, meth ? NM rasan vn! ar UH >, + a PROCEEDINGS OF THE SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON FOR THE YEAR 1882. T= OARS PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY, AND SOLD AT THEIR HOUSE IN HANOVER SQUARE. LONDON: MESSRS. LONGMANS, GREEN, READER, AND DYER, PATERNOSTER ROW, Lik el OF THE COUNCIL AND OFFICERS OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. 1882. COUNCIL. Proressor W. H. Frowrr, LL.D., F.R.S., President. Maror-Gen. Tux Lorp Anrnenr, | E. W. H. Hotpsworts, Esq. C.B. Henry E. Dresstr, Esq. Cuartes Drumuonn, Esq., Trea- surer. Sree JosprpH Fayrer, K.C.S.L., F.R.S. Joun P. Gasstor, Esq. F, DuCanr Gopman, Esq. Lr.-Cot. H. H. Gopwin-Atsten, F.R.S. Cot. J. A. Grant, C.B., F.R.S. Dr. A. GintuEr, F.R.S. Dr. Epwarp Hamttron, Vice- President. Prorrssor Mrvarr, F.R.S., Vice- President. Proressor Newton, F.R.S. Henry Pottocgs, Esq. Ossert Satvin, Esq., F.R.S. W. Aysarorp Sanprorp, Esq. Puitie Lurtey Scrater, Esq., M.A., Pa.D., F.R.S., Secretary. Rv. Hon, George SciatEeR-Boorn, M.P. JosepH TRAVERS Suite, Esq. Capt. George EK. SHELLEY. PRINCIPAL OFFICERS. P. L. Sctater, Esq., M.A., Ph.D., F.R.S., Secretary. W. A. Fores, Esy., B.A., Prosector. Mr. A. D. Bartierr, Superintendent of the Gardens. Mr. F. H. Warernouss, Librarian. Mr. Joun Barrow, Accountant. Mr. W. J. Witriams, Chief Clerk. LIST OF THE CONTRIBUTORS, With References to the several Articles contributed by each. Page Baron, L., L.M.S. Missionary. Notes on the Habits of the Aye-aye of Madagascar in its PPGRING: She. 2 oa hai SE te Sas ears Stew ge OOo BartTLett, Epwarp, Curator of the Maidstone Museum. On some Mammals and Birds collected by Mr. J. Haux— Webbie Masterd Pera’ fo402 ws. vd Sj adore ss we cen sie OOS Betz, F. Jerrrey, M.A., F.Z.S., Professor of Comparative Anatomy in King’s College, London. Descriptions of new or rare Species of Asteroidea in the Collection of the British Musum. (Plate VI.) .......... 121 An Attempt to apply a Method of Formulation to the Species of the Comatulide ; with the Description of a new paper te ete EN ee teenies acs wae oo bane . 530 Exhibition of examples of Limneus truncatulus ........ 634 Studies in the Holothuroidea—I. On the Genus Psolus and the Forms allied thereto. (Plate XLVIII.).......... 641 Note on a Crinoid from the Straits of Magellan ........ 650 iv Buastus, Dr. Witnieno, C.M.Z.S. On a Collection of Birds from the Isle of Ceram made by Dr. Platen in November and December 1881 ...........- Bovutencer, G. A., C.M.Z.S. Notes on a South-American Frog lately living in the Society’s Gardens. (Plate X11];). <3... 44: <2... eee Observations upon the Heloderma ..........++0+0.-: Description of an apparently new Species of Lizard of the Genus.Sceloporus. (PlatetLWE.).< 2 &. Serhan tegen 396 Stevenson, Henry, F.L.S. Exhibition of, and remarks upon, a specimen of the Dusky Petre): from: Norfolke sitsdis ine Swans on oie pl tepeiires Sew ekee eee TaczanowskI, L., C.M.Z.S. Liste des Oiseaux recueillis par M.Stolzmann au Pérou nord-oniental. :(PlatestL., IL. )ac fa.600 bP ee 2 TreceTmeteEr, W. B., F.Z.S. Exhibition of a skull of Rhinoceros sumatrensis and of some horns of a Buffalo and Deer from Borneo Tuomas, Ouprietp, F.Z.S., Zoological Department, British Museum. On the African Mungooses. (Plate III.) ............ 49 On a Collection of Rodents from North Peru. (Plate IV.) 98 xv Page On a small Collection of Rodents from South-Western tae (Ie RIN rac tonne aaron etapa Eras sae «LOG Ona a small Collection of Mammalia from Central Mexico 371 Description of a new Species of Rat from China. (Plate Description of two new Species of Péeropus from tlhe Caroline Islands. (Plates LIV., LV.)........-- -¢:02006 738 THomson, ARTHUR. Notes on a Species of Stick Insect reared in the Insect- House in the Society’s Gardens. (Plate LII.) ........). 718 Trimen, Rouanp, F.L.S., F.Z.8., &e., Curator of the South- African Museum, Cape Town. On an apparently undescribed Sun-bird from Tropical South-western Africa. (Plate XXXII.) .............. 451 Tristram, Rev. Canon H. B., M.A. (Oxon.), F.R.S., C.M.Z.S. Description of a new Species of Land-Rail from East NUEHCH Ces JLOde Fane ot TN, Sere Sas Me es aa oaret = _ 93 Van Dyck, W., M.D. On the Modification of a Race of Syrian Street-Dogs by means of Sexual Selection. With a Preliminary Notice by Coarirs. Darwin, FBS, PeZ. Sci. 3. 6 sae ny wens 367 Watson, Morrison, M.D., F.Z.S., Professor of Anatomy, the Owens College, Manchester. On the Muscular Anatomy of Proteles as compared with that of Hyena and Viverra Waite, E. W., F.Z.S. Notes on Birds collected in the Argentine Republic. With Notes by P. L. Scuarer, M.A., Pa.D., FBS. ..¢..:55.. 591 ERRATA. Page 178, top line, for villicollis read vitticollis. 303, line 24 from the bottom, for p. 208 read p. 298. 503, ,, 26 from the bottom, for macroscelis read macrocelis. 682, ,, 24 from the bottom, for jussoni read qussont. 683, ,, 8 from the bottom, for tetragoaa read tetragona. LIST OF WOODCUTS. 1882. Page Last lower molars of Herpestes ichnewmon and H. albicauda,....... 76 Liver, stomach, duodenum, &c. of Rkamphastor dicolorus .....+.. 95 Plantar surface of left pes of Fossa ... cece ceeeee seer eeneeereee 151 Pads of Genetta tigrind .....02 cercveves FR ACI ORMOO TINO Doe 152 Milk-teeth of Viverra civetta .......++ San CoN ee ere ete Secret 155 Prescrotal scent-glands of Genetta tigrinad ....+.++. rile, Nai eauetatets! 156 Pads of Prionodon ..... SRI Ob.otis IR IOraOO CAE OHNO Dan oO Oamer 158 External form of Potand © ....5.ec pc eee eee r rere t eee cencseeces 160 External form of Arctogale ..... RE onthe etie cisiers oerttne apsvonsie 164 Half basis cranii and half mandible of Arctogale ........+-.+005 . 165 Pads of Hemigalea ....... PF re a ee sis oi heres ehejecerepeter eke 166 Pads of left pes of Cynogale .ivsesecerecsrnenerseeneernneennne 172 Milk-teeth of Cynogale .......- aie taaaterstete site cesterel Megeuersreciecmeces ciate 174 Half basis cranii and half mandible of Suricata .........0+seeeeee 184 Claws of Viverride..........+- Joc bid. o POD CURRIN COHOI OAD OF 192 Soles of the paws of Cryptoproctd.s..sceseesreneeneren enc eneeas 195 Diagrams to show the mechanism of the “kink” of the neck in the TETIGHEY, pine Ge ROnDe DOr DOO OO. TIO DOI sce pIeo corset Onricigicn: 211 Tongue of Erethizon dorsatus..... c+ seecee cree rece ene enenenens 272 Stomach of Hrethizon dorsatus .....+++« BB on Steck btn mre 273 Ceecum of Erethizon dorsatus (exterior) «1.1... e essere ee Feet 274 Ceecum of Erethizon dorsatus (interior) .....ee eee esse eee eens »» 276 Diaphragmatic aspect of the liver of Hrethizon dorsatus .......... 276 Abdominal aspect of the liver of Brethizon dorsatus ........++.. oe She Brain of Errethizon dorsatus .s..cec sc eece cer ccc cen et eee ceeeces 278 Brachial plexus of Erethizon dorsatus ....+.++s+eeeerveenenees .. 279 Lumbo-sacral plexus of Erethizon dorsatus ...+4..eeeeeeee evens TRO Palate of Myrmecophaga jubata... 1. ses cec cece rece cere eee e eens 288 Brain of Myrmecophaga jubata (from above) «1+... e reer ees 292 Brain of Myrmecophaga jubata (from the side and from the inside). . 293 Diagram of right cerebral hemisphere of Tamandua tetradactyla,... 295 Female generative organs of Myrmecophaga jubata .......-.++++. 297 Deeper adductor muscles of the right thigh of Pterocles arenarius .. 316 Gastrocnemius muscle of right side of Pterocles arenarius ........ 319 Intestines of Pterocles arenarius 6... cece eee cee eee e ete n ees 323 Ceca of Pterocles arenarius and Syrrhaptes paradoxus ........++55 324 Duodenum of Pterocles arenarius ...... ccc cece cere eee e eee e eens 825 Duodenum of Syrrhaptes paradoxus . 0... 0c recente nee eens 326 Diagram showing the supposed relationship of the Pteroclide...... 3el Trachea of Seleucides igrd ..... 0. ce eevee nee teen eens 334 Head of Cyanomyias ceclestisS 6... ccc cece ence renee nee eens 342 xx Page Geoemyda impressa (upper surface)... 0... cee eee eee eee 344 Geoemyda impressa (lower surface) ..... faci Pca RON Pa Chen REO pc 345 Geoemyda tmpressa (Sid0 VIOW).s.....-60ccccere cs eeeenivccreeers 346 Prachew Of Manucogia aang \ 3 eal ae hs * vi - 7 rf ak vine: avn — ~ ; 2 _ “ ? 2 a6 Face seb ena S per Tete om uty nase set Se 4 7 A vei Sea DO YTAIIO 10120100 A is Pal oN be es ot ae hat ls : 4 toca bh, 3 ae ora we , X. XI. XII. XIII. XIV. XV. QV XVII. XVIII. PReNXG XX. XXI. XXII. XXIII. XXIV. XXV. XXVI. XXVII. XXVIII. XXIX. XXX. XXXI. LIST OF PLATES. 1882. Page Fig. 1. Chlorophonia torrejoni. Fig. 2. Diva branicku Figs. 1, 2. Picumnus steindachneri 3, Q......+.000+ 2 Hips 3.5 PicumnusgelskisiG ules aieatesialaieisis «laielas «vittarts Pehinog ale; mello ao setachninle tafe, ake sata clit « BN Pec 587 Fig. 1. Erythropygia ruficauda ......sceeeeeseees 588 Fig. 2. Erythropygia zambesiana ........s+eeeees Cyanorhamphts satssett.. 0. 052+: 00 scence ever one 630 CONTSTTATCNOUES re areas wre) ore a olet els transite la aelelele lens eigen 631 Fig. 1. Psolus (Lophothuria) peronii.........+.+++ } 641 Fig. 2. Psolus (Hypopsolus) ambulator .... Mollusca of the ‘ Lightning’ and ‘ Porcupine ’ ee 656 TN MOISE cos. cds ua acco dad eee aoMDOnU SH Sobo. ¢ } Phasianus humie ..... dea njecvaheiohateie's ein ate We Sota 715 Bacillus putellifers Vitec aewal lite sae icopik ae itele mrauye 718 Arnoglossus!GTORMOANIE <0... lei «ass ehein «tone ieetol ee 748 Pieropusipheocephalus..,wetaje.cire 6 siols s/sh1eysieisleratale 755 IPEEN OPUS ON EVI CETIS Telste Nave tatoo) Stoke ales glans a) alee , XIII, 1846. = 4s. 6d. ... 6s. ose Ma ei leitch - 4s. 6d. ... 6s. » XIV. 1846. 5s 4s, 6d. ... 6s. VIS 1838: a 4s. 6d. ... 6s. XV. 1847. ‘fs 4s. 6d. ... 6s, 3 VALI 1840! 5 4s. 6d. ... 6s. Teden 1830-47. 5 4s. 6d. ... 68. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. 8vo. 13 vols. and Index. (Second Series.) Letterpress only. With Plates Coloured. To Fellows. To the Public. To Fellows. To the Public, ie Wecsat =e Set Part XVI. 1848:1 vol. 8vo.4s. 6d. ... 6s. ... Price 1 1 0 enue foal > VET 1819: x, ASAGUPAL &. MEGST es 26, SOs 0 we 7-6 » XVIII. 1850. * AS3Od.) ws 3 (G8: st EL a 118 0 S XIX. 1851. 55 Age Otn some OS. sa oO LG OE tol 0% 5 XX. 1852. Pe ASM mgs OR nas has) AO On Os L., 1—0* 5 XXI. 1853. _ AS SOL eee OS hoes say OG. .O 1 4 0 » XXII. 1854. 3 AS SOG. =e. SOs cee. Els OR IO FG .0 » XXIII. 1855. x, Seiden f.2) 1) 68: ssh WY PGE 118 0O* » XXIV, 1856. ~ CER iowe eee ee ye si ctl 10 PSs » XXV. 1857. » ae Ofemue es OS: se LAG he Ffleak es 3) Le ESbSs PA 46. 00 ees se OS: at 12) 0) sack » XXVIT. 1859. sa 4se6de ee. 68: ep edb Ui 2 2._0* » XXVIII. 1860. Pe 4; Gd0) <2 Gs; s8 212450 ae 2 50 Index 1848-60. =A 4S 6d:is~ ce Gs: ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, 1848-60. 8vo. 6 vols. Plates Uncoloured. Plates Coloured. To Fellows. To the Public. To Fellows. To the Publie, ae Ee ee a ee 0 a's, Vd: Fe ene Mammalia’ 2. cpceveess Ivol,.. 2) {65.2 110. One. Pree 2 |S 0. eaeeonan) VER sos ccs eene ten OVO sre) (OO nse ONO was 5, 4.15 JUS o OeEGEEe Reptilia etsPiscés 73) Tavyol,° "Ob (9° el SPOS. SS AT BP6 i 1040 Mollusca,...:.....0.e0 i vols Ones 9s sale Di \...oiger Ir Srtlo 110 0 Annnlosa, ct: Radiata Liyol: silane Ga G20t 2 Ore 559 20°38 10 3 3 O* * No copies of these volumes remain in stock, 3 PROCEEDINGS OF THE SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. Complete. Letterpress only. Illustrations only. ae To the To 'o the To ‘o the Fellows. Public. Fellows Public. Fellows. Public, 1861, cloth 32s......... BAS. vcemt as ASS Ol eontnece Gs. setae AT sri Odbaaanest « 4ls. 862, ee ASS occ cans ATS. icescens 43360 vccenase OStce ccm DiS: OGixcesvexs 41s. US er lila (22 Ree Al Suwcactes ASHGd Riscese< 685. ccs0er 27S 6d .ccccesxt 4ls. | fel ty GRR eps 1 eee 1g) opatass As Gdlsxs 4 hts Cais. dss 2 siGdsurl de: 4ls. WSORS. 9,0" - OeRaceoss AGS aio 9pac4 OO pap rdct cs Gsiveeeea B75. Odsnispaees 4ls. 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Vol. I., containing 59 Plates (1833-35) Priee3 13 6.. 418 O* Vol. II., a GA alts (1835-41), _,,.-4..0,.0..%5.5 6, 6* Vol. III., # 03 sass 1842-49) ,.3 8 6.0 411 0* Vol. IV. ci aise 1851-62) 5, 6 2 0... 8) 2.6% Vol. V., S G/aa; 1862-66) 94 5-3 6... 619 .0 Vol. VI., 0 Saas CISG6-69). "5.1 5° OCR 1S. “OO WolsVIIE, =. 95; 130: (1869=72)) ,., 817 0°... AlRIG..0 VolsVilt,* | ;; 82a CISA2= Pt) '§, 968 Sn ed2 Ths0 Vol. IX., Bs wile re CISTD 10) xq de Oe 00 ieclG) 0.40 Vol. X., 94 IST —fo) ay 1D) OleG . eeloug 0 Vol. XI. »part 1, containing 4 plates (Jan. H380)..5.0-12 Oe. a -Ov16) 0 Vol. x: eh = 7 » (Aug. 1880)., 018 O.. 1 4 0 MoI sees s Sines (Mar. LOGh)-. Soe Ghee FOO Vol. XI., ,, 4, F 3, VApr.t88r);, 0°72 “6.2928 10° 0 Nol, 3350s » 18 , (Junel88l),,018 6.. 1 4 0 VOIE:XT 55) 6 * 6 45) (Jan: 1882).,,,. 0-12 0. .<. 0, 16, 0 Vol. XL; ,, 7, F Set ssoe Oct. 1882) 0° tae 0. 0 Viole, 55, 8; ie lies oe (an LSSS) a Olea O..k O 16 6 i Only imperfect copies of these volumes remain in ae LISTS OF THE ANIMALS IN THE SOCIETY’S GARDENS. List of Vertebrated Animals Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London. 8vo. 1862. Price 1s. 6d. List of Vertebrated Animals Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London. (Second Edition.) 8vo. 1863. Price 1s. 6d. List of Vertebrated Animals Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London. (Third Edition.) 8vo. 1865. Price 1s. 6d. List of Vertebrated Animals Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London. (Fourth Edition.) 8vo. 1866. Price 1s. 6d. Reyised List of the Vertebrated Animals now or lately Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London. 8vo. 1872. Price 2s. Revised List of the Vertebrated Animals now or lately Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London.—Supplement, containing Additions received in 1872, 1878, and 1874. 8vo. 1875. Price 1s. List of the Vertebrated Animals now or lately Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London. (Sixth Edition.) S8yo. 1877. Price 3s. 6d. List of the Vertebrated Animals now or lately Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London. (Seventh Edition.) 8vo. 1879. Price 3s. 6d. List of the Vertebrated Animals now or lately Living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London.—First Supplement, containing Additions received in 1879. 8vo. 1880. Price 1s. 6d. Such of these publications as are in stock may be obtained at the Society’s Office (11 Hanover Square, W.), at Messrs. Longmans’, the Society’s pub- lishers (Paternoster Row, E.C.), or through any bookseller. Price 6d., Sewed, A GUIDE TO THE GARDENS OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. Thirty-sixth Edition, corrected according to the present Arrange- ment of the Gardens, By PHILIP LUTLEY SCLATER, M.A., Ph.D., F.R.S., PROCEEDINGS OF THE SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS OF TE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. January 3, 1882. Prof. Flower, LL.D., F.R.S., President, in the Chair. Mr. W. A. Forbes exhibited and made remarks on the horns shed by the male Prongbuck (Anéilocapra americana) living in the | Society’s Gardens since December 1879, which had been dropped, one on November 15 and the other on November 24, of 1881. This, it was believed, was the first instance on record of one and the same individual of this species having shed its horns in consecutive years, though that this event took place periodically had been rendered nearly certain from previous observations!. Professor Owen, C.B., F.R.S., read the twenty-third of his series of memoirs upon the extinct birds of the genus Dinornis and its allies. The subject of this memoir had been discovered, during the con- struction of a road in Nelson province, South Island of New Zealand, in a cavern of that remote district. Along with the skeleton was found the ossified windpipe and some small smooth pebbles lying in the position of the gizzard. The skeleton (the most complete frame- work of one and the same individual Moa that had reached England) had been offered for sale, and, on the recommendation of the author, had been purchased by the Trustees of the British Museum, and was being exhibited (articulated) in the Museum of Natural History, Cromwell Road. The bones showed the maturity, if not the old age, of this ? See Mr. Forbes’s article, P. Z. 8, 1880, p. 540. Proc. Zoox. Soc.—1882, N 1 Age Sy cee 2 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, smallest known representative of its kind. The skull was larger in proportion to the body than in either Dinornis maximus or D, ingens, but manifested no modification approaching to the shape of the bill in Apteryw; it retained the generic characters shown in all the larger kinds of Dinornis. The sternum was strictly Dinornithic. The chief osteological distinction was a greater number of cervical~ vertebre ; but the author remarked that no other skeleton had been discovered, or recovered from swamp-deposits, under cireum- stanees precluding the oversight of two or more vertebre from the middle of the long neck, where missing ones might be indicated by size or by joints. The metatarsus gave no indication of an articular surface for a back toe, yet the bones of this minute digit of both feet were transmitted; hence the amalgamation of Palapteryx with Dinornis received additional support. The size of the bird was about that of the Dodo. On the grounds detailed in the memoir the author referred its subject to the genus Dinornis, and to a new species proposed to be called D. parvus. In the remote, well-wooded, and sparsely populated district of the southern division of New Zealand, Prof. Owen was of opinion that a recovery of a still-existing specimen might be less unlikely than that of the Notornis, also originally recognized by fossil remains. This memoir will be printed entire in the Society’s ‘ Transactions.’ The following papers were read :— 1, Liste des Oiseaux recueillis par M. Stolzmann au Pérow nord-oriental, Par L. Taczanowsx1, C.M.Z.S. [Received November 28, 1881.] (Plates I. & IT.) Les oiseaux de cette liste ont ¢té collectionnés pendant les vingt mois depuis le 13 septembre de 1879 jusqu’en avril de 1881, dans les localités suivantes :— a. Localités situées sur le versant occidental de la chaine orientale des Cordiliéres (systéme du Haut Marajion). Chachapoyas. Chef lieu du département Amazonas, élevé 4 7600 pieds au dessus du niveau de l’océan, situé dans le syst¢me de Rio Utcubamba, un des affluents de la rive droite du Marafion. Cette localité, dépourvue de foréts, appartient 4 la région connue par les habitants sous le nom de la Sierra. La contrée est en grande partie couverte de paturages et de broussailles, et ce n’est que dans le fond des ravings qu’on rencontre la végétation un peu plus riche, composée principalement d’un arbuste épineux nommé “zarza”’ entremélé d’aulnes, en y formant des surfaces plus ou moins vastes de brous- sailles basses, presque impénétrables, parsemées ci et 1a de groupes PASS 2 s J. Smitiith , Hanhart imp LOHLOROPHONIA TORREJUNI 2.DIVA BRANIGKIL . ~< « a) . « ~~ f i : - - ra Hanhart imp J.Smit hth 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 3 d’arbres peu élevés, constituant probablement des restes des anciennes foréts. Au sud de cette contrée se trouve la forét de Puma-ureu, qui, comme on le dit, communique avec les grandes foréts du systéme de Huallaga. Lamiapampa. Ferme éloignée de 12 kilométres de Chachapoyas, située au bord de la forét de Puma-urcu, élevée 4 8800 pieds. Les excursions y ont été faites jusqu’a 9300 pieds. Par ses conditions naturelles la localité est analogue 4 celle de Cutervo, située de l’autre edté du Marajion. Plusieurs espéces d’oiseaux y sout représentées par des formes voisines, comme: Chlorospingus leucogaster au lieu du Ch. superciliaris, Diva branickii au lieu de la D. vassori, Seto- phaga melanocephala au lieu de la 8S. bairdi, Peeilothraupis igni- erissa au lieu de la P. Jacrymosa, Diphlogena iris au lieu de la D. warszewiczi, &e. Cocoché. Hacienda située sur la grande route entre Cutervo et Chachapoyas, 4 la distance de trois kilométres du Marafion, 4 5800 pieds d’altitude. C'est une contrée analogue & celle de Tambillo, située du cdté opposé du fleuve ; elle est également boiseuse, mais la rareté relative d’une petite palme nommée “sada,” trés caractéris- tisque pour les foréts de Tambillo, frappe V’ceil du voyageur. On y rencontre beaucoup d’animaux et d’oiseaux qu’on ne trouve pas de l'autre cété du Marafion, comme Nyctipithecus trivirgatus, Rupicola peruviana, Tinamus kleei, etc. Plusieurs autres espéces y sont rem- placées par des formes voisines, comme p. e. le Basileuterus coronatus remplagant le B. castaneiceps. 6. Localités situées sur le versant oriental de la chaine orientale des Cordiliéres (systtme du fleuve Huallaga). Chirimoto. Vallée de Huayabamba, localité située au sud-est de Chachapoyas, 4 60 kilometres en ligne droite de cette dernitre ville. C’est une grande vallée, parfaitement plane, entourée de montagnes et traversée d’une rivicre assez considérable, nommée Rio de Pindu- cuchu, connue aussi dans les différentes localités qu'elle traverse sous les noms de Rio de Curiyacu, Rio de Totora, Rio de Millpuc. Aprés avoir traversé la vallée, la rivitre se perd au pied d’une mon- tagne dans la localité Millpuc, et aprés avoir dépassé quelques kilo- métres sous cette montagne, elle sort sur la surface, et ensuite, aprés sa réunion avec les rivitres Omia et Jevil, elle forme une riviére im- portante nommée Huambo. Dans les intervalles de quelques années la rivicre inonde la vallée, en laissant ensuite une série de lacs (Rumu- eucha, Mamacucha, Sausecucha, et autres). Ces bassins d’eau restent pendant une année ou plus, et attirent une quantité d’ oiseaux aquatiques et d’échassiers. Toute la partie plate de la vallée est couverte de champs cultivés ou de bois composés principalement de Guayavas (Psidium pyriferum). Les pentes des montagnes environ- nantes sont couvertes de paturages ou de broussailles basses. La vallée est entourée de foréts vierges, qui dans certains endroits des- ceudent sur la pente des moutagnes environnantes et pénétrent dans la vallée méme, comme cela a lieu 4 Curiyacu, dans la partie occidentale de la vallée. Toute la vallée est élevée de 5400 pieds. Ray-urmana. Une montagne au dessus de Chirimoto, élevée de 4 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, 8000 pieds ; une partie de sa pente et son sommet sont couverts de foréts. Huambo. 3700 pieds daltitude. Plantation inhabitée au fond de la forét vierge, 4 10 kilometres de Chirimoto, au bord de la riviére Huambo, qui, comme on le prétend, se rend prés de Pachiza au fleuve de Huallaga. C’estune forét chaude et humide, du earactére des foréts vierges, analogue sous le rapport des conditions naturelles a PAmable-Maria du Pérou central, exploré par M. Jelski. Yurimaguas. Ville située sur la rive gauche de Huallaga, au point de sa réunion avec la Paranapura; entourée de foréts vierges chaudes et humides, dlevée 4 peine a 500 pieds au dessus du niveau de Pocéan. Comme dans les listes précedentes, chaque espéce fournie pour la premicre fois par M. Stolzmann et non fournie par son prédécesseur est marquée d’un astérique devant son numero; 160 espéces sont done nouvelles pour exploration de nos voyageurs, et ne se trouvent pas dans leurs listes précédentes, et plusieurs d’entre elles sont nouvelles pour la faune péruvienne, dont quelques-unes sont nou- velles pour la science. TURDIDE. 1. TurpDvus 1GNoBILIs, Nel. Turdus leucomelas, V.; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 503. Six exemplaires recueillis 4 Chirimoto et 4 Huambo, en juillet et mars. Iris brun grisatre foned. 2. Turpus crotorrzus, Licht.; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 503. Une femelle de Huambo du 28 février 1880. Iris brun foncé. 3. TurDus niericeps, Jelski; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 503, tab. Ixiy. Un exemplaire, sans indication de sexe, tué 4 Chirimoto le 29 juillet 1880, s’accordant en tout avec l’exemplaire typique, 4 dimen- sions un peu plus fortes, laile pli¢e mesurant 113 mill., le bec un peu plus long. Les bordures blanches des plumes de la gorge sont un peu moins larges que chez l’exemplaire cité. Rencontré une seule fois par notre voyageur. 4. Turpus swarnsoni, Cab, ; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1871, p. 503; 1879, ps 227i, Trois exemplaires de Tamiapampa et de Huambo. 5. Turpus sperranus, Tsch.; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p- 504; 1879, p. 221. Une femelle de Tamiapampa du 17 novembre 1879. 6. Carnarus FuscatTer, Lafr.; Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 507; 1879, p. 222. Un male de Chachapoyas du 22 septembre 1879. Iris blanc sale. 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 5 *7, CATHARUS MACULATUS, Scl. Deux miles tués 4 Huambo le 16 mars et le 29 avril 1880. Ivis brun foneé; bordure de la paupitre et le bec orangés ; pattes jaunes de cire. TROGLODYTID. *1, TuryoTHorus CcoRAYA (Gm.). Deux miles tués 4 Yurimaguas le 25 février et le 8 mars 1881, completement identiques aux oiseaux de Cayenne, et ne présentant qu’une légére différence dans la couleur de la poitrine et du milieu de abdomen, qui est beaucoup plus cendrée. Iris brun rougeatre. *2, THRYOTHORUS ALBIVENTRIS, 0. Sp, Th. corayze similis, capite supra cum collo postico brunneo-griseis ; dorso rufo ; lateribus capitis nigris, minime albo-striatis ; su- perciliis albis tenuissimis, vix signatis ; gula, pectore et abdo- mine medio albis; hypochondriis crissoque griseis ; cauda nigro griseoque transfasciata. Rostrum nigrum, mandibula inferiore cinerea ; pedes grisei ; iris brunnea. Forme voisine du Th. coraya, mais bien distincte au premier coup d’ceil: la couleur du sommet de la téte avee le cou postérieur et le devant méme du dos est d’un gris légérement brunatre, nettement tranchée du roux occupant le dos avec le croupion; cette derniére nuance est bien différente de celle du Th. coraya, elle est moins foncée, tirant au jaunatre au lieu de rougeitre ; tectrices caudales également rayées de noirdtre; les cétés de la téte sont aussi noirs avec des stries blanches sur la région auriculaire, trés fines, beaucoup moins nombreuses et peu apparentes ; la bande sourcilitre réduite 4 quelques stries blanches trés fines, formant une ligne non continue et située seulement sur la partie postoculaire; sur les parties inféri- eures du corps le blanc est fort répandu, occupant la gorge, le milieu de la poitrine et largement le milieu de l’abdomen ; les cétés de la poitrine sont légérement colorés de cendré, ceux de l’abdomen et le bas ventre gris-brunatre ; sous-caudales rayées de gris et de noiriitre. Tectrices alaires concolores au dos; rémiges brunes bordées extéri- eurement de fauve; sous-alaires et le bord interne des rémiges blanchatres. Rectrices, comme chez le 7. coraya, rayées de gris et de noir. MAachoire noire avec les bords gris, mandibule cendrée & bords blancs ; pattes grises ; iris terre de sienne. La femelle semblable en tout au male. ; Longueur totale ¢ 163, vol 225, aile 67, queue 61, bec 21, tars 23 millim. Distinct du Th. cantator, Jelski(P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 130) principale- ment par la présence des stries sur la région auriculaire, par le sourcil plus fin et non continu, par le blanc du milieu de la poitrine et de Vabdomen ; les raies claires des rectrices grises et moins nombreuses au lieu de rousses ; les sous-caudales rayées ; Ja nuance rousse du dos différente. Une paire tuée 4 Chirimoto le 13 juillet et le 13 aott 1880, 6 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, *3. CyPHORHINUS SALVINI, Sharpe, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. vi. p. 292, pl. xviii. fig. 1. La coloration de cet oiseau est semblable en tout 4 celle du C. modulator, mais la nuance des parties supérieures du corps est d’un brun fonceé moins roussitre, cette différence est la plus frappante sur les bandes claires des rémiges ; la couleur rousse de la gorge et de la poitrine est beaucoup plus foncée. Le bec est noir corné, au dessous de la mandibule inférieure blanc d’ivoire, brusquement séparé de la couleur foncée ; pattes cornées foncdes ; iris brun-foncé. Longueur totale ¢ 155, vol 242, aile 73, queue 40, bec 24, tarse 23, doigt médian avec l’ongle 22 millim. Trois males tués 4 Yurimaguas en février 1881. 4. MicrocercuLus MARGINATUS, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1877, p- 506. : Deux males tués 4 Yurimaguas le 16 et le 21 février 1881, qui paraissent étre jeunes. Jls ont le brun des parties supérieures du corps plus fortement ferrugineux que chez l’adulte de P Amable- Maria ; le blanc du dessous squamulé par les bordures des plumes brunes, plus fines sur la gorge et plus grosses sur le milieu de P’abdo- men ; les flancs plus ferrugineux et également variés ; les plumes du sommet de la téte plus distinctement squamulées d’une nuance plus foncée ; les grandes et les moyennes tectrices alaires marquées pres de leur extrémité d’une fine strie rousse. Les squamules foncées du dessous sont moins prononcées sur un des ces exemplaires. Iris brun-foneé. MNIOTILTIDz. 1, DENDR@CA BLACKBURNIZ (Gm.); Tacz, P.Z.S. 1871, p. 508; 1879, p. 223. Trois exemplaires de Huambo. 2. DENDRa@CA CHRULEA (Wils.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 508. Trois exemplaires recueillis 4 Huambo le 10 février et le 15 mars 1880. Iris brun foncé. 3. GEOTHLYPIS ZQUINOCTIALIS (Gm.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1880, p- 191. Un male de Chirimoto. 4. My1opEcTES CANADENSIS (L.). Dendreca canadensis, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 508; 1879, p. 223. Six exemplaires de Huambo. 5. BAsILEUTERUS coronatus (Tsch.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p- 509. Cing exemplaires de Cococho, de Ray-urmana, de Chachapoyas, et de Tamiapampa, Iris brun foncé, 6. BastLuuTERUS UROPYGIALIS, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 509. Un exemplaire de Huambo du 12 mars 1880. Iris brun foncé. 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. ™NI 7. SETOPHAGA VERTICALIS, d’Orb. et Lafr. Myioborus verticalis, Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 508; 1879, p. 221. Un exemplaire de Chirimoto du 20 avril 1880. Iris brun foneé. 8. SETOPHAGA MELANOCEPHALA (Tsch.). Myioborus melanocephalus, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 509. Huit exemplaires tués 4 Chachapoyas et & Tamiapampa en sep- tembre et en novembre 1879. Iris brun foncé. Le jeune en premier plumage a le sommet de la téte d’un gris un peu plus foncé qu’an dos; la jaune de la gorge plus pale que chez Vadulte ; le sourcil jaune, ainsi que le tour de l’ceil commencant a se manifester par des plumes isolées de cette couleur ; il a anssi quel- ques nouvelles plumes noires au sommet de la téte. VIREONIDA. 1. VrreosyiyviA outvacra (L.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1879, p. 224; 1880, p. 192. Quatre exemplaires de Huambo, plus petits que ceux de Callacate et de Guajango, s’en distinguent principalement par le bec beaucoup plus court et par la raie foncée transoculaire plus prononcée. Les oiseaux de Callacate et de Guajango sont de la méme taille que ceux de Cayenne et ont le bec également long. 2, VIREOSYLVIA FLAVOVIRIDIS, Cass.; Tacz. P. Z.S.1874, p.509. Une femelle tuée 4 Yurimaguas le 23 février 1881. Cet exemplaire est un peu différent du male de Monterico, et principalement le sommet de sa téte est d’un cendré plus pur; le blanc est plus largement disposé sur le ventre ; le jaune des flancs et des sous-caudales est plus pur; la bande sourcilicre d’un cendré blanchitre, plus large et largement prolongée jusqu’aux nariues, tandis que chez le male de Monterico elle est trés fine et peu distincte devant l’wil. L’iris est rouge clair chez Poiseau de Yurimaguas, et brun clair dans celui de Monterico. *3, Hy.Lopniius onivacevus, Tsch. Faun. Peru. p. 193. Plusieurs exemplaires, recueillis 4 Huambo en février et en mars 1880, paraissent appartenir 4 l’espéce décrite par M. Tschudi, du moins on ne trouve pas rien d’important dans sa description qui pourrait combattre mon opinion. Toute la description peut s’ap- pliquer parfaitement, excepté deux détails, qui pourraient présenter des doutes, comme la couleur de la queue “zeisig griin”’ et celle des sous-alaires “ weiss.” Nos oiseaux sont en dessus d’une couleur olive verdatre, induite de gris au cou et sur le devant du dos, tirant sur le vert jaunatre au sommet de la téte et au croupion ; tout le dessous du corps est d’un jaune légérement verdatre, fort imprégné Wolivatre sur les flancs, et passant au blanchatre sur le bas ventre et au menton. Ailes grises A tectrices de la couleur du dos, les rémiges bordées de vert jaunatre ; les sous-alaires et une large bordure interne de toutes les rémiges 8 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, d’un jaune plus pale que celui de abdomen. Queue olive grisitre. Bec brun-rougeatre clair; pattes carndes ; iris ocreux jaunatre, un peu plus foncé intérieurement qu’d l’extérieur. 3. Longueur totale 138, vol 200, aile 62, queue 52, bec 14:5, tarse 19 millim. 9. Longueur totale 136, vol 193, aile 58, queue 52, bec 15, tarse 19 millim. 4. CycLoruis ConTRERASI, Tacz. P. Z.S. 1879, p. 224, tab. xxi.; 1880, p. 192. Trois exemplaires de Chachapoyas. Le sommet de la téte coloré au milieu de verdatre sur un espace restreint. HirvuNDINIDZ. *], HiRUNDO ALBIVENTRIS, Bodd. Un exemplaire tué 4 Yurimaguas le 14 février 1881. Iris brun foncé. *2, ATTICORA FASCIATA (Gm.). Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas du 14 février 188]. Iris brun foncé. 3. ATTICORA CYANOLEUCA (V.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 510; 1879, p. 224; 1880, p. 192. Un exemplaire tué 4 Huambo le 5 avril 1880. 4, ATTICORA CINEREA (Gm.); Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 510. Un exemplaire tué 4 Tamiapampa le 30 octobre 1879. C@REBID&. 1. DrGLossA BRUNNEIVENTRIS, DesMurs; Tacz. P. Z. 8S. 1874, p. 511; 1879, p. 225. Un jeune male de Tamiapampa du 29 octobre 1879. 2. Diguossa sirroies (d’Orb. et Lafr.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, poll Un jeune oiseau d’Achamal du 27 aoit 1880. 3. Digiossa personaTa, Fras.; Tacz. P. Z. 8S. 1874, p. 511; 1880, p. 193. Une paire de Tamiapampa du 27 octobre 1879. 4, DicLossopis CZRULESCENS, Sel.; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 511; 1879, p. 225. Plusieurs exemplaires de Chachapoyas, de Tamiapampa et d’ Acha- mal, recueillis entre le 13 septembre 1879 et le 23 aotit 1880. 5. ConIROSTRUM ATROCYANEUM, Lafr.; Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874 p- 511; 1879, p. 225, Un mile adulte tué & Tamiapampa le 4 novembre 1879, 4 sommet de la téte aussi bleu que chez ceux du Pérou central, 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 9 6. Dacnis cayana (L.); Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 510. Quatre exemplaires recueillis 4 Huambo en février 1880. 7. Dacnis mopestA, Cab.; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 510. Deux femelles de Huambo tuées en mars 1880, semblables en tout au type de la description. 8. Dacnis XANTHOPHTHALMA, Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, pp.131, 510. Une femelle tuée 4 Tamiapampa le 22 novembre 1879, tout & fait semblable a Doiseau typique. *9. CHLOROPHANES ATRICAPILLA (V.). Deux femelles de Huambo et de Yurimaguas, tuées le 24 mars 1880 et le 20 février 1881. Iris rouge brunatre chez ladulte, et d’un brun foncé chez le jeune. 10. Caresa cyanea (L.). Cereba nitida, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 510. Deux miles de Huambo, tués le 7 mars et le 24 avril 1880. Tous les oiseaux péruviens que j’ai vu ont la nuance bleue beau- coup plus claire que chez les oiseaux de Cayenne et du Brésil, surtout sur la téte; la couleur noire également disposée sur la gorge comme chez ces derniers ; en outre ils ont le bec moins long. TANAGRIDZ. 1. CHLOROPHONIA TORREJONT, nu. sp. (Plate I. fig. 1.) Chlorophonia viridis, Tacz. P.Z.8. 1879, p. 225. Ch. prasino-viridis ; semitorque nuchali latissimo, circuloque ocu- lari caruleis ; ventre medio jlavo; pectore hypochondriisque flavo-olivaceis; remigibus nigricantibus viridi maryinatis. Rostrum nigrum; pedes cinerco-plumbei ; iris fusco-brunnea. dad. Toute la (éte avec la gorge et le devant du cou est d’un beau vert de pré luisant, avec un léger ton jaunatre au front; un large croissant d’un bleu outremer occupe la nuque et le derriére du cou, en s’amincissant graduellement sur les cotés de ce dernier; un anueau d’un bleu plus pale que celui du croissant nuchal entoure finement l’ceil; le dos est couvert de plumes d’un vert brunatre foncé, terminées d’une bordure verte; le croupion et les sous-caudales sont d’un vert malachite. En dessous le milieu du ventre et les sous-caudales sont d’un jaune souffre, la poitrine et les flancs d’un olive jaunatre. Tectrices alaires vertes olivdtres ; rémiges noiratres bordées finement de vert olivatre 4 l’extérieur et de gris blanchatre intérieurement ; sous-alaires jaunitres, et grises le long du bord de Vaile. Rectrices noiratres avec une fine bordure externe verdatre, Bec noir avec la partie grise au dessous des narines, 4 mandibule grise foncée et noiratre au bout et en dessous ; pattes plombées ; iris brun foncé. @. La femelle semblable au mile, 4 couleurs un peu moins pures et moins vives ; surtout le collier est moins vif et moins uniforme. 10 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, 3. Longueur totale 123, vol 198, aile 59, queue 34, bee 11, tarse 15 millim. Q. Longueur totale 123, vol 205, aile 63, queue 34, bee 11, tarse 15 millim. Six exemplaires tués en juin et en aotit 4 Chirimoto. Je dédie ce beau Tanagride 4 Don Tomas Torrejon, propriétaire de Tamiapampa, Alcade municipal de Chachapoyas, comme preuve de ma gratitude pour son bienveillance et amitié sincere envers notre voyageur. *2, EuUPHONIA CHALCOPASTA, Scl. et Salv. Nomencl. Av. Neotr. p. 157. Onze exemplaires des deux sexes tués 4 Chiromoto et 4 Huambo en mai et en juillet 1880. Iris brun foneé; bec noir 4 mandibule cendrée, terminée de noir ; pattes grises. La jeune femelle différe des adultes par le manque de l’éclat mé- tallique sur les parties supérieures du corps, dont le sommet de la téte est lavé de jaune olive jusqu’ 4 la cervix, qui avec la nuque est d’un plombé, tirant au bleuatre dans certaines directions de la lumicre ; le dos est d’un vert olive tirant au jaunatre sur le croupion et les sus- caudales ; les cétés de la téte sont d’une nuance plus pale que le dos ; gorge grise jaunatre ; milieu de la poitrine et du devant de l’abdo- men sont d’un gris terreux, passant & l’ocreux pale sur le milieu du ventre ; les flancs du corps largement d’un vert jaunatre. Les ré- miges et les rectrices comme dans le mile. 3. EvPHONIA NIGRICOLLIS (V.) ? Deux jeunes femelles de Huambo, tuées en avril 1880. Il est probable que ces deux oiseaux appartiennent a lL. insignis, Scl. et Salv., car ils different légérement des jeunes del’ Z. nigricollis. 4, EvpHoNIA XANTHOGASTRA, Sund.; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p- 518. Sept exemplaires recueillis 4 Huambo depuis février jusqu’en avril 1880. Iris brun fonceé. 5. PipripEA MELANONOTA (V.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1879, p. 226. Un exemplaire de Huambo, *§. Diva BRANICKI!, n. sp. (Plate I. fig. 2.) D. lete cerulea ; capite cum nucha griseo-virente, stramineo mi- cante ; remigibus rectricibusque nigris. g. Couleur générale de tout le corps est d’un beau bleu un peu différent de celui de la D. vassori, et tirant également sous certain jour au violet comme chez l’espéce citée; le sommet de la téte avec la nuque et les joues est d’une couleur séladon grisatre, fort luisant, passant Iégérement au bleuatre sous certain jour et au straminé ver- datre dans une autre direction de la lumiére ; les lores sont également noirs, mais d’une nuance moins intense que chez la D. vassori ; la bor- dure du front et celles du menton A peine indiquées. Tectrices alaires comme chez l’autre espéce, d’un bleu uniforme sur les petites et les 1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 11 moyennes, et noires avec une large bande terminale sur les grandes ; les rémiges et les rectrices noires, également bordées de bleu, mais plus saphyré. Bee noir; pattes brunes cornées ; iris brun foneé, Les miles, probablement moins adultes, ont les plumes du bas ventre tirant plus ou moins au gris verdatre, analogue a celui de la téte. Q. Comme dans la D. vassori la femelle a les couleurs moins pures 4 cause de la transparence du foncé de la base des plumes ; cependant la couleur de la téte est la méme que chez le mile, mais d’une nuance moins pure. Les jeunes en premier plumage ressemblent en tout & ceux de la D. vassori ; ils sont d’un gris foncé en dessus, tirant légérement au verdatre sur le dos, et un peu plus fortement sur les scapulaires ; le dessous du corps est d’un gris plus pale, & plumes du milieu du ventre largement bordées de blanchatre ; les petites tectrices alaires un peu plus fonedes que le dos, les grandes bordées de vert bleuitre ; rémiges et tectrices noiratres, bordées extérieurement de bleu. 3. Longueur totale 150, vol 240, aile 76, queue 53, bee 13, tarse 14, doigt médian avec l’ongle 17 millim. 2. Longueur totale 148, vol 235, aile 74, queue 53, bec 13, tarse 14, doigt médian avec Vongle 17 millim. Plusieurs exemplaires des deux sexes recueillis 4 Tamiapampa en octobre et en novembre 1880, 7. CALLISTE YENI (d’Orb. et Lafr.); Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 514. Un male tué 4 Yurimaguas le 2 avril 1881. *8, CALLISTE C@LICOLOR, Scl. Onze exemplaires des deux sexes recueillis 4 Huambo en janvier, février et mars 1880. Iris brun-foncé. 9. CaALLIstr xANTHOGASTRA, Bp.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 514. Un male tué 4 Huambo le 10 mars 1880. Iris brun foncé. 10. Cauuiste putcura (Tsch.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 514, Cing exemplaires des deux sexes de Huambo, tu¢s en février et en mai 1880. Iris brun foncé. 