicoides), 3. rafflesii (Picus), 63. rafflesii (Tiga), 63. ramsayi (Cyanops), 97. ramsayi (Megalema), 97. regulus (Aisalon), 426. regulus (Falco), 426. Rhamphococeyx, 235. Rhinoplax, 158. eae 236. ' rhodogastra(Teraspizias), 9aee (Terasp: Rhopodytes, 230. Rhytidoceros, 146, rosa. (Palgornis), 251, 252, 253. rosa (Psittacus), 252. rubiginosus (Gecinus), 51. rubiginosus (Hemicircus), 51. rubiginosus (Pyrrhopi- cus), 51. rubricapilla (Megalaima), 100 rubricapilla (Xanthole- ma), 100. rubricapillus (Bucco), 100. rubricatus (Picus), 45. rubricatus (Yungipicus), 5. rubropygia (Raya), 9. rubropygialis (Chryso- notus), 61. rubropygialis (Picus), 61. rubropygius (Serilophus), 9. rudis (Ceryle), 119. ruficollia (Buceros), 147. rufigastra (Alcedo), 124. rufipedoides (Falco), 423. rufinotus (Meiglyptes), 55. rufinotus (Micropternus), 55. rufinus (Buteo), 390. Tufinus (Falco), 390. rufipennis (Centrococ- cys) . rufipennis (Oentropus), 239. 448 rufipennis (Scops), 292. rufitinctus (Astur), 401. rufitinctus (Lophospiza), 40 i rufitinetus (Spizaétus), 401. rufiventer (Buteo), 393. rufiventris (Cacomantis), rufiventris (Polyphasia), 218 rufus (Picus), 55. rutherfordi (Spilornis), 358, 58. rutilus (Harpactes), 201. sacer (Falco), 402. sacer (Palzeornis), 248. sagittatus (Ephialtes), 296. sagittatus (Scops), 296. saker (Hierofalco), 420. Sasia, 77. saturatior (Halcyon), 132. saturatus (Cuculus), 207. saturatus (Tinnunculus), 429. Sauropatis, 135. scandiaca (Nyctea), 290, acandiaca (Strix), 290. Scelospiza, 396. Scelospizias, 396. Scelostrix, 266. scindeanus (Dendroco- pus), 36. scindeanus (Picus), 36. schisticeps (Palzornis), 253. Scops, 290. scops (Ephialtes), 295. scops (Strix), 291. scutata (Buceros), 158, scutatus (Rhinoplax), 158. scutulata (Athene), 309, scutulata (Ninox), 309, scutulata (Strix), 309, seloputo (Strix), 278. seloputo (Syrnium), 278. semicoronatus (Iyngipi- cus), 45. semicoronatus (Picus), 45. semitorques (Hphialtes), 300. semitorques (Otus), 300. semitorques (Scops), 300, a aa (Upupa), sepulchralis (Cuculus), 218, ALPHABETICAL INDEX, sericeogula (Raya), ll. Serilophus, 8. severus (Falco), 423. a ig (Hypotriorchis), 23. shaheen (Falco), 415. shorei (Chrysonotus), 62. shorei (Picus), 62. shorei (Tiga), 62. sibirica (Strix), 284. sindiana (Alcedo), 122. euizien is | Dendincoay) sindianus (Picus), 36. sinense (Syrnium), 277. sinensis (Bulaca), 277, 278. ; ) sinensis (Centropus), 239, sinensis (Pelophilus), 239. “sinensis (Strix), 278. sirkee (Centropus), 237. sirkee (Taccocua), 237. sivalensis (Palzornis), 248, smaragdinus (Chryso- coccyx), 222. smyrnensis (Alcedo), 182. smyrnensis (Halcyon), 132, j soloensis (Astur) 400. soloensis (Falco), 400. soloensis (Micronisus), 400. soloensis (Tachyspiza), soloensis (Tachyspizias), 400. am sonnerati (Penthoceryx), 219. a neat (Polyphasia), 19, : sonneratii (Cuculus), 219. ss (Dendrocopus), sordidus (Hemicercus), aparverioides (Cuculus), 211. ) sparverioides (Hierocoo- eyx), 211. sphynx (Limnaétus), 349, sphynx (Spizaétus), 349, spilocephalus(Ephialtes), rie spilocephalus (Scops Pook (Scops), spilogaster nis), 358. spilogaster (Spilornis), 358, (Hemator- spilonotus (Circus), 388. Spilornis, 357. ‘Spizaétus, 348. spodiopygia (Collocalia), 8. spodiopygia (Macro- pteryx), 178. squamatus (Gecinus), 19. squamatus (Picus), 19. squamicolle (Chryso- phlegma), 28. stevensoni (Accipiter), 405 strenuus (Cuculus), 212. strenuus (Hierococcyx), 212. strepitans (Strix), 289, erete (Cuculus), 207, 210. stricklandi (Brachypter- nus), 67. stricklandi (Chrysoco- laptes), 67. pees (Chrysocolaptes), strictus (Picus), 65. ‘Striges, 263. Strigids, 264. striolatus (Gecinus), 20. striolatus (Picus), 20. Strix, 264. strophiatus (Archibuteo), 395. strophiatus (Hemiztus), 395. subbuteo (Falco), 422. pub pubcoteiypetrionahio), subbuteo (Lithofalco), Se cet subfurcatus (Cypselus), is (Cypselus) subfurcatus icropus), 169, sei ae subruficollis (Aceros), 148. subruficollis (Buceros), 148. subruficollis (Rhyti- ceros), 148, subruficollis (Rhytido- Cait) 148. subtypicus (Accipiter mye (Accipiter), sultaneus (Chrysoco- laptes), 66. sultaneus (Falco), 415. sultaneus (Indopicus), 66. sultaneus (Picus), 65. sumatrana (Strix), 289. sumatranus (Ooracias), 6. sumatrapus (Corydon), 6, sumatranus (Cuculus), 233. sumatranus (Poliococ- cyx), sumatranus (Rhopo- dytes), 233. sumatranus (Zanclosto- mus), 233. sumatrensis (Aviceda), All. sumatrensis (Baza), 411. sunia (Ephialtes), 292. sunia (Scops), 291, Surniculus, 223. swainsoni (Circus), 381. swinhoei (Merops), 114. oa ats 114. syama (Baza), 409. sykesi (Megalama), 90. sylvatica (Acanthylis), 174. sylvatica (Chwtura), 174. Syrnium, 273, © Taccocua, 237. Tachornis, 170. Tachyspiza, 396. tarayensis (Noctua), 301. tectorum (Cypselus), 171. teesa (Butastur), 362, teesa (Buteo), 361. teesa (Circa), 362. teesa (Poliornis), 363. tenuiceps (Vultur), 323. tenuirostris (Cuculus), 216. tenuirostris (Gyps), 323. tenuirostris (Ololygon), 219. tenuirostris(Polyphasia), 216, 218. Thereiceryx, 86. thermophilus (Falco), 419 threnodes (Cacomantis), 218 Thriponax, 72. tickelli (Anorrhinus), 151. tickelli (Buceros), 151. tickelli (Ocyceros), 151. tickelli (Ptilolemus), 151. tickelli (Toccus), 151. Tiga, 61. VOL. ITI, ALPHABETICAL INDEX, tiga (Chrysonota), 61. tiga (Picus), 61. tinnunculoides (Falco), 30. Tinnunculus, 428. tinnunculus (Cerchneis), tinnunculus (Falco), 428. Tockus, 154. torquatus (Merops), 110. be ada (Palgornis), torquatus (Psittacus), 250. torquilla (lynx), 78. torquilla (Yunx), 78. tridactyla (Alcedo), 127. tridactyla (Ceyx), 127. tridactyla (Tiga), 61. a a aa 61. tridactylus (Picus), 61. tristis (Meiglyptes), 52. tristis (Melias), 232. tristis (Phoenicophsus), 233. tristis (Rhopodytes), 282, tristis (Zanclostomus), 232. trivirgatus (Astur), 401. trivirgatus (Falco), 401. ee (Lophospiza), Ol. trivirgatus (Lophospi- zias), 401 Trogones, 198, Trogonida, 198. tubiger (Noctua), 307. tukki (Miglyptes), 53. tukki (Picus), 53. turcomana (Strix), 284. turcomanus (Bubo), 284. typus (Chicquera), 427. tytleri (Palzornis), 259. umbrata (Urrua), 286. umbratus (Bubo), 286. undulatus (Buceros), 147. undulatus (Hematornis), 357 undulatus (Rhyticeros), 14 undulatus (Rhytidoce- ros), 147. undulatus (Spilornis), unicolor (Oollocalia), 176, 177 449 unicolor (Haliztus), 366. unicolor (Hirundo), 176. unicolor (Limnaétus), 341. ) unwini (Caprimulgus), 187. Upupa, 159. Upupz, 159, Upupide, 159. Urrua, 285, 286. varia (Ceryle), 119. varia (Halcyon), 138. variegatus (Picus), 47. varius (Cuculus), 213. varius (Hierococcyx), 213. varius (Todirhamphus), 138. Venilia, 50. venustus (Cuculus), 219. vernalis (Coryllis), 261. vernalis (Loriculus), 261. vernalis (Psittacus), 261. se a (Cerchneis), 425, vespertinus(Erythropus), 424. vespertinus (Falco), 424. vespertinus (Tinnuncu- lus), 424. vibrisca (Palzornis), 257, vibrissa (Psittacus), 256. vidali (Halcyon), 136. vigil (Buceros), 158. vigil (Rhinoplax), 158. vindhiana (Aquila), 337. vindhiana (Palzornis), 248, violaceus (Buceros), 144, virens (Megaleema), 86. virens (Megalaima), 84. virgatus (Accipiter), 404, virgatus (Falco), 404. viridanus (Gecinus), 22. viridanus (Picus), 22. viridirostris (Rhopo- dytes), 231. viridirostris (Zanclosto- mus), 231. viridis (Bucco), 89. viridis (Calyptomena), 12. viridis (Centropus), 243, viridis (Cyanops), 90. viridis (Gecinulus), 31. viridis (Megalema), 90. viridis (Megalaima), 90, viridis (Merops), 110. 2@ 450 ve (Thereiceryx), vittate (Aquila), 340. vittatus (Oypselus), 167. vittatus (Gecinus), 22, vulgaris (Buteo), 390. vulgaris (Otus), 270. Vultur, 316, Vulturide, 315. westermani (Picus), 39. whiteleyi (Atheue), 305. xanthoderus (Ohryso- phlegma), 25. santhodecda (Picus), 25. ALPHABETICAL INDEX. Xantholeema, 97. xanthonota (Pseudo- spiza), 81. aad (Indicator), 8 xanthonotus (Pseudo- fringilla), 81. xenthorhynehus (Chalco- coccyx), 221. xanthorhynchus (Ohryso- eoccyx), 221. xanthorhynchus (Oucu- lus), 221, Yungipicus, 45. Yunx, 78. Zanclostomus, 230. ai (Megaleema), 8 aeylanica (Megalaima), 87 zeylanicus (Bucco), 86. sat ail (Ketupa), zeylonensis (Strix), 281. zeylonica (Cyanops), 87. fe zeylonicus (‘Thereiceryx), 86 zorca (Strix), 291. Zygodactyli, 80. PRINTHD BY TAYLOR AND FRANCIS, RED LION COURT, FLEET STREET. weed 4 ) ALIS WY if : we : LErsucey ett EN ares ae Aaa Bae (Sie! 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