590,5 FI v, 18:1,11 cop, 2 CENTRAL CIRCULATION BOOKSTACKS The person charging this material is re- sponsible for its renewal or its return to ?he library from which it was borrowed on or before the Latest Date stamped below. You may be charged a m.n.mum fee of $75.00 for each lost book. CAU TEUEPHONE CENTER, 033-8400 JUL21 1998 When renewing by phooe, write new due date below previous due date. FX FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY FOUNDED BY MARSHALL FIELD, 1893 v PUBLICATION 272 ZOOLOGICAL SERIES VOL. XVIII, No. 1 DESCRIPTIONS OF FIVE NEW INDO-CHINESE BIRDS * BY OUTRAM BANGS AND JOSSELYN VAN TYNE WILFRED H. OSGOOD CUKATOR, DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY EDITOR CHICAGO, U. S. A. APRIL 9, 1930 FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY FOUNDED BY MARSHALL FIELD, 1893 PUBLICATION 272 ZOOLOGICAL SERIES VOL. XVIII, No. 1 DESCRIPTIONS OF FIVE NEW INDO-CHINESE BIRDS BY OUTRAM BANGS AND JOSSELYN VAN TYNE WILFRED H. OSGOOD CURATOR, DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY EDITOR V NATURAL HISTORY CHICAGO, U. S. A. APRIL 9, 1930 '~ "--"vr/ OFT-': DEC 9-1; ; j PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY FIELD MUSEUM PRESS 510.5 FJ DESCRIPTIONS OF FIVE NEW INDO-CHINESE BIRDS BY OUTRAM BANGS AND JOSSELYN VAN TYNE The five birds here named were secured by the members of the William V. Kelley-Roosevelts Asiatic Expedition of Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, the Indo-China division of the expedi- tion being under the leadership of Harold J. Coolidge, Jr. The large collection of birds obtained on this expedition is in our hands and we hope soon to publish a detailed account of it in a later number of Field Museum publication. The present paper is a preliminary one containing only descrip- tions of some new forms. Garrulax erythrocephalus hendeei subsp. nov. Type from Chapa, Tonkin. No. 68007 Field Museum of Natural History. Adult female. Collected February 15, 1929, by R. W. Hendee. Orig. No. 6. Characters. — Of the eight forms that Stuart Baker (Fauna British India) considers geographical races of Garrulax erythrocephalus the new form needs comparison only with melanostigma Blyth, from which it differs in having the back slightly grayer, the throat duller reddish brown, and the sides of the neck and the entire chest strongly "scaled" — the feathers of these regions having pale gray edges and dusky centers. Wing of type, 95; tail, 97 mm. This well-marked form is named for the able young naturalist Russell W. Hendee, whose death of tropical fever was a sad blow to his fellow members of the expedition. Cursonia crispifrons saxatilis subsp. nov. Type from Nam Na River at Bac Tan Trai, Tonkin. No. 68008 Field Museum of Natural History. Adult male. Collected February 26, 1929, by J. Van Tyne. Orig. No. 430. Characters. — Differs from Cursonia crispifrons crispifrons (Blyth) of the limestone ranges of Tenasserim in being gray in general coloration instead of olive brown. Upper parts grayish olive brown, the dark edges of the feathers deep black. Lower parts: throat white, heavily striped with deep black, breast and belly dark gray. Wing, 75; tail, 74 mm. 4 FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY — ZOOLOGY, VOL. XVIII This very gray and black form was found only on the limestone hills whence came the type. Several were shot there by Mr. Coolidge but all but the type were lost in the holes in the rocks into which they fell. Schoeniparus rufogularis kelleyi subsp. nov. Type from Phuoc Mon, Quangtri, Annam. No. 68009 Field Museum of Natural History. Breeding male. Collected January 30, 1929, by J. Van Tyne. Orig. No. 167. Characters. — A very distinct form, differing sharply from S. r. major, S. r. blanchardi, and S. r. stevensi in having the throat band broader and deep chestnut in color — very much darker than in any of the other known forms. The head and whole upper parts are much darker than in any of the other races. Wing of type, 66; tail, 50 mm. Named for Mr. William V. Kelley, who financed the expedition. Alcippornis poiocephala alearis subsp. nov. Type from Muong Moun, Tonkin. No. 68010 Field Museum of Natural History. Adult male. Collected March 29, 1929, by J. Van Tyne. Orig. No. 921. Characters. — Most nearly like Alcippornis p. magnirostris (Walden) and as in that form with sooty brown coronal stripes and grayish brown head (thus differing from Alcippornis p. haringtoniae Hartert). From Alcippornis p. magnirostris the new form differs in its darker, less olive brown back; duller, less cinnamon-rufous rump and outer edges of wing feathers; and in its more cinnamon-rufous under parts. Wing of type, 67; tail, 60 mm. Phylloscopus pernotus sp. nov. Type from Muong Yo, Laos. No. 68011 Field Museum of Natural History. Adult female. Collected May 19, 1929, by J. Van Tyne. Orig. No. 1734. Characters. — Somewhat similar to Phylloscopus trivirgatus ricketti (Slater) but smaller, and breast and belly white instead of yellow. Upper parts rather duller olive green than in Phylloscopus t. ricketti and dark head stripes duller — olivaceous dusky instead of black. Lower parts very different; throat and under tail coverts yellow, breast and belly white, becoming grayish on sides. Wing, 50; tail, 35.5 mm. (the wing in a long series of Phylloscopus t. ricketti measures 53 to 56 mm.). UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS-URBANA 30112042393345