1], Catuistr GyROLoIDEs (d’Orb. et Lafr.); Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p ol4. Huit exemplaires de Huambo, tués entre le 30 janvier et le 21 avril 1880. 12. CaLnisTe ARGENTEA (T'sch.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 514; 1879, p. 226. Une paire de Chirimoto, tuée le 5 juillet et en septembre 1880. Le male unique de Paltaypampa, au Pérou central, tué le 13 mars, différe des miles du Pérou septentrional, tués en septembre, par la nuance des parties supérieures du corps, des flancs de l’abdomen et des bordures sur les rémiges et les rectrices bleues, comme dans la figure de la ‘Fauna Peruana,’ au lieu de vert-bleudtres ; ce qui est 12 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, en relation avec le changement du plumage. L’exemplaire cité était en pleine mue, et toutes ses plumes fraiches présentent la couleur bleue, tandis que celles du plumage précédent sont de la méme nuance que chez tous les oiseaux du nord. *13. CALLISTE ARGYROPHENGES, Scl. et Salv. Six exemplaires de Huambo, tu¢s en avril 1880. Iris brun foneé ; bec noir; pattes d’un gris plombé foncé. La femelle a le sommet de la téte gris noiratre, squamulé de ver- datre, plus distinctement au front, et moins sur la nuque; cétés de la téte et gorge d’un straminé, passant au vert bleuatre pale dans les autres directions de la lumiére ; le dos et le croupion sont d’un jaune verdatre, plus clair sur ce dernier; scapulaires olives; poitrine bleue verdatre pale; milieu de l’abdomen largement gris, 4 plumes bordées de blanchatre ; flanes de la couleur du dos ; sus-caudales olives, sous- caudales grises olivatres bordées de blanchatre. Ailes et queue noiratres, 4 plumes bordées de vert olivatre; les bordures des rémiges primaires d’un vert bleuatre ; sous-alaires externes grises lavées de vert, les internes blanches; bord interne des rémiges blanchatre. *14, CALLISTE NIGRICINCTA, Bp. Un mile de Huambo, tué le 9 avril 1880. Iris brun fone . *15, CALLISTE CHRyYSOTIS, Du Bus. Un male de Chirimoto, tué le 1 septembre 1880. Tris brun foncé. 16. CALLISTE CYANEICOLLIS (d’Orb. et Lafr.); Tacz. P. Z. S. 1874, p. 515. Quatre exemplaires de Huambo et de Chirimoto. Les ceufs, recueillis 4 Corral et 4 Chirimoto en février, mars et en avril, sont ovés, médiocrement allongés, 4 coque mate, blanche ou d’un blanc légérement jaunatre, parsemé de taches irregulitres vio- latres peu nombreuses, presque également disposées partout, ou plus souvent rares et petites sur la grande moitié terminale, grosses et formant une large couronne dense autour du gros bout, qui est par- semé de petites, mais plus nombreuses qu’ausommet. Dimensions: 19 x 13°3, 19°2 x 14°1, 20 x 13°8 millim. 17. Catuisre MELANOTIS, Scl. Ibis, 1876, p. 408, tab. xii. fig. 1. Quatre exemplaires de Chiromoto et d’Achamal, tués en juillet et en septembre. Iris brun foncé. 18. In1mpornis Anais (Tsch.) ; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 514. Trois exemplaires de Ray-urmana, d’Achamal et de Chirimoto, tués en juin et en juillet 1880. Iris brun foncé. M. Stolzmann prétend que ces oiseaux sont fort rapprochés par leurs habitudes aux Buarremons, et que leur place dans le systéme serait la plus naturelle auprés de ces derniers, 1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 13 19. PactLorHRaupis 1enicrissa, Cab.; Tacz. P.Z.S8. 1874, p. 514, Trois femelles et un jeune en premier plumage, recueillis 4 Tami- apampa en octobre et en novembre 1879. Le jeune oiseau en premier plumage a toutes les couleurs égale- ment disposées comme chez les adultes, mais les nuances sont moins intenses et moins pures, le noir est beaucoup moins foncé, le rouge du dessous et de la tache auriculaire tirant 4 lorangé sale; le bleu du croupion et du devant de V’aile plus clair, moins Iuisant et moins uniforme ; les sous-caudales noiratres, largement terminées de rouge orangé; les rectrices bordées distinctement de bleudtre. Iris brun foncé. 20. Compsocoma sumpruosa (Less.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p- 913. Deux exemplaires de Chirimoto, tués en septembre 1880, sont d'une taille intermédiaire entre les exemplaires de VAntioquia et ceux du Pérou central, s’approchant plus par leur taille aux premiers, et par la nuance des bordures externes des rémiges aux derniers. millim. millim, Longueur de Vaile dans l’oiseau de Medellin 99, de la queue 74 oe Kh Chirimoto 94, oe 69 . as Auquimarea 89, “ 60 21. TANAGRA PALMARUM, Wied. Tanagra melanoptera, Tacz. P.Z.8. 1874, p. 513. Un exemplaire tué 4 Yurimaguas le 25 février 1881 est d’une taille égale a celle des oiseanx de la Guyane frangaise et moins forte que Poiseau du Pérou central. 22. TANAGRA C@LEsTis, Spix; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, pe SIS 1880, p. 195. Un male tué 4 Yurimaguas le 10 mars 1881, une femelle 4 Hu- ambo le 12 février 1880. Les ceufs, recueillis en janvier, mars et avril, sont ovés, plus ou moins allongés, 4 surface faiblement polie, blanche sale, tachetée ou marbrée de nombreuses taches brunes violAtres inférieares, et brunes foncées superficielles; les taches sont irrégulicres, de différentes dimensions, et plus ou moins également disposées sur toute la surface. Dimensions: 22:8 x 16°8, 24°2x 17, 25 x 17°2, 26°5 X 16°8 millim. 23. TANAGRA CYANOCEPHALA (d’Orb. et Lafr.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 313; 1879, p. 227. Un mile de Chachapoyas. 24. TANAGRA DARWINI, Bp.; Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 513; 1880, p- 195. Un exemplaire de Tamiapampa. 14 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, *25. RAMPHOCELUS JACAPA (L.). Une paire de Yurimaguas tuée en février 1881, et une paire de Huambo tuée en février et en mars 1880, Les deux males des deux localités se ressemblent en tout, et diffe- rent des oiseaux de Cayenne par la nuance rouge moins forte sur les parties inférieures du corps, et presque nulle sur le milieu du ventre. La femelle de Yurimaguas ressemble 4 celle de Cayenne, tandis que la femelle de Huambo a la nuance générale plus claire, le devant du visage et de la gorge rouge, et tout le dessous du corps beaucoup plus enduit de rouge que chez les femelles de Yurimaguas et de Cayenne. Sous le rapport de la taille l’oiseau de Huambo est le plus grand, celui de Yurimaguas le plus petit, comme on le voit des dimensions ci-jointes :— Cayenne. Yurimaguas. Huambo. a aS SS SS 3 3 2 & 202 Longueur totale.... — — 194 186 198 190 5 duvol .. — — 260 246 273 234 ie deVaile.. 81 74 760 73 83 78 Les ceufs, recueillis 4 Huambo et & Corral en janvier et en février, sont ovés ou elliptiques, courts, a surface lisse ; le fond est vert bleu- atre assez pale, parsemé de points et de gouttes noires, plus ou moins réguliérement arrondies, quelquefois de taches irrégulicres, en gé- néral peu nombreuses, plus souvent plus nombreuses au gros bout, rares au sommet, rarement distribuces également sur toute la sur- face. Dimensions: 22°4X16°7, 22°4x17, 23x17, 23°8x 17:2 millim. 26. PyranGA AzAR& (d’Orb. et Lafr.) ; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p- 514; 1879, p. 277; 1880, p. 195. Quatre exemplaires de Chirimoto. *27, PyRANGA ARDENS (Tsch.). Huit exemplaires des deux sexes, et en différents plumages, de Chirimoto, Huambo et d’Achamal, recueillis en mars, juillet et septembre. Iris brun foncé. 98. PH@NICOTHRAUPIS RUBICA (V.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 913. Trois exemplaires recueillis 2 Yurimaguas en janvier 1881. Ins brun fonceé. 29. TRICHOTHRAUPIS QUADRICOLOR (V.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 513. Quatre exemplaires de Huambo. 30. TACHYPHONUS RUFIVENTRIS (Spix); Tacz. P.Z.8, 1874, p. 513. Une paire de Yurimaguas du 15 mars et du 26 février 1881. Iris brun foncé, 1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 15 *31. TACHYPHONUS MELALEUCUS (Sparm.),. Six exemplaires des deux sexes de Chirimoto et de Huambo. Les males de cet oiseau ont la taille beaucoup plus forte que ceux de Cayenne. Longueur totale 220, vol 298, aile 96, queue 93 mil- lim. Les ceufs, recueillis en février et en mars A Corral et & Chirimoto, ressemblent en tout a Ja figure de Messrs. Sclater et Salvin dans le P. Z.8. 1879, tab. xlii. fig. 5. Leur surface est fort polie et luisante. Ils présentent beaucoup de variétés sous le rapport de la grandeur et de la forme des taches. Le fond est d’un rougeatre sale pile, rare- ment blanchatre ; les taches inférieures violatres pales, les superfi- cielles, d’un brun trés foncé; généralement elles sont rares, plus ou moins denses au gros bout ; quelquefois il y a de trés grosses, sou- vent des veines épaisses et des zigzags ; il y a aussi des exemplaires dont la maculature est réduite a une fine moucheture pale. Dimen- sions: 22°8 x 16°8, 21°8 x17, 23°217, 24°8 x18, 26x19 millim. 32. Nemosia Guira (L.); Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1877, p. 744. Un mile adulte de Huambo, tué le 5 avril 1880. Iris brun foncé. 33. CHLOROSPINGUS LEUCOGASTER (‘T'acz.). Dacnidea leucogastra, Tacz. P.Z.8.1874, p. 131, tab. xix. fig. 2. Dacnidea albiventris, Tacz. P. Z.S8. 1874, p. 510 (errore). Six exemplaires des deux sexes de Tamiapampa et de Chachapoyas. La femelle ne différe en rien du male. Selon l’opinion de M. Stolzmann, c’est un viseau trés voisin du Ch. superciliosus, et habitant la chaine orientale du Pérou septen- trional et le Pérou central, tandis que le Ch. superciliosus se trouve dans les localités analogues de la chaine occidentale du Pérou septen- trional. En comparant ces deux oiseaux, il est évident qu’ils ne se distinguent que par la couleur; le vert olive du Ch. superciliosus est remplacé par le gris foneé chez le Ch. leucogaster, le jaune par le blanc; la ressemblance entre ces deux formes se manifeste méme dans la disposition de la bande sourciliére et des taches aux joues. Sous le rapport de leurs habitudes les deux oiseaux se ressemblent en tout; ils habitent en petites bandes les foréts, et se tiennent dans les couronnes des arbres, ot ils sont moins remuants que les Dacnis. La voix des deux espéces est semblable 4 ce point, que M. Stolzmann en entendant pour la premiere fois l’oiseau oriental, croyait recon- naitre la voix de l’oiseau occidental. Le genre de Dacnidea doit done étre annulé. 34. BuarreMmon AsstMiLis (Boiss.); ‘Tacz. P.Z.8. 1880, p. 196. Un exemplaire de Chachapoyas. 35. BUARREMON BRUNNEINUCHUS (Lafr.); Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p- 515; 1879, p. 228; 1880, p. 197. Un exemplaire de Tamiapampa. 16 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, 36. BuaRREMON LATINUCHUS, Du Bus; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1880, p- 197. Buarremon specularis, Tacz. P. Z.S. 1879, p. 228. Six exemplaires de Chachapoyas et de Tamiapampa, tués en sep- tembre et en novembre 1879. *37. ARREMON ERYTHRORHYNCHUS, Scl. P.Z.S. 1855, tab. Ixxxix. Un mile et une femelle de Huambo, tués en janvier 1880. Iris brun foncé. *38. Cissopis MEDIA, Sel. Une femelle de Yurimaguas, tude le 4 mars 1881. Iris jaune. 39. PsirrosP1zA ELEGANS, Tsch.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 518. Deux exemplaires de Tamiapampa et de Ray-urmana, semblables aux oiseaux du Pérou central par la disposition de la couleur rousse sur le visage, et non A ceux de la Nouvelle Grenadeet de P Antioquia. 40. Satrator MAGNus(Gm.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 517. Un male de Huambo, tué le 10 mars 1880. Iris brun foneé. Les ceufs, recueillis 2 Huambo en janvier et en février, sont d’une forme ovée allongée, 4 sommet plus ou moins aigu, la surface lisse, d’une couleur verte bleudtre avec une couronne autour du gros bout, composée de veines noires trés longues et fines, mélangées avec des plus grosses, entremélées de différentes maniéres ; dans d’autres les veines sont trés fines et plus ou moins courtes, formant une couronne incomplete; sur d’autres la couronne est composée d’un petit nombre de points entremélés de quelques traits courts. Dimensions; 26°6X19 millim. (Scl. et Salv. P. Z.S. 1879, tab, xlii. fig. 9.) #41, SALTATOR CHRULESCENS (V.). Un male de Yurimaguas, tué le 22 février 1881. Iris brun foncé. 42. SALTATOR LATICLAViws, Scl. et Salv. ; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 517; 1880, p. 198. Un male de Tamiapampa, tué le 19 novembre 1879. Cet exemplaire, également comme celui de Cutervo, a la couleur rousse plus repandue sur l’abdomen, et le noir moins prolongé sur le haut de la poitrine que chez les oiseaux du Pérou central. FRINGILLIDE. *1, Guiraca CyYANEA (L.). Une paire de Yurimaguas du 10 mars 1881. Iris brun foncé. *2. ORYZOBORUS TORRIDUS (Gm.). Un mile de Yurimaguas, tué le 17 février 1881, est plus petit que les oiseaux de Cayenne et du Brésil, et n’a point de trace du miroir alaire blanc propre 4 l’espéce. Longueur totale 130, du vol 185, de l’aile 55, de la queue 45, du bec 12 millim. Iris brun foncé. 1882. | IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 17 *3. SPERMOPHILA CASTANEIVENTRIS, Cab. Une femelle tuée 4 Yurimaguas le 4 mars 1881. Iris brun foncé, 4. SPERMOPHILA LuctTuosA (Lafr.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 519. Quatre exemplaires des deux sexes de Huambo et de Yurimaguas, tués le 12 mars 1880 et en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. Les ceufs, trouvés 4 Chirimoto au mois de mars, ressemblent i ceux du Chardonneret par leur forme et le mode de la coloration; le fond est également verdatre pale, les taches sont cependant d’une nuance différente, elles ne sont pas rouges mais d’un brun peu foneé ; en général elles sont plus grosses, mélangées avec des petites, plus nombreuses prés du gros bout en y formant une couronne lache; le petit bout est moins tacheté, ou presque pur. L’éclat & peu prés comme dans ceux du Chardonneret. Dimensions: 18x 12°5, 17°3 X 12°5 millim. 5. VOLATINIA JACARINA (L.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 520; 1880, p. 199. Une femelle de Chirimoto du 17 aout 1880. 6. PuryGitus ocunaris, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z. 5. 1874, p. 520; 1879, p. 229. Une femelle de Chachapoyas du 13 septembre 1879. 7. COTURNICULUS PERUANUS, Bp.; Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 521. Trois exemplaires de Yurimaguas. 8. CurysomirTRis CaPiTaLis, Cab.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 222; 1879, p. 230. Un cuf trouvé 4 Chirimoto, au mois de mars, ressemble par sa forme aux ceufs du Chardonneret. I! est blanc pur, parsemé de pe- tites taches et de points rouge-brique, rares sur toute la surface et plus nombreuses autour du gros bout. L’éclat. est trés faible. Di- mensions: 17 X 12°3 millim. IcTerip#&. CassICUs LEUCORHAMPHUs, Bp. Cassiculus chrysonotus, Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 523. Trois exemplaires tués 4 Tamiapampa en novembre 1879. Iris bleu trés clair. CorvID&. 1, Cyanocitra soL1#a, Bp. ; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 524. Trois exemplaires de Tamiapampa identiques 4 celui du Pérou central. 2, XANTHURA PERUVIANA (L.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 524 ; 1879, p. 230. Trois exemplaires de Huambo et de Chirimoto. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. II. 2 i8 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, TyRANNID&X. 1. MytoTHERETES sTRIATICOLLIS, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p- 932. Un exemplaire tué & Chachapoyas le 13 septembre 1879. Iris brun foneé. 2. OcutTHaca THORACTICA, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, pp. 133, 533 ; 1879, p. 232. Cing exemplaires tués 4 Tamiapampa en octobre et en novembre 1879. 3. OcuTHa@ca LEsson}, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 533 ; 1880, p- 202. Une femelle de Tamiapampa, tuée le 27 octobre 1879. 4. MecocercvuLvus sticrorTervs (Scl.), Mecocerculus teniopterus, Cab.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 533. Ochtheca stictoptera, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1880, p. 202. Une paire tuée 4 Tamiapampa en novembre 1879. 5. MuscisaxICOLA FLUVIATILIS, Scl. et Salv.; Tacz. P.Z.S8. 1874, p. 534. Un exemplaire tué & Huambo le 7 avril 1880. *6. PLATYRHYNCHUS SENEX, Scl. et Salv. P. Z.S. 1880, p. 156. Une femelle tuée 4 Yurimaguas le 22 janvier 1881. Iris brun foncé ; pattes carnées claires. Sommet de la téte schistacé foncé avec la huppe interne blanche. 7. TODIROSTRUM CINEREUM (L.); Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 534; 1880, p. 202. Un exemplaire de Huambo tué le 19 février 1880. Iris blanc. 8. EvscarTHMus pyrruops, Cab.; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 535. Quatre exemplaires des deux sexes de Tamiapampa, tués en no- vembre 1879. Les deux sexes ne présentent entre eux aucune différence. Iris d’un brun rougeatre clair, d’une nuance un peu plus foncée que les plumes du tour de l’ceil. 9, Orcuitus piteatus, Tsch.; Taez. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 535. Une paire de Huambo du 5 février 1880. Iris brun-noisette clair. 10. CoLoprerus GALEATUS (Bodd.). Quatre exemplaires recueillis 4 Yurimaguas au mois du mars1881. Iris blanc sale. 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 19 11. Mronecres srriaticouuis (d’Orb. et Lafr.) ; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 535; 1879, p. 233. Cing exemplaires de Chirimoto, de Tamiapampa et de Huambo, tués en novembre 1879 et en juillet 1880. *12. MIONECTES OLEAGINEUS, Cab. Deux miles de Yurimaguas, tués en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. 13. LerpropoGon suprrerciLiARis, Tsch.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p- 536. Plusieurs exemplaires de Huambo tués en mars et en avril 1880. Deux miles de la méme localité sont beaucoup plus petits, et ne présentent aucune différence dans la coloration. L/aile plice 63 millim. tandis qu’elle est ordinairement de 73. 14, Lepropocon auritus, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, pp. 134, 536. Un exemplaire tué 4 Ray-urmana le 29 septembre 1880. 15. Posonotriccus opHTHALMICUS, Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, pp.135 et 535. Quatre exemplaires de Huambo, tués en février 1880. Iris brun de cerise. *16. PHyLLOMYIAS sp. ine. Trois exemplaires tués 4 Chirimoto en aotit 1880, voisins du PA. semifusca et du Ph. tumbezana, semblables en coloration a la pre- miére, mais plus forte et 4 bee plus faible; distincts de la dernicre par la couleur jaune du dessous du corps, par la nuance plus foncée tirant 4 l’olive des parties supérieures du corps, et l’aile plus courte de 2 millimetres. 17. ORNITHION IMBERBE, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1879, p, 234; 1880, p. 202. Une femelle de Chirimoto, tuée le 14 juillet 1880. *18. TyRANNULUS ELATUS (Lath.). Deux males de Yurimaguas, tués en février 1881. *19. TYRANNISCUS CHRYSOPS, Scl. Onze exemplaires de Huambo et de Chirimoto, tués en mars, avril et juillet 1880. Iris brun, bordé de blanchatre. 20. Exarnea atsicers (d’Orb. et Lafr.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 936; 1879, p. 234. Un jeune oiseau de Tamiapampa, tué le 27 octobre 1879. 21. Exarnga ereas, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 536. Une femelle tuée & Huambo le 6 février 1880 s’accorde en tout avec les oiseaux du Pérou central, mais elle est plus petite, son aile re est plus courte de 10 millimétres que celle des males de P Amable- aria. Q* 20 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, *22, ELAINEA PAGANA (Licht.) ? Un mile tué 4 Chirimoto le 29 juillet 1880 ressemble en tout aux oiseaux de Cayenne, mais il est beaucoup plus grand, Vaile plice est plus longue de 10 millim., la queue plus longue de 15 millim. *23, ELAINEA, Sp. inc. Deux exemplaires tués 4 Chirimoto le 28 juillet et le 3 aotit 1880, se distinguent de toutes les formes pcruviennes par le disque foncé dans toutes les plumes du sommet de la téte, y formant des squa- mules bien distinctes, et par la couleur des parties inférieures du corps semblable & celle de lE. pagana, dun straminé blanchatre varié comme dans les Phyllopneuste de stries irrégulicres d’un jaune plus intense. Les dimensions s’accordent avec celles de I’. palla- tange de M. Sclater: longueur totale 150-153, vol 220-226, aile 70, queve 61, bec 12 millim. Le bec est plus aminci dans sa partie terminale que chez l’E. albiceps. *24, LeGATUS ALBICOLLIS (V.). Un mile et une jeune femelle de Huambo, tués le 13 février et le 3 mai 1880, et un miile de Yurimaguas du 14 mars 1881. Ce der- nier ressemble en tout aux oiseaux de Cayenne, tandis que les ciseaux de Huambo se distinguent par la bande sourciliére plus large, entou- rant tout le sommet de la téte, et les taches foncées des parties infé- rieures du corps moins développées. Iris brun foneé. *25, My1ozETETES GRANADENSIS, Lawr. Un exemplaire tué A Yurimaguas le 14 mars 1881. Ins gris foncé. 96. RuyncuocycLus FuLyiPEcTUsS, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p- 537. _ Un mile tué A Huambo le 12 mars 1880. _ Iris brun trés foncé. 27. RHYNCHOCYCLUS SULPHURESCENS (Spix); Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1877, p. 326. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas. 28. RuYNCHOCYCLUS PERUVIANUS, Tacz. P, Z.S. 1874, p. 137. Sept exemplaires de Huambo, tués en mars 1880. *29, RHYNCHOCYCLUS MEGACEPHALUS, Nel. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas, tué le 20 avril 1881. Iris blane sale. *30. Prrancus SULPHURATUS (L.). Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas, tué le 22 fevrier 1881. Iris brun fonce. 31. MyropynastEs souiTarius(V.); Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 537. Deux femelles de Chirimoto, tuées en juillet et en septembre 1880. Iris brun fonee. 1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 21 32. MyropYNASTES LUTEIVENTRIS, Scl.; ‘Tacz. P. Z. p- 537. Un male tué 4 Yurimaguas le 14 mars 1381. [ris bran foneé. 33. MyYIODYNASTES CHRYSOCEPHALUS (T'sch.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 537. Une femelle tuée 4 Huambo le 2 avril 1880. Iris bran foneé. 34. HiruNpDINzA ScLATERI, Reinh. Hirundinaea bellicosa, Tacz. P. Z. 8, 1874, p. 537. Un mile tué A Chirimoto le 9 juillet 1880. Iris brun foneé, *35, Myr1osrus viLuosus, Scl. Un male et une jeune femelle de Huambo, tués en mars 1380. Iris brun foncé. *36. MyioBiIus BARBATUS (Gm.). Un mile tué 4 Yurimaguas le 20 avril 1881. Iris brun foncé. 37. Myiosius cinNAMOMEUS (d’Orb. et Lafr.); Tacz. P. Z. S. 1874, p. 537; 1879, p. 235. Un exemplaire de Huambo, tué le 9 avril 1880. 38. Myrosrus ERYTHRURUS, Cab.; Tacz. P. Z.S.1874, p. 538. Deux exemplaires tués 4 Yurimaguas en février et en mars 1881. Iris brun foncé. *39. Mytonius nzvius (Bodd.). Deux adultes de Chirimoto, tués en aotit 1880, et un jeune de Huambo du 11 avril 1880. Iris brun foneé. 40. Mvytosrus superciuiosus, Tacz. P, Z.S. 1874, p. 538. Une paire de Cococho tuée en aotit 1879. Ces oiseaux s’accordent en tout avec la femelle décrite de Ropaybamba. Le male est d’une taille distinctement plus forte, 4 sommet de la téte orné d’une huppe interne d’une belle couleur jaune limonacée; le jaune de l’abdomen plus intense que chez la femelle ; et la couleur des bordures des rémiges moins roussitre. Iris brun foncé; machoire noire, mandi- bule brunatre avec les bords et l’extrémité noirs; pattes d’un corné cendré. Longueur de ]’aile 67, de la queue 96, du bee 17, du tarse 18 millim. 41. EmprpocHanes ruscatus (Wied); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p- 538. Cinq exemplaires de Huambo, tués en février et en avril 1880. Tris brun foncé. 42. Contorus arpesracus, Cab. ; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 539; 1879, p. 325. Un jeune male tué 4 Cococho le 17 aoait 1879. 22 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan, 3, *43. Conropus VIRENS (L.). Six exemplaires tués 4 Huambo entre le 9 février et le 5 mai 1880. Tris brun foncé. *44, Conrorus BOREALIS (Sw.). Un jeune mile de Huambo, tué le 5 mars 1880. Iris brun foneé. *45, MyIARCHUS TYRANNULUS (Mill.). Un exemplaire tué 4 Yurimaguas le 14 février 1881. Iris brun foncé. 46. My1arcuus nicriceprs, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 539 ; 1878, p. 238; 1880, p. 203. Deux exemplaires de Huambo et de Tamiapampa. 47. Mytarcuus cernarotes, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1879, p. 670. Onze exemplaires des deux sexes de Chirimoto et de Tamiapampa. 48. TyRANNUS MELANCHOLICUS, V.; Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 539. Deux exemplaires de Huambo tués en mars 1880. Ivis brun foncé. Les ceufs, recueillis & Corral et 4 Chirimoto en février et en mars, sont ovés, assez courts; 4 sommet obtus ou faiblement aigu; surface lisse ou médiocrement luisante; le fond est isabelle ou blanchatre, varié de grosses taches et de points violatres pales et d’autres superficielles brunes ou brunes rougeitres foncées, pour la plupart irréguliéres, rares sur la surface et plus nombreuses autour du gros bout. Dimensions: 23°6 x 18°7, 24182, 25x:*19°3, 26 x 19°7, 26 X 18°2 millim. *49, TYRANNUS AURANTIO-ATRO-CRISTATUS, d’Orb. et Lafr. Un jeune male de Huambo, tué le 5 mars 1880. Iris brun foneé. PIPRIDZ. *], PiIpRiTES CHLORION (Cab.). Trois exemplaires des denx sexes de Huambo et de Yurimaguas, tués en mars 1880 et en mars 1881. Iris brun foncé. 2. Prrra cHLOROMEROS, Tsch.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 539. Huit exemplaires recueillis 4 Huambo depuis le janvier jusqu’au mai de 1880. Iris blane chez les adultes et brun foncé chez les jeunes. *3, Prpra CoRACINA, Sel. Onze exemplaires des deux sexes de Chirimoio, recueillis en sep- tembre et en juillet 1880. Iris cerise-brunatre chez le male, et terre de Sienne chez la femelle. 4, Prpra tevcociiia (L.). Six exemplaires des deux sexes de Yurimaguas. Ins rouge de cerise, 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 23 *5, Prpra 1stporI, Scl. Huit exemplaires de Huambo recueillis en avril et en mai 1880. Iris brun rougeatre. *6, PIPRA VIRESCENS, Pelz. Un mile de Yurimaguas tué le 28 février 1881. Iris blanc sale. Cet exemplaire, ainsi que les autres males que M. Stolzmann a eu en main, n’ont aucune trace de jaune au sommet de la téte, dont il est mention dans la diagnose de M. Pelzeln. *7, CHIROMACHERIS MANACUS (L.). Un male de Yurimaguas. *8, MACH ZROPTERUS STRIOLATUS, Bp. Deux males et une femelle, tués 4 Yurimaguas en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. *9, HETEROPELMA AMAZONUM, Scl. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas, tué le 3 février 1881. Iris brun, un peu plus clair autour de la pupille. CoTINGID. 1, Trryra semrrascriata (Spix); Tacz. P.Z. 8. 1874, p. 540, Trois exemplaires de Huambo, tués en mars 1880. Iris du male adulte brun autour de la pupille et d’une nuance plus claire 4 lex- térieur ; brun foncé du jeune male. *2. TiryrRA ALBITORQUEs, DuBus. Une femelle tuée 4 Yurimaguas le 14 mars 1881. Iris brun foncé. *3,. HADROSTOMUS MINOR (Less.). Deux femelles de Yurimaguas, tuées en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. *4, PACHYRHAMPHUS NIGER, Spix. Une paire de Yurimaguas, tuée le 16 mars I881l. Iris brun foneé, 5. PACHYRHAMPHUS VERSICOLOR, Hartl.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p- 540; 1879, p. 236. Un mile de Tamiapampa, tué le 5 novembre 1879. *6. PACHYRHAMPHUS, sp. inc. Deux exemplaires de Yurimaguas tués en mars et en avril 1881. Forme voisine du P. albogriseus, mais bien distincte, moins forte, i ailes plus courtes, bec beaucoup plus long et plus large. Le mile, dont le sexe est constaté, parait étre jeune et au moment de com- mencer lamue. Le sommet de la téte est concolore au dos, teint légérement d’une nuance roussitre, bordé des deux cétés d’un large 24 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, sourcil cendré, dont la partie antérieure entre Pceil et le bec est blanchatre ; tout le dessous du corps est jaunatre pale; les bordures des plumes alaires sont d’un ocreux trés pale et presque blanches sur quelques-unes des plumes; la queue est sembable 4 celle du P. albogriseus. Iris brun trés foncé. La femelle a le roux du sommet de la téte d’une nuance différente de celle de la femelle du P. albo- griseus, sans aucune trace de la bande latérale noire ; les bordures des plumes alaires sont d’un roux beaucoup plus intense que chez le ile, ainsi .que les taches terminales des rectrices. 6. Longueur totale 150, vol 212, aile 64, bec 20 millim. 9. Lon- gueur totale 145, vol 210, aile 63, bec 21 millim. 7. Lipaucus stmpLex (Licht.); Tacz. P.Z.S8. 1874, p. 540. Quatre exemplaires de Huambo et de Yurimaguas, recueillis en féyrier 1881. Iris brun foneé. 8. Rupicoua PERUVIANA (Lath.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 540, Un mile adulte de Huambo. *9, PIPREOLA RIEFFERI, Boiss. Trois exemplaires recveillis 4 Tamiapampa en octobre et en no- vembre 1879. Iris brun foncé. *10. PIpREOLA AUREIPECTUS, Lafr. Un mile tué le 23 aotit 1880 4 Achamal. Iris jaune. 11. Ampexio arcuatus (Lafr.) ; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 540. Un exemplaire de Chachapoyas. 12. HrniocHERA RUFAXILLA, Tsch.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1879, p- 237. Trois exemplaires des deux sexes recueillis 4 Tamiapampa en octobre et en novembre 1879. Izis rouge. *13. CoTINGA MAYNANA (L.). Deux males et deux femelles, tues 4 Yurimaguas en février et en mars 1881. Iris ocreux. *14. LAMPROTES ALBOCRISTATUS, Lafr. Un mile tué 4 Tamiapampa le 6 novembre 1879. Iris brun foneé. Selon Popinion de M. Stolzmann, cet oiseau n’a rien de commun avec les Tanagrides ; ses habitudes indiquent son ‘affinité aux oiseaux de la famille des Cotingides. C’était aussi opinion de Jules Verreaux. *15, JODOPLEURA ISABELLZ& (Parz.). Un mile tué & Yurimaguas le 7 février 1881. Iris brun trés foneé. 16. CrpHALOoPTERUS ORNATUS, Geoff.; Tacz. P.Z.S., 1874, p. 521. Un male et deux femelles de Huambo, 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 25 DENDROCOLAPTID&. *], SYNALLAXIS ALBESCENS, Temm, Un mile tué a Yurimaguas le 22 février 1881. Iris brun, *2. SYNALLAXIS CISANDINA, Stolzm. MS, S, supra ex olivaceo fusca, subtus dilutior ; pileo toto, alis ex- tus et cauda rufis; superciliis postocularibus griseo-albidis ; gula albida ; tectricibus alarum inferioribus remigibusque intus ochraceis. g ad. D’un gris olivatre foneé en dessus, d’une nuance beaucoup plus pale en dessous ; 4 sommet de la téte roux en entier, tirant au front en grisitre dans certaines directions de la lumicre ; un sourcil gris blanchatre ou cendré assez large derri¢re )’ceil et & peine distinct sur le devant ; gorge blanchitre, légérement nébulée de gris. Ailes rousses extérieurement, 4 rémiges intérieurement brunes bordées de roussitre, sous-alaires ocreuses. Queue 4 12 rectrices d’tin roux un peu plus foneé que Vaile. Bec corné noiratre 4 mandibule carnée pale; pattes grises olives; iris terre de Sienne. 2. La femelle ne diffcre en rien. 3. Longueur totale 178, vol 230, aile 70, queue 71, bec 18, tarse 20 millim. 2. Longueur totale 170, vol 218, aile 65, queue 70, bec 19, tarse 20 millim. Forme intermédiaire entre la S. antisiensis et la S. curtata, distincte de la premicre par une taille moins forte, la couleur du dos moins grise, celle des parties inférieures du corps plus foncée, surtout sur la poitrine, le sourcil moins prononcé, la couleur rousse de la téte, des ailes et de la queue relativement plus foncée. De la S. curtata elle difftre par la couleur rousse occupant le front, et d'une nuance un peu plus foncée, ainsi que celle des ailes et de la queue ; la couleur du dos est plus roussitre dans la S. curtata. Trois exemplaires tués 4 Chirimoto et 4 Huambo en aoiit et en février 1880. *3, SYNALLAXIS FURCATA, Stolzm. MS. 8. supra olivaceo-grisea, subtus ochracea ; pileo, alis extus et cauda rufis ; superciliis latis postocularibus ochraceis ; tectri- etbus alarum inferioribus remigibusque intus ochraceo-cinna- momeis. @. D’un gris brunatre en dessus, d’un ocreux en dessous; A sommet de la téte roux, tirant au jaunitre sur le front et passant insensiblement sur la nuque en couleur dorsale; bordé des deux cotés par une large bande sourciliére postoculaire ocreuse; une raie rousse foneée derri¢re V’ceil. Les ailes rousses extérieurement, 4 tectrices inférieures et le bord interne des rémiges ocreux. Queue 4 12 rectrices, rousse, un peu plus rougeatre que l’aile; les sous-cau- dales ocreuses sales, les tectrices supérieures de la queue rousses. Machoire noire cornée; mandibule blanche d’ivoire avec l’extrémité grise foncée ; pattes grises olives, avec les bordures jaunes sur les scutelles ; iris gris. 26 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, Longueur totale 174, vol 224, aile 69, queue 65, bee 18, tarse 19 millim. L’oiseau en premier plumage a la couleur des parties supérieures du corps plus foncée, le sommet de la téte concolore au dos, le des- sous du corps fauve, avec les flanes de abdomen largement gris ; bande sourcili¢re fauve. Ailes et queue comme dans l’adulte. Il a déja quelques plumes rousses sur le milieu de la nuque, et plusieurs ocreuses sur la gorge et la poitrine. Ces deux exemplaires ont été tués & Chirimoto (5400'), la femelle le 21 juillet, le jeune le 13 aodit 1880, sur les arbres peu élevés, dans les conditions sembables a celles de la S. antisiensis. C’est une forme voisine de cette dernicre. *4, SYNALLAXIS HYPOSTICTA, Scl. Un male tué 4 Yurimaguas le 9 mars 1881. Iris ocreux. *5, SYNALLAXIS RUTILANS, Temm. Deux exemplaires de Yurimaguas, tués le 18 février et le 1 mars 1881. Iris brun foncé. 6. SYNALLAXIS FRUTICICOLA, Stolz.; Tacz. P.Z.S. 1879, p. 670, 1880, p. 200. Les ceufs de cette espéce, recueillis 4 Corral en février, sont d’un blanc légérement verdatre. Dimensions: 20x 15°8; 20°4x16; 20°7X16; 22x 16-4 millim. *7, ANCISTROPS LINEATICEPS, Scl. Trois exemplaires de Yurimaguas tués le 1 et 4 février 1871. Iris brun foncé. *8, AUTOMOLUS SCLATERI, Pelz. Trois exemplaires de Yurimaguas tués en janvier 1881. Iris brun foncé. *9, PHILYDOR ERYTHROPTERUWS, Scl. Deux exemplaires tués & Yurimaguas en février 1881. Iris brun foncé, 10. [eoporvus sticroptitus, Cab. ; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 528. Un male tué 4 Yurimaguas le 1 février 1881 a le bee un peu plus long et l’abdomen un peu plus foneé que l’exemplaire typique. Iris brun fonce. 11, ANABAZENOPS CABANISI, Tacz. P. Z. 8S. 1874, p. 529; 1879, Paco Deux exemplaires de Cococho et d’Achamal tués en septembre 1880. 12. Xenors rutinus, Licht.; Tacz. P. Z. S. 1874; p. 529; 1879, p. 231. Cing exemplaires de Chirimoto, Cococho et Huambo, 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 27 13. XENops LITTORALIS, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 259. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas. 14. Srrrasomus oxntvaceus (Wied); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 529; 1877, p. 323. Deux exemplaires tués 4 Yurimaguas en février 1881. 15. MarGARornis SQUAMIGERA (d’Orb. et Lafr.) ; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 529; 1880, p. 201. Un exemplaire de Tamiapampa du 11 novembre 1879. Iris brun foncé. *16. MARGARORNIS BRUNNESCENS, Scl. Deux exemplaires de Huambo, dont le male adulte est pris le 6 avril, et un jeune le 30 janvier 1880. Ivis brun foncé. Cet oiseau est trés mal placé dans le genre. Son bec est tout a fait différent de celui de l’espéce typique ; la proportion du doigt médian aux latéraux est autre ; les ailes sont beaucoup plus courtes, etc. Selon les observations de M. Stolzmann, il differe encore plus par ses habitudes: tandis que le M. squamigera grimpe continuelle- ment a la maniére des Xenops et des Grimpereaux, le M. brunnescens sautille sans cesse sur les branches des petits buissons tout pres de terre. *17. GLYPHORHYNCHUS CUNEATUS (Licht.). Quatre exemplaires de Yurimaguas, tués en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. *18. DenpROcCINCLA FruMIGATA (Licht.). Deux exemplaires tués & Huambo en février 1880. Iris gris fonce, *19. DENDRORNIS TRIANGULARIS (Lafr.). Un exemplaire de Ray-urmana (7500') tué le 17 juillet 1880, Iris brun foncé. *20. DENDRORNIS ROSTRIPALLENS (Des Murs). Deux exemplaires de Yurimaguas, tués en janvier 1881. Iris brun-foncé. 21. DENDRORNIS CHUNCHOTAMBO (Tsch.) ; Tacz. P. Z. S. 1874, p- 529. Six exemplaires de Huambo et de Chirimoto. *22. DENDRORNIS ELEGANS, Pelz. : Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas, tuéle 1 février 1881. Iris brun oncé. 28 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, 23. XIPHOCOLAPTES COMPRESSIROSTRIS, N. Sp. X. promeropirhynchus?, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1879, p. 231. Un exemplaire, pris par M. Stolzmann & Ray-urmana le 29 sep- tembre 1880, s’accorde en tout avec celui de Tambillo, dont jai donné la description dans la liste de 1879, et différe également des oiseaux de la Nouvelle Grénade, ce qui me décide a lui proposer le nom spécifique et la diagnose suivante :— X. promeropirhyncho simillimus, sed rostro breviore, compressiore et pallido ; striis fulvis pilei et colli postici strictioribus ; dorso unicolori; gula fulva, binis vittis brunneis longitudinalibus ; abdomine medio lutissime ochraceo, nigro maculato ; striis pec- toralibus lineis nigricantibus marginatis ; subcaudalibus brun- neo-ferrugineis, nigro variis ; alis caudaque obscurioribus. La machoire est grise cornée, plus fonceée 4 Vextrémité, plus claire sur les bords; mandibule grise cornée noiratre 4 l’extrémité, passant graduellement en gris plombé vers la base; pattes plombées olivatres ; iris brun foncé. Cet exemplaire présente les dimensions suivantes: ¢. longueur totale 342, vol 458, aile 143, queue 135, bec 51, tarse 31, hauteur du bec vis & vis les narines 12 millim. 24. PICOLAPTES PERUVIANUS, nN. sp. P. lacrymiger, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 529; 1879, p. 232; 1880, p. 201. Un male recueilli 4 Tamiapampa le 22 novembre 1879. Tous les exemplaires de cette forme, que j’ai va en grand nombre des différentes localités du Pérou central et septentrional, se ressem- blent dans tons les détails, et se distinguent constamment des oiseaux de la Colombie ; ils paraissent done constituer une forme différente, fort répandue au Pérou. La différence principale consiste dans la forme des taches sur les parties inférieures du corps, qui au lieu détre lacrymiformes, e’est & dire distinctement ¢largies et obtuses & Yextrémité, comme dans l’espéce citée, sont graduellement atténuées vers l’extrémité et plus ou moins aigués; la gorge est unicolore et fanve, au lieu de blanche, distinctement squamulée chez les oiseaux de Colombie ; la présence des stries dorsales trés fines, dont il n’y a pas de trace chez le P. lacrymiger ; la nuance du ford de Ja poitrine et de ’abdomen est distinectement plus pile dans ces oiseaux péruviens, ete. Je propose done le nom spécifique et la diagnose suivante pour cette forme péruvienne. P. supra olivaceo-rufus, pileo obscuriore ; uropygio, alis caudaque cinnamomeis ; pileo usque ad nucham maculis minimis subtrian- guaribus, pallide fulvis, nigro terminatis notato ; gutture fulvo immaculato; capitis lateribus superciliisque albidis brunneo striatis ; pectoris abdominisque plumis rufo-olivaceis striga mediana oblonga fulva aut albida, apice plus aut minus acuta, nigro marginata notatis. 3. Longueur de Vaile 112, queue 100, bec 30, tarse 21 millim. Q. Longueur de Vaile 108, queue 99, bee 29, tarse 21 millim. 1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 29 ForMICARIIDA. | *]. THAMNOPHILUS TENUIFUNCTATUS, Latr. Huit exemplaires de Chirimoto et de Huambo, des deux sexes et de différents Ages, recueillis en février, juillet, aoiit et septembre 1880. Ivis blanc sale et gris dans les jeunes, *2. THAMNOPHILUS MURINUS, Pelz. Une paire d’exemplaires de Yurimaguas, tués en janvier et en mars 1881. Iris gris. *3. THAMNOPHILUS SUBANDINUS, 0. sp. Th. nigerrimus, tectricibus alarum scapularibusque albo marginatis; rectricibus macula alba terminatis; plumis dorsi ad basin albis ; subalaribus nigris, albo variis ; remiguin margine interno fulve- scenti-albido. Rostrum nigrum; pedes cinerei; tris obscure griseo-brunnea. _ Le male adulte est noir intense en entier, avec les tectrices alaires et les scapulaires externes variées d’une bordure blanche; !es rec- trices, excepté les médianes, terminées par une tache blanche, la premicre portant en outre une autre tache pareille dans la moiti¢ de sa barbe externe; les sous-caudales terminées par une bordure blanche; les sous-alaives blanches variées de noir ; les rémiges primaires bordées finement de blanc dans leur moitié terminale; la barbe interne de toutes bordée largement de blanc jaunatre; les plumes du milieu du dos largement blanches 4 la base, celles du croupion longues et laches, cendrées & la base. Bec noir; pattes grises; iris brun grisatre fonce. Le mile moins adulte se distingue par l’ondulation cendrée de Yabdomen ; les sous-alaires roussAtres vari¢es de noir, et les bordures internes des rémiges plus jaunatres. La femelle est grise foncée en dessus & sommet de la téte noir depuis le vertex jusqu’a la nuque, et quelques grosses taches noires au milieu du dos ; le front, les cétés du visage, la gorge et la poitrine sont d’un gris beaucoup plus pale que celui du dos; abdomen rous- sitre, plus intense sur les flancs, ainsi que les sous-caudales. Ailes noiratres ; toutes les rémiges finement bordées & l’extérieure de gris, et largement de roussatre sur la barbe interne ; sous-alaires de cette dernicre couleur. Queue noiratre, avec une fine bordure terminale blanche sur la barbe externe des trois latérales de chaque coté de la queue. Sec corné noiratre ; iris brun foncé. 3. Longueur totale 175-177, vol 240-244, aile 72, queue 60, bec 19, tarse 22 millim. @. Longueur totale 175, vol 240, aile 70, queue 62, bec 18, tarse 22 millim. Sembable au 7A, luctuosus, Tsch., du Pérou central, mais plus petit, & bordures blanches des tectrices alaires moins larges, surtout des petites, qui dans ce dernier couvrent presque en entier la base noire des plumes du devant de J’aile. La femelle différe encore plus de celle de Pesptce du Pérou cen- tral, et principalement par la présence de la calotte noire intense et des taches noires au milieu du dos. 5 30 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, Huit exemplaires des. deux sexes de Chachapoyas, de Chirimoto et de Tamiapampa, recueillis en septembre et en novembre 1880. *4, PYGOPTILA MACULIPENNIS, Scl. Un male de Yurimaguas, du 15 janvier 1881. Iris brun foncé. 