7 “Tap bY ‘ ot oe aon amg FNS SO Dee ae = P 4 Ps v = Ashen ii MO a ‘ La ery y ye : mares -_ ‘ * Sn ee — ee >| ee - at ae ee a wie OS = Sa al ed te NTE f r ‘al + \ Mos $< % Ye ! : i 2 Sg a npr: ar “7 “ - ena = a z = . Sse z <= > a oe os - Bee i . = th ~ ~—— wor * — —— on —_ pa Penis ee Cs Te dg ~ TN) ee _ : i tae ee oe 1 > = Z - - _ = . = oe SE ITT _ ee = aang — alge a r : : * ee Se ee = =! ———— RR a et AUT ORY PE. JOURNAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL. Part Il. Extra Numper. Aveusr, 1875. CATALOGUE OF OF BURMA. BY THE LATE ; Ek. BLY Te. O.M.Z.S., HON. M.B.0O.U.; HON. M. ASIAT. SOC. BENGAL; CORR. M. ROY. ACADEMY OF TURIN, OF ROY. NORWEGIAN, AND OF BATAVIAN SOCIETY OF SCIENCES; CORR. M. ACAD. NAT. SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA, AND NAT, HIST. SOC. OF THE MOSELLE DEPARTMENT. WITH A MEMOIR, AND PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR. a ee > L F MAD HERTFORD: PRINTED BY STEPHEN AUSTIN AND SONS. 1875. oe Se ee ae — aoe 15-19 0A05- ue 2 eS é 7, © WM a 7, ‘ ~, ". } \ .* > 7 EIT r ; . " ? F i ” . : ie | a A L} ' Mie Se te WS oe 22g ACI Seas + eS SP Pee eee a Le eiscalit Piva acta aan ac alta! na, Se eth oo r tilale sais Some eee 2 alee as ee ue 4 Ad —— 4 oat ™ mt -— ted i «1 X1V Lntroduction. (March 30). He had been led to consider it while drawing up the intro- ductory chapter which was to preface these catalogues, for in a letter to me dated 15th July of that year he refers to this MS. as follows :— ‘‘T suppose that Phayre showed you my sketch of what I conceive to be the true regions and sub-regions of 8. E. Asia, and I expected that he would have modified somewhat my notions with regard to the provinces into which I venture to divide the Jndo-Chinese sub-region, but he seems to have assented to them altogether. Only yesterday I received the ‘ Proceedings of the Asiatic Society’ for April and May last, and the ‘Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal,’ Part II., No. 1, 1871, and in p. 84 of the ‘ Proceedings’ I find some remarks by Stoliczka which quite confirm my views, only that I think that, with regard to the extension of the Malayan fauna into India, he should rather have said Southern India, because the African affinities of Central and Northern India, inclusive of the Siwalik Deposits, are of ancient date, as shown by the occurrence of Bos namadicus in Central India, which is barely separable from the European B. primigenius (a type of Bos which is elsewhere only known from Europe), and by the presence of giraffes and of antelopes of African type in the Siwalik Deposits. I have such an enormous mass of valuable facts to deal with, that I gave over making them public in driblets at the meetings of the Zoological Society; and I have now time and undisturbed leisure to treat of them in a work which I am preparing on ‘ The Origination of Species,’ a subject upon which I think I can throw some hight,’’* As pointed out in a note, Blyth’s ‘Austral-Asian region’ is generally the same with Dr. Sclater’s ‘Indian region,’ minus Hindustan proper, or the plains of Upper India east and south of the north-west desert—the Dukhun or table- land of the Peninsula with the intervening territory, inclusive of the Vindhyan Ghats—the Coromandel Coast and the low northern half of Ceylon—all of which Blyth places in his Ethiopian region. What remains of India after this large deduction Blyth distributes through three sub-regions, viz. the Himalayan, Indo-Chinese, and Cinghalese. India cannot, he argues, be treated as a natural zoological province: it is a border-land in which different zoological regions meet, and one, therefore, “of. extraordinarily complex zoological affinities.”” Burma of course falls within his Indo-Chinese sub- * Among the papers left by Blyth is one headed ‘ Origination of the Various. Races of Man, which he may have intended to form part of the book here referred to. It contains nothing original, but brings together numerous points of resemblance and contrast observable in the several groups of the order Primates. Introduction. XV region, which extends southward as far as Penang and Province Wellesley, where his Malayan sub-region commences. The interest which Blyth had always taken in the Rhinoceros group was revived by the safe arrival at the Zoological Gardens of the Chittagong indi- vidual, the Ceratorhinus crosser of the present Catalogue. In his paper con- tributed to the ‘ Annals’ in 1872, he argues against Gray’s assignment of this species to Rhinoceros sumatrensis, and in favour of its identity with the fine Tavoy specimen shot by Col. Fytche, and figured in this Journal, vol. xxx. p. 156. Blyth’s conjecture that the Arakan Hills is one of the habitats of this species is borne out by the letter in which Capt. Lewin, the superin- tendent of the Hill Tracts of Chittagong, first reported to me in 1867 the capture of the animal.* After giving her measurements, which were then 6 feet from crown of head to root of tail, and 4 feet 2 inches in height, and otherwise minutely describing her horns, Capt. Lewin adds: ‘‘ You are mis- | taken I think in supposing that she has come from the Tenasserim Provinces —the two-horned species is found in my hills. I have seen one alive, and several of my men have seen a dead one.” In the Journal of Travel and Natural History, No. 2,}+ of 1868, will be found a letter from Blyth in explanation of some remarks which he had made at the Zoological Society on the occasional shedding or loss by violence of rhinoceros’ horns, followed by their renewal. In this he takes the opportunity of pointing out the tendency which some species have to develope a rudi- mentary horn on the forehead, and argues for the possible explanation in this manner of cases of three-horned rhinoceroses being reported by travellers. The connexion which Blyth established, first with ‘Land and Water,’ and later with the ‘ Field,’ gave him interesting literary occupation ; and the ‘Naturalist’? columns of both these journals abound in scraps by ‘ Zoophilus,’ which did real service to the advancement of scientific truth. No pen so ready as his to expose current fallacies or sensational announce- | ments in works of travel of the results of loose and careless observations. Very many of his ‘scraps’ are worthy of being collected and preserved, for such use as we see they have been turned to by Mr. Darwin. These columns occasionally contained more elaborate papers, such as the series in the ‘Field’ for 1873, on ‘ Wild Animals dispersed by human agency,’ and ‘On the Gruidee or Crane family.’ This monograph, for such it amounts to, was * The date of capture is erroneously given, both by Mr. Blyth and by Dr. Anderson in his cited communication to the Zoological Society. Tt Page 1380. XV1 Introduction. its writer’s last utterance. He had long been ailing, and in the autumn of this year he became very ill, and. went to Antwerp for a change. On his return he called on me, feeling, as he said, better, though complaining of ereat prostration. He seemed full of what he had seen in the Antwerp Zoological Garden, where he thought he had found another new species of Rhinoceros. This was our last interview. Though nursed by a tenderly- attached sister, his weakness increased, and he died of heart disease on the 27th of December, within a day or two of his 63rd birthday. More competent authorities than I can pretend to be have done justice to the high intellectual powers which Blyth displayed from the outset of his — career as a naturalist; to the wonderful capacity and accuracy of his memory, which, unassisted by any systematic notes, assimilated the facts once stored in it, and enabled him readily to refer to his authority for them; to his great power of generalization, and to the conscientious use which he made of it. Abundant proof of the high respect with which his opinions were always listened to, and of the careful consideration given to them even where they were not accepted, is to be found in the published works of his brother natural- ists. No higher testimony to his habitual scientific caution need be adduced than that of Mr. Darwin, but it 1s equally borne by Jerdon throughout his pub- lished writings. Gould“ refers to him as ‘‘ one of the first zoologists of his time, and the founder of the study of that science in India.’ I confine myself here to putting on record the tribute of an old and intimate friend, to the excellent qualities of heart possessed by Blyth. The warmth and freshness of his feelings which first inspired him with the love of Nature clung to him. through his chequered life, and kept him on good terms with the world, which punished him, as it 1s wont to do, for not learning more of its wisdom. Had he been a less imaginative and a more practical man, he must have been a prosperous one. Few men who have written so much have left in their writings so little that is bitter. Noman that I have ever known was so free as he was from the spirit of intolerance; and the absence of this is a marked feature in all his controversial papers. All too that he knew was at the service of everybody. No one asking him for information asked in vain. Among the | i many pleasurable reminiscences of my own long residence in India, few are more agreeable than those which recall his frequent Sunday visits to me. The Society are largely indebted to the three able Naturalists who have lent their aid to the publication of these Catalogues. That of the Mam- malia, with the exception of the Bats, was revised by Dr. Anderson last 21 OF. : Pah 3 sae ee ————— —_ — Sail —_ s Pe a ie =, CS iL F a vat on ——— ———— — ee —- lS —~_ —— - * «Birds of Asia,’ Pt. XXVI. Trochalopteron blythit. ——_—___—_ —— — See o ’ = ——— —— fi 4 ‘a y "aa <*> 7 . - . af tlie, = a se tsereerenncearedenetnacenvensetira gsr et Oe Te ti “eo ) ir foot. eee t ihe ™ ae i ates ii ie te eed bere ep, fr ee a Ta a pA . BS - Se Sir 7 = een 2 , athe 7 - 7 nd re Bini. gE KF OS a fea end rit Ake ‘ ee bes eae eles java nr Introduction. XVil1 year, before he was summoned to India to join the second expedition to Yunan. Dr. Dobson, of the Royal Victoria Hospital of Netley, has edited the Catalogue of the order Chiroptera, the study of which he has long specially cultivated. In both cases the notes and additions of the editors are inclosed within brackets, and bear their respective initials. One or two notes added by myself are signed ‘ Editor.’ All unsigned notes and citations of references are those of the author of the Catalogues. | The Catalogue of Birds will be found, under Lord Walden’s able and conscientious treatment, to be a complete list of the Burmese species, 660 in number, as ascertained to date. His editorial notes and additions, which embrace the latest information afforded by his fine collection, are inclosed in brackets, and largely enhance the value of the Catalogue. Blyth’s MS., for the species enumerated in it, has been scrupulously adhered to, obvious errors of orthography having alone been corrected, and localities being added where the habitats were doubtful when he wrote. On this last point I quote Lord Walden’s own words: ‘“'The names of the localities added are given on the authority of Mr. ‘Davison, Mr. Oates, Major Lloyd, Captain Feilden, and Lieutenant Ward- ‘law Ramsay, whose initials will be found attached. My endeavour has “been to include those localities which, while within the range, are not ‘specified by Mr. Blyth. All Major Lloyd’s and Lieutenant W. Ramsay’s ‘‘specimens and some of Captain Feilden’s have been identified by me. Mr. ‘Hume is responsible for the accurate identification of those obtained by “Mr. Davison and Mr. Oates, and although that gentleman, in most ‘‘cases, adopts the faulty nomenclature of Mr.G. R. Gray’s Hand List, 1 ‘“‘ believe I have succeeded in correctly interpreting his meaning.”’ A. GROTE. Lonpon, August 27, 1875. Last of Mr. Blyth’s published papers in the Journal of the Asiatie Socrety of Bengal and other Journals, with the necessary references. Curator’s Reports, read at the Society’s Monthly Meetings. Report for September, 1841, read by his predecessor, Mr. Piddington, on the occasion of Mr. Blyth’s first introduction to the meeting of the 6th October, X. 836. | | Report for October, 1841, X. Pt. 2, 917. » . November, 184], X. Pt.-2; 936. XVI Introduction. Report for January, 1842, XI. Pt. 1, 95. ; February, 1842, XI. Pt. 1, 129. April, 1842, XI. Pt. 1, 444. June, 1842, XI. Pt. 1, 585. July, 1842, XI. Pt. 2, 788. The two Appendices to this Report monograph the Asiatic Drongos and Quails. August, 1842, XI. Pt. 2, 865.” Treating mainly of Reptilia. September, 1842, XI. Pt. 2, 880. October, 1842, XI. Pt. 2, 969. November, 1842, XI. Pt. 2, 1202. February, 1848, XII. Pt. 1, 166. To which is appended a revision of all previous reports, beginning with some interesting obser- 19 9 vations on Asiatic Simiade. November, 1843, XII. Pt. 2,925. This is entitled the ‘ Monthly Report for December, 1842,’ but it contains Addenda, which cover the whole intervening period. It is very full and interesting, especially in its comments on collections from Darjeeling. May, 1844, XIII. Pt. 1, 361. Further appendix to the above report for December, 1842. It describes the Mynahs and Babblers. « November, 1846, XV. p. xcix. February, 1847, XVI. Pt. 1, 209. March, 1847, XVI. Pt. 1, 385. April, 1847, XVI. Pt..1, 502. May, 1847, XVI. Pt. 1, 608. June, 1847, XVI. Pt. 2,725. Describing the Quadrumana in the Society’s Collection. July, 1847, XVI. Pt. 2, 863. Describes the Sciuride in the Society’s Collection, and gives Addenda to previous Reports. i August, 1847, XVI. Pt. 2,992. With Supplement. Describes the Hornbill group. | aie? December, 1847, XVI. Pt. 2, 1271. Remarks on the different species of Pangolins. January, 1848, XVII. Pt. 1, 82. March, 1848, XVII. Pt. 1, 247. April, May, and June, 1848, XVII. Pt. 1, 559. January, 1849, XVIII. Pt. 1, 80. June, 1850, XIX. 426. July, 1850, XIX. 490. September, 1850, XIX. 497. 9) 19 99 Lntroduction. : X1X Report for October, 1850, XIX. 561. January, 1851, XX. 108. (Arrear Reports of 1849. February, 1851, XX. 213. ) i | 3 August, 1851, XX. 448. 7 ou earl, 1852, XX. 841-356) . , May, 1852, XXI. 433. "3 May, 1858, XXII. 408. = September, 1853, X_XIT. 580. - October, 1853, X XIT. 589. 3 February, 1854, XXIII. 210. Appends a short note to his paper Re on Orangutans in Vol. XXIT. ni Ks October, 1854, XXIII. 729. Describes in a note the series of Indian and Tibetan Foxes in the Society’s Museum. "h 4, +February, 1855, XXIV. 178. il 5, March, 1855, SMV. 187, — . " April, 1855, XXIV. 252. Reports on Riippell’s contributions from Abyssinia, and mentions Tickell’s and Frith’s discoveries of Ad- te jutants’ nests. bile | =< May, 1855, XXIV. 359. q a July, 1855, XXIV. 469. Enumerates in a note the series of smaller Squirrels in the Society’s Collection. ‘i October, 1855, XXIV. 711. Is mainly given to notices of Theobald’s contributions of Reptiles and other specimens from Tenas- serim provinces. ai i August, 1856, XXV. 4389. Remarks in a note on the two “st supposed wild types of the Domestic Cats of India. = May, 1857, XX VI. 238. July, 1857, X XVI. 284. | : ‘5 October, 1857, X XVI. 314. y a December, 1857, X XVII. 81. Subjoins in a note a synopsis of the species of Paleornis with their synonyms. Lo 6 May, 1858, XXVII. 267. Describes Dr. Liebig’s contributions from the Andaman Islands, and numerous Siluroid and other Fishes obtained in the neighbourhood of Calcutta. s February to May, 1859, XXVIII. 271. Further observations on | Andaman collections. » = ie: giao alain) SPIRIT At , ae ea ae eS PS = = 2 eel _——— ‘ a a ste id Sut EE SSS eS =e ae = er A — ni 7 = - a = - . ee 7 ; : a 5 ai, PATS ee! Bes) ——S SS SSS ESS . = = - = : a = = — = = ‘ 10 Mammals of Burma. [ No. 1, of it is that it has two lateral radiating centres of hair upon the crown, the hair meeting and being pressed upwards between them. The small young resemble the adults, excepting that their colours are more strongly contrasted. 7. PRESBYTES OBSCURUS. | Semnopithecus obscurus, Reid, P. Z. 8. 1887, p. 14; S&. leucomystax, Tem.; Sima maura apud Raffles; S. albocinereus, Is. Geoffroy; &. halonifer, Cantor; probably S. maurus apud Helfer; ?S. sumatranus, 8. Miller, apud Schinz; 8. eristatus in the Atlas to ‘* Voyage au pole sud,” t. 3. Myook-myet-gwen-phyoo (Mason). | The Dusky-leaf Monkey is the most common species of the genus in the Malayan peninsula, from which its range extends at least to the province - of Mergui, where it was obtained by the late Major Berdmore. It has also been received from Siam, and is likewise an inhabitant of Sumatra, if not also of Borneo. The adults are blackish, with hair upon the nape lengthened and conspicuously whitish. The newly born young are of a vivid golden- ferruginous colour, which soon changes to dusky-ash, and is continued latest upon the tail.* This may be the species which Mason refers to as being ‘‘found, in considerable numbers, in the interior” of the Tenasserim provinces; but, he adds, ‘‘it is not so numerous as the other Monkeys and the Gibbons.”’ He also remarks that ‘‘the large flowers of the Dullenza, and many others, are much sought after by these monkeys as food.” 8. PRESBYTES CHRYSOGASTER. Semnopithecus chrysogaster, Lichtenstein ; S. potenziani, C. L. Bonaparte, apud Peters, P. Z. S. 1866, p. 429. The mounted skins of an adult female and young, procured by Helfer somewhere in the Tenasserim provinces, are in the Berlin Museum. By the courtesy of Professor W. Peters I have been favoured with coloured drawings of those specimens. The mature animal has the upper parts, limbs, and tail blackish, the hairs ferruginous on the basal half; slight band crossing the forehead, cheeks, front, throat, and front of neck, sullied white; rest of the lower parts deep and bright ferruginous, which tinges the inner side of the limbs; face colourless, or pinkish white. Young wholly pale ferruginous, somewhat darker on the hands and feet. There is a slight compressed crest on the vertex, but no distinct whisker-tufts, or lengthened hair on the nape. It is highly probable that some adults are wholly ferruginous, as happens with P. maurus in Java (the so-called S. pyrrhus, Horst.,=S. auratus, Geoff.), and with P. melalophus in Sumatra, * J.A.8. B. xvi. p. 734, ; 1 | | oak 187 5. | | Lemurs. 11 the so-called P. nobilis, Gray; while it is likely that there is a melanoid phase of P. rubscundus of Borneo.* | | Before seeing the coloured drawings sent by Professor Peters, I suspected that P. chrysogaster would prove identical with P. paleatus, Blyth, which is common in the hills bordering on Sylhet and those of Tippera and Chittagong, and the old males of which are deeply tinged with ferruginous on the lower parts. Females and young have the lower parts white or but faintly tinged with ferruginous, and the rest of the coat is of a pure grey, the face black, and there 1s no crest, but the hairs of the crown are so disposed as to appear like a small flat cap laid upon the top of the head. The old males seem always to be of a deep rust colour on the cheeks, lower parts, and more or less on the outer side of the limbs; while in old females this rust colour is diluted or little more than indicated. A mature male which I possessed alive was an exceedingly gentle animal, and the species is akin to P. maurus of Java, though so different in colouring. It is likely to occur in the northern part of Arakan. 9. PRESBYTES BARBEI. 3 Presbytes barbet, Blyth, J. A. S, B. xvi. p. 374. This species is closely allied to, if not identical with, P. femoralis, Horsfield (=P. chrysomelas, Tem.), of the Malayan peninsula and Sumatra, the female of which is figured of a brown colour by MM. Temminck and 8. Miller; but adults of both sexes described as P. barbet, from skins, minus _ the skull, procured in the interior of the Tippera hills, were black. The colour is probably variable. According to Cantor, the face during life is intense black, except the white-haired lips and the chin, which are of a milk-white colour. It is another likely species to occur in the Indo- Chinese region; and from the Malayan peninsula Dr. Cantor gives four species of this genus, viz. P. eristatus, P. femoralis, P. obscurus, and P. melanopus; while the remarkable and very handsome P. nemeus was observed plentifully in Cochin-China by Crawfurd, whence also has lately been described and figured P. nigripes, Ad. Milne-Edwards.t M. Milne- Edwards, jun., has also figured and described Rhinopithecus roxellana, a very remarkable animal of this group from the same forests of Eastern Tibet as are inhabited by Macacus tibetanus. * In the Calcutta Museum there is a brown specimen of the common P. cephalopterus of Ceylon. T J. A.S. B. xii. p. 174, xiii. p. 467, xvi. p. 735. ¢ Nouv. Arch. du Mus., tom. vi., Bulletin p. 7, t. 1. at, fame te i} ‘ ee 4h dit TA : ———————————————— eS eNseeeneseeeeneeeseneeeee = SST — ——— : ae —————————— oe a a TT PRS ae eer rere ee _ EEE — Sea ae = = - —— “ a b i ay ie. ¥ ee be a ‘ ) “ St RGN OTTO TED EEL LS TE ION ERAS TRE GA Ree ae. ee a = Sear al aI te ec | | _ SS > = = ae —— — Sa ———_ se . : aiciae Lae ae ‘ — = os es ————— J : os See —- : m= —_ = = Bei exnay Fie — ™ re ~ oh ee aeons 12 Mammals of Burma. Sub-order LEMURIA. Fam. MNycticebidee. *10. Nycricenus TARDIGRADUS (J. 10). Nyceticebus tardigradus, F. Cuv., N. bengalensis, Geoffroy; “Sloth” of Anglo-Indians, and doubtless, therefore, “the little Bradypus”’ of Helfer.* Myouk-moung-ma, “Monkey's concubine,’’ Mason. | ; The Slow Loris 1s generally diffused, but from its habits not much observed. The range of this genus extends to Eastern Bengal, and I have been assured, on good authority, that it inhabits the island of Préparis, though it has not been met with either in the Andaman or Nicobar Islands. Vosmaer’s figure (1770) of his ‘‘ Bengaalschen Luiaard”’ very well represents the race inhabiting Sylhet and Arakan. In Malacca it is more deeply coloured; and M. Ad. Milne-Edwards separates that of Siam and Cochin- China by the name JV. cinereus.t | Sub-order PLEUROPTERA. fam. Galeeopithecidee. 11. GALAOPITHECUS VOLANS. Lemur volans, L.; Vespertilio admirabilis, Bontius; figured in Marsden’s “ History of Sumatra,” pl. ix. Myook-hloung-pyau, i.e. embryo-monkey flying, Mason. The range of the Cobego, a very remarkable but common Malayan animal, extends certainly to Mergui, where skins of it were procured by Major Berdmore; but Mr. Dunn states that he possessed a living specimen that was obtained about one hundred miles up the Koladyne river, which flows from the North into Akyab harbour! He was moreover positive about the correctness of the identification.t According to Sir T. Stamford Raffles, writing in 1820, ‘‘this animal, the kudurg of the Malays, is too well known to require description. It usually hangs from the branch of a tree suspended by its four hands..... Mr. Marsden’s figure gives a very good idea of this animal.”§ Mr. Wallace remarks that “it is sluggish in its motions, at least by day, going up a tree by short runs of a few feet, and then stopping a moment as if the action was difficult. It rests during the day, clinging to the trunks of trees, where its olive or brown fur, mottled with irregular whitish spots and blotches, resembles closely the colour of mottled bark, and no doubt helps to protect it. Once, * J. AS. B. vii. p. $59, t Ann. Se. Nat. 1837, vil. p. 161, Nouv. Arch. de Museum, iii. Bulletin p. 9, pl. 3. iP. ZS. 1868, p: 370: §- Tr, Lin, Soc,-xiij. p. 248; ee SE 1875.1] Hlying Lemur. 13 in a bright twilight,” he adds, ‘‘I saw one of these animals run up a trunk in a rather open space, and then glide obliquely through the air to another tree, on which it alighted near its base, and immediately began to ascend. I paced the distance from one tree to the other, and found it to be seventy yards; and the amount of descent at not more than thirty-five or forty feet, or less than one in five. This I think proves that the animal must have some power of guiding itself through the air; otherwise in so long a distance it would have little chance of alighting exactly upon the trunk. Like the Cuscus of the Moluccas, the Gale@opithecus feeds chiefly on leaves, and possesses a very voluminous stomach and long con- voluted intestines. The brain is very small, and the animal possesses such remarkable tenacity of life, that it is exceedingly difficult to kill it by any ordinary means. The tail is prehensile, and 1s probably made use of as an additional support when feeding. It is said to have only a single young one at a time, and my own observation confirms this statement, for I once shot a female, with a very small blind and naked little creature clinging Closely to its breast, which was quite bare and much wrinkled, reminding me of the young of marsupials, to which it seemed to form a transition. On the back, and extending over the limbs and membrane, the fur of these animals is short, but exquisitely soft, resembling in its texture that of the Chinchilla.”* Raffles, however, states that it produces two young at a time, and Mr. A. Adams, who accompanied Sir E. Belcher in the exploring voyage of H.M.S. ‘‘Samarang,’’ found two young in one which he dissected. He observed this animal ‘‘ both in Borneo and Basilan in a wild state. It is crepuscular,” he adds, ‘“‘and hangs suspended during the day to the under surface of boughs in the tops of high trees. When it moves, it seems to shuifle and scramble among the leaves, and sometimes drops suddenly from its elevated position. It feeds on leaves, and the stomach of one I examined was filled with the remains of the foliage of Artocarpus and other trees. At Sarawak I had a living Cobego in my possession, which was procured on the occasion of felling some trees, in the top of one of which the animal was suspended. It was very inactive on the ground, and did not attempt to bite or resist.’”’+ ‘In several shot on the hill at Pinang,” remarks Dr. Cantor, ‘‘the stomach”? contained vegetable matter, but no remains of insects. In confinement, plantains constitute the favourite food, but deprived of liberty the animal soon pines and dies.’’t * Wallace’s “Travels in the Malay Archipelago,” vol. i. p. 185. tT Notes, etc. (1848), p. 265. + dk. BOB, ay pags. 14 Mammals of Burma. [ No. 1, According to Horsfield, the Cobego ‘lives entirely on young fruits and leaves; those of the cocoa-nut and of Bombax pentandrum are its favourite food, and it commits great injury to the plantations of these, which surround the villages of the natives” of Java. In that island it is ‘‘ confined to particular districts, where it is met with chiefly on isolated hills, covered | with a fertile soil, and abounding with young luxuriant trees, the branches ' of which afford it a safe concealment during the day. As the evening approaches, it leaves its retreat, and is seen in considerable numbers making © oblique leaps from one tree to another ; it also discovers itself by a croaking, harsh, disagreeable noise. If an individual is forced from its usual abode, it advances by slight awkward leaps, until it meets with an object on which it can ascend by its claws.” gg ee This animal occurs in Siam, and is probably far from rare in the valley of the Tenasserim river. By some zoologists it is referred to the order or sub-order Insectivora; although, it would seem, to no extent an insect-eater, according to all trustworthy observation. Order CHIROPTERA. | Tribe HARPYDIA. | } Harpies or Roussettes ; Frugivorous Bats which do not hybernate, and are peculiar to warm climates. They have no American representatives. fam. Pteropodidee. Pieropus medius, Temminck, Monog.i. p. 176; Pteropus edwardsti, Geoffroy, Ann. Mus, XV. p. 192 partim, apud Peters. Len-hwat or Len-wet, Mason. The common Indian Roussette, or ‘‘ Flying-fox.” Some of the larger species of this genus are by no means well defined apart, if really differing to an extent which should be regarded as specific. | Prof. Peters has elaborately monographed the genus Pteropus,* and subse- quently the rest of the family,} of which he recognizes ten genera. He admits : twenty-six species, with two sub-species, of Péeropus as then known to him. The ordinary Indo-Chinese Roussette is the same as the Indian one, and wherever found varies to some extent in colouring, the back being more or less * “Bericht der Akademie zu Berlin,”’ May 27th, 1867, tT tbid. Dec, 19th, 1867, é *12. Prrropus mepivs (J. 12), | . | ty! Frugivorous Bats. 18 pale and the lower-parts more or less suffused with black or wholly fulvous ; but in the Southern Tenasserim provinces it seems to grade into the more deeply-coloured #. edulis of Peron and Lesueur, as figured in Horsfield’s ‘Zoological Researches in Java,” which is recognized as distinct by Professor Peters, who refers to it P. edulis et gavanicus, Desm., P. edulis, funereus, et pluto, Tem., P. micobaricus* and Pachysoma giganteum, Fitzinger. It is probable, therefore, that the latter, if truly distinct, should be recognized as an inhabitant of the Tenasserim provinces; but I suspect that it will be found to grade into the other. 13. CYNONYCTERIS AMPLEXICAUDATA (J. 13). Pieropus amplexicaudatus, Geoff., Ann. and Mus. xv. p. 96; Peters, in P. Z. S. 1871, p. 018; P. leschenaulti:, Desmarest; P. seminudus, Kelaart. Tenasserim provinces, Siam, Amoy, Formosa, S. India and Ceylon, Malay countries to Timor, Moluccas, Philippines. 14. KonyYcTERIS SPELZA. Lonycterts spelea, Dobson, Journ. As. Soc. B. 1873, p. 204; Macroglossus speleus, Dobson, J. A. 8. B. xl. pl. x. fig. 3, 4, p. 261. Tenasserim, Siam. The habit of resorting to caves implied by the specific name of this kiodote has not, that I am aware of, been previously remarked of any of the family, but is hkely to be common to sundry of the smaller Ptero- podide. | Specimens of Cynonycterts amplexicaudata have since been obtained by Mr. W. T. Blanford, in the Némakdun Salt Caves, Kishm Island, in the Persian Gulf. ] + | | | 15. MAcROGLOSSUS MINIMUS. Steropus minimus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. xv. p. 96 (1810); Steropus rostratus, Horsf. Zool. Research. in Java (1825); Macroglossus minimus, Temminck, Monogr. Mammal. ii. p. 96; Horsf. Cat. Mamm. Mus. HE. I. Comp. p. 29; Blyth, Cat. Mamm. Mus. As. Soc. Beng. No. 57; Dobson, J. A. 8. B. 18738, p. 2065. A specimen in the Indian Museum, Calcutta, was obtained by Major Berdmore in 1858, in the valley of the Sitang river, Tenasserim province. This, the smallest species of frugivorous bat, has a rather wide distribution, extending from the Himalaya to North Australia. | * [Pteropus nicobaricus, Dobson, J. A. 8. B. 18738, p. 198. Quite distinct from both P. edulis and P. medius.—G.E.D. ] t [Dobson in P. A. 8, B. May, 1878, p. 110.] Mammals of Burma. *16. CYNOPTERUS MARGINATUS (J. 14). Vespertilio marginatus, B. H. A. common and very generally diffused species, inhabiting, it would seem, everywhere that bananas grow in 8.E. Asia and its islands. Its flight is particularly light and buoyant, and is performed by rapid movement of the wings, as it hovers around a fruit-tree, being quite unlike the slow winnowing motion of the wings of the larger ‘ Flying-foxes,” Both, however, travel to vast distances in the course of a night’s foraging.* The neck and sides of this Bat are often strongly tinged with bright ferruginous, which would appear to indicate full maturity.+ It is an ex- traordinarily voracious feeder, and will devour more than its own weight at a meal, voiding its food apparently but little changed while still slowly munching away. Of the guava, though a soft mellow fruit, it swallows only the juice, opening and closing its jaws very leisurely in the act of mastication, and rejecting the residue. inclusive of Celops frithii (J. 29). 32. ASELLIA STOLICZKANA. Asellia stoliezkana, Dobson; P. A. 8. B. May, 1871, p. 106; J. A. - B. vol. xl. p. 263; Phyllorhina trifida, Peters; P. Z. 8. June, 1871, p. 513. Specimens were obtained by Dr. F. Stoliczka and Mr. F. Day at Penang. fam. VWespertilionide, Ordinary Bats. *33, Nyoricesus Lurnus (J. 48). Nycticejus luteus, Blyth, J. A.S. B. vol. xx. p. 157; Seotophilus heathii, apud Swinhoe, P. Z. S. 1870, p. 619. | Arakan, and probably the rest of British Burma, unless far to the south- ward. ‘Very common in Canton in April and May.” * #34, N. vemmrncxi (J. 44). Vespertilio temmincki, Horsfield. | Generally diffused, except probably at high elevations. One of the most abundant of Bats throughout India up to the base of the Himalaya, as well as in the Indo-Chinese and Malayan countries, and the South of China. 