5. DysirHAMNuS sEMICINEREUS, Scl.; Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 350. Nombreux exemplaires des deux sexes de Cococho, Huambo et Chirimoto. *6. THAMNOMANES GLAUCUS, Cab. ‘Trois exemplaires de Yurimaguas recueillis eu féyrier 1881. Iris brun foncé. *7. MyRMOTHERULA SURINAMENSIS (Gm.). Deux males de Huambo, tués en mars et en avril 1880. Iris brun foneé. *8. MyrMoTHERULA pyGmM%a (Gm.). Deux exemplaires de Yurimaguas, tu¢s en janvier et février 1881. Iris brun foncé. *9. MyRMOTHERULA GUTTURALIS, Scl. et Salv. ‘ Trois exemplaires de Huambo, tués en mars 1881. Iris gris clair. *10. MyrMoTHERULA HEMATONOTA, Scl. Quatre oiseaux des deux sexes, tués 4 Yurimaguas en février et en mars 1581. Iris brun clair chez le male, et gris pale chez la femelle. 11. MyrMoTHERULA ATROGULARIS, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, pp. 137 et 530. Sept exemplaires de Huambo, tnés en février et en mars 1880. Iris brun rougeatre foncé. 12. MyrMOTHERULA MENETRIESI, d’Orb.; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p- 530. Six exemplaires tués 4 Huambo en février et en mars 1880. Iris brun foneé. *13, MyRMOTHERULA AXILLARIS (V.). Deux exemplaires de Yurimaguas, tués en janvier 1881. _ Itis brun foneé. *14, MyrRMOTHERULA CINEREIVENTRIS, Scl. Six exemplaires des deux sexes tués 4 Yurimaguas en janvier et en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. *15. HERpsILOCHMUS PUNCTICEPS, 0. sp. Il. supra cinereo-olivaceus, subtus pallide sulphureus ; pileo nigro albo muculato ; gula fusco subsquamulata ; hypochondriis oliva- 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 31 ceo lavatis ; alis nigricantibus, tectricibus flavido limbatis, re- migibus externe colore dorsi marginatis; rectricibus mediis cinereis, externis fere totis albis, reliquis nigris albo terminatis. Rostrum nigrum, mandibula grisea ; pedes cinereo-plumbet ; iris grisea. Male adulte d’un cendré olivatre en dessus, 4 sommet de la tete noir maculé de nombreuses taches subtriangulaires blanches, le plus denses au milieu et en arricre des yeux, petites au front, et presque nulles sur la région sourcilicre; tout le dessous est jaune souffre pale, plus pale sur la gorge et squamulé de noiratre, lavé d’olivatre sur les flancs et le haut de la poitrine; joues jaunitres varices de noir. Ailes noiratres, 4 tectrices bordées a l’extrémité de jaunatre ; les bordures externes des rémiges fines de Ja couleur du dos, et celles des primaires jaunatres pales; les sous-alaires jaunes 4 peu prés comme Pabdomen ; le bord interne des rémiges d’un jaune plus pale. Les deux rectrices externes blanches presque en entier, les autres noires terminées de blanc, de plus en plus moins en avancant vers le sub- médiaires, les deux médianes cendrées en entier. Maéchoire noire ; mandibule grise ; pattes cendrées plombées ; iris gris. La femelle sembable au male, et distincte par le sommet de la téte largement roussitre et immacul¢, exceptée la région sourcilicre, qui est grise avec les taches blanchitres oblongues, analogues a celles du male; la gorge est squamulée de foncé; les tectrices alaires beau- coups moins foncées, avec les bordures pareilles 4 celles du male. Le jeune mile se distingue de l’adulte par le sommet de la téte roussitre en grande partie avec des taches d’un blanc jaunatre, plus grosses que celles de l’adulte; le fond du dos est plus olive; les tectrices alaires comme chez la femelle. 3. Longueur totale 145, vol 182, aile 55, queue 49, bec 17, tarse 17 millim. Trois exemplaires de Huambo, tués en février et en mars 1880. *16. RHAMPHOCENUS MELANURUS, V. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas, tué le 20 janvier 1881. Iris gris. 17. CERCOMACRA TYRANNINA, Scl.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1877, p. 530. Sept exemplaires des deux sexes de Huambo et de Chirimoto, tués en mars, mai et avril 1880. Iris brun trés fonceé. *18, CERCOMACRA CINERASCENS, Scl. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas, tué le 25 février 1881. Iris gris. *19,. PERCNOSTOLA FoRTIS, Scl. et Salv. Une femelle de Yurimaguas, tuée le 15 mars 1881. Iris brun. 20. MyRMECIZA HEMIMELENA, Scl. et Salv.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 530. Quatre exemplaires de Huambo, recueillis en avril 1880. Iris brun foncé. 32 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, *21. MyRMECIZA MAYNANA, 0. sp. M. fumosa ; gula, pectore, abdomine medio, alis caudaque nigris ; tectricibus alarum maculis albis triangularibus variis. Rostrum nigrum; pedes plumbei ; iris fusco-brunnea. Male adulte voisin de la I. atrothorav, mais parfaitement distinct par la couleur générale plus uniforme, celle des parties supérieures du corps d’un fuligineux & peine lavé de brunatre; la couleur du dessous beaucoup plus foncée que dans l’espéce citée, et en conséquence le noir de la portrine parait étre moins distinct du fu- ligineux de abdomen, tant plus que le noirdtre passe le long du milieu de cette partie. Les tectrices alaires sont noires, terminées chacune par une tache triangulaire blanche ; rémiges noiratres sans bordure brune; sous-alaires noiratres variées de quelques taches hlanches. Queue noire. Les plumes du milieu du dos blanches a la base. Bee noir; pattes plombées ; iris brun foncé. Longueur totale 160, vol 200, aile 58, queue 55, bec 20, tarse 26 millim. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas. *22, HypocNemis CANTATOR (Bodd.). Quatre exemplaires de Yurimaguas, tués en janvier et en mars 1881. Iris brun foncé, 23. HypocNEMIS MYIOTHERINA (Spix); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p- 31. Cing exemplaires des deux sexes de Yurimaguas, recueillis en janvier et en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. 24. HypocNemis pacitonora, Pucher.; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p- 931. Une paire de Huambo recueillie en février et en avril 1881. Iris brun-foneé. 25. Hyrocnemis THEeRes& (Des Murs); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p- d31. Quatre exemplaires de Huambo et de Yurimaguas, recueillis en février 1880 et de 1881. Iris gris foncé chez Je male, et moins foneé dans la femelle. *26, Prruys LUNULATA, Scl. et Salv. Une femelle de Yurimaguas, tuée le 18 février 1881. Iris gris trés foncé. *27. FoRMICARIUS ANALIS (d’Orb. et Lafr.). Une femelle tuée 4 Huambo le 3 février 1880. Iris brun foncé. *28. FoRMICARIUS NIGRIFRONS, Gould. Une femelle de Yurimaguas, tuée le 20 avril 188]. Iris brun foneé. 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 33 29. GRALLARIA ALBILORIS, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1880, p. 201. Une paire recueillie 4 Chacapoyas en septembre 1879. Ces deux exemplaires ont le roux du sommet de la téte plus intense et plus pur que chez les oiseaux de Cutervo et de Callacate, et plus prolongé sur Je devant du dos ; le fond du dessous est un peu plus jaunatre ; les stries de la poitrine tirent au roussAtre, ce qui me parait provenir du plumage plus frais chez ces individus, *30. GRALLARIA PRZEWALSKII, 0. sp. G. rufo-brunnea; pileo fusco ; genis, hypochondriis subcaudali- busque rufis ; pectore abdominegue medio latissime cinerascenti- bus; ventre medio isabellino. Rostrum nigrum; pedes ceruleo- cinere?, pallidi ; iris fusco-brunnea. Le male adulte est d’un brun roussatre en dessus, & sommet de la téte brun noiratre ; les joues sont d’un roux ferrugineux ; une bande sourcili¢re postoculaire large, d’une nuance rousse différente; la gorge fauve pale; le milieu de la poitrine et de l’abdomen largement cendré, milieu du ventre isabelle; les flancs de la poitrine et de Yabdomen d’un roux brunitre pius clair qu’au dos; sous-caudales roussatres. Les ailes extérieurement de la couleur du dos; sous- alaires rousses ; barbe interne des rémiges brune, lavce en dessous de roussatre. Queue concolore au dos. Bec noir; pattes cendrées bleuatres piles; iris brun trés foncé. La femelie est semblable au male, et distincte par la nuance plus pale au sommet de la téte, grise lavée de roussiétre; la couleur du dos plus rousse ; le roux des joues et des cdtés du cou plus clair ; gorge ocreuse ; le cendré du milieu de la poitrine et de abdomen enduit d’isabelle. Bec comme dans le male, 4 mandibule plus claire en dessous, tirant au gris corné. 3. Longueur totale 220, vol 325, aile 97, queue 65, bec 29, tarse 51, doigt médian avec longle 34 millim. 2. Longueurt otale 210, vol 315, aile 100, queue 60, bec 29, tarse 48, doigt médian avec l’ongle 33 millim. Deux exemplaires (¢ et 2) de Ray-urmana 4 8000! daltitude, tuée le 29 octobre 1880. Je dédie cette espéce & mon ami le Colonel Przewalski, coura- geux explorateur de la Mongolie chinoise et du Thibet septentrional, dont les découvertes nous ont procuré des donueés précieuses pour la connaissance de la faune de ces contrées inhospitali¢res. *31. GRALLARIA MINOR, Stolzm. MS. G. brevicaude simillima, sed minor, supra fusco-olivacea. Forme voisine de la G. brevicauda, mais beaucoup plus petite, a bee en proportion un peu plus fort. En coloration distinete princi- palement par la nuance des parties supéricures du corps olive bru- natre, au lieu de brune roussitre de l’espéce citée ; les taches du des- sous sont également disposées, mais d’une teinte analogue a celle du dos ; les lores blanchatres. Le mile a la barbe externe des rémiges teinte lég¢rement de ferrugineux. Sous-alaires ocreuses d’ une teinte Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. III. 3 04 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, moins forte que chez l’espéce citce; les bordures internes des ré- miges 4 peine roussitres. Bee noir corné, & mandibule blanche @ivoire avec l’extrémité et les bords gris corn¢s foncés; pattes grises: iris brun trés foncé. 3. Longueur totale 170-175, vol 282, aile 84, queue 33, bec 24, tarse 40, doigt médian avec l’ongle 26 millim. 2. Longueur totale 165, vol 270, aile 80, queue 33, bec 23:5, tarse 39, doigt médian avec l’ongle 26 millim. Deux miles et une femelle de Yurimaguas, tués en février 1881. 32. CoNOPOPHAGA ARDESIACA, d’Orb. et Lafr.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 531. Un male tué & Huambo le 28 avril 1880. Iris brun foneé, 33, CorYTHOPIS ANTHOIDES (Cuv.) Six exemplaires de Huambo et de Yurimaguas. PrreRoprocHiD&. *SCYTALOPUS, sp. inc. Un jeune oiseau en premier plumage de Chirimoto. TROCHILIDA. *], GLAuciIs HIRSUTA (Gm.). Un jeune oiseau de Yurimaguas. 2. PHarrnornis suPEerciLiosus (L.). Ph. malaris, Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 541. Un male de Yurimaguas du 2 février 1881. 3. PHAETHORNIS Guy (Less.); Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 541. Sept exemplaires de Huambo recucillis depuis le 30 mars jusqu’au 1 mai. *4. P HAETHORNIS HISPIDUS, Gould. Une femelle tu¢ée & Yurimaguas le 10 mars 1881. *5, PHAETHORNIS NiGRICINCTUs (Lawr.). Un male de Yurimaguas du 21 février 1881. *6, PHAETHORNIS BOURCIERI (Less.). Un male tué A Yurimacuas le 25 février 1881. g 7. APHANTOCHROA HyposticTA, Gould; Tacz, P Z.S. 1874, p- 545. Deux paires de Huambo, recueillies en mars et en mai 1880. *8. DoryPHORA JOHANN (Boure.). Quatre exemplaires tués 4 Huambo en avril et en mai 1880. _ :1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 35 *9, DoRYPHORA EUPHROSYN#, Mauls. Un male de Huambo du 30 avril i880. *10. DorypHora RECTIROSTRIS, Gould. Quatre exemplaires de Huambo et de Ray-urmana (7500’) recueillis en avril, en mai et en juillet 1880. 11. Hetropoxa otero (Tsch.). Leadbeatera otero, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 543. Deux males et une femelle de Huambo et de Chirimoto, tués en février et en juillet 1880. Les males ont la quene moins profondé- ment échancrée que celui de Soriano au Pérou central. L’exem- plaire de Huambo a la queue plus fourchue et la plaque céphalique d’une nuance plus violette que celui de Chirimoto. *12. PHeOLZMA ZQUATORIALIS, Gould ? Une femelle de Ray-urmana (7500') du 14 juillet 1880, voisine de la Ph. equatorialis, mais distincte par la présence de la gemme gulaire cuivreuse, la couleur de la queue vert olivatre plus métallique, 4 baguettes seulement rousses dans les trois rectrices externes. 13, THALURANIA NIGROFASCIATA, Gould. Th. tschudii, Tacz. P. Z. S. 1874, p. 542. Neuf exemplaires des deux sexes, recucillis 4 Huambo et 4 Acha- mal depuis le mois de mars jusqu’en septembre 1880. ‘ 14. Panoptires MATHEWsI (Boure.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p- 544; 1879, p. 237; 1880, p. 204. Un male recueilli 8 Tamiapampa en novembre 1880. *15, GouLpIA porEeLarnit (Du Bus). Une paire recueillie 4 Huambo en avril 1880. 16. AcrsTRURA MULSANTI(Bource.); Tacz. P. Z.S8. 1874, p. 5413 1879, p. 237. Deux exemplaires recueillis 4 Tamiapampa et A Chirimoto en novembre 1879 et en aoiit 1880. 17. Cuxrocrrcus BomBus, Gould; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1879, p. 237; 1880, p. 206. Cing exemplaires de Chirimoto et de Tamiapampa, recucillis en novembre 1879 et en aotit 1880. 18. Myrris ranny (Less.) ; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1879, p. 238; 1880, p» 206. Un jeune mile tué A Chirimoto le 16 aodit 1880. #19, LoppiGrsta MirABILis (Bourc.); Tacz. et Stolam. P. Z, S. 1881, p. 827. Une suite des oiseaux des deux sexes, recueillis A Chachapoyas et & Tamiapampa. 3% 36 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, *20. SrEGANURA PERUANA, Gould. Cing exemplaires recueillis 4 Cococho et 4 Chirimoto en juillet et en septembre 1880. 21, Lessia GRACILIS, Gould; Tacz. P. Z. 8.1879, p. 238; 1880, p. 206. Deux miles adultes, tués 4 Chachapoyas en septembre et en octobre 1879. 99, AGLAACTIS CUPREIPENNIS (Boure. et Muls.); Tacz. P. Z.8. 1880, p- 207. Un jeune male de Tamiapampa, tué le 9 novembre 1879, présen- tant les mémes dimensions que les oiseaux de Cuteryo, mais le bec est un peu plus court et beaucoup moins épais. 23. RAMPHOMICRON RUFICEPS (Gould); ‘'acz. P. Z.S. 1880, p. 207. Six exemplaires de Chachapoyas et de Tamiapampa, recueillis en octobre et en novembre 1879. *24, UrosricTE INTERMEDIA, Ul. sp. U. supra aureo-viridis ; gula et collo untico squamosis, viridibus, nitentibus ; ornamento pectorali obscure violaceo ; abdomtne viridi, plumis griseo marginatis; subcaudalibus rufescentibus, disco viridi ; macula alba postoculari minima ; remigibus brunneis ni- tore violaceo ; eauda emarginata, rectricibus ad basin e@neo-virt- dibus, ad apicem fusco-cupreis, medtis et submediis brevioribus, macula alba terminatis. Rostrum nigrum; pedes brunneo- nigricantes ; iris nigra. Fem. subtus alba viridi maculata ; rectricibus tribus utrinque la- teralibus albo terminatis. Male adulte vert doré briliant en dessus, 4 plumes du sommet de la téte subsquamuleuses; gorge et le devant du cou couverts de plumes squamuleuses d’un vert éclatant sous certain jour, suivies d’une tache jugulaire d’un violet obscur peu luisant ; poitrine et ab- domen verts, 4 plumes du milieu de ces parties largement bordeées de blane grisdtre; sous-caudales roussatres a disque vert; région anale blanchitre ; tache postoculaire blanche trés petite. Les ailes atteignent l’extrémité des rectrices médianes, a tectrices supérieures et les inférieures de la couleur du dos; les rémiges brunes lustrées de violacé, tirant sur l’olive sous certain jour. Queue fort entaillée, a rectrices de largeur médiocre, les médianes les plus courtes, Pex- terne dépassant de trés peu la subexterne ; vertes a la base et dun cuivreux rougeatre obscur dans la moitié terminale ; les médianes et les submédianes largement terminées de blanc, les premicres avec une petite tache brune a l’extremité méme ; page inférieure de la queue moins brillante, d’un olive bronzé enduit légérement derougeatre vers l’extrémité des rectrices. Bec noir; pattes brunes noiratres ; iris noir. 1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 37 Le male probablement moins adulte a les sous-caudales roussatres sans disque vert. Le jeune male prenant sa livrée d’adulte, 4 plaque gutturale verte presque complétement formée, n’a aucune trace de parure violette ; les sous-caudales d’un roussitre plus pale que dans les adultes. La femelle a le vert des parties supérieures du corps moins doré que chez le male ; tout le dessous du corps blanc tacheté de vert, les taches de la gorge et du devant du cou plus petites et plus brillantes que celles des cot¢s de abdomen, rares sur le milieu de ce dernier ; sous-caudales d’un blanc légérement roussdtre. Queue moins profon- dément échanerée que celle du mile, 4 rectrices médianes vertes en entier, les autres vertes passant au cuivreux a l’extrémité moins lon- guement que chez le male ; les externes et les subexternes largement terminées de blanc ; les intermédiaires ont aussi une tache blanche au bout. 3. Longueur totale 118, vol 140, aile 58, queue 40, bec 22 millim. 2. Longueur totale 111, vol 134, aile 57, queue 40, bee 23 millim. Forme intermédiaire entre les deux esptces connues, voisine de la U. benjamini, mais plus grande, a tache gutturale moins grande, et @une autre nuance, moins métallique; les sous-caudales d’une autre couleur ; la tache postoculaire beaucoup plus petite ; espace blan- chatre sous la parure gutturale presque nulle ; bee plus fin; les rec- trices médianes beaucoup plus courtes que les voisines. Trois males et une femelle de Chirimoto et de Ray-urmana. 25. METALLURA SMARAGDINICOLLIS (d’Orb. et Lafr.) ; Tacz. P.Z. 8. 1874, p. 544; 1879, p. 238; 1880, p. 207. Une suite d’exemplaires des deux sexes recueillis en novembre 1879 aux environs de Chachapoyas et de Tamiapampa. 26. ADELOMYIA MACULATA, Gould. A. melanogenys, Tacz. P. Z. S. 1879, p. 238; 1880, p. 207. Un mile tué 4 Tamiapampa le 27 octobre 1879. *27. Cuats Guimeti (Boure. et Muls.). Cing exemplaires des deux sexes tués & Huambo dans les mois de mars et d’avril 1880. *28, HELIoTHRIX AURITUS (Gm.). Une paire tuée & Huambo en février et en avril 1880. 29. PerasopHora Anais (Less.); Tacz. P. Z. 8.1874, p. 541 1879, p. 237; 1880, p. 204. P. jolata, Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 541. Deux exemplaires de Chirimoto recueillis en aofit 1880. *30, PrTASOPHORA DELPHIN (Less.). Un paire recueillie 4 Huambo en mai 1880, 38 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED] (Jan. 3, 31, Docrmasres ENsIFER (Boiss.); Tacz. P. Z, 8. 1874, p. 543; 1880, p. 204, Une femelle tuée & Tamiapampa le 16 novembre 1879. 32. HexriorryeHa viona, Gould; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1879, p. 238 ; 1880, p. 205. Cing exemplaires tués 4 Chachapoyas et a Tamiapampa en octobre et en novembre 1879. *33, DrpHLoGmNa ris (Gould). Quatre miles et trois femelles recueillis 4 Chachapoyas et a Tamiapampa en octobre et en novembre 1879, comparés par M. Salvin avec l’exemplaire typique. Nos miles présentent quelques Iégéres différences avec la descrip- tion dans l’ouvrage de Mulsant, et principalement en ce que le de- vant du dos et les tectrices alaires ne sont pas vertes, mais d’un bronzé antique sombre, lustré de rougeatre dans certaines directions de la lumitre et passant au noir velouté dans les autres; la tache jugulaire, composce de trois ou de quatre plumes, n’est pas bleue, mais d’un lilas clair, conservant sa teinte dans toutes les directions. La femelle différe du mile parles plumes du sommet de la téte moins longues que chez le male, en constituant la surface distinctement squamuleuse, & couleur verte foneée sur le devant du front, passant ensuite en vert doré, puis graduellement en orangé et au rouge de feu, beaucoup moins fort que chez le mile; la tache occipitale est réduite 4 quelques petites plumes bleues sur la ligne médiane; la partie cervicale est couverte de plumes squamiformes d’un rouge rubiné avee un éclat assez fort ; le vert de la gorge moins luisant et passant au bleudtre sous certain jour; point de gorgerette; les plumes du haut de la poitrine frangées de fauve ; la couleur cannelle de ’abdomen moins foneée; rectrices bordées 4 lextrémité de bronzé foncé ; le reste comme dans le mile. Une femelle moins adulte ala couleur rousse généralement plus pale ; les plumes de la gorge, des cdtés du visage et de tout le devant du cou isabelles 4 la base et une bordure terminale, ce qui forme des taches vertes plus ou moins isolées sur un fond clair; les bordures terminales des rectrices plus larges ; la couleur cuivreuse rougeatre du dos ne changeant pas en noir velouté. Un mile, probablement incomplétement adulte, a les petites et les moyennes tectrices alaires en grande partie d’un cannelle plus intense que sur les autres parties du corps ; cet individu n’a aucune trace de la gorgerette lilacée. 34. BourcimRta tNSECTIVORA (Tsch.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 543. Un mile tué 4 Huambo le 1 mai 1880. *35. HeELIOMASTER LONGIROSTRIS (V.) Un mile de Yurimaguas tué le 17 février 1881. 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU, 39 *36. ERIOCNEMIS AFFINIS, Elliot. Deux miiles et une femelle de Chirimoto et de Ray-urmano (7000- 7500'), recueillis en juillet et la fin de septembre 1580, *37. ERIOCNEMIS DYBOWSKII, 0. sp. KE. supra aureo-viridis, subtus splendide viridis, abdomine splen- didissimo ; pectore medio albo, viridi maculato ; subcaudalibus splendide viridibus ; pedibus albo papposis ; remigibus nigri- cantibus nitore violaceo; cauda profunde emarginata, ereo- viridi. Rostrum rectum, subcylindricum, dimidia parte corporis longius, nigrum ; pedes niyricantes ; iris nigra. Le male est vert avec un éclat doré cuivreux en dessus, tirant légérement au bleudtre dans certaines directions de la lumiére; le vert du dessous du corps beaucoup plus brillant, surtout sur lab- domen, passant sous certain jour en bleu beaucoup plus fort qu en dessus; les plumes du milieu de la poitrine blanches 4 la base, for- mant un petit espace blanc, plus ou moins couvert de vert; sous- caudales aussi vertes que l’abdomen, 4 base des plumes fauve blan- chiitre ; touffes des pattes tr¢s abondantes, blanches pures. Tec- trices alaires vertes dorées; rémiges noirdtres lustrés de violet. Queue profondément entaillée, d’un vert bronzé, beaucoup plus bril- lant sur la page inférieure. Bee noir, 4 bords de la mandibule blanche dans les deux tiers basales ; pattes noirdtres 4 bords libres des écailles carnés ; iris noir. La femelle est semblable au mile, 4 couleur verte des parties supé- rieures du corps tirant au doré; l’espace blanc du milieu de la poitrine plus volumineuse et varié de taches plus petites ; les plumes de la gorge & base blanche plus ou moins visible; celles du milieu méme dé abdomen frangées de blane. 3. Longueur'totale 106, vol 137, aile 52, queue 33, bec 22 millim. @. Longueur totale 110, vol 137, aile 52, queue 31, bee 22 millim. Deux males et une femelle de Ray-urmana (7000-8000'). Jededie cet oiseau-mouche 4 mon ami M. le Docteur Bénoit Dybowski, éminent et infatigable explorateur de la faune de la Sibérie orientale. 38. CYANOMYIA CYANICOLLIS, Gould; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1880, p- 208. Un jeune male de Chirimoto du 8 juillet 1880. 39. Leuctppus cH1onoGasTEeR (Tsch.); Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p- 942. Six exemplaires de Chirimoto, recueillis en juillet 1880. Les ceufs des deux pontes présentent les dimensions suivantes :—1°. 1°36 X95; 13°8x9 ; 2% 14°5%x9.2; 14°6 x 9-3 millim. *40, THAUMATIAS FLUVIATILIS, Gould ? Une femelle recueillie 4 Yurimaguas le 14 février 1881, un peu douteuse, 40 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, *41, CHRYSURONIA JOSEPHINE (Boure. et Muls.). Six exemplaires des deux sexes recueillis 4 Huambo au mois de mars et en avril 1880. *42, EUCEPHALA C&RULEA (V.). Un exemplaire, probablement femelle, tuée 4 Yurimaguas le 20 avril 1881. 43. CHLOROSTILBON BREVICAUDATUS, Gould; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 545. Male adulte et un jeune male de Huambo et d’Achamal tués en mai et en aotit 1880. CyPsELID&. *], CypseLus montivacus, d’Orb. et Lafr. Un exemplaire de Huambo du 18 mars 1880. Iris brun trés foucé, 2. Cuarura RuTILA (V.); Tacz. P. Z. 8S. 1874, p. 545. Un exemplaire de Chirimoto. CAPRIMULGID&. *], ANTROSTOMUS RUFUS (Gm.). Un male, tué entre Chirimoto et Achamal le 7 aott 1880. Iris noir. #2, ANTROSTOMUS NIGRESCENS, Cab. Un exemplaire de Huambo, tué le 2 avril 1880. Iris noir. 3. NyYCTIDROMUS ALBICOLLIs (Gm.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1877, p. 327; 1879, p. 240. Quatre exemplaires des deux sexes de Chirimoto. STEATORNITHIDA. 1, STEATORNIS CARIPENSIS, Humb. ; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1880, p. 208, Deux exemplaires, tués 4 Hvambo en février 1880. Picip#&. *]. PICUMNUS STEINDACHNERI, n.sp. (Plate II. figs. 14,29.) P. supra griseus albido squamulatus ; capite nigro, supra albo punctato; fronte et vertice rubro striatis ; margine frontali tectricibusque narium albidis; gula albida; pectore abdomi- neque nigris albo striatis, ventre nigro alboque transfasciato ; alis griseo-brunneis ; remigibus secundariis albido marginatis ; cauda nigra, rectricum mediarum pogonio interno et vitia mediana obliqua binarum utringue externarum albis. Fem. mari similis, pileo toto nigro albo punctato. Le male adulte est d’un gris cendré en dessus, 4 plumes terminées 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 4l dune bordure blanchatre et précédée d’une petite tache centrale noiritre sur celles de la région interscapulaire; sommet et cotés de la téte noirs, 4 plumes frontales et celles du vertex terminées de rouge miniacé foncé, en formant un grand espace rouge mélangé de noir, le reste du sommet et le haut des cdtés de la téte variés de points blanes; les tectrices nasales et la bordure frontale blanchatres ; tectrices auriculaires d’un noir brunitre. Gorge blanchatre sale ; poitrine et le devant de abdomen noirs variés de stries blanches occupant le milieu méme de chaque plume, un peu plus larges sur la premicére, et plus fines au milieu du dernier ; flanes de l’abdomen et le bas-ventre rayés 4 travers de noir et de blanc; sous-caudales blanches entourées d’une bordure noire. Ailes brunes grisitres, 4 tectrices finement bordées de blanchatre ; les rémiges secondaires bordées extérieurement de blanchdtre en formant une large raie longitudinale sur chacune des ailes pli¢es; sous-alaires blanches, ainsi que le bord interne de toutes les rémiges. Queue noire, & barbe interne blanche dans toute la longueur des rectrices médianes, et une large raie oblique de la méme couleur sur Je milieu des deux rectrices latérales de chaque cété de la queue. Bee noiratre, cendré au dessous des narines, 4 mandibule grise terminée de noir; pattes grises ; iris brun foncé. La femelle est semblable au mile et ne différe que par le sommet de la téte tout noir ponctué de blanc. Une femelle, probablement moins adulte, a seulement la poitrine noirdtre variée de grosses gouttes blanches, tout l’abdomen rayé de blanc et de noir. 3. Longueur totale 112-115, vol 195-202, aile 56, queue 33, bec 14, tarse 12, doigt médian avec V’ongle 15 mill. 9. Longueur totale 111-113, vol 195-200, aile 57-59, queue 33, bee 13°5-14, tarse 11°5-12, doigt médian avec l’ongle 15 mill. Quatre males et deux femelles de Chirimoto recueillis en juillet, en avril et en septembre 1880. Je dédie cette intéressante espéce 4 mon ami M. le docteur Stein- dachner, savant directeur du Musée de Vieune. Parmi les oiseaux fournis précédemment par M. Jelski du Pérou central il y a un mile de Pieumnus que j'ai pris pour un P. albosquamatus, mais qui est trés voisin du précédent et distinct de ce dernier par la couleur différente des parties inférieures du corps et celle de la bordure frontale et des tectrices nasales. Comme il est inédit, je donne sa description en lui proposant le nom du voyageur qui a tant enrichi Ja connaissance de la faune péruvienne. 2. PIcUMNUS JELSKI, 0. sp. (Plate II. fig. 3.) P. supra griseus, minime albido squamulatus, striis fuscis indi- stincte varius; pileo nigro, fronte verticeque cinnabarino striatis, cervice nuchaque albo punctatis; margine frontali tectrici- busque narium ochraceis; gula sordide albida ; pectore abdo- mineque albidis nigi‘o maculatis ; alis griseo-brunneis ; remigibus secundariis albido marginatis ; cauda nigra, pogonio interno 42 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, rectricum medianarum et vitta mediana obliqua externarum utrinque binarum albis. Le male adulte est d’un gris cendré en dessus, a bordures des plumes d’un gris plus clair moins prononcées que dans le précédent, avec des stries noiratres au milieu des plumes peu distinctes ; sommet de la téte noir, & plumes frontales et celles du vertex terminées lon- guement de rouge cinabre, formant un espace aussi vaste comme dans l’espéce précédente, mais d’une nuance un peu plus foncé ; les tectrices nasales et la bordure antcrieure du front ocreuses; région auriculaire gris brunitre. Gorge blanchatre sale ; le reste des parties inférieures du corps est blanchitre, lavé légérement de jaunatre et varié de taches noires, dont celles de la poitrine sont plus ou moins élargies en bandes transversales, celles des flancs de abdomen sub- cordiformes et plus grosses qu’au milieu de cette partie; sous- caudales blanchiitres avec une ou deux taches centrales noires. Ailes brunes grisAtres, 4 tectrices bordées finement de gris clair ; les rémiges secondaires bordées extérieurement de blanchatre en formant sur Vaile pliée une large bande de cette couleur, semblable 4 celle de l’espéce précédente ; sous-alaires blanches ainsi que le bord interne de toutes les rémiges. Queue noire & barbe interne blanche dans toute la longueur des rectrices médianes, et une large raic oblique de la méme couleur sur le milieu des deux rectrices latérales de chaque coté de la queue. Bec noiratre, 4 base de la machoire cendrée sur les cotés; la mandibule cendrée a la base, jaunatre au milieu et noiritre au bout; pattes grises; iris brun foncé. Longueur de Paile 59, queue 31], bee 14, tarse 12, doigt médian avec longle 15 mill. Paltaypampa dans la vallée de Chanchamayo au Pérou central. 3. Picumnus aunirrons, Pelz.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 546. Cing exemplaires recueillis 4 Huambo en mars et en avril 1880. 4. Camperuinus HaMATOGASTER, Tsch.; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 546, Trois exemplaires de Huambo et de Ray-urmana, recueillis en mars et en septembre 1880. Iris brun foncé. 5. Dryocopus tineatus (L.); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 546. Une paire de Huambo, tuée en février et en avril 1880. Iris blane, 6. CHLORONERPES H&MATosTIGMA (Natt.); Tacz. P. Z.S, 1874, p- 546, Une paire de Yurimaguas, tuée en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. *7, CHLORONERPES FLAVIGULA (Bodd.). Une femelle de Yurimaguas. 8. CHRYSOPTILUS ATRICOLLIS, Malh.; Tacz. P. Z.S.1880, p. 209. Un mile tué 4 Chachapoyas le 25 septembre 1879. Iris brun foneé, 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 43 9, MrLANERPES CRUENTATUS (Bodd.). Melanerpes hirundinaceus, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 546. Deux males et une femelle tués 4 Yurimaguas en janvier et en mars 1881. Iris jaune. 10. Hypoxanruus Brevirostris, Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 546, 1880, p. 209. Un male de Tamiapampa. *11. CeLEUS sUMANA (Spix). Une paire de Yurimaguas, tuée en janvier et en mars 1881. Iris brun rougeitre foncé. *12. Crteus Grammicus (Malh.). Un mile tué 4 Yurimaguas le 20 janvier 1881. Iris brun rou- geatre foncé. Momotip&. Momorus BRASILIENS!S, Lath. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas, tué le 15 mars 1881, Iris brun, TROGONID. *1, TroGon viripis, L. Deux miles recueillis & Huambo le 4 février et le 3 mai 1880. Tris brun foneé. Dans le vivant la bordure de la paupicre est d’un blanc bleudtre ; bec blanc bleuatre sale, avec une bande transversale noire voisine de l’extrémité de la machoire ; pattes plombées. *2, TROGON ATRICOLLIS, V. Un mile de Yurimaguas tué le 8 mars 1581. Iris brun trés foncé. Dans le vivant bee et le tour de la paupitre olives piles ; pattes grises. 3. TroGon conuaRis, V.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 547; 1880, p- 210. Un male de Huambo, tué le 1 avril 1880. Tris brun foncé; bec jaune de cire; pattes grises. 4. TroGon HELrorHRIX, Tsch.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 547. Six exemplaires des deux sexes recueillis 4 Tamiapampa en octobre 1880. Iris brun foncé. GALBULID, *1, GALBULA ALBIROSTRIS (Lath.). Une paire recueillie 4 Yurimaguas le 22 janvier et le 28 février 1880. Iris brun foncé. *2. UROGALBA AMAZONUM, Scl. Une femelle de Yurimaguas, tuée le 17 février 1881. Iris brun foncé. 44 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, *3. JACAMEROPS GRANDIS (Gm.). Une femelle de Yurimaguas, tuée le 3 février 1881. Iris brun trés foneé. BucconipD2. *1, Bucco picatus, Scl. Un exemplaire sans indication de sexe de Yurimaguas, tué le 8 février 1881. Iris brun trés foncé. *2. Bucco MACRODACTYLUS, Spix. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas, tu¢ le 15 janvier 1881. Iris rouge de cerise. 3. MALACOPTILA RUFA (Spix). Un mile de Yurimaguas, tue le 22 janvier 1881. Iris brun rougeiatre. *4, MaLacopriia Frusca (Gm.). Un mile de Huambo tué le 8 avril 1880. Iris brun foncé. *5. NONNULA BRUNNEA, Scl. Ibis, 1881, p. 600. Une femelle de Yurimaguas, tuée le 2 février 1881. Iris brun foncé. 6. Monasa PERUANA, Bp.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 548. Deux femelles tuées 4 Yurimaguas en janvier et en féevrier 1881. Tris gris tres fonceé. *7, CHELIDOPTERA TENEBROSA (Pall.). Une paire de Yurimaguas tuée en janvier et en février 1881. Iris brun foncé. CucuLID2. 1. Praya niGRicRissa, Scl. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 548, 1879, p. 240. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas du 13 mars 1881. Iris rouge cerise. *2, PIAYA MELANOGASTRA (V.). Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas tué le 22 janvier 1881. Iris brun fouceé, RHAMPHASTID. *], RHAMPHASTOS INCA, Gould. Un exemplaire de Huayabamba du 7 juillet 1880. Iris d’un gris obseur. *2, PreROGLOSSUS HUMBOLDTI, Wag]. Une paire d’ oiseaux adultes des deux sexes, recueillis 1 Yurimaguas en mars 1881. Iris rouge cerise. Une jeune femelle de la méme localité, tuée le 25 février 1881, 1882. ] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 45 paraissant appartenir & la méme espcéce, a le bee beaucoup plus court que dans les adultes, 4 bords de la machoire non dentelés, noire 2 l’extrémité et noirdtre avec une légére nuance orangée au dos, orangée sur les cOtés; mandibule brune noiratre sur les cdtés, noire au bout et orangée finement en dessous. Une singulicre armure couvre tout le talon; c’est un tubercule corné couvrant toute la surface de cette partie, hérissé en dessus de 4 ou de 5 grosses €pines aigués, dont les deux inférieures dirigées en avant sont creuses sur leur face interne, et les autres rangées sur le bord externe du talon sont plus petites et dirigées en arri¢re. La colora- tion de cet oiseau ne présente aucune différence de celle des femelles adultes, si ce n’est que la couleur du plumage des jambes est plus pale et mélangée en grande partie d’olive. Iris brun grisatre foncé ; pattes olives; peau nue au dessus de l’ceil bleue verdatre, au dessous plombée violatre, une tache triangulaire peu distincte se trouve derriére l’ceil. Longueur totale 357, vol 416, aile 119, queue 116, bee 62 millim. *3. PreRoGLossus FLAVIROSTRIS, ['ras. Deux exemplaires de Yurimaguas du 3 février 1881. Iris rouge cerise, foncé. 4, SELENIDERA REINWARDTI (Wagl.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 578. Un mile recueilli 4 Yurimaguas le 23 janvier 1881. Iris en dessus et en dessous de la prunelle jaune, devant et derri¢re la prunelle d’un gris foneé, ce qui donne a cette derni¢re une forme oblongue en apparence, le tout entouré d’une bordure verte. 5. ANDIGENA CUCULLATA (Gould); Tacz. P. 8. Z. 1874, p. 548. Une paire de Chachapoyas et de Tamiapampa (9000’), tuée le 13 septembre et le 12 novembre 1879. Iris jaune verdatre dans le mile et vert dans la femelle. CapPiITONiD&. 1, Capito auratus, Dumont; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 549. Un male de Yurimaguas. *2. Capito steer, Sel. P. Z. 8. 1878, p. 140. Deux miles et une femelle de Chirimoto et de Huambo recueillis en mai et en juillet 1880. Iris gris foneé chez le male. La femelle ressemble en tout a celle du C. glaucogularis, Tsch., et ne s’en distingue que par la lunule gulaire rouge remplacée par une tache petite et d’une couleur moins intense. Elle est d’une taille un peu moins forte. Iris brun foncé ; bec verdatre sale, 4 dos gris corné ; pattes olives. Longueur totale 170, vol 233, aile 69, queue 42, bec 23°5 millim. 46 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, PsiTTACIDA. *1, Ara Macao (L.). Un oiseau vivant de Yurimaguas. *2, ArA ARARAUNA (L.). Un oiseau vivant de Yurimaguas. 3. Conurus Luctani (Deville); Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 549. Une paire de Yurimaguas. *4, BROTOGERYS XANTHOPTERA (Spix). Un exemplaire vivant de Yurimaguas. *5, BROTOGERYS JUGULARIS, Deville. Un exemplaire de Yurimaguas. *6, Curysotis restiva (L.). Un oiseau vivant de Yurimaguas. 7, CHRYSOTIS MERCENARIA (Tsch.); Tacz.P. Z.S. 1874, p. 550. Un mile de Huambo du 12 mars 1880. Iris rouge trés foncé. Cet exemplaire est d’une taille plus forte que Poiseau de Maraynioe et présente quelques légéres différences dans les détails de la colora- ration, surtout dans la queue. Un ceuf trouvé dans un trou d’arbre est trés court, 4 coque orangée dans sa transparence. Long. de 36-3 sur 31 millim de largeur. *8, CHRYSOTIS AMAZONICA, Scl. Un exemplaire vivant. #9, CAICA MELANOCEPHALA (L.). Un male de Yurimaguas tué le 15 mars 1881. Iris composé d'un anneau double, dont lint¢rieur est gris trés fonec, entouré de rouge cramoisi, changeant en orangé apr¢s la mort de loiseau. *10. PsvrracuLa pASsERINA (L.)? Un mille tué & Yurimaguas le 13 mars 1881, a le croupion vert comme celui de la femelle sans aucune trace de nuance bleue. Iris gris clair. STRIGIDA. Scops BRASILIANUs (Gm.). Un jeune oiseau tué & Yurimaguas le 18 février 1881. FALcoONID. i. AsruRINA MAGNIROSTRIs (Gm.); Tacz. P. Z. 8.1874, p. 5523 1879, p. 241. Un exemplaire tué & Huambo en février 1880. Iris jaune; cire et pattes orangées. 1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 47 *2. BuTEO PENNSYLVANICUs (Wils.). Une femelle tu¢e 4 Huambo le 9 mars 1880. Iris bran marron clair ; cire jaune sale ; pattes d’un jaune orangé. *3. ACCIPITER PILEATUs (Tem.). Une femelle adulte de Huambo tude le 26 avril 1880. Ivis orangée ; cire noire en dessus: bec noir avec la partie grise au dessous des narines; pattes jaunes orangées. Longueur totale 440, vol 797 millim. *4, MicrAsTuR MIRANDOLLEI, Schl. Un oiseau adulte de Yurimaguas, tué le 2 mars 1881. Iris gris foncé. 5. Harpacus Bipentatus (Lath.) ; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 550. Un mile tué 4 Huambo le 22 février 1880. Iris d’un roux cannelle rougeatre ; cire jaune verdatre sale ; pattes jaunes orangées. *6. Hyporriorcuis RUFIGULARIs (Daud.), Un mile de Huambo du 18 avril 1880. Tris brun foneé; cire jaune ; pattes jaunes orangées. CAaTHARTID®. * 1. Ginops pernicra, Sharpe. Cathartes aura, Orb. Voy. Amér. mér. iv. p. 38, tab. i. f. 3. Un mile tué & Huambo le 12 avril 1880. Iris gris avec des rayons blancs trés fins autour de la pupille. Téte nue, d’un rouge violet avec une grande tache occipitale blanche quand les plis de la peau sont rassemblés. Bec blanc d'ivoire ; pattes blanchatres & doigts noiratres. ARDEID&. *1, Arpra coco1, L. Une jeune femelle du Corral. tuée le 17 aotit 1880. Iris jaune clair. *2, ARDEA AGAMI, L. Un mile adulte de Yurimaguas. 3. TigrisoMA saLMont, Scl. et Salv.; Tacz. P.Z.S. 1879, p. 242; 1880, p. 212. Un male tué 4 Huambo en avril 1880. ANATIDE, Darina oxyura, Meyen; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p. 554, Un exemplaire tué 4 Rumucucha le 3 octobre 1880. 48 M. TACZANOWSKI ON BIRDS COLLECTED [Jan. 3, CoLUMBID. 1, CoLumBA penisgeA, Temm.; Tacz. P. Z.8. 1874, p. 555. L’euf, recueilli 4 Chirimoto en février, présente les dimensions suivantes: 39°3 x 29 millim. *2. CoLUMBA RUFINA (Temm.). Un exemplaire tué & Chirimoto le 20 juillet 1880. Iris d’un rouge framboise extérieurement et d’un gris violatre trés foncé autour de la pupille. *3. CoLUMBA VINACEA (Temm.). Un exemplaire de Huambo tué le 20 février 1880. Iris gris violatre, presque de la nuance du sommet de la téte, mais un peu plus foncé; paupicres grises ; tour de l’ceil dénudé carné violatre. *4, PeERISTERA GEOFFROYI (Temm. ). Une femelle de Rumucucha, tuée le 27 aout 1880, Iris rouge clair. 5. GeoTRYGON MONTANA (L.); Tacz. P.Z.S. 1874, p. 556; 1879, p. 243. Un male de Cococho, tué le 28 aot 1879, et un male de Yuri- maguas du 9 mars 1881. Iris ocreux. CrAcID2. 1. PeneLore scuaTeRt, Gr.; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1874, p.550; 1879, p. 243. Trois exemplaires de Tamiapampa tués en novembre 1879. Iris brun rougeatre. 2. PENELOPE BOLIVIANA, Reichb.; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 558. Une femelle tuée & Yurimaguas le 7 février 1880, distincte des oiseaux du Pérou central par le fond des parties inférieures du corps fort roussatre, et les stries fauves au lieu de blanches. Iris brun foncé: parties nues de la face grises d’acier ; peau nue de la gorge rouge carnée. 3. PENELOPE RUFIVENTRIS, T'sch. Deux males de Tamiapampa, tués en novembre 1879, s’accordent en tout avec la description et la figure de la ‘ Fauna Peruana,’ tandis que les trois exemplaires fournis précédemment par M. Jelski du Pérou central different par Ja disposition de la couleur plombée sur le devant du cou. La peau nue chez les oiseaux vivants de Tamia- pampa est d’un bleu outremer ; bee noir; pattes rouges brunatres a doigts bruns avec une nuance rougedtre tres faible; iris rouge brunatre. 4, ORTALIDA GUTTATA (Spix). Une femelle et un poussin recueillis 4 Chirimoto le 6 juillet 18380. 