35. N. castangvs (J. 45). Nycticejus castaneus, Gray. This species or race, which merely differs from the last in having the under-parts nearly or quite as deeply coloured as the upper-parts, has been obtained at Dacca, although chiefly a Malayan race or variety. Jerdon refers to it as inhabiting Burma. Others are likely to occur, especially of small size, and not improbably the large and singularly adorned JV. ornatus: which has been received from the Khasia hills. [I believe both WV. luteus. and N. castaneus are synonyms of V. temminckit. NV. luteus is the perfectly adult WV. temminchit. No difference whatever, except size, can be found on comparing recent specimens and skeletons. Specimens of JV. ornatus, Blyth, were obtained by Dr. Maes in the Kakhyen Hills, Yunan.—G.E.D. | * Swinhoe, lc., vide also Hutton, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 706. 22 Mammals of Burma. | i ies le 1875. | | Insectiworous Bats. 93 *36. VESPERUGO IMBRICATUS. Vespertilio imbricatus, Horsfield; ‘ young probably V. abramus, Tem., and V. lodatus, Gray; probably adult of V. coromandelianus, F. Cuv.,” Dobson, in P. A. S. B. 1872) p. 156).* A minute species, about the commonest and most generally diffused of Bats from the base of the Himalaya to Ceylon, as likewise in the Indo- Chinese and Malayan countries, and the South of China. It has also been recorded from Persia.t When disturbed in a room its flight is so exceedingly rapid that it can hardly be followed by the sight. 37. TYLONYCTERIS PACHYPUS. Vespertilio pachypus, 'Temk., Monog. Mamm.; Scotophilus fulvidus, Blyth, J. A.S. B. vol. xxviii, p. 293; Vesperus pachypus, Dobson, P, A. 8. B. 1871, p. 212; Tylonycteris pachypus, Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Berl. 1872, p. 704. Tenasserim provinces. 88. Kurtvouna prota, (J. 53). Vespertilio pictum, Pallas. | This very beautifully coloured little Bat, as seen alive or quite fresh, occurs in British Burma, as in the adjacent parts of 8.E. Asia. |*39. VESPERTILIO HASSELTII. Vespertilio hasseltit, Temm. Monog. Mammal. il. p. 225; Vesperugo hasseltii, Wagner, — Suppl. Schreb. Saugeth. v. p. 740. | This large-footed bat belonging to the same section of the genus (Subg. Leuconoé, Boie) as Vespertilio capaccint, Bonap., is readily dis- tinguished from all other allied species by the very small size of the second lower premolar and its position quite internal to the tooth-row. Dr. Peters, who first detected the presence of this small premolar, remarks that the species was long considered as Vesperugo on account of the supposed absence of this tooth.§ Tenasserim province, Sumatra and Java. | 40. V. BERDMOREI. Myotis berdmorei, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xxvii. p. 298. A small species, akin to the European V. pipostrellus, obtained by the late Major Berdmore in the valley of the Sitang. ‘Of a dark fuscous hue, * Mr. Swinhoe gives Vesperugo abramus (et akokomult), Tem., and V. imbricatus, Tem., as distinct, P. Z.S. 1870, p. 618. foe, we 5. By, xl p. $61, y Po Z.8. 1872, ps 7. § Monatsb. Berl. Akad. 1866. 24 Mammals of Burma. | Nera the fur slightly tipped with earthy-brown on the upper-parts, and much more largely with a paler (almost whitish) brown below; membranes dusky. Length 34.in., of which tail 14 in.; expanse 92 in.; fore-arm 14 in.; ear- conch (posteriorly) 4 in. Three specimens (females). [This species must ever remain doubtful, for the types referred to above cannot be found in the Indian Museum collection. They were absent from the collection of the Asiatic Society when it was transferred to the Indian Museum, Calcutta.—G.E.D. | It need hardly be remarked that the foregoing is a meagre list of the Chiroptera which may reasonably be expected to inhabit the different pro- vinces of British Burma; but it is a group which for various reasons is neglected by ‘ordinary collectors, and one that to be investigated with tolerable success requires some special attention to be bestowed upon it. Only those zoologists who have made some study of the Bats can have an adequate idea of the multitudinous variety of them, not only as regards specific but very strongly marked divisional forms; and exceedingly little is as yet known of the diversities of habit which must needs accompany so much variation in structure. Sub-order CARNIVORA. Fam. Canidee. 41. Canis rurizans (J. 187). Canis rutilans, Miiller; vide Murie, on “Indian Wild Dogs,” P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 715 et seg. Tau-khwae (Mason), The “‘Dhole” is generally diffused through the forests, but apparently not common anywhere; it hunts in packs. A Burmese female in the People’s Park, in Madras, ‘‘ upwards of three years old,” is stated by Col. McMaster to answer to Hodgson’s description of the Ludnsu of Nipal, ‘‘except in her height, which cannot be more than seventeen or eighteen inches.” In Malacca and Sumatra the race, C. suma- trensis, Hardwicke, is smaller and deeper coloured, and the Tenasserim race is probably identical with it, whether or not so with that of India. In the latter there is considerable difference in the appearance of the animal according to season, the winter vesture being longer and paler in colouring, with the brush much more finely developed. This seasonal difference may well have given rise to some of the notions regarding a plurality of species. r 7 << + i~ ye 2 ns ’ . MAG e ‘ ; . wit aes aki Ps oe Tere y Tog eet oe tee pee ; n Ps f ci NN dar tir GE ke a Al any he IDF he : de eo ae i is oe Ce Ae ee, PP * 7 = ltt cert Mi ieamemmimiarinns mares a7 ee a a ‘ ' : . aaa = = ———————— —— —— ———— = ——— ee = SS — > — r = pene oetan teens SSS ee ——————— =I = a ETT — —— ———— ee a ee or at EE a Ra ES ee o ‘ a = - - eae tea i ae aia ————— ae ~ on - > xe = | NR ate es2 Bi ieeiend = ee iE =e ee Ree w 1875. ] Carnivores—Dogs— Cwets and Genets. 95 ¥42, C. AUREUS. Canis aureus, Lin. ; Myae Khwae (Mason). The Jackal is not uncommon at Akyab, and it has been shot in the vicinity of Prome, and at Thyetmyo; but in Arakan it has not passed the boundary of the Naf river. Kam. VWiverride. Sub-fam. Viverrinz (Civets and Genets). *43. VIVERRA ZIBETHA (J. 119). Viverra zibetha, Lin., S.N.T. 65; Hyoung-myen, Arakan. The Grey Civet is a widely diffused species, which, Mr. Swinhoe states, inhabit China from Hongkong to Shanghai, as also the Chusan Archipelago, and the island of Hainan. Dr. Cantor procured it in the Malayan peninsula, Province Wellesley; and it inhabits Arakan, and probably is extensively diffused over the Indo-Chinese countries, as in Lower and Eastern Bengal, and the Tarai at the foot of the Eastern Himalaya. ae MEGASPILA. Viverra megaspila, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xxxi. p, 3381; V. zbetha, apud Waterhouse, Cat. Zool. Soc. Mus. 1838, No. 252; V. tanggalunga, apud Cantor, J. A.S. si Ey. pe a, nec apud Gray. Khyoung-myen, Ricson, Large-spotted Civet. Of the same size as V. ztbetha, with the body- markings large and black, and comparatively few in number, 7.¢. as com- pared with V. cwettina of Malabar. I have seen flat skins of this animal from Prome, resembling those which Dr. Cantor procured in Province Wellesley, and one brought from Sumatra by Sir T. S. Raffles, which was formerly in the Museum of the Zoological Society in London. It is nearly allied to V. civettina of S. Malabar, but very different from V. tanggalunga, Gray, of the Malay countries, which is a much smaller animal, with more cat-like tail, and the spots of which are much smaller and more numerous. In the Philippine Islands it is probable that V. tanggalunga should be regarded as an introduced species. *45, VIVERRICULA MALACCENSIS (J. 121). Viverra malaccensis, Gmelin, 8.N. 92. Wa-young-kyoung-bank, Arakan. Kyoung- _ka-do, Mason. The Common Viverette. It is abundant in the Indo-Chinese countries, as in India, 8. China, and the Malayan peninsula and islands. There is a nearly allied species in Madagascar. Manunals of Burma. Sub-fam. Parapoxurina (Musangs). *46, Parapoxurus Gray (J. 124). Paradoxurus grayt, Bennet, P. Z. 8. 1835, p. 118, Hill Musang. Inhabits the Arakan hills. *47, P. musanea (J. 123). Paradoxurus musanga, F. Cuv., Mamm. Lith. 1. t. 55. Kyoung-woon-bank, Arakan. Common Musang. As common as in the neighbouring countries. 48. P. TRIVIRGATUS. Paradoxurus trirgatus, Temm. Monagr. ii. t. 68, fig. 1; Kyoung-na-ga, Mason. Lhe three-streaked Musang inhabits Tenasserim provinces, Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, and Java. 7 | *49, P. LEUCOTIS. Paradoxurus leucotis, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xxvii. p. 274; Horsfield’s Catal. Marhm. India House Mus., No. 66. Ma-zwet-phyoo, Arakan. | The white-eared Musang inhabits Sylhet, Arakan, and Mergui.* *50. ARCTICTIS BINTURONG (J. 126), Vierra binturong, Rafiles, Trans. Lin. Soc. xiii. p. 258. Myouk-kya, or “ Monkey- tiger,’ Arakan. The Binturong inhabits the Mishmi hills, at the head of the valley of Assam, and occurs southward to the Straits of Singapore, and is also found in the islands of Sumatra and Java. Finlayson procured it in Siam. lam. Herpestide. Mungoose, *51, Urva canorivora (J. 184), Urva cancrivora, Hodgson, J. A. 8. B. vol. vi. p. 561. Mwai-ba, Arakan. The crab-eating Mungoose is found in N ipal, the Khasia hills, Arakan, Pegu, N. Tenasserim, Vokien hills near Amoy (Swinhoe). It is the only representative of the Mungoose group in British Burma. * The species found in the Andaman Islands appears to be identical with P. Jewcotis, . Blyth. It was, however, described as a new form by the late Lieut.-Col. Tytler, and named after himself as P. tytlert (J. A. S. B. 1864). > = ” ‘ a y se eT Te er et te ER NSPE yes ERLE CODES ORE Wig Rh RITE eg it phy i EC i Ct RT EE en ae Oe Ee Sa As a ~ di oe ——— SS — a Se Ee ae a va * 1875. | =a Cats. 97 fam. Felide. Cats. 52. Ferris treris (J. 104). Felis tigris, Lin.; Tigris regulis, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1867, p. 268. Kya, Arakan. The Tiger. Common in the forests. 53. F. parpus (J. 105). Felis pardus, Lin.; Leopardus pardus, Gray, P. Z.S. 1867, p. 268. Theet-kya, Arakan. | The Pard. Also common; and black individuals not rare in the Southern Tenasserim provinces and Malayan peninsula. *54, F. macroceris (J. 107). felis macrocelis, Temminck ; F. diardi, F. Cuvier. The clouded Tiger-cat. A skin has been obtained in the mountains which separate Arakan from Pegu, and the species is probably of general occurrence in the higher mountain forests. Crawfurd noticed a dressed skin of it in the market at Bangkok. As the animal increases in age, its ground-hue becomes more fulvescent, and there is much individual variation in its markings. J have never seen it from the Malayan peninsula, but it in- habits Sumatra and Borneo, as likewise the Eastern Himalayas, and the islands of Formosa and Hainan; doubtless, therefore, the intervening countries generally in suitable localities. Hodgson notes it from Tibet ! 55. I. viverrina (J. 108). Felis viverrina, Bennet, P. Z. 8. 1833, p. 68. The fishing Tiger-cat. Tenasserim provinces, and probably the lowlands generally of British Burma; also Camboja, 8. China, Formosa, and all suit- able parts of India, with Ceylon. This animal has coarse fur, for a Felis, and chiefly inhabits low watery situations, where it preys much on fish. *)o. Uo unpDATA (J. 110). Felis undata, Demarest. Theet-kyoung, Arakan. The Leopard-cat. Generally diffused. Specimens from Arakan and Tenasserim present the ordinary colours of Indian examples, with the body-markings resembling those of Genetta afra. Dr. Gray describes £. tenasserimensis,* but I cannot perceive that the flat skin upon which this is founded differs from ordinary /. undata. | * P, Z. 8. 1867, p. 400. ed ee ae Mammals of Burma. | No. 1, *57. F. cHaus (J. 115). Felis chaus, Gildenst. Khyoung tsek-koon, Arakan. The Chaus. The author procured this species in Arakan, and Col. McMaster states that he ‘‘shot a very fine one in Burma.” Egyptian specimens exhibited in the London Zoological Gardens do not differ in any respect, that I can perceive, from the common Indian species. Mason refers to a species about the size of a domestic cat, ‘but its colour and markings are exactly those of a Tiger. These Cats,” he adds, ‘are very abundant in the jungles, and occasionally venture into towns, where they make great havoc among the poultry.” I could not well fail to have met with such a species, did it exist, and take leave to doubt that any small species of Cat is coloured and marked exactly like a Tiger. Lf, undata is doubtless intended, at least in part. ; Mason also refers to an animal which he denominates the ‘ Fire-cat,”’ or ‘‘ Hire-tiger,’’ of the Burmans. This is very probably F. temminckit, Vigors (£. moormensis, Hodgson, and F. chrysothrix, Tem. MS.), which is found not only in Nipal and Assam, but in the Malayan peninsula and Sumatra, and therefore may be expected to occur in the intervening territory. It has been lately figured by Dr. Sclater.* Fam. Mustelidee. Sub-fam. Lutrina (Otters). *58. Lurra narr (J. 100). Lutra nair, F. Cuv. Phyau, Arakan. Common on both sides of the Bay of Bengal. *59, AoNYxX LePTonyx (J. 102), Lutra leptonyx, Horsfield, Zool. Res. Java. Otter with minute claws. ‘‘Otters abound in some of the streams. In the upper part of the Tenasserim, a dozen at a time may be occasionally seen on the rocks of the river. The Burmese sometimes domesticate them, when they will follow a man like a dog” (Mason).t As common as the former species. eT. A. O. 166, Pu SXxvI, p. 616, + No animals are more difficult to determine than the species of Otter, from their general similarity, which may lead to over-hasty identification of them, and the neglect to note specific differences which appear on minute examination. The skuils generally afford good means of discrimination. a 1875. | Martens, Weasels and Badgers. 29 Sub-fam. Musreninm (Martens, Weasels,* and Badgers). *60. MARTES FLAVIGULA (J. 96). Mustela flavigula, Boddaert. Black-capped Marten. Khasia hills and Arakan. Similar to Himalayan specimens, and differing from the Malayan race, found also in Formosa, by having much longer fur and a wholly black cap, instead of a brown cap with black periphery. *61. HELictis NIPALENSIS (J. 95). Gulo nipalensis, Hodgson, J. A. 8. vol. v. p..287; Melogale personata, Is. Geoffroy. Kyoung-pyan (Mason). | The Brock-weasel. Arakan, and common in Pegu. It is decidedly identical with the species inhabiting Nipal and Sylhet, if not also with H. orzentalis (Horsf.) of Java; but distinct from AH. mos- chata, Gray, of S. China and Hainan, and ZH. subaurantiaca, Swinhoe, of Formosa. Dr. Gray identifies Melogale personata, from the vicinity of Ran- goon, with the Chinese H. moschata, judging—it may be presumed—from the figure rather than the description in the Zoologie of M. Bélanger’s Voyage aux Indes Orientales.t *62. ARCTONYX COLLARIS (J. 93). Arctonyx collaris, F. Cuv., Mamm. Lith. ii. t. 60; , 18/3, p. 231. The Dusky Shrew. Procured by Major Berdmore in the Tenasserim Provinces. Sub-fam. Tatpinz (Moles), 72. TALPA LEUCURA. Talpa leucura, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. vol. xix. p. 215, and figure of skull. The Sylhet Mole. Obtained by Major Berdmore in the valley of the Sitang. * The late Mr. 8. Griffith collected both in the Khasia hills and in Afgh4nistan, and his specimens from those two very distinct localities became intermixed and confounded. Hence several Khasia species of mammalia, birds, and reptiles have been erroneously stated by Messrs. Horsfield and Moore to inhabit Afghanistan. Vide Ibis, 1872, p. 89. 3) Mammals of Burma. Order CETACEA. fam. Delphinide. Dolphins and Porpoises, 73. ORCELLA FLUMINALIS. Orcella fluminalis, Anderson, P. Z. 8S. 1870, pp. 220, 544; 1871, pl. 48, fig. 2. La-boing (Mason). The Irawadi Dolphin, inhabiting the deep channels of the river from 300 to 600 miles from the sea. Colour uniform dirty white. fam. Balenopteride. Rorquals. 74, Batmnoprera rnvica (J. 147). Balenoptera indica, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. vol. xxviii. p. 488. Indian Rorqual. “s ») aetna - i ae “ 7 me oa ee ~ ~ SN - | = Mpa oy it ee i | pyr ee oe ee a Ar a a = - SS - = el ye a ee a py hal natin os Some Pe Raia. Set | ee 7c ie i t= dave 2 -~ : ate: Se ae mere SS ee —— = = °3 = — an mine ee rare a en a bcs al 7 _ io 9 eg tpn = a ik a 4 oe | \ vie ‘ie ie Sa SS _ sisting between the faunse of the upper provinces of the two peninsulas than 38 | — .§ Mammals of Burma. [ No. 1, 3. S. BARBEI. Sciurus barbei, Blyth, J. A. 8, B. xvi. p. 875, pl. xxxvi. fig. 3, xviii. p. 608. Tenasserim provinces, commoner to the southward, Siam, Cambodja? Hainan? S. China ? | | A Malacca specimen in the Leyden Museum is marked Tamias leucotis, Tem. It is closely allied to S. m‘clellandit of the E. Himalaya and also of Formosa, but more brightly coloured, having four pale dorsal stripes about equally vivid, alternating with five black stripes. It is doubtless S. m‘clellandii of Cambodja,* of Hainan,+ and of China and Formosa ;t but a Formosan specimen in the Leyden Museum represents the Himalayan race, S. m‘clellandi. Mason remarks of S. barbed that it abounds in the provinces of Yé, Tavai, and Mergui.§ Fam. Murides. Rats nin Mice. 94, HapaLoMys LONGICAUDATUS. Hapalomys longicaudatus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xxviii, p. 296. A remarkable murine form, from Schwe Gyen in the valley of the Sitang or neighbouring hills, discovered by Major Berdmore. 95. Nxsoxra rnpica (J. 172). | ee | Nesokia indica, Gray ; Mus indicus, Geoff. Probably Yae-kwet of Mason. | It has been obtained at Tonghoo by Mr. W. Theobald. | The occur- rence of this common Indian field Rat in the open country of upper Pegu, together with a Hare akin to the Lepus ruficaudatus of the plains of Northern India, and of sundry birds identical with or akin to Indian species which are unknown in the broad belt of forest which fringes the | coast of British Burma, indicates the probability of a closer connexion sub- we as yet know of; our acquaintance with the fauna of Western Indo-China being chiefly sssediaead to that of the great maritime belt of forest. The present species is, however, indicated by Mr. Swinhoe from Formosa. * P, Z. 8. 1861, p. 187. + ibid. 1870, p. 232. t ibid. 1870, p. 634. § In addition to all of the above, I have seen an undescribed species of medium size from Tonghoo. | | P. A. 8. B. 1866, p. 240. 187 5. | ——- Rats and Mice. 39 96. Mus sanpicora (J. 174). Mus bandicota, Bechstein. Myae-kywet (Mason). This species I give on the authority of Mason, which I accept the more readily as it is known to occur in Siam and the Malayan peninsula and islands; also in Formosa, where Mr. Swinhoe thinks that it was probably introduced when the Dutch were in possession, A.D. 1680.* *97. M. pEcumanvs (J. 176). Mus decumanus, Pallas, Glires, 91. The common. Brown Rat. I observed this pest to be very numerous and troublesome at Akyab, but saw no traces of it at Rangoon or Maulmein, nor further southward; but wherever there is European shipping, it will sooner or later find its way and establish itself permanently. *98. M. RoBUSTULUS. Mus robustulus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xxvii. p. 294; Theobald, P. A. S. B. 1866, p. 240; M. berdmoret? Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xx. p.1738; M. rufescens, Gray, var. ? 3 Common Rat of Rangoon and Maulmein, also of Mergui. vee to be critically examined in the fresh state. Under the heading of ‘‘ White-bellied Rat,’”? Mason remarks that ‘the Rats are scarcely second to the Termites for the mischief they perpetrate. They burrow in the gardens and destroy the sweet potatoes; they make their nests in the roofs by day and visit our houses and larders by night. They will eat into teak drawers, boxes, and book-cases, and can go up and down anything but glass. In the province of Tonghoo they sometimes appear in immense numbers before harvest and devour the paddy like locusts. In both 1857 and 1858 the Karens on the mountains west of the city lost all their crops from this pest; and it is said that they are equally destructive occasionally in the eastern districts, but have not appeared for several years. The natives say it is the same Rat as the one that frequents houses.” Again, he remarks that Mr. Cross, when on the Tenasserim river a few months ago (in 1858 ?), wrote—‘‘ The people, in common with all who grow the hill paddy, over an extent of country more than fifty miles square, are suffering a famine of rice. This is occasioned by swarms of Rats, which devoured the paddy, or rather cut down the stalks, just as the ears began to fill. The Rats twice visited some parts of this territory during the season, * P, Z. S. 1870, p. 635. a ci Vl a nea EL ty Tia “ i Se oom . = Pts A . : + —— — —— =: —_—— - = Se - ~ S Pi. pee = - rm ee A OE TT a eee earatsee ee eranal E a wt prs pee em - ik a es lA a ’ vei : ’ . | —- saa 24 - : i - . = : SPS es ors — tania ? N 4 Ted 4 ‘ tT. _— .\ ye bates range sides pes . 7 —_ ae — oa, 4 " sas vit : 2 : 7 = ; “ — 2 eS res a ne and rola lal ae a Ne Pi il = ret eh .- S Na 7 - ror in A oa ss _ - | Fi vino ng Paresomasas . - _ ——- - + —— — =e ar = — eas - - 9 = , 4 . Ps ———s rt 1 . a e i ash -< Ly say i ae . et J = > 3 “ : : z, na aii y : . . Yr id J ? Sey ee ve a! tae: i la ai ° +s . = cial py any ay olny esheets Se Rin Se tel eg mah Seerrn nem Ni oS iy Ul Alc ord tg rerio oie ea ecien iY u : ] “er “aaeine nt eipaatinay ponte a8 epic a 2 =" — - = sums mcctoe tee Sony oe Saleen ea oy vl pol meta ton "iteas re nha tesa Fea’ 40 Mammals of Burma. | No. 1, so that scarcely a stalk of rice escaped them. I met with two of these animals, swimming the Tenasserim where it is more than a quarter of a mile wide, and succeeded in capturing one. The animal is about five inches from the nose to the end”’ (base ?) ‘‘ of the tail, of a slim and nimble appearance, the belly white, and the rest a mouse colour. During the rains, when the river is much wider and more rapid, these Rats crossed in columns, as the people say, so abundantly that a boat, in passing through, caught bushels of them. They only make their appearance at long intervals, like the locusts of other places. It is said to be from twenty to thirty years since they visited the country before, to any great extent.” 99. M. caupartor (J. 188). Mus caudatior, Hodgson, Horsf. Cat. Mamm. India House Mus., p. 144; var. I. cimnamomeus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xxviii. p. 294. Lower Pegu and Martaban. It differs only from the Nipdlese animal of Mr. Hodgson by having the upper-parts entirely of a bright cinnamon colour. #100. M. concotor. Mus concolor, Blyth, J. A. S. B, xxviii. p. 295, the young; 7id. M. ——? p. 294, the adult. Upper and Lower Burma; Malayan peninsula. It requires to be critically examined in the fresh state. 101. M. PEa@uveEnsts. Mus peguensis, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xxviii. p. 295. Schwe Gyen, valley of the Sitang river. A particularly well-distinguished species, of which there is an unmis- takeable specimen marked from the Philippines in the Derby Museum of Liverpool. Mason suspects this to be the field Mouse of the Karen districts. 102. M. nirrpvtvs. Mus nitidulus, Blyth, J, A. 8. B. xxviii. p. 294. Valley of the Sitang. Mason notices a “very familiar little Mouse in the houses at Tounghoo,” which he never saw in the Tenasserim provinces ; and he inclines to refer it to the present species. 103. M. BEAVANI. Mus beavant, Peters, P. Z. 8. 1866, p. 589. Valley of the Salween. gp! 1875. | Rats and Mice. 4] 104. M. Bapivs. | Mus hadius, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xxviii. p. 295. Valley of the Sitang. It is allied to UL oleraceus of India, the type of Dr. Gray’s genus Vandeleuria. | Other species of Rat and Mouse doubtless remain to be discovered, and it is desirable that they should be minutely described when fresh. Of the former, a very likely species to occur is the MZ andamanensis, Blyth,* a subspinous Rat which proves to be the Uf. setifer apud Cantor,} but not M. setifer of Horsfield, which is identical with I bandicota. Three well-distinguished species of Mice from the Khasia hills are described as I. cumcularis, M. erythrotis, and MW. ghiroides, Blyth.t According to Mason, “there is a Water Rat throughout the country which burrows in the banks of streams, and takes to the water when pursued.” 105. RuIzomys SUMATRENSIS. Mus sumatrensis, Raffles; R. cinereus, M‘Clelland, Cale. Journ. N. H. ii. p. 456, and pl. xiv. not good; Spalax javanus et Nyctocleptes dekan, Temminek. » Pwat, Tenasserim, Mason. Tenasserim provinces; Malayan peninsula and islands. Arakan? S *106. R. CASTANEUS. Rhizomys castaneus, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xii. p. 1007, xxxvi. p. 198; MM. badius apud Blyth. Arakan, Pegu. Barely separable from If. badius (J. 201), from which it seems to differ only in its much brighter colouring. 107. R. prurnosus. Lhizomys prwinosus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xx. p. 509. Originally described from the Khésias, and obtained by Dr. Anderson in the vicinity of Bhamo. | 108. R. minor (J. 201). hizomys minor, Gray, Ann. M. N. H. x. p. 226; Horsfield’s Catal. No. 228. Allied to the two preceding species, but of a dusky brown colour, with white muzzle and around the eye, and pale naked feet. I obtained a living ear. 2, . b. xxx, 7. 108: ° T ibid, xv. p. 254. t ibid. xxiv. p. 721. § Cale. Journ. N. H. ii. p. 297. | Journ. of Exped, p. 256. I a a a a a a ¥ 7 Oe. oer es See SSS = = : — - tie er veo at = aia pment en series Hes oot Ee =—— ' . — . ie a beets SS ae eee ———— OO 42 | Mammals of Burma. [ No. 1, specimen of this animal when in Upper Martaban, but the skin of it got spoiled ; and I at once recognized the same species in two drawings of it as obtained in Siam by Capt. Finlayson. It has likewise been obtained at Yanangeen, on the Irawadi. It is even included, together with R. sinensis, Gray, in Mr. H. Walker’s ‘“ Catalogue of the Mammalia of Assam”? (7b2d. iii, p. 267); but both species are there in need of verification. Mason remarks that ‘‘this animal, which burrows under old bamboo roots, resembles,” to, some extent, ‘‘a Marmot more than a Rat, yet it has much of the Rat in its habits. I one night caught a specimen gnawing a coco-nut, while camping out in the jungles.” According to Mason the Byhais call the Bamboo Rat thai, and they say that there is the Bamboo Khai, the Reed Khai, the Maranta Khai, and the Wie, a very small species of the same tribe.” In R. sumatrensis the fur is thin and bristly. The other three here given are smaller animals, with shorter tail and the fur soft and dense. fam. Hystricide. Porcupines. *109. Hystrix BENGALENSIS? (J. 205). Hystrix bengalensis, Blyth; H. malabarica, Sclater, P. Z. 8. 1865, p. 3538, pl. xvi. _ Phyoo, Tenasserim (Mason). The Porcupine of Arakan appears to be ea same as that of pee and of Eastern and Lower Bengal, the skull of which is not tumid, as in H. leucura, Sykes. Moreover, I cannot perceive (to judge from the stuffed specimen in the British Museum), that the adult Z. malabarica, Day, differs from it in any respect. I have only seen small Arakan specimens, however, and will not be too confident that I am right in referring them to. the present species. 110. H. toneicavpa? (J. 206). Hystriz longicauda, Marsden ; Acantheon javanicum, F. Cuv., Mém. Mus. ix. t. 1, fig. 3, 4. I also give this Malayan species with hesitation, though I believe it to be that which inhabits the Tenasserim provinces. | There is also H. alopeus, Hodgson,* from Nipal, which seems to be one and the same with H. grote:, Gray,t from Malacca, remarkable for having but one black ring on its white quills. The skins of Porcupines when dried, and afterwards relaxed and set up in museums, are usually in wretched * J, A. 8. B. 1847, p. 772, 6. 32. + [P. Z. S. 1866, p. 306, pl. xxxi. This species is referred by Mr. Sclater to Z. longicauda, Marsden, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 234,.—Ed. ] 1875. | Porcupines—Hares— Boars. 43 condition, and when of young or half-grown specimens only, some of the supposed species of them (if they really be species) are difficult of discrimina- tion. These animals require to be compared together when alive, adult, and in good condition, in order to be properly understood. 111. ATHERURA FASCICULATA. Hystrix fasciculata, Shaw ; Buffon, Supp. tom. vii. p. 308, t. 77. This animal inhabits the Tippera hills, Siam, and the Malayan peninsula, _ and thereiore probably the Indo-Chinese countries generally. | A. living Malayan example in the London Zoological Gardens could not be distinguished from its African companions referred to A. africana, Gray ; but an example from Assam is much paler in colour and more freckled, as was orfe which I possessed from Tippera. This northern race is well figured in Hardwicke’s “(Illustrations of Indian Zoology,’ copied from one of Buchanan Hamilton’s drawings. fam. Leporide. Hares. 112. Lupus PEGUENSIS. Lepus peguensis, Blyth, Journ. As. Soc. B, xxiv. p. 471. Yung (Mason). Inhabits the open country within or beyond the range of forests. Craw- furd long ago remarked that ‘‘ the Hare is unknown in Pegu, but that it makes its appearance in the hills before the disemboguement of the Irawadi.” Order UNGULATA. Fam. Suide. 113. Sus onistarus (J. 215). Sus cristatus, Wagner, Minch. gel. Anzeig. ix. p. 535, 1839; S. indicus, Gray. Tau-wet (Mason). A boar which I examined at Akyab was of the ordinary Bengal race. but the Tenasserim wild boars are considerably smaller, the skulls of adults being one-fifth less in linear dimensions, though otherwise similar. One such was given to me in Calcutta as that of a tusked sow, and I afterwards found that the Tenasserim boar-skulls differed in no respect. The race requires to be critically examined. Mason remarks that the Tenasserim wild Hogs are of ‘“‘a small blackish species, exceedingly numerous,” and that they are very destructive to the Karen paddy-fields. According to Colonel McMaster, although some heads of Tenasserim wild boars, which I showed - - é a fe : —— —— ne si) La ¥ mi. v ie ae Ee — = ; c ee — — = Aue —— = = = ————————— . 1s ae ’ , 7 si a felt iar ent Lag shyt, Mg ey SSS eee ee ee = = == = = ~ —— S——SSSS eee ae I ~~ 6s a ae 44 Mammats of Burma. | Nios te him in Calcutta, ‘‘ were certainly smaller than those of India,” the animals which he had seen in Upper Pegu appeared to him to be about the same size as those which he had seen in former hunting days in India. That Pigs are inimical to snakes is well known; but Mason mentions that he has seen the head of a Python ‘that was killed by a drove of hogs, whose whole length measured eighteen feet.” Whether wild or tame does not matter, but that author repeatedly uses the word ‘“‘drove”’ in connexion with wild animals, even rats. It is a remarkable fact (if quite trustworthy) that a number of Hogs should thus combine to destroy a large Python. | Fam. Tragulide. Chevrotains. 114. Tra@uLus KANCHIL. ‘ Moschus kanchil, Raffles. Yung* (Mason). This small Chevrotain, or ‘‘ Mouse-Deer,’’ with a medial black stripe on the chest, is common in the southern Tenasserim provinces, and extends throughout the Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo; but in Java it appears to be replaced by the equally diminutive 7. yavanicus (T. pelandoe, Blyth).t In Cambodja and Cochin-China there is a race which chiefly differs from 7. kanchst in wanting the medial dark stripe on the chest (Z. affinis, Gray) ;{ and the island of Hainan, it is remarked by Mr. Swinhoe, “‘ produces a-~ Mouse Deer, which I have made out to be Zragulus meminna.§ The latter can hardly be, for that species (Meminna indica) is elsewhere un- known eastward of the Bay of Bengal. There is, again, a Chevrotain much larger than the 7. kanchil, which seems to be generally diffused over the Malay countries, the Z. napu, F. Cuvier, which is not unlikely to occur in South Tenasserim; and what are probably local races of Z. napu have been described as 7. stanleyanus and T. fuscatus, the pyrrhous 7. stanleyanus having been erroneously supposed to inhabit Ceylon. Meminna indica is the only species of Chevrotain that inhabits Ceylon and the Indian peninsula; and throughout the Malay countries there are the larger 7. napu and its subordinate races, and—except in Java—the smaller 7. kanchil (to which T. afims should perhaps be subordinated), with 7. javanicus in Java only. The Z. kanchil is the only one, so far as hitherto ascertained, that ranges northward into British Burma, and in the Malayan peninsula it is much more abundant than the 7. napu. * The same name which he assigns to Lepus peguensis. fala. B. Sxvin, pr 277. | to P Ze Be 1861, py 138. § ibid. 1870, p. 644. 1875. | Deer. : 45 Fam. Cervidee. Deer. *115. Rusa ARISTOTELIS (J. 220). Cervus aristotelis, Cuv. Schap. Common and generally diffused through the great forests. The Samur Deer of Burma appeared to, me to be rather small, and 1 have never seen a fine pair of horns of this species from the countries eastward of the Bay of Bengal. : *116. HyrnaprHus porcinus (J. 222). Cervus porcinus, Zimm, The Drat, or Hog Deer, is very abundant. Mason observes, however, that this species seems to be confined to the plains. ‘‘It abounds,” he states, ‘¢north and east of Maulmein, and on the large islands south of Tavai; but it is not found north of the station, nor eastward among the hills, nor in the valley of the Tenasserim, but is found again on the plains of the Sitang.”’ Some individuals (especially does) are more or less distinctly ‘‘ menilled”’ or spotted when in their summer coat, which has given rise to reports of the Indian Spotted Deer (Axis maculatus) having been observed in Burma. The so-called Hog Deer of Malabar is the Meminna indica; but, whether or not introduced (as is most probable), the true Hog-Deer inhabits a part of the west and south-west of Ceylon. The Indian Spotted Deer has been introduced into Province Wellesley and has there multiplied, as noticed by Cantor; and according to Raffles also in Sumatra, and there by native agency. *117. PaNoLIA ELDI. Cervus eldi, Guthrie, Calc. Journ. N. H. u. p. 415; horns figured, 2d¢d. i. pl. xii, ii. pl. xii; C. (Rusa) frontalis, M‘Clelland, cdid. 11. p. 401, pl. xiii, xiv; 0. dyratus, Schinz ; C. dimorphe, Hodgson; Panolia acuticornis, Gray. TZ’hamine of Burmese, Sungrai of Manipur. It inhabits Pegu, and thence northward to the valley of Manipur, and southward to Mergui and the adjacent northern part of the Malayan peninsula. In Cambodja and the island of Hainan it is replaced by a nearly allied race, P. smithi,* subsequently C. platyceros of Dr. Gray;+ and interposed between the two races of Panola there would appear to occur the fine * Cervus smithii, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1837, p. 45. + vide P. Z. 8. 1867, p. 841, figs. 22 and 28. SSS a —s = ~_ a a a SIO - = mai a ; = : eo = et a ot ee | ‘neh 7) ‘ —--=—- — ~- = : Les oe ‘ = -- Simmeedal a Sean IE. A i = . yi Pi = ~~ - SR Eee ia tye 3 ary eo baled - = ———————————— nes ——— SN , : ! : , - Z ; { d eee ar 1 * ie a aeceell = : — f= HT j . F gin {if i ; | ie a Tg ei , Ve me } ye oe he Sue nt 7 i SHE ; ae) a : 4) 2) ij ie = r i} mild ‘ oo. H . ie , t j | Bil S Wee ) le | ae iI | ama) |! a | cel | a | ee | i | Sate O vin: aie pe 1 j I 46 Mammals of Burma. | No. 1, Rucervus schomburgki, Blyth, which is a Siamese representative of the Indian R. duvaucelli, and doubtless similar in its habits. or illustrations of the horns of all four species, vide Proc. Zool. Soc. 1867, p. 835, figs. 1-28. The earliest figure of the horns of P. eld: is given, with a portrait of its dis- coverer, Lieut. Eld, in the Bengal Sporting Magazine.* This remarkable Deer is a highly gregarious species, resorting to open- ings in the forest, like the Indian Bard-sing’ ha, Rucervus duvaucellt.t *118. CERVULUS AUREUS (J. 223). Styloceras aureus, H. Smith, G.A.K. iv. 148, t. v. 805. Gee, or Barking Deer. | The diminutive Deer of this form, commonly known as Muntjacs, are generally distributed over the hill forests of north-east Asia and its islands; but examination of a series of skulls from different localities in the Museum of the London Royal College of Surgeons inclines me to think that the various species of them have not been satisfactorily made out. That of Java, C. vaginalis, Boddaért, is one of the most distinct, and has considerably larger horns than any of the others; again, the small C’. reevestt, Ogilby, of China is well distinguished ; and Dr. Gray charac- terizes one from Cambodja as C. cambojensis,t which he has since identified with Rucervus schomburgki! The Burmese species differs in no respect that I am aware of from the ordinary Indian one, and again from that inhabiting the Malayan peninsula; but the Sumatran would appear to be somewhat different. It is the most numerous and universally diffused of all the Deer of Burma. More extensive materials for comparison of the different races than are at present available are needed for a final determina- tion of the species of Muntjac Deer.§ Fam. Capride. Goats, Sheep, and Antelopes in part. *119. CAPRICORNIS SUMATRENSIS. Antilope sumatrensis, Shaw; Marsden, Hist. Sumatra, Atlas, pl. xiv; F. Cuvier, Mamm. Lithog.; 4. interscapularis, Lichtenstein ; C. rudida, Blyth; ©. swinhoei, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1862, p. 268, pl. xxxv; skull with horns from Arakan, figured Calc. Journ. N. H. i, pl. xu. Zan-kseik, Mason. * Jc. vol. xiv. 1839, p. 346. t vide Lieut. Eld, doc. cit., and especially Lieut. Beavan, in J. A. S. B, xxxvi. p. 175 et seg., and P. Z. 8. 1867, p. 789. t P. Z. 8. 1861, p. 188. _ § [Sir VY. Brooke has since arranged the known species, P. Z. 8.1874, p. 88.—Hd. | - Fr Ft ee Sf es = 1875. | Goats, Sheep and Antelopes—Brson. 47 This species appears to be distributed from Arakan through Pegu to the extremity of the Malayan peninsula, and to occur in Siam and Formosa, and | also in Sumatra. This species varies much in colour, from red to black, and the black sometimes with a white nape, or the hairs of the nape may be white at the base only. Two flat skins from Arakan are of a pale red-brown colour, with black dorsal list, and quite resemble the figure of one from Formosa, which is styled C. swinhoe. The late Lieut. Beavan, again, described a female shot on ‘‘the grass and bamboo-covered sides of Zwagaben’’ moun- tain, near Maulmein, as being of a mingled black and ferruginous colour,* and he mentions that the animal had been seen at Thayet Myo in Pegu.. Mason also states that it is common on the mountains of Tonghoo, and Cantor obtained it from those of the Malayan peninsula. The ‘wild goat” mentioned by Crawfurd, as stated by the Siamese ‘‘to be found in some of the mountains of their country, and to be shot for their horns, which are prized by the Chinese for certain alleged restorative properties,’’ can hardly be any other. On comparison of skulls from Sumatra, Arakan, and Mergui, I could detect no distinguishing character, and they differ little from those of C. bubalina of the forest region of the Himalaya, except in being considerably smaller. The genus is a very peculiar one, by no means so nearly related to the Goats and Gorals as is generally supposed, but examples of it should be studied in captivity before it can be thoroughly understood, and the skeleton of this form is a desideratum in European collections. Fam. Bovidee. The Bovine family. *120. Bos eaurus (J. 288). | Bos gaurus, C. H. Smith. Fine skull figured in J. A. 8. B. vi. p. 224; another cb7d. x. 470. Pyoung. | | The Gaur, or “ Bison” of Indian sportsmen, is diffused in all suitable localities throughout British Burma, and its range extends southward to the straits of Singapore, but not to any of the islands. Nowhere does this grand species attain a finer development than in Burma, and the horns are mostly short and thick, and very massive, as compared with those of Indian Gaurs, though the distinction is not constant on either side of the Bay of Bengal. In the Malayan peninsula, where it is known as the Salandang, this animal would appear to be becoming extremely rare, at least to the southward; and * P. Z. 8, 1866, p. 4. : } ; ? ; { ; | ; ' r ‘ = - b B f - TP 1 | | q * i | | f i t q hie £ 5 Ht _ L i , Fr iF } + fe ai x ug OM. id : 48 Mammals of Burma. | No. 1, we need information respecting its distribution in other parts of Indo-China... I have seen a characteristic skull from Johore, and once possessed a living calf, which was sent, together with a Malayan Tapir, from Singapore. 121. B. FRONTALIS. Bos frontatis, Lambert, Lin. Trans. vii. p..57, pl. 4; B. gaveus, Colebrooke; P. Z. 8, 1866, pl. 1, young bull; Hodgson, J. A. 8. B. x. p. 470, skull, fig. 1. The Gayal or At’ hun. In the domestic state only, the range of this fine species extends south- ward to the hills bordering on the Koladyne river, which flows into Akyab harbour from the north. In the hilly parts of Tippera and Chittagong it exists in the wild state. Inthe fully mature bull the horns are longer and the dewlap is considerably more developed than is represented in the figure cited. ¥122: B. sonDAICUS. Bos sondaicus, 8. Muller; B. bentinger, Temminck. Tsoing of Burmese. The Banting inhabits Pegu, the Tenasserim provinces and Malayan penin- sula, Sumatra, Borneo, and Java; being domesticated in the island of Bali. The hybrid with the Javan humped cow constitutes the B. leuco- prymnus of Quoy and Gaymard, as the hybrid Gayal constitutes the P. sylhetanus of F. Cuvier. The Banting has bred in the Zoological Garden of Amsterdam, where I have seen bull, cow, and calf in fine condition. The bull, more especially, has an indication of a hump, which, however, must be specially looked for to be noticed; and he has a broad and massive neck like the Gaur, but no raised spinal ridge, nor has either of these species a deep dewlap like the Gayal. The cow is much slighter in build, with small horns that incline backwards; and she retains her bright chestnut colour permanently, while the bulls become black as they attain maturity, excepting always the white ‘ stockings,’’ and also the white patch on each buttock, which is characteristic of the species. In the old bull the cuticle between the bases of the horns becomes enormously thickened, corneous and rugged, and this begins to show before the coat has commenced to change colour, as may be seen in a stuffed specimen in the British Museum, which is that of an animal procured in Pegu by the author of this paper, and which lived for some time in the London Zoological Gardens. How far to the eastward the range of this animal extends in the Indo-Chinese countries, remains to be ascertained; but I have reason to believe that two other species of Bos there remain to be described, one of which is domesticated in Siam and the other in Cochin China. -e i. 1875. | Buffaloes and Tapirs. ae! 49 123, Busatus aRni (J. 239). Bos arnt, Shaw. | The Indian Buffalo exists wild, whether or not indigenously so, and everywhere in the domestic state; and, as the calves obtain their full supply of milk, the tame Buffaloes in Burma assume their full development, and are not stunted in their growth, as in most parts of India. The Rev. F. Mason remarks that ‘“‘there are great numbers of wild Buffaloes in the jungles of the South, which are supposed by the natives to be indigenous; but they are more probably of the domestic race that have run wild, like the wild Horses of America.’”’ The Indian Buffalo now abounds in a state of wildness in the north of Australia, where they have spread from Port Essington, and there are many in the delta of the Nile, where also they must needs have descended from domestic stock. From Crawfurd’s description of the animal it would seem that Bos sondaicus is domesticated in Siam. He, however, styles it B. taurus? ‘The Bos taurus,” he remarks, ‘‘is found wild in the Siamese forests, and exists very generally in the domestic state, particularly in the northern provinces. Those we saw about the capital were short limbed, compactly made, and frequently without horns. They were generally of a red or a dark-brown colour, and never of the white or grey, so prevalent amongst the cattle of Hindustan. They also want the hump over the shoulders, which charac- terizes the latter. They are used only in agricultural labour, for their milk is too trifling in quantity to be useful, and the slaughter of them, publicly at least, is forbidden even to strangers. When, during our stay, we wanted beef for our table, our servants were obliged to go three or four miles out of town, and to slaughter the animals at night. The wild cattle, for the protection of religion does not extend to them, are shot by professed hunts- men on account of their hides, horns, bones, and flesh, which last, after being converted into jerk beef, forms an article of commerce to China.’’* Kam. Tapiride. Tapirs. 124. TaprRus MALAYANUS. Tapirus malayanus, Raffles, F. Cuvier, Mamm. Lithog. i. p. 87.. Ta-ra-shu, Mason. ' The Malayan Tapir inhabits the Tenasserim provinces as high as the 15th deg. north lat.; also Lower Siam, the Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo; if not likewise the southern provinces of China, where the species is not likely to be a different one. ‘‘Though seen so rarely,” * Embassy to Siam and Cochin China, 11. p. 192. 4 50 Mammals of Burma. | No. 1, remarks Mason, ‘‘the Tapir is by no means uncommon in the interior of Tavoy and Mergui provinces; I have frequently come upon its recent foot- marks, but it avoids the inhabited parts of the country. It has never been heard of north of the valley of the Tavoy river.” Fam. BRhinoceratide. Rhinoceroses. 125. RurvocEros sonpatcus (J. 213). Rhinoceros sondaicus, Cuvier; Horsfield, Zool. Res.in Java; S. Miiller, Verhand. t. 33; R. nasalis, R. stenorhynchus, et R. flowert, Gray, apud Busk, P. Z. 8. 1869, p. 416. Khyen-hseu, Mason. The Lesser One-horned Rhinoceros. So far as I have been able to satisfy myself, this is the only single-horned Rhinoceros of the Indo-Chinese and Malayan countries, its range of distribution extending northward to the Garo hills, where it co-exists with the large A. endicus, and to eastern and Lower Bengal. It would appear to be the only Rhinoceros that inhabits the Sundarbans, occurring within a few miles of Calcutta; and yet I know of but one instance of its having been brought to Europe alive,* and then it was not recognized as differing from R. indicus, which latter is not uncommonly brought down the Braéhmaputra from Assam, and sent to Kurope from Calcutta. There is reason, also, to believe that &. sondaicus is the species which was formerly hunted by the Moghul Emperor Baber on the banks of the Indus. Southward it inhabits the Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, Java, and Borneo (?vdde Busk, loc. cit.). Itis about a third smaller than A. sndceus, from which it is readily distinguished by having the tubercles of the hide uniformly of the same small size, and also by having a fold or plait of the skin crossing the nape, in addition to that behind the shoulder-blades, In R. indicus the corresponding fold does not thus meet its opposite, but curves backward to join—or nearly so in some individuals—the one posterior to the shoulders. A fine living male, before referred to, was exhibited for some years about Great Britain, and was finally deposited in the Liverpool Zoo- logical Gardens, where it died, and its preserved skeleton is now in the anatomical museum of Guy’s Hospital, Southwark. Two passable figures of it from life are given in the ‘‘ Naturalists’ Library,”. where it is mistaken for the huge &. indicus. : Sa _ pee ws ‘ | TR eae —”®~ AS. = eer 5 nee — > ~ : pein : Pais . Sea > ees ee " ~ “4 = a b a ‘ it x ™! Eties al ir " Es . a - : =—o 1 — rire —- bial en 7 ee SE a - ——— c Es ea ak B- epee y se = 2 : ik PE Ron ‘ we - - ml - Ss WATE ence oh ae Stine Seer 9 = yee! SSS SSS a y Dorie non te , = Dh “ “tng La = ee —— ——— oan —— a es . 4 _— g Ee ee sae 7 pant ’ a ee aan i Si alte Se a it ee ae : - a SSS SSE == — ee Sa a a & * [Since Mr. Blyth wrote this paper, another example of this species is now alive in the Zoological Society’s Garden.—J.A. ] _ i a a 1875. | Rhinoceroses. 51 Rhinoceros sondaicus is found at all elevations, as remarked of it by Dr. Horsfield, in Java; and from the mountains of Palouk, thirty miles north of Mergui, a writer quoted by the Rev. F. Mason observes—‘‘ We were on the summit of the highest range of mountains in the provinces. The tall timber trees at the first ascent were dwindled into a thick growth of stunted bushes, unmixed with a single shrub. The path, which was narrow and steep, had reached a level spot, that had been in the rains the wallowing place of a rhinoceros; for it has the habit of wallowing in the mire no less than the hog and the buffalo.” The Sumatra Rhinoceros was also tracked by General Fytche to an altitude of about 4000 feet, when he obtained a close view of the animal with two finely developed horns.* _ Crawfurd was assured at Bangkok that a thousand Rhinoceros horns were thence annually exported to China. According to Helfer, the R. indicus, in addition to R. sondarcus, inhabits the northern portion of the Tenasserim provinces; and Mason asserts that a single-horned Rhinoceros from the Arakan jungles was purchased by the London Zoological Society, and lived for many years in the Regent’s Park, the species in that case being unquestionably R. indicus. Again, according to a writer in the Oriental Sporting Magazine,} both species of one-horned Rhinoceros occur in Burma, and he cites, as his authority for the statement, a writer in the first series of the same periodical (vol. ii. p. 35), mentioning that his said authority appears to be ‘‘a thorough sportsman and no mean naturalist.’? I nevertheless hesitate, upon present evidence, to admit the Great Indian Rhinoceros into the list of Burmese animals. 126. CERATORHINUS CROSSII ? Rhinoceros crossit, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1854, p. 250, with figure of anterior horn, 32 in, in length over the curvature, and 17 in. in span from base to tip; &. dasiotis, Sclater. Kar-fringed Rhinoceros. In the Rhinoceroses of this type the hide is comparatively thin, and is not tessellated or tuberculated, nor does it form a ‘coat of mail,” as in the preceding; but there is one great groove (rather than fold or plait) behind the shoulder-blades, and a less conspicuous crease on the flank, which does not extend upwards to cross the loins, as represented in F. Cuvier’s figure; and there are also slight folds on the neck and at base of the limbs; the skin being moreover hairy throughout. There is also a second horn placed at some distance behind the nasal one. Until recently, the existence of more than one species was unsuspected. In 1868, a young female was captured in the province of Chittagong, and on 7. A, &. B. xxx. p, 157, t+ July, 1832, p. 301. 1 ! i t per ‘ i] ; ty reg fe ik Ae \ i iS | a . a * 4 4) , i 5 r i i H.- | i q Ls 3 - = . ae (Pkg th if bi - ¥ 4. fi 7 v 4 ik | ) & oi ae : ; 52 Mammals of Burma. | | [ No. 1, its arrival in the London Zoological Gardens, early in 1872, was believed to represent the Rhinoceros sumatrensis of Bell and Raffles; but soon afterwards another two-horned Rhinoceros was received at the same establishment from Malacca, obviously of a different species, which proved to be the veritable R. sumatrensis. Since its arrival, it has now (1878) considerably increased in size, and it probably is not yet quite full grown. As compared with C. sumatrensis, it is a considerably larger animal, with much smoother skin, of a pale clay- colour, covered with longer and less bristly hair, the latter of a light brown colour, as seen in the mass. The ears are placed much further apart at the base, and are not lined with hair as in the other, but are conspicuously fringed — with long hair; and the tail is much shorter and largely tufted at the end. The horns are worn away, but if the species be truly assigned to C. erossii, the anterior would grow very long and curve to a remarkable extent back- wards, while the posterior horn would probably be short. A second speci- men of an anterior horn, almost as fine as the one first described, has recently turned up among the stores of the British Museum; and I found a smaller anterior horn of #. crossz in the Museum of the London Royal College of Surgeons, confirmatory of its peculiar shape. In this group the horns are remarkably slender except at the base, and of much more compact texture than in other Rhinoceros horns. I have reason to believe that this is the two- horned species which inhabits the Arakan hills, those of northern Burma, and which extends rarely into Assam; and I think it highly probable that the skull figured in Journ. As. Soc. B. xxxi. p. 156, pl. iii. f. 1, repre- ‘sents that of ©. crossit (seu Jt. dasvotis), in which case the range of the species would extend into the Tenasserim provinces. A detailed notice of the individual sent to London has been given by Dr. Anderson.* 127. C. SUMATRENSIS. Lthinoceros sumatrensis, Bell, Phil. Tr, 1793, p. 3, pl. 2, 3,4; R. javanus, F. Cuv. Mamm. Lithog., very young; C. dlythit, Gray, Ann. M. N. H. (4), vol. xi. p. 860. Kyen-shan, Mason. 7 | The Sumatran Rhinoceros is much smaller than the preceding species, with a harsh and rugose skin, which is black, and clad with bristly black hairs ; the ears less widely separated at base, and filled internally with black hairs; the muzzle anterior to the nasal horn much broader; and the tail conspicuously longer, tapering, and not tufted at the end. Horns attaining considerable length, and curving but slightly backwards, as represented in Journ. As. Soc. B. gem 1 b6 201 ivf. - i = es ~—— = pes ‘ 4 : | By int 56 — Birds of Burma. [ No. 1, the place of P. rosa (Boddaért) of India generally and Ceylon. In Nipal both species occur, but the present one only (if I mistake not) in Lower Bengal, and its range extends eastward to the south of China. ‘There are various distinctions, one of which is that in P. rosa the wings are blue on the inner side, while in P. cyanocepHatus they are green within. P. Rosa is also a much more finely coloured bird than the other, and has a con- spicuously longer tail. | [Rangoon, Karen hills, Tonghoo (W. #.). Linneus’s title of Psit- tacus ecyanocephalus, founded on Brisson’s Psittaca cyanocephala (Orn. iv. p. 859, no. 70, pl. xix. f. 2, ‘‘ East Indies’’), applies to this race. While Psittacus purpureus, P. L. 8. Miller (Suppl. p. 74, no. 6, d.), founded on the Perruche a téte rouge de Gingt (Daubent. Pl. Enl. 264), Psettaca gingrana erythrocephala, Briss. (tec. p. 3846, no. 65, pl. 29, f. 2, ‘“‘royaume de Gingi’”’), as shown by the late Mr. Cassin, ten years ago (P. Ac. N. Sc. Philadelphia, 1864, p. 239), must take precedence of Gmelin’s title of Psittacus erythrocephalus (8S. N.1. p. 325, No. 74 ex Briss.). Mr. G. R. Gray (H. List, 1. No. 8054), who followed Cassin, adopted P. L. 8. Miiller’s title, and retained it, rather vaguely, for the species inhabiting ‘India and Ceylon,’’ while restricting Gmelin’s title of bengalensis to the Nipalese form. Curiously enough, Mr. Gray wrongly associated P. L. 8.. Miiller’s title of purpureus with Daubenton’s plate, No. 888, on which Boddaert founded his title of Psittacus rosa (Table, p. 53). There does not appear to be conclusive proof of both species occurring in Nipal, but conf. Jerdon, in Ibis (1872, p. 6, No. 149). The title of Pstéacus rosa, Boddaert, strictly pertains to the Bengal form. | | 5. *P. viprisca (J. 152). Psittacus ponticerianus, Gmelin; P. alexandri (L.), apud Finsch, Die Papageien, tom. il. p- 59; P. modestus, Fraser, the young. | An exceedingly common species in the forests of British Burma, and Mason remarks of it (in particular) that ‘‘ immense flocks of Parrakeets may be seen simultaneously descending on the rice-fields, where persons have to be in constant attendance to drive them away during the season of harvest ;” while of P. rorevatus he notices that it is ‘often seen in the rice-fields, but in smaller companies, which have not the habit of simultaneous descent.” Westward, the present species is common in the Terai region of the E. Himalaya, but its range does not extend further into India, whence its synonym of ponticerianus is a misnomer. Great numbers of the very young are brought every season to Calcutta from Chittagong, and it is remarkable 1875. ] Parrots. 57 that from the earliest age the males only have the upper mandible coral- red. In a presumed female which I possessed in captivity, the upper mandible changed from black to coral-red when the bird was about eighteen months old; and I have seen numerous specimens which had been killed when the change was in progress. I have also shot red-billed and black- billed specimens out of the same flock, and therefore cannot admit the P. nigrirostris, Hodgson, as a distinct species, differing only in the colour of the upper mandible. Moreover, the same sexual diversity in the colouring of the bill, whether permanently or otherwise, occurs in several kindred species. Rarely, the lower mandible is also red in Burmese specimens, almost constantly so in Javanese examples; but I have been unable to detect the slightest difference of plumage on comparison of skins from Nipal, — Arakan, and Java. | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. &.). Assuming that the rose-breasted parra- keets of the Indian Continent and Burma belong to one species, and those of Java and Borneo to another, it is not difficult to allot to the first their correct title. Mr. G. R. Gray (¢.c. No. 8066), following Cassin (J.c.), adopted for the Indian species exclusively P. L. 8. Miiller’s title of Psittacus fasciatus, bestowed by him (t.c. p. 74, no. 6, f.) on Daubenton’s plate (op. cit. no. 517), and which subsequently served as the subject of Pséttacus vibrissa, Boddaert, not vibrisca (¢.c. p. 80), and of Psittacus pondicertanus, Om, (6. p. 325, No. 73). This plate, as has been shown by Dr. Finsch, was taken from the Javan species, and therefore the titles cited fall before that of Psittacus alexandri, Lin. Wagler (Monog. p. 511) first bestowed a title, that of Paleornis melanorhynchus, on the Continental species, and by this it must be called. | 6. P. MELANORHYNCHUS. P. melanorhynchus, Wagler, nec Sykes; Ibis, 1873, p. 79; 2. nigrirostris, Hodgson, | partim, vide Cale. Journ. N. H. vii. p. 560.* A most closely allied species to the last, from the Tenasserim provinces, if not also the base of the Eastern Himalaya. As seen alive, together with examples of the preceding, the difference is more conspicuous from its purely white irides, whereas the other has dark irides. The cap has a slight tinge of verditer, but no trace of ruddy colouring, and the red of the breast is continued past the black moustachial streak and the ear-coverts, * It is worthy of notice that Mason designates the bird, not distinguishing the two races, as the “ black-billed Parrakeet.”’ ae santa eS = Tale Eo ME. he ont eal ales =— ; ws — : -_ 2 ") * tha 1s : i | aed ae ae + Le 3 > Sees a ae 7 ms | FP 4 ya | “4 + aa aa j! < §| & 5 + of) \- Bale \. wae / ; WE { ; The , | b ’ a : \ e ' Brian - 4 jay . Ws i et - i ; : | -- ig a . ie : Bebe 1 ] ; ) 4 ; nt} y al f) mm j ao = ; c i) 4 a : i : ia. 1. 1 Wee) 7 way . J Fi ; Pei hi 7 Tae ap ee bre ie - a rh & Hf d aM be i - I ®. i ‘ 7 | S | i ina % } ale . {i t % Ee . ou 2 ie ae b - } iB . tr 3 : nh ‘ ‘9 : ie re ee] : a { : it ie ; ie : Be yore hoe { §. eis — 3 — - ae Deg | | a ii > ve } : Ti « t ; Sins : - : a ri - a = i a oe ne a | E | f Ht 7a 4 ' J . I * 4 i 7. in P i : i $ i 1 pk , ys : hoy t a , F See 3 Msi? 7 q : F | Bay i 7 ” < ‘ a i. || 4 ie amet iy a € Hl * {\ " q ———_ an ame 2S ee aaa gine actes —— apemayesst eas ae Fie a i me SAL * ae | oy ' . ‘ a ” — ae. eee 2a t= — =e ee oa — weer SSS FS eT —_—s ee 58 Birds of Burma. [ No. 1, so as to form a half-collar bordering the sides of the cap; it also does not descend so far on the abdominal region, a larger portion of which is green than in the other. These differences are conspicuous in the living birds when seen together. All hitherto examined have the bill black, but in the male it is probable that the upper mandible is coral-red. A living specimen in the London Zoological Gardens is alleged to be from Kashmir, which is certainly a mistake. There are skins in the British Museum which are positively from the Tenasserim provinces. | The facts here stated are quite new. I am not aware that they have ever been previously published. Dr. Jerdon certainly was unacquainted with them. Further investigation is most desirable; more especially as Mr. Blyth is completely at issue on many points with what has been averred by Mr. Hume. My own experience does not accord with Mr. Blyth’s opinion. | , 7. PsrrrINus MALACCENSIS. Psittacus malaceensis, Latham, nec Gmelin; P. incertus, Shaw; Swainson’s J//. Orn. pl. 164. 3 This common Malayan species occurs in Mergui province. It is essen- tially a short-tailed Palgorms, but with affinity to Zanygnathus. [Blyth’s generic title Psctéinus is absorbed by Dr. Finsch in Kuhl’s Psittacula. Latham’s specific title malaccensis is also by the same author superseded, on the ground of its conveying an erroneous idea of the geo- graphical range, and Shaw’s title ancertus is adapted. A better or more acceptable reason is that Gmelin and Latham named two distinct species of Asiatic parrots by the title of malaccensis. | 8. *LORICULUS VERNALIS (J. 153). Kyai-tha-da. Generally diffused in the forests. | Tonghoo (W. £.). | Order RAPTORES. Fam. Falconide. 9, FaLco PEREGRINATOR (J. 9). Faico peregrinator, Sundev.; Gould, B. As. pt. ii. pl. 2; communis, var. (?) Raffles, ex Sumatra. | It is asserted by Mason that I showed him a skin of this Falcon received mi) 1875. | Falcons. 59 from Burma, though I have no recollection of the circumstance. It is, however, a most likely species to occur there, as is also /. peregrinus, in suitable localities, where ducks resort plentifully. £. peregrinator would appear to be chiefly a Malayan species, and the specimen of it originally obtained by Sundevall was obtained on board ship, in lat 6°, between Ceylon and Sumatra, about seventy miles from the Nicobar Islands. | Major Lloyd has sent me an undoubted example of this Falcon, shot near Tonghoo. | [10. F. pernerrinus (J. 8). - Prome (Oates). | 11. Hyporriorcuis sEvERuS (J. 14). Tenasserim. Inhabits from the 8. E. Himalaya to Java and the Philip- pines, but has not hitherto been met with in the plains of India. Mr. Holdsworth notes it from Ceylon. *12. TInNUNCULUS ALAUDARIUS (J. 17). Gyo-theing. Common. TZ. saturatus, nobis,* from the Tenasserim provinces, is perhaps a distinct race, remarkable for the great development of the black markings on its plumage; but it requires further confirmation. | Tonghoo (Lloyd), Karen nee (W. &.), Thayet Myo (Peilden). Linnunculus atratus, Blyth, apud G. R. Gray, H. L. No. 212, ex Burma, is a misprint for 7. satwratus, Blyth. | [13. ERyrHRoPUs VESPERTINUS ? (J. 19), Mr. Hume has thus, with doubt, identified an example sent to him by Captain Feilden from Thayet Myo. | 14. PoLIOHIERAX INSIGNIS. Poliohierax insignis, Walden, P. Z. 8. 1871, p.627; Lithofalco feildeni, A. O. Hume, Peat. Dp. 1372, p. 70. Upper Pegu. *15. Hrmrax EvTotmus (J. 20). falco cerulescens, apud Stoliczka, J. A. S. B. pt. 2, xxxix. p. 282. Koung-oo-hnouk. Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim, Siam. | The title of Mcrohterax, Sharpe, must be employed for this genus. | * J.A.S. B, xxii. p. 277; Ibis, 1866, p. 238, “ * om a ~ ait igs hae Sc alan late ye te ee Pl ag SS: eee Bis tae PE Bard sgt tl Sheth on a aha ™ oa — ~— Ja ay , eR ee are ase eee —— a are ew ag a wa EE RST, rae = wee: — J fT ee tac i tie: 9 -— prac ner aan c: sade aie | t Bi rid r} i | { | vi, E cH i a m a eee 1 ated mie asa i . my 4 sei . " . : V o < nt “— ‘ Kc = inst igi aera a a aoe wi dali a ‘iniia on. dins Hinbeliteettin ‘eo sah ad hast. ~ ~~ oad e ; as . a el i a a a Ge een mee ahaa la Ts adaliairee aoa nareeeeeeees SS SE SS SSS pc ak poe is See aigistoa; aces es Sea uelena irae = upeoes teneeeneiee = = inks = a - ~ ae nn eer om os ne ere ee eS ae Sf Ree sp REE aed ae eS het ae, 2 7 on SOI ree AUS aa haere — Ey ine yg A427 L " pu ee SS ee ee eS a, ete ENS ese Pay ibe! SEY Stu ir a Pet at = ee eee eee eer gi yr epee a reer ares oe a - a Faas Set eel Behera re deatnds cca J > . . NS = —e . n uF Pa = as * on ts ome" . aa. Tar mi aU < : 5 | re “ ys ‘ ; , J eee eae Nee pear eab ay eee ve - = 5 Seek: a 5 Ye ai a SF atin a as a ————— eee tS a 2 $a epi aa |) a) | | (| i = | = ee Dee is a nae iw hte Bes eth RE Se A - Diets r D a See smears eng ee J : : 7 ee a 7 : acne bs is era yee as = - — - = = = = — : = a 2 en ee iit ae Ne — o 60 Birds of Burma. | Deeds 16. H. rrrnerrarivs. H. fringillarius, Drapiez ; H. malayensis, Strickland; Falco cerulescens, apud Vieillot, Gal. des Ois. t. 18; Pl. Col. 97. | Malayan Peninsula, Sumatra, Java, Borneo. Obtained by Helfer, pro- bably in Mergui province (specimen in Calcutta Museum). In the north of Arakan, H. melanoleucus, nobis,* will most probably be found to occur, as it has been obtained in the province of Kachar. [Meeta Myo (Davison). | | *17,. Baza LopHortss (J. 58). Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. 