1882.] IN NORTH-EASTERN PERU. 49 Cette femelle se distingue de celle du Pérou central par le manque complet des taches blanches sur le devant de abdomen. Bee gris bleuatre ; cire et les paupiéres plombées; pattes roses; iris brun fonce. RAID. RALLUS NIGRICANS, V. Un male adulte tué 4 Huambo le 12 avril 1880. Itis terre-de- Sienne foncé. SCOLOPACID, TRinGoIpES MACuLARIUS (L.) ; Tacz. P. Z.S. 1877, p. 330. Deux femelles adultes tuées 4 Huambo 4 la fin de mars 1880. PopiciPiTID&. *PODICEPS DOMINICUS (L.). Sept exemplaires adultes recueillis & Rumucucha en juin et en juillet 1880. Iris jaune. Les poussins en duvet, recueillis en juillet, ont le sommet de la téte noir avec une tache rousse au milieu et une série de raies blanches disposées comme il suit: une strie médiane devant la tache rousse, un sourcil au dessus de chaque ceil; une raie postoculaire, raie oblique cervicale prolongée sur toute la longueur du cou et un chevron nuchal passant aussi sur le cou; joues, gorge et le devant du cou sont blanes varies de lignes noiratres, dont une passe depuis le menton sur toute la longueur de la gorge et du cou; deux autres de chaque cété du cou, une sur les cétés de la gorge et l’autre tout le long du bas des joues. Dos gris noiratre parsemé de poils blancs; poitrine et flancs gris foncés mélés de poils blanchatres ; milieu du dessous largement blanc. Iris presque noir. Les ceufs des deux pontes ressemblent 4 ceux du P. minor de Europe, et sont en général un peu plus petits. Dimensions: 36 x 25, 35°5 X 27°8, 36°3 x 27°8, 35 x 25, 37°3 x 25°7 millim, TINAMID&. 1, Cryprurvs opsoLetus (Temm.) ; Tacz. P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 563. Six adultes et un jeune de Chirimoto, recueillis en juillet et en septembre 1880. Iris gris clair chez le male, gris chez la femelle. 2. NoTHOPROCTA CURVIROSTRIS, Scl. ? Un jeune oiseau couvert presque en entier de plumes, tué & Cha- chapoyas le 23 septembre 1879, me parait appartenir & cette espeéce. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. IV. 4 50 MR. M. JACOBY ON NEW GENERA AND (Jan. 3, 2, Descriptions of new Genera and Species of Phytophagous Coleoptera. By Martin Jacony. | Received November 31, 1881. | Lamprosoma, Kirby. 1. LAmMpROSOMA GRANDE, Sp. nov. Subglobular, very convex, black below, above brilliant metallic green. Head very finely, thorax distinctly punctured ; elytra rather deeply punctate-striate, the interstices finely scratched. Length 33 lines. Hab. Amazons. Head very broad, finely and closely punctured, the front with an obsolete depression ; clypeus separated from the face by a short but deep impression at the sides only, anterior border deeply concave. Labrum fulvous. Jaws and antennee black, the basal joint of the latter metallic green above, fulvous below. Thorax more than three times as broad as long, the sides greatly deflexed, the posterior lobe rounded and large, obliquely and distinctly impressed at each side, surface closely and more distinctly punctured than the head. Seutellum metallic green. Elytra regularly convex, scarcely nar- rowed behind, the lateral lobe not much produced, subangulate ; each elytron with ten rows of punctures deeply impressed at the base, but much smaller towards the apex, the interstices finely scratched. Prosternum rather longer than broad, its surface with a few deep punctures. A single specimen is contained in my collection. The present species is allied to L. amethystinum, Lac., L. cunea- tum, Baly, and L. canaliculatum, Baly, but differs from all of them in the more narrow transverse thorax, broader scarcely attenuated shape, the finer punctuation of its head and thorax, and the shape of its clypeus; the shape of the thorax is almost that of Lych- nophaés laticollis, although to a less extent. On the whole the present species bears a great resemblance in shape and colour to the last-named insect ; but the appendiculate claws show it to be a true Lamprosoma. Lycunornats, Lacordaire. 2. LycHNopHats AFRICANA. Broadly ovate, moderately convex, black. Thorax extremely finely punctured and strigose; elytra finely and irregularly punc- tured, a scutellar spot and a lateral band from the base to the apex metallic cupreous. Length 2 lines. Hab. South Africa. Head convex at the vertex only, subdepressed at the middle, finely longitudinally strigose; epistome limited at each side in front of the eyes by a short transverse depression. Eyes very slightly 1882. | SPECIES OF PHYTOPHAGOUS COLEOPTERA. 51 emarginate at their inner margin. Antenne rather long, extending to the base of the thorax, the seventh to the apical joints dentate but not very transversely shaped. Thorax more than three times as broad as long, greatly defiexed at the sides, the posterior margin rather regularly rounded at the sides, and the median lobe obsolete and not produced ; upper surface extremely finely punctured on the disk, very finely longitudinally strigose at the sides. Scutellum trian- gular, black. Elytra regularly but very moderately convex, the lateral lobes slightly produced and rounded; surface much more strongly punctured than the head, the punctuation close and irregularly arranged ; black, an elongate sutural spot surrounding the scutellum, and the lateral margins from the base to the apex, aureous or cupreous. Prosternum convex anteriorly, subtriangular, much nar- rowed behind. Claws simple. Two specimens of this interesting species were kindly given to me by Mr. Thorey, of Altona. I have included it for the present in the genus Lychnophaés, of which no species has been known inhabiting Africa. The general shape of the insect, scarcely emarginate eyes, and slender antennze would no doubt justify the erection of a special genus; but as these differences seem to me to be those of degree rather than generic, I have thought it best to abstain from the creation of a new genus. The insects were col- lected by Drége. NEOCHLAMYS, gen. nov. Ovate, rotundate, very convex. Head invisible from above. Eyes submarginate. Palpi short, robust, terminal joint conical. Antennee short ; fourth and fifth joints elongate. of equal length; the rest gradually transverse, subserrate. Thorax transverse, narrow, its sides rounded. Scutellum rather large, flat, triangular, Elytra distinctly lobed at the sides, very convex, irregularly punctured and strigose. Prosternum compressed, narrowed behind. Cavities for the reception of the antennze and legs present. Claws simple. Type, Neochlamys strigicollis. The genus described here is, without doubt, closely allied to Spherocharis, but well distinguished by the shape of the antennz and the simple claws. The eyes in the present genus may almost be called entire, the inner margin of the head scarcely advancing opposite the insertion of the antenne, and the pygidium scarcely protruding beyond the elytra, in one instance being even totally covered by them. Iam unfortunately not sure about the locality of this species, but believe it to be from Brazil. 3. NroCHLAMYS STRIGICOLLIs, sp. nov. Broadly ovate, rotundate, very convex, bronze-coloured, shining, Antenne, palpi, and tarsi fulvous; head and thorax closely longi- tudinally strigose; elytra closely and irregularly punctured, the apex and sides strigose. Length 22 to 3 lines. Hab. Brazil? 4% 52 MR. M. JACOBY ON NEW GENERA AND (Jan. 3, Head flat, slightly depressed between the eyes, closely covered with fine longitudinal striz, a triangular space between the eyes impunctate and smooth; anterior margin of the clypeus perfectly straight. Labrum transverse, black. Antennee shorter than the thorax ; fulvous, the first joint metallic eeneous, dentate from the seventh joint. Thorax nearly four times as broad as long, the pos- terior margin moderately produced at the middle, the median lobe not produced and straight; sides rounded, the entire surface closely covered with elongate puuctures and fine longitudinal striz. Scu- tellum rather broad, triangular, smooth. Elytra slightly broader at the base than the thorax, regularly convex, the apex rounded, with an obsoletely raised short costa near the lateral margin towards the apex; lateral lobe moderately produced and rounded; surface covered with smaller and larger punctures on the disk, the.sides and apex finely and closely strigose ; entirely of a metallic bronze colour. Underside and legs of the same colour, closely rugose-punctate ; the abdominal segments of nearly equal length; tarsi falvous. Prosternum rather broader than long, compressed and narrowed behind, rugose-punctate. Two specimens are contained in my collection. I may add to the above description, that the elytra in both the specimens before me are covered with small purplish spots of dif- ferent shape and position, which I attribute to accident or discolora- tion of the ground-colour, although I cannot be sure about it. One specimen shows also a short pygidium, while the latter is totally covered by the elytra in the other. EUMOLPID&. LuLycuivs, nov. gen. (sect. 7ypophorine). Antenuz with the last five joints widened, last three joints broadly transverse, wider than long. yes distant, entire. Prosternum varrowed at the middle, its base truncate; femora without teeth; intermediate tibiee notched at the apex. Claws bifid, the inner division minute. Type, Lulychius madagascariensis. This genus may be at once distinguished from all those belonging to the T'ypophorine by the broadly transverse and flattened apical joints of the antennee. It seems to be allied to the genus Sybriacus, Har., but differs in the unarmed femora and bifid claws. 4, EULYCHIUS MADAGASCARIENSIS, Sp. nov. Oblong, rufous ; last three joints of the antenne black ; thorax coarsely punctured; elytra finely punctate-striate, black, opaque, shoulders and the apex rufous. Length 23 lines. Hab. Madagascar. Head rather closely and strongly punctured. Clypeus separated from the face by an obsolete transverse groove. Labrum testaceous. Antenne extending to the base of the thorax ; first joint subglobular, 1882. | SPECIES OF PHYTOPHAGOUS COLEOPTERA. 53 thickened; second a little shorter than the third ; seventh and eighth joints gradually widened ; last three joints flattened, broader than long, black. Thorax narrowly transverse, fulvous, shining ; sides rounded, anterior margin straight ; disk rather convex, closely and deeply punctured. Scutellum triangular, fulvous. Elytra wider at the base than the thorax, moderately convex, the sides deflexed ; surface closely and regularly punctate-striate, black, opaque, a trian- gular spot at the shoulder and a narrow elongate apical one fulvous, Underside and legs entirely fulvous. Three specimens are contained in my collebtion. BALyA, noy. gen. Elongate, subparallel. Head perpendicular, broad, invisible from above. Eyes slightly emarginate, small. Palpi filiform. Antennze half the length of the body; second joint short, globose; third and following three joints subequal, slender; the rest gradually thickened. Thorax transverse, its sides rounded and entire, anterior angles produced. Scutellum triangular. lytra slightly wider than the thorax, convex, semipunctate-striate. Legs of moderate size ; the intermediate and posterior tibize of the male with a large tri- angular acute tooth. 2. Intermediate tibiee toothed oniy, the posterior ones emar- ginate ; prosternuin greatly narrowed in the middle, the base trun- cate; anterior thoracic episternum concave, Type, Balya quadrimaculata. I found this genus upon a handsome-coloured insect, of which three specimens are contained in my collection, from Brazil. It ought to be placed amongst the first group of the Eumolpide (the Iphimeine, according to Chapuis’s arrangement), from all genera of which it is easily distinguished by the toothed middle and posterior tibize of the male and its general elongate subcylindrical shape. 5. BALYA QUADRIMACULATA, Sp. lv. Below black ; head, thorax, and the base of the femora fulvous; antennee (the first 4 joints excepted), a spot at the middle of the thorax, and the tibiae black ; elytra dark purplish, the suture and two spots on each elytron flavous. Length 3 lines. Hab. Brazil (Lagoa Santa). Head very finely and closely punctured, broad, the eyes very distant. Antenne black, the first four joints fulvous. Palpi fulvous, terminal joint black. Thorax transversely convex, not narrower at the apex than at the base, the anterior angles produced into a short tooth, fulvous, with a central black rhomboidal spot; surface searcely visibly punctured. Scutellum black, triangular. Elytra slightly wider at the base than the thorax, parallel and subcylindri- cal ; surface closely covered with large and smaller punctures arranged in subregular rows, the apex longitudinally costate ; of adark purplish- blue colour, the suture narrowly, and two irregular-shaped spots near 54 MR, M. JACOBY ON NEW GENERA AND [Jan. 3, the lateral margin, one before, the other behind the middle, fulvous. Underside, knees, tibiee, and tarsi black, femora fulvous ; four pos- terior tibie armed with an acute long triangular tooth at their outside. Tn my collection. Mentvus, Chapuis. 6. MENIUS VIRIDIANEUS, sp. Noy. Ovate, convex, dark greenish zneous. Antenne and the legs obscure fulvous; thorax deeply but not closely punctured ; elytra very deeply and regularly punctate-striate, the mterstices convex anteriorly. Length 2 lines. Hab. Cameroons (the plains.) Front of head rather swollen, obsoletely and finely punctured, with a distinct but short longitudinal groove between the eyes, the latter with a distinct, posteriorly widened groove at their inner margin. Clypeus separated by a triangular impressed line from the face. Labrum fulvous. Antenne half the length of the body, fili- form, entirely fulvous, or with the apical joints piceous. ‘Thorax about twice as broad as long, distinctly narrowed from the base to the apex, its sides but little rounded, surface impressed with deep but rather remotely placed punctures. Scutellum subtriangular, its apex acute. Elytra slightly wider at the base than the thorax, con- vex, regularly and deeply punctate-striate near the base, much more finely towards the apex; below the shoulder several strize are united at their ends and their commencement and are only half the length of the rest ; interstices impunctate, subcostate near the base, but flat posteriorly. Femora with a short acute tooth. Collected by Mr. Rutherford. Coilection Jacoby. This species is allied to M. costatus, Baly, but is larger, differently shaped, the thorax much more strongly punctured, and the elytra are devoid of the strongly raised costze near the lateral margin. Terituus, Chapuis. 7. TERILLUS POROSUS, Sp. NOV. Elongate, convex, fulvous, finely pubescent below. Thorax irregu- larly and moderately strongly, elytra foveolate punctate, the interior - of the punctures metallic green. Length 33-4 lines. es. Hab. Australia, Cooktown. Head very minutely and closely punctured, and covered with fine silvery pubescence. Antennze half as long as the body, third joint double the length of the second, light fulvous. Thorax about twice as broad as long, its sides straight, disk longitudinally obsoletely sulcate from the base to the apex, rest of the surface irregularly covered with rather fine punctures, pubescent like the head. Scu- tellum smooth. Elytra foveolate-punctate, the punctures near the base arranged in irregular double rows, the rest confusedly distributed, 1882. | SPECIES OF PHYTOPHAGOUS COLEOPTERA, 55 interstices transversely wrinkled and costate near the apex ; the interior of the punctures, especially near the lateral and sutural margins, metallic green, Underside and legs fulvous, closely covered with fine silvery pubescence. In my collection. CuriripeA, Baly. 8. CHEIRIDEA SUBRUGOSA, sp. Noy. Oblong, convex, metallic green, pubescent. Legs cupreous. Tho- rax deeply punctate, its sides serrate. Elytra punctate-striate and transversely rugose, subpubescent, metallic green, with a broad transverse black band at the middle. Length 4 lines. Hab. Cameroons. Head rugose punctate, thinly covered with long white hairs. Labrum and jaws, as well as the palpi, black. Antenne nearly half the length of the body, the joints robust and (with the exception of the first three joints) elongate, black. Thorax subquadrate, its sides slightly rounded and serrate, all the angles acute ; surface deeply aud rather closely punctured, the interstices laterally transversely wrinkled ; metallic green, covered with thin white hairs at the sides. Scutellum pentagonal, thickly covered with white pubescence. Klytra wider than the thorax, convex at the middle and acutely pointed at the apex, irregularly transversely rugose and deeply punctured, the interstices subcostate at the disk, metallic green, this colour divided at the middle of each elytron by a broad transverse black band which does not quite reach the suture, this band is limited anteriorly and posteriorly by thick white pubescence, which is also prominent towards the apex in the shape of longitudinal stris, principally near the sutural margin. Underside obscure metallic green, closely pubescent. Legs cupreous, femora without tooth. Claws appendiculate. Jn my collection. This handsome species bears a close resemblance to Psewdocolaspis timialithus, Thoms., in regard to shape and colour, and might be easily mistaken for that species if the generic characters were not totally different. ‘The serrate sides of the thorax, filiform antennee, and the appendiculate claw show it, however, to belong to Baly’s genus Cheiridia, described in the Journ.Linn, Soc., Zool, vol. xiv, p. 253. HWAnricipa, DiaAmpuini, Gerstiicker. 9. DIAMPHIDIA ANGOLENSIS, sp. nov. . Broadly ovate, convex, testaceous or flavous. Antenne simple, black ; sides of the breast, knees, tibize and tarsi, three spots on the head, and five on the thorax bleck ; elytra very closely punctured, black, sutural and lateral margins and a pear-shaped spot from the base to the middle flavous. Length 43-5 lines. Hab, Angola (Africa). 56 MR, M. JACOBY ON NEW GENERA AND [Jan. 3, Head with a few fine punctures, flavous, a rhomboidal spot at the middle and one on each side at the base black. Antenne black, the second and third joints and the apex of the terminal one fulvous. Thorax nearly three times as broad as long, the sides very moderately rounded, anterior angles acute; surface finely and not very closely punctured on the disk, much more closely towards the sides ; a broad subquadrate irregular-shaped black spot is situated at each side, and connected anteriorly with a small round spot, another oblong one being placed in the middle of the base. Scutellum black. Elytra extremely closely subrugulose punctate, black, the margins narrowly testaceous, but interrupted at the apex by an elongation of the black portion; an elongate pear-shaped testaceous spot extends from the middle of the base in an oblique direction to the middle of the elytra. Underside closely pubescent. Four specimens of this well marked species are contained in my collection. The design of the elytra and thorax will distinguish this insect from any of its allies. GALERUCID&. Lurrropes, Motsch. 10. LUPERODES MARGINATUS, Sp. nov. Oblong, convex, light flavous below. Antenne, their basal joints excepted, piceous. Above pale olive-green, extreme lateral margins of the elytra and their epipleuree black. Length 3 lines. Hab. Africa, Lagos. Head not longer than broad, with a well marked transverse groove between the eyes, finely punctate, the latter black, prominent. An- tennee two thirds the length of the body, obscure piceous, the two or three basal joints flavous, joints 2 and 3 very short, of nearly equal length, the rest filiform and slender. Thorax narrowly trans- verse, its sides straight and narrowed from base to apex, the angles obtuse and rather rounded ; surface like the head, very minutely punc- tured. Scutellum triangular. Elytra convex, parallel, more dis- tinctly punctured than the thorax, of a very pale greenish tint, with the lateral and apical margins black; this colour is narrowed gra- dually towards the base, where it is very narrow. Underside and legs flavous, finely pubescent ; last abdominal segment in some specimens black. Collection Jacoby. The genus Luperodes, resembling in its general appearance the genus Monolepta, may be known by the very long first tarsal joint of the posterior legs, the tibize of which are armed with a long spine, in connexion with the open anterior coxal cavities. 11. LurpERODES AUSTRALIS, Sp. Noy. Oblong, convex, flavous; apical joints of the antenne, and the breast, black ; elytra minutely punctured, flavous, the base and a small spot below the middle rufous, 1882. | SPECIES OF PHYTOPHAGOUS COLEOPTERA, Or hae Length 2-25 lines. Hab. Australia. Head impunctate, with a short transverse groove between the eyes, the latter very large, black. Antenne rather closely approached, the four basal joints flavous, the rest piceous, joints 2 and 3 very short. Thorax transverse, the sides slightly rounded, anterior margin straight, posterior much rounded ; surface impunctate, flavous. Elytra very closely and finely punctured, with a transverse rufous band at the base, the posterior margin of which is irregularly sinuate, and a small spot of the same colour situated behind the middle and close to the sutural margin. Underside and legs flavous. Breast shining black. Two specimens are contained in my collection,received from the Mus. Godeffroy at Hamburg. Mauacosoma, Chey. 12. MaLacosoMA POLITUM, sp. nov. Oblong, convex, black. Thorax fulvous, impunctate ; elytra testaceous, extremely minutely punctured; legs and antenne black. Length 3 lines. Hab, South Africa. Head black, pubescent, with a more or less distinct central longi- tudinal groove at the vertex. Antenne short and robust; the second joint the shortest ; the third and fourth joints of equal length ; the rest subcylindrical, slightly thickened. Thorax transversely convex, its sides rounded, especially anteriorly, the anterior angles slightly tuberculate; surface convex, entirely impunctate, fulvous. Scutellum black. Hiytra convex, impunctate like the thorax, or visibly punctured only when seen under a strong lens; testaceous, very shining. Underside and legs rather thickly covered with yellow pubescence. The highly polished upper surface of the present species, which is totally impunctate, will distinguish it from MW. lusttanieum, with which it agrees in coloration. Collection Jacoby. 13, MaLAcosoOMA QUADRIMACULATUM, Sp. nov. Oblong, testaceous ; antennze, tibise, and tarsi black ; elytra very finely punctured, testaceous, a small longitudinal spot at the base and a band from base to apex, greatly narrowed anteriorly, black. Length 3 lines. Hab. Natal. Head convex, very minutely punctured, with a distinct transverse sinuate groove between the eyes. Antenne half the length of the body ; second joint short ; third and fourth joints elongate, of equal length ; the basal one fulvous, the rest black. Thorax narrowly trans- verse, nearly three times as broad as long; surface distinctly but irregularly punctured, fulvous. Scutellum nearly semicircular, flavous, smooth. Elytra rather more finely and closely punctured than the thorax, of the same colour as the latter; each elytron with an elongate 58 MR. M. JACOBY ON PHYTOPHAGOUS COLEOPTERA. ([Jan. 3, black spot near the scutellum and another broad band of the same colour, the anterior part of which is greatly narrowed and concave at its inner margin; this band does not extend quite to the lateral margin or the apex. Underside and femora testaceous ; tibize and tarsi black, My collection and that of the British Museum. 14, MaLacosoMA FLAVOMARGINATUM, Sp. Nov. Elongate, testaceous. Head and thorax fulvous; elytra closely punctured, blackish blue, the lateral and sutural margins flavous. Length 3 lines. fTab. South Africa. Head convex, closely punctured. Antenne half the length of the body, black, first three joints flavous. Thorax of the same shape as in M. quadrimaculatum, its surface distinctly but less closely punctured. Scutellum flavous. Elytra very closely and rather strongly punc- tured, black with a bluish tint, the sutural and lateral margins, as well as the apex, narrowly flavous. Underside and legs of the same colour; tarsi piceous. Collection Jacoby. GonropLeuRA, Westwood. 15. GONIOPLEURA BASALIS, Sp. nov. Elongate, convex, rufous. Thorax finely punctured, its sides tri- dentate; elytra finely pubescent, metallic green or blue, the base more or less broadly rufous. Length 7 lines. Hab. Sumatra. Head finely and closely puuctured. Clypeus slightly transversely depressed, its anterior margin deeply concave and bidentate. Apex of jaws black. Antennze light fulvous, extending to one third the length of the body. Thorax subquadrate, punctured like the head ; each lateral margin produced at the middle into a biangulate flat protuberance preceded by a small tooth, from which an oblique depression extends across the disk towards the base. Scutellum rufous. Elytra convex and parallel, closely and rather more strongly punctured than the thorax, and covered, especially towards the apex, with whitish pubescence ; metallic green or blue, with a more or less broad rufous transverse band at the base. Underside and legs rufous. Collection Jacoby and British Museum. From G. viridipennis, Clark, to which the present species bears a great resemblance, it may be distinguished by the dentate and angulate lateral thoracic margin, which in Clark’s species consists of a single tooth only, while here it is followed by an almost square- shaped broad angular protuberance. The rufous basal margin of the elytra varies in width, but is constant. This species forms the fourth of the genus Gontopleura, += , : ; ; ? Z : ‘ , P ’ ; if »* TA ' \ ‘ _ \ ‘ { + 2 . ‘ x : . \ ‘ \ ” L \ 4 SS 4 ; { : ; ; 7 ‘| r) _ . \ - \ ‘ a “Tad lla a ew ON ee Out WEY UeL Wqtr rua 1882.] MR. 0. THOMAS ON THE AFRICAN MUNGOOSES, 59 3. Onthe African Mungooses. By Oxprietp Tuomas, }.Z.8., British Museum. [Received December 2, 1881.] (Plate ITI.) In the Zoology of the Yunnan Expedition’, Dr. John Anderson of the Calcutta Museum has recently fully worked out the Oriental species of that difficult Viverrine group, the Mungooses; and the present paper is an attempt to treat similarly those that are found in Africa, The latter, however, are very much less uniform in structure than the former, as they belong to no less than seven genera, six being peculiar to Africa, while the Oriental forms, as Dr. Anderson has shown, ought all to be included in the restricted genus Herpestes. The Oriental and African Mungooses together form a very natural subfamily, the Herpestine”, quite distinct from the other large group of the Viverridze, namely the Civets and Paradoxures, or Viverrine. Prof. Flower, in his well-known paper on the classification of the Carnivora®, says of the Viverride (p. 35) that “they show a great tendency to break into two groups, of which Viverra, Paradoxurus, Aretictis, &c. belong to one, and Herpestes and its various modifi- cations to the other, /hyzena being an aberrant member of the last,’ and (p. 20) gives a description of the characters of the base of the skull in this group, compared with those of the Viverrine. Externally the members of this subfamily are distinguished by their comparatively lithe and slender form, and by their generally blunt, elongated, and but slightly curved claws, as compared with the short, sharp, semiretractile, and strongly curved claws of most of the Viverrinze. The following are the only two previous papers of any importance on the subject of the African species of this group :—(1) Temminck, Ksq. Zool. Cote Guinée, pp. 93-118 (1853) ; and (2) Gray, P.Z.S, 1864, pp. 547-579. The first of these contains much useful information, especially with regard to the variation to which these animals are subject ; nevertheless, notwithstanding his clear insight into the badness of other people’s species, Temminck formed several bad species of his own in it. The second, by Dr. Gray, is a complete revision of the group, in which, however, such a large number of untenable genera ave formed, and so many bad species are made and allowed, that the confusion into which the group had fallen cannot be said to have been removed by it. On the other hand, it must be admitted that 1 Op. cit. p. 168 (1878). 2 On the principle of strict priority this name ought to be Suricatine, Suri- cata antedating Herpestes by seven years ; but it would be so obviously unsuitable to call the subfamily after one of its most aberrant members, that I think we are justified in using the later and more classical term, 3 P.Z.8. 1869, p. 4. 60 MR, O. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, his general arrangement of the group seems to be a very natural one, and has, in its main outlines, been followed here. With regard to the genera treated of, I have only taken those found actually on the continent of Africa, and have therefore not included the aberrant forms Galidia, Galidictis, and Hupleres', which are only found in Madagascar, and of which the species present but little difficulty, so that there is no need for any special revision of them*. On the other hand, none of the true Mungooses are indigenous to Madagascar, though one or two of them have been recorded from there; but these would seem either to have been introduced, or the correctness of their locality to have been very doubtful. It must be remembered that the artificial introduction of animals of this group is by no means unlikely, as Mungooses are constantly tamed by the natives, and would thus easily be carried by them from one place to another *, In preparing this paper I have had the advantage of examining the collections, each possessing many typical specimens, contained in the Berlin, Leyden, and Frankfort Museums, in addition to the large series in our own national collection. I have thus seen nearly 250 African Mungooses, including the types of the species described by Gray, Peters, Riippell, Temminck, Smith, and others, the names of these species being marked with asterisks in the synonymy helow. All together, of the seventy-five good and bad species described, I have examined the types of thirty-one, the greater part of the remainder being species named either from rough travellers’ descriptions, from previously published figures, or else merely in alteration of earlier names. I must here thank Prof. Peters of Berlin, and Prof. Schlegel and Dr. Jentink of Leyden for the facilities they have afforded me of seeing the specimens under their charge, and Prof. Milne-Edwards for much useful information with respect to the typical specimens contained in the Paris Museum. Before commencing the detailed review of the species, I think it will be useful to make a few remarks concerning the characters which should be especially attended to by any one wishing to name an African specimen of this group. In the first place, I would call attention to the variation to be ob- served in the coloration of certain species : thus in Herpestes gracilis, the three varieties are extraordinarily different in their general colour, while the plan of coloration and all other characters are precisely identical ; these different colours moreover are not strictly confined ' These genera all differ from the continental Mungooses in not possessing an alisphenoid canal, a character present in all those treated of here. ® Dr. Jentink has recently worked out the species of the genus Galidia (Notes Leyd. Mus. i. p. 131, 1879). * The only true Mungoose collected without doubt in Madagascar, that I know of, is a young individual of Crossarchus fasciatus, obtained by Van Dam, and now in the Leyden Museum. Prof. Milne-Hdwards informs me that, in his opinion, ‘Le Vansive” ( Herpestes galera), usually said to have originally come from Mada- gascar,. was certainly not obtained there, no other collectors having met with it in that island sinee, 1882. | AFRICAN MUNGOOSES, 61 to any locality, though there is a certain tendency for all, or at least most of the specimens from one district to be alike in colour ; in fact, if this had not been so, I should not have felt justified in regarding the various forms even as distinct varieties. Again, H. albicauda varies most peculiarly in the amount of white present on the tail, some specimens having that member nearly entirely white and others wholly black, individuals of each type being moreover found in the heart of the district mostly inhabited by those of the other. Another remarkable point in connection with variation in colour is the fact that in certain species there seem to be two forms, one with annulated and the other with unannulated fur. Thus ordinary specimens of H. galera, Gr., have annulated fur, while others from various localities, among which are the types of /Z. pluto, Temm., have their longer hairs entirely unannulated. In the same way I. mutyigella, Riipp., seems to be the unannulated form of H. graci- lis, H. iodoprymnus, Heugl., being intermediate, and H. granti, Gr., similarly that of H. badius. It is of course possible that these two forms represent a seasonal change, though the few dated specimens that I have seen do not, on the whole, lend much support to this view, especially when we remember how comparatively little seasonal change of temperature must occur in the region with which we now have to deal. In the second place, attention should be drawn to the apparent frequency with which specimeng of this group seem to lose the minute first toes on both fore and hind feet. Thus both ‘ Cynictis” melanura and ‘* Galerella”’ ochracea ‘ owe their generic names to the fact of their halluces having been accidentally lost; and Bdeogale nigripes, Puch., has probably been referred to that genus for the same reason*. In the work already referred to*, T'emminck has drawn attention to this same point, and has given several instances which had fallen under his own observation. The minute claw of the first toe is probably very easily knocked off during the skinning and stuffing of specimens ; and the digit itself, without the claw, is so small and inconspicuous that it would not be observable without the closest scrutiny. On the whole it would seem that though some few cases may occur in which the claw has either never been developed or has been knocked off during life, yet as a rule, so far as I have seen, the loss has probably occurred after death, there being generally distinct traces of the former presence of the claw, thus showing that it could not have been lost during life, for then the skin would presumably have healed over the place. Thirdly, it is worthy of note that while the dimensions of the teeth are very constant, their number is by no means so: thus, one of our specimens of Crossarchus zebra (p. 89) has an additional true molar above on each side behind the two normal ones, the extra ones not being in any way crowded or rudimentary, but fully 1 T have softened and opened the skin of the hind foot of the type of this species, and found, as I expected, a broken metatarsus, about one tenth of an inch in length, and of the usual thickness, adhering to the entocuneiform bone. 2 See below, p. 77. 3) Op. cit, p. 107. 62 MR. 0. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, developed, and looking quite as if that species always possessed them. Again, a specimen of /. gracilis has an additional lower premolar standing side by side with the third normal one; but this differs from the last instance in being more obviously an abnormality. The type of Rhinogale melleri, as mentioned below (p. 81), has one more upper premolar on each side than is found in any other species of the group; but as, so far as I know, this typical specimen is unique, I cannot say whether the dental formula possessed by it is constant or not. On the other hand, a deficiency in the full number of teeth is very common, all the species with normally four upper premolars often losing the first one, which when present is always much smaller than any of the others. It has just been mentioned that the dimensions of the teeth are very constant ; and so much is this the case that I have found that the comparative measurements of the fourth upper premolar and second molar afford very good specific characters; for in those species in which the teeth are more or less round and suitable for grinding rather than cutting, the second molar is of considerable size and the fourth premolar is but little larger, while, on the other hand, when the teeth are slender, angular, and with cutting-edges, as in H. ichneu- mon, the last molar is very small and rudimentary and the last pre- molar is large and has a well-developed anterior internal process. As an instance of these differences, I may mention the cases of H. albicauda and LH. ichneumon, in the first of which the last molav is from 71 to 84 per cent. of the fourth premolar, while in the latter these percentages range only from 42 to 45. The measurements upon which these percentages are founded are those of the greatest diameter of the tooth—in the fourth premolar from the posterior point of the tooth to the anterior edge of the internal lobe, and in the last molar simply the greatest transverse diameter of the tooth. The percentages obtained by these measure- ments are called in the synopses of the species the ‘dental per- centages ;’’ and a table is given at the end of each genus showing the exact dimensions, with the resulting percentages, of the teeth of its members. Synopsis of the Genera. A, With a naked groove from the muzzle to the upper lip, I, Toes 5—5. a. Premolars + (if only 3 in either jaw, a diastema SIMSVYRURCSEUL) eaidaeanes ese IN aascntadseecsaceccacs += J. Hurresres, b, Premolars 3 (no diastema in front of Ist premo- lar). Hind soles naked ....:sicsccssetsees oats II. Henocaz. II. Toes 4—4. ce. Premolars {- Hind soles hairy .i...ccesseccesesees Til. Borocanu, III. Toes 5—4. d. Premolars {. Hind soles hairy ...... Hilal eats ai IV. Oynictis. 1882. | AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 63 B, No groove from nose to upper lip. IV. Toes 5—5. ¢. Premolars 3. Palate concave. Hind soleshairy V. Ruunocaue. J. Premolars #*. Palate flat. Hind soles bald...... VI. Crossarcius. VY. Toes 4-4. g. Premolars }. Hind soles bald......c..:.ccceeceeeees VII. Suricara. I. HerRpestes. Type. “ Vangusta, Oliv.”*, Ilig., Desm., Fisch., &e. .. 2 Ichneumon, Lacép. Méim. de VInst. ii. p. 492 (1801) (nee Linn. S. N.i. p. 930, 1766) ...... HT. ichneumon. Herpestes, Ullig. Prodr. Syst. Mamm. p. 135 PII See, oh. alae ise scan Po MoI £6 HT. ichneumon. Atilax, F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. Mamm. ii. livr. REI) Pena esha cae ae o's pagar wate Spee aye A HT. galera. Mungos, Ogilby, P. Z. 8. 1835, p. 103 (1835).. H. vitticollis. Urva, Hodgs. Journ. As. Soc. Beng. vi. p. 560 eis asic EE a: «ratty bl plains A ... A urva. Mesobema, Hodgs. Journ. As. Soc. Beng. x. i 2 i alae ace Caos Pama me et Osmetectis, Gray, Ann. & Mag. N. H. x. p. 260 MURR eens os wen as ste DR ERM GRO mkt * H, urva, Calogale, Gray, P. Z.S. 1864, p. 560 (1864) .. H. nepalensis. Galerella, Gray, t. cit. p. 564 (1864) ...... H. gracilis. Calictis, Gray, t. cit. p. 565 (1864).......... HH. smithii. Teniogale, Gray, t. cit. p. 569 (1864) ...... H. vitticollis. Onychogale, Gray, t. cit. p. 570 (1864)...... H. maccarthie. Toes 5—5. Teeth, 1.2, C. 1, P.M. +, M. 5, x 2=40. Underside of tarsus generally naked. Fur of two kinds, the longer usually annu- lated, so as to give the animal a grizzled appearance. Tail long, varying from about half to nearly equal the length of the head and body together. First toes on both fore and hind feet very small, probably nearly functionless. Claws of medium strength. Range. 8. Europe, all Africa, Asia Minor, Persia, and nearly the whole of the Oriental zoological region. To this, the typical genus, belong all the Indian and nearly half of the African species. There is a great variation in size and colour among its various members ; but the cranial characters are very fairly FT, urva. ! Tn the only known specimen, very possibly not constant, 2 Jn all the specimens seen; but a diastema is generally present, so that there is probably a minute first premolar in immature individuals. 5 This name is frequently quoted by the early authors as having been given by Olivier ; but I cannot find that it was ever used by him. In fact, in his ‘ Voyage dans 1’Empire Ottoman, l’Egypte et la Perse,’ vol. iii, p. 100 (1804), he uses the Linnean term Viverra ichneumon. Tven if, however, the name Mangusta was eyer characterized before 1811, I think we should be justified in ignoring it, as it is altogether barbarous, and Illiger’s name has received universal acceptance. Agassiz (Nomencel. Zool. i. p. 19) cites Mangusta as haying been described by Baron Cuvier in his ‘Tableau Elémentaire,’ 1797 ; but there is no mention of the genus in that work, b4 MR. O. THOMAS ON THE (Jan. 3, uniform. Dr. Anderson, in the work quoted above, has fully de- scribed and figured the skulls and dentition of the Indian forms ; and the African ones are very similar, if we except H. (Ichneumia) albi- cauda, which has, of course, as forming a distinct subgenus, many characters peculiar to itself. Synopsis of the Species. A. Taysus nearly or quite naked below. Upper M* 40-60 per cent. of P.M‘. Last lower molar small, with only 2 external cusps. (Subgenus HERPESTEs.) I. Tip of tail with a dark-coloured pencil. a. Tail-tip black. a. Size large: head and body 20 in. or more. a’. Skull halfas broad as long. Palwaretic 1. A. ichneumon, p. 64. b'. Skull less than half as broad as long. 1 BUHL) SENT) 6 sacecgasbepepanusaceuadnsdedbooachnc 2. H. caffer, p. 66. 8. Size small: head and bedy 12-14 in. ... 