18, PERNIs prrLtorHyNncuus (J. 57). A long-crested specimen received from Mergui, and described as P. brachypterus.t Its primaries were not fully grown. Mr. A. O. Hume notes it from Burma and Siam. [Tonghoo (W. R.), Thayet Myo (F. and 0.)] *19, ELANUS MELANOPTERUS (J. 59). Arakan, Tenasserim. ‘‘ Various localities in British Burma” (4. 0. Hume). [Thayet Myo (W. #.), Arakan (0.). | *20. SPILORNIS CHEELA (J. 39). Doung-tswoon. Common in Arakan, if correctly identified, as is most probable. The nearly allied but smaller race, with shorter crest, S. bacha (Daudin); Falco i] bido, Horsfield; Mematornis spilogaster, nobis; HH. elgint, Tytler, inhabits | the Andamans, South India, and Ceylon, as also Malacca and Java; and, | according to Messrs. Swinhoe and Gurney, is an intermediate race. | Tonghoo (W. &.); Thayet Myo (2). 8S. elgint, Tytler, is undoubtedly a distinct species. Nor can I agree to unite S. spilogaster with S. bacha. At Kalee Gunge Dr. Day obtained an adult bird, in the rich brown plumage of true S. bacha. | 21. S. RUTHERFORDI. S. rutherford, Swinhoe, Ibis, 1870, p. 85. Has been procured in the vicinity of Rangoon, in Siam, and Hainan. | Said by Mr. Hume to have been obtained near Tonghoo. Neighbour- hood of Amherst and Ye (D.). | # JA. $2 By xi. pe 179 bis. + J. A. S. B. xxi. p. 436. i 1875. | Fatcons. 61 ie *99,. Crrous MELANOLEUCUS (J. 53). | Thein-kya. Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim. hy, | [Tonghoo (W. R.); Thayet Myo, Rangoon (fF). ] *23. C. cINERACEUS (J. 52), F Pegu, Tenasserim. | *24. C. swarnsoni (J. 51). Arakan, Pegu. E ay *25. C. meuarnosus (J. 54). = Arakan, Tenasserim. : : : at | Tonghoo, Rangoon CW. R.).] 26. Pottornis TEESA (J. 48). Common in Province Amherst. [Tonghoo (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.). Hodgson’s generic title, Butas- bes bur, takes precedence over Poliornis, Kaup. | 27. P. INDIcUS. | Faico indicus, Gmelin; F'. javanicus, Latham; Buteo poliogenys, Temminck, Fauna Japonica, pl. vil. B., where printed pyrrhogenys; B. pygmeus, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xiv. p. 117; 3 Astur barbatus, Kyton. rs According to Mr. A. O. Hume, this species ‘“‘has now occurred on os several occasions in Southern Burma.” The specimen described as Buteo ta! | ‘ . pygmeus was obtained by Helfer. One procured by Mr. Swinhoe in Formosa a” had a crested occiput.* 0 28. P. LIVENTER. P. liventer, Temminck, p.c. 488. st? An example from Tonghoo, identified by Viscount Walden;} Siam (Gurney). [Tonghoo (W. #.); Thayet Myo (0.). To Major Lloyd belongs the credit of having first discovered that this species was an inhabitant of ¢ Burma, where, judging by the number of examples sent to me, it appears J | very common. | ‘4 * This, 1864, p. 429. + Tr. Z. §. viii. p. 37 (1871). W ae: nee ad ri emer ee Pat ne ee ee EA MATIN NM * = 7 hl pte rr ae alma erent wer ee REET OIE L RS Fes No eA ak aa — 2 ae 5 at CS an bi ong SDS SEER ded ay ss bab este ae a PE Mae CN el ee en ne ee: w : ie Be Ms: ‘> b = a eee in a ee ¥ Spee ~ mere se << = sidghanteainial te ey 4 ic) eee arene Sr | SSS ma ak - = Birds of Burma. [Nom P. HUMILIS. Falco humilis, 8. Muller ; Icthyaétus nanus, nobis. Burma, fide Viscount Walden. Mr. W. E. Brooks identifies Haliaétus plumbeus, Hodgson,* with this species. *43. BLAGRUS LEUCOGASTER (J. 43). A. common maritime species which preys chiefly on sea-snakes. “44, Harrastur INDUS (J..55). Common, extending southward to Malacca. | Tonghoo (W. #.); Thayet Myo (0.). ] *45. Mitvus govrnpa (J. 56). Tswon-boke. | Common in the cold season. At Bangkok it is as abundant as in Calcutta. Cantor procured it at Pinang. [46. M. arrrnis. M. affinis, Gould, P. Z. 8. 1837, p. 140. Thayet Myo examples, obtained by Mr. Oates and mee Feilden, are thus identified by Mr. Hume. | (47. Burzo prumipss (J. 47). A Buzzard obtained by Captain Feilden at Thayet Myo is identified by Mr. Hume as B. japonicus, Schlegel. | fam. Vulturide. Vultures. 48. VuLtur catvus (J. 2), Vultur calvus, Scopoli; Gould, B. As. pt. xi. pl. 1. Not a common species, 49. Gyps inpicus (J. 4). Vultur indicus, Scopoli; Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 3, immature plumage. Arakan, Siam. Vultures assigned to this species are mentioned to have been obtained on Zwagaben mountain by Lieut. Beavan.t I have seen two specimens of G’. indicus in a Malacca collection. No doubt a Vulture of any kind is there rare, or it would not have been deemed worthy of preservation. * J. A.S8. B., xli. pti. p. 73 + P.Z. 8, 1866, p. 3. 1875. | Owls. 65 According to Sir T. Stamford Rafiles, “ Wiultures are rare on the west coast of Sumatra, but are occasionally seen on the Malay peninsula, and at Pinang.” Mr.-k. W. H. Holdsworth notices that the Vulturtde are absent from Ceylon ;{ and Mr. Wallace asserts the same of the entire Malayan archipelago. t [ Upper Pegu (0.). | 50. G. BENGALENSIS (J. 5). Leu-ta. ‘Often seen in great numbers, even in the suburbs of large towns” (Mason). I noticed a few about Akyab only. Cantor procured it in Province Wellesley.§ It abounds as much in Siam as in Bengal. | Thayet Myo (Hume); Pabyouk (D.).] fam. Strigidee, Owls. dl. Hunva nrparensts (J. 71). Specimen in nestling garb, obtained by Colonel Tickell upon Moulé-it mountain, and described by him as Ptiloskelos amherstdi.|| This species has been confounded with the Malayan H. orientalis (Horsfield), which is a much smaller kind, and otherwise differs considerably. The young of both are in the British Museum, which enables me to confirm the present identi- fication. | Tonghoo (W. £.).] “52. ASCALAPHIA BENGALENSIS (J. 69). Arakan. *53. A. conomanDa (J. 70). Arakan. 54. Scops terria (J. 75). Arakan, Tenasserim. Identical with Himalayan specimens. [| Rangoon, Karen hills (W. R.); Thayet Myo (F.). The Rangoon and Karen examples are not separable from Malaccan individuals. But they are distinct from true S. Jempijt, Horsf., which is from Java. | OES, 2a 2. SUL. DP. 270: t 2.4. 8.1872, p. 406, + Ibis, 1868, p. 2. § P. Z. 8. 1854, p. 258. | J. A. 8S. B. vol. xxviii. p. 448, “| z " i a | Bi a i a4 a ae i= He i 7" ( iinet Aa hy a * — i oneal " ane Bria ent aeie elk Rediesd Sock ae eee hak Soiree 0 ui tien le yr pea BE 66 | Birds of Burma. Nord, mE | *55. 8. BakKamUNA (J. 74). i ) i noe S. pennata et S. sunia, Hodgson; Gould, B. As. pt. xxii. pl. 3. Ml Arakan. Otus mantis, 8. Miiller, which is S. rufescens, Horsfield, is dubiously stated by Mr. A. O. Hume to have been found in Burma. | Thayet Myo (L£. fide Hume). | *56. Kerupa CEYLONENSIS (J. 72). Tee-dok. Arakan. The common Indian species, an example of which was obtained by Canon Tristram in the valley of the J a Its range extends eastward to China. | Tonghoo (W. &.); common from Thayet Myo to Tonghoo (0.); Am- herst (D.). | 57. K. JAVANENSIS. ii i | K. javanensis, Lesson; Strix ketupa, Horsfield; Strix ceylonensis, apud Temminck, th P.C. 74. | One received from Ramri Island, Arakan; also Siam. Common in the Malayan peninsula and archipelago. {| Amherst (D.). |] *58. AleoLius BRAcHYoTUs (J. 68). Brachyotus accipitrinus (Gm.), Ibis, 1872, p. 328. Arakan. | Asto accipititronus (Pallas) is the correct denomination of this Owl. Those authors who may desire to generically separate it from the long-eared Owl, will have to adopt the generic title of Brachyotus, Gould, and not that of Aigolius, K. and B., previously employed by Kaup as the generic title of S. tengmalme. | ” *59. ATHENE WHITELEYI (?). Athene whiteleyt (?), Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 313; A. cuculoides (?). Arakan, Tenasserm. Common. A. castanoptera, Horsfield, a Javanese species, is mentioned by Helfer; | and an example of the Indian 4. radiata was obtained by Dr. Cantor from a Keddah.* [ Rangoon, Tonghoo, Yey-tho (W. R.); Thayet Myo (0.). The numerous individuals collected by Major Lloyd and Lieutenant W. Ramsay | all belong to true 4. cuculovdes. | * P.Z.S. 1854, p. 262. gat! mg fl a oP ae 1875. |: | Owls. | 67 | 60. A. PULCHRA. A. pulchra, Hume, Str. Feath. 187 a 469, Thayet Myo (W. £&.). | 61. Guaucrpium BRODIEI (J. 80). Noctua brodiei, Burton; Gould, B. As. pt. xxii. pl. 4. Obtained by Colonel Tickell upon Moulé-it mountain. | Meeta Myo, Kyouknyat (D.). | *62. Ninox scututatus (J. 81). Khen-bok. Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. Common. ‘Very abundant at Tavai; and though I never heard it at Moulmein, its familiar voice saluted me on the first night of my arrival at Tounghoo” (Mason). [Karen hills (Z.); Tonghoo (W. R&.); Thayet Myo (0.); Pahpoon, Kyouknyat, Amherst (D.). Until’comparison has been made with Sumatran examples, it will be best to retain the title of the Ceylon species, 1. har wae, for the Burman WVinoz. | 63. SYRNIUM SELOPUTO. Strix seloputo, Horsfield; Strix pagodarum, Tem., P. C. 220; 8. sinensis, vera. P Latham, not of Hardwicke and Gray. Mergui, Siam, Nicobar Islands. In Assam, according to Mr. A. O. Hume, this species apparently replaces the S. occellatum of India, and it is ‘“con- stantly found in Burma.’’ | | Thayet Myo (#7). Identical with Malaccan examples. S. SINENSIS, Lath., founded on Sonnerat’s Hibou de la Chine (Voy. Indes, ii. p. 185), can hardly refer to this owl. | 64. 8. rvprant (J. 68). This should be the Burmese race, as it occurs at Malacca, as well as in South India and Ceylon; but Mr. A. Hume has a Burmese specimen, and suspects that ‘‘if the Nipal and Nilgiri birds be distinct, the Burmese, Kumaon, Simla, and Kotegurh birds are intermediate between these two.” * 65. Proprius saptus (J. 62). Strix badia, Horsfield; Gould, B. As. pt. xxii. pl. 6. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Malay countries. | Tonghoo, Karen hills (W. k.). Identical with Malaccan and Bornean examples, | * “Scrap-book,” Part I. Raptores, No. 2, p. 351. et a aE ee eee te SS ee SE ok} dentate a ht ry re! oe : - bo ay ye pe | Be By 68 Birds of Burma. | No. 1, 66. StRrx Javanica (J. 60). Strix javanica, Gm.; Gould, B. As. pt. xxiv. pl. 1; &. endiea, Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 250 ; nec 8. javanica, apud Horsfield, as figured by Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 15. Common and generally diffused. | [Thayet Myo (#7). This is true §. javanica, Gm., founded on F. von Wurmb’s Wachteule von Java (Magazin f. d. Neueste, iv. pt. 2, p. 10, no. 4, 1786). No Latin title was given by this author. | 67. 8. canprpa (J. 61). S. candida, Tickell; Gould, B. As. pt. xxiv. pl. 2. Tonghoo. Occurs also in Central and Southern India, China, the Philippine Islands, and Australia. | Tonghoo (Z.). | Order INSESSORES. Sub-order Prcarrm, Tribe HALYCONES. fam. Bucerotidee. Hornbills. “68. DicHocERos Brcornis (J. 140). Young-yen, Arakan (Phayre). Oukchingee (Big-Hornbill), and sometimes Yonia (Beavan). This fine Hornbill seems to be generally diffused through the forests, and is by no means rare, nor particularly shy. Southward its range extends to Malacca and Sumatra.* [Mong (W. £.); common on the western slopes of the Pegu hills (O05 Pahpoon, and 30 miles north of Ye (D.). Mr. Hume (Str. Feath. ii. p. 470) treats the Malaccan race as distinct. The characters which differentiate the Indian from the Malayan forms have yet to be recorded. | “69. HypRocissa ALBIRosTRIS (J. 142). Ouk-Khyen. The commonest species of Hornbill throughout British Burma. | Tonghoo, Karen hills (W. R.).] * Buceros cavatus and B. bicornis are given as distinct species by Mr. W. H. Blanford, Ibis, 1870, p. 466. It can only be by a mistake of some kind. Se ee a 1875. ] Hornbills. 69 70. ANORRHINUS TICKELLI. | Buceros tickelli, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxiv. pp. 266, 285; xxviii. p. 412; Ibis, 1864, pl. iii. Mountains of Amherst Province, up to 4000 feet of elevation. A kindred species from the Nagas was referred to 4. galeritus by Major Godwin-Austen,* and is named 4. austent by Dr. Jerdon;+ but it proves to be no other than the Malayan Craniorrhinus corrugatus (Tem. P. C. 520), the head being now in the possession of Lord Walden. A. galeritus is also a Malayan species. *71. ACEROS PLICATUS (?). Buceros plicatus (?), Latham; B. rujficollis, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xu. p. 176. Chittagong, Kachar, Arakan, Tenasserim provinces, Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, Java (?). Javanese specimens appear to me to be somewhat different. In Tenasserim, remarks Mr. Barbe, both this species and the next are very common, associating in flocks of a dozen or twenty birds, but the two species do not mingle in the same flock. | Dr. Day obtained this species in Assam. ] 72, A. SUBRUFICOLLIS. A. subruficollis, nobis, J. A. S. B. xi. p. 177. Tenasserim provinces, Malayan peninsula. This species is very closely akin to the Papuan A. ruficollis (verus), the females being undistinguishable. | Tonghoo (W. #.). | 73. A. NIPALENSIS (J. 146), Munipur, Kachar, Tenasserim mountains. | Kam. Upupidee. Hoopoes. 74, UPupA LONGIROSTRIS. Upupa longirostris, Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 898. Toung pee-tsok. Tenasserim, Siam, Hainan. | This is hardly to be considered more than a deeply-coloured race of U. epops, and I have an impression that Arakan specimens are pale, like those of Lower Bengal and also of Europe.§ | Tonghoo, Thayet Myo (W. L.). | Pa. . B. Xxxtx. p.-96. t Ibis, 1872, p. 6. { For notice of the Hornbills of British Burma, vide Tickell, Ibis, 1864, p. 173 et seq. § Cf. Stoliczka, J. A. S. B. xli. pt. 2, p. 235; Sharpe and Dresser, Hist. of Birds of Europe, pt. vii. ; Murie, Ibis, 1873, pp. 181 et seg. oe eh dir epost EE ‘7h + =n ap — -\ o-epedigietiel ~~ —_ A Set ome (a ee Miia AEN © ge Kk) fy et =» a inseam eB roi > Oe a my one ee a P rape, earners et envioran tae a 1 eso Ni aid aie = SS ae En ean tee neon i Let Rr Sea Se etn tapos — tte eter - : ee hl ae ee ~. “a Birds of Burma. fam. Alcedinides. Kingfishers. 75, CARCINEUTES PULCHELLUS. Carcineutes pulchellus (Horsf.), Sharpe, Mon. Alc. pl. 96. The range of this Malayan species extends to Mergul. [Karen hills (W. &.); Amherst (D.). The examples from the Karen hills are absolutely identical with those Malaccan individuals which possess a rufous collar. This collar is strongly marked in these Karen specimens. But in many Malaccan specimens it is wanting. When in this common phase of plumage, they become the C. amabiiis, Hume (Str. Feath. 1. p. 474), founded on Upper Pegu examples obtained by Mr. Oates. | *76. PELARGOPSIS BURMANNICA. Pelargopsis burmannica, Sharpe, Mon. Ale. pl. 35. Peing-nyen (generic). Arakan (?), Tenasserim provinces, Siam, Andaman Islands. One of several geographical races which are barely separable. | Yey-tho, Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.). | *77. P. aAMAUROPTERA (J. 128). P. amauroptera (Pearson), Sharpe, Mon. Alc. pl. 30. This species is seldom seen far inland, though in India it occurs in the Tarai at the foot of the Eastern Himalaya; being chiefly seen about estuaries where the water is brackish. It probably is nowhere more abundant than along the Tenasserim coast. | Yey-tho (W. £&.).] *78. Hancyon pirEata (J. 130). Halcyon pileata (Bodd.), Sharpe, Mon. Alc. pl. 62. Conimon. | | Palow (0.); Karope, Tavoy, Moulmein (D.). ] *79. H. conomanpa (J. 181). Hl. coromanda (Lath.), Sharpe, Mon. Alc. pl. 57. Common, chiefly about estuaries. [Meeta Myo, Amherst, Tavoy (Bj) *80. H. swyrnensis (J. 129). H. smyrnensis (Linn.), Sharpe, Mon. Ale. pl. 59. The most common species of its genus, as generally throughout Southern Asia. | | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. &.).] bic gi! 1875. | | Kingfishers. 71 *81. SAUROPATIS CHLORIS (J. 182). _ Haleyon chloris (Bodd.), Sharpe, Mon. Alc. pl. 87. Common along the sea-coasts. _ [Amherst, Henza Basin (D.).] *82. CHYX TRIDACTYLA (J. 133). Ceyx tridactyla (Pall.), Sharpe, Ion. Alc. pl. 40. Deing-nyeen. Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. | [Eastern Pegu hills (0.); between Tavoy and Meeta Myo, Karope, Ye (D.). *83. ALCEDO BENGALENSIS (J. 184). Alcedo,bengalensis, Gm., Sharpe, Mon. Ale. pl. 2. Common. | Rangoon, Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. #.); Thayet Myo (F.).] *84, A. ASIATICA. A. asiatica, Swainson; A. meningting, Horsfield ; Sharpe, Mon. Alc. pl. 5. Tenasserim provinces. It is remarked by Mr. W. T. Blanford, that Pelargopsis burmannica, Halcyon smyrnensis, and Alcedo bengalensis, are apparently replaced in the Irawddi delta, where the water is salt, by P. amauroptera, H. pileata, and A. asiatica. According to Helfer, Alcedo beryllina, Vieillot (biru, Horsfield), is also an inhabitant of the Tenasserim provinces, but I have never seen it even from the Malayan peninsula. The present, however, is one of the species which Helfer did procure. | This is probably A. beavani, Walden, for Mr. Hume remarks that Amherst and Ye examples are identical with individuals from various parts of India and from the Andamans. 4. meningting, Horsf., the senior title of A. asiatica, is a perfectly distinct species. | “85. CuRYLE RuDIS (J. 186). Ceryle rudis (Linn.), Sharpe, Mon. Ale. pl. 19. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Malacca, South China. | Tonghoo (W. R.); Thayet Myo (0.).] [86. CO. eurrata (J. 187). C. guttata (Vig.), Sharpe, Mon. Ale. pl. 18. Kollidoo, Pachaun (D.). | Se shen, senesced >, Oe On ale ie ee 7 7 = eed a= - CO TTT eee * Se LL alee, papain iadiala eh = So ——— ee Sak ok A pur ed ee 5 eae adil —_ Birds of Burma. Fam. Coraciad2. Rollers. “87. Coractas AFFINIS (J. 124). | Coracias afinis, McClell., Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 211, not good. Hgnet-kha. Generally diffused, and always typically coloured; whereas specimens from Tippera, Sylhet, Assam, and Lower Bengal are mostly crossed more or less with C. indica, showing every gradation from one to the other. Gould’s figure assigned to C. affinis in his “‘ Birds of Asia’’* represents a hybrid of the kind; and C. indica also interbreeds with C. garrula in localities where those two races meet. Eastward, the present species extends at least to Siam. [ Rangoon, Tonghoo, Thayet Myo (W. R.).] *88. EuRYsToMUS ORTENTALIS (J. 126). Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. fam. Meropidee. Beeeeaters. *89. Mrrors puitipprnvs (J. 118). Merops phitippinus, Linn.; Gould, B. As. pt. vii. pl. 2. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Malacca, Sumatra, Java, Philippines, South China. The Philippine race does not, as has been asserted, differ in any respect. | Tonghoo (W. R.); Thayet Myo (0.).] “90. M. eryrrocerHatus (J. 119). M. erythrocephalus, Gm.; Gould, B. As. pt. viii. pl. 18. ~ Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Malacca. The Javanese I. quinticolor, Vieillot, is distinguished by having no rufous above the black pectoral band.f [ Rangoon, Karen nee (W. R.); Thayet Myo (F.). The Malaccan habitat is doubtful. For reasons already stated (Ibis, 1878, p. 301), Gmelin’s title, taken from Brisson, cannot be adopted. If, however, the title of quinticolor, Vieillot, is to be used for the Javan race, the continental form must take the name of JL. leschenaulti, Vieill. In either view the necessity of coining the new title of I. swinhoe’, Hume, does not seem apparent. | © Park S21,-pl. 2, T- BIZ. 187, pe 348: &G Le _ a = a) eel L875.) Bar bets. 73 *91, M. virivis (J. 117). M. viridis, var. ferrugeiceps, Hodgson. Arakan, Tenasserim provinces, Siam. Jf. sumatranus, Raffles, occurs in Siam, and should be looked for in the Southern Tenasserim provinces. (Rangoon, Tonghoo hills, Karen hills (W. R.).] *92. NyYcTIORNIS ATHERTONII (J. 122). Nyctiornis athertonii (J. & 8.), Gould, B. As. pt. ii. pl. 2. Tenasserim provinces. | Tonghoo, Karen hills (W. R.).] 93. N. AmIcra. Merops amictus, Temminck, P.C. 310; Swainson’s Zool. Ill., 2nd series, pl. 56; Gould, B. As. pt. ii. pl. 3; N. malaccensis, Cabanis. Procured by Helfer, probably in Mergui province. [Near Zadee (D.). NV. malaccensis, Cab., was described from the young bird. | Tribe COCCYGES. fam. Capitonide. Barbets. *94, MEGALHMA MARSHALLORUM (J. 191). Megalema marshallorum, Swinhoe ; Marshall’s Mon. Cap. pl. 16. Pko-goung. Arakan. | Karen hills (W. 2.). Mr. Hume has identified examples obtained by Mr. Davison at Kollidoo and Kyouknyat as belonging to UL virens (Bodd.), and not to the Himalayan bird. | *95. M. wopasonr (J. 192). M. hodgsoni, Bp.; M. lineata, Marshall’s Mon. Cap. pl. 36, 37. Khasias, Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim, Siam, Malacca (?), Java. ‘ [Rangoon, Tonghoo, Yey-tho (W. R.); Thayet Myo (0.). Vieillot’s title of déneata cannot be applied. |] *96. M. asrarica (J. 195). M. asiatica (Lath.); Marshall, Mon. Cap. pl. 29. Kok-kha-loung. Arakan, where not common. [| Tonghoo (W. &.); Pahpoon, Kollidoo (D.).] Birds of Burma. i a at en 97. M. rranxuint (J. 196). M. franklinii (nobis); Marshall, Mon. Cap. pl. 24. A cA a ts nn i Khasias, Tenasserim mountains. According to Col. Tickell, this species ‘‘swarms from 3000 to 5000 feet elevation, not higher, nor lower, and from the first level it suddenly supplants MU. lineata (MU. hodgsoni?), the Pokoung of the Burmese.” (98. M. Ramsay. M. ramsayi, Walden, Ann. N. H. (4), 15, p. 400, June, 1875, Karen nee (W. B.). |] — a ra — Pn Sl Ae cat a fe it Hei = ee ee ~~ *99, M. cYANOTIS. M. cyanotis (nobis); Marshall, Mon. Cap. pl. 33, fig. 3. Khasias, Tippera, Kachar, Arakan, Tenasserim provinces. [Karen Hills (W. B.).] : | 100. M. wystacopHanvs. M. mystacophanus (Tem.), Marshall, Mon. Cap. pl. 19. Om-ben-gwen (D.). | [101. M. rycoenrra. M. incognita, Hume, Str, Feath. ii. p. 442. it Karope, Ye (D.).| — . *102. M. waMAcePHALA (ks 197), q bn) X. hemacephala (L. 8. Miller); Marshall, Mon. Cap. pl. 42. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Penang, Malacca, Philippines. | Rangoon, Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. R.); Thayet Myo (Go. Fam. Picidee. Woodpeckers. Theet-towk (generic). “103. Hemicercus canEnTE (J. 165). . Picus canente, Lesson, Cent. Zool. t. 73. Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim. This only differs from the South Indian fT. cordatus in being constantly larger. - - [Karen hills, from 500 to 4000 feet (W. R.). Two males are sent by Mr. Ramsay. One has the head uniform deep black; the other with a few buif markings on the feathers of the forehead and crown. | 1875. | Woodpeckers. 75 #104, ALOPHONERPES GUTTURALIS (J. 168). Picus pulverulentus, Temminck, P.C. 389; Picus gutturalis, Valenciennes. Arakan, Shan hills, Tenasserim, Malacca, Java. The largest of Asiatic Woodpeckers. [Arakan and Pegu hills (0.); Tonghoo (Z.). Examples from Cochin- china in no way differ. According to Sundevall (Consp. Av. Picinarum, p. 10, no. 23), Temminck’s title has priority, and he quotes the year 1825 as the date of publication. But there must be some mistake, for Sundevall refers to the 65th Livraison of the Recueil, whereas P. pulveru- lentus was described and figured in the 66th. Anyhow, Crotch (Ibis, 1868, p- 500) gives 1826 as the year in which both these Livraisons were published. Elsewhere (Ibis, 1871, p. 164, note) reasons are stated why, while the exact date of Valenciennes’ title remains undetermined, preference should be given to the one bestowed by Temminck. | 105. THRIPONAX CRAWFURDIL. Picus crawfurdi, J. E. Gray, Griffith’s English edition of Cuvier’s “Animal Kingdom,” Birds, vol. ii. p. 5138, pl. 1; Hemilophus feddeni, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xxxii. p. 75; T. jerdoni, Cabanis, Mus. Heine. ii. p. 105. Upper Pegu. | Thayet Myo, Tonghoo (W. &.); Pahpoon, Kyouknyat (D.).] 106. T.. savensts. P. javensis, Horsfield; Picus leucogaster, Reinwardt, Tem. P. C. 501. Mergui, Malacca, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Philippines. *107. CHrysocoLAPTEs aurricristatus (J. 166 partim). Picus guttacristatus, Tickell 9? ; pe gs delesserti, Malherbe, Mon. Picida, pl. 64; Ibis, 1866, p. 355; 1872, p. 8. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Malacca. , | Yey-tho, Tonghoo (W. &.); Thayet Myo (7); Arakan hills (0.). Tickell’s title has priority over Malherbe’s and Hodgson’s titles. | *108. Tiga JAVANENSIS (J. 184). _Picus javanensis, Lyungh ; vide Lord Walden in Ibis, 1871, p. 170 ; Picus tiga, Horsfield ; Tiga intermedia, Blyth. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Java. Common. A smaller race (Z. rufa, apud Stoliczka) occurring in the Malayan peninsula and Sumatra.* | Yey-tho, Rangoon, Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet Myo Saale Malaccan and Javan examples are smaller, otherwise identical. | * Vide Stoliczka, in J. A. 8, B. xxxix. p. 289. ne a, sa ee ee a == =. aoe os 14 tm? y 7 kash . } nae Reo Sa —————SSSs ———— ——— SESE 9 Ae ; PS ay | yee may" = See et Se ne Atenas de tame 125. D. awmatts. Picus anatlis, Horsfield; Picus pectoralis, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xv. p. 15. Tonghoo, where the occurrence of this Javanese species is remarkable. - [Tonghoo (Z.); Karen nee (W. R.); Thayet mat (#7). Identical with Javan examples. | | ’ aie he on bed an a ee — Sere —— 126. Lioprro MAHRATTENSIS (J. 160). | Picus blanfordi, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxxii. p. 75. Tonghoo. As compared with specimens from Central India, those from Pegu have more of white on the plumage, but Viscount Walden informs me that in this respect they resemble others from Ceylon. | Thayet Myo (£.); Tonghoo (W. B.).] #197. YUNGIPICUS CANICAPILLUS. Picus canicapiius, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xiv. p. 197. Khasias, Arakan, Tenasserim provinces. Common. | Tonghoo, Karen nee at 4000 feet (W. BR.) ; Thayet Myo (f#). | 128. Vivia rnNominatTa (J. 186). Picumnus innommatus (Burton); Gould, B. As. pt. xxii. pl. 18. Tenasserim mountains. | Karen hills at 2000 feet (W. B.). | #129. SasTA ocHRACEA (J. 187). Sasia ochracea, Hodgson; Gould, B. As. pt. xxii. pl. 14. Arakan, Tenasserim. | Tonghoo hills (W. R.).] | 130. S. aBNORMIs. Picumnus abnormis, Tem., P.C. 871, fig. 3. Stated by Mr. Hume (Str. Feath. ii. p. 472) to have been obtained by Mr. Davison near Ye. | *131. Lynx torgurtta (J. 188). Arakan. | Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.).] 1875. | Cuckoos. 3 79 fam. Cuculides. Cuckoos. *132. HieRococcyx sPARVERIOIDES (J. 207).* Arakan, Malacca. | Rangoon, Yey-tho, Karen nee at 4000 feet (W. R.); Pahpoon (D.).]. 133. H. varrus (J. 205). This species can hardly but occur, as also H. nisicolor (J. 206); but in the Malay countries they would seem to be replaced by 1. hyperythrus, Gould,} of which Cuculus fugax, Horsfield, is the young bird. HZ varius is common in the Dacca district of Eastern Bengal, and Jerdon gives it from “Burma and Malacca,” but I do not remember to have seen a specimen from the eastern side of the Bay of Bengal. 134. CucuLus microprervs (J. 203) and C. arrrnis (J. 204). These differ only in size, and have the same note bhokatdko, which I often heard in the vicinity of Moulmein during the rainy season, but did not obtain a specimen. Both races occur in Java, and C. affinis occurs both in Nipal and the Malayan peninsula. Of necessity both of them must inhabit the Indo-Chinese countries. I have never seen a specimen of intermediate dimensions. | Mr. Hume (Str. Feath. iii. p. 79) makes the important statement that the above numbers of Jerdon belong respectively to the male and female. If this be so, a hitherto much disputed question is satisfactorily settled. | 135. C. canorus (J. 199). A specimen of this bird, in the plumage of immaturity, was shot in my presence, in the garden of the Commissioner, at Moulmein. Mr. Wallace obtained it in Timor. | Karen nee at 3500 feet (W. R.); Prome (Ravkes). | 136. C. striatus (J. 200). C. striatus, Drapiez ; Ibis, 1866, p. 359; 1872, p. 12. The range of this Cuckoo extends from the Himdlaya to China and * Mr. Hume gives H. strenuus, Gould, from Thayet Myo. P. A. S. B. 187250. 71. [The Thayet Myo example of the supposed Philippine H. strenuus, here alluded to, was nothing but H. sparverioides.] T B. As. pt. viii. pl. 15. x : oe —————— ——= i rer = AT ER vm = i ~s aie onchange ged age pe eel . ee ey ¥ ip elibowt sare > beans si. ss —— ian a 5 =F a 5 ea -Culaae * : : sn y Perla ee = rai or te SE al i Tie at a ate i} ia | i } | } | | | i} - aan ih } i iil { ‘ae! af NI |} | 5 1 2 ¥ | } n | 4 = FS a SS eee 86 Birds of Burma. | No. 1, *169. Macropreryx coronatus (J. 104). Hirundo coronata, Tickell; Gould, B. As. pt. xi. pl. 2. Pegu, Siam. Replaced by JL klecho in the Malayan peninsula. | [Thayet Myo, Tonghoo, Karen nee, at 1700 feet (W. R.); Ngabeemah, pine forests north of Kollidoo, Henza Basin (D.). | Suborder PASSERES. Fam. Corvidee. Crows, Jays, etc. *170. Corvus vaitLanti (J. 660). Corvus vatllanti, Lesson. Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. Generally diffused in pairs throughout the forests.* | Pegu (0.). | *171. C. sPLENDENS (J. 668). Kyte-gan. : At Akyab this Crow abounds, and also (as I was informed by Mr. W. T. Blanford) at Mandell, high up the Irawddi. At Khyouk Phoo, a party of seven individuals made their appearance on the 7th December, 1856, which subsequently stocked the neighbourhood; but to what extent the race may have spread at the present time Iam unaware. Elsewhere in Arakan this Crow has still no representative; but across the mountains which divide that province from Pegu, again at Rangoon, Moulmein, Tavoy, and as far South as Mergui, as also in Siam, it is replaced by a wholly black race, quite similar in form and habit, but having a much shriller voice (a sort of shrieking caw), if possible still more inharmonious than that of the other. There is just a very faint tinge of ash-colour on the nape and breast, where the com- mon Indian Crow is cinereous; but this must be specially looked for to be remarked. Though abundant about Mergui station; I have not seen it from any locality further south; and I have been assured that it does not occur at Pinang, Malacca, or Singapore. This melanoid race of C. splendens 18 erroneously referred to C. culminatus (i.e. C. vaillanti) by Mason, as it also * Forjvariation of size in this species, cf. W. T. Blanford, J. A. S. B. li. pt. 2, p. 68. . carl ? ee ' 1875. | Crows, Jays, ete. | af is by the late Sir R. H. Schomburgk.* Sir A. Phayre, referring to it as the common Crow of the branches of the Irawddi, states that “away from the river, on the hills, there is a Crow of the same size, but not with the same tinge on the neck, being of an uniform black throughout.’’+ As regards the Indian bird, an unknown donor has favoured me with two skins differing remarkably in size, but in no other respect. Length of closed wing 11 in. in the larger specimen, 10 in. in the smaller; of middle tail-feathers, re- spectively, 63 in. and 54 in; tarsus 12 im. and 13 m. Some Ceylon “specimens now (1872) living in the London Zoological Gardens are decidedly smaller, and rather darker coloured than Bengal or Akyab specimens; and I have seen other specimens from Ceylon, which again were darker. coloured and approximately melanous } [ Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. &.). The melanoid variety referred to has recently been separated and named C. insolens, Hume (Str. Feath. 11. p. 480). The late Mr. G. R. Gray (H. List, ii. p. 14) restricted Vieillot’s title of splendens (erroneously referring it to Temminck) to a supposed Javan and Sumatran species of Corvus, and adopted Hodgson’s title of cmpudicus for the Indian. The type of Ze Choucas gris du Bengale, C. splendens, Vieillot (N. D. vii. p. 441, 1817), came from the Indian continent, and no representa- tive race even of that species 1s known as existing in either Java or Sumatra, Temminck’s statement notwithstanding. °C. ¢mpudicus, Hodgson, must continue, as hitherto, a synonym of C. splendens, Vieillot. Another curious variety of this Crow occurs in Tonghoo. Two examples of it are of an isabelline cream colour; the urapygium and abdomen being dark brown. I do not, however, propose to name it as belonging to a distinct species. | Magpie Group. 172. Pica MEDIA. Pica media, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xi. p. 393; P. sericea, Gould; P. caudata, apud J. Anderson, Exped., p. 259. Bhamo, China, Hainan, and Formosa. * Ibis, 1864, p. 252. 2.2. ©. BD, xxi. p. 76, xxiv. p. 479. { Some time ago I received a packet containing two skins of C. splendens, coloured as in India. Wing, respectively 11 in. and 94 in.; tail, 64 and 53 in.; beak to forehead 2 in. andlgin. The latter are probably the admeasurements of the Ceylon race. ad are inal “Sa Se a ae A PM Se Ne rE ar sane a EN a eet some ene —— oe a a - a ee a D atin, - q Hie we a a i. -"- an I ret i is A a 7 77 Birds of Burma. | No. 1, _*173. Denprocrrta rura (J. 674). Common throughout the Irawadi valley, 1 in Pegu (Blanford) ; also in tin vicinity of Moulmein. [ Rangoon, Tonghoo, Yey-tho (W. R.); Thayet Myo (F.); Tenasserim provinces (D.). | #174. D. wrazavensts (J. 676). D, himalayensis, nobis, Ibis, 1865, p. 45. Mountains of Arakan, and probably those of the Indo-Chinese 7 generally. | Tonghoo hills, Karen nee (W. R.); north of Pahpoon (D.).] *175, CRYPSIRHINA VARIANS. Corvus varians, Latham; Lev. Ois d’ Afr. pl. 56; Phrenotrix temia, Horsfield, Zool. Res. in Jaya, pl. —. Prome, Bassein, common in the neighbourhood of Moulmein, Lower Siam, Java. I have never seen this species from the Malayan peninsula, though it is cited from Malacca by Herr v. Pelzeln, which I strongly suspect to be a mistake. | Rangoon, Tonghoo, Yey-tho (W. &.); Tenasserim provinces (D.). The Malaccan habitat is certainly erroneous. This is another peculiar Javan species, which re-appears north of Province Wellesley. It has long since been compared and specifically identified with Javan individuals. | #176. C. cucurzara. C. eucullata, Jerdon, Ibis, 1862, p. 20; Gould, By As. pt. xv. pl. 3. Thayet Myo, and the dry country above the British frontier. Not seen in Lower Pegu (Blanford). | Thayet Myo (W. R.).] [177. TEMNURUS LEUCOPTERUS. Glaucopis leucopterus, Tem. P. C. 265. Meeta Myo (D.). | *178. Unoctssa MAGNIROSTRIS, Psilorhinus magnirosiris, nobis; Gould, B. As. pt. xi. pl. 3. Mountains of Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam. | Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. R.). ] pur a 3 B © ee _—— 4 — ; = —2 ad a 4 > ; \ A \ ; b . 1875. | ~ Starlings. 89 *179. CIssA SINENSIS (J. 673). Coracias chinensis, Bodd.; Gould, B. As. pt. 1x. pl. 8. Arakan, Tenasserim provinces, China (?). [Tonghoo, Karen hills (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.). | [180. GaRRULUS LEUCOTIS. G. leucotis, Hume, P. A. 8. B. 1874, p. 106. Tonghoo, Karen nee; very generally distributed both in the hills and in the plains of the Titec province (W. &.). | fam. Sturnidee. Starling family. Subfam. Hutapetinz (True Mainas), *181. HuLABES INTERMEDIA (J. 693). Gracula intermedia, A. Hay; cf. Stoliczka, J. A. S. B. xxxix. pt. 2, p. 327. Arakan, Tenasserim provinces, Siam. The common ‘Hill Maina” of Northern India; that of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands now considered to be different. | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. #.). Perfectly distinet from £. yavanensis. | 182. AMPELICEPS CORONATUS. Ampeliceps coronatus, nobis, J. A.S.B. xi. p. 194, xv. p. 32; Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 81. Tonghoo, Yé, Mergui, Cochin China. | Tonghoo (Z.); South of Moulmein (D.). | Subfam. Srurnin# (Starlings, ete.). *183. ACRIDOTHERES TRISTIS (J. 684). La-yet-mouk. Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim. | Rangoon (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.). | *184. A. arnernranus (J. 685). Tenasserim provinces. ‘Though common in Upper India, as remarked by Jerdon, ‘‘it certainly does not occur in Southern India, notwithstanding its specific name, taken from Gingi, south of Madras.” ES : 4 iy ; i at it RNP A A cli 9 aS T's i f pry rene pec, ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee Priced arene ee a ; . Mele d= Fe et ROE: Ba ce “ 7 P 4 4 t a ke ee pli a RE rw en cae an { mf qe ; ie soe ee eel tar, - pete i ah aa a Ope etl Mgt eae aR Sh te a a SR ded ne eee net eee ee at ” wr wy i See Se Pea 2am SR GE + Salpape ow 7 ————— ee LE ae Lee ae pe RG oe a a le Sete, 4 . —— “+ i at : ts x isieanetinealll iY wide Seater Se ae. 2-2 ule aaa rg. wee . ions ee en ee oT meee — oe = me = Rie eee en en ee ee se Birds of Burma. *185. A. Fuscus (J. 686 partim®). Arakan, Tenasserim, Pinang, Malacca, Hainan. [ Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. R.).] [186. A. stamEnsis. A, siamensis, Swinhoe, P. Z. 8. 1863, p. 308. ‘‘Karen nee, at 3000 feet. Iris, pale chocolate ; bill, orange-yellow ; legs, dusky yellow” (W. £&.). | *187. STURNOPASTOR CONTRA (J. 683). Sturnopastor contra, var. superciliaris, nobis, J. A. S. B. xxxii. p. 77. Khasias, Thayet Myo, Tavoy, Siam. About Tavoy it is particularly abundant, and, as Mason remarks, ‘‘is often seen perched on the back of the Buffalo, gathering insects.” [Tonghoo (W. R&.).] 188. S. NIGRICOLLIS. Gracula nigricollis, Paykull, Act. Holm. xxviii. pl. 9; Pastor temporalis, Tem. Bhamo, Lower Siam, South China. 189, STURNIA BURMANNICA. Sturnia burmannica, Jerdon, Ibis, 1862, p. 21; Pastor peguanus, Lesson, (?) the young (?). Thayet Myo and Ava; more common above the British frontier than below it (Blanford). | Tonghoo, Karen nee, Thayet Myo (W. R.). A sordid tawney-white albino variety of this species is among the Thayet Myo examples. | #190. S. PAgopARUM Ce cere Arakan. *191. S. mauaparica (J. 688). Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim. | This species does not appear to inhabit Upper Pegu, being replaced by the following. | * The true 4. mahrattensis (Sykes), of South India, has been received at the London Zoological Gardens. It has the bill wholly yellow, white irides ; a less developed frontal crest, and more of white tipping the middle tail-feathers. _A. leucocephalus, a very distinct species, from Cochin China, is described in the Ibis, 1870, p. 185. Another allied species from Siam is distinguished by Mr. Swinhoe as .A. siamensis (P. Z. S. 1863, p. 303). hs = - 2 = 5 = .* ere; — : ofan Sr pea ane teil Y baal 4 —_ = =- as * a — 4 be Re be 7 j | | ; D zs 1875. | | Weaver Birds. | a 192. S, NEMORICOLA. S. nemoricola, Jerdon, Ibis, 1862, p. 22. Thayet Myo. | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. #.). TZ. leucopterus, Hume (Str. Feath. ii. p. 480, note) appears to be synonymous. | | 193. S. sINENSISs. | Oriolus sinensis, Gmelin; Pl. Enl.617 ; Pastor elegans, Lesson, Bélanger, Voyage, pl. 6. Pegu (Lesson); China. | | That this species winters in Pegu is suggested by Mr. Swinhoe (P.Z.S. 1871, p. 884), but the fact has yet to be established. | 194. CALORNIS DAURICA. — LTurdus dauricus et Gracula sturnina, Gmelin; Pastor malayensis, Eyton; Pl. Enl. Bei, fig. 2. Mergui, Malacca, Dauria. [This bird can hardly be placed in the genus Calornis. It is more nearly allied to the members of Sturnia. Its oldest specific title is sturnina, Pallas. It is difficult to decide what species is meant to be depicted in Pl. Enl. 627, fig. 2. ] | | 195. C. AFFINIs. C. affinis, A. Hay, J. ALS. B. xv. pp. 36, 369. LTippera, Arakan, Nicobar Islands. 196. C. CHALYBEA. Lurdus chalybeus et T. strigatus, Horsfield; TZ. -insidiator, Raffles, Tem. P.C. 199. figs. 1, 2. Mergui, Malacca, Sumatra, Java. | [If the Mergui Calornis belongs to the Malaccan and Sumatran species, it must take the title of cins:diator, Raffles, until it has been shown that the Javan Calornis belongs to the same species. | | 197. SARAGLOSSA SPILOPTERA (J. 691). Karen hills at 2000 feet, Tonghoo (W. £.). |] Fam. Ploceidee. W eaver-Birds. 198. PLockus JAVANENSIS. Loxia javanensis, Lesson, Traité, p. 446. Pegu, Siam, Java, Lombok. Observed by myself in Rangoon station. [ Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.).] ee Me vents a oben aa Xe SL LkeeNAeee CY RCT Sieawry i a Se ee a a ee ac ny cr omen a tm eating ey rent aoe i ee Be ha Se gee : * ey op Lo AIR rh id em SS Ca AI a orale Tar Dae a TS SS ee Se Birds of Burma. | Nox a *199. P. pHitrppinus (J. 694). LP. baya, nobis ; cf. W. T. Blanford, J. A.S. B. xli. pt. 2, p. 167. Zsa-ghaung-kwet. Arakan, Lower Pegu, Malacca, Sumatra, not Philippines. Attaches its pensile nests to the projecting thatch of dwelling-houses in Rangoon, as duly noticed by Jerdon. | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.). |] *200. P. manyar (J. 695). Arakan, Thayet Myo, Siam, Java. 201. P. Benearensis (J. 696). Thayet Myo, Ava. tam. Astrildidee. Waxbills, Amadavats, etc. 202. Pappa ORYZIVORA. Loxia oryzivora, Lin.; Edwards, pl. 41. The well-known ‘Java. Sparrow’ of British dealers in birds, which is extensively diffused over the Malay countries, was procured in Mergui province by Major Berdmore. Mr. Swinhoe notices it from Amoy, Hong- kong, and Shanghai; but in the vicinity of those emporia it has probably escaped from captivity in the first instance, as it likewise has in that of Madras, in Madagascar, Zanzibar island, the Seychelles, St. Helena, Celebes, and the Philippines. *203. Munra RUBRINIGRA (J. 698). | Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim, South-west China. Common. Bornean speci- mens are similar to Indian and Burmese, having the black of the abdominal region and lower tail-coverts well developed; but this black is much reduced in quantity, and sometimes nearly obsolete, in examples from Malacca and Sumatra. In the race inhabiting Celebes (I. brunneiceps, Walden), the black beneath is well developed, while that on the head and neck is much embrowned. The race with white underparts, having the black abdominal patch and lower tail-coverts (Edwards, pl. 355), has never been observed eastward of the Bay of Bengal, but occurs rarely in Lower Bengal, and prevalently (if not wholly) in South India and Ceylon. IL. formosana, Swinhoe,* is yet another of these very slightly differing races, for which names are barely admissible. | Tonghoo (W. £&.). | * Ibis, 1865, p. 356, om + FSP A 1875. | Finches. 93 *204. M. puncrvraria (J. 699). Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim, Siam. The true Indian race, as distinguished from the kindred IZ misorva (Tem.), which inhabits the Malayan peninsula, and has ash-coloured upper tail-coverts. | | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. #.). The Burman spotted Munia, as repre- sented by Mr. Ramsay’s examples, belongs to I. sub-undulata, Godwin- Austen (J. A. 8. B. xl. p. 370, May 6, 1874), IL. superstriata, Hume (Str. Feath. u. p. 481, note, Oct. 1874), being a synonym. | *205. M. acuricaupa (J. 702). . | Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Malacca, Sumatra, China, Formosa. This species is the Mringilia muscardina of the Leyden Museum, a systematic name which is adopted for it by Mr. Gould.* In J apan it is extensively bred, white, partially white, and of pale colouring. |Tonghoo hills (W. R.); Thayet Myo (0.). I cannot find that Mr. Gould employed the title of muscardina in any part of the Z. 8. Proceed- ings of 1859. | *206. M. tevconota (J. 701). Tau-tsa, * Forest Sparrow.” Arakan. Of general diffusion. 207. AsTRILDA aMANDAVA (J. 704). Mason includes this species (the common Speckled Waxbill, Amadavat, or Lal Muna of India) without remark; and Sir R. H. Schomburgk notices its occurrence in Siam, as also Mr. Gould (from specimens sent by Schom- burgk).t ‘‘ Many are brought to Bangkok for sale. They frequent the rice- fields and pastures, and go in flocks.” I do not remember having seen Burmese specimens ; but Jerdon notices that the range of the species extends to Assam and Burma, which Mr. W. T. Blanford assures me is the fact. Fam. Fringillidee. True Finches. Subfam. PassERin (Sparrows). *208. Passer rnpicus (J. 706). P. domesticus, var. (?), Ibis, 1867, p. 41. Hin-tsa (House Sparrow). Not uncommon at Akyab, but rare to the southward, in the jungle-clad provinces. Common, together with P. montanus, at Thayet Myo. Nubian specimens are undistinguishable. * PZ. B®. 1859, p10. + 3D, ZB. 1859, :p, 1065 I tera cae iia al ae rat SEP rai k Banl aide oes ees pageant Bs" — PEAS do ike ascii i pi rr ieee oes Se ee ss FA Aba St te ad ele da) peel ett ae nee STE te eset a laos — stir I 7s as ab an se sean Pinte SR pee as Arta tee Pe ~~ e ‘ same - apr - La eet: TE . —- — - + —— = ~ oe et ee aero = . i Sr Es EE = nee rr ern ary pe tees = A i : ~ SSS ah sion ee canton o | : = 7 wee —— . ¥ = —\ s nr in SAR ntl es Te eres = sethantes th = Birds of Burma. [ No. 1, *209. P. monranvus (J. 710). The common house Sparrow everywhere to the eastward of the Bay of | Bengal, its range extending southward to the Malay countries, and eastward to China and Japan, Formosa, and the Philippines. *210. P. AssIMIxis. P. assimilis, Walden, An. M. N. H. (4), v. p. 218. Tonghoo. #911. P. FLAVEOLUS. P. flaveolus, nobis, J. A. S. B. xxxi. p. 844. Passer jugiferus, Tem., Bonap. Consp. Av. 1. p. 508. | Arakan, Upper Pegu; ‘abundant in the bushes near Thayet Myo; also common further up the Irawadi” (W. . Blanford). Doubtful as an inhabi- tant of the Philippines, as alleged of P. jugiferus, which I identified with the present species in the Royal Museum of Natural History at Leyden. Accord- ing to Mason, this species ‘is found throughout the country,’ but he shows that he did not recognize P. montanus to be the common Sparrow of the country ! | [ ‘Iris, in 2, brown; bill above, pinkish brown, below somewhat paler ; legs brownish. Karen nee” (W. R.). One example, a female, has the mandibles crossed as in Loxva, the maxilla to the left, the mandible to the right. | Subfam. FRineiLLin#& (Typical Finches). *212. CarpoDAcUs ERYTHRINUS a 738). Arakan. | Tonghoo (W. R.).] Subfam. Emperizinm (Buntings). *213. Evuspiza avREoua (J. 728). Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim, China. Occurs in large flocks in the interior, which migrate northward to breed. | [Tonghoo (L.). Mirafra flavicollis, McClell., as long since stated by Horsfield and Moore, is the female. EZ. flavogularis, Blyth, is also synonymous. In the H. List, No. 7679, McClelland’s title is made to re- present a distinct species, and that of Mr. Blyth is treated as a 1 synonym a Xe M. flavicollis. | = oo cS Ge 1 i =. i a Tale Di ae rae eal nema aaa Aa . é 1875. | | Larks, Wagtails and Pipitts. 95 214. EMBERIZA RUTILA. Limberiza rutila, Pallas; Tem. and Schl., Fauna Japonica, Aves, tab. 56B. A single specimen procured by Mr. W. H. Blanford, near Bassein. Another since obtained at Sikhim. |Tonghoo, Karen nee, Tsankoo hills (W. R.); neighbourhood of Pah- poon (D.). | [215. EK. rucata (J. 719). Tonghoo, Thayet Myo, in winter (0.). | (216. E. pusreza (J. 720). Karen nee, at 5500 feet (W. B.).] “217. MELOPHUS MELANICTERUS (J. 724). Arakan, Pegu, Siam, South China. {| Karen nee (W. £.). |] Fam. Alaudidsee. Larks. & *218. AtaAupa GuLeuLA (J. 767). Sent from Arakan, where probably not common. It is likely to be so in Upper Burma. 219. ALAUDULA RAYTAL (J. 762). “ Abundant on the banks of the IrawAdi, in Upper Burma, frequenting the sand-dunes, to the colour of which its own plumage closely approximates. During the height of the flood of the Iraw4di, I observed it feeding on the roads and plains in the station of Thayet Myo in small parties” (Jerdon). *220. Mrirarra assamica (J. 754). Arakan. | 221. M. arrinis (J. 755). Common at Thayet Myo (W. H. Blanford). |. microptera, Hume (Str. Feath. i. p. 483), is synonymous. | fam. Motacillidee. Wagtails and Pipits. *222. CoRYDALLA RICHARDI (J. 599). Arakan. | Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. R.); Pahpoon, Tavoy, Moulmein (D.).] ogi ve ee Sa chipercheee A RST SLT ATONE Tl AE EET TO SO Aiea © z Lae ae i woe Rare Ae baa . 4 2 camer only Pe - pene SSR ee ee = ey Se RS a aR Sea eC ae *, See ae ag SP 2 laa — : Doalexsl ose? Var SG So a eR oe > . re r SSS : were, Sa rs eh a ene ee ” ee Panes ee : fe oo —— ote Ee ° f ’ i - sae So eee : | 2 Lae — — apes ~~ at ——————————— zs _— @ at ee . ited eatiemisle a a as Atenas 7 rat ~ ss ee ee SO — a et ~ a a a — SS ate ager —— rer - = - ss ay oe a a ea Sate A ae . ' ’ f } ‘ 4 q ~ hy ee = — . — _ ae ae — i. = Cad pal § ~~ — aon — a aT ‘ cas — Ee = = a = o. - ra — - — ts , <= PVR en te Soy er a= — ~ ~— ~ a =: as are =a 2h += - scans cama == = ay a mSHSLI é Birds of Burma. *223. C. ruFuta (J. 600). Arakan, Tenasserim. | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. R.). | *224. Pipastes MacuLatus (J. 596). Anthus maculatus, Hodgs.; Gould, B. As. pt. xvii. pl.11; Fauna Japonica, Aves, pl. xxiii. Arakan, Tenasserim. Anthus agilis, Sykes, is true P. trivialis. [Karen nee hills, from 2000 to 5200 feet elevation (W. R.). Some eminent ornithologists decline to admit the specific distinction of A. agilis, A. maculatus, and the common European Tree Pipit. In the H. List, No. 3640, L. 8. Miiller’s title of plumatus is adopted for the European bird. But as Linnzeus published the twelfth edition of the Systema ten years before L. 8. Muller bestowed the title cited, it is more in accordance with accepted practice to prefer the Linnean title. | *225. ANTHUS ROSACEUS (J. 605). Arakan. ; [ 226. A. CERVINUS. Motacilla cervina, Pallas, Zoogr. Rosso-As. i. p. 511. Examples obtained by Mr. Davison in Tenasserim are thus identified by Mr. Hume. | *227. Bupyres viripis (J. 593). Motacilla cmereicapilia, Savi, N. Giorn. d. Lett. p. 190. Arakan, Tenasserim. Bengal and Egyptian specimens quite similar. | Rangoon, Tonghoo, Karen nee at 3000 feet elevation (W. fia. | | 228. B. cancaratus (J. 594). A single immature example obtained at Pahpoon by Mr. Davison is thus identified by Mr. Hume. | #229. Lrwonzpromus rnpicus (J. 595). Motacitla indica, Gm.; Gould, B. As. pt. xiv. pl. 13. Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca, China. | Thayet Myo (F.). | *230. Moracitia tuzonensis (J. 590). Arakan, Tenasserim. | Tonghoo (W. &.). The black-backed, white-faced species, is referred to under the above title. But strictly Sonnerat described the grey-backed 1875. | Henicures, Pittas. 97 _ = ; eS ae bird. While Scopoli in his diagnosis, taken from Sonnerat, misquoted the description, and converted the word ‘‘ grey ”’ into black.”? The members of this section of the genus which inhabit Luzon have not hitherto been examined, and it therefore remains quite uncertain from what species Son- nerat described. It is not improbable that he did so from an Indian example of UL. dukhunensis. | [ 231. M. pununensts (J. 591). Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. &.); Pahpoon (D.). | *232. M. poaruta (J. 592). _Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. [Rangoon (W. £#.). Whether or not specifically distinct from J. sulphurea of Europe, this bird must take the title of melanope, Pallas. | Fam. Henicuridee. Henicures. *233. Henicurus eurratus (J. 584, partim). Linicurus guttatus, Gould, P. Z. 8. 1865, p. 664; B. As. pt. xviii. pl. 11. Kast Himalaya, Khasias, Arakan. a | *234. H. immacutatus (J. 585). Khasias, Arakan, Tenasserim. | Thayet Myo (0.). | *235. H. scuistaceus (J. 586). | Arakan, where much less common than the preceding race ; Tenasserim, China. | Karen hills (W. 2.). | [ 236. H. tescHENAULTI. Turdus leschenaulti, Vieill. N. D. 20, p. 269. This Javan and Foochow bird is stated by Mr. Hume to have been obtained in the neighbourhood of Pahpoon and at Meeta Myo. If the iden- ‘tification is correct, an interesting fact. It may perhaps be ZH. frontalis. | fam. Brachyuride. Pittas. *237. HypRORNIS NIPALENSIS (J. 344). Hydrornis nipalensis, Hodgson ; Gould, B. As. pt. i. pl. 2. Arakan, Tenasserim. 3 ‘i "| Le q it a hee. y ales { 7 Lirds of Burma. | No. 1, | 238. H. oarnsr. H, oatesi, Hume, Str. Feath. i. p. 477, ‘Karen nee, from 2500 to 4000 feet. Iris (male not quite mature), brown; bill, pale brown; legs, light fleshy pink. Iris (in adult female), brown; bill, dark vinous brown; legs, light fleshy pink” (W. R.).] *239. BRACHYURUS CYANEUS. Pitta cyanea, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xii. p. 1008, xvi. p. 153; Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 55; Gould, B. As. pt. 1. pl. 2a; D. G. Elliot, Mon. Brachyuride, pl. xiii. Myat-gnung. Arakan, Martaban; Tenasserim (Helfer). [ Karen hills, at 2000 feet. Iris, hair brown; bill, black ; legs, fleshy *240. B. moLtuccEnsis. Lurdus moluccensis, P. L. S. Miller; Elliot, Ibis, 1870, p. 413; Mon. Brachyuride, pl. iv. ; Pitta cyanoptera, Temminck, P.C. 218. hain. Tenasserim, Siam, Malacca, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, South China (Amoy). One specimen, received from. Arakan, has the bill fully as large as in B. megarhynchus (Schlegel), from the Isle of Banka.* 3 | Rangoon (W. R.); LThayet Myo (D.). There is no evidence in favour of the Javan habitat attributed to this Pitta by Temminck. The size of the bill varies considerably. | | 241. B. mecarnyncuvs. | Pitta megarhyncha, Schlegel, Vog. Nederl. Ind. Pitta, p. 32, no. 8, pl. 4. He, 2s A well-marked species, hitherto known as being peculiar to the island of Banka, but stated by Mr. Hume (Str. Feath. ii. p. 475) to occur at Tavoy and Amherst in the months of May, June, and July. |] “242. B. cucutzatus (J. 346). Nipal, Khasias, Arakan, Malacca. | Rangoon (W. &.); Thayet Myo (F.); Amherst (D.). Malaccan indi- viduals are identical with Himalayan and Burman examples. | Fam. Turdidee. Thrushes. Subfam. Turpinz. “243. Myropnonus remmincxir (J. 343). Khasias, Arakan, Tenasserim. [Karen hills (W. R.). WM. eugene’, Hume (Str. Feath, i. p. 475) 1s synonymous. J. temminchit extends to Siam. | * Ibis, 1870, pl. xii. the 1875. | | Lhrushes. 99 | 244. BracHYPTERYX CRURALIS (J. 338). Karen nee, 5000 feet (W. &.). | [ 245. Pnozpyea squamata (J. 329). Karen nee, at 4000 feet (W. £.). |] *246. PEerRrocossyPHus CcYAaNneEvs (J. 351). Arakan, Tenasserim. Generally, but not always, with more or less of ferrugineous colouring on the abdominal region, as in specimens from the Kast Himalaya. ‘In Burma,” remarks Colonel M‘Master, “this is the tamest and most confiding bird I have ever seen; it not only frequently enters the verandahs, but the inner rooms of houses, and is almost startling with its noiseless and uncanny familiarity. Whilst at Tonghoo, I had, every Season, one or two of them about my house, so fearless, that they might almost have been handled. I saw one, in my verandah at Rangoon, kill and swallow a large scorpion.’’ * | Karen hills, from 2000 to 4000 feet (W. R.). ] 247. MontTrIcoLA SAXATILIS. Turdus saxatilis, L.; Pl. Enl. 562. ‘Upper Burma, on the banks of the river near Ava.” + ‘‘ Summers on the Pekin mountains” (Lard). | *248. OROcOETUS CINCLORHYNCHUS (J. 353). Arakan. *249, GEHOCICHLA CITRINA (J. 355). Arakan. | Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. R.); Thayet Myo (0.); neighbourhood of Ye and Amherst (D.). | *250. TuRDUS OBSCURUS. Turdus obscurus, Gmelin; TJ. pallens, Pallas; TZ. rufulus, Drapiez; . modestus, Kyton ;{ Fauna Japonica, Aves, pl. xxvil. Myai-lu-hgnet. Khasias, Arakan, Andamans, Malacca, Java, Borneo, China, and North- East Asia, according to season. | (251. T. pALLIpus. T. pallidus, Gm. 8. N.i. p. 816. . ‘Karen nee, at 5000 feet in January (W. R. - Has also been received by Major Godwin-Austen from N. Cachar. | * J.A.S. B. xl. pt. 2, p. 211. t vide Blanford, Ibis, 1870, p. 466. + Not 7. javanicus, Horsfield, which is the same as 7’. fumidus, 8S. Miiller. - EEA 3 tierra amity sa a= ae i; PE re Te “ "i Fee A ERY UE ET ee eae - oon pag i Se eS eee ct ee ~ pagpiltthin bela alidiant: data dt Pe Sees meee pons penny ee re es ar oe ore eh pe + gt ty SS ol ct as - 3, a yy = SS 24 eee epee te nS NTP I GL Se NE eh ema aE f = ¢ bs net citar oi; aera, Se a ’ F Nts: PPE a 9 a OE ee , ‘ : Sg, \ . ae 4 9 et SS Se ea = aoe . > = = = atiacisis oe Se ee eee - . =e oi at sl aaa a a — = — —- = — _ = he — m. rane. 2 nol eal \ ies i > ~ = = aceeiiiecmanmmiel a ee Serene er aesnimet — — . : : yee he . : : a = r ed sees a . a . +, gy {ae au La i th Ma at me rt sell lily ie tay lata EE a pas OPH in hater tha lat Sieh 100 Birds of Burma. | No. 1, | 252. T. sIBERICUS. TL. svberieus, Pallas, Reise, Russ, Reichs, iii. p. 694, no. 10. Karen nee, March 1, at 2500 feet. Iris (in female), rich brown; bill, black, slightly yellow at gape; leg, brownish yellow (W. £.).] *953. ZOOTHERA MARGINATA. Zoothera marginata, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xvi. p. 141.* Khasias, Arakan. | | ‘‘ Karen nee, from 1500 to 8000 feet. Iris(3, ¢), dark brown; maxilla, dark brown, almost black; basal half of mandible, albescent; legs, brown with a tinge of pink; orbital skin, purplish” (W. L.). | sh [254. OrxocincLa MOLLISsIMA (J. 370). wf Karen nee, at 5000 feet (W. 2&.). |] ip a [ 255. O. pauma (J. 371). | “ Thayet Myo (Hume). | x Hi (ny Ail pint =< *256. ANTHOCINCLA PHAYREI. Anthocincla phayret, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxxi. p. 348. One specimen procured in Tonghoo. [Pahpoon (D.). | Subfam. Saxrconinm (Wheatears, Robins, etc.). #257. Crrrocincia macrourA (J. 476). Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca, Sumatra, Java. The Hainan race is smaller, according to Mr. Swinhoe. | Rangoon, Tonghoo, Karen nee, at 1500 feet (W. R.).] *258. CopsycHUS SAULARIS (J. 475). Gracula saularis, Lin.; Gould, B. As. pt. xv. pl. 5. Tha-beik-lway. Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim, Siam, South China. | Rangoon, Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. R.). | 259. Myromena tEvcura (J. 477). Procured by Col. Tickell upon Moulé-it mountain, at an elevation of 5500 feet, being probably the same species as was obtained by Bélanger in Pegu, in which case, the kindred Javanese race (Brachypteryx ailbifrons, * Z. monticola, apud Godwin-Austen, J. A. S. B. xli. pt. 1. p. 142. B Af ‘i fr fi =s — = 1876. | Wheatears, Robins, ete. 101 Boie)* is figured for it by M. Lesson, by the name Wotodela diana, in the supposition of its being a more brightly coloured specimen of the same bird ; the two species being very nearly allied. IZ. Jeucura has also been obtained in the Khasias. - ° | Karen nee (W. R.). In his text Lesson also describes the Javan bird, and there is nothing to show that he referred to any other species. ‘T'he genus LVotodela, of which Lanius diana, Lesson, is the type, must, therefore, merge in Brachypteryz. | | *260. Ruyacornis FruLtarnosa (J. 505). Arakan, Thayet Myo, China.t [261. Rorrorzra avrorea (J. 500). Thayet Myo (/-). | *262. CHAIMARRHORNIS LEUCOCEPHALUS (J. 506). Arakan. *263. ‘CyanEcULA suEctca (J. 514). Arakan. *264. CaLLIoPE’ CAMTSCHATKENSIS (J. 512). Arakan. | Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet Myo (BF); Pahpoon (D.). | [ 265. LARVIVORA CYANE. Motacilla cyane, Pallas, Reise Russ. Reichs, iii. p. 697, no. 18. Pahpoon (D.). | _ 266. Bracuypreryx ——-(?). From Z4wagaben mountain, described by Lieut. Beavan.t 267. OREICOLA JERDONI (J. 487). Lthodophila melanoleuca, Jerd.; Gould, B. As. pt. xviii. pl. 11. ‘‘Qbtained only once, in long elephant-grass, in the northern portion of the Bassein district” (W. H. Blanford). *268. PRATINCOLA FERREA (J. 486). Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim, South China. | Tonghoo, Tonghoo hills, Karen nee, at elevations of from 2500 to 4000 feet (W. R.).] * Bonap. Consp. Av. i. p. 257. T &. aurorea has been received both from the Khasias and the Malayan peninsula. { Ibis, 1870, p. 321. | archi adnsec ae ee RA Shenae onl ners eae SEES steer dersmi=rastineerne*insietvenffr=rsee-sereeypreniewyinama neta denel tel hi eee et Nil ith natin at oon ink nd 4) not aa ane nanan ae al erent sali Kd Cattle te tol Sa Ad ceaheF? ¥ — ae a aE i igs wren w pert ats te a aaa Ml Beeaoaetat yn nen ee A lett Si witty - q en = x . — . ~} ln a it et ir eae lat = - 7 — = alin ea easements 102 Birds of Burma. | No. 1, *269. P. caprata (J, toa Lay-khya. Arakan, Tenasserim, Java, Celebes, Lombock, Floris, Philippines, Pinoe | Tonghoo, Yey-tho, Karen nee, at 3500 feet (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.).] *270. P. mnpica (J. 483). P. indica, nobis; Gould, B. As. pt. xv. pl. 12. Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim. | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. #&.). It has been shown most conclusively by Mr. Dresser (B. Eur. Dec. 1873) that the Asiatic Stonechat cannot be speci- fically separated from the European. Mr. Blyth’s title must therefore give way to that of P. rudicola (Lin.). | | 271. P. tevcura (J. 484). P. leucura, nobis; Gould, B. As, pt. xvii. pl. 12. ‘“Banks of the Irawadi, near Thayet Myo, and throughout Upper | Burma. Common, and a constant resident’”’ S36 H. Blanford).* | Tonghoo (Z.). | fam. Muscicapidee. Chat-flycatchers. t 272. Nitrava GRanpis (J. 316). | Chaitaris grandis, nobis; Gould, B. As. pt. i. pl. 4. Tenasserim mountains. #273. N. sunpARA (J. 314). N. sundara, Hodgson; Gould, B. As. pt. 1. pl. 6. Mountains of Arakan and Tenasserim. | Karen nee, at 4000 feet (W. R.).] [ 274. N. macericorrmH (315). Phenicura macgrigorie, Burton; Gould, B. As. pt. ii. pl. 6; Nidtava vivida, Hume, Str. Feath. i. p. 478. | Karen nee, at 3000 feet (W. R.); three days south of Pahchaun (D.). * Query Saxicola hemprichit (?), Ehrenberg, Symb. Phys., fol. aa. [The characters » which distinguish P. leweura from P. hemprichii will be found stated by Mr. Dresser, B. Kur., sub P. rubicola. | + These Chat-flycatchers, with mottled nestling plumage, ee much with the preceding subfamily. 1875. | | Chat-flycatchers. = Os Karen examples identical with Himalayan, etc. The Tenasserim bird has been separated under the title cited, from being ‘‘altogether brighter than the Himalayan species.” No other character (?) is mentioned. | *275. CYORNIS RUBECULOIDES (J. 304). Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim provinces. | Rangoon, Tonghoo hills, Karen nee, from 600 to 2000 feet Wo de. Many of my Burman examples, and also some from Ceylon, have the dark blue of the throat divided by the rufous colouring of the breast running up almost to the chin. Examples obtained in the neighbourhood of Pahpoon and Ye are identified by Mr. Hume as belonging to Oyornis elegans (Tem.); an identification, judging by’ his remarks (Str. Feath. ili. p. 104, swdb OC. rubecu- loides), which requires confirmation. Cf. Walden, Ibis, 1872, p. 373. | [276. C. rrexenxt (J. 305, 306). C. tichelli, Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1842, p. 491. Karen nee (WV. R.). | “277. SIPHIA sTROPHTATA (J. 319). Arakan, Tenasserim. | 278. S. eryrmaca (J. 322). S. erythaca, Blyth & Jerdon, P. Z. 8. 1861, p. 201. ; Karen hills, at 4000 feet (W. R.); pine forests north of Pahpoon Gee *279. ANTHIPES MONILIGER (J. 317). Arakan, Tenasserim. | Karen nee, at 5000 feet (W. R.).| “280. ERYTHROSTERNA MACULATA (J. 326). Arakan, Tenasserim, Java. | Karen nee, at from 3000 to 5000 feet (W. R.).] *281. E. reucura (J. 328). Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim, Hainan. Very common about Akyab in the cold season; obtained also at Bassein. | Rangoon, Karen hills (W. R.). | 282. KE. acornaus? (J. 325). Zwagaben.* | | Karen nee, at 2500 feet (W. R.). LE. sordida, Godwin-Austen, is the | female of some species of Xanthopygia, perhaps of X. nareissina, but from which the type slightly differs. | * Beavan, Ibis, 1870, p. 320. — ine if q| ¥ as | ‘ce if j oo ae | it t 3 if ft ae — ag peathememne =e ere-y~aee renee vine TE aE Eg ce aT RT Te = mS aS ene r li . —— = i 2a Se epee. 62s APT” £9E" re 8 S-sagene oe ane Saleen apaaleienel aeaaremends eagrhadhenhses aie Paerpnehaed - - Fee pa 6 sO I FL pe SO ee 8 py Ee Ry EE = Birds of Burma. | No. 1, *283. EumyIAs MELANOoPS (J. 801). Arakan, Tenasserim. | | Karen nee, at from 700 to 5000 feet; frequents rocky hills (W. &.).] *284. Buraris LatrRostris (J. 297). Arakan, Malacca, Sumatra, China. [Tonghoo (W. R.); Pabyouk and Meeta Myo (D.).] *285. B. srprricus (J. 296). Muscicapa sibirica, Gmelin; cf. W. E. Brooks, J. A. 8S. B. xl. pt. 2, p. 75. Arakan. | ee @ [Tonghoo hills, Karen hills at 700 feet, in December, a young bird 286. B. rerRueineus (J. 299). Thayet Myo, Hainan, South China. Fam. Sylviidee. Warblers. *287. ARUNDINAX AEDON (J. 518). Arakan, Tenasserim, China. [ Tonghoo (W. R.). | *288. ACROCEPHALUS BRUNNESCENS (J. 515). Arakan. | Hemprich & Ehrenberg’s specific title, stentorea, has precedence. | *289. A. pumEToRUM (J. 516). Arakan. = = ere = = ” rr fe ies ss . . " SS a a a ar . —— ee at a / = . —= 7 = ae PE ers a — ——S ae . sel *) [291. Nuornis rravorrvacea (J. 552). A. specimen obtained by Mr. Oates in Upper Pegu is doubtfully thus identified by Mr. Hume (Str. Feath. iii. p. 189).] a i q ii ial TES 5 vara winereanesg Ie LENA Ret) ALATA ak AT eat EY Mat a alu eat age irk 4 nea cps ag : “hh 1875. ] Warblers. 105 [ 292. N. assrmixis. Horornis assimilis, Hodgs. Cat. B. of Nipaul, Brit. Mus. 2nd ed. p. 143; Blyth, Ibis, 1867, pp. 21, 22; Godwin-Austen, J. A. 8S. B. 1874, p. 167. Karen nee(W.#.). In all respects identical with Shillong, Naga hills, Assam, and Darjeeling examples, excepting that the entire under-surface is more decidedly tinged with pale sordid yellow. NV. assimilis can be readily distinguished from JV. flavolivacea, by its shorter wing and tail, weaker and much shorter bill, and by having the under shoulder-coverts pure sulphur- yellow. | *293. PHYLLOPNEUSTE FuUSCATUS (J. 555). Hlorornis fulviventris, Hodgson, P. Z. 8. 