38 H. gracilis, p, 68. b. Tail-tip red. y. Size small: head and body about 12in.... 4. A. sanguineus, p. 71. II. Tip of tail not darker, ce. Darkrufous. Size large : head and body 20- DG isegeeetaacverecasewecsenaic ceca cee eatanes 5. H. galera, p. 72. d. Dark grizzled grey. Size medium : head and body 4 —1oMin sth xsncbtereteosssueerertssee< 6. H. pulverulentus, p. 74. e. Light grizzled grey. Size small: head and body. O=U Sinai prceerce sp eiews suse matiatteree 7, H. punctatissimus, p. 74. B. Tarsus hairy beneath. Upper M? more than 70 per cent. of P.M*, Last lower molar large, with 3 external cusps. (Subgenus Icuneumta). I. Tail very bushy. Size large, 22-26 in. ...... 8. H. albicauda, p. 75. 1. HerpEsTes ICHNEUMON. Viverra ichneumon, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 63 (1766). Ichneumon pharaon, Lacép. Mém. de I'Inst. iii. p. 492 (1801). Ichneumon egypti, Tiedem, Zool. i. p. 364 (1808). Herpestes pharaonis, Geoff. Descr. de ?Egypte, H. N. ii. p. 139 (1812). HI. numidicus, ¥. Cuv. Hist. Nat. Mamm. iv. livr. 68 (1834). * H. widdringtoni, Gray, Ann. & Mag. N. H. ix. p. 50 (1842). Hi. dorsalis, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1864, p. 549 (ex Smith, 8. Afr. Quart. Journ. ii. p. 113, 1835) (1864). Hab, Southern Spain, Asia Minor, Palestine, and Africa north of the Sahara. Size large, about 20 inches; form slender; tail about 4 to 5 inches shorter than the head and body. Fur long, especially on the rump and basal quarter of the tail, where the longer hairs are often 4 or more inches in length. General colour dark grizzled grey-brown, the hairs annulated with dark red-brown and creamy yellow, the tips of the back hairs darker yellow. Underfur thick and woolly, bright rufous in colour. Tip of tail shining black, the hairs elongated so as to form a distinct tassel, sometimes reaching 5 inches beyond the vertebree. Feet dark brown. Underside of hind feet generally quite naked, the part under the caleaneum sometimes, though rarely, hairy. ~ 1882.] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES, 65 Skull comparatively short and-broad, the breadth nearly always more than half the length (49-56 per cent.). Teeth slender and sharp, the last molar less than half the length of the 4th premolar (42-48 per cent.). Dimensions. Head and body’. ‘ail. Hind foot?. a. Spain (type of H. widdringtoni).. 20-0 17-0 3°7 ee chen ote es aes (kU 16-0 38 c. Palestine (Tristram)...... eee ane 21:0 150 3°4 d, Andalusia (Lord Lilford) ...... 21:0 16:0 3°4 e. Morocco (Parzudaki) .......... 205 15:0 3°4 Skulls. Ine. to Basi- Palate- Palate- cross cranial Length’. Breadth, length.* breadth®. line’, axis*, a. Spain(Zool.Soc.) 4°05 2°25 2:28 «1:30 1-34 6: Eeypt ........ 385. 2:04. 9:90 24. ..1-40.. 1-41 Cel. ay: 00 cee 37 2:0 low Ube (BO is For dimensions of teeth, see p. 78. * From the tip of the nose to the root of the tail, along the curves. Unless otherwise stated, the measurements are taken from stuffed specimens. * Without the claws. * From the front of the premaxille to the most posteriorpoint of either of the occipital condyles. * Greatest breadth across zygomata, ° From the front of the premaxille to the end of the bony palate. * Between the points at which P.M+ and M? touch each other at their outer edges. " From the front of the premaxill to a point on the palate midway between those mentioned under 6. * From the central point of the posterior edge of the basioccipital to the anterior edge of the lower surface of the presphenoid. It will be seen that, of these skull-measurements, Nos. 3, 4, and 5 are the same as those adopted by Prof. Huxley in his recent paper on the Canidex (P. Z, 8. 1880, p. 243). I do not, however, think that the measurement of “total length ” used by him is at all satisfactory, as the occipital spine, to the tip of which he measures, varies greatly with the age of the individual, and also between different species—some forms developing a bony crest comparatively early, and others, eyen when quite old, haying scarcely any at all. ‘These objections do not apply to measuring from the posterior point of the condyles, which is a place where no extra bony matter is added as the animal gets older. It is true that it would seem to be somewhat unnatural to measure from a central azygous point to a lateral symmetrical one; but practically the resulting dimension is so nearly exactly the same as measuring either to the upper part of the supraoccipital, not including the spine, or to the centre of the same bone just above the foramen magnum, that this objection is overbalanced by the convenience of measuring to the most posterior non-yarying point of the skull, and a point which can always be used with such extreme exactitude. The measurement given under 7 is a very useful one, a8 giving the true length Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. V. 5 Sy. a MR. O. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, 2. HeERPESTES CAFFER. Viverra cafra, Gmel. Linn. 8. N. i. p. 85 (1789). H. griseus, Smuts, Enum. Mamm. Cap. p. 19 (nee Desm.) (1832). H. madagascariensis, Smith, 8.Afr. Quart. Journ. ii. p. 114 (1835). ? Herpestes bennetiti, Gray, Loudon’s Mag. N. H. i. p. 578 (1837). Hab. Africa south of the Sahara. Somewhat larger than H. ichneumon, about 23 inches. Colours as in that species, with the following exceptions :—The annulations on the longer hairs are somewhat narrower, and consist of deep shining black and pure white rings, instead of brown or yellow ones, thus causing the general colour to be a much clearer grey ; and the under- fur is dark and dull (not bright) rufous, and sometimes simply dark grey-brown. Underside of hind feet always naked. Skull, compared with that of H. ichneumon, longer and narrower, the breadth always less than half the length (46 to 48 per cent.). Teeth and other characters as in H, ichneumon. Dimensions. Head and body. ‘Tail. Hind foot. a. Kingwilliamstown (Zvrevelyan) .. 22°0 18-0 3°7 De S.AMIGa stage eles 2b e580 eaeee0 19:0 3°9 e. Pie eke Sok» ALR 23°0 19°0 4-0 d. See ones iow ne tps -. 200 19°0 4:0 of the muzzle, a dimension not satisfactorily shown by merely taking the “palate- length,” because the amount to which the bony palate extends behind the molars varies considerably, both between different individuals and different species. With regard to the “ basicranial axis,” I haye been compelled, with some hesi- tation, to use a different measurement from that given by Prof. Huxley, because, first, his anterior point, easy enough to take in a bisected skull, cannot be found with any exactitude in a whole one; and, secondly, in many genera of Carnivora, for instance in the group at present under discussion, this spot as defined by him for a non-bisected skull (‘a point opposite the middle of the distance between the optic and ethmoidal foramina ”) falls considerably inside the posterior nares, and does not by any means “lie a little behind the posterior extremity of the vomer,” as it does in the Dogs. The axis I propose, however, is easily measured in all states of the skull; and a similar and corresponding axis may be readily obtained, not only in all the different genera of Carnivora, but also throughout almost the whole of the Mammalian class. I have, for example, long used this same axis in my notes on Rodents’ skulls, where it is always very readily observable, This axis, moreover, equally shows, in a horizontal line, what Prof. Huxley’s axis shows in an oblique one, namely the combined lengths of the basioccipital, basisphenoid, and prasphenoid bones, which, according to that author, ‘‘repre- sent the foundation around and upon which the other parts are built.” The measurements throughout are in English inches and tenths, except in the case of the tables of dimensions of teeth, where, a very small unit being required, they are given in millimetres. 1882.] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 67 Skulls. Palate- Palate- Incisors to Basicra- Length. Breadth. length. breadth. cross line. nial axis. BROAD ee > Ge Ee DAbAN RAT th S564. BAB 1°55 b. No locality .. 4°18 1°98 2°35 1:24 1°49 1°50 e. Kingwilliams- SOL, «8. s. ie oot arse ze 190 _ For teeth, see p. 78. These two closely allied species, H. ichneumon and H. caffer, seem to be very common over their respective ranges. There can never be any difficulty in distinguishing either of them from all others, as their large size and long black tail-tips readily separate them from all their congeners. Their nearest ally seems to be H. jerdoni, Gr., from India; but that is considerably smaller, and has an entirely distinct range from either of them. With regard to their distinctness from each other, I was at first disposed to regard them as only races of one species, as Temminck had done; but I have found such constancy in their distinguishing characters that, combined with the fact of their ranges being in diffe- rent zoological vegions, I have been induced to retain them as distinct species. There is no doubt, however, that they are very closely allied ; but when we remember how very distinct the faunas of the southern Palzarctic and of the Ethiopian regions are, scarcely any species being common, it would naturally seem preferable to consider as distinct two forms so fairly well marked as are H. ichneumon and H. caffer, when the line of demarcation between them so exactly corresponds with what is generally recognized as the boundary between the two zoological regions. I cannot find any characters whatever by which to separate, even asa variety, the Spanish Ichneumon (H. widdringtoni) from the form found on the southern side of the Straits of Gibraltar. In the specific diagnosis of H. ichnewmon given above, mention is made of the fact that occasionally the posterior part of the hind soles are hairy, instead of being bald as is usual. In connection with this, it is worthy of remark that a partly hairy sole seems to be accompanied by an increased length of the hallux, as though certain individuals or families were accustomed, probably on account of the nature of the soil, to walk in a more digitigrade manner than usual, and the hallux were in these cases elongated sufficiently to reach the ground. In H. galera I have also found the same thing, there being one of our West-African specimens of that species with a hairy sole and elongated hallux, whilst all others of the large series that I have examined have naked soles and short halluces. The following will show the extent of these differences, which, being quite unaccompanied by other special characters, are most certainly not specific :— In a hairy-soled H. ichneumon the posterior 0°9 in., and in the similar H. galera 1°45 in., is densely clothed with hair, while in all 5 68 MR. O. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, other specimens of both species there is no hair at all on the soles from toes to heel. And as to the length of the hallux, in the hairy- soled forms of the two species its claw reaches to within 0°23 and 0:27 in. from the most anterior point of the large central foot-pad, while in other specimens these measurements average 0°52 and 0°64 in. respectively. With regard to the habits of these large Mungooses, the manner in which H. ichneumon destroys the eggs of the crocodile is well known; and there is no doubt that it is of considerable use to the country in this way. Smuts’ says of H. caffer :—This animal lives in many parts of the Cape colony, mostly in holes in the earth. It feeds principally upon mice, the smaller birds, and amphibians, and is often kept in a state of domestication on account of the services it renders in destroying these animals.” 3. HERPESTES GRACILIS. a. Typical variety. *H, gracilis, Riipp. N. Wirb. Abyss. p. 29, pl. viii. fig. 2 (1835). */T. mutgigella, Riipp. t. cit. p. 29, pl. ix. fig. 1 (1835). Ichneumia nigricaudatus, Geoff. Mag. Zool. 1839, p. 18 (1839). H. galinieri, Guévin, Ferret & Galinier, Voy. Abyss., Atl. Zool. pl. i. fig. 1 (juv.) (1847-48). * H. punctulatus, Gray, P. Z.S. 1849, p. 11 (1849). H., lefebvrei, Des Murs & Prév., Lefebvre Voy. Abyss., Atl. Zool. pl. i. (in text H. gracilis) (1850). *H. ornatus, Peters, Reise nach Mossambique, Mamm. p. 117, pl. xvi. (1852). HI. ochromelas, Puch. Rev. et Mag. Zool. vii. p. 393 (1855). * H. iodoprymnus, Heug). Nov. Act. Ac. Leop. xxix. p. 23 (1861). HH. adailensis, Heugl. Peterm. Geogr. Mittheil. 1861, p. 17 (1861). H. muischeltschela, Heugl. Reise N.O. Afr. ii. p. 41 (ex Riipp.) (1877). H. ruficauda, Heug]. Reise N.O. Afr. ii. p. 43 (1877). Hab. Kast-African subregion—from Cape Verd round by Abys- sinia to Natal. b. Variety melanurus. *Cynictis melanura, Martin, P. Z, 8. 1836, p. 56 (1836). Hab. West-African subregion—Sierra Leone to Cameroons. c. Variety badius*. *Ichneumon ratlamuchi et cawi, A. Smith, App. Rep. S. Afr, Exp. p. 42 (1836). 2 Enum. Mamm. Cap. p. 20, 1882. 2 T have used this name in preference to either of Dr. Smith’s previous names for this variety, because not only is it more classical and extremely appropriate, but Dr. Smith himself proposed the alteration, and therefore there can be no in- justice in ignoring his earlier names. 1882. ] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 69 *Herpestes badius, Smith, Ill. Afr. Zool. pt. ii. pl. iv. (1838), *H. granti, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1864, p. 561 (1864). *Calogale venatica, Gray, t. cit. p. 563 (1864). Hab, South-African subregion, and northwards to Zanzibar. d. Variety ochraceus. *H. ochraceus, Gray, P.Z.S. 1848, p. 138, pl. viii. (1848). Galerella ochracea, Gray, P. Z.S. 1864, p. 564 (1864). Hab. Abyssinia. Specific Characters.—Size small, form slender ; tail slightly shorter than the head and body. Fur of medium length, not longer either at the base or tip of the tail; colour very variable, sandy, rufous, or dark grey-brown. ‘Tip of tail always deep shining black, the black part varying from 1 to 4 inches in length. Underside of tarsus naked. Skull like that of a miniature A. ichneumon; the teeth similarly slender and sharp. Last molar about half the length of the 4th premolar (46 to 59 per cent.). Varietal Characters. Typical variety.—General colour above and below dark brownish grey, with or without black annulations ; the tips of the hairs often with a distinct ruddy tinge. In unannulated specimens the black tail-tip not so sharply separated from the rest of the tail. Var. melanurus.—General colour above and below dark rufous, distinctly annulated with black. Fur short and crisp. Var. badius.—Bright rufous, sometimes annulated with black, Fur rather long and soft. Var. ochraceus.—Light sandy yellow, annulated, in the only known specimen, with black. Dimensions. Head Typical variety. and body. ‘Tail. Hind foot. a. Abyssinia (Riippell) .......... 14°5 12:0 2°5 b. Natal (Type of punetulatus).... 12°5 1]°5 2°3 Var. melanurus. Beg ICTER AUCODEY ton, ip 8 cpdle, 3s vans & « 13°0 11-0 2°3 Var. badius. Bas ALICE (EYPE) cs. 5.06,se gs oe LOS 11-0 20 ON a ons MA si, cStmssfon x, 19 Var. ochraceus. f. Abyssinia (type), imm... ...... 10:0 9°8 1°9 70 MR. 0. THOMAS ON THE (Jan. 3, Skulls. Ine. to Basi- hee Palate- Palate- cross cranial Var. gracilis. Length, Breadth. length. breadth. line. axis. a. Abyssinia(Blanford) 2-54 1:34 1:32 081 0°89 1:0 6. Natal (type of AH.) ..-- : ‘ P : has punctulatus) .... 2°55 1:30 1°31 0°81 0°90 Var. melanurus. e. Sierra Leone (Lord) ,.- i= : , : feed: TERR La bons 132 1-40 0°80 0-90 Var. badius. d. Mgunda Mkali (type | 9.45 y.909 1-95 ~=— 082085 = of H. granti) .... es wadticn yer onielaeri2?5 1-27. . (1°29), 0°80 ... 0:83 0°96 Var. ochraceus. J. Abyssinia (Hora), \ elegy “ag. 1-10 9 0°78 fi; amas? Fist xe This variable species appears to be the common small Mungoose of the whole of Africa. The distribution of its three principal varieties is somewhat interesting as so closely corresponding to the zoological subregions of Africa, as defined by Mr. Wallace in his ‘Geographical Distribution of Animais’*. Thus, the true H. gracilis is found from Cape Verd and Senegal across to Abyssinia and south- wards to Natal, a range nearly exactly agreeing with the “ East- African” subregion. I have seen no specimens of this species from Angola or Damaraland, so that I cannot say what, if any, form is found there ; but, according to Mr. Wallace, we should also expect to find the true H. gracilis in that district. Again, the varieties melanurus and badius occur, the first all over the ‘‘ West-,” and the latter over the “South-African”? subregions. It is true that speci- mens belonging to the true H. gracilis are sometimes, though rarely, found in both the other subregions, and H. éadius oceurs as far north as Zanzibar in the East-African subregion; but these facts only show the necessity for regarding the various forms as varieties, and not as species, which they might fairly be considered to be if each was strictly confined to its own district. It will be seen by the above synonymy that the variability in colour of H. gracilis has caused the formation of a considerable number of untenable species. The asterisks prefixed to the names show that I have seen typical specimens of the greater part of these so-called species ; and I do not think there can be much doubt in the case of any of them. In my opinion, H. mutgigella, which at first sight seems so different from the rest, represents simply the unannulated form of H. gracilis, an intermediate state being repre- sented by a typical specimen of H. iodoprymnus, Heugl., in the Leyden Museum. Of the other names, I am not quite certain whether H. adailensis, Heugl., should not rather be placed under ? Vol, i. p. 258, and map, p. 250 (1876). 1882, ] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES, 71 var. ochraceus ; but without seeing a specimen I cannot be certain on this point. In Temminck’s paper mentioned above, very nearly the same con- clusions are come to with regard to these small Herpeste with black tail-tips, I am, however, disposed to demur to his statement that all the differences between what are here considered varieties are merely owing to seasonal change; for it would be obviously impro- bable that all the Abyssinian specimens known should have been taken in the winter, and nine tenths of the West- and South-African specimens in the summer. No doubt, however, a certain amount of change does take place according to season; but we cannot deter- mine the amount of this until there are considerable series of dated specimens available for examination, 4, HERPESTES SANGUINEUS, *H. sanguineus, Riipp. N. Wirb. Abyss. p. 27, pl. viii. fig. 1 (1835), Hab. 8. Egypt (Kordofan). (Types, Frankfort Museum.) Form and size much as in H. gra- cilis. Fur short and rather harsh. General colour very pale fawn. Hairs annulated with brown and yellowish white, the latter predo- winating, and so arranged that there is an appearance of cross stripes on the posterior half of the back. Tail with longer hairs, which are annulated with black and white, though the black is not at all conspicuous. ‘Tail-tip yellowish red, sharply separated from the rest. Feet nearly white. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. Kordofan (Riippell) .... 122 11°9 2°1 b. 66 a i VIZAL 12-2 _— Cc a se serra WISE, 10°8 1:9 Skull. Palate- Palate- Ine. to Length. Breadth. length. breadth, cross line. a. .. 2°35 1°15 1:18 0°73 0°82 This species, hitherto only found in Kordofan, is evidently a desert form, having the sandy coloration usually found in animals inhabiting sandy plains. Dr. Riippell seems to have found it numerous, as he brought home five or six specimens. He states that it lives in holes in the ground, among bushes, and that, though fierce when wild, it is yet easily tamable. Herr von Heuglin also found it, though not commonly, in the same region. Dr. Riippell states that there are in H. sanguineus only 22 caudal vertebrze, while there are 25 in H. gracilis and 28 in H. ichneumon. Not having any material on which to found similar observations, I cannot say whether these numbers are constant or not ; but a consi- 72 MR. O. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, derable series of perfect skeletons would be necessary before one could place any reliance upon them as a specific character. 5. HERPESTES GALERA. a. Typical variety. Mustela galera, Erxl. Syst. Reg. Anim. i. p. 453 (1777). Viverra nems, Kerr, Linn. 8. N. p. 160 (1792). Mustela afra, Kerr, t. cit. p. 175 (1792). Ichneumon galera et major, Geoff. Deser. Egypte, Hist. Nat. ii. p- 138 (1812). Atilaw vansire, F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. Mamm. iii. livr. 54 (1826). Herpestes paludinosus, G. Cuv. Régne Anim. ed. 2, i. p. 158 (1829). *Mangusta urinatriz, A. Smith, Zool. Journ. iv. p. 437 (1829). * Herpestes pluto, Temm. Esq. Zool. Guin. p. 95 (1853). *Herpestes loempo, Gray, P. Z.S. 1864, p. 551 (nec Temm.) (1864). Athylax vansire et paludosus, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1864, p. 557 (1864). Hab. West and South Africa. b. Variety robustus. *Athylax robustus, Gray, P. Z.S. 1864, p. 558 (1864). Hab. East Africa (White Nile). Specific Characters.—Size very large, form stout and heavy. Tail shorter than the body without the head. General colour either grizzled reddish brown and white, or dark blackish brown without annulations’. Underfur greyish brown. Feet dark brown. Tail coloured like the body, but rather darker, sometimes gradually be- coming nearly black towards the end, the black never sharply sepa- rated as in H. ichneumon. Belly similar to back. Cheeks gene- rally with a peculiar indistinct whitish mark from the angle of the mouth to below the ear. Hind soles as a rule quite naked, some- times with the posterior third hairy’. Skull very stout and heavy, the lower jaw particularly so, with a distinct and well-marked chin in adults. Teeth rather small in proportion. Last molar more than half the last premolar (56-61 per cent.). Varietal Characters. Var. galera. Smaller: skull less than 4°3 inches in length. Var. robustus. Larger: skull more than 4°5 inches in length. Dimensions. : Head Typical variety. and body. Tail. Hind foot. Gs, Cape st? inhy-sxoss . 24°5 13:0 39 be. +55 7 hea 24°0 13:5 3°9 Con W A fecal erate oe 24:0 : 3°8 Var. robustus. d, Type: E. Africa.... 26:5 12°5 4-0 * See above, p. 61. 2 See above, p. 67, 1882. ] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 73 Skulls. Basi- Palate- Palate- Inc.to cranial Length. Breadth. length. breadth. crossline. axis. a Sv Atnes sg 03°75 211 2°15 1°37 1°32 ]-20 d. + pe fate: 2°13 2°16 1°35 1°37 131 G os Mas 2 14525 ais 2°45 1°42 1°55 1°53 d. W. Africa.... 4°25 2°52 2°38 1°38 1°50 146 Var. robustus. e. White Nile | 455 ) (type)...... Ff. No loc. (Berl. 4-59 Misi) f stint ‘ald This large species was first mentioned as long ago as 1661 by Flacourt, in his work on Madagascar’. It is there called ‘ Vond- sira,” which name forms the basis of Buffon’s term “ Le Vansire.”’ Its reputed occurrence in Madagascar caused Dr. Gray and others to believe that there were two species, the one in Africa being natu- rally supposed to be distinct ; but now, as no other specimens have since occurred in Madagascar, we are justified in concluding that Flacourt only saw an introduced specimen, and that it is not indi- genous to that island. I have preserved Dr. Gray’s H. robustus as a distinct variety, because the skulls show that there is a considerable difference in size between this eastern form and that found in the west and south. It unfortunately happens that the specimen of H. robustus in the Berlin Museum, the dimensions of the skull of which are given above, has no locality recorded for it, so that I do not know any thing about the extent of the range of this variety; the British-Museum specimen was obtained from the White Nile. On this species the genus ‘‘ d¢thylax’’ has been formed ; but there does not seem to be sufficient reason for its separation from the typical Herpestes. It is just worthy of note that large specimens of Crossarchus obscurus are often so extremely similar in colour and proportions to small ones of this species, that an examination of the muzzle or skull is needed to show to which group they belong. The variation in the hairiness or otherwise of the hind soles of this species has already been referred to”. As, judging from Smuts’s account of its habits, Cuvier’s name H. paludinosus, the ‘“ Marsh” Ichneumon, is correct for the ordinary naked-soled individuals, it seems probable that those with the hinder portion of the soles hairy live on a dry soil, where, one would imagine, they would not have to walk in so wholly a plantigrade manner as if they lived where the ground was soft and muddy and where a digitigrade animal would be liable to sink in at every step. Smuts says of H. galera *:—-‘‘ This animal lives in marshy places, 1 «Histoire de Ja grande isle Madagascar,’ p. 154 (1661). > Above p. 67. - 8 T.ctt. p. 22, 74 MR. 0. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, and on the banks of the smaller rivers of the extreme south of Africa ; its principal food consists of frogs, crustaceans, &c.” 6. HERPESTES PULVERULENTUS. H. pulverulentus,Wagn. Miinch. Gel. Anzeig. ix. p. 426 (1839). *H. apiculatus, Gray, P. Z. S. 1864, p. 551 (1864). Hab. Eastern half of the Cape colony. Size rather small, form somewhat stout. Tail about as long as the body without the head. Soles of hind feet hairy below caleanea ; the rest naked, at leastinthe centre. Fur rather long, soft, and shining. General colour uniform grizzled grey, the longer hairs annulated with equal-sized rings of black and white or yellow. Underfur brown for its proximal, and grey for its distal half. Tail-hairs long, coloured like the body to the extreme tip. Feet slightly darker than the body. Skull very like that of H. gracilis, though somewhat stouter and the teeth heavier. Last molar less than half the length of the last premolar (43-44 per cent.). Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. S. Africa] Co-types of H. api- { 14:0 PieG 2°4 b. 53 ulate. Gua, eiecye 14:0 11°3 26 c. a5, ME Eee oye ars 15:0 11:4 2°3 d. PU o> 2 arth ee tenia 13°0 10:0 2°4 Skulls. Ine. to Basi- Palate- Palate- cross cranial Length. Breadth, length. breadth. line. axis. a. Kingwilliamstown (Trevelyan) .. c. 2°7 3! ae Oo y=!) 95 — 6.5. Affiea os. 02705. 1°33. 1S 88 "95, — This Mungoose reminds one somewhat of a small H. caffer, the colour and character of its fur being very similar, though it has not, of course, the long black tail-tip of that species. Its range seems to be rather limited, as all the specimens with exact localities that I have seen are from the eastera half of the Cape colony (Algoa Bay, Kingwilliamstown, Caffirland, Natal, &c.). It is naturally very likely that it will yet be found further north than Natal ; but it is not pro- bable that it will occur in any number, if at all, in the western districts of the colony, or it would surely have been recorded from there before this. I have not been able to find any mention of the habits of this species. 7. HeRPESTES PUNCTATISSIMUS. *H. punctatissimus, Temm. Esq. Zool. Guin. p. 108 (1853). Hab. West and South Africa (Gaboon, Algoa Bay, Temm.). I have only seen a single specimen of this species, one of the types o 1882. ] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 75 obtained by Dr. Brehm at Algoa Bay, and now preserved in the Leyden Museum. Temminck, in his original description, mentions another specimen, from the Gaboon ; but I am told by Dr. Jentink that this is not now in the Leyden Museum. The following is a description of the Algoa-Bay specimen :— Fur short and harsh, the hairs on the back barely half an inch long. General colour all over pale grey, the hairs finely grizzled with black and creamy white ; belly like the back, except that the hairs have longer pale tips and less black. Tail-hairs rather longer than those on the body, uniformly annulated with black and white ; no trace of a darker tail-tip. Feet and legs like the body; soles naked. Dimensions (Algoa Bay). Head and Gady®.. ..- oii. - 13:0" Ta ode 2 Pee or ts sre tigs wae 10°2 Plat Pope eles a eS 75 The skull is so imperfect that the only measurements obtainable are the following, which Dr. Jentink has kindly taken for me :— This small species bears a certain resemblance to some of the smaller Indian Mungooses, especially H. auropunetatus, Hodgs., though it has much shorter fur than that species. It appears to be very rare, as there seem to have been no specimens recorded in addition to the two mentioned by Temminck, of which, as mentioned above, only one is now in the Leyden Museum. I may here mention that an examination of the type of H. micro- cephalus, Temm.”, a species of which the locality was not known, has convinced me that that name must stand as a synonym of H. auropunctatus, the specimen being quite similar to the types of Hodgson’s species preserved in the British Museum. 8. Herprstes (ICHNEUMIA) ALBICAUDA. H, albicaudus, G. Cuv. Régne Anim. ed. 2, i. p. 158 (1829). *H. leucurus, Ehrenb. Symb. Phys. pl. 12. Decas 2 (1830). Ichneumia albescens, 1. Geoff. Mag. Zool. 1839, pp- 16 & 35 (de- scription, not figure) (1839). *H. loempo, 'Temm. Usq. Zool. Guin. p. 93 (1853). Ichneumia nigricauda, Puch. Rev, et Mag. Zool. vii. p. 394 (1855). ? Bdeogale nigripes, Puch. t. cit. p. 111 (1855). *H. pluto, Gray, P. Z.S. 1864, p. 552 (nec Temm.) (1864). Ichneumia abu-wudan, Fitz. & Heugl. Sitzungsb. Ak. Wien, liv. Abth. 1, p. 561 (1866). Hab. East Abyssinia to Natal, and West Africa (Guinea &c.). Size large, form rather slender. Tail bushy, rather shorter than * Apparently somewhat stretched. * Esq. Zool. Guin. p. 113 (1853), 76 MR. 0. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, the body without the head. Underside of tarsus thickly hairy down to the root of the hallux. Fur of medium length. General colour blackish grey, the longer hairs ringed with black and white, the ter- minal third nearly always black. Uuderfur woolly, uniform dirty grey. Feet black. Tail-hairs very long, in some cases with white bases and long shining black tips, so that the whole tail appears to be black ; in others with a long white tip beyond the black, so that then the tail appears to be white ; in the latter case the hairs at the extreme tip of the tail are generally wholly white. a, b. Last lower molars of Herpestes ichneumon. C, a. A a H., albicauda. a, c. Upper view; 0, d. side view. Skull rather stout and heavy, the muscular ridges, however, but little developed. Brain-case comparatively short, not half the length of the whole skull. Teeth more rounded than in the members of the typical subgenus. Last molars, above and below, proportionally much larger than in Herpestes, the lower one with a well-marked extra external cusp between the two usual ones, so that there are five cusps in all (see woodcut, Fig 1, ¢, d.). Inold specimens, of course, this character cannot be made out, as the cusps are worn off these teeth at a comparatively early age. Dental percentage 71-84. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. Type, Nubia(Berl. Mus.) 26-0 158 4°9 A> Natal. Getic ee. eb 24:0 15:0 ie ~c. Caffraria (Leyd. Mus.).. 24°5 15°8 4°85 e. W. Africa (type of H. loempo, Leyd. Mus.).... 23°0 15°8 45 Skulls. Ine. to Basi- Palate- Palate- cross cranial Length. Breadth, length. breadth. line. axis. a: Accra: oi dame eer 2S e216 1. 26 13 L5 — 6. W. Africa (Berl. MUS.) «|. eR EEO ARY 2°41 1°25 1°41 — ce. Abyssinia ...... 3°75 1°88 2°05 at ists 1:18 d. E. Africa...... ec. 3°80 2°07 220 1g o7 — 1882. } AFRICAN. MUNGOOSES. 77 The present rather peculiar species has always, in its white-tailed form, been recognized as the type of a distinct genus or subgenus, for which Geoffroy proposed the name of Ichneumia. No one, how- ever, ever seems to have noticed that the black-tailed H. loempo, Temm., is not even specifically distinct from the typical form, and therefore, of course, possesses all its more important structural cha- racters. H. albicauda and IH. loempo cannot even be separated as varieties ; for the only difference between them, namely the colour of the tail, seems to be purely an individual variation. It is true that for the most part specimens from West Africa, representing H, loempo, have black tails, and those from East Africa white tails ; but I have seen too many exceptions to this rule to feel justified in re- garding the two forms as varietally distinct. Thus there is in the Berlin Museum a specimen from Accra, ou the Gold Coast, which has a regular white tail, just as in the typical 7. albicauda ; and, on the other hand, black-tailed specimens from East Africa are by no means rare. Moreover, in the British Museum we have two specimens from the Bogos country, Abyssinia, received together, and the skulls of which are quite identical, one of which has a black loempo-like tail, and the other has a tail with quite as much white on it as in average albicauda. We thus see that the presence or absence of a white tip to the tail-hairs is a character upon which no specific distinction can be founded; and, in fact, it would rather seem that the white tail is the result of a desert life, specimens from sandy districts having, as a rule, white, and those from forest regions, black tails. Ichneumia albescens, 1. Geoff., appears to be simply a pale form of this species, in which the longer hairs are fewer in number, so that the grey underfur shows more on the surface, and thus gives a generally paler colour than usual. I. nigricauda, Puch., seems to be quite identical with this species, representing the usual West-African black-tailed form. With regard te Bdeogale nigripes, Puch., from the Gaboon, I have already mentioned my suspicion that it has accidentally lost the first toes on all four feet; and it seems very possible that it is really only a white-tailed specimen of this species, and not a Bdeogale at all. The original description would exactly fit the Accra white-tailed spe- cimen already referred to ; and that is certainly a true Herpestes, as the fifth toes are present on all the feet’. Of all the Mungooses, H. albicauda seems to be the most nearly allied to the true Bdeogale, strongly resembling the species of that genus in general colour, quality of fur, length and bushiness of tail, hairiness of tarsus, proportionally large size of the last molar, and most of all in the presence of the median middle external cusp to the last lower molar, a character in which Bdeogale differs from all other 1 Since writing the above I have xeceived a letter from Prof. Barboza du Bocage, in which he informs me that the specimen from Angola, referred by him (P. Z. 8. 1865, p. 402) to Bd. nigripes, proves on a closer examination to possess minute Ist claws to the fore feet, thus strongly confirming my previous opinion about that animal. 78 MR. 0. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, Mungooses except the present species and those of the very distinct genus Crossarchus. The absolute sizes of the molars in Bdeogale are, however, as is shown in the table of dimensions, much less than in Ichneumia. The following table gives the dimensions of the last upper pre- molar and last molar of the species of Herpestes, with the percentage of the latter tothe former. The letters correspond to those denoting the different skulls of which the measurements are given above. Where the teeth belonging to a skull not previously referred to are measured, an asterisk is inserted instead of a letter. P.M*. M? Percentage. mm. mm. Bobo H. ichneumow ...........000. a...| 11:0 5:0 45 &...) 108 4-9 45 c 103 50 48 EM CAMET Wecarcresneeasnsssee a...| 12:0 54 45 Creal) Ml2r0 55 46 H. gracilis, typ. var. ...... Diss 76 3:7 48 oe 8:0 4-1 51 As 8-0 38 47 ese 81 4:5 55 ahonty var, melanurus, ¢... Td 3:5 47 3) peybe) AWE DACILUS pee cases 76 38 50 Cnc 74 3:5 47 6: mas var. ochraceus, /f... Vic 39 55 H. sanguineus ............... a 67 28 42 H. galera, typ. var. .......4. a 12:0 ei 59 b 119 67 56 ce [3°2 76 58 hice) aa abl le, 2 61 » 9» var. robustus ... ¢... 12:0 7-0 58 ie gloss 75 57 H. pulverulentus .....,...06 den.| 9:0 40 dt Uae 9-0 3:9 43 H, punctatissimus ......... a3 7-0 35 50 H. (Ichneumia) albicauda, «... 9-9 Tl 71 bie O-4 6:9 73 Ce. 9-0 Oe 78 aK. 9:0 (F3 83 Hees 9-0 76 84 eee 9:0 7-0 17 | 1882.] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 79 II]. HeLoGare. Type. Helogale, Gray, P..Z.S. 1861, p. 308.........55 HH. parvula. Range. Mozambique to Natal. Toes 5-——5. Teeth, I. ‘, C. ~ P.M. > M. 2 x 2=36. Outlines of skull more rounded than in Herpestes, even in old specimens. Underside of tarsus naked. ‘Tail shorter than the body. Other characters as in Herpestes. This genus was separated from the true Mungooses by Dr. Gray on account of the presence of only three premolars in each jaw, instead of four as normally possessed by Herpestes. It is true that in that genus, as mentioned above, the first small premolar is fre- quently absent ; but in these cases there is always a vacant space where the tooth usually stands; while in Helogale the tooth which corresponds to the second premolar stands quite close to the canine, leaving no diastema whatever. In addition to this character, the general shape of the skull is quite different from that of Herpestes, being shorter, broader in proportion, the walls of the brain-case thinner, and all the surfaces much smoother, with less well-marked muscular ridges. The figures of the skull quoted in the synonymy below show the difference in general appearence very well. The form of the teeth is, as Prof. Peters remarks, very similar to that found in “ Herpestes fasciatus,’ which likeness extends to the other species of Crossarchus: but the two genera may of course be readily distinguished by the different shape of the skull, and by the presence in Helogale of the distinct naked line from the nose to the upper lip already referred to. The skulls and dentition of the two species of this genus seem to be very much alike, though there is a slight difference in the size of the last molars. 1. HELOGALE PARVULA. * Herpestes parvulus, Sundev. Gtv. af Kongl. Vet. Ak. Férhandl. 1846, p. 121. Helogale parvula, Gray, P. Z.S8. 1861, p. 308 (woodcuts of skull), Hab. Natal (Wahlberg). Size small, form slender ; tail rather shorter than the body without the head. General colour above and below dark finely grizzled grey- brown, the hairs annulated with black or brown and yellowish white. Feet and tail like body but rather darker. No trace of rufous on - any part of the body. Last molar proportionally somewhat larger than in H. undulata. Dental percentage 79-80. Dimensions. Head and body. ‘Tail. Hind foot. a. Natal (one of the types) .... 9°5 i) 5) b. » (Warwick) Gipleie este bre 6 83 4'6 _— 80 MR. O. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, Skull, Basi- Palate- Palate- Inc. to cranial Length. Breadth. length. breadth. cross line. axis. a. Nafal...... 1°82 113 90 63 ‘61 65 Bling). ckparde i aS 86 61 60 == Of this species, the smallest of all the Mungooses, Dr. Sundevall obtained in the typical series a considerable number of specimens; but, curiously enough, no others have come to any of the Museums that I have seen, except specimen 6 measured above, which was ob- tained from Natal through a dealer. However, Dr. Sundevall dis- tributed specimens so freely, that there are some of his original speci- mens of this species in most of the larger European Museums. 2. HELOGALE UNDULATA. * Herpestes undulatus, Peters, Reise n. Mossambique, p. 114, Taf. xxv. (animal and skull) (1852). Hab. East Africa (Mozambique, Peters; Taita, Hildebrandt). Size, compared with that of most Herpesteé, small, though slightly larger than Helogale parvula. Form slender. Tail rather shorter than the body without the head. General colour grizzled rufous, the longer hairs annulated with black and white ; underfur for basal portion grey, terminal portion red. Neck, belly, and legs rich rufous, with less black grizzling. Tail coloured like back, no black tip. Skull asin H. parvula, but larger, and the last molar smaller in proportion ; dental percentage about 70. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. Type, Mozambique Bolt 7 9°4 6°7 1°56 b. Taita (Hildebrandt). . met pada 6-4 1-48 Skull. Palate- Palate- Ine. to Length. Breadth. length. breadth. cross line. ig, THitar? . ego, 2°0 1-24 "99 "68 65 This species may be readily distinguished from H. parvula by its larger size and its bright rufous belly and underside of neck, these parts in H. parvula being a dull grizzled brown. I only know of the two specimens of which the dimensions are given above; so that I am not in a position to state what the full range of this form is. Dr. Peters states that H. undulata is particularly fond of eg which it breaks by throwing them with its fore legs through its hind ones against a wall. Molars of Helogale. H. parvula. Tei Bk M’. Percentage. G. a ececersce ‘eu 3°0 40 80 b. Eom. svdasl. iit boolt 572 4:1 79 Hi, undulata. 0s) BARGE shakes a'6. _ ADs Ble 1882. ] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 81 Ili. Bprocaue. Type. Bdeogale, Peters, Reise nach Mossamb., Siug. PCBS). whos 5 2 050 I Ne sivieteies' B. crassicauda. Range. East Africa (Mozambique, Zanzibar) ;? West Africa (Ga- boon). Toss 4—4, Teeth and other characters as in Herpestes, with especial resemblance to those of the subgenus Ichnewmia (see above, p. 77). In Dr. Peters’s original description, he states that on the fore feet there is only a minute rudiment of a first metacarpal, and on the hind feet not even this trace of the normal first toe. In a spirit specimen of B. puisa in our collection, I cannot even find the rudi- mentary first metacarpal, so that this individual is absolutely without any remnant of the first digit. The following are the three species which have been described as belonging to this genus; but it must be confessed that the two Mo- zambique species are very closely allied to each other; and as to the West-African one, I have already stated my belief that it is only a synonym of Herpestes albicauda; but not having had the oppor- tunity of examining the type, I put it provisionally in its place here, with Dr. Pucheran’s short diagnosis appended. 