1845, p. 31. Arakan, China. | Yattoun (0.); Ye-boo, Pahpoon (D..). | #994. P. BRUNNEUS. P. brunneus, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xiv. p- 591; P. maackw, Schrenck; cf. Ibis, 1871, p- 109. Arakan. *295. P. maenrrostRIs (J. 556). P, borealis, Blasius, Naumania, 1858, p. 313; Ibis, 1871, p. 110. Arakan, China. | Mr. Hume (Str. Feath. ii. p. 478) includes P. borealis as a Tenasserim species, but omits P. magnirostris. | *296. P. vinipanus (J. 560). z; schwartei, Radde, Reisen, i. p. 260, pl. ix. f. 1, a, b, c. Arakan. | | Neighbourhood of Pahpoon (D.). | | 297. P. LueuBRIs (J. 558). Pahpoon (D.). | [ 298. P. BRooxs!. Phylloscopus brookst, Hume, Str. Feath. i. p. 408. Pahpoon (D.). ] 299. REGULOIDES TROCHILOIDES (J. 564). Amherst. | [Karen hills, from 3000 to 4000 feet (W. &.); Tonghoo (L.); neigh- bourhood of Pahpoon (D.). | m nee » iM ath aol piel wired ie fe Mins oily main abi y ead ii aad mig sisiha ¥ SA ca di an ery 4 ee, ) - ~ SEERA Aan — . — : ie — - ermal ‘ woke “ ; a = : ee el - ~ - . os ESrheresines r aia < See pe A, on be rete a a rR ee AI A 0 a en ae RN a a a a al RI a ei eal ce a es ne Sra i ec a Se Sa — I hoe air YT? “4 . a , " mn 4 : re ar SN a ee ee a a wwe q _] | ) ; Py { i g ry 4a. - og i ag te it a | Sere Tape hep cer NS a re ae ea See tt ee a ee Le Senecio pga ies pre! ow 8 Yys Se Sls SRS ERS CNTLANY SNS ON rrr Rs Ser Giese rhGe rel hY HRA share -gestewr em mannan pre-e oper rev enr th in - “ “an ~ ae Se ee re eter os SS a ae oak Toe erry L a ho a ht Come nirai cae ame am ne oi pe ene ae pen etme tne TSE Es OES PR ee Te eee bh! - : - ag Sepals us gl 7 4 on H | | | H -| ae a att hal hk Hany Wi 14a P| pi 106 Birds of Burma. [ No. 1 *300. R. supercriiosus (J. 565). Arakan, Tenasserim. | Tonghoo, Karen hills, from 700 to 2500 feet ( IV. R.).] *301. R. prorueutus (J. 566). Arakan. [ Pine forests north of Pahpoon (D.). | 302. R. viriprpennts (J. 567 2 Originally described from the Tenasserim hills, and since obtained plentifully at Darjeeling. | Karen hills, from 2000 to 4000 feet (W. R.).] [ 303. R. rrocroa (J. 568). Karen nee, Karen nee hills at 3000 feet (Wie): | ¥304. ABRORNIS XANTHOscHISTUs (J. 572). Arakan. | 305. A. SUPERCILIARIS (J. 574). A. superciliaris, Tickell, J. A. S. B. xxviii. p. 414. Originally described from the Tenasserim hills, and since found to be common at Darjeeling. | Tonghoo hills, Karen nee (W. R.).] [ 3806. A. CHRYSHA, 0.8. Above bright oil-green, two broad dark stripes springing from the fore- head, passing over the head and descending down the sides of the neck, where they are almost black. A central single stripe thus formed on the head, yellowish-green. A broad stripe, springing near the nostril and passing over the eye, and thus bounding the dark stripe, bright yellow. Kar-coverts mingled black and green. Cheeks, chin, throat, thigh-coverts, under tail-coverts, shoulder-edge, under shoulder-coverts, and axillaries, bright canary-yellow. Breast paler yellow, shading to pale silky grey on the abdominal region and flanks. _ Quills light brown, edged externally with bright greenish yellow. Major wing-coverts tipped and edged with yellow. Rectrices like the quills, all but the middle pair being edged on their interior margins with very pale yellow. Maxilla brown; mandible pale straw-colour. Wing, 2; tail, 2°75; tarsus, 0°56; bill from forehead, 0°50. Karen hills, ? a. | I am not sure whether this is not Reguloides fulviventer, Godwin-Austen, a species founded on a carbolized example, in which the green and yellow may have become changed to grey, or altogether discharged. | | ) = A i Bs) vor | Babblers. 107 *307. CULICIPETA BURKII (J. 569). Arakan. — | [The generic title, Cryptolopha, Swainson, is synonymous and has pre- cedence. The Arakan form may possibly belong to the following species. | 308. C. TEPHROCEPHALUS. C. tephrocephalus, J. Anderson, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 218. Bhamo. | ‘Iris, brown; bill, above brown, sale yellowish ; legs, pale greenish brown, Karen hills, at 3500 feet” (W. R.); neighbourhood of Pahpoon (D.). Dimensions of the bill in the specimen from the Karen hills equal to those of Darjeeling examples of C. burkit. | tam. Garrulaeidee. - Babblers. *309. GARRULAX LEUCOLOPHUS (J. 407). Khasias, Arakan. *310. G. BELANGERI. G. belangert, Lesson, ‘Bélanger’s Voyage, Atlas, t. 4. Tenasserim provinces. The Himalayan G. leucolophus, the range of which extends to Arakan, the Tenasserim G. belangert, the G. diardi, Lesson, = G. leucogaster, Walden, of Siam and Cochin-China, and the G. bicolor, Lesson, of Sumatra, are mutually representative races or conspecies, but which do not appear to grade into one another. Each in its own range abounds, and from its noisiness is the most prominently conspicuous bird in the forest. [Tonghoo (W. &.); Thayet Myo (/-). | 811. G. STREPITANS. G. strepitans, Tickell, J. A. S. B. xxiv. p. 269. Tenasserim mountains, where common from 3000 to 5000 feet elevation ( Zickelt ). 312. G. CHINENSIS. Lanius chinensis, Scopoli, Del. Fl. Faun. Insubr. il. p. 85; Corvus aurttus, Daudin. Tenasserim provinces, also South China. Obtained by myself in Upper Martaban, where observed associating with G. belangeri. [Tonghoo. Iris( 6), lake colour; bill, black; legs, dusky brown (W.L.). ] ea A : ree | =n = hag 4| — - le eeeconentarsreveres ne eens afte nsiiailiean stam ‘ Ses - pip a ee Lee eee thee —— pocaen ASS ne" f= SS ostentetienet sacndthe-n acy aiikketieedlicedieaie amakibed deaeaeanam erate en tT ee eo ee a ee ee fersae ind at ot Uns Cees Re Se Sr - ce rh Steer caper: Ce Te ee eT eee Se — : 4 Tati AoE eb a> pigeon weer gt 7 eee a 2 eee a ol a ecg iceman as iP std oyun a pee ——_ lie ————— ee | na — ert wn t cart mai ———— a ee — Ss es a eT NS alts a al ie een -_ ss rears ats ” ae # of d ] = ry = me NEA aw pal { Bete x \ dele { I 7 aia ae it og a4 &. vs ‘a aE th. \ ip re aq - i ihe IE ft i | = Na st : ' Oe! y is = h | 1 I . hea Bh pe ‘ai |, = me VG \ q i - } ie oa > Bh ip 4 \ j ina ais :* 4 5 = iia: ce ew 2 ¥ 1 7 ' i - ae fy ‘ ' “d ¢ by 2 . iy : ee it ia ce iene Ip hat 1 Vi p ‘ i ik | i | : | q 4 Pi Bie Mi t ; d 1 i 7 — omg ee rite ‘ L i r iz i & y \ a i F ‘ i { ’ " pu { ; € t ; oe i ‘* { I i | Oa } yb ne | |e | f hi i f ar = ’ q | i | 0 i Sig’ (iy \ eu ] F ah he Mi tO Me a rt cali be dee ET AR VIO 108 Birds of Burma. - oa 313. G. pEcToRALIS (J. 412). Arakan. As remarked by Dr. Jerdon, “‘ Specimens fgom the Himalayas have usually the ear-coverts silver-grey, whilst those “from Arakan have them black and grey in every gradation.” In some the pectoral band is wanting. [Thayet Myo, Karen nee (W. £.). | ¥*314. G. MoNnILIGER (J. 413). | Arakan, Tenasserim. Very similar to the last, and therefore liable to be confounded with it; but it is smaller and conspicuously less robust. | Rangoon, Thayet Myo, Yey-tho, Karen hills (W. &.). | *315. G. ALBIGULARIS (J. 411). Tavoy, Siam ( Gould). *316. TRocCHALOPTERON MELANOSTIGMA. Trochalopteron melanostigma, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxiv. p. 268. Tenasserim mountains, where obtained by Colonel Tickell, “up to the vast wall-like crags of Moulé-it, 7500 feet.”’ | Karen nee. Iris (4), deep chocolate; bill, black; legs, pale brown (W. R.).)] | 317. AcTINURA RAMSAYI. Actinura ramsayi, Walden, Ann. M. N. H. (4), 15, p. 402 (June Ist, 1875). Karen nee, at 3500 feet. Iris ($ ?), light hair brown; bill, horny brown; legs, slaty brown (W. 2.). | *318. SrBIA MELANOLEUCA. Sibia melanoleuca, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxviii. pp. 413, 461. Moule-it mountain, where obtained by Colonel Tickell. ‘Evidently exceedingly rare, or confined to elevated peaks. A pair only seen, of which the male was secured. Lively and restless, with a prattling whistle like that of S. capostrata.” It is a conspecies with S. capistrata of the Himalaya, and S. gracilis* of the Khasias. [319. S. prcaorpEs (J. 430). Karen nee, at 5000 feet (W. R.).] * J. A. 8. B. xx. p. 521; xxvii. p. 429. . ._ 4 erg § ' 4 | em erin ree Sa iy cove mnie TART orem Sapna yearns £875. | | Babblers. 109 *320. GAMPSORHYNCHUS RUFULUS (J. 884). Arakan, Tenasserim. | The Tenasserim race has been separated by Mr. Hume under the title - 7 of G. torquatus (PB. A. 8. B. 1874, p. 107).] aa 321. PTERYTHRIUS ERYTHROPTERUS (J. 609). Lanius erythropterus, Vigors; Gould, B. As. pt. viii. pl. 8. Bhamo.* 322. P. MRALATUS. P. eralatus, Tickell, J. A. 8. B. xxiv. p. 267. Tenasserim mountains, at 3500 to 4500 feet elevation. | Karen nee hills, from 4000 to 5000 feet. Iris (2), deep lavender; bill, above black, below lavender; legs, dull white; claws, dark brown (W. R.). | *323. ALLOTRIUS MELANOTIS (J. 611). Pteruthius melanotis, Hodgson; Gould, B. As. pt. viii. pl. 11. 4 Tonghoo. Deed =a fam. Liotrichidee. it | 324, Curra NIPALENSIS (J. 612). 4 Karen nee, at 6000 feet (W. R.). Sundeval (M. N. Av. Disp. Tentamen, p. 41) rejects the generic title Cutia, and adopts Hodgson’s substituted title of Heterornis. | oe [ 325. Liopriia annecTans (J. 618). 1 Karen nee (W. £.). The ferruginous colouring of the lower back, rump, and upper tail-— coverts, in the example from Karen nee, is much darker Ahan is observable in a numerous series from Darjeeling, Assam, and the Munipur hills. | *326. LiormRix LuTHA (J. 614). Sylvia lutea, Scopoli; Gould, B. As. pt. iii. pl. 17. Khasias, Arakan, South-west China. *327. L. ARGENTAURIS (J. 615). Mesia argentauris, Hodgson; Gould, B. As. pt. xiv. pl. 10. Khasias, Tenasserim mountains. [ Tonghoo hills, Karen nee hills, from 1500 to 4000 feet (W. B.). | * vide J. Anderson, Exped. p. 2659. 110 Birds of Burma. [ No. 1, | 328. L.striauta (J. 616). Tonghoo hills (W. B.).] 329. SIVA CYANOUROPTERA (J. 617). S. cyanouroptera, Hodgson; Gould, B. As. pt. xiv. pl. 12. Khasias, T’enasserim mountains. | Karen dee (1 .-ai.). | | 330. Mrinta castawercurs (J. 619). Karen nee, at 5200 feet (W. R.).] 331. STAPHIDEA srRiaTa (J. 625). Is this identical with L castaneiceps, Moore, from the Khdsias, and with S. torqueola, Swinhoe,* from China? Obtained by Col. Tickell on Moulé-it mountain at an elevation of 3000 feet. | Distinct from S. torgueola, but doubtfully so from S. castaneiceps. | *332. YUHINA GULARIS (J. 626). Arakan. | 333. PRopaRus DUBIUS. P. dubius, Hume, P. A. 8. B. 1874, p. 107. Discovered by Mr. Davison in pine forests north of Pahpoon. = Minla rufogularis, Mandelli ? | Query Fam. (2) T “334. Herpornis xantHoievca (J. 680). Khasias, Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. A very closely allied race from Hainan and Formosa is named H. tyrannula, by Mr. Swinhoe. t [Common in the Pegu hills (0.).] fam. Zosteropidee. “335. ZOSTEROPS PALPEBROSUS (J. 681). Sylvia palpebrosa, Tem.; P. Z. S. 1872, pl. xx. fig. 1. Arakan, Tenasserim, Nicobar Islands. | Karen hills (W. B.).] * Gould, B. As. pt. xxiii. pl. 14. t [Title omitted in MS.] + Ibis, 1870, p. 347, pl. 10. aoe v pa a Titmice. 111 306. Z. SIAMENSIS. Z. svamensis, nobis, Ibis, 1867, p. 34. Tenasserim mountains. | Rangoon (W. £&.).] eerie tee toke, — [337. Z. austent, n.s. Karen nee, at 2500 feet (W. R.).] Above, dark uniform oil-green ; underneath, light yellowish-green ; “almost pure yellow on chin, throat, ne under tail-coverts. A shade of black below the eye. Quills dark brown, edged externally with the colour of the dorsal plumage. Shoulder-edge bright yellow. Axillaries and under shoulder-coverts white tinged with yellow. Rectrices hair-brown, narrowly edged externally with green. Wing, 2-6: ; tail, 1°50; tarsus, 0°50; Dill, from forehead, 0- 55. | — = “ ze — —— mente Fife ay Ape ra == Sit aa aR Fam. ——— (?).* *338. Muscrrrna CINEREA.- Muscitrea cinerea, nobis; J. A. 8. B. xvi. p. 122. Arakan. A remarkable form, of which the affinities are not obvious. The only specimen became destroyed by insects. | The type was obtained in the island of Ramree. ] - Kam. Paridee. Titmice. “339. MuLANOCHLORA FLAVICRISTATA (J. 650). Parus flavocristatus, Lafr.; Gould, B. As. pt. xx. pl. 16. Arakan, Tenasserim mountains, Malacca, Sumatra. ‘One obtained at Kyodan, Salween river” (Beavan). | Karen nee (W. R.). The specific title, sultanea, Hodgs., has prece- dence. | | | 340. Parus comMIxtvs. P. commizxtus, Swinhoe, Ibis, 1868, p. 63. Karen nee, at 3000 feet. Iris, hair brown; bill, black; legs, plumbeous (VW. R.); pine forests north of Pahpoon (D.). Barely separable from Japanese examples of P. minor. | * [Title omitted in MS. ] Ea ee cd = di abe sa5-= 112 Birds of Burma. | Nox ae [ 341. P. nrpatensis (J. 645). P. nipalensis, Hodgson, Ind. Rey. ii. p. 31 (1838). Thayet Myo (/.). The Indian species is now admitted to be distinct from the Javan, P. cmereus, and the title of P. cesius, Tickell, has been adopted for it by Mr. Swinhoe. Where or when Tickell published this title I have failed in discovering, yet Jerdon certainly employs it as a synonym Ge] ¥342. MAcHLOLOPHUS SUBVIRIDIS. Parus subviridis, Tickell, J. A. 8. B. xxiv. p. 267; xxviii. p. 418. Tenasserim mountains, at 3500 feet elevation. | | | | This must still continue a doubtful species. It was founded on a single example, shot at an elevation of 3500 feet in the Tenasserim hills by Col. Tickell. A second individual (much injured) from Tenasserim was identi- fied with it by Mr. Blyth (/. ¢.) four years later. Both appear to have been examples of Jf. spelonotus in immature plumage. | [ 343. M. sprronotus (J. 649). Karen nee, at 3500 feet (W. R.). | | 344. A%GITHALISCUS ERYTHROCEPHALUS (J. 634). Parus erythrocephatus, Vigors, P. Z. 8. 1831, p. 28. Karen nee, 3000 feet (W. R.). ] Fam. Sittidee. Nuthatches. 345, SIvrA NEGLECTA. Sitta neglecta, Walden, Ann. M. N. H. (4), v. p. 218. Tonghoo. | Tonghoo, Yey-tho, Karen nee (W. £#.). | *346. DENDROPHILA FRONTALIS (J. 253). Arakan, T'enasserim, Malay countries. [Tonghoo, Karen nee, Tsanko hills (WV. f.). Identical with examples from Ceylon, India, Java,.and Borneo. | (347. CERTHIA DIScoLoR (J. 245). Karen nee, 5000 to 6000 feet (W. R.).| 1875. | | Babblers. 113 Fam. Timeliidee. ¥348. PoMATORHINUS _HYPOLEUCUS. Pomatorhinus hypoteucus, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xiii. p. 319; xiv. p. 559; xxiv. p. 218; P. albicoilis, Horsf., Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 57. Nipal, Khasias, Arakan, Tenasserim. | 349. P. OCHRACEICEPS. ?’: ochraceiceps, Walden, Ann. M. N. H. (4), 12, p. 487. Tonghoo, Karen nee hills, at 2500 feet. Iris (&), pale straw-yellow ; bill, coral-red, with a marked tinge of orange; legs, greenish (W. R.). | *350. P. scuisticeps (J. 402). Khasias, Tippera, Arakan. | Upper Pegu (0.). | *351. P. LevcogasTER (J. 403). Khasias, Arakan, Tenasserim. ‘This and the preceding species resemble each other in colouring; but P. schisticeps 1s altogether larger, and has proportionally longer and coarser bill.and feet, with very much longer and | straighter claws. . | [‘‘Karen nee, at 38000 feet. Iris (6) straw-yellow; bill, orange- yellow, black at nostrils; legs, slaty (W. 2.). | ¥352. P. PHAYREI. 3 P. phayret, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xvi. 452. ; Sikhim, Tavoy, Khasias, Arakan. ¥350. P. ALBIGULARIS. P. albigularis, nobis, J. A. S. B. xxiv. p. 274. This species and P. hypoleucus were procured by Colonel Tickell upon Moulé-it mountain, at from 5000 to 6000 feet elevation. According to Mason, it is very common in the province of 'Tavoy. | 354. P. MARIA. P. marie, Walden, Ann. M. N. H. (4), 15, p. 408 (June Ist, 1876). Tonghoo hills (W. £.). | (355. P. pryrHrocenys (J. 405). Pine forests north of Pahpoon (D.). | ; i f) ‘ ‘wag 3 : oe. > al a ra ee = _ “- - = = SSS SSS oT ae spain! io aay” q / sn nk ne a cA EES ORR rt eter Sa oe a le ee cen pd ae Net de 114 | Birds of Burma. [ No. 1, *356. Tretia seRDont (J. 396). ‘Timalia erdoni, Walden, Aun. M. N. H. (4), x. p. 61; . bengalensis, Godwin Austen. | “Upper Burma, where much more abundant than in Bengal, and less shy, affecting hedge-rows and villages, instead of the unfrequented grass jungles and thickets, in which alone it is seen in Bengal”? (Jerdon). Mr. W. T. Blanford informs me that he has Burmese specimens of intermediate size to 7. yerdont and T. pileata, Horsfield, rendering the pro- priety of their separation doubtful. | Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. #.) ; Pahpoon, Yeboo (D.). The continental form must take the title of Z. bengalensis, Godwin Austen (J. A. 8. B. 1872, p. 143), which has priority over mine. As the specific validity of the species in no way depends on its dimensions, the information quoted has no bearing on the point. And this remark equally applies to Mr. Hume’s observations (Str. Feath. ili. p. 118). The large series, from various parts, I have had opportunities of comparing with the Javan species, fully support Dr. Jerdon’s, Major Godwin Austen’s, and my own conclusions. | *357. MIXoRNIS RUBICAPILLA (J. 395). Motacilla rubicapiila, Tickell; Ibis, 1872, p. 376. Arakan, Tenasserim. | Karen nee (W. #.); both sides of the Pegu hills (0.).] #358. PELLoRNEUM RUFICEPS (J. 399). Arakan, Tenasserim. 309. P. TICKELLI. P. tickellt, nobis, J. A. S. B. xxviii. p. 414; P. subochraceum, Swinhoe, Ann. M. N. H. (4), 7, p. 257. ‘Tenasserim mountains. | Rangoon, Tonghoo, Thayet Myo, Karen hills (W. R.).] 360. P. mrvor. P. mnor, A. O. Hume, Str. Feath. ii. p- 298. Thayet-myo. | A synonym of P. tickelli. | *361. TuRDINUS* CRISPIFRONS. Lurdimus crisprfrons, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxiv. p. 269. Tenasserim mountains. * Generically identical with Cacopitta, Bonap. (1850). 1875. | Babblers. 115 362. T. GUTTATUS. ‘T. guttatus, Tickell, J. A.S. B. xxviii. pp. 414, 450. Tenasserim mountains. 368. T. BREVICAUDATUS. T. brevicaudatus, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxiv. p. 272; Gould, B. As. pt. xxiv. pl. 9; 7. striatus, Walden. Khasias, Tenasserim mountains. These three cee were harried by Col. Tickell. [ 364. DryMocaTAPHUs FULVUS. _ Drymocataphus fulous, Walden, Ann. M. N. H. (4), 15, p. 401 (June 1st, 1875). Karen nee, at 2500 feet (W. 2.). |] 365. T'RIcHosroma ABBorti (J. 387). Arakan (Ramri), Moulmein. This bird is barely separable from the (so-termed) Brachypteryx sepiaria, Horsfield, which is Myiothera grisea of the Leyden Museum, and Walacopteron olivaceum, Strickland. Its range extends to Kastern Bengal, and to the Nipdlese tarai. [Rangoon, Tonghoo, foot of Karen hills (W. R. ). Identical with examples from the Garo hills, from hills near Mymensing, from Dunapur, and from Dunsiri valley. | | 366. T. wrnor. LT’. minor, Hume, Str. Feath. i. p. 5365. Lemyne, Meeta Myo, Ye(D.). Judging by the description, a species of doubtful validity. But, if distinct from the Indian species, eee true LT. abbotte. | [367. T. RUBIGINOSA. f. rubiginosa, Walden, Ann. M. N. H. (4), 15, p. 402 (June Ist, 1875). Karen nee (W. £.). | *368. ALCIPPE NIPALENSIS (J. 388). A. phayrei, nobis, J. A. 8S. B. xiv. p. 601, wanting the dark sincipital stripes, is probably the young. Arakan, Tenasserim. ‘‘Common, but local, in hilly jungles up to 4000 feet’? (Zickell). [ 369. A. MAGNIROSTRIS, 0S. Karen nee hills, at 3000 feet (W. &.). All the individuals obtained in the locality named differ from Darjeeling, « tills inh ita ji em mu sate r Darl 116 Birds of Burma. | LNo. 1, Garo hills, and Naga hills examples, by wanting the grey-coloured cheeks and ear-coverts of A. nipalensis, and by having the .tail brown and not rufous. All the dimensions are greater. Wing, 2°75; tail, 3; tarsus, 0°87. | *370. STRACHYRHIS NIGRICEPS (J. 391). Arakan, Tenasserim mountains. ‘In hilly forests, 3000 feet” (Zvckell). Timalia larvata, 8. Miiller,* from Sumatra, is nearly akin and should be compared with it. [| Pegu hills (0.).] [3871. S. RuFIcEPs (3938). | Karen nee (W. &.); neighbourhood of Pahpoon (D.). A single Karen nee example, in very indifferent order, appears to belong to this species. | | | 372. S. RUFIFRONS. S. rujifrons, Hume, Str. Feath. 1. p. 479. Pegu hills (0.). | *373. 8S. curysna (J. 394). S. precognitus, Swinhoe. Arakan, South China. ; | S. chrysea is also stated by Dr. Jerdon to occur in Arakan, and in Mr. Blyth’s manuscript the number of that species in Jerdon’s Birds of India (394) is added to the title. But it is evident that S. precognita, Swinhoe, cannot be a synonym, for it is the name of a species nearly allied to, although distinct from, S. ruficeps. This last species was probably omitted by Mr. Blyth through accident, while to it he doubtlessly intended to add S. precog- nita, Swinhoe, as a synonym, and not to S. chrysea. | (374. S. ASsMILIS, 0.8. Above cinereous olive-green. Feathers of the head yellow, with brown central streaks. Cheek and ear-coverts, pale brown tinged with yellow. Entire under surface, dilute yellow. Quills, brown edged externally with pale yellow. Rectrices, cinereous brown tinged with olive-green. Wing, 1°92; bill, from forehead, 0°56; tail, 1:92; tarsus, 0°58. ‘Karen nee (3, 2) at 2800 feet of elevation. Iris (&), lake; bill, lavender, pink at base of mandible; legs, brownish yellow; feet, greenish. Iris (2), brown; bill, dark plumbeous, pinkish at base of mandible ; legs, light greenish-brown”’ (W. £.). | * Bonap. Consp. Ay. i. p. 217. 18 75. ] Babblers. 117 ¥375. Pycroruis SINENSIS (J. 385). ‘‘Very common in Upper Burma’”’ (Jerdon). I noticed it abounding in the vicinity of Akyab. [Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.).] — = sae atv en Pe Spa Te fePec re Pe oy! i mie " 5 mm" : 4 . . wuts ; : <0 “ rt ei AI ss > itt die ds Sa ea ——— oes nly Re erderciel R: LE EO SEF IE REN > ayer A at pLmylye tetas eit.) et i ge re 2} on erigeyerye ete San c “ 4) ior seli shiloh ie analveiay paadeeieiALeesty) apettiniaion pal vieaslas ane eeatooieseeeeant kee ater eet Eee ets Telia teen demon - sare shin te ovetvedl |, ay , ‘ . s a a eee - a a, RD 7 — = +1947 ey “ip . . . ae, wer oe : eainaerecnty = Pra Peto ae TY ees pore wn es = ae a n eooe) Lt Yor—tie = TEs ap ds hat tears ey ee th 376. P. ALTIROSTRISs. Chrysomma alttrostre, Jerdon, Ibis, 1862, p. 22. Common at Thayet Myo. [This species has not been recognized since Dr. Jerdon described it thirteen years since. By some it is regarded as nothing but P. SIneNSis, a species thoroughly well known to Dr. Jerdon. But, moreover, he mentions 7 7 ; ie ' a i ‘fe. 1 > iz fd &: i | & { } 4 mu ma: :& } Lt ' S 4 ; i BT 4 f (/. ¢.) that ‘‘it will probably be considered worthy of separation as a sub- genus,” and that it ‘‘makes an approach to the Paradoxornis group.’ In conversation Dr. Jerdon has asserted that it was a “ good species.” | *377. PaRapOoXoRNIS RUFICEPS (J. 875). Paradoxornis ruficeps, nobis; Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 94, fig. 1; Gould, B. As. pt. vi. pl. 12. Received from Arakan, and the only species as yet received from any re part of British Burma, though others may be expected to inhabit the same OEE localities.* He [Karen nee, at 2500 feet (W. R.).] Hy : [378. P. evtaris (J. 374). | He P. gularis, Horst.; Gray and Mitchell, Genera of Birds, ii. pl. 94, fig. 2. HI | Karen nee, at 5600 feet (W. B.). | if | Fam. Megaluridee. iy *379. CRATEROPUS GULARIS. | i Chatarhea gularis, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxiv. p. 478. j “The familiar garden-babbler of Thayet Myo, and still more abundant | and familiar higher up the Irawddi, as Mr. W. J. Blanford informs me” Hy (Jerdon. Hh [Thayet Myo (W. B.).] if * Suthora brunnea, J. Anderson, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 211. Momien, Yunan. 4500 feet. Wt | | HAY eat rt i ak Hi Hy CT ahaha ota ert ? . f ) ; (a oh) ae ; . dj = Loe ate 4 | i t : Sin ae’ c id “a bY ; ey = ; ee ‘ Abad Fae iO ave ec pi aig alah SEL ok os 8 i le a Stag) ih A SPT OAR Sie Tes DEEL PLONE at TN TTT 2 a “ — | - : * Rees : t ; 4 4 * ‘ ‘ . = ame as et — - ae ee: eS ———— se BIST ————————— Sn ae SE ae ES a as fin ‘eg a ay a J Shae 3 sal , ‘ ; SSS = = —— SS en ee 3 ‘ meee ° 2 i. ~ a Saas — nig ————————— —- ' . = . omits ne Lada " ‘ ——— ——— = —— SS = ae —— a TES fed ait! cig Y 4 % da Reith il tt ie i st a cc th A I hai We to — se a pete terre a re jie . = ~ == a SSS Sa =r ——— e+ Bae ay gb 2 ‘ i 7 y —_ ane ae a oe eoree ae rs dik ; - = —-—— - mh Me r p ‘a - ' e a a 2 ? oF tee SS — eto Pn de dein SSS ee are Nabe : it tren hi he macikd ) hers _ “ > Se ESE ——e eeeEOEeEeeeeeeee Scabies ais ul R ia cil 3 ae : : Me 2a : ti ‘ mee A 4 — = ~ : —= = = " -" = aia - ee = = ae aaa — . ~ — r A ‘ es et Deities. = anew ’ a 7 | : Se, oe aa = ~ ; trae an “ ¥ " pends ; Ae ee a A Cr acta Mt ale ee —— —— = ee sina o e . € ~ : TAS ie ee ress Se I == oe <= - — = os = ————— = = — tel 4 “ eaikr?: = os (5 ths ade a een — eae on —_ a ed sti . = = : ————ESS = - — = - — = aus ae F a 4 = = : a = en ——— —— 2 4 7 > = _ - - = — en a er = ‘ ae he — = = \ - = es es — = a = = SSE = = SSS TSS ~ = a ee —= —= ——— —— vet a ‘) = — = = = = = = ane oe ] SSS SS = — = > 3 ae = ee Re OE et te . va et at ae - we a . “ ae =e Se mre a ta EL a Sota le Oa oe > : ” — SS - ———_—— — e : ‘ , ; 5 os os : > ‘ Beis tote STs: ¥ - ae ae ~ : | P | ] 118 . Birds of Burma. No: aig 880. C. EARLEI (J. 439). ‘Not rare at Thayet Myo, but confined entirely to the long grass and reeds on the islands and churrs of the Irawadi”’ (Jerdon). *381. C. caupatus (J. 438). | | Arakan, Thayet Myo. As this and the two preceding species are absolutely congeneric with sundry African species of undoubted Crateropus,* IT can only refer them to that genus. It is remarkable that the true Mala- cocerct, so characteristic of India and Ceylon, have no typical representative in the countries eastward of the Bay of Bengal. *382. Mxcaturus paLusrris (J. 440). The range of this species extends from India, Assam, and Burma to Java and the Philippines. I do not remember to have seen it, however, in col- lections from the Malayan peninsula. *383. Drymorca Lonercaupara (J. 544). Arakan. [384. DryMoEcCA BLANFORDI, D.s. Above brown (darkest on the head), with an olive-green tinge, which is in some very distinct on the rump. A dull, broad, albescent stripe springing from the base of the bill, and extending back over and beyond the eye. Kar-coverts mingled albescent and pale brown. Cheeks, wing lining, and all the lower surface of body yellowish white, faintly rufescent on flanks and thigh-coverts. Quills, brown externally, narrowly edged with olive-green. In some with an indistinct rufous shade. Rectrices, pale brown above; albescent underneath. All but middle pair with a bold subterminal brown transverse isolated mark. Middle pair with a faint indication of a dark terminal spot. (4) Wing, 2; tail, 2°50; tarsus, 0°82; bill, from fore- head, 0°58. “Tris (?), dark buff; maxilla, horny brown, mandible, pale; eyelids, yellowish brown; legs, dull white. Iris (4), yellowish brown; bill, fleshy brown ; eyelids, yellowish brown; Tonghoo” (W. £.). | *385. PRINIA FLAVIVENTRIS (J O2). Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. [Rangoon (W.£#.). The type of Delessert’s species came from Bhootan. Assam (Tezpur) examples obtained by Major Godwin Austen agree with * Of. This, 1867, p. 6. 1 875. | Wren Warblers. | 119 Delessert’s diagnosis, the ear-coverts and the lores being grey; the ciliary region being dark coloured like the head. Sylhet individuals do not differ, but specimens from the Munipur hills, while otherwise undistinguish- able, possess pure white lores continued into a bold pure white supercilium. Out of a large series obtained by Lieutenant W. Ramsay at Rangoon, one only has the lores and superciliary ridges pure white. All the other speci- mens being like the Assam and Sylhet birds. In my series. of the Javan representative form, P. familiaris, one example only has white lores and supercilium. The presence of a white supercilium does not appear to indicate the sex, for all the Munipur birds whose sex had been determined are marked 5, while the single Rangoon example with a white supercilium is noted a ?, and the others, some 6 and some @. | *386. P. RUFESCENS. P. rufescens, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xvi. p. 456; P. beavani, Walden. Arakan, Pegu. [P. beavani is a distinct species. P. rufescens is a very rufous form of P. gracilis. | [387. P. eracriis (J. 536). Rangoon (W. #.); Pegu (0.) ; Kollidoo (D.) ap [ 388. P. Hopasont (J. 538). Rangoon, Karen nee (W. 2.); Thayet Myo (0.). |] [389. P. BEAVANI. BP. beavani, Walden, P. Z. 8. 1866, p. 651. Yey-tho, Karen hills, at 2000 feet (W. R.); Thayet Myo (O.); Tenas- serim (D.). | *390. CIsTICOLA SCHHNICOLA (J. 539). Arakan, Pegu, Hainan, South China, Formosa. { 391. HorzEITes PALLIDIPES. Phylloscopus pallidipes, Blanford, J. A. 8. B. 1872, p. 162, pl. vii. Pahpoon (D..). | [392. H. sERIcna, n.s. Above uniform, rather dark, brown washed with an olive tint, having in some lights a ruddy tone. Under-surface of body and wing-lining silky white, the flanks, thigh-coverts, and under tail-coverts sullied with pale super-. 120 Birds of Burma. | No. 1, brown. Cheeks and ear-coverts mixed pale brown and white. Space before the eye and superciliary ridges, sordid white. Quills and -rectrices brown, edged with the colour of the upper plumage. Wing, 2; tail, 1°75; tarsus, 0°68 ; bill, from forehead, 0°60. | “Tris (?), dull brown; bill, yellow: legs, fleshy white. Karen hills” [393. Suya crrnicerRa (J. 547). Thayet Myo (0.). | [ 394. S. ERYTHROPLEURA, 0s. Male, above rufous brown, the base of the feathers being ash. On the lower back and upper tail-coverts the rufous hue predominates. Space before the eye, dark brown. A white line, springing from near the nostril, passes back over and behind the eye. Lar-coverts, cheeks, chin, throat, breast, abdomen, and wing-lining, creamy white, strongly suffused with rufo-fulvous. Flanks, thigh-coverts, and under tail-coverts bright ferruginous. Quills, brown edged with ferruginous. Rectrices like the back. (4) Wing, 1°87; tail, 4:87; tarsus, 0°88; bill, from forehead, 0°65. Tonghoo (W. £#.). | *395. ORTHOTOMUS LONGICAUDA (J. 5380). Of general occurrence, extending eastward to South China and Formosa, and southward to Singapore. | [Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.); Tenasserim (D.). The Ceylon and Indian Tailor-bird must stand O. sutorius (@. R. Forster), Zool. Ind. p. 17 (1781), even if it be considered identical with the South China species, Muscicapa longicauda, Gm.= 0. phyllorrhapheus, Swinh., which it appears to be. | | *396. O. EDELA. O. edela, Tem., P.C. 599, fig. 2. | Tavoy, Siam (Gould). According to Mason, ‘‘Tailor-birds are very common at Tavoy, though rare at Moulmein.” He is not likely to have discriminated the particular species. | I am not certain which species is intended by Mr. Blyth. The authority of Mr. Gould is quoted for the occurrence of this Javan race of the common Indian Tailor-bird at Tavoy and in Siam. The Javanese O. edela and the Indian O. sutorvus are barely separable, the Javan being chiefly distinguished by having the lores and superciliary stripe pale ferruginous, and not greyish- 1875. | Sir ties: ay white. All the Burman examples, and those from Siam, I have been able to examine, belong to O. sutorius. Formerly Mr. Blyth mistook the more does occur in Burma. : (397. O. FLAVI-VIRIDIS. 0. flavi-viridis, Moore, P. Z. 8. 1854, p. Rangoon (W. £.). The description of O. nitidus, Hume, agrees well with this species before the grey throat and black breast-feathers have been assumed. Mr. Hume’s specimens were obtained at Pahpoon, Ky oe and Thayet- chaun. | / ] [398. O. cononatus (J. 531). Tsan koo hills, at 3000 feet (W. 2.). | [ 399. LocusTELLA LANCEOLATA. Sylvia lanceolata, Tem., Man. d’Orn. iv. p. 614; Locustella subsignata, Hume; cf. Dresser, B. Eur. parts 35 and 36. Yeboo (D.). | fam. Ganiidee. Shrikes. *400. Lanrus TEPHRONOTUS (J. 258). | e Arakan. 1 [Kyouknyat (D.). | *401. L. nroricers (J. 259). L. nigriceps, Frankl.; Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 71. Arakan, Siam. [Tonghoo (W. &.); neighbourhood of Pahpoon (D.). | *402. L. cristatus (J. 261).* Arakan. [Rangoon, Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet.Myo (0.); Tenasserim (D. ). | * vide Lord Walden, “On the Rufous-tailed Shrikes,” Ibis, 1867, p. 212. Mason includes L. tigrinus, Drapiez, but I know not on what authority. ly rm Tn s a ee eS ete eg he ORT tna So oe Te “eter re Em th + Myers Saw Ce recently described O. flavi-viridis, Moore, for O. edela, and Moore’s species: cnet 7:ss-shhssmmenasrnnad timer suas ssroceeensanscmanetianeniamcertemnnanviineds endo a ee — eyes mes AE ag eet PR era 122 Birds of Burma. [No. 1, 403. L. cotzurrorpuzs. L. collurioides, Lesson, Voyage Bélanger, p. 250; L. hypoleucus, nobis, J. A. §. B. xvii. p. 249. Pegu, Martaban, Tenasserim provinces, Siam. “ Thayet Myo and Ava a ig in cold season only” (W. 7. Blanford). fe | Rangoon, Tonghoo, Thayet Myo, Karen nee (W. Ss n *404. TEPHRODORNIS PELVICA (J. 263). | 4 Arakan, Tenasserim, Hainan. | lg [Karen hills (W.R.); Thayet Myo(0.).] *405. T. ponticERiana (J. 265). | Pegu. : : < | Tonghoo (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.). | e a g| *406. HyLorerPE PHILOMELA (J. 266). 7 £ . Arakan, Pinang, Java, Borneo, Andaman Islands. is a [Must stand Myloterpe grisola (Blyth). Hylocharis occipitalis, Hume, } i Str. Feath. 11. p. 202, is synonymous. | 407. HEMIPUS OBSCURUS. Muscteapa obscura, Horsfield; M. hirundinacea, Reinwardt. Mergui.* [408. H. prcarus (J. 267). Muscicapa preata, Sykes, P. Z. 8. 1832, p. 85. Tonghoo, Karen nee, at 1500 feet, Tsan koo hills (W. R.); Thayet Myo (0.); Pahpoon (D.). All the examples sent to me by both Major Lloyd and Lieutenant Wardlaw Ramsay, from the Tonghoo province, belong to the South Indian and Ceylon species. But Mr. Blyth seems to be correct in his opinion that the Assam bird, I. capitalis, is a distinct species. All the examples of the male I have seen from Darjeeling, Assam, and the N aga hills, have the back brown, and the head alone black (ef. Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 368; Jerdon, op. cit. 1872, p. 116; and compare Hume, Str. Feath. 1878, p. 435 ; 1875, p. 98). Young males in both species wear the female dress. The young H. picatus in transition plumage, before assuming the full black dorsal garb, shows brown on the back. 7. capitalis, &, when adult, retains the brown colouring on the back | let EI RTL STE SE PR EN —e Se unease TS Le * Mason also gives UM. picatus, meaning doubtless JX. eapitalis (cf. Ibis, 1866, p. 368). tin i eBid a id 8 Mile PAE TES a iar: Sate aati: a2) SF ce RE te et 1875. | Cuckoo shrikes. 123 Fam. Graucalidee. ate ee i ae a eT ee — - = Di tie ue ‘ #409. GRAUCALUS MACEI (J. 270). Arakan, ‘l'enasserim. [ Rangoon, Tonghoo hills, Karen nee from 2500 feet to 4000 feet (W: R.); Thayet Myo (Ff.).] *410. VoLVOCIVORA AVENSIS. Volvocwora avensis, nobis, Catal. p. 327; C. melanoptera, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xv. p. 307. Common in Arakan. | [ Rangoon, Tonghoo, Thayet Myo, Karen nee (W. R.); Pabyouk, near Amherst (D.). | ~*411. V. syxusr (J. 268). Upper Pegu. (412. V. menanoscuisrus (J. 269). V. melaschistos, Hodgson, Ind. Rev. i. p. 328 (1836). Examples obtained at Pahpoon, Pabyouk, Ye-boo, and Ye, by Mr. Davi- son, are thus identified, with doubt, by Mr. Hume (Str. Feath. ii. p. 474). | *413. Puricrocorus speciosus (J. 271). Turdus speciosus, Lath.; Gould, B. As. pt. ix.; P. rutidus, Gould; P. fraterculus, Swinhoe; P. andamanensis, Tytler. Hgnet-men-tha &, hgnet-men-thamie 2 (‘ Prince and Princess Bird,’’ Mason). | Arakan, Tenasserim, Andaman Islands, Khasias, Siam; and Hainan (Swinhoe). Mr. V. Ball remarks of this species that ‘‘the amount of red on the central tail-feathers varies much in specimens from various parts of India and Burma.” Four out of five males from the Andamans have the central tail-feathers wholly black. The specimens in Lord Walden’s collection from India have black middle tail-feathers, while in those from Burma the outer web is red. Others sent by Mr. Swinhoe as P. fraterculus do not appear to be separable. | [Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet Myo (0.). Out of a numerous series from Tonghoo and its vicinity only one male has the middle pair of rectrices completely black; while in all the females, without exception, they are entirely black. Some Assam examples have the middle pair black. | *414, P. prevrrostRis (J. 273). Phenicornis brevirostris, Vigors; Gould’s Century, pl. 8. Arakan. | Karen nee, at 3000 feet (W. ht. \; pine forests oe of Pahpoon (D.). | | 7 a & j | ) 124 Birds of Burma. [ No. 1 —-*415. P. Roseus (J. 275). | ; Muscicapa rosea, Vieillot; Gould, B. As. pt. ix. pl. — ye Arakan. | | Tonghoo (W. &.); Pahpoon (D.).| *416. P. PEREGRINUS (J. 276). Parus peregrinus, Linn.; Gould, B. As. pt. ix. pl. — Arakan, Tenasserlm. Common; some of the males very brightly coloured, and appearing to grade into P. flagrans, Boié, of the Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo. Mr. V. Ball remarks that ‘ Andaman specimens correspond to the darker-plumaged variety of this bird from Madras and Ceylon, from one of which Gould’s figure is taken.” | Tonghoo (Z.); Karen nee (W. &.); Thayet Myo (£).] P. flagrans, Boie, in no way resembles P. peregrinus, otherwise than by its small dimen- sions. It is a diminutive form of P. ardens, Boié, which, in its turn, is a small form of P. speciosus. The female of P. flagrans is yellow and grey, as in the other two species. PP. peregrinus is a distinct type, and has no known representative in any part of the Malayan sub-region. | *417. P. ALBIFRONS. ie P. albifrons, Jerdon, Ibis, 1863, p. 20. 7 ll | Thayet-myo. An interesting ‘“‘double” of the Indian P. erythropygius. | [Tonghoo (Z.); Thayet Myo (0.).] fam. Pipridee. Manakins. *418. CALYPTOMENA VIRIDIS. . Calyptomena viridis, Rattles ; Horsfield, Zool. Res. in Java, pl.; Stoliczka, J. A. S. B. Xxxix. pt. 2, p. 284. Tenasserim mountains.* ‘These birds resort to dense thickets when alarmed, but will sally out to feed on fruits (wild figs), and they mingle with Barbets and other birds a while so doing. ‘The note is low and sweet—a low whistle. Like the Eury- i if lavmi, they are tame and stupid” (Zvckell). Helfer also procured this species 1) ae in the Tenasserim provinces. * vide J. A. 8S. B. xi. p. 248; Tickell, op. cit. xxiv. p. 279. Broadbills. 1295 fam. Eurylemide. Broadbills. ¥419. SERILOPHUS RUBROPYGIUS (J. 139). Raya rubropygia, Hodgs.; Gould, B. As. pt. v. pl. — Arakan, Khasias, 8. E. Himalaya. #420. S. LUNATUS. S. dunatus, Gould; B. As. pt. v. pl. — Tenasserim provinces. ‘These birds are much better flyers than the Eurylaim:. I found them once in a flock, like Titmice, but very high up” (Zickell). Dr. Helfer states, in his MS. notes quoted by Mr. F. Moore, “that he observed this bird in societies of thirty or forty, upon the loftiest trees in the forests in the Tenasserim provinces; and that they are so very fearless that the whole flock can be shot down one after the other.”. He only observed them on one occasion. | ‘‘ Iris, iridescent green and brown; bill, turquoise blue, paler towards the tip; region of nostrils, gape, and under surface of basal half of mandible, orange; legs, orange-green; claws, bluish-white”’ (W. #.). Karen hills, 30 miles north of Tonghoo (Z.); Karen nee, at 8000 and 4000 feet (W. R.); Pahpoon, Amherst, Om-ben-gwen (D.). | 421. CoRYDON SUMATRANUS. Coracias sumatranus, Raffles; Gould, B. As. pt. v. pl. — Tenasserim provinces, Malacca, Sumatra, Borneo. ‘‘A singular and rare bird; crepuscular (very likely diurnal as well), and so stupid and tame as to allow itself to be pelted without moving” (7Zvckell). | | Karen hills (W. R.).] *422. HURYLEMUS JAVANICUS. Lurylemus javanicus, Horsf.; Gould, B. As. pt. v. pl. — Tenasserim provinces, Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, Java, Borneo. ‘“‘ Not common, at least it isnot often seen, being very quiet and secluded, though excessively tame, and not crepuscular like Corydon” (Zickell). | Tonghoo hills (Z.). | 423. E. ocHROMELAS. 7 Li. ochromalus, Raffles; Gould, B. As. pt. v. pl. — Tenasserim provinces, Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, Borneo. 5 Sie Pe picts Cd yeaplla Ng i See ee ese re 5)! - = reteeh A oem nie ineremmians “atte ool n s , _ 4 ~ 4 M J P — “a a aa os , sy) er iiss so eain Lreataioa a cieemennaieee ee eae Sone erie eaveeresare nn ener 4 Sys aes, % ane " »j — Sn eee See rnb eno a eet ee EN DE TN ee a neat i iu ay i) at 1) a me fey / ; 7 | ig He ite | aie ] } +h He {hh Vai re i (ye aa ie i aa j zy od y } iD | | ea | “y | * || i | | ji it FA / ‘ q | i 4 | { j ry ii e | | j isl ii i Y fh { . hae a Mh i@Z ie me ty Eee ia) ie | 1 j “al | Zl ¥ 1 q Hie lee yy th re | ‘ i | fe ~ ie lee |i 7 ia " ai 4 vie Th i 4 ae | r: | / Hl it! : f 3 , ie i ‘i AF i sie eye Hi SM 7h <= e | ie ie Sah | ~ Bi By ti | ie | Nl ie ey | 7 i — | : 4 ‘2 i) i 4 | We | | Hy ] | 7 qf : i3 | ah a ; ie PY % : ia it || = : i : ® M | & = , - ia | 126 a | Birds of Burma. [ No. 1, 424. CYMBORHYNCHUS MACRORHYNCHUS. Lodus macrorhynchus, Gm.; Gould, B. As. pt. v. pl. — Bassein, Tenasserim provinces, Siam, Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, Borneo. [Count Salvadori has recently (Atti R. Ac. Sc. Torino, ix. p. 421) re- stricted Latham’s Great-billed Tody to Sumatra and Borneo, also to Java, but with a doubt, and has separated the Malayan Broadbill under a new title, C. mataccensis (t. ¢. p. 425). True C. macrorhynchus, according to the Count, has a black and unspotted tail; whereas the Malayan bird, on the three outer pairs of rectrices, has, towards the apex, and on the inner webs, a white oblique spot. In the Malaccan bird this is so, and Sumatran examples will more probably be found to agree with the Malaccan rather than with the Bornean. But to which race Latham’s type, contained in the Leverian Museum, belonged, Count Salvadori does not make quite clear. Latham’s type, however, is, as the Count mentions, and as Herr von Pelzeln has told us (Ibis, 1874, p. 19), extant in the Vienna Museum. We may therefore assume that the Count, with his accustomed accuracy, has satisfied himself on the point. | *425. C. AFFINIS. C. afinis, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xv. p. 812; Gould, B. As. pt. 5, pl. — Arakan (Ramri), Tavoy (Gould), Siam, and Cambodja (@. R. Gray). *426. Psarisomus DALHOUSLH (J. 138). Liurylaimus dalhousie, Jameson; Gould, B. As. pt. v, pl. — Arakan, Tenasserim, Sumatra. ‘‘On the table-land of Cherra Punji,” remarks Mr. Frith, “‘ flocks of this bird often ascend, while, as they fly about from garden to garden, the native boys hunt them by intercepting and turn- ing their flight away from the gardens, when they are soon fatigued and easily caught with the hand” (J. A. S. B. 1855, p. 279, note). | Karen hills, at 3000 feet (W. R.). I can find no record of a com- parison having been made between this species and Sumatran Z. psittacinus, S, Mill. | Kam. Hirundinidee. Swallows. *427. Hirunpo rustica (J. 82). Mostly of the smaller eastern race (H. gutturalis, Scopoli), but I think not exclusively so. Arakan, Tenasserim. | Tonghoo (W. £.); Thayet Myo (0.).] 1875.) Swallows. (428. H. ryriert. H. tytleri, Jerdon, B. Ind. iii. p. 870. Thayet Myo (0.); Tavoy (D.).] 127 [429. H. morREORUM. H. horreorum, Barton, Fragm. N. H. 1799, p. 17. Tonghoo (W. #.). Undistinguishable trom Californian examples. | (430. H. ririrera (J. 84). Pahpoon (D.). | “431. CucROPIs ERYTHROPYGIA (J. 85, partim). Hirundo erythropygia, Sykes; Gould, B. As. pt. xx. pl. 10; Ibis, 1866, p. 337. Common in parts of the jungles, at least during the northern winter. (432. C. STRIOLATA. Hirundo striolata, Tem., Faun. Japonica, p. 33. Karen nee, at 2600 feet, in March; Karen hills, at 3000 feet, in January (W. R.). Identical with Flores, Formosan, and Chinese examples. Quite distinct from C. erythropygia, which is barely separable from C. rufula. | 433. CHELIDON uRBICA (J. 92). Col. Tickell writes: ‘‘There are great numbers here” (at Moulmein) ‘in the season; and I have also seen large flocks of them in India, but they appear from time to time, not constantly, as does H. rustica.” * *434. CoryLE sINENsIs (J. 89). Common along the rivers, where it holds the place of C. riparia in Europe. |Tonghoo (W. R.); Pahpoon (D.). C. obscurior, Hume, Str. Feath. lil. p. 43, is founded on a single indifferent specimen of a species of Cotyle obtained at Thayet Myo by Mr. Oates. | kam. Artamide. Clusterers. “435. Artamus Fuscus (J. 287). Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Hainan. In the Andamans and Nicobars, A. leucorhynchus (Lin.) replaces it. | Tonghoo, Thayet Myo, Karen hills (W. B.).] * J. A. 5S. B. xxiv. p. 809. ee ee = ee ead be sr S as ‘eg a8 AS casuals neo. — “ if epee 1 oer + etapa Rian at tt pry eek svat a ey drm ar: eer ee > — ; Lees , ay 4\\ Pea NS Se SF GRY het hth A Go we pant wil eo + strep pera heya S “ame Ae he . : " ai “J « o- — re SS whatous Pe ctype th era mse om 5 a = @ = : A Ee 3 + Fs E ai 4 7 % 4 uD 17 t | & i ; : oe | | } a! oe | 4] ; ae | ‘a i i; as f f 1 : hh a a an f ; ; i} He i “4 E. 4 } a ; Bi 4 | aly i can i a i = ue Wil s+} 1 @ i. 4 Ri ia i Ht { a re | fl a i i 1s “| i + ay “La it oe i 4 4 Be! 13 ii ah | A i. ee , oH 13 jal § ee ae tai i 4 i ; nek 3) t 5 i} 7 aml a 8 L id "1 4 | a ie | b . le ed “a? f i : al aR i i I ' } + TH ie (j } : 134 ie 5 ia uu G : ' : 3% H SS eee 5 nee glial a “itnapeig! a wt = te a ah St ea ms er sence 0 eee Lae wing rae om od : 128 Birds of Burma. [N 0. 1, Fam. Dicrurides. Drongos. *436. CHIBIA HOTTENTOTA (J. 286). f Arakan. y | Tonghoo, Karen hills (W. R.); Pahpoon, Moulmein Dae *437. BHRINGA REMIFER (J. 283). Arakan, enasserim. | Tonghoo, Karen hills (W. R.); Thayet Myo (O.). The Burman ex- amples, as well as Indian, are not separable from the J avan. | *438. CHapria mneEa (J. 282). | Arakan, ‘'enasserim. .— a [| Tonghoo, Karen hills, Karen nee (W. R.); Thayet Myo (0.). Gs Sr matayensis, A. Hay, is identical with the Sumatran Zuolius picinus, S. er Miller, Bp. Consp. i. p. 852, the type of which I have compared at Leyden. | *439. DIssEMURUS PARADISEUS (J. 284, partim). Bs Arakan, Tenasserim. I provisionally bring together the various races of Bhimray (as they are designated in Bengal), because it appears to me that their differentiation is not yet sufficiently understood; but specimens from different localities differ much in size and in the development of the frontal crest. In some the latter is rudimentary, if it exist at all; while in others it attains a length of 23 in.,* the frontal plumes flowing over and beyond the occiput. ‘he ordinary length in Burmese specimens is about 14 in. In one specimen in the Calcutta Museum, which is believed to have been procured ’ Me by Helter, the frontal crest is rudimentary, whilst the racket tail-feathers : : attain very unusual length, the unwebbed portion of them being much more hae spirated than I have seen in any other. Again, there is one race, found _ especially in Tippera, with the frontal crest 23 in. long, and the closed wing 5 ig 62 in. But, with the exception perhaps of this Tippera bird, there would | seem to be all possible gradations in different localities, especially as regards th the development of the frontal crest. The longest crested (or Tippera form) i a is styled Chiba malabarotdes by Mr. Hodgson,t and the Edolius grandis, y Gould,{ is described to have the crest 14 in. in length. £. paradiseus ( Cu- | a) * vide figure in J. A. 8. B. xv. p. 296. ] ‘th + India Review, 1837, p. 325; syn. Lanius malabaricus, as figured by Latham and | “uy Shaw, not as described by Latham from Sonnerat’s figure. Vey + P. Z. §. 1836, p. 3. Drongos. 199 culus paradiseus, L.) 18 based on Brisson’s Cuculus cristatus seamensis, founded on a drawing by Poivre of a Siamese specimen, and should therefore denote the ordinary Tenasserim bird, which is identical with the Bhimray of the Calcutta bird-dealers. As observed in captivity, this species has astonish- ing powers of mimicry.* I had one which imitated the fine song of the Shama (Cittocincla macroura) to perfection; also the crowing of cocks, and every other sound produced by domestic poultry, the cawing of crows, the notes of various other wild birds, the bieating of calves, the ery of a dog being whipped, mewing of cats, etc.; but I do not remember to have heard one sing in the wild state. Mason, however, mentions its loud, flute-like notes, and remarks of one that used to come at sunset every evening, and i perch on a bough near his dwelling in Dong-yan; “there it would sit and | pour forth an incessant strain of melody for half an hour at a time.” As seen alive, it presents a very different appearance from the stuffed specimens exhibited in museums, the hackled feathers of the neck showing to advantage. When tamed it is very fearless and familiar, and may be suffered to have its liberty in country places. It preys with avidity on small birds and other animals. But with all its extraordinary faculty of imitating sounds, the Bhimraj never attempts to articulate human speech, in which some examples of the hill maina (Hwlabes) succeed so admirably. . [Thayet Myo, Karen nee, Tonghoo, Rangoon (W. #.). These examples agree with the Siam bird. An individual from Tonghoo, obtained by Major Lloyd, has the outer pair of rectrices feathered along the whole length of the inner side of the shaft. This is found occasionally to occur in individuals of - many species of Dissemurus. E. intermedius, Lesson, 1s founded on some species, with the outer pair of rectrices fully webbed. Malabar in- dividuals sometimes exhibit the same peculiarity. In D. megarhynchus it isnormal. On the other hand, D. lophorhinus sometimes has the inner web | wanting, except at the extremity of the outer rectrices. | *440. BucHanaa aTRA (J. 278). Muscicapa atra, Hermann, if distinct from 2&. macrocerca of Java; Ibis, 1872, p. 119. Arakan. [Tonghoo, Karen nee, Rangoon (W. &.). Muscicapa atra is Hermann’s title for the South Indian bird, which is invariably smaller than that of Northern and Eastern India. D. macrocercus, Vieillot=Z. longus, Tem., pertains to the Javan bird alone; a distinct form. Some Burman examples —* of. Ibis, 1860, p. 99. Pee ee: Oe =e : - +e ened ee pros ato - at le com 4a 4 ( és an: HI ji 4 bs a iy d 4 ost als (ile Bia oe eee ee — ’ y nn neers aaa = re} i |] ‘ihe || ie |) eG a f . \ ¥ { a - pt ; an He \h | ae is ij } | # - | oe | t ‘ inal) Bye Ee Hie | | ! - a Wie yy y ay Ne i it a | i al fil ae | Ul ee | ie | Ne i ie be Ie ie i ‘| | | ae Uae 130 | Burds of Burma. possess, while others want, the white rictal spot, an unstable character among the continental races, but never found, so far as at present recorded, in true B. macrocerca, nor in B. catheca. Adult Tonghoo birds agree best in the relative proportions of the rectrices with B. catheca. | 441. B. InTERMEDIA. D. intermedius, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xv. p. 298; xxxix. pt. 2, p. 822; Viscount Walden in P. Z. 8. 1866, p. 545. Arakan hills, near Bassein (W. 7. Blanford), South Tenasserim, Pinang, Malacca (Stolvczka). [Tonghoo, Karen nee, Karen hills (W. R.); Moulmein (Beavan). Lieut. W. Ramsay has sent from the localities cited a very numerous series of a species of Buchanga, which provisionally, until I have been able to examine typical Penang examples, are here referred to B. intermedia (Blyth). They vary but slightly in their dimensions when full grown. Wing, 5:25; outer pair of rectrices, 6-12; middle pair, 4:25. Nor is there much if any variation in their colouring when in perfect plumage. Lores, jet black; under surface, pure uniform bluish-ash, with little or no gloss; above, glossy bluish-ash, somewhat darker than below, and paler on the rump; rectrices, ashy-blue. They are almost identical in colouration with Javan B. leucophea, that bird ‘however being smaller, and having a less forked tail. Wing of B. leucophea, 5; outer pair of rectrices, 5°38; middle pair, 4. Among a large number of Javan birds I can find no variation of colouration when in perfect plumage. B. mouhotr, Walden, is not separable from this Burman form. | [442. B. prrrHops. Dicrurus pyrrhops, Hodgs., Gray’s Zool. Misc. p. 84, no. 653. Rangoon, (W. &.). The Rangoon examples sent by Lieutenant W. Ramsay are all referable to B. pyrrhops. They are identical with individuals from Deyra Doon, Nipaul, and Dacca. In colouration they do not differ from B. intermedia, but their dimensions. are considerably larger. Wing, 5°75; outer pair of rectrices, 6°50; middle pair, 4°50. In perfect plumage they do not vary among one another. Nor can either they or B. intermedia be confounded with fully-plumaged examples of B. longicaudata, either from Malabar, Ceylon, Simla, Mussoorie, Nipaul, Darjeeling, and Asalu. The ashy Drongos have no representative in Southern India or in Ceylon. While B. longicau- data has no representative in Java, so far as is yet recorded, nor have I ever seen a Malaccan or Burman example of it. Along the lower ranges of the all flycatchers. 131 Himalaya it certainly occurs, and there meets B. pyrrhops. In immature plumage B. longicaudata might, by a superficial observer, be mistaken for B. pyrrhops. But in adult full dress it is as distinct as it is from B. atra, with which, however, it was also for long confounded. By some B. leucophea, B. intermedia, and B. pyrrhops might be considered as constituting one species, but no author who had studied the subject would unite them with B. longi- caudata. The D. cineraceus, Horsf., apud Blyth (J. A. S. B. 1846, p. 299), and there described by Mr. Blyth from a Malaccan specimen presented by me to the Calcutta Museum, was an example of B. leucogenys, in the young . plumage before the pure white cheeks are developed, and in which phase of plumage it may be easily mistaken for B. leucophea. It ranges from Malacca through Siam, Camboja, and China, to Japan. It is not unlikely that it, as well as B. longicaudata, may be found to occur in Tenasserim. Mr. Blanford gives the last (Ibis, 1870, p. 468) from the Bassein district. | 443. Dicrvrus ANNECTENS (J. 279), Nipal, Tenasserim, Malacca. | Rangoon (W. R.). D. affnis, Blyth, is synonymous. | fam. Tehitreadee. F lycatchers. *444, TcHITREA AFFINIS (J. 289). Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. |Thayet Myo (W. &.). The oldest and correct generic title is Muser- peta, Cuvier. Count Salvadori (Uccelli, Borneo, p. 187) adopts Lerpsiphone, Glogger, a more recent title for an undefined genus. | — i 1 an | ’ |S a 7 i‘ 1; a eee — — [445. T. parapisr (J. 288). Mr. Hume thus identifies, but with doubt (Str. Feath. iii. p. 474), a single example of an ‘immature female’’ obtained at Lemyne by Mr. Davison. | (446. PHILENTOMA VELATUM. Drymophila velata, Tem. P. C. 334. Om-ben-gwen (D.). | *447. HyporHyMys AZUREA (J. 290). Arakan, Tenasserim, Malay countries, Philippines. Common. | Thayet Myo (0.).] 132 Birds,of Burma. *448. MyIALESTES CINEREICAPILLA (J. 295). Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. | | Tsan koo hills, Karen nee, 3500 feet (W. R.). The title of this genus S| 7 must stand Culcvcapa, Swinh., it having precedence over Hmpidothera, : Sundey. | *449, LEUCOCERCA ALBIFRONTATA (J. 292). ys Tonghoo. | Thayet Myo (0.). Lesson’s specific title, awreola (Tr. p. 390), was published during the same year as that of Franklin. Until we have means of determining the month, or day of the month of the year 1831, on which the Traité was published, it will be most convenient to retain the title by which the species is best known. Franklin published his title on the 9th of August. | | a (450, L. arsrcorrrs (J. 291). : | Platyrhynchus albicollis, Vieillot, N. Dict. 27, p. 13 (1818). iil Karen nee hills, at 4000 feet (W. &.); Pahpoon (D.); Thayet Myo ja 451. L. JAVANICA. Muscicapa javanica, Sparrman, Mus. Carls. pl. 75. Mergui, Siam. The common species of the Malay countries. - (452. CHELIDORNYX HYPOXANTHA (J. 294). ity Rhipidura hypoxantha, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xvii. pp. 930, 935. iin Tonghoo hills (W. #.). | ey Thy Kam. Brachypodiide. Bulbuls. *453. HyPpsIPETHS PSAROIDES (J. 444). Arakan, Fokien province, China (Swenhoe). 454. H. concotor. | H. concolor, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xviii. p. 816, probably H. yunanensis, J. Anderson, Ee S167 1p. 223. : Tenasserim mountains (Bhamé district?). This and the preceding, a Himalayan race (found also on the Khasias), the darker-coloured HZ. ganeesa of South India, the still darker H. nigerrimus, Gould, of Formosa, and the black HZ. perniger, Swinhoe, of Hainan, are geographical representatives of ened - face ee Nd Se \ eo? ERR BT i a Mihi it ita ERD Sn RRA 0A aI LP NE IEP TY TO AI A ALTE Bulbuls. 133 each other, or conspecies, and it is remarkable that Ceylon examples are not so dark coloured as are those from the mainland of South India, nor so grey as are Himalayan specimens. In Turdus melaleucus, J. E. Gray (H. nivevceps, Swinhoe), of China, however, we have the same type, with the coral-red bill, but the black cap replaced by pure white; a remarkable variation, which is repeated among the black-headed and white-headed cinnamon- coloured munia grosbeaks. [Tonghoo, Karen hills, at 1500 feet. Iris, hair-brown; bill and legs, lake-red (W. R.). H. yunanensis, Anderson, is synonymous. The white- capped Chinese species must stand H. leucocephalus (Gm.), founded on Sonnerat’s Merle Dominiquain de la Chine, Voy. Indes, ii. p. 191.] *455. H. MaccLELLanpi (J. 447). H. holti, Swinhoe, Ibis, 1861, p. 266. Arakan, South China. 456. H. TICKELLI. ff. tickelli, nobis, J. A. S. B. xxiv. p. 275. Tenasserim provinces. [ Karen nee hills, 2500, 4000 feet. Iris, red-brown; bill, brown; legs, fleshy brown (W. R.). Under-surface of body plumage hardly distinguish- able from the same in HZ. malaccensis. | *457. IoLE VIRIDESCENS. Tole pie deacbns. nobis, Ibis, 1867, p. 7; J. virescens, nobis, J. A. S. B. xiv. 573. Arakan, Khasias, Tippera, Tenasserim (where obtained by Helfer). [ Tonghoo (Z.); Yey-tho, Tsan koo hills (W. &.). | : | *468. Hemixvus Fiavata (J. 448). Pycnonotus flavala (Hodgs.), Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 59. Khasias, Arakan, Tenasserim. A representative species, A. castaneimotus, Swinhoe, inhabits Hainan. [H. hildebrandi, Hume, Str. Feath. 1. p. 508. Karen hills, at 2000 feet. Iris (?), lake-brown; bill, black; legs, light brown (W. R.); forests north of Pahpoon (D.). A representative form, with the head and crest dark brown, not grey. Probably the species determined by Mr. Blyth as HZ. flavala. | 459. TRACHYCOMUS OCHROCEPHALUS. Turdus ochrocephalus, Gm. ; Tricophorus crispiceps, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xi. p. 204. Mergui. Common at Malacca, Sumatra, Java, Borneo. eno eg tee ee Pin ee ~i6-> - i | '3 | t . i CS ee = = i : \ ' ON ee ee ee ee a new aha srt : esl ree ete ene tees oll aint it one etna that gt ad _ ants — ~ en = ee Bt, my ‘2a aah LAs a ee a ee Tn : nm >a *499. AX. eouLpIm (J. 227). Cinnyris gouldie, Vigors; Ibis, 1870, p. 30. Mountains of Arakan, where probably also occur 4. nipalensis, 4. satu- rata, and ZG. ignicauda, all of which inhabit the Khasias. le. OP ots (493. AK. DEBRII. Nectarinia debryii, G. Verr., R. M. Zool. 1867, pl. 16; Walden, Ibis, 1870, p. 39. Karen nee, at 4000 feet. Iris (&), bill, and legs, browu (W. #.). A e a] a ee SSS en sae bsaut: ei = ae afl Sap es SY TEIN MRP DARING es A BATT ric RR Tae rn = ‘a 4 bt 1 aaa ean a ca A a ha ARATE ae acl = ED Ter ia = ill aio hnenamanten eet = — 142 Birds of Burma. representative form of 7%. gouldie, from which it only differs by having the breast vermilion. : . | 494. AK. SANGUINIPECTUS. Ai. sanguinipectus, Walden, Ann. M. N. H. (4), 15, p. 400 (1st June, 1875). Karen nee hills, at from 2500 to 3000 feet (W. R.).] *495. N ECTAROPHILA HASSELTI. Nectarinia hasselti1, Tem.; Certhia brasiliana, Gm.; Ibis, 1870, p. 41. Tippera, Arakan, Tenasserim, Pinang, Malacca, Sumatra, Borneo. *496. ANTHOTHREPTUS MALACCENSIS. Certhia malaccensis, Scopoli; Ibis, 1870, p. 47. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Cambodia, Malacca, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Celebes, and Sula Islands, but ‘“‘does not reach the Moluccas” ( Wallace). *497. CHALCOPARIA PH XNICOTIS. | _ Nectarinia phenicotis, Tem.; Certhia singalensis, Gmelin; Ibis, 1870, p. 48. Tippera, Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam, Malacca, Sumatra, Java, Borneo. [ Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. R.).] *498. Dicmum cruentatuM (J. 236). Certhia cruentata, Lin.; Gould, B. As. part vi. pl. — Arakan, Tenasserim, Pinang, Malacca, Sumatra, Borneo. Very abundant in the vicinity of Mergui station. [Rangoon, Yey-tho, Tonghoo (W. &.); Thayet Myo (/%). The race which inhabits Sarawak has been specifically separated by Count Salvadori under the title of D. nigri-mentum (Ucc. Borneo, p. 165). Malaccan indi- viduals appear also to differ, although but slightly, from Burman, Bengal, and Assam examples. | | *499, ]). TRIGONOSTIGMA. Certhia trigonostigma, Scopoli; C. cantillans, Latham (ef. Stolicazka, J. A. 8. B. XXXIX. pt. 2, p. 308). Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca, Sumatra, Borneo. [Karen hills, at 3000 feet (W. 2.). ] *500. D. curysorromum (J. 237). Khasias, Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. [Tonghoo. Iris (é, ?), brown; Dill, black; legs, dark slate- colour aa a RE) ES I a Fi SE a ES a a ee Pigeons. “501. D. pryrHRoruynona (J. 238). Certhia erythrorhyncha, Latham, Ind. Orn. i, p. 299; Nectarinia minima, Tickell. Latham’s title was founded on the drawing of a young specimen, with the colour of the bill exaggerated. A still smaller species from Hainan has been described as D. minullum, Swinhoe, Ibis, 1870, p. 240. Arakan, Tenasserim. Exceedingly abundant in the jungles near Moul- mein, and coming within reach of the hand if the spectator remains motionless. | There is nothing in Latham’s text to indicate that he described from a drawing. | 7 [502. D. virescens. D. virescens, Hume, Str. Feath. ii. p. 198. Pahpoon and neighbourhood (D.). | ; _ [503. D. onrvaceum. ) D. olivaceum, Walden, Ann. M. N. H. (4), 15, p. 401 (June Ist, 1875). | Tonghoo hills, Karen hills (W. R.).} | ‘ [504. Myzanrue renrpectus (J. 241). k Vr Karen nee, at 4000 feet (W. R.).] | Order GEMITORES. Pigeons. nt fam. Treronide. Hurrials. th #505. Torta nipatensis (J. 771). alt | Not uncommon in Arakan; occurs also in the Malayan peninsula, and in i Sumatra, pt | Pegu hills (O.); Tenasserim (D.). The generic title, Toria, must give way to Lreron. The species seems to be identical with 7. nasica; if so, its range extends to Borneo. | *506. CROocOPUS VIRIDIFRONS. Treron viridifrons, nobis, J. A. S. B. xiv. p. 849; Bonap., Icon. des Pigeons, pl. 9. Pegu, Tenasserim provinces, Siam. This race is barely separable from C. phenicopterus, but its colours are always purer and more strongly con- trasted. Mr. W.'T. Blanford, however, gives C. phenicopterus from Ava, in addition to C. viridifrons from Bassein and Thayet Myo.* | Tonghoo (W. &.). | ! * This, 1870, p. 469. 144 Birds of Burma. *507. OsMoTRERON PHAYREI (J. 776). | Common in Arakan and Pegu, rare in Lower Bengal. In colour it quite resembles Zorza nipalensis, but the bill is very differently shaped. | Tonghoo (W. #.); Tenasserim (D.). | *508. O. Bicrnota (J. 774). Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim provinces, Siam, Malacca (fide Walden) and India generally. A slightly different race inhabits Hainan (0. domvzillet, Swinhoe).* From Siam Mr. Gould notes the allied Z. viridis (Scopoli)= vernans, Lin., in addition to O. brcincta. O. viridis is a common Malayan species, which is likely to occur in South Tenasserim. | Tonghoo (W. &.). The common Malayan species alluded to is Columba vernans, Lin. Mr. Hume notes it from Tenasserim (Str. Feath. 1. p. 461, and i. p. 162), but does not include it in his list of Tenasserim birds (op, ett. 11. p. 481. | | 509. SPHENOCERCUS SPHENURUS (J. 778). | Tonghoo hills (W. #.); hills north of Pahpoon (D.). | , (010. 8. aproaupus (J. 779). ‘Tonghoo hills (W. #.); hills north of Pahpoon (D.). | fam. Columbidee. Pigeons and Doves. Subfam. Carporuacinz (Fruit Pigeons). *511. CarpopHaGa INSIGNIS (J. 781). Mountains of Arakan.+ In the Leyden Museum I remarked that C. insignis (Hodgson) appeared to be the same as C. badia (Raffles), the former being rather brighter in colouring; while C. lacernulata (Tem.), of Sumatra and Java, is rather smaller with a distinct grey cap. [ C. lacernulata is, as yet, only with certainty recorded as an habitant of Java. | *512. C. mnza (J. 780). Bung-madie. Generally diffused over British Burma, and identical with the species as found in Central India and in the Andaman Islands; while the correspond- * Ibis, 1870, p. 534. + cf. J. A. 8. B. xxvii. p. 416. SS ES a a ce a Pigeons and Doves. | 145 ing bird of the Nicobars (C. insularis, nobis*) is constantly distinguishable. C. rosacea (Tem.), from Timor, etc., differs very slightly. In Southern India and Ceylon the race is smaller, but otherwise similar (C. pusilla, nobis +). Of this small race I observed four specimens from Travancore and Ceylon in the Museum at Leyden. | Tonghoo (Z.). |] 513. C. BICOLOR. Columba bicolor, Scopoli; Sonnerat, Voy. t. 103; C. alba, Gmelin; C. littoralis, Tem. Mergui archipelago, Nicobar Islands, Malayan peninsula. Subfam. CoLtumBin”® (Pigeons). 514. ALsocomus puniceus (J. 782). Arakan, Tenasserim, not uncommon on Ramri Island; Central India, Ceylon. It is nearly allied to Columba tanthina;+ and an unnamed species of the Palumbus or Cushat group from Siam (Xvengmai) would seem to be indicated by the late Sir R. H. Schomburgk.§ | | Tonghoo (W. &.). The examples constituting the large series obtained at Tonghoo by Lieutenant W. Ramsay in no way differ from Maunbhoom and Upper Assam individuals. | *515. CotumBa trivia (J. 788). Columba livia, var. intermedia, Strickland; C. turricola, Bonap. Common, as throughout India, and only differing from the wild ‘European livia in having no white above the tail. It everywhere grades into the domestic Pigeon. *516. TURTUR TRANQUEBARICUS (J. 797). Turtur tranquebaricus, Hermann, Obs. Zool. p. 200. Gyo (generic). Arakan. [Karen nee(W.&.). The Karen nee examples belong to true 7. humilis of the Philippines, and not to 7. tranquebaricus. | *517. T. TIGRINUS. Columba tigrina, Tem.; Knip, Pig. pl. 43. Indo-Chinese and Malayan countries.. This can hardly be considered as eS. AS. Beep eri. t+ op. cit, xvi. p. 816. t Fauna Japonica, Aves, t. Ix. c. § Ibis, 1864, p. 250. 10 af ‘ ita j \ a. et EE eae DAN ITE LY APOE I Say Ty SR aN HE SS PT, raves ae ere ee, Neen " ENR i a EAA i NEA ME k | i Ne i * ¥ ' ae =o | i ' 7 oy a | ia et | ‘ } 4 ! | iW I y iz ce ft - i ti I 146 Birds of Burma. being other than a race of 7. swratensis, of India with Ceylon, but, except where the two come in contact, the difference would seem to be maintained. | Yey-tho, Thayet Myo (W. R.). Mr. Hume, Str. Feath. iii. p. 164) speaks of ‘‘typical tegrina from Sumatra.” As the species, 7. tigrinus, was not described from a Sumatran individual, it is difficult to gather what is meant by the expression ‘‘ typical.”’ | *518. T. mezna (J. 793). Gyo-peing-tu-ma. Arakan, Tenasserim. A specimen of 7. cambaiensis flew on board a steamer when in sight of land on the voyage from Moulmein to Rangoon.* [Tonghoo, Karen nee, at 4000 feet (W. R.). | | 519. T. n1sortus (J. 796). Thayet Myo (/.). Professor Schlegel (Mus. P.-Bas, Columbae, p. 123) adopts the title of 7. douraca, Hodgs., for this Indian dove, and restricts the Linnean title to the domestic bird of Europe (¢. ¢. p. 125). But all the authors Linneus quotes described the bird from India. It is the Zurtur indicus of Aldrovandi, and Linneus says “ habitat in India.’’ | 520. MacropyGiIa RUFICEPS. Columba ruficeps, 'Tem.; P.C. 561. Mergui, Province Wellesley, Java. A finer species akin to this inhabits the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Jf. rufipennis, nobis ;+ and the IL. tusala is likely to occur on the higher mountains of Arakan, if not further south ;. 1t is not rare on the Khasias, and a smaller race of the same is described from Hainan. { | | This Javan species may occur as stated, but the following appears to be the commoner form. | (521. M. assrmixis. M. assimilis, Hume, Str. Feath. 1. p. 441. ) Karen hills, at 3000 feet. Iris (¢), grey; bill and legs, vinous brown (W. R.); Kollidoo (D.). | (522. M. rusarra (J. 791). Karen nee (W. £&.); Kollidoo (D.). | * Beavan, Ibis, 1869, p. 406. Pb Ag SB. x¥s pp et. t Ibis, 1870, p. 356. | Pheasants, ete. 147 ig “523. CHALCOPHAPS InDIcUS (J. 798). \ _ India, Indo-China, and Malay countries, Andaman Islands; but the a Nicobar race* is a little peculiar, and corresponds with CO. marie, Bonap. a8 | Rangoon, Tonghoo, foot of Karen hills (W. R.); Tenasserim (D.). Recent investigations do not confirm the opinion that the Nicobar race of this species differs. | — tm ae A a lk ae a ee. a ome . Py =? \d . So = a —_ ao — »! - Subfam. Cananinm (Hackled Ground-Pigeons). 024, CALG@NAS NICOBARICUS. Columba nicobarica, Lin. ; Edwards, pl. 339; Pl. Enl. 491. This remarkable bird is common in the Mergui archipelago, and I have received the young from the Cocos Islets, north of the Andamans. It seems to be only able to maintain itself in islands where there are no small carnivor- ous mammalia; and I doubt, therefore, the statement that it is ‘common on | the Tenasserim coast.”’} Sar pa aor maa TE a eee i Se | | q | ; | | | | | i i 8 | | i Order GALLINACEA. Poultry-Birds. fam. Pavonidee. a = | Pheasants, ete. i f Subfam. Pavonrn (Peafowl). Hf *525. Pavo MUTICUS. Pavo muticus, L. Oo-doung. Hlliot, Mon. Phas. pt. i1. pl. 11. ih Chittagong, Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam. Invariably of darker and less vivid colouring than the species as it occurs in Java, but not otherwise differing. In the provinces of Sylhet and Assam the Indian species, P. cris- tatus, replaces it.{ It is doubtful, at present, whether this species really inhabits the Malayan peninsula or Sumatra; but Crawfurd distinctly asserts that it inhabits ‘“‘the tropical countries lying between India and China,—of the Malayan peninsula, and the islands of Sumatra and Java.”§ On the other hand, Wallace remarks that ‘‘ itis a singular fact in geographical distribution that the Peacock should not be found in Sumatra or Borneo, while the superb fl ed, A. BBS pe. t Cale. J. N. H. i. p. 605. t Cale. J. N. A. tie pe - § Tr. Ethn. Soc. .s. vol. il. p. 451. 148 Birds of Burma. Argus, fire-backed, and ocellated Pheasants of those islands are equally unknown in Java.”* Raffles must mean this species when he states that ‘the common Peacock is a native of the Malayan peninsula and of Java, and is also known to Sumatra.” He gives the Malayan name as I/’ree or Marak, © but in Sumatra he may only have seen tame Peafowl, imported from Java. The late Dr. Cantor had specimens in his collection from Pinang and Pro- vince Wellesley, but whether procured there in the wild state I am unaware ; it may be remarked, however, that the same collection contained specimens of Gallus varius, which is understood to be quite peculiar to Java. | The occurrence of this species in Burma offers a notable instance of the fact that Javan forms, unknown in the Malay peninsula south of Pinang, and in Sumatra and Borneo, reappear in Burma. | Subfam. ARGUSANINZE. 526. ARGUSANUS GIGANTEUS. Phasianus argus, L.; Elliot, Mon. Phas. pt. i. pl. 2. Mergui, Malayan peninsula, Sumatra. ‘527. PoLYPLECTRON CHINQUIS. Polyplectron chinguis, Temminck ; Pavo tibetanus, L.; Gould, B. As. pt. xxiii. fig. 1; Elliot, Mon. Phas. pt. 11. pl. 8. Doung-Kula, Monuwur, and Day-o-da-huk. Sylhet, Assam, Tenasserim provinces; South-West China (Swinhoe). | The oldest name for this species is P. thibetanus, but as it involves a geographical error, Temminck’s title is adopted by most authors. | Subfam. PHastaANINe (Pheasants). 528. GALLUS FERRUGINEUS (J. 812). Tetrao ferrugineus, Gm.; Elliot, Mon. Phas. pt. ii. pl. 9. The wild common Fowl. Abundant in the forests, and the domestic poultry of the Karéns 1s commonly recruited from the wild race, which is not the case in those parts of northern and central India where the wild and tame inhabit the same forest districts. The cheek-lappet of the cock is pure white and contrasting in the Indian race, and red in the Indo-Chinese race. The tarsi are always slate-coloured in the wild bird, but tend to become yellow in the domestic before any other change is perceptible. [Tonghoo (W. &.); Tenasserim (D.). |] * Malay Archipelago, i. p. 169. rae *®* | ee & eo S&S = = we — —s _ Pheasants, ete. 149 *529. NycTHEMERUS LINEATUS. Phasianus lineatus, Latham; P. reynaudii, Lesson; P. Fasciatus, M‘Clelland ; Elliot, Mon. Phas. pt. iii. pl. 7. eet. Pegu, Martaban, Tenasserim. Common down to the sea-level or nearly so. In Arakan the race is hybrid (Lophophorus cuviert),* and presents every gradation from JV. lineatus to G'. horsfieldit of Tippera and Sylhet.t | Karen hills(W. R.). Wagler’s generic title Genneus has precedence. | 030. N. ANDERSONT. | uplocamus andersoni, Elliot, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 137; Mon. Phas. pt. v.pl. 41. This fine species, intermediate to WV. lineatus and the well-known Silver Pheasant, WV. argentatus, Swainson,§ was discovered by Dr. J. Anderson in Yunan. | Another beautiful species, Diardigallus prelatus, Bonap.,|| inhabits the Shan States, and is now bred in European vivaria. According to M. Germain, this bird is common through the forest region of French Cochin-China. In the Yunan mountains the superb Lady Amherst Pheasant was obtained by Dr. J. Anderson. [The oldest published title with a description for D. prelatus, is crau- furdu, J. EB. Gray (Cuv. R. An. (Griffith), Aves, iii. p. 27). Mr. Craufurd brought the type (¢) from Ava, but we have no evidence that the species is indigenous to Burma, and it is therefore not here included. | 531. EupLocoMus IGNITUS. 7 Phasianus ignitus, Latham; E. vieillotté, Gray; Gould, B. As. pt. ii. pl. 8; Elliot, Mon. Phas. pt. ii. pl. 10. This large Malayan Pheasant is common along the valley of the great Tenasserim river. Kachar. Subfam. Prerpicinm (Partridges). *532. FRANCOLINUS PHAYREI. Francolinus phayrei, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xu. p. 1011; xxiv. p. 480. Common in Pegu, and a young example is contained in the British Museum from Cochin-China. Very similar to /. sinensis (Tetrao chinensis, * Tem... 2,0, yop. 1. t+ HElhot, Mon. Phas. pt. iv. pl. 4. t vide J. A. S. B. xvii. p. 817. § Elliot, Mon. Phas. pt. i. pl. 6. || Phasianus crawfurdii (?), Gray, 2 ; Gould, B. As. pt. xi. pl.4; Elliot, Mon. Phas. pt. 1. pl. 12. { Thaumalea amherstia, Gould, B. As. pt. xviil. pl. 7; Elliot, Mon. Phas. pt. i. pl. 10. ‘ : ee a’ ‘ pao, , yA _ ia % re NEALE x ite rs iat Bi le? 1 ERE Sn ST a i re DS GR Mister a = Sere So neeaee es a ouch = a a PPE tet Lee Sr Ae ni re 150 Birds of Burma. Osbeck, 7. perlatus, Gmelin), but less robust, having the bill and feet more slender. In Hainan the species is described as identical with that of South China. Sir. R. H. Schomburgk’s /. pictus from Siam is doubtless the present species. | | | Thayet Myo, Karen nee (W. #.). The slight differences between the Burman and Chinese races of this Francolin, relied on by Mr. Blyth, seem hardly sufficient to constitute a separate species. A comparison made between numerous examples from Burma and China disinclines me to concur in Mr. Blyth’s opinion. | — 533. ARBORICOLA RUFIGULARIS (J. 825). This species of Peura Partridge, which inhabits the South-East Hima- laya, at a lower altitude than 4. torqueola, was obtained by Colonel Tickell in the mountainous interior of the Tenasserim provinces, at elevations of from 3000 to 5000 feet. *534. A. INTERMEDIA. A. intermedia, nobis, J. A. S. B. xxiv. p. 277. I failed to discriminate these two races, until I had received numerous living examples of A. atrigularis from Sylhet, when I remarked the difference of A. intermedia, which I have reason to suspect was received from Arakan. There is a specimen of the latter in the British Museum, habitat unknown. (Since the above was written, Mr. W. T. Blanford has obtained A. entermedia from Arakan. ) 535. A. BRUNNEIPECTUS. A. brunneipectus, Tickell, J. A. 8S. B. xxiv. p. 276. Tenasserim mountains, from 3000 to 5000 feet ( Zickelt). | Tonghoo and Karen hills (W. £&.). | 536. A. CHLOROPUS. A. chloropus, Tickell, J. A. 8. B. xxviil. pp. 416, 463. ‘¢Tolerably numerous; but as far as my observations go, is entirely con- fined to the forests on the banks of the Zummee river. Unlike its known congeners, it avoids mountains, and inhabits low though not humid jungles, where the ground merely undulates or rises into hillocks. arly in the morning these birds come out on the pathway, scratching about in the elephants’ dung, and turning over the dead leaves for insects. They do not appear to have any crow or call, though during the pairing season this may not be the case” (Zickell). This species is nearly allied to A. charlton a re — —— . = . * —— ee -——— — — = — — ™ LHemipodes. 151. | | (Eyton), 4. pyrrhogaster (Reichenbach) of Province Wellesley, but is sufficiently distinguished. [ Eastern slopes of the Fog hills (0.). : 537. CALOPERDIX OCELLATA. : iE Letrao ocellatus, Rafiles, Tr. L. 8. xiti. p. 3822; Perdix oculea, Tem.; Hardw. Ill. | i] Zool. i. pl. 58. | - ; : i Obtained by Major Berdmore in Mergui province. Had. also Province Wellesley and Sumatra. | Temminck’s specific title has precedence. | i, 038. BAaMBUSICOLA FYTCHEI. | os . Bambusicola fytchet, J. Anderson, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 214, pl. xi. | _~ Was obtained on the hill-sides of Ponsee, at an elevation of 3000 feet. Fi e 039. RoLLULUS CRISTATUS. Columba cristata, Gmelin; Perdix coronata, Latham. Valley of the Tenasserim river, Siam, Malayan peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo. ‘‘ More common about Malacca than in the Wellesley Province and : in Tenasserim”’ (Stoliezka). i | | Must stand as Rollulus roulroul. | an *540. CoruRNIx communis (J. 829). Arakan, Martaban. [Karen nee (W. &.). | —— | | 641. C. cornomanpdeEticts (J. 830). 7 | Common in Upper Burma. | i | 542. EXCALFACTORIA CHINENSIS (J. 831). Tetrao chinensis, Lin. ; Gould, B. As. pt. x. pl. 12. Arakan, Tenasserim, Malayan peninsula and islands. q , he - . Fam. Turnicide. i « Hemipodes. ee ts 548. TuRNIX BLANFORDI. Turnix blanfordt, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxxii. p. 80; Hemipodius maculosus, Tem. (?); Turnix maculatus, Vieillot, Gal. des Oiseaux, t. 217. Arakan, Pegu.* -[Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. £.); KaBidus (D.). Not to be separated from Shanghai and Chefoo examples. | * vide Swinhoe, in P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 402. 152 — Bards of Burma. 544. T. ptumprpes (J. 838). L’. plumbipes, Hodgson, Beng. Sport. Mag. 1887, p. 345. Tenasserim specimens are quite similar to those from Nipal. | Thayet Myo, Karen nee, Tonghoo (W. R.). Not separable from Malaccan examples; but differing somewhat from Javan 7. pugnaa. | Order GRALLATORES. Waders. N.B.—Bustards are foreign to the Indo-Chinese countries, but a straggler of the Likh Florikim (Sypheotides aurita) is recorded to have been shot at Sandoway, Arakan (Bengal Sport. Mag. 1835, p. 151). Tribe LIMICOLA& (Plovers and Snipes). Kam. Charadriadee. Plovers. *545. AESACUS RECURVIROSTRIS (J. 858). Common along the banks of rivers. | Kyasoo creek (W. R.). | 546. OEDICNEMUS CREPITANS (J. 859). Yenan-khyoung (W. H. Blanford). 547. CH@ITUSIA CINEREA (J. 854). Bassein, China and Japan.* [Tonghoo (W. &.); Ye (D.). As Professor Schlegel (/. ¢.) gives Mr. Blyth’s title precedence, it may be accepted for the present. Further inves- tigation may, however, show that Temminck and Schlegel’s title was published at an earlier date. The Report in which Mr. Blyth first described C. cinerea was for March, 1842, but was only actually published with the Proceedings of the A. 8. B. for June, 1842. | #548. SARCOGRAMMA ATRINUCHALIS. Sarcogramma atronuchatis, nobis, J. A. 8. B. xxxi. p. 340, note. Common from Arakan to Malacca. It has much more black on the nape than the Indian race, margined with white below, more or less developed. [ Yey-tho, Thayet Myo, Tonghoo, Karen nee (I. R.).| # H. Schlegel, Mus. des Pays-Bas, Cursores, p. 69. Plovers. 549. SARCIOPHORUS BILOBUS (J. 856). Thayet-Myo. | Boddaert’s specific title, malabaricus, has priority, as a glance at Pl. 880 will show. | | | | Enl. “550. HopLoprERUS VENTRALIS (J. 857). Common along the banks of rivers. Mr. Swinhoe met with it in Hainan | Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. R.).] “551. SQUATAROLA HELVETICA (J. 844). Arakan. | Tonghoo (W. &.). | *552. CHARADRIUS FULVUS (J. 845). Common in the cold season. | Thayet Myo, Tonghoo (W. R.).] 558. AUGIALITES PLACIDA. Aigialites placidus, G. R. Gray, Cat. Hodgs. Coll. 2nd ed. p. 70, 1863; 4. hartingi, Swinhoe ; Hudromias tenuirostris, A. O. Hume, probably Charadrius longipes, apud David, N. Arch. de Mus. 1867, p. 38. A specimen of this bird was believed by Dr. Jerdon to have been pro- cured by him in Burma, but he was not sure whether he obtained it on the coast or inland. *554. AX. Moneoica (J. 847). Common in the cold season. *555. AX. DuBIA (J. 849). Charadrius dubius, Scopoli, Del. Fl. Faun. Insubr. ii. p. 92. | Smaller than the European 4. curonicus, but otherwise similar, and of common occurrence.* | | 4. philoppensis, apud Jerd., No. 849, and which is the number in Mr. Blyth’s MS., is=C. curonicus, Gm. But perhaps the species actually in- tended by Mr. Blyth is 4. minuta (Pallas), apud Jerdon, No. 850, and of which Lieutenant W. Ramsay obtained specimens at Tonghoo. The title C. philippensis, Lath., was founded on the same plate as that of C. dubius, Scopoli. Until the species which inhabits the island of Luzon has been studied, the correct titles for the two species cannot be determined. The synonymy is very simple, but the correct application of the various titles cannot be made until the Philippine type has been compared. | * For notice of Z. philippensis, commonly referred to the same, vide Ibis for 1867, p. 164. 154 | Birds of Burma. [556. AS. corontous (J. 849). Rangoon (W. R.).] *557. AB. ALEXANDRINUS (J. 848). | C. alecandrinus, Lin. | : Arakan. | Tonghoo (W. &.). | q i| kam. Heematopodidee. f *558. STREPSILAS INTERPRES (J. 860). 7} Arakan. | - 559. HmMaTopus ostRALEGuS (J. 862). | qi Arakan ; China and Japan (H. Schlegel). — i! fam. Glareolidee- 7 : : 41 Pratincoles. q ! %560. GLAREOLA ORIENTALIS (J. 842). | Arakan, Pegu. : [Tonghoo (W. #.).| | #561. G. nacrua (J. 848). j, Arakan, Pegu, Tenasserim. Dr. Jerdon found this species breeding at Thayet Myo, with the young just flown in May. 7 [ Tonghoo (W. £.). |] | ai | qi Fam. Recurvirostride. 1 : 1 #562. HIMANTOPUS AUTUMNALIS (J. 898). 7 » Arakan. i. leucocephalus* will doubtless be met with.} : ' The Stilt-plovers of the Old World have bright rose-coloured legs, and ? | ruby-red irides; while those of America (ZZ. nigricollis) have very much paler q i pinkish legs and dark irides; diversities which are not seen in the dry skins. : [Karen hills (W. R.).] q' | ql * Gould, Birds of Australia, vol. vi. pl. 24. a | t cf. Ibis, 1865, p. 35, 1867, p. 169; J. A. S. B. xli. pt. 2, p. 253. ; TS rr ed a NN EL = Snipes, ete. 155 fam. Sceolopacidee. Snipes, ete. *563. Toranus @Lorris (J. 894). Arakan. [ Upper Pegu (0.). | *564. T. stagnatiuis (J. 895). Arakan, Tenasserim. [Upper Pegu (0.).] *565. T. catrpRis (J. 897). Arakan. | Karen nee (W. R.).| *566. ACTITIS GLAREOLA (J. 891). Arakan. | Tonghoo, Karen nee (W. R.). | ~*567. A. ocHRorus (J. 892). ) Arakan. | Upper Pegu (0.). | *568. A. HyPoLEUcUS (J. 893). Arakan, Tenasserim. | Tonghoo (W. B.). | *569. XENUS CINEREUS (J. 876). Arakan, Tenasserim.* *570. Liwosa mGocePHALA (J. 875). Arakan. *571. NuMmENIUS LINEATUs (J. 877). Numenius lineatus, Cuvier, R. An, 2nd ed. 1. p. 521; Lesson, Tr. d’Orn. p. 565; WX. major, Fauna Japonica, Aves, pl. 66. Arakan. [Kyasoo creek (W.' R). Mr. Blyth has always maintained that the Indian differed from the European Curlew. | *572. N. pumopus (J. 878). Arakan, Tenasserim, Andamans, and Nicobars. [Thayet Myo (£.). | * of. Ibis, 18738, p. 68. - a o, n a - — oo TR cn Th ee. GUT ES ¥ wot ae RRR Age eal Es =a i ch a TARE EGO “fe feechin 2 GRE verte : deniniambdie —— - caer een 156 Birds of Burma. *573. TRinea suBARQUATA (J. 882). Arakan, Tenasserim. *574. T. pLatyruyncna (J. 886). L. platyrhyncha, Tem.; Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 157, fig. 2. Arakan. *575. T. satina (J. 884). LT. salina, Pallas; 7. damacensis, Horsfield; 7. subminuta, Middendorff. Arakan, Tenasserim. [ Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. R.). While 7. damacensis, Horsf., remains unidentified, it will be best to adopt Middendorff’s title of subminuta for this species. Mr. Swinhoe identifies 7. salina, Pallas, with 7. albescens, Tem., a species which has a red neck and throat in spring. For it, 7. ruficollis is the oldest title. | "576. 'T. tremMincxi (J. 885). Arakan. | Tonghoo (W. &.). | 577. EURYNORHYNCHUS PyemmuS (J. 887). | E. pygmea (Lin.), Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 157, fig. 1; Gould, B. As. pt. xx1. pl. 13; Ibis, 1869, pl. xi. | Estuaries of rivers, on extensive mud-banks left by the tide. *578. PHILOMACHUS PUGNAX (J. 880). Arakan. | Moerhing’s generic title cannot be used, and as Leach gave no generic characters, and was not substituting a title, Pavoncella must fall, and Machetes, Cuv., be adopted. | 579. GaLtinaGco scoLtopacina (J. 871). Common in Upper Burma. | Tonghoo (W. #&.); Pabyouk (D.). | ¥*580. G. steNURA (J. 870). The most common snipe of the Indo-Chinese and Malayan countries. [ Scolopax stenura, Kuhl, MS.; S. sthenura, Bp., An. St. Nat. 1829; S. horsfieldii, J. E. Gray, Zool. Misc. 1831, p. 2. Mr. G. R. Gray (H. L. No. 10344) most unaccountably gives Dr. Gray’s title the precedence. | Jacanas, Cranes. [581. G. eattinuta (J. 872). Upper Pegu (0.). | | 582. ScoLopax RUSTICOLA (J. 867). An example of this Woodcock was shot at Moulmein by Colonel D. Brown a few years since (fide Hume, Str. Feath. ii. p. 482). ] *583. RiYNCHEA BENGALENSIS (J. 878). Arakan, Tenasserim. | Rangoon, Yey-tho (W. R.). | kam. Parride. J acanas. *584. Meropipius rnpicus (J. 900). Arakan, 'Tenasserim. | Tonghoo (W. £.). | *585. HyDROPHASIANUS SINENSIS (J. 901). Arakan, 'Tenasserim. | Tonghoo (W. #.). Must stand J. chirurgus (Scop.), unless on com- parison the Philippine bird be found to differ. | Fam. Gruidee. Cranes. 586. GRUS ANTIGONE (J. 863). Kyo-gya. 4 Arakan and Pegu. Very numerous in the interior in large flocks. According to Lieut. Beavan, it breeds in Burma.* Cantor procured it in Province Wellesley, and it is common in Siam. | 587. G. LoNerRostRis (J. 865). G. longirostris, Tem., Fauna Japonica, Aves, pl. xxi. ; @. cinerea, of Indian authors ; ef. Ibis, 1873, p. 81. Included by Mason, and was observed by Mr. Swinhoe in Hainan. * P. Z. S. 1867, p. 762. 158 Birds of Burma. Fam. Tbidide. J J Ibises. *588. FALcrInELLUs IaNneus (J. 948). oT Arakan. : | al *589. GERONTICUS PAPILLOSUS (J. 942). Arakan. | i *590. [pis MELANOCEPHALUS (J. 941). Kula-gowk. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam. Fam. Ciconiidee. Storks. *591. TANTALUS LEUCOCEPHALUS (J. 938). Arakan, Tenasserim. Common. | Tonghoo (W. R. 2n epist.). | *592. ANASTOMUS oscrTANs (J. 940). Kha-ru-tsoke. Arakan. *593, XENORHYNCHUS AUSTRALIS (J. 917). Arakan, Tenasserim. |The Asiatic Jabiru, even if it be identical with the Australian, must take the title of asvatica, Lath. ] *594. Crconra EPIscopus (J. 920). | Ciconia microscelis, Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 151. Khyee-kheng-tswop. Arakan, Tenasserim, Malayan countries. | | Upper Pegu (0.). | | | FI 595. C. asa (J. 919). Included by Mason. 596, Luproprinus areata (J. 915). Arakan, Tenasserim. Breeds on trees on the limestone mountains. | Tonghoo (W. &. im epist.). Although long ago shown by Professor Schlegel (Mus. P.-Bas, Ardeae) that, under the title of Ardea dubia, Gmelin 2 as a a ‘ 7 — a Herons. | 159 had confounded three distinct species, namely the two Indian and the African, Mr. G. R. Gray (H. L. No. 10195) adopted Gmelin’s title for the larger Adjutant of India. It is even doubtful whether Latham’s title of argala may in strictness be employed. If it be rejected, an unexceptionable title, Professor Alfred Newton suggests, is available in _A. gigantea, RK. Forster (1795, Faun. Ind. p. 11), and the adoption of which would avoid the necessity of using Temminck’s most objectionable title of marabu. | “597. L. savantca (J. 916). Dung-tsat and Nghet-gyee. Arakan, Tenasserim, Hainan. Fam. Ardeidee. Herons. —*598. ARDEA SUMATRANA (J. 922). Ardea sumatrana, Raffles; Gould, B. Austr. vol. vi. pl. 54. Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca, Sumatra, and Australia. *599. A. cINEREA (J. 928). Generally diffused. *600. A. purPuREA (J. 924). Khyung byaing. Generally diffused. *601. Huropras ata (J. 925). Arakan. | Cf. Swinhoe, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 412, E. modesta. ] *602. H. mnTERMEDIA (J. 926), Ardea intermedia, Wagler; Fauna Japonica, Aves, pl. 69; Gould, B. Austr. vol. vi. pl. 57. 3 Frequents open places about the town of Rangoon. Obtained at Bhamo. *603. H. aarzerra (J. 927). Common in the interior. 604. H. EULOPHOTES. H. eulophotes, Swinhoe, Ibis, 1860, p. 44; Gould, B. Austr. vol. vi. pl. —. Obtained by Major Berdmore at Mergui. OEE 160 Birds of Burma. | 605. H. concotor. | : Demiegretta concolor, nobis, J. A. S. B. xv. p. 372. | Arakan (Ramri), Andaman and Nicobar Islands.* — *606. BupHus coromannus (J. 929). Arakan. *607. ARDEOLA GRAYI (J. 930). . Arakan. | Karen nee (W. &.). | ) [608. A. PRASINOSCELES. Be A. prasinosceles, Swinhoe, Ibis, 1860, p. 64. { rte Examples obtained by Mr. Davison at Tavoy and Ye-boo, are thus 7 sil identified by Mr. Hume (Str. Feath, ii. p. 483). ] iy jl *609. Burorrpxs savanicus (J. 931). Common. " [Tonghoo, Rangoon (W. #.). | i 1 *610. ARDETTA FLAVICOLLIS (J. 932). . Common. | [Tonghoo, Rangoon (W. f.). | be it *611. A. crnnAMOMEA (J. 933). it Common. | q , [ Rangoon, Tonghoo (W. &.). | q qk *612. A. stnEensIs (J. 984). : Common. j- [Tonghoo (W. £.). | 7% ¥613. GoRSACHIUS MELANOLOPHUS. ’ Ardea melanolopha, Raffles, Tr. L. 8. xi. p. 326. q \ Specimen obtained in Ramri by Major J. R. Abbott. | gq tf - \y * Ardea jugularis, Forster, is given by Herr v. Pelzeln from the Nicobars, in addition ; 1 to A. concolor. | = [The specific title of sacra, Gm., supersedes that of concolor, Blyth (ef. Walden, Ibis, q 4 1878, p. 318). A. jugularis, Forster, is synonymous. ] - el Rails, Coots, ete. 161 *614. Nycricorax GRIsEus (J. 937). Arakan, Bhamo. | Rangoon (W. £.). | fam. Rallidee. Rails, Coots, etc. “615. PorpHYRIO POLIOCEPHALUS (J. 902). Arakan, Tenasserim. P. smaragdinotis is given from Siam.* | | Tonghoo (W. R.). Latham’s description agrees well with the common } i Indian purple Coot, He says nothing about a brown ‘back, and that the i: whole head, neck, and lower parts are unicolorous pale lavender-blue, as my | ae : | EE : stated by Mr. Hume (Str. Feath. 11. p. 185). Latham describes the bird as having the back purple; the head and neck, blue-grey, growing to azure &g towards the chin; breast and belly verditer green (Suppl. i. p. 375). | FT *616. GALLICREX CRISTATUS (J. 904). | : ie Arakan, Tenasserim. _ : | Upper Pegu (0.). Must stand G. cimereus (Gm..). | sgt *617. PorzANA PHa@NIcURA (J. 907). Rallus phenicurus, Forster; Gould, B. As. pt. xxiv. pl. 12. Arakan, Tenasserim, Siam. Common. rs [Tonghoo (W. £.). | | & *618. P. marvuETta (J. 909). Arakan. ~ *619. P. promma (J. 910). i | Common. 1 e620. PP ruses (J. 911). Common. *621. Hypormnipra striata (J. 913). Common. [Rangoon (W. R.).| 4a : * Tbis, 1864, p. 246, note. [P. smaragdinus, Tem. P. C. 421=P. indicus, Horsf., and not the African P. smaragno- re tus, Tem.= Gallinula madagascariensis, Lath., is the species alluded to. ] 11 162 Birds of Burma. | 622. Ratrrva ceyronica (J. O1f}. Lhayet Myo (0.).] | 623. R. rascrava. ftatlus fasciatus, Raffles, Tr. L. S: xiii. p. 328, Amherst (D.).] “624. Rattus rnpicus (J. 914). fi. japonicus, Schlegel. Arakan. *625. GALLINULA CHLOROPUS (J. 905). Arakan. | Upper Pegu (0.).] *626. Furica atra (J. 908). Arakan. *627. Popica PERSONATA. Podica personata, G. R. Gray, P. Z. S. 1848, 90, Aves, pl. 4; Gen. Birds, pl. 173. Cachar, Tenasserim provinces, Malacca. | ‘These very rare birds in Tenasserim,”’ remarks Col. Tickell, “are met with in shady deep narrow streams in forests, whether in the tideway or remotely inland. They swim rapidly, but seldom dive; and although emi- nently aquatic in conformation, resort, strange to say, for safety to land. Scrambling up the steep banks when shot at, and running with unexpected rapidity into dense thickets, its flight is like that of the Coot, or Water-hen, squattering along the surface of the water.” * Kan. Laride. Gulls. 628. Larus rcrnyaktus (J. 979). Ramri. *629. XEMA BRUNNEICEPHALA (J. 980). Chrowcocephalus tibetanus, Gould. Mason also includes X. ridibunda. Arakan. * Tickell, J. A. S. B. xxviii. p. 455. 630. LESTRIS POMATORHINUS. An example in mature plumage procured by Colonel Tickell near Moul- mein.* ; Fam. Sternidee. Terns. *631. GELOCHELIDON ANGLICA (J. 983). Arakan. : “632. HypRocHELIDon rnpica (J. 984). Arakan, Tenasserim. 633. THaassEvus cristatus (J. 989). Sterna bergii, Licht. ; S. velox, Ruppell. Tenasserim coast. 634. Tn. meprus (J. 990). Sterna media, Horsfield; S. afinis, Ruppell; S. bengalensis, Lesson ; 8. torresii, Gould. Arakan, Tenasserim. *635. SEENA AURANTIA (J. 985). A common river Tern. [ Tonghoo, Sittang river (W. £.). | —¥636. STERNA MELANOGASTRA (J. 987). — Sterna melanogastra, Tem.; Gould, B. As. pt. x. pl. 16. A common river Tern. | Of maritime Terns which must needs occur on the coast may be men- tioned Onychoprion melanauchen (Tem.), P.C. 427, which breeds plentifully in the Nicobars; O. panaya, Anous stolidus, and A. tenwirostris.t On the coast must also necessarily occur Phaéton ethereus, Sula fiber, and probably Fregata. [Tonghoo (W. #.). Horsfield’s title, javanica, has priority. | [637. S. mrnura (J. 988). ; Tonghoo (W. B£.). | . ae ee Irrawady river (W. R.). I have not as yet been able to identify this species. | * J. A.S. B. xxvii. p. 416. t of. Ibis, 1867, p. 178. Terns. : 163 164 | Birds of Burma. 689. Ruyncnors atBrconiis (J. 995). Not rare. Frequently seen on the Tavoy river, according to Mason. | Tonghoo (W. R.).| | Order NATATORES. ? ) foe! Tribe TOTIPALMAT. Ai. .. ; fam. Pelecanidee. Pelicans. 640. PELECANUS JAVANICUS. | Common. | ) | Jerdon’s number is left blank in MS. | : *641 P. PHILIPPINENSIS. P. philippinensis, Gm.; Ann. M.N. H. xiv. p. 122; J. A. 8. B. xviii. p. 821. | Common. | i, | Jerdon’s number is left blank in MS. | _— = : kam. Graculidee. Cormorants. 642. GRacuLus carzo (J. 1005). : Obtained by Colonel Briggs at Tavoy,* and common in Upper Burma. Ih Finlayson probably means this Cormorant when he mentions having ty procured ‘‘a fine species of black Pelican”’ in the Gulf of Siam. iy | Tonghoo (W. R.).] _ 643. G. FuscrcoLiis (J. 1006). Phalacrocorax sulcirostris, Brandt. Bhamo, Mouloung lake (J. Anderson). ; 644. G. premaus (J. 1007). Ten-gyve. Common. | Tonghoo, Sittang river (W. &.).] * P. Z. 8. 1859, p. 150. Darters. kam. Plotidee. Darters. *645. Prorus mELANocaster (J. 1008). Ten-gyte. | Arakan, Tenasserm. Enormous flocks near Mengoon (J. Anderson). The alleged Australian species (P. novehollandie, Gould) differs in no respect. | Tonghoo (W. R.).] Tribe LAMELLIROSTRES. Fam. Anatidee. *646, SARCIDIORNIS MELANONOTUS (J. 950). Tau-won-bat. _ Common. | Tonghoo (W. £&.).] ft *647, DENDROCYGNA ARCUATA (J. 952). at j Common. J. major is also included by Mason. | Tonghoo (W. £&.). | = *648. CasARCA RUTILA (J. 954). | Arakan, Bhamo. 649. C. LEvcoprerRA (J. 955). Inhabits the valleys of the great rivers, from the Megna at least to the Tenasserim. The Anas scutulata, S. Miiller, seems to be a domesticated, if ie not hybrid, variety of this species, and the examples of it in the British and | Leyden Museums have much intermixture of white in the plumage. %650. NErropus COROMANDELIANUS (J. 951), Karagat. Common. [Tonghoo (W. £.). | #651. ANAS PacILORHYNcHA (J. 959). _ Arakan, Bhamo, Tenasserim. *652. A. CARYOPHYLLACEA (J. 960). | A. caryophyllacea, Latham; Gray and Mitchell, Gen. Birds, pl. 168. Arakan, Bhamo. 166 Birds of Burma. “653. A. sTREPERA (J. 961). Arakan. *654. A, ACUTA (J. 962). Arakan. *655. A. crrcra (J. 965). Arakan, Tenasserim. Has been known to breed near Moulmein. | Tonghoo (W. £.).] “656. A. crEcca (J. 964). a Arakan, common at Bhamo, Hainan. = *657. A. PENELOPE (J. 968). | | Arakan, Hainan.* i “658. Furiauta nrroca (J. 969). Arakan. 659. Branra Rrvurina (J. 967). Bhamo. | [If employed, Branta should be written Brenthus. But as the type of | Scopoli’s genus (Ann. I. Hist. Nat. p. 67) is A. bernicla, Lin., A. rufina can- not well be included under it. | Tribe (?) fam. Podicipidee. . Grebes. *660. Popicers purirprEnsis (J. 975). Arakan. | Tonghoo (W. £.).] * A. punctata (Anas punctata, Cuv., Gould, B. Austr. vii. pl. 11; Querquerdula : andamanensis ? Tytler) inhabits the Andaman Islands (Ball, J. A. S. B. xli. pt. ii. p. 290). | [Not 4. punctata, Cuv., but I. gibberifrons, 8. Miiller= M. alboguiaris, Hume. ] Birds of Burma. - 167 | From the total number of birds known to inhabit Burma, 660, as noted in the foregoing list, four must be deducted. Namely: 1. Paleornis melanorhynchus, apud Blyth. 2. Leraspizias rhodogastra. 3. Micropternus burmannicus=M. rufinotus. 4, Pellorneum minor=P. tickells. The next seven species may have been confounded with species also enumerated : 5. Caprimulgus indicus with C. jotaka. 6. Cypselus batassiensis with C. infumatus. 7. Sturnia malabarica with S. nemoricola. 8. Brachyurus megarhynchus with B. moluccensis. 9. Cryptolopha burki with C. tephrocephalus. 10. Orthotomus edela with O. flavi-virrdis. 11. Macropygia ruficeps with M. assimilis. And the total may have to be still further reduced by three more species, namely : 12. Sturnia ak its occurrence not resting on good evidence. 13. Machlolophus subviridis, apparently I. spilonotus, juv. 14. Brachypodius cinereiventris, perhaps a variety only of B. melano- cephalus. The following four ‘species, not separately enumerated, may have to be added : 1. Megalema virens, n addition to ML. marshallorum. 2. Hemixus hildebrandi, in addition to H. flavala. 3. Criniger grisevceps, in addition to C. flaveolus. 4. Osmotreron vernans. 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