1. BDEOGALE CRASSICAUDA. * B. crassicauda, Peters, tom. cit. p. 120, Taf. xxvii. (1852). Hab. Mozambique (Tette-Boror). Characters much as in B. puisa (described below), except that the tail is distinctly longer in proportion, and the tail-hairs, which are very long, have their basal halves white and their terminal black, while in B. puisa they are uniformly blackish brown. The last molar also in the present species seems to be proportionally some- what longer, judging from Dr. Peters’s excellent figures. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. Mozambique (type) .......... 17:0 10°6 3°15 Skull Length. Breadth. Palate-length. a. Type (from Peters) .......00. 3°15 1°79 1:96 2. BDEOGALE PUISA. * B. puisa, Peters, tom. cit. p. 124, Taf. xxviii. (1852), Hab. Mozambique (Mossimboa) (Peters); Zanzibar (Kirk). Size rather large ; form slender ; tail short, not half so long as the head and body. Underside of the hind foot thickly hairy to the base of the toes. General colour dull brownish, with or without annulations. Underfur tawny yellow, long and soft. Limbs 1 From front of jaw to foramen magnum. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. VI. 6 82 MR. O, THOMAS ON THE (Jan. 3, darker, nearly black. Head greyish. Tail bushy, uniformly blackish brown. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. Type, Mozambique (very old) .. 20°8 9°1 3°25 b; Zanzibar CKtirk) «sc agnenee asnylloo 7°0 3°0 Skull. Palate- Length. Breadth. length. a, Type (from Peters) ....2...--+; 3°4 2°1 2:1 This species, of which Dr. Kirk has sent us a rather small speci- men from Zanzibar, is found further north than its ally B. crassicauda. Our specimen being in spirit, I have been able to examine carefully the state of the feet with regard to the absence of the first toes; and I find, as mentioned above, no trace whatever of these digits ; while in species which normally possess five toes, and the first one is in any case accidentally lost, there are generally some remains left of the missing digit, in the shape of a broken metacarpal or metatarsal ”. The species of this group would seem to be very rare, as I have seen no other specimens of either B. crassicauda or puisa besides the types of the two species in the Berlin Museum, and Dr. Kirk’s one already referred to. 3. 2? BDEOGALE NIGRIPES. B. nigripes, Pucheran, Rev. et Mag. Zool. vii. p. 111 (1855). Hab. W. Africa (Gaboon). “Major ; corpore albescente ; cauda candidissima; artubus mgris.” No dimensions of any sort are given. Dimensions of Teeth of Bdeogale. B. crassicauda. P.M?. M?. Percentage. a. Type (from Dr. Peters’s figure).... 775 5:5 73 B. puisa. * Zanmbar LAwh) wires. 23s weeks. (OD 4°5 66 IV. Cynictis. Type. Cynictis, Ogilby, P. Z.S. 1833, p. 48......«... C. penicillata. Range. That of the only species. Toes5—4'. Teeth, 1.2, C. >, P.M. +, M.?x2=40. Muzzle with a distinct naked line from nose to upper lip. Hind soles quite hairy. Frontal portion of skull strongly convex, brain-case high. A weil-marked vacuity in the floor of the auditory meatus, consisting of a more or less rounded hole, which, as the animal gets older, 1 See above, p.61. 2 Our only skeleton of this genus has not the smallest rudiment, eyen of the metatarsal, of the hallux, 1882. | AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 83 gradually fills up, but never produces the row of small holes found in Suricata. Other characters as in Herpestes. This genus is a very distinct and well marked one, not only on account of its different number of digits, but also of the fact that its skull is very differently shaped from that of Herpestes, more resem- bling that of Suricata than that of any of the genera of this section. In Smuts’s work on the Mammals of the Cape, published a year before Mr. Ogilby described the genus, the absence of the hallux in this form was noticed, and Dr. Smuts stated his opinion that a special genus ought to be formed for it. He did not, however, give it a name, so that that given by Mr. Ogilby stands unaltered. The only well authenticated species is 1. CYNICTIS PENICILLATA. Herpestes penicillatus, G. Cuv. R. A. (edit. 2), i. p. 158 (1829). Mangusta levaillantii, A. Smith, Zool. Journ. iv. p. 437 (1829). *Cynictis steedmanni, Ogilby, P. Z.S. 1833, p. 49 (1833). Cynictis typicus, Smith, S. Afr. Quart. Journ. ii. p. 116 (1835). *C’ ogilbiz, Sm. t. cit. p. 117 (1835); Ill. Zool. 8. Afr. pl. 16 (1849). Ichneumia albescens, Geoff. Mag. Zool. 1839, pl. 12 (figure, not description) (1839). *C. leptura, Smith, Ill, Zool. 8. Afr. pl. 17 (1849). Hab. Cape Colony. Size medium ; form slender, head rather small in proportion. Tail about the length of the body without the head, very bushy. Colour varying from dark yellow (C. steedmannt) to light yellowish grey (C. ogilbit) ; longer hairs with their basal halves light yellow, then with a black subterminal ring, and their tips white. The variation in the general colour is caused by the different lengths of these white tips to the hairs. Underfur rich yellow. Chin white; belly and legs rather paler than back. Tail very bushy, the hairs often over 2 inches in length, and coloured like the longer back-hairs—namely, first yellow, then black, and the tips white. Hairs at tip of tail white to their roots. Dental percentages 57-66. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. Type of C. ogilbii ...... 15:0 9°0 30 ONG, oN fring gis: 0929 Ss 020 9:0 3°0 é Sat W arotsl otha Sait. WetcelOto 9°3 31 Skulls. Basi- Palate- Palate- Inc. to cranial Length. Breadth. length. breadth. cross line, axis, a. Type of C. ogilbti 2°65 =1°6 1°42 90 97 92 b. Type of C. lep- CUTUSiinc-iis (C)p2iG9e» WeGl «11°39 87 95 ais! c. Type of C. steed- Mannt..,... (ce) 268 1:56 1-44 90 °98 _ 6* 84 MR. O. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, This species may be readily distinguished from all its allies by its bushy white-tipped tail and its peculiar greyish yellow colour. I can find no tangible specific differences between the various forms which have been described as distinct species. C. leptura, Smith, judging from his figure, appears to be slightly different from the rest ; but the typical skull, in the British Museum, shows no characters whatever by which to separate that form from the rest; moreover there is in the Leyden Museum a specimen, in other respects quite the same as OC. penicillata, which has as slender a tail as C. leptura. I therefore do not think that the latter can stand as a species distinct from C. penicillata. Dr. Smith, in the letterpress to his figure of C. ogilbyi in his ‘Illustrations,’ gives a full account, too long to quote here, of the habits of this species. It is said to inhabit dry and sandy plains, where it lives in holes in the ground, to which, however, it only retires during the night, passing the day in hunting for mice, small birds, &c., or simply basking in the sun. Teeth of Cynictis. P.M?+. M?. Percentages. Ce Sy Ree 81 ait 63 Os ins ey ALS 5°0 66 Comeiwiats 8:9 5°3 59 ane OES 8:0 4:6 57 V. RHINOGALE. Rhinogale, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1864, p. 375 (woodcuts of SURI) caics > hendiatae se thouning Sesk, = niin ko hedaiie- Sor <4, cigan dna een Range. That of the only species. Toes 5—5. Teeth, I. 5, : 7 P.M.2, M. ae 2=42. No naked line from nose to upper lip. General form of skull rounded, without marked angles or crests. Palate deeply concave both transversely and antero-posteriorly. Teeth rounded, suited for grinding rather than cutting. Last molars above and below proportionally very large, the lower one as long as the first molar, and very possibly with an extra external cusp; but the teeth are too much worn in the only known specimen for this point to be made out. Lower jaw rather peculiarly twisted (ef. original figures). This genus is a somewhat remarkable one, having the general external form of the true grooved-nosed Herpestines, while it has the hairy nose and the generally rounded skull and dentition of the present section of the group. — It is, moreover, quite peculiar among the genera of this group in possessing a distinctly concave palate, a character which readily separates it from all other Mungooses. Iam not prepared to say at present to which of the other genera Rhinogale is most nearly allied, as it presents such a mixture of characters that without further material a satisfactory decision on this point is ex- tremely difficult to arrive at. However, it naturally falls into this place by the characters used to arrange the other genera; so that we Type. 1882.] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 85 may, for the present, leave it here, where it was originally placed by Dr. Gray. 1. RHINOGALE MELLERI. (Plate III.) *Rhinogale melleri, Gray, P. Z.S. 1864, p. 375 (1864). Hab. “ East Africa.” Size and form much as in Herpestes ichneumon. Tail about as long as the body without the head. Hind soles hairy to the roots of the toes. General colour uniform pale brown, the longer hairs each with only one or two rings of brown and white, the rings passing so gradually into each other as to give but little general appearance of grizzling. Head paler, the white of the hairs showing more conspicuously. Underfur dark grey at its base, pale brown at its tip. Belly like back, but rather paler. Feet similar, but darker. Tail with long hairs, somewhat as in black-tailed examples of H. albicauda: for its basal third the hairs are uniformly brown; for the middle third they are white for their basal halves and black for their terminal; and on the terminal third they are all black; the tail therefore gets very gradually darker towards the end. No doubt other specimens would show considerable variation in the detailed coloration of the tail. Skull as described above in the generic diagnosis. Teeth rounded, the posterior molars worn flat in the only specimen. Dental percentage 73. In the lower jaw the posterior molar is remarkably large, being precisely as long as the preceding tooth ; while the species which most approaches it in this character, Bdeogale puisa, has the last only 85 per cent. of the first molar, and the others of this group range downwards from 85 to 45 per cent., the proportions of these two teeth following with great regularity those of the upper teeth, of which the percentages are given in detail. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. | Hind foot. a. Type, E. Africa.... .. 22°0 15°5 3°8 Skull. Basi- Palate- Palate- Inc, to cranial Length, Breadth. length. breadth. cross line. axis. Bdy pec. 43B8i0 tT Ges OA7BC 1:08q co PQ2-) [14 The type specimen of this species, though obtained by Dr. Meller and described nearly 20 years ago, has, as far as I know, remained unique up to the present time. Happily both the skull and skin are quite perfect, so that I have been able to make out all the more important characters of the species. With regard to the locality at which this specimen was obtained, it appears that the only places in East Africa at which Dr. Meller collected were (1) on the Zambesi and (2) Zanzibar; so that 2. melleri must have come from one or the other. As of late years 86 MR. 0. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, Dr. Kirk has done so much to make the zoology of Zanzibar known to us, it seems on the whole more probable that this species does not occur there, but that the Zambesi is its proper habitat, especially as Dr. Meller was there considerably longer than he was at Zanzibar. However, it is not very likely that it can be much longer before such a large and well-marked animal is again discovered ; and then the question of locality will be satisfactorily settled. Molars of Rhinogale. Upper Per- Lower Per- P.M‘. M?. centage Ml’. M2. centage. R. melleri .... a 75 5°5 73 6'4 6°4 100 VI. CrossaRCHUs. Type. Crossarchus, F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. Mamm. ii. livr. La ks ai oie isla ge Progen ever ipa aceite Ade C. obscurus. Ariela, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1864, p. 565 (1864).... ©. fasciatus. Mungos, Gray, P.Z.S. 1864, p. 578 (1864) (mec Ogilby')..'. 0.0.0.2 eee cee eee ce eee ... @. gambianus. Range. Africa south of the Sahara. Toes 5—5. Teeth, I. = C. + P.M. = M. 2x 2=36. Nonaked central line on nose. Hind soles naked. Skull depressed, as in Herpestes. Teeth rounded, without sharp cutting-edges. Vacuity in floor of auditory meatus oblong, in filling up often forming a row of smal] holes, as in Suricata. Last lower molar with an extra cusp in the centre of the outer edge, as in Bdeogale and the subgenus Ichneumia’. This genus includes four species, scattered over the continent of Africa. It is a matter of considerable interest to find that the three species placed by Gray under “ Mungos,” in a separate subfamily from Crossarchus, are not really generically distinct from the single species hitherto supposed to be the only member of this genus*. I can find no differences of importance whatever between these various forms; in fact C. obscurus resembles, at least in dentition, C. zebra and C. gambianus more than either of these do C. fasciatus. It is true that in our only skeleton of C. obscurus there is a certain amount of difference in the length of the hallux as compared with that of the other species; but an examination’ of a considerable number of skins does not show any constancy in this character, 1 Ogilby’s genus was founded solely on the Cinghalese species H. vitzicollis, Benn.; H. gambianus and fasciatus happening to be mentioned in the same paper, Gray took it as founded on them, and made another genus, “ Teniogale,” to contain the Ceylon form. 2 See p. 76. 3 Since the above was written, Prof. Mivart has pointed out to me that the researches of Chatin into the structure of the anal glands of the Carnivora (Ann. Sci. Nat. 5th series, xix. p. 89, n., 1874) fully confirm the opinion here expressed . to the generic relationship of the striped Mungoose (C. fasciatus) with C. obscurus. 1882.] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 87 which has already been proved to be one of singular variability ', No doubt, also, C. obscurus has a somewhat more elongated nose than the other species ; but the value of this character, besides being almost impossible to estimate without spirit specimens, is extremely doubtful; and the remarkable agreement in other characters convinces me that C. obscurus is certainly congeneric with C. zebra, gambianus, and fasciatus. Most specimens of C. obscurus have aremarkably short alisphenoid canal, as compared with that of most Mungooses; but one of our specimens has the canal quite as long as in ordinary C. zebra, the species which has the next shortest canal. The species of this genus seem to be somewhat restricted in their geographical distribution. Thus C. odscurus has hitherto only been found from the Cameroons to Sierra Leone, C. gaméianus on the Gambia, C. zedra in Abyssinia, and C. fasciatus in the eastern part of the Cape colony and as far north as Mozambique’. Synopsis of the Species. I. Back grizzled, not cross-striped. a. Colour dull brown, tips of hairs yellow...... 1. C. obsewrus, p. 87. b. Colour grizzled grey, hairsannulated.......<. 2, C. gambianus, p. 88. II. Back cross-striped. c. P.M* more than 8 mm. Stripes narrow, Dinderside.rntons vsacseann ocd sos darauv boxe ct 3. C. zebra, p. 89, d P.M* less than 7 mm. Stripes broad, Underside grizzled grey .................-06 4. C. fasciatus, p. 90. 1. CROSSARCHUS OBSCURUS. Crossarchus obscurus, F. Cuv. Hist. Nat. Mamm. ii. livr. 47 1825). te typicus, A. Smith, S. Afr. Quart. Journ. ii. p. 135 (1835). Hab. West Africa. Size medium ; form rather stout; muzzle produced. ‘Tail about half as long as the head and body. General colour dull grizzled brown; the longer hairs dark brown for four fifths of their length, and the tips yellow. Underfur brown at base, light grey for terminal half. Belly like back. Head more finely grizzled, with a rufous tinge. Feet almost wholly black. Tail like back, but the yellow tips of the hairs gradually become red towards the tip. Skull long and narrow, with a narrow and depressed nasal region. Teeth very small, upper P.M* but seldom reaching 7 mm. in its greatest diameter. Dental percentage 71-77. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail, Hind foot. fee CalnerOOUS. sat -raee tine 15:0 oo oe Oe WE Atricn. 8 s oc oe 1 Bain ~ 2-5 1 See above, p. 67. 2 See footnote 2 on p. 90. 88 MR. 0. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, Skull. Basi- Palate- Palate- Inc. to cranial Length. Breadth. length. breadth. cross line. axis. a. W._ Africa (isch). 2. 285 1°54 1°6 85 97 —_— b. Zool. Soe... 2°8 1°43 16 "84 96 "84 PTS Sr cn eens oe 1°39 1°55 *85 “98 — This species is a very well known and fairly common one, though it seems to be quite restricted to the West-African subregion. Its superficial likeness to small dark-coloured specimens of Herpestes galera has already been refered to above’. A specimen in the Berlin Museum has the following note attached to it :—* Bores in the earth with its nose after insects.” 2. CROSSARCHUS GAMBIANUS. * Herpestes gambianus, Ogilby, P. Z.S. 1835, p. 102. Mungos gambianus, Gray, P. Z.S8. 1864, p. 575. Hab. Gambia. Size, form, and general coloration much as in C. fasciatus (q. Vv.) ; but the hairs on the back placed, so to speak, without reference to their rings, so that there is no trace of cross bands, but only a general grizzled appearance; and thus the posterior part of the body only differs from the head and shoulders in being more rufous. Neck and chest white; on the sides of the neck a distinct black streak separating the upper and lower colours, in this respect reminding one of Herpestes vitticollis, Benn. Skull broad and heavy as in C. fasciatus. Teeth small, as in C. obscurus and zebra. P.M* only 6mm. long. Dental percentage 80. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. © Hind foot. a, Gambia (type)........ 15°0 . 2°5 Shull. Basi- Palate- Palate- Inc. to cranial Length, Breadth. length. breadth. cross line. axis. a Dypels: ie. siv285 1°58 1°43 "84 "92 — This species is very interesting as showing what a comparatively unimportant character the presence of cross bands on the back is. Its coloration is extremely similar to that of C. fasciatus; ‘yet by a simple disarrangement of the hairs of the back, all the broad distinct cross bands vanish, and the back only presents a coarse grizzled rufous-grey colour. The type was collected by Mr. Rendall on the river Gambia, whence, at about the same time, a second specimen (immature) was sent to the late Lord Derby. Both these specimens are now in the BOE hh: 1882. ] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 89 British Museum; but no others, so far as I am aware, have since been obtained. 3. CROSSARCHUS ZEBRA. *Herpestes zebra, Riipp. N. Wirb. Abyss. p. 30, pl. ix. fig. 2 (animal), and pl. x. fig. 1 (skull) (1835). H. gothneh, Fitz. & Heugl. 8.B. Akad. Wien, liv. Abth. 1, p. 560 (1866). H. leucostethicus, Fitz. & Heugl. t. cit. p. 561 (1861). Hab. Abyssinia. Size rather smaller than in the last species, and form slenderer. Tail half as long as the head and body. General colour grizzled grey, with cross bands on the posterior part of the back. Longer hairs ringed with black and pale yellow or white, without any rufous, the rings very narrow, so that the transverse bands are correspondingly narrow, five or more to the inch. Underfur dirty yellowish grey. Chin, chest, and belly more or less bright rufous, a sharp line along the sides of the neck separating the rufous from the grey of the upperside. Central line of the underparts gene- rally white, this colour varying in quantity very much, sometimes extending all down the centre from chin to anus, sometimes nearly or quite absent. Tail-hairs ringed like those of the body, the black gradually predominating towards the tip, which is often quite black. Feet, in the same way, becoming blacker to the toes. Skull as in C. gambianus. Teeth rather small, P.M‘ between 6 and 7 mm. long. Dental percentages 66-79. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. Abyssinia (Riippell) ...... 13:5 7'0 2°3 6. sf (skin). 020.224 13°0 6°6 — Skulls. Basi- Palate- Palate- Inc. to cranial Length. Breadth. length. breadth, cross line. axis, a. No locality .. 2°75 1°59 1°46 “95 94 ue Fy b. 2 era | 1°5 1°43 ‘88 ‘89 "95 e. Bogos, Abys- sinia’ ....2°42 1°35 1°26 79 ‘80 *89 This species has hitherto been found only in Abyssinia, where Riippell and others have obtained it in considerable numbers. It may readily be distinguished from the other striped Mungoose, C. fasciatus, by the narrowness and whiteness of the cross bands, and by the sharply defined rufous of its neck and chest. I can see no reason for the separation of either H. gothneh or leucostethicus from the typical form, the characters given being quite unimportant. It has already been mentioned that one of our skulls of this + With third upper molars. 90 MR. O. THOMAS ON THE [Jan. 3, species possesses a third pair of upper molars behind the two normal ones. The presence of this extra pair of teeth however, is, shown to be of no specific or generic importance by the fact that in a second, quite identical, specimen collected at the same time and place (Bogos- land, Abyssinia), there are only the two usual pairs of upper molars. 4, CROSSARCHUS FASCIATUS. Viverra ichneumon (3, Schr. Saug. iii. p. 430, pl. exvi. (1778). V. mungo', Gmel. Linn. S. N. i. p. 84 (1789). Herpestes mungo, Desm. Mamm. i. p. 211 (1820). H, fasciatus, Desm. Dict. Sci. Nat. xxix. p. 58 (1823). *Ichneumon tenionotus, Smith, S. Afr. Quart. Journ. ii. p. 114 (1835). Ariela tenionota, Gray, P. Z. S. 1864, p. 565 (1864). Hab. 8.E. Africa (Caffraria to Mozambique *). Size medium; form stout. Tail rather more than half as long as the head and body. General colour grizzled grey, the posterior half of the back with cross bands. Longer hairs ringed with black and yellow or dark rufous, the posterior half of each light ring being always rufous. The rings somewhat broad, so that the transverse body-bands are also broad, there being about 34 to the inch, counting both light and dark bands. There are altogether about 12 or 13 bands; but they merge so gradually into the rest of the body-colour that they cannot be exactly counted. Underfur grey- brown. Neck, chest, and belly uniform grizzled grey, like the upper part of the head and shoulders, not rufous as in C. zebra. Feet and tail like body, but becoming gradually nearly or quite black towards their distal parts. Skull comparatively broad and heavy, the teeth larger than in any other species, P.M* more than 8 mm. long, last molar small. Dental percentage 57-59. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. KE VAGHIG. oc iuls oa ageid sin Goch i ae Ly 8-0 2°8 6. Natal (type of I. tenionotus) .. 12:0 70 2°4 Skulls. Basi- Palate- Palate- Inc.to cranial Length. Breadth, length. breadth. crossline, axis. a. 8. Africa (Dr. Smith).... 2°84 167 1°51 98 99 1°05 6. 8. Africa (Dr. Smith) ose BFOenMe4Ge 1°45" 92 1:00 96 ? This name is so utterly barbarous, and that of H. fasciatus so well known, that I think we are justified in ignoring it and using Desmarest’s classical and appropriate term. * Two specimens, said to be ‘‘ Herpestes fasciatus,” are recorded from Angola in the ‘ List of Animals in Zool. Soc. Coll.’ 1879, p- 62; but as neither of these is still living and nothing has been preserved of them, I cannot say whether they really belong to this species, to C. zebra, or to some undescribed form. 1882. ] AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. 91 This species by its locality, and not C. zebra, no doubt represents the early-known “ Viverra mungo,” which was said to come from the “ East Indies.’’ No cross-striped Mungooses, however, are known from India, and the original specimens must have been obtained from the Cape. All the specimens with exact localities that I have seen come from the eastern parts of the Colony, and none from the western ; so that we may suppose that its true range is very similar to that of Herpestes pulverulentus'. Probably, however, tame examples were sometimes bronght down to Capetown, where they would be seen by the earlier travellers. Dr. Smith says of his Ichneumon tenionotus, “ Inhabits Natal: rare.’ Molars of Crossarchus. PM‘. | M2 | Percentage. | | otimenn mm. Omobkeuruel ve. <:dakeasusceees Die. 62 | 48 | 77 Bilas) EO esl ae tle ed 1 & Gig eee ea? tz | |. gambianus ......eees a...| 60 48 60 | OS AEDPA Cfaansccsseanessdeceess Gees 69 46 | 66 | os 65 45 | 69 AS 68 sO} | 73 He. 65 al 79 be Or efasClatus ioc. 2: scsncottcasce fies. 87 5:2 59 Osc. 80 5:2 57 | VII. Suricata. Type. Suricata, Desm. Tabl. Méth. Mamm. in Nouv. fy Dict. d’H. N. (ed. 1) xxiv. (1804) ............ SS. tetradactyla. Rhyzena, Illig. Prodr. Syst. Mamm. p. 134 Ue Ws Shite ote Se sei sin! es MV ER eee sais EH S. tetradactyla. Range. That of the only species. Toes 4—4". Teeth, I. $,C. +, P.M.4, M. 2x 2=38. Hind soles naked. Nose produced. No central naked line from muzzle to upper lip. Fore claws very long, twice as long as the hind. Skull very broad, the zygomata strongly diverging backwards. Facial outline convex. Posterior part of skull very high, not compressed as in Herpestes, but more as in Cynictis. Teeth very similar to 1 See p. 74. ° In a skeleton and a specimen in spirit, I find the following rudiments of the 1st toes :—of the fore foot, in the spirit specimen, a rudimentary metacarpus, 2 mm. in length; in the skeleton, no trace ofa hallux, but the above-mentioned rudiment might easily have been lost. Of the hind foot, in the spirit specimen, a hallucal metatarsal 2 mm. long and 24 broad, and, in the skeleton, a similar rudimentary metatarsal and, in addition, a minute Ist phalanx (14 mm. long and 1 broad). 92 MR. O. THOMAS ON THE AFRICAN MUNGOOSES. {Jan. 3, those of Crossarchus. First upper premolar absent, with no dia- stema in its place; first lower either present or, if absent, there is a distinct diastema. Auditory meatus somewhat prolonged, with the imperfection of the floor well marked, consisting of a line of minute holes, quite different from the large round hole found in this position in Cynictis’. 1. SuRICATA TETRADACTYLA. Viverra suricatta, Erxl. Syst. Regn. An. p. 488 (1777). V. tetradactyla, Schreb. Siiug. iii. p. 434, tab. exvii. (1778). Mus zenik, Scopoli, Delic. Flor. et Faun. ii. p. 84 (1786). Viverra zenik et tetradactyla, Gmel. Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 85 1789). : ‘bel he capensis, Desm. Tabl. Méth. Mamm. (p. 15) in Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. Ist edit. xxiv. (1804). Rhyzena tetradactyla, Il. Prodr. Syst. Mamm. p. 134 (1811). Suricata viverrina, Desm. Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. 2nd edit. xxxii. p. 297 (1819). Rhyzena typicus, Smith, 8. Afr. Quart. Journ. ii. p. 117 (1835). Hab. Cape Colony (Algoa Bay, Cape, &c.). Size small; form slender. Tail about half the length of the head and body together. Fur long and soft. General colour light grizzled grey, with black transverse bands across the posterior part of the back. Longer hairs broadly ringed with black and white, the white on the whole predominating ; the transverse bands formed by the regular arrangement of the hairs, by which the white and black rings come opposite to each other on adjacent hairs. Underfur dark rufous. Head nearly white, except a distinct oblong black mark round the eyes. Ears black. ‘Tail yellowish, with a well- marked black tip. Feet like body. Skull as described above. Dental percentage 70-79. Dimensions. Head and body. Tail. Hind foot. a. (In spirit) .. 14:0 70 2°4 6. S. Africa .... 15:0 7 fate 2°5 2 x sisi 14:0 8-0 2:5 Skulls. Palate- Palate- Ine. to Basi- Length, Breadth. length. breadth, cross line. cranial axis. Gi. 2:42 1°79 L337 90 *88 “74 b52°38 1°75 1°36 *84 "84 ‘76 This animal is a well-known Cape species: it seems to be confined ' Prof. Flower, in his paper on the Classification of the Carnivora (P. Z. S. 1869, p. 20), says of this genus:—‘ Here, and here alone among the Viver- ridx, there is a prolonged auditory meatus; but it presents the peculiarity of being fissured along the whole extent of the middle of its floor.” It should, however, be noted that Crossarchus has a somewhat produced meatus, and that all the genera of this group haye constantly a more or less fissured meatus-floor, individual skulls often exceeding Swricata in this respect. 1882. ] ON A NEW LAND-RAIL FROM EAST AFRICA. 93 to that colony; but I have seen so few specimens with exact loca- lities, that I am unable to determine its precise range. It may always be readily distinguished from all other Mungooses by its elongated nose and claws and its peculiar coloration, especially its black ears, no other species having ears differing in colour from the rest of the head. Smuts says of its habits : —“ This animal lives in various parts of the Colony, mostly in mountain caves; it is easily tamed and kept in a state of domestication.” Molars of Suricata. P.M‘. M?. Percentage. S. tetradactyla, a 7°0 5:0 71 as b 6°3 5:0 79 » oa leletes 6°5 4-8 74 He Ce oe 7°0 a2, 74 4, Description of a New Species of Land-Rail from Kast Africa. By H. B. Tristram, F.R.S., C.M.Z.S. [Received December 28, 1881.] I have lately received from Mr. R. C. Ramshaw, a medical missionary who has been stationed for four years in Kast Africa, a small collection of birds, chiefly of Ploceidee and Cinnyride, formed by him at Ribé, a little to the north of Rabai, and at Jomon, a district extending S. lat. 3°-5° and E. long. 39°-40°. Among the specimens occurs a Land-Rail which both Mr. Sharpe and Capt. Shelley consider to be undescribed. I therefore venture to describe it as CREX SUAHELENSIS, spec. nov. C. capite et regione parotica castaneis ; collo superiore fusco ; dorso inferiore nigricante ; supracaudalibus castaneo mar- ginatis ; cauda nigricante, castaneo marginata; mento et thorace albis ; pectore rufescente ; abdomine albescente ; crisso et subcau- dalibus lete castaneis ; scapularibus brunneis, quaque pluma albo marginata ; remigibus nigrescentibus, pogonio eaterno remigis primi albo;'subalaribus brunneis; rostro, tarsis et pedibus olivaceis. Long. tota 9, ale 3°92, caude 2°3, rostri a rictu ‘85, tarsi 1°4, digitt med. 1-9. Hab. Ribé, East Africa. The white edgings to the scapulars and some of the feathers of the back seem to indicate immaturity. In other respects the bird has all the appearance of being adult : and the measurements certainly do not correspond to those of any known species. 94 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE ANATOMY [Jan. 3, 5. Note on the Gall-bladder, and some other Points in the Anatomy of the Toucans and Barbets (Capitonide). By W. A. Forbes, B.A., Prosector to the Society. [Received December 30, 1881.] The statement has been made, and copied *, that a gall-bladder is absent in the Toucans. The latest writer on the visceral anatomy of birds, Dr. Hans Gadow *, describing the gall-bladder of the “ Coccy- gomorphe,” says :—“ Ahamphastus compensirt das Fehlen der Blase durch einen sehr langen (9 em.) und weiten Ductus Choledochus ”’ (Z. c. p. 70). On dissecting, therefore, some months ago a fresh specimen of Pteroglossus wiedi, 1 was considerably surprised to find a peculiarly long and tubular gall-bladder, which lay superficially, covering the other abdominal viscera and extending far down in the abdominal cavity, its fundus nearly reaching the cloacal region of the intestine. My attention having been thus called to the point, I have since, whenever opportunity has offered, always looked for this viscus, and have now ascertained its presence in specimens of Rhamphastos cari- natus, vitellinus, and dicolorus, Pteroglossus wiedi (3), Selenidera maculirostris, and Adulacorhamphus prasinus. The annexed drawing (fig., p. 95) will show its general form and relations, as seen in a fresh specimen of Rhamphastos dicolorus. In the specimen figured the total length of the gall-bladder was not less than 4°15 inches. The cystic duct originated ‘85 inch from the liver, and was 1°7 inch long. In other cases the duct arises much nearer the portal fissure. Its presence, therefore, in all Toucans is nearly certain *. It is also present, of exactly the same general form, and with the same relations, in all the Capitoninze I have examined as regards this point, namely Megalema virens (a fresh specimen), M. franklini, and Xantholema rosea. Its presence in Jndicator in a similar form is almost certain, from the intimate relationship of that genus to the Barbets and Toucans. Unfortunately I can give no exact information on this point, the only specimen I have of an Indicator having been eviscerated. The only other family of birds in which, so far as I am aware, the gall-bladder assumes this peculiar vermiform shape, and lies 1 Owen, Anat. Vert. ii. p. 177; Macalister, Morph. Vert. p. 194; Crisp, P.Z.S. 1862, p. 137. = ‘Versuch ein. vergleich. Anatomie des Verdauungssystemes d. Vogel,” Jen. Zeitschr. xili. n. F. yi. 5 Tt is but due to the late Prof. Garrod to say that he also had noted this peculiar gall-bladder, aptly characterized by him as “ intestiniform,” in several Toucans dissected by him, including R. Cuvieri and carinatus and P. wiedi. It is also, I find, correctly described by Meckel (‘Traité général,’ &., Paris, 1838, t. viii. p. 289), as follows :—‘‘ La conformation de la vésicule est extrémement curieuse chez le toucan (Ramphastos). Elle y est d’une longueur si énorme, qu’elle occupe la cavité abdominale toute entiére: elle est trés rétrécie, et res- semble plutot 4 un cecum qu’a une vésicule.” I made my first observations unaware of either of the above facts. 1882. | OF THE TOUCANS AND BARBETS. 95 freely in the abdominal cavity, is that of the Picide. Nitzsch! describes the liver of the Woodpeckers (of which he examined Geciaus viridis and canus, Dryocopus major, medius, aud minor, and Picus martius) as being ‘immer mit ausgezeichnet langer darmfor- miger Gallblase ;” and I can quite confirm this description as being Liver, stomach, duodenum, &c., of Rhamphastos dicolorus, from in front, showing the peculiar intestiniform gall-badder (4g. 4). St, stomach ; d, duodenum ; p, pancreas; 7. h, d, I. h. d., right and left hepatic ducts ; ¢. d, cystic duct. applicable to the last-named species. Garrod also correctly noted, in his MSS., the “long intestiniform gall-bladder”’ of Gecinus. The similarity, therefore, in this respect of the Capitonide? to the Picide strengthens the many arguments for the intimate relationship of these two groups. And I may take this opportunity to point out some further peculiarities which these birds have in common with each other. These are :— (1) The great extent of the deltoid muscle, which extends down the entire length, or very nearly so, of the humerus, and is inserted * In Naumann’s Orn. Deutschlands, v. p. 252. ? Tuse this term, with Garrod (Coll. Papers, p. 464) to include the Tou- cans and Indicator, as well as the true Barbets. 96 ON THE ANATOMY OF THE TOUCANS AND BARBETS. [Jan. 3, by a tendinous slip into a small tubercle on the external surface of that bone, close to the elbow, and just above the tubercle for the tendon of origin of the extensor metacarpi radialis longior muscle. This is common to the Picide, Indicator, and the Toucans and Barbets. As long ago noticed by Nitzsch’, this peculiarly long deltoid also occurs in the Passeres; but its similar condition in the Capitonide has not, I think, before been observed. But, as showing that the similarity in this respect of the Passeres to the Picidee and their allies is not necessarily a mark of relationship, I may add that in some other birds, as, e. g., Carpophaga, Ptilopus, and Cariama, the deltoid is nearly the same in size and shape, extending down to very near the elbow. (2) The presence of a distinct ossicle, of the nature of a sesamoid, the so-called ‘scapula accessoria,”’ which is developed in the scapulo-humeral ligament of the shoulder-joint, and plays over the posterior angle of the humerus-head. From it arise some of the fibres of the deltoid. Nitzsch, with his usual accuracy *, had also noticed the existence in the Picidz of this bone, which, as is well known, occurs also in the Passeres ; but the relationships of the bone in the last are not the same as they are in the Picidz, Indicator and other Pici I have examined. Tn the Passeres the bone in question becomes connected with the tendon of the pectoralis secundus muscle as this courses over the head of the humerus towards its insertion, sending round it a special thin tendinous loop, in which the tendon of that muscle plays. Hence, in the undisturbed position of these parts, the pectoralis tendon is seen to be somewhat L-shaped, the angle of the L being at the place where it is connected by this fibrous loop to the sesamoid bone, and so dragged backwards out of a direct course. In the Pict I have been able to find no such connection between the scapula accessoria and the pectoralis secundus tendon, which remains quite free from it throughout its course. The additional points of resemblance detailed in the present com- munication render the near relationship of the Picidz to the Capi- tonidee even more certain than before. Nitzsch, from pterylographical grounds, and Kessler *, from osteological ones, long ago pointed out this connection, which was afterwards remarkably confirmed by Garrod’s observations on their myology and visceral anatomy. The fact that there should be important cranial differences between the two groups (and even amongst the members of one of these) only shows that the cranial structure of a bird may be profoundly changed, in accordance with its conditions of existence, whilst in the rest of its organs no change whatever is effected ; and such a fact must of itself tell heavily against the view that the structure of the skull in birds is of itself alone a certain, or even sufficient, index to their sys- tematic classification. 1 Zeitschr. f. ges. Naturwiss. 1862, xix. p. 400. ? Tom. supra cit. p. 399. 3 Bull. Soc. Imp. Nat. Moscou, xvii. pp. 382-334, 340, 1882.] PROF, PARKER ON THE SKULL OF THE CROCODILIA, 97 January 17, 1882. Prof. Flower, LL.D., F.R.S., President, in the Chair. The following report on the additions to the Society’s Mena- gerie during the month of December 1881 was read by the Secretary :— The total number of registered additions to the Society’s Mena- gerie during the month of December 1881 was 82, of which 8 were by birth, 39 by presentation, 26 by purchase, and 9 were received on deposit. The total number of departures during the same period, by death and removals, was 82. The most noticeable additions during the month were :— 1. A young male Guemul Deer (Fureifer chilensis), from Pata- gonia, purchased December 22nd of the Jardin d’Acclimatation of Paris. This animal has lately shed its horns, and is now growing a new pair. 2. A Germain’s Peacock-Pheasant (Polyplectron germaini), pur- chased December 24th. Both these accessions are of species new tothe Society’s series. Prof. Newton exhibited, by favour of Messrs. Hallett & Co., the skin and bones of the trunk of a specimen of Notornis mantelli, re- cently received by them from New Zealand, and stated to have been obtained in the province of Otago about eighteen months ago. Prof. Newton pointed out that the sternum figured in the Society’s ‘ Transactions’ (vol. iv. pl. 4. figs. 5-8) as of this species must belong to a totally different form. Prof. W. K. Parker, F.R.S., read a memoir on the skull of the Crocodilia, of which the following is an abstract :— «©The Crocodilia have seen the rise and fall of several Reptilian dynasties, and even now they are in no danger of extinction. Their development is precisely like that of the Sauropsida generally (the other Reptiles, and Birds) ; but in some very important respects they anticipate cranial modifications that only come to perfection in the Mammalia. “It is difficult, at first, to see in what their embryo differs from that of a bird; but the long tail is diagnostic; this, however, would not always have served that purpose, as the avian contemporaries of the Crocodiles of the Oolite had tails relatively as long as those of the Crocodiles. «The near approach to that modification of the skull which is seen in the Bird is very remarkable in the early stages of the Crocodile ; but whilst the one becomes as light asa quill, the other becomes as heavy as the armour of a Tortoise; yet in the adult Crocodile the whole hind skull is a labyrinth of air-cavities, which Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. VII. 7 98 MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. [Jan. 17, differ but little from those of a bird. Notwithstanding the massive- ness of the skull, nearly every suture is persistent; in the light skull of the Bird nearly every suture is obliterated. “The pier of the mandible explains, and is explained by, that of the Lizard on one side, and the Salamandrian below. The jaw itself is at an early period quite continuous with the hyoid arch ; and that arch is for a time continuous with the auditory columella, as in the Hatteria of New Zealand ; and the columella itself is only a modi- fied part of that arch. In its early segmented state, however, and in its later broken-up condition, it comes very near to what is found in the mammal, and greatly helps the morphologist in working out a harmony between this arch in the Sauropsida and the Mam- malia. “In the discussion which took place a dozen years ago between Professors Peters and Huxley (for the views of the latter see P. Z.S. 1869, pp. 391-407), as to the early continuity of the mandibular and hyoid arches and their nature, both combatants were right and both were wrong. ‘The two arches are continuous for a time; but that condition does not sustain Prof. Peters’s reasoning. The deductions of Prof. Huxley, in spite of the fact that he worked with imperfect materials, will remain true for all time.” Prof. Parker’s memoir will be published entire in the Society’s Transactions.’ The following papers were read :— 1. On a Collection of Rodents from North Peru. By OxpriELp Tuomas, F.Z.S., British Museum. [Received December 15, 1881.] (Plate IV.) The collection now described was obtained by M. Stolzmann, the well-known Polish collector, in Northern Peru, and has been placed in my hands for determination by Prof. Taczanowski, of the Warsaw Museum, by whom a nearly complete set has been presented to the British Museum. Every specimen has its exact locality, date, and altitude recorded ; and the habits of many of the species have been noted by M. Stolz- mann, whose remarks, placed between quotation-marks, are appended to their respective species. The localities from which the collection was obtained are as follows :— Tumbez.—Capital of the province of the same name. Situated on tke river Tumbez, at about 4 miles from its outlet in the Bay of Guayaquil (3° S. lat.). Tambillo.—A colony on the river Malleta, a tributary of the Upper Amazons. This river forms the boundary between the pro- duit IP Jue * Sate . Vi ete > y * ‘ . ~ & ’ id m4 * ee a L oe Lime » ee ; = — “te "eae £2 a By. 1882.] MR. Q. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. 99 vinces of Jaen and Chota. Tambillo is situated about 5700 feet above the level of the sea, upon the eastern slope of the western chain of the Cordilleras (6° S. lat.). Cutervo.—A town in the province of Chota, department of Caja- marca, about twodays south of Tambillo, on the same slope, 9000 feet. Callacate.—A colouy, 4800 feet in altitude, about 8 miles north- west of Cutervo, on the banks of the river Chota, which runs into the Amazon under the name of Chamaya. Chirimoto!.—A colony in the valley of the Huayabamba, a tributary of the Huallaga, in the province of Chachapoyas. It is about 5400 feet above the sea, upon the eastern slope of the eastern chain of the Cordilleras (6° S. lat.). Huambo'.—A plantation in the forest of the same name, to the east of Chachapoyas and Chirimoto, 3700 feet in altitude, on the banks of the river Huambo, a tributary of the Huallaga. All these localities, except Tumbez, are on the northward Andean extension of the Patagonian subregion, as defined by Messrs. Newton and Salvin’; so that we should naturally expect, as indeed turns out to be the case, that most of the species would be the same as those found by Mr. Louis Fraser, who collected at places situated in the Ecuadorean part of this same Andean tract. Tumbez is on the southward extension of the Subandean subregion on the Pacific side; but the specimens collected there are too few to draw any deductions from. The chief interest of the collection centres in the fine series of Hesperomys contained in it ; for of this difficult genus and the closely allied one Holochilus M. Stolamann obtained just over 40 speci- mens. The value of this additional material may be perceived when it is remembered how very few of the specimens in the various museums are preserved in spirit, or have their exact localities or habits recorded. On account, therefore, of the fact that most of the published de- scriptions have been taken either from stuffed specimens or skins, I have thought it useful to give the measurements of every adult Specimen in this collection, even when belonging to compara- tively well-known species. It must, moreover, be remembered that from such a locality as Northern Peru very few species of this group can in any sense be called well known; in fact, of the 11 species of Hesperomys and Holochilus here described, only two, Hes- peromys longicaudatus and olivaceus, at all deserve this term; and even of these, additional measurements are much to be desired, as helping to show the range of variation found among the South- American Muride. Of the 11 species just referred to, only one belongs to Holochilus, the remaining ten being distributed among Calomys, Rhipidomys, and Habrothriz, three of the eight subgenera of Hes- ' Additional information concerning these two localities may be obtained from ae oo own paper on the birds collected by Mons. Stolzmann antea, p. 2). * Encyel. Brit, ed, 9, iii, p. 744 100 MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. [Jan. 17, peromys now usually admitted. Of these Calomys claims four species, one being new ; Rhipidomys also four, of which two are new; and Habrothrix the remaining two, both of which are previously-known species. There are thus three new species in the collection; and of two of the others I am somewhat doubtful of the determination ; so that I think it possible that either or both of them will in the end turn out to be really different from the species to which I have pro- visionally referred them. The chief previous information bearing on this subject is comprised in Tschudi’s classical work on the fauna of Peru’, and in Mr. Tomes’s papers on the Mammals collected in Ecuador by Mr. Fraser”. Of the 6 Muride mentioned by Tschudi, only one, Hesperomys leucodactylus, was found by M. Stolzmann; while of the 13 brought from Ecuador by Mr. Fraser he obtained six, or just about half; so that from his well-preserved spirit-specimens I have been able to supplement the descriptions given by Mr. Tomes, many of which were drawn up only from skins. 7 It is perhaps well to mention that, when describing these Rats and Mice, I found it possible, owing to their excellent state of preservation, entirely to dry the hairs, so that the colour and texture of the fur, and the general appearance of the animals were just as they would have been if the specimen had been examined when recently killed. I have been unfortunately unable to supplement from this collection the notes recently published by me with regard to the comparative lengths of the different parts of the alimentary canal’, because the intestines had been removed from all the specimens before they came into my hands. Of the new species obtained by Mons. Stolzmaun, H. spinosus* is perhaps the most interesting, as being the first Hesperomys that has been found with spiny fur. I have long expected that such a form would be discovered. There are so many examples of tropical species of the neighbouring genus Mus which possess spines in their fur, that I have always been surprised at there being no spiny members of such a large and variable tropical genus as Hesperomys. The present discovery of a spine-clad Vesper-mouse is therefore pro- porticnately interesting. As in the Old-world Mus’, so here in Hesperomys, I find that the number of mamme is both very constant® and very distinctive of 1 Pp, 177-184 (1844) 2 P.Z.S. 1858, p. 546; 1860, pp. 211 & 260. 3 P. ZS. 1880, p. 696. * Infra, p. 105. 5 See P. Z.8. 1881, p. 531, Ke. § The variation in the number in some of the common species of Mus, viz. in M. decumanus, rattus, and alexandrinus, has caused this character to fall into disrepute among writers on Rodentia; but, with the exception of these species, and of one or two others which have the unusually large number of from 14 to 18 mamme, I have never, in any single instance, found a specimen of either Mus or Hesperoniys in which the number differed from that normal to the species, I do not of course assert that individual variations do not occur, but only that they must be extremely rare, as I haye never met with any in all the large series of specimens that I have examined with special reference to this point. — 1882.] MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. 101 the various subgenera and species, though the value of this character seems never to have been noticed by any previous writer in connexion with the arrangement of the Sigmodont Muride. The following Table gives the number of mamme found in a few of the best-known Sigmodontes not included in the present col- lection :— Pectoral Nr. of adult pairs of Total females mamme. Inguinal. mamme. examined. Ochetodon mexicanus, De Sauss. ... 1 2 6 1 Hesperomys (Rhipidomys) sumi- chrasti, De Sauss. ...s0ccccsceeee 2 4 8 H. (Vesperimus) leucopus, Raf. ... 1 2 6 6 H.(V.) michiganensis, dud. § Bach. 1 2 6 1 H. (Qryzomys) couesi, Als#. ......... 2 2 8 2 H. (Calomys) bimaculatus, Waterh. 2 2 8 1 (type) Sigmodon hispidus, Say § Ord ... 3 2 10 7 We thus see that the number of mammee gives us an additional character by which to separate Dr. Coues’s subgenus “‘ Vesperimus ”’ from Calomys, the first having only 3, while the latter has 4 pairs. Sigmodon also, ou whose generic distinction Dr. Coues has cast some doubt ', is, so far as its mammez are concerned, very distinct from any of the other New-world Muride in having no less than 5 pairs, the largest number found in this group. 1. Lepus BraAsILrensis, L. a (juv.). Cuteryo, 9000’, Feb. or Mar. 1879. 2. Ecuinomys semisPinosus, Tomes, P. Z.S. 1860, p. 265. a. & (imm.), Tumbez, sea-level, June 1876. In the reeds (Canna brava) on the banks of the river.” [Mus muscuuwvs, L. a. Callacate, 4800', April 1879. This specimen had a large Ms¢rus-larva in the flesh just above the root of the tail (See C. O. Waterhouse, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1881, p» Xxil). | 3. Hoxtocuiius (Necromys) apicatis, Peters, Abhandl. Akad. Berl. 1860, p. 152. Hesp. cephalotes, Desin., Tomes, P. Z.S. 1858, p. 548 (nee Desm.). a. Chirimoto, 5400', Jan. 1880. 6. Huambo, 3700’, April or May 1880. c, d (juv.). Tambillo, 5800’, Feb. 1878. Dimensions, in inches :— Head and Forearm Har-conch, Muzzle body. Tail. Hind foot. and hand. length. to ear. GO 755 9:0 1:96 1:96 68 1°58 BO. 84 101 2°05 2°15 65 1:77 In the paper quoted above, Prof. Peters described a large Guaya- 1 Mon, N, Am. Rod. p. 32, 1877. 102 MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. _[Jan. 17, quil Rat as Nectomys apicalis, g. and sp. n., the genus being founded on the presence of short webs to the toes, including H. squamipes, Bts., from which JV. apicalis was separated on account of its only having 5 instead of 6 hind-foot pads. I do not, however, think that the presence of webs to the feet is a character of generic im- portance, and should prefer to regard Nectomys as only a subgenus of Holochilus. The specific distinction of H. apicalis is, no doubt, quite correct, as all the specimens in the present collection agree in having only 5 hind-foot pads. None of them have, however, the white tip to the tail described by Prof. Peters ; but this is no doubt a point in which there may be considerable variation. The incisors of H. apicalis were originally said to be snow-white ; but the present speci- mens do not agree with this, their incisors being pale yellow; but they are certainly very much lighter-coloured than in H. squamipes, where they are a rich orange. Notwithstanding these differences, I do not think there can be any doubt that these specimens belong to Prof. Peters’s species, as they agree perfectly in size, locality, and the very important character of the number of the foot-pads. There is in the British Museum another specimen of this species, collected by Mr. J. K. Salmon at Concordia, Medellin, U.S. of Colombia. : a) “ Appeared to be aquatic, although caught in a cultivated eld.” (4) “ Killed in an arm of the river just as it was seizing a branch of a Guava-tree, which touched the surface of the water. It had in its stomach an aromatic mass composed of fruity substance. It swims perfectly, only coming out late in the evening, and is probably the animal which gnaws the fish taken in the Indians’ nets. It is not possible to catch it in a rat-trap.” 4. Hesprromys (Catomys) uatTicers, Lund, Blik p. Bras. Dyrev. iii. p. 279 (1841). a-c. Huambo, 3700’, April and May 1880. Head and Forearm Ear-conch, Muzzle body. Tail. Hind foot. andhand. length. to ear. Gtisrts30 6°3 135 1:44 ‘70 1°14 To this species I refer three specimens, of which, however, only one is adult. The tarsus seems to be somewhat longer than in the original specimens ; but otherwise it agrees very fairly with a spe- cimen of H. laticeps in the Museum collection from the original locality, Bahia. This Bahian specimen, however, is only askin; and it is therefore quite possible that spirit-specimens would show such differences from the Peruvian one, that, combined with the greater length of the tarsus and the difference in locality, a new species would have to be formed for the latter. The following is a description of the adult individual, a male :— Fur rather short and close, compared with that of H. albigularis or leucodactylus. General colour above dull brown, very finely 1882.] MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. 103 grizzled with dark greyish yellow. Belly white, the basal halves of the hairs, however, both above and below, dark slate-colour. The back- and belly-colours rather sharply separated. Feet greyish white. Tail brown above and white below, the latter colour, however, grad- ually becoming darker, so that the distal half of the tail is nearly uniform. Foot-pads prominent; soles naked, proximal halves quite smooth, distal halves coarsely granulated. Fifth hind toes, without claws, only reaching just to the end of the fourth metatarsals. Ears with a projection on the anterior border'. Skull with well-marked supraorbital ridges. “‘ These Rats created great havoc among the stores of maize under the roof of the house. After atime they multiplied to such an extent that I caught 14 in one night. This species also did con- siderable damage in the plantations of cocoa, gnawing holes in the skins of the fruit, and eating the contents.” 5. Hesperomys (CALoMys) ALBIGULARIS, Tomes, P. Z. 8. 1860, p. 264. a. Cutervo, 9200', Feb. or Mar. 1879. b-f. Tambillo, 5800', Feb. 1878. g. Callacate, 4800’, Apr. 1879. h. Huambo, 3700', Apr. and May 1880. Head and Forearm Ear-conch, Muzzle body. Tail. Hind foot. and hand. length. to ear. a 3.. 50 6:2 1:24 1:48 69 1°25 bie... dil 6:6 13 1:56 ‘70 1°28 ¢« 9.. 49 6:5 1-24 1:46 “72 1:24 To this species I refer eight of the specimens, from various loca- lities. As Mr. Tomes’s account was drawn up from skins, the follow- ing description may be useful :— Fur long, soft and fine, with a few longer black hairs intermixed. General colour above deep rufous, becoming clearer on the sides, and passing gradually into pale rufous on the belly. Basal two thirds of the hairs dark slate-colour all over the body, except that in some of the specimens there is a pure white blotch just between the fore legs, a peculiarity which suggested Mr. Tomes’s name for the species. Anterior half of the outer and posterior half of the inner sides of the ears thinly covered with black hairs, the remainder nearly naked. Feet white, with the exception of the metacarpals and metatarsals, on which there are a few brown hairs intermixed. Tail very long and slender, above brown and beneath white for its whole length, the two colours rather sharply separated. Anterior border of ears without any projection. Mamme 8, two pectoral and two inguinal pairs. Soles naked, foot-pads large and prominent, fifth hind toes, without claws, reaching to the middle of the first phalanx of the fourth toes. It will be seen that the above description does not quite agree with that of Mr. Tomes; but I do not think that the differences are of ‘ See P. ZS. 1881, p. 4. 104 MR. 0, THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. [Jan. 17, sufficient importance to justify me in describing our specimens as new without seeing Mr. Tomes’s type. This species, as represented by the specimens before me, is very like the European Mus sylvaticus, L., in general appearance, though it is considerably larger. Its nearest ally seems to be H. longi- caudatus, Benn., which, however, differs from it by its much smaller size and by its quite uniform brown or black tail. As all the eight specimens of H. albigularis in the collection possess the same bicolor tail, it would seem to show that it is as constant a character among the New-world Hesperomyes as I have found it to be among the true Old-world Mures. H. vulpinoides, Schinz’, a species of about the same size, has a quite unicolor tail. This latter, moreover, comes from the eastern side of S. America, the types having been collected in the province of Minas Geraes. 6. Hresperomys (CALoMys) LONGICAUDATUS, Benn. a-f. Huambo, 3700’, April and May 1880. Head and * Forearm Har-conch, Muzzle body. Tail, Hind foot. andhand. length. to ear. be Dosa aD 5°0 "89 "95 45 ‘79 6. 9.. 3:25 54 90 98 50 84 Go oe EO. 54 90 98 3)3) 85 d.2.. 2:90 4:8 89 _ "52 78 This species seems to be the common Mouse of the whole of central S. America, as the Museum series contains specimens from Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Chili, Buenos Ayres, Paraguay, Minas Geraes, and Bahia, thus covering an extremely extended range. The following is its synonymy, as far I have been able to make it out with any certainty :— Mus longicaudatus, Benn. P. Z.8. 1832, p. 2. Mus (Calomys) flavescens, Waterh. P.Z.S. 1837, p. 19; Voy. Beagle, i. Mamm. p. 46, pl. 13 (1839). Mus longicaudus, Lund, Blik p. Bras. Dyrev. ili. p. 279 (1841). Hesperomys eliurus, Wagn. Archiv f. Naturg. 1845, i. p. 147; Abhandl. Akad. Miinch. v. p. 307 (1850). It is, however, just possible that Mus longitarsus, Rengg.”, may refer to this species, in which case Mr. Bennett’s name would have to sink into a synonym, as Rengger’s work was published in 1830, two years before M. longicaudatus was described. Prof. Burmeister in his recent work on the Mammals of the Argentine Republic®, places M. longitarsus as a synomym of H. longicaudatus, apparently not noticing that, if they are the same, the former name must stand as that of the species. However, the type of M. longitarsus, though young, is said by Rengger to have a hind 1 Schinz, Syn. Mamm. ii. p. 193 (1844). H. vulpinus, Lund, nec Licht, 2 Saug. Parag. pp. 231, 232 (1830). 8 Page 221, 1879. 1882. ] MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. 105 foot no less than 14 lines in length, while the very largest specimen in our considerable series of this species has a hind foot barely 1 inch long. I am therefore inclined for ‘the present to continue to use Bennett’s well-known name, believing that H. longitarsus may be found to be only the youug form of some larger species. 7. Hesperomys (CaLomys) SPINOSUS, sp. n. a, 6. Huambo, 3700’, April and May 1880. Head and Forearm Ear-conch, Muzzle body. Tail. Hind foot. andhand. length. to ear. Glid 1143°0! 3°85 87 95 50 ‘78 bg .. 3:0 3°95 87 94 "46 ‘75 Back of Breadth of con- Total Greatest Molar incisors to striction between Lower jaw length breadth. series, 1st molars. orbits. (bone only), Skullofa..°91 ‘51 13 "22 “19 “50 Fur of medium length, composed of flattened spines intermixed with fine hairs, the spines predominating onthe back but becoming rather fewer on the sides and disappearing on the belly. General colour above dark grizzled rufous and black, the spines slate-coloured, with black tips, the hairs also slate-coloured for the greater part of their length, but their tips rich orange. Sides becoming paler towards the belly, where the tips of the hairs in one specimen are white, and in the other pale fulvous, the bases of the hairs, however, being, as usual, slate. Head like back, but with fewer spines. Ears thinly covered'with short black hairs. Tail at its base dark brown above and white below; but the two colours soon merge into uniform blackish brown; the scales proportionally very large. Tail-hairs very scanty, except at the tip, where they form a slight and inconspicuous pencil. Fore feet dark brown, the toes slightly paler. Hind feet and toes pale greyish white, not sharply separated from the colour of the legs, with a brown patch on the distal part of the metatarsus. Foot- pads small but prominent, soles smooth on proximal and granulated on distal halves. Fifth hind toes, without claws, reaching barely to the middle of the first phalanx of the fourth toes. Ears with a well- marked projection on their anterior edge. Both the specimens being males, I cannot record the number of mammee ; but the other characters being so similar to those of ordinary Calomys, itis unlikely that there would be any other number but 8. Skull on the whole similar to that of other small Calomyes, but with the supraorbital ridges sharper and more strongly developed than in any others that I have seen, and the space between the orbits broader than usual. The discovery of this Mouse, as spiny as an average Heteromys, is, as mentioned above, of great interest; for hitherto no spiny Hespero- 1 Taken before the skull was extracted, 106 MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. [Jan. 17, mys has been recorded’, notwithstanding the tropical climate of central and northern South America and the innumerable forms into which the Vesper-mice have been developed. Among the Old-World Muride instances of the development of spines are extremely numerous, though their presence would seem often to be variable, the spines being apparently shed and renewed ac- cording to the season of year”. In the case of this Peruvian Vesper- mouse, however, it is scarcely likely that there could be any shedding of spines according to season, since at Huambo, only 6 degrees south of the equator, there can be but very little appreciable change of season at all. Moreover, as far as regards the distinctness of this species, there appears to be no Calomys as yet described with the colours and proportions of H. spinosus, even if we ignore the presence of the spines as a specific character. 8. Hresprromys (RurPrpomMys) LEUCODACTYLUS, Tschudi, Fauna Peruana, p. 183, Taf. xiii. fig. 2 (1844). H, latimanus, Tomes, P.Z.S. 1860, p. 213. a. Huambo, 3700’, April or May 1880. Head and Forearm LEar-conch, Muzzle body. Tail. Hind foot. and hand. length. to ear. a.2..485 65 11 14 5 117 The single specimen of this species is rather paler-coloured than Tschudi’s type, which I have examined in the Berlin Museum ; it is otherwise, however, quite identical, all the more important characters agreeing exactly. The following isa short description of Mons, Stolzmann’s specimen :— Fur soft and close. General color above pale brownish grey, below white. Dark colour of the back continued down to the meta- carpals and metatarsals; toes white. Lars without a projection on their anterior edge. Tail quite unicolor, dark brown, with the hairs increasing in length to its tip, where they form a distinct pencil. Feet remarkably short and broad, sole-pads very large, round and smooth. Fifth hind toes reaching to the middle of the second pha- lanx of the fourth toes. Whiskers very numerous, black. Mamme six, one pectoral and two inguinal pairs. * Several individuals of this species were caught on the palmwood roof of the house in which I was living. They gnawed to pieces all leather articles, such as saddles and bridles, and used the frag- ments to build their nests with. One of these, made of paper torn from a book, was built in the folds of a mosquito-net.”’ 1 Lund (Blik p, Bras. Dyrev. iii. p. 277, 1841) described a Mus setosus from Minas Geraes as haying spines in the fur; but this is now generally admitted to have been founded on a specimen of Mus alexandrinus, Geoff., an introduced species which seems to be very common in Brazil. 2 Of, P.Z.S. 1881, p. 540, 1882, | MR, 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. 107 9. Hesprromys (Raipmomys) PYRRHORHINUS, Pr. Max. Abbildungen, Taf. 27 (1822-26); Beitr. ii. p. 422 (1826). Mus mystacalis, Lund, Blik p. Bras. Dyrev. iii. p. 279 (1841). Hi, leucodactylus', Natt., Wagn. Wiegm. Archiv, xi. 1, p. 147 (nec Tschudi) (1845) ; Miinch. Abhandl. v. p. 310 (1850). H. macrurus, Gery. Casteln. Amér. du Sud, Mamm. p. 3, pl. 16. fig. 1 (1855). a, b. Tambillo, 5800', February 1878. Head and Forearm Ear-conch, Muzzle body. Tail. Hind foot, and hand, length. to ear. GDF) 95°8 ET 1:2 1°55 71 1°3 6. 9.. 4:9 6:8 VS 1°4 70 1°19 The following is a description of the two specimens in the col- ection :— Fur long and very soft, not mixed with longer harsher hairs. General colour above rich rufous, quite hiding the dark slate- coloured bases of the hairs. Head similar but paler. Belly-hairs half slate-colour, half pure white. Ears covered with short black hairs. Whiskers black. Fore feet with the metacarpals brown and the digits white. Hind feet with the metatarsals pale orange- coloured and the digits brown. Tail very long, the basal half inch covered with the red-tipped body-hairs, the remainder uniformly dark brown above and below, the hairs, which are black, forming rather less of a pencil than usual. Ears without a projection on the anterior edge. Feet rather long for the subgenus, though shorter than in ordinary Hesperomyes. Foot-pads large, smooth and rounded. Fifth hind toes as in H. lewcodactylus. Mamme 6, one pectoral, and two inguinal pairs. Incisors both above and below orange- coloured, broader than in other Rhipidomyes. It will be seen that there are certain discrepancies between the above and the original description. The true H. pyrrhorhinus is said to have a reddish-yellow back and a pure white belly, as also has a specimen from Bahia, probably the type, of H. macrurus, Gerv., in the British Museum. The original specimens of H. pyrrhorhinus, moreover, were also obtained in Bahia, on the eastern side of South America. However, without knowing more of the forms inhabiting the intermediate country, I do not care to describe M. Stolzmann’s specimens as new. ** Lives in trees.” These last two species belong toa very distinct subgenus. Its chief characters may be thus expressed:—Form Dormouse-like. Tail long, with the hairs generally forming a pencil at the tip. Feet short and broad ; the foot-pads large, smooth and rounded, but not standing up much above the sole, evidently adapted for climbing. 1 Burmeister (Republ. Argent. p. 223) refers this name to H. angouya, Desm. ; but, judging from Wagner’s descriptions, I think there can be no doubt that it is the present species. He distinctly refers to the pencil of longer hairs at the tip of the tail, which is quite absent in H. angouya, 108 MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. [Jan. 17, Mamme 4 or 6. Skull with more or less well-marked supraorbital ridges. The most peculiar member of the subgenus is H. sumichrasti, De Sauss.', upon which both that author's Myctomys and Tomes’s Myoxomys* were founded*. These names must, however, both stand as synonyms of Rhipidomys, Tschudi, H. leucodactylus cer- tainly belonging to the same subgenus as H. sumichrasti*. It is true that whereas the ordinary S. American Rhipidomyes are dis- tinguished from true Hesperomys by having only 6 mamma, H. sumichrasti outdoes them all in this respect by having only 4°, and in other ways is the most markedly specialized of them all; but nevertheless the difference is only in degree, and not in kind, so that I think we are justified in amalgamating Myctomys with Rhipi- domys as but one subgenus. There are, however, in addition to the well-marked species already referred to, three at least which, while they possess in different degrees some of the essential characters of Rhipidomys, yet are more or less intermediate between the true Hesperomys and the most typical members of this subgenus. The first of these is H. bicolor, Tomes’, the position of which, however, I cannot properly determine, not having seen a specimen. The other two are those next follow- ing, both new to science, of which H. taczanowskii would seem to be most nearly allied to Rhipidomys, notwithstanding its rounded supraorbital margin and untufted tail, and H. cinereus the least, having, in addition to these two last-mentioned characters, feet pro- portionally longer, with less Rhipidomyine foot-pads, and a more or less bicolor tail. Notwithstanding these differences, however, I prefer for the present to call these both Rhipidomys, as they have only three pairs of mammee, a number characteristic of the ordinary members of that group. 10. H. (Rurprpomys) CINEREUS, sp.u. (Plate IV.) a. Cutervo, 9200’, February or March 1879. Head and Forearm EHar-conch, Muzzle body’. Tail. Hind foot. and hand. length. to ear. DY ALT 5 5'0 1:14 1°38 64 1°18 Skull-dimensions. Back of Breadth of con- Total Greatest Molar incisors to striction between Lower jaw length. breadth. series, 1st molar. orbits. (bone only), ovals 73 we °37 "19 ‘78 ' Rey. et Mag. Zool. 1860, p. 107. 2 P.Z. 8. 1861, p. 284. 3 See Alston, Biol. Cent.-Am., Mamm, p. 143, 1880. 4 Mr. Tomes himself, when first describing Myoxomys, placed in it, besides H. sumichrasti (its type and most typical species), H. Jatimanus, Tomes (= H. leu- codactylus), and H, bicolor, Tomes. 5 See above, p. 101. 6 P. Z.8. 1860, p. 117. 7 These measurements were taken before the skull was extracted, 1882. ] MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. 109 Fur extremely long and soft, only exceeded in this respect by H. longipilis, Waterh. General colour above grizzled ashy grey, the hairs being, as usual, slate-coloured for five sixths of their length, and the tips white, with numerous wholly black longer hairs inter- mixed. This colour lightens gradually into the greyish white of the belly, where the basal two thirds only of the hairs are slate-colour. Anterior edge of the outer side of the ears thickly clothed with long and soft dark brown hairs, as also is the posterior half of the in- ternal surface, though there the hairs are much shorter. Tail un- usually thick, tapering to a point, brown above and white beneath, the two colours not sharply separated, closely covered with short shining hairs from root to tip, nearly hiding the scales; there is, however, no terminal penci! of longer hairs. Upper surfaces of feet covered with pure white shining hairs, much longer than usual, those at the tips of the toes quite hiding the claws. Foot-pads large and prominent. Fifth hind toes reaching to the middle of the second phalanx of the fourth toes. Mammze 6, one pectoral and two inguinal pairs. Ears without a projection on their anterior edge. Incisors rich orange; upper margins of orbits without any trace of ridges. This very peculiar-looking Rat may be readily distinguished from all its allies by its very long soft fur, its thick and tapering tail, and by the unusual hairiness of both ears, feet, and tail, the result, no doubt, of the extreme height at which it was obtained. I can find no species with which it could by any means be con- fused. H. galapagoensis, Waterh., bears a superficial resemblance to it, but differs by several of the more important characters, having 8 mamme, naked extremities, and a well-marked projection on the anterior edge of the ear. The next species seems to be really the most nearly related to it, though its general appearance is quite different. As there is only a single specimen of this species in the collection, Prof. Taczanowski has been unable to let the British Museum have an example. I have therefore had the species figured (Plate IV.), so as to make it more readily recognizable by those unable to exa- mine the type in the Warsaw Museum. 11. Hesprromys (RHIPIDOMYS) TACZANOWSKII, Sp. 0. a, 6. Tambillo, 5800’, February 1878. (!) ¢ (imm.). Cutervo, 9200, Feb. or March 1879. Head and Forearm LEar-conch, Muzzle body. Tail. Hind foot. andhand. length. to ear. Bee ne et ge IO 5°3 *88 Np fa 45 D7 6.d(imm.) 3:0 49 87 1:04 "50 87 Fur of medium length, soft and woolly; general colour above greyish yellow, the hairs being tipped with rufous yellow, with very few longer darker hairs. Head greyer and less yellow. Belly, as usual, greyish white, the separation of the upper and under colours quite gradual. Ears thinly clothed with brown hairs. Tail pale brown 110 MR. O. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. [Jan. 17, above and beneath, uniformly thinly clad with brown hairs. Feet white, with a faint admixture of brown on the metacarpus and metatarsus. Foot~pads large and rounded, as in the typical Rhipi- domys. Fifth hind toes as in H. cinereus. Mamme 6, one pectoral and two inguinal pairs. Ears without a projection on their anterior edge. Incisors and supraorbital margins as in H. cinereus. I have much pleasure in naming this peculiar species after Prof. Taczanowski, to whose kindness I am indebted for the opportunity of working out this interesting collection of mammals. H. tacz- anowskti may be readily distinguished from the last species by its much smaller size, and from its other near ally, H. dicolor, Tomes, by the fact that that species hasa much shorter tail (3°5 in.), shorter hair, and a pure white belly. 12. Hesprromys (HABRoTHRIX) OLIVACEUS, Waterh. Mus (Habrothriz) olivaceus, Waterh. P. Z.S. 1837, p. 6. Hesperomys renggeri, Waterh. Zool. Voy. Beagle, ii. p. 57, p). xv. (1839). a, 6, Tumbez, sea-level, June 1876. ce. Callacate, 4800', April 1879. Head and Forearm Muzzle Har-conch. body. Tail. Hind foot. and hand. toear. length. BiGin ox ie Ort 3°14 87 1°05 °93 63 6.3 (imm.) 3°0 2°75 "86 1:0 “86 “60 Co Oi bveetous 2°65 79 1:0 “94 “56 This species seems to be a very common one all along the western parts of S. America ; for, in addition to these Peruvian examples, the Museum contains a considerable series of specimens from Bolivia and Chili, including the types of the species, collected by Mr. Dar- win during the voyage of the ‘ Beagle.’ Mr. Tomes also records it from Ecuador. It will seen by the dimensions given above that the Callacate spe- cimen has somewhat shorter ears, feet, and tail than the others, while it has a larger body and head ; and it has also rather thicker and softer fur. It seems very probable, however, that these differences are only owing to the much greater altitude at which it was obtained, since it is a well-known law among mammals that individuals from colder climates have a tendency to have larger bodies and shorter extremities than those of the same species living in warmer places. 13, Hesperomys (HABROTHRIX) CALIGINOSUS, Tomes, P. Z. S. 1860, p. 263. a-f. Huambo, 3700', April and May 1880. Head and Forearm Ear-conch, Muzzle body. Tail. | Hind foot, and hand. length. to ear. ad.. 4:0 2°9 *84 1:07 a2 96 6. Sv. ae 3°01 *8d — ol "98 c.2 3°5 3°0 85 1°05 "92 °92 1882. ] MR. 0. THOMAS ON RODENTS FROM PERU. 111 I am not quite certain about the identity of these specimens with Mr. Tomes’s Ecuadorean species, as H. caliginosus is described as being 5 inches long, with nearly naked ears and feet, but by measur- ing the largest individual of the present series along the curves, a length of nearly 5 inches may be obtained ; and as the colours and other dimensions agree very fairly, I prefer to regard them as H. caliginosus, rather than to describe them as new. The following isa short description of these specimens :—Fur very soft, of medium length. General colour above dark grizzled orange-black, the colour resulting being as dark asin 1. obscurus, Waterh. Belly pale yellowish white, the bases of the hairs grey. Ears, feet, and tail covered with short dark brown hairs. Ears with a rounded projection on their anterior margin. Fifth hind toes reaching to between the base and the middle of the first phalanx of the fourth toes. Tail uniformly black all round, upperside of feet granulated with black, and the soles of the hind feet also deep black. This blackness of all the extremities forms a ready means of distin- guishing the present species from the preceding one, in which the tail is brown above and grey beneath, and the soles have scarcely a tinge of black. The British Museum also possesses a specimen certainly identical with these Peruvian ones, which was collected by Mr. T. K. Salmon at Concordia, Medellin ; so that, as Ecuador is just between that loca- lity and the present one, the probability of M. Stolzmann’s speci- mens being the true H. caliginosus is greatly increased. ‘This is the most diurnal species of all, and on that account is very subject to the attacks of Wstrus. The base of its tail is naked and white; and the fly deposits its eggs on this spot, as may be seen in those specimens which contain the larve, or from which the latter have escaped.” In addition to the above notes on the Rodents collected by M. Stolzmann, it may be useful to give the localities and dates for the three species of Opossum obtained by him. These are:— 14. DipeLpHys NupDICcAUDATA, Geoff. a, 6. Q and young, Chirimoto, 5400', July 1880. 15. DipELPHYS CINEREA, Temm. a. @, Chirimoto, 5400', July 1880. 16. DipeLpuys mMuRINA, Linn. a. 2, Tambillo, 5800', Feb. 1878. b,c. Q and g, Tumbez, sea-level, June 1876. 112 MR. T. E. BUCKLEY ON THE [Jan. 17, 2. On the Variability of Plumage exhibited by the Red Grouse (Lagopus scoticus). By T. E. Bucxusy, B.A., F.Z.S. [Received December 27, 1881.] At the commencement of this paper I wish to remark that I do not propose to speak of what are commonly termed varieties, such as albinos, melanisms, &c., but of such variations in plumage as I think may be met with by any one in a season’s grouse-shooting, only specifying that they should be obtained late enough in the season for the birds to have attained the highest perfection of plumage, which would be by November. Although many authors have remarked on the variations of the plumage of the Red Grouse, it seems to have been generally supposed by them that these variations had reference to the locality or district inhabited by the birds. Thus Yarrell writes (Br. B. ed.3, ii. p. 368):— ““The Red Grouse of N. Wales are said to be large in size and light in colour; those of the Western Highlands are also light in colour, and are said to be earlier breeders than those of the eastern parts of Scotland, which are, however, of large size and dark in colour.” Mr. Gray writes (B. West of Scotland, p. 234), in reference to examples from the Hebrides, that ‘‘ they may be said to be smaller and lighter in colour than those from moors on the mainland, especially the mountain-ranges of the north-east of Scotland, which invariably yield, in good seasons, the largest and most beautifully marked Grouse. In- many districts the native Grouse partake of the coloration of the ground in their markings: thus the finest and darkest birds are those frequenting rich heathy tracts; while on broken ground of a rocky character, such as may be seen in the south of Wigtonshire, the Grouse are either more or less mottled, or are altogether lighter in colour, and less in weight.” The same gentleman adds in a note, on the information of Mr. Elwes, ‘that in the district of Gareloch, west of Ross-shire, Grouse vary very much in the breast- markings.’ Mr. Colquhoun, on the same subject writes (‘ The Moor and the Loch,’ 3ed. p.112):—‘“*ThePerthshire Grouse are much smaller and darker in colour than those of Argyllshire. The West High- lander is a beautiful rich red and very large. . . . In the low corn- districts, such as Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire, and the Border counties, the Grouse are a light brown, borrowing a tint from the stubbles on which they delight to feed. ... All these birds are so light in the colour as more nearly to resemble Partridges.”” Mr. Dresser (B. of Europe, vii. p. 166), after describing some specimens, makes this observation:—‘ The Grouse differ somewhat in colour according to locality. Judging from the series I have before me, I consider that those from Scotland are somewhat the larger, and considerably darker in colour. Those from the north of England are more rufous ; and the Irish bird is considerably the lightest, and has a yellowish red tinge in the plumage; the feathers on the legs are also darker and 1882. ] PLUMAGE OF THE RED GROUSE. 113 browner than in any of the other specimens. I have no speci- mens from Wales, where they are said to be small and very light- coloured.”’ Thus you will see by the authors I have quoted that all agree in the extreme variation in the plumage of the Red Grouse ; but, then, all assign certain variations to certain localities and districts; and I wish to point out and illustrate by the series of specimens I exhibit that as great amount of variation may be found amongst Grouse ob- tained in a single locality as is mentioned by the authorities above quoted, and that hereby the observation of Thompson (B. Irek: ii. p- 47) is partly corroborated. He states:—“ It has been remarked to me by sportsmen that the Grouse of Ireland and Scotland differ in size and colour. This is apparently correct when birds of a certain district are compared with those of another ; butit is, in my opinion, apartial view of the subject, as in different localities throughout either the one country or the other birds will be found equally to vary in these respects. The following observations strikingly illustrate this opinion :—A friend who shot over the moor of Glenroy, Inverness- shire, in 1844, observed that the Grouse differed much in their plumage, and were of three varieties, each kind keeping particularly to its own quarters. On the darkest and most heathy ground were the darkest birds and the largest, weighing generally 2 1b. and some- times 2 lb.20z. On the rocky parts they were of a very much lighter brown, while on the stony and heathy ground combined they were of an intermediate brown, mottled more or less with white.”’ Now my own observations do not fully bear out the remarks of Thompson’s friend ; for I have not only killed dark birds on light- coloured ground, but, when the partially migratory habits of the Red Grouse are considered, it is scarcely possible to suppose that each individual would always pick out as its resting-place for the time being the particular piece of ground that suited its owa plumage the best; for the birds are always drawing down from the higher to the lower ground as winter advances’. If we look at a large series of Grouse cocks (and unfortunately my series is not large enough to show this well, as each bird has been in most cases picked out as a representative of its own particular class of variation), we shall find that their backs show but little variation ; and I think No.3 as described below is a very good representative specimen. The hens here vary in a more marked degree, the generality being a good deal speckled with lighter tints of brown, as may be seen in No. 4 ; but of all the variations the true Red Grouse, in the lecality whence the most of these Specimens were obtained, isthe rarest. Nos. 1 and 2 are a very good pair ; they are old and barren. A great part of the ground where these specimens were obtained has the heather much mixed with a certain grass which is called “deer’s hair.’ This in the spring is quite yellow ; and I fancy these 1 It is obvious that once the ground is covered with snow the utility of variation is done away with, as then all Grouse look as black as Rooks, Proc. Zoo. Soc.—1882, No. VIII. 8 114 MR. T. E. BUCKLEY ON THE | Jan. 17; yellow-speckled hens breed in this mixed grass and heather, while the more ordinarily marked ones, such as No. 8, breed in the heather alone ; but later on in the season, when the coveys begin to break up, the birds nolonger entirely inhabit the ground that suits their plumage best. Andhere I may remark on a habit of the Red Grouse that I have not seen noticed elsewhere, which is that as the season advances the sexes separate, the cocks going singly or in twos, or at the most threes, the hens in larger numbers, except a few pairs here and there, which I believe to be barren birds. Every ornithologist who has tried it must have remarked how difficult it is to get specimens of Ptarmigan in any of their three distinct plumages, at least in the British Isles ; and I find, though in a less degree, the same may be said of the Red Grouse, as in nearly all of the specimens exhibited traces of their summer or autumn plumage may be found, though most of them were obtained near the end of the season. I do not pretend to call the one exhibited a perfect series, as almost every Grouse varies more or less from its neighbour ; and it would not be easy to get two birds resembling each other in every feather, as may be done in most other species. Having made these prefatory remarks, I now proceed to describe in detail some of the birds in the series now exhibited, nearly all of which were obtained at or near Balnacoil in the valley of the Brora, East Sutherland, and, whether cocks or hens, had completed their full winter piumage as far as it can be. No. 1. Male, Nov. 7, 1879.—Head and neck reddish brown, the back of each being marked by irregular bars of black relieved by others of yellowish brown. Back deep reddish brown, closely interlined by very small and irregular lines of black, these lines being much coarser near the centre of the back. Wing-coverts, rump, and upper tail-coverts the same, but the black lines still smaller ; primaries slightly edged with white. Breast deeper in colour than the back, getting darker still towards the centre, the feathers being marked throughout by fine black lines, a few white feathers appearing between the legs. de No. 2. Female, Nov. 7, 1879.—This bird (which with the one last described made a barren pair) resembles No. 1 in most particulars : the back has fewer black bars in it, but more dark spots; and the upper tail-coverts are more marked with black bars and_ spots. The breast is decidedly lighter in colour, and has the dark bars ae regular; a few of the under tail-coverts are tipped with white. This pair are good examples of the typical form of Red Grouse, one of the least common on the moor where they were procured. No. 3. Male, Oct. 31, 1879.—Head and back of neck dark brown, relieved with lighter spots and black bars. Back reddish brown, with small black bars, each feather having a black patch; greater wing-coverts the same, but with fewer black patches ; one or two of the lesser wing-coverts have a tip of white ; upper tail-coverts dark brown with black bars, a few of these tipped with white. Throat deep chestnut-brown ; breast deep reddish brown with decided bars 1882, | PLUMAGE OF THE RED GROUSE. 115 of black, a deeper colour in the centre, where also some white feathers appear; under tail-coverts a good deal tipped with white ; primaries very faintly edged with white. The back of this bird may be taken as typical of the male Red Grouse. No. 4. Female, Oct. 21, 1879.—Head and neck brown, with black spots. Back and greater wing-coverts brown with black bars, many of the feathers having a black spot; primaries much marked with white on the outside; secondaries very dark brown, minutely marbled with light brown; upper tail-coverts a rich brown, barred and spotted with black ; tail black, with a slight marking of brown on the outer edge of the outer feathers. Breast and throat yellowish brown, the upper part of the former much barred with black, the lower part much darker, many of the feathers having an edging of white below the black line; the sides again lighter and more coarsely marked ; under tail-coverts same as sides. No. 5. Male, Nov. 22, 1879.—Head deep reddish brown with black bars and markings, the sides of the head being mottled with white. Back black, relieved by a few bars of dark and light brown ; greater wing-coverts deep dusky brown, marked by shadings of a rather lighter brown; smaller wing-coverts edged with white; pri- maries slightly edged with the same; upper tail-coverts deep brown, barred with black, a few feathers having a white edging. Chin much marked with white; throat deep reddish brown ; the top of the breast has a circle of nearly black feathers; the centre nearly white with a few black feathers, going away at the sides into deep reddish brown much marked with black and white; under tail-coverts same as sides. This is a very well marked specimen of a pretty common variation ; I have one almost identical from Skye. No. 6. Female, Oct. 31, 1879.—Back of neck and head dark brown with black bars and spots ; sides of neck chestnut-red, some of the feathers tipped slightly with white. Back deep brown, with bars of black ; some of the feathers have a black spot, and others are edged with a lighter brown; greater wing-coverts the same as the back but without the black spots, many of the feathers edged with white ; lesser wing-coverts also much edged with white ; upper tail-coverts red- dish brown with black bars, a few feathers edged with white. Feathers of chin edged with white ; upper part of breast rich dark brown, barred with black, the edging of white on each feather increasing towards the centre of the breast, where the brown nearly disappears, the colouring there being black and white; the sides have the bars of white and black on the ground-colour more distinct; under tail- coverts the same as the sides. Outsides of the primaries edged with white. The tail marked and tipped with brown. This bird when fresh killed had a most beautiful purple gloss over its breast. I have killed this same variation in Ross-shire, but I have not found it a very common one. No. 7. Male, Nov. 22, 1879.—Back of head and neck very deep reddish brown, with black bars and spots, also spots of a lighter 8 116 ON THE PLUMAGE OF THE RED GROUSE. [Jan. 17, colour. Back very black, the feathers edged and barred with dark brown, greater wing-coverts black, with here and there slight brown markings; upper tail-coverts very dark brown with lighter brown marks, shading to nearly pure black at the tail. Chin black, throat very deep reddish brown ; breast black, some of the feathers slightly edged with brown, which turns to white at the centre of the breast, the sides showing more decided brown markings ; under tail-coverts same as sides, but the markings more distinct still. This bird approaches to a melanism; but as I have often come across specimens closely resembling it, I have described it as a type of one of the variations. No. 8. Female, Dec. 3, 1879.—Back of head and neck light brown, marked with black bars and spots. Back, greater and lesser wing-coverts, and tail-coverts light brown marked with black bars, some of the feathers having black spots; the tips of many of the feathers again have a very light brown spot, giving it a very mottled appearance. Outer edges of primaries slightly marked with white. The whole of the breast, sides, and under tail-coverts light brown, shading to darker brown in the centre, each feather having one or more black bars—the feathers in the centre and sides also being edged with white, as are also the under tail-coverts. This and No. 4 most nearly resemble each other, the latter being probably the older bird. Now I think it will be admitted that the specimens I exhibit should not be, as I maintained before, regarded as “ varieties” in the vague and ordinary sense of that word. It seems to me that we should regard them as instances of individual differences or polymor- phisms—just as in the case of the Ruff (Qachetes pugnax), which exhibits a degree of variability in its seasonal adornment more con- spicuous, I allow, than that of the Grouse now before us, but far less permanent, since the difference in the Grouse would appear to remain, if not throughout the year, for at least several months, while that in the Ruff is confined to but a few weeks in the spring or early summer. Thus, if my contention be just, we have in the Red Grouse—the only species of birds according to the opinion of most ornithologists which is peculiar to the British Islands, and a species which in the judgment of the best authorities is itself the modified descendant of a far more widely distributed species, the Willow-Grouse (ZLycopus albus)—an amount of individual variability capable of still further and perhaps indefinite modification as to colour, should occasion arise whereby such modification might be rendered necessary for the persistence of the stock. 2.1262. dD Ar Hanhart imp GB Sowerby lith NEW SHELLS. 1882.] MR. SOWERBY, JUN., ON NEW SPECIES OF SHELLS. 117 8. Descriptions of new Species of Shells in the Collection of Mr. J. Cosmo Melvill. By G. B. Sowrrsy, Junr. [Received December 30, 1881.] (Plate V.) Conus prytanis. (Plate V. fig. 1.) Shell somewhat pyriform, lightish brown, here and there longi- tudinally streaked with darker brown, encircled with a well-defined narrow pale band below the middle; spire short; whorls 9, smooth, the upper ones sloping, the rest squarely turreted, with bold whitish tubercles at the angles, banded with dark brown between the tuber- cles ; last whorl slightly rounded at the upper angle between the tubercles, faintly ribbed towards the base. Aperture of moderate width, nearly equal at both ends, light purple within. Lip thin, with scarcely any sinus at the upper extremity. Length 35, width at the angle 20 millim. Hab. Galapagos Islands. In looking over Mr. Melvill’s fine collection of Cones in October last, he called my attention to this shell, which he had obtained in 1873 at the sale of the late Thos. Norvis’s collection, and to which he had given in manuscript the above name, not having been able to identify it with any known species. I have since compared it with C. lividus (Brug.), which it resembles in colour, but from which it differs materially in form, being much shorter, with convex sides, slightly contracted at the base. It differs also from that species in the character of the crown, the tubercles being more clearly de- fined and elevated than in any specimen of C, lividus with which I have met. Its next ally is C. brumneus (Mawe), the whorls of the spire of which species are distinctly grooved, whereas in this they are smooth. It differs also from that species somewhat in form, and in the whitish band with which it is encircled. The shell it is most like in form and coronation is C. tiaratus (Brod.), which is a species far removed from it in colour and markings. Upon searching the British-Museum collection, Mr. Edgar A. Smith drew my attention to three specimens similar in every respect to Mr. Melvill’s shell, and undoubtedly of the same species, marked “ Galapagos, sandy mud (H. Cuming).” They had been mistaken for a variety of C. brunneus. Conus EVELYN, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 2.) Shell elongately pyriform, pale yellow, striped with light brown, - encircled with an interrupted whitish band ; spire rather short ; whorls flattened, with four spiral grooves, coronated with elongated flattened tubercles at the angle; apex prominent; last whorl very faintly striated, rather convex below the angle, and slightly attenuated towards the base. Aperture rather narrow, a little widened towards the base, interior white. Length 28, width at the angle 14 millim, 118 MR. G. B. SOWERBY, JUN., ON (Jan. 17, Although a shell of no very striking form, and having characters in common with several, there is no species to which I can very closely compare it. The spire is rather like that of C. punctatus, Hwass ; but it is a much more slender shell, and the painting is quite of a different character. Conus SEMIVELATUS, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 3.) Shell pyriform, plum-colour, white at the top ; spire short ; whorls slightly convex, smooth ; last whorl rounded at the upper angle, then convex, and contracted at the base. Aperture moderate, purple within. Length 16, width 10 millim. Hab, Red Sea. A remarkable little species, of a very unusual colour. The whole of the spire and just the top of the last whorl is plain white, and the rest of the shell of a uniform plum-colour. The specimen is in perfect condition; and its operculum, which is preserved, is very small and thin. Mr. Melvill gave the shell the above name in manuscript in his collection. I have seen two other specimens, varying very little from the type. Conus DIANTHUS, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 4.) Shell rather abbreviately conical, pale pink, with irregular patches of orange; transversely rather distantly ribbed, longitudinally faintly striated, striee undulating across the ribs and forming thereon minute scales ; ribs closer, stronger, and smoother towards the base ; spire rather short, regularly conical ; whorls 10, flatly sloping, un- dulated at the angle, last two or three with a concave depression just above the angle ; the last whorl has the upper angle obscurely coronated, sides nearly straight, or very slightly convex. Aperture rather narrow, a little wider towards the base, pink within. Lip very little sinuated at the upper extremity. Length 28, width at the angle 13 millim. An interesting species of peculiar sculpture, the waved striz crossing the ribs giving them more of a scaly than of a nodulous appearance, Conus WILMERT, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 5.) Shell fusiform, pale. brown, transversely ribbed, ribs strong, rounded, smooth, equal in width to the interstices, which are crossed with thread-like striz ; spire very elevated, whorls 11, flatly sloping, with three deep-cut spiral grooves, keeled at the angle, a spiral cord against the suture; last whorl with the upper angle acutely keeled, sides sloping, and attenuated towards the base. Aperture narrow. Lip slightly sinuated at the upper extremity. Length 21, width 8 millim. Hab. Port Blair, Andaman Islands (Lieut.-Col. Wilmer). Much narrower than C, acutangulus(Ch.),with a very elevated spire. MITRA MELVILLI, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 7.) Shell cylindrically fusiform, encircled throughout with deeply 1882. ] NEW SPECIES OF SHELLS. 119 punctured grooves, light brown, longitudinally promiscuously streaked with pale straw-colour and dark brown, pale straw-colour in the grooves, interrupting the dark longitudinal streaks; spire nearly equal in length to the mouth; whorls 9, sloping, scarcely convex ; last whorl rather convex in the middle, and very slightly tapering towards the base. Aperture rather narrow, not contracted at the base, interior smooth, white; columella furnished with six small plaits, the lower one being scarcely visible. Lip crenulated. Length 31, greatest width (about the middle of the shell) 10 millim. The light-coloured grooves intersecting the dark flames give a marked character to the painting of this shell. Psrupotiva (MACRON) STEREOGLYPTA, sp. noy. (Plate V. fig. 8.) Shell angularly ovate, ponderous, white; spire rather short, turreted ; whorls 5, convex, rounded at the angle, depressed at the suture, with a prominent ridge between the suture and the angle ; the last whorl has the upper angle somewhat rounded, and a second equally rounded angle a little below, sides slightly convex, with three rather broad deep grooves near the base; umbilical ridge thick and broad. Aperture oblong-oval, smooth, white within. Lip very thick at the upper part. Columella furnished with a callosity, which is thickened into a tubercle at the upper part and depressed so as to cover the unbilicus at the lower. Jength 75, width 51 millim. Length of aperture 43, width 21 millim. The specimen is unfortunately in bad condition, the outer surface being much worn and the lip imperfect ; but it is certainly worthy of notice, being the largest species of a very limited genus, and of a bold and striking outline, entirely different from the two largest species hitherto known, P. kellettii and P. ethiops. I have not attempted to describe the surface of the shell, on account of its condition; but there are faint indications of obsolete sulci, with a sort of malleation between. ENGINA XANTHOLEUCA, sp. noy. (Plate V. fig. 9.) Shell fusiform, white, painted with yellow from the lower extre- mity to nearly halfway up the body-whorl, the colour terminating abruptly; longitudinally rather obliquely and distantly ribbed ; spirally closely and deeply grooved ; spire elevated, about equal in length to the aperture, rather tumid; whorls 6, slightly convex ; last whorl rather convex above, then tapering, contracted and pro- duced at the base. Aperture oblong. Outer lip furnished exteriorly with a slightly flattened frilled varix, and interiorly with six elon- gated tubercles or teeth. Columella smooth. Canal moderate, slightly recurved. Length 15, width 6 millim. Hab. Mauritius. CoLUMBELLA (ANACHIS) OSTREICOLA, Sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 10.) Shell minute, subfusiform, blackish brown, longitudinally ribbed, ribs slightly nodulous at the upper part; transversely grooved to- wards the base ; spire acute, rather longer than the mouth ; whorls 120 MR. SOWERBY, JUN., ON NEW SPECIES OF SHELLS. [Jan. 17, 6, sloping, scarcely convex ; nucleus smooth ; last whorl somewhat swollen, contracted towards the base. Aperture oblong, dark brown within. Lip with a moderate sinus above, denticulated within. Canal very short. Columella with a nodulous callosity above. Length 4, width 2 millim. Hab. Florida, on Ostrea virginica (Melvill). Mr. Melvill found specimens of this shell as noted above in 1872, and in 1879 gave the species the above name in manuscript in his collection; but the shell has not I believe been hitherto described. It is allied to C. nigricans, but smaller and quite different. FIsSURELLA MELVILLI, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 11.) Shell oval, rather elevated, broad behind, slightly contracted in front ; radiately closely ribbed, ribs very little raised, alternately larger ; concentrically wrinkled; pale green, interior greyish white. Orifice round, subcentral. Margin slightly irregularly wrinkled. Length 50, width 40, height 22 millim. Differing from its congeners chiefly in the rotundity of its orifice. PECTEN SIBYLLH, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 12.) Shell thin, suborbicular, acutely elevated at the umbones, equi- lateral, equivalve. Colour light orange, concentrically faintly banded with darker orange. Upper valve slightly convex, lower somewhat flatter ; both valves very finely and closely ribbed, ribs very delicately serrated. Right auricle narrow, extending to about a quarter of the length of the shell from umbo to margin; left auricle moderately broad. Alt. 58, lat. 56 millim. A very beautiful species with delicate sculpture ; the ribs are very numerous and close-set, varying slightly and promiscuously in size, not regularly alternating as in some species. The delicate close-set scales cover the whole of the ribs. The specimen passed from the collection of the late Thomas Lombe Taylor into that of Mr. Melvill, who gave it the above name in manuscript. PECTEN LOXOIDES, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 13.) Shell rather thin, obliquely subovate, inequilateral, white, with the upper valve transversely undulately streaked, and spotted with pinkish orange. Lower valve rather deep, upper slightly convex. Radiating ribs 20 in number, prominent, rounded, smooth ; inter- stices about equal in width to the ribs, also smooth. Auricles small, the right rather larger than the left. Alt. 25, lat. 24 millim. Hab. Australia. The valves of the specimen are odd; there are also odd valves of the same species in the British Museum. The species is quite unlike any hitherto described, and may be easily recognized by the obliquity of its outline. : Conus TEXTILE, vatinuETRIos. (Plate V. fig. 6.) Compared with C. canonicus (Brug.), more pyriform and atten- P.Z,5 1682.27 7, Mintern Bros amp . C Beneau del et hth NEW ASTEROIDEA 1882.] PROF. F.J. BELL ON NEW SPECIES OF ASTEROIDEA. 121 uated at the base ; very closely and beautifully inlaid with minute white triangular scale-like markings upon a dark-brown ground, disposed in three broad bands ; the colour in the narrow spaces between the bands is lighter brown, with the markings tending to zigzag streaks ; the markings of the spire are waved streaks crossing the whorls. Length 51, width 23 millim. Mr. Melvill had named this shell in manuscript Conus euetrios ; and I admit that it is quite as worthy to be considered a species as C. canonicus (Brug.), C. vicarius (Lamk.), C. verriculum (Reeve), C. archiepiscopus (Brug.), C. tigrinus (Sowerby), C. corbula and scriptus (Sowerby), all of which, however, I consider varieties of Conus textile (Linneus). It is the opinion of some that, having got thus far, other species, such as C. abbas (Brug.), C. panniculus (Lk.), CO. legatus (Lk.), &c., should be included; but having had exceptional opportunities, from time to time, of examining large numbers of specimens of all the varieties, I continue to regard these last as species. EXPLANATION OF PLATE V. Fig. 1. Conus prytanis, p. 117. Fig. 8. Pseudoliva(Macron) stereoglypta , 2. evelyne, p. 117. p. 119. 3. —— semivelatus, p. 118. 9. Engina xantholeuea, p. 119. 4. dianthus, p. 118. 10. Colwmbella (Anachis) ostreicola, 5. —— wilmeri, p. 118. » 119. 6. —— textile, var. euetrios, 11. Fisswretla melvilli, p. 120. p. 120. 12, Pecten sibylle, p. 120. 7. Mitra melvilli, p. 118. 13. loxoides, p. 120. 4, Descriptions of new or rare Species of Asteroidea in the Collection of the British Museum. By F. Jurrrey Betz, M.A., F.Z.S. [Received January 10, 1882.] (Plate VI.) Although naturalists are agreed that it is most convenient to publish descriptions of new species in connexion with a systematic review of the groups to which they severally belong, I venture on this occasion to depart from the custom, as a knowledge of these new species may be agreeable to those who are interested in the order, while the revisions can only appear slowly, and at perhaps great intervals of time. CALVASTERIAS ANTIPODUM, n. sp. (Plate VI. fig. 1.) The credit of recognizing the generic affinities of this species must be given to M. Perrier; for there is attached to the bottle con- taining it a label bearing, in his handwriting, ‘‘ Calvasterias, sp.” It formed part of the collection made during the voyage of the ‘ Erebus’ and ‘ Terror.’ R=61; r=19. Arms five, greatest breadth of arm 17:5 millim, Adambulacral spines generally in a single row, stout and 122 PROF. F, J. BELL ON NEW [Jan. 17, rounded at their tips. Madreporic plate almost subcentral. The integument is thick, and has a peculiar clamminess; and the spines developed on the surface are rather scale-like rounded processes, ornamented with a radial striation; of these an irregular series extends along the median dorsal line of each ray; towards the extremity of the ray the scales become a little thinner and longer, or, in other words, more spinous; the striation may still be detected on their tips. While at this end they are somewhat scattered, they are more numerous at the base of the arm, where also they are larger. Passing into the disk a complete circlet is made by these processes, the aggregation at the base of each radial series being brought into connexion with its fellows by interradial aggregations. In this way a rather broad though somewhat feebly indicated circlet of modified spines lies around the centre of the disk; a few similar spines are to be found in the central space. In the middle of one of the interradial aggregations there is placed the madreporic plate, which thus comes to be surrounded by a circlet of spines. On the arms three rows of pore-areas may be made out on either side of the median row of spines, which are the only spinous processes that are developed on the abactinal surface. ‘The marginal spines, short and blunt and pretty regularly arranged, have an appearance not unlike that presented by the jaw of a Cyclodus. Between them and the adambulacral spines there is a bare space, which, in this spirit-specimen, is narrow and groove-like. The whole creature is of a yellowish-white hue ; and the suckers are little darker than the rest of the body. A single specimen. The only indication of its habitat is the fact that it was collected during the voyage of the ‘ Erebus’ and ‘ Terror, CRIBRELLA MINUTA, n. sp. (Plate VI. fig. 2.) R=18; r= 6:5 Arms five, 6 millim. wide at their base, and somewhat rapidly diminishing in breadth. The abactinal sur- face plain, and similar for its whole extent. The adambulacral spines fringing the groove are arranged in a single row; there is generally one for each plate; they are of a fair size, and are distinctly separated from one another. Externally to these there is a series of transverse rows, containing at least three or four spines, and sometimes having them arranged in double order. Beyond these, and separated from them by a more or less distinct lon- gitudinal groove, is a longitudinal row of closely packed spines. Externally to this there are a number of combs of spines set trans- versely, which occupy the edge of the actinal surface of the ray. The next series of spines is not so regularly arranged, and leads to the irregular disposition of spiniferous ossicles which obtains on the abactinal surface. The madreporic plate is small, obscure, and marginal. No pedicellarie detected. The colour of the single example (which has been in spirit for more than twenty-five years) is dead white. Keuador (Haslar collection, J. O. Goodridge, Esq., R.N.). 1882. | OR RARE SPECIES OF ASTEROIDEA. 123 Miruropia vicToriz, n. sp. (Plate VI. figs. 3, 3a.) R = 265, r=/3°5;s R= 30, r=4:6. Arms five, 4 or 4:2 millim. wide at their base, and not diminishing in breadth for some distance from the disk ; integument of the abactinal surface marked out into spaces by the arms of the calcareous skeletal pieces; a few spines, two or three millimetres long, are to be found along the middle line of the arm; a few spines, which are generally a little longer, are placed at the upper or abactinal edge of the side of the arm. They frequently exhibit a white and brown patchwork-like coloration, which is due to the arrangement of the pigment in the integument which covers them. The actinal or lower margin of the side of the arm has along it from 7 to 10 spines of about the same length as those on the upper margin. The rather wide ambulacral groove is fringed by a regular series of short blunt spines, which are strongest in the region which falls within the disk. Within this series there is a row of smaller and more delicate spines, of which about five, set in fan-shape, belong to each ambulacral ossicle; the outer and larger spines may be coarsely granulated. The madre- poric plate is small, white, and rounded, and is set not far from the centre of the disk ; the abactinal surface of the disk presents no characters by which it may be distinguished from that of the arms ; the papulee on the actinal surface are rare. No pedicellarie detected. This new species is to be distinguished from M. clavigera by (1) the rarity of the papular spaces on the abactinal surface, (2) by the proportionally smaller spines, and (3) by the absence of a row of spines between the ventro-marginal series and the abactinal rows, a row which appears to be constantly present in the better-known form. Judging from the single specimen of M. bradleyi in the collection of the British Museum, that species has much larger papular pores, has two rows of spines on the actinal surface of the rays, and none at all on their abactinal surface. Victoria Bank (20° 42! S., 37° 27' W.); depth 39 fathoms; bottom, dead coral. Both the specimens from which the above description has been drawn up are injured; one appears to have lost one of its arms during life, as the free end is healed. They formed part of the collection made by Dr. Coppinger (H.M.S. ‘ Alert’) in 1879-80; but they were not noticed in my report (P. ZS. 1881), as they did not form a part of the fauna of the Straits of Magellan. FROMIA INDICA. Fromia indica, Perrier, Rév. des Stellér. p. 177. Scytaster indicus, Perrier, Ann. Sc. Nat. (5) xii. p. 255. Although M, Perrier’s description states that his specimen has six rays, I have no hesitation in assigning to the species a five-rayed specimen, in which the proportion of R to r is somewhat greater than in the example which formed the object of M. Perrier’s description. I base the determination chiefly on the following con- siderations :—The presence of six rays is of itself no evidence in favour of a true polyactinid condition as against a possible heter- 124 PROF, BELL ON NEW SPECIES OF ASTEROIDEA. [Jan. 17, actinic peculiarity ; and the decision can only be given with the aid of evidence which proves or disproves the idea that the species can and does undergo division. Such evidence is here afforded by the spe- cimen in the national collection; for it has the arms of different lengths ; this, of course, points to some of the arms being younger than the others, or, in other words, as having arisen by gemmation after division. The heteractinic, rather than the sexradiate, condition should therefore be regarded as a part of the diagnosis of the species. FRoMIA TUMIDA, n. sp. (Plate VI. figs. 4, 4 a.) Arms and disk more swollen than in most of the species of the genus. R=45,r= 14; R= 35, r= 11°5, or R = 3'2r (about); breadth of arms at base 14°5, 12°5 millim. All the plates on the actinal surface, with the exception of those of the marginal series, are closely covered with stout spines, from which the spines of the adam- bulacral series are distinguished by their smaller size. The whole of the abactinal surface is covered by squarish-headed granules, which are all of very much the same size, and are all very regularly distributed ; they are arranged in elliptical aggregations, two or three rows of which extend along the back of the ray, or they are placed between these aggregations ; in the former case they are somewhat more closely packed. The intermediate spaces, in addition to the granules, present a certain number of pores, which, however, are, in comparison with other species of this genus, rare. The madre- poric plate is rather nearer the margin than the centre of the disk, and is very similar to the same body in F’. milleporella. There are about seventeen marginal plates in both the actinal and abactinal series ; and both sets are covered with granules of a fair size; and the marginal granules of each set are to be easily distinguished from the more central ones which they surround. For some way along the surface of the arm the dorso-marginal plates are deeper than long ; the infero-marginal plates are much more nearly square. There seems to be a large pore at the proximal angle between the two sets of marginal plates; but as the two specimens on which this deserip- tion is drawn up have both been dried, it is not possible to speak definitely on the point. The same remark will apply to the pore at the proximal angle of the actinal edge of the infero-marginal plates. The adambulacral spines appear to be arranged in three longi- tudinal rows. They are subequal in size, and diminish very slightly as they approach the free end of the ray. The space between these spines and the marginal plates is completely occupied with short stout spines, set in tufts on small plates. No pedicellariz. Ceylon. Presented by M. Kelaart. EXPLANATION OF PLATE VI. Fig. 1. Scales of Calvasterias antipodwm, X 4:1. 2. Abactinal surface of Cribrella minuta, X 2:1. 3, 3a. Actinal and abactinal surfaces of Mithrodia victorie, X 2:1. 4, 4a. Actinal and abactinal surfaces of Fromia twmida, showing the arrangement of the plates and spines, X 3: 2. 4b, Portion of actinal surface, more highly magnified. P.Z.5 1882 PEs 135 Hanhart imp 147 W Porkiss ith AUSTRALIAN AND PACIFIC CICADIDE, 1882.] MR. W. L. DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADID&. 125 5. On some undescribed Cicadidee from the Australian and Pacific Regions. By W. L. Distant. [Received January 13, 1882.] (Plate VII.) The species here described are almost wholly from the Museum Godeffroy at Hamburg, the Rhynchotal collection of which I have been requested to determine by Mr. Schmeltz. Australia is particularly rich in Cicadidz ; and from what little is known at present it probably possesses the greatest number of that family compared with any other region of the globe. Cyclochila, Psal- toda, Henicopsaltria, Thopha, Cystosoma, and Chlorocysta are genera remarkable in structure, some extremely limited and none numerous in species and, so far as our present knowledge extends, completely con- fined to Australia ; whilst the genus Melampsalta, though not alto- gether confined to that continent, is yet even now known to comprise a greater number of Australian species than can be found belonging to a genus in any other fauna. - Two genera, Cicada and Tibicen, have almost a world-wide range, or are at least found in all the zoological regions. If we compare the distribution of the Australian Cicadidee with the geographical features of the botany of the same region, coinci- dences at once appear. Many affinities, as has been so ably pointed out by Dr. Hooker, exist between the South-African and Australian floras ; and genera are found common to these two regions which are found nowhere else. One very striking and parallel case may be mentioned in the Cicadidze. The Australian genus Cystosoma is strikingly dissimilar to the usual generic type in having a wonder- fully inflated and dilated abdomen: in South Africa we find in this respect an analogous genus in Pydna. The extraordinary multiplicity of Australian species in the genus Melampsalta reflects the abund- ance of species in the genus Acacia as found in the same region. In the specific nomenclature I have largely used the names of Australian explorers, qualitative terms being an impossibility to provide for these insects, and more likely to obscure than to eluci- date their differences. CosMOPSALTRIA STUARTI, 0. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 2, 2a, 20.) Body above pale greenish, sparingly pilose. Head with a spot on each lateral margin, and a smaller and rounded spot on each side of the ocelli, black; ocelli red margined with black ; eyes dull ochraceous. Pronotum with two narrow, central, longitudinal fuscous fascize, some- what faint and obliterated about centre, more widely divergent on anterior margin, and joined together on the posterior margin ; oblique striee behind eyes, and a spot on anterior inner border of lateral mar- gin, also fuscous. Mesonotum with two central obconical spots mar- 126 MR. W.L. DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADID&. [Jan. 17, gined with fuscous, a faint broken sublateral fascia on each side, an irregular spot on disk, and a small rounded spot in front of each anterior branch of basal cruciform elevation fuscous. Abdomen be- coming faintly testaceous towards apex; body beneath and legs pale greenish ; apices of the tibie, rostrum, tarsi, and apical segment of abdomen pale testaceous. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline ; tegmina with the costal membrane pale greenish, the apical portion of the venation fuscous. The abdomen is elongate, and much attenuated towards apex, the dorsal surface of the basal segment is somewhat rounded and produced anteriorly, aud sinuated centrally on the posterior margin. The head, including outer margin of eyes (which are very large and promi- nent), is very little narrower than base of pronotum. The opercula reach the base of the third abdominal segment, and are broadly and deeply sinuate on their outer margin, with the apices rounded. Rostrum reaching posterior coxee. Face with a central impression, and very strongly striated transversely. Long. 21 millim.; exp. tegm. 51 millim. Hab. Fiji Islands. (Mus. Godeffroy.) This species is closely allied to C. distans, Walk., which is also found in the same locality. From this it differs in being ouly one half the size, and in having the dorsal surface of the basal segment of the abdomen sinuated behind, besides which the head is more pro- duced in front and wider between the eyes relative to the width of the pronotum at the base. The opercula also are longer, as in Walker’s species they do not reach the apex of the third abdominal segment. TIBICEN BURKE], n. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 3, 3a, 36.) d+ Head castaneous, area of the ocelli and two spots at base black, base ochraceous, more or Jess margined with black; pronotum ochra- ceous, with a central hourglass-shaped fuscous fascia, the centre of which is longitudinally ochraceous ; on each side of disk is a small black curved fascia; oblique striee, inner borders of lateral margins, lateral angles, and anterior border of posterior margin also blackish. Mesonotum black, with a small central angulated spot on disk, on each side of which is a waved and angulated fascia, narrowest and com- mencing on anterior margin and joined to anterior branches of basal cruciform elevation, followed by a straight sublateral fascia, ochraceous. Cruciform basal elevation dull ochraceous. Abdomen black, sparingly pilose ; posterior margin of apical segment and anal appendage tes- taceous. Underside of head, sternum, and opercula ochraceous and pubescent, the last with the disk fuscous and posterior margin nar- rowly but clearly ochraceous. Face castaneous with the centre black. Anterior legs ochraceous, femora streaked with fuscous, base of tibize and apex of tarsi fuscous, apical half of tibize somewhat castaneous, Intermediate and posterior legs with the coxze luteous; femora pitchy, with the apices luteous ; intermediate tibize castaneous, with the base ochraceous, posterior tibia ochraceous. Abdomen beneath black, with the apical segment and anal appendage testaceous. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline; tegmina with the costal membrane and basal 1882.] MR. W. L. DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADID&. 127 portion of venation ochraceous, costal area fuscous, anastomoses in- fuscated. The rostrum just passes the apices of the posterior coxe ; face with the sides transversely striated, its width about equal to the distance from its lateral margin to inner margin of eyes; opercula not cover- ing the apical margin of metasternum, with their posterior margins broadly rounded. Long. 21 millim.; exp. tegm. 65 millim. Hab. Australia, Peak Downs. (Mus. Godeffroy ; coll. Dist.) TIBICEN WILLsI, n. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 4, 4a, 40.) 2. Body above black. Head with the apex of face testaceous, the ocelli red. Pronotum with three large and confluent ochraceous spots on each side, somewhat narrowly separated at centre, and almost extending to lateral margins. Mesonotum black, with two very obscure obconical spots; basal cruciform elevation dull ochra- ceous. Abdomen black, with the apical segmental margins testaceous ; anal appendage obscure pitchy-testaceous. Underside of body and legs pale testaceous; head between face and eyes black ; lateral margins of sternum spotted with fuscous, and a lateral abdominal segmental row of transverse spots of the same colour. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline; tegmina with the venation fuscous, the costal membrane, basal and claval areas ochraceous, transverse veins at base of second and third apical areas, with connecting portion of longi- tudinal vein, infuscated ; wings with the basal and claval areas ochra- ceous. The face is very convex, narrowly and longitudinaly sulcated, the sides transversely striated, rostrum reaching the posterior coxe ; posterior lateral angles of pronotum somewhat acutely ampliated and produced. Long. 20 millim.; exp. tegm. 53 millim. ee Australia, Peak Downs, Sydney. (Mus. Godeffroy ; coll. ist.) I have been enabled to examine nine specimens of this distinctly marked species, all of which, however, were females. In general appearance these have a superficial resemblance to the genus Melam- psalta. [Since writing the above I have discovered one male specimen of this species in the Godeffroy collection, which was received from Sydney. The opercula are pale ochraceous, with somewhat paler margin, and about reach the base of the first abdominal segment, they are slightly directed inwardly, the inner margins rounded and produced, but considerably apart, and the posterior margins wide and very slightly rounded. | TIBICEN GILMOREI, n. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 8, 8a, 8.) 3. Body above dull testaceous. Head castaneous, the vertex some: what darker than the front, area of the ocelli blackish. Pronotum with a central fuscous longitudinal fascia which has a very wide and triangular base, hind margin fuscous, with the posterior edge 128 MR. W.L, DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADID&. ([Jan. 17, pale ochraceous. Mesonotum with two central obconical spots bordered with ochraceous, a curved fascia on each side of disk con- nected with anterior branches of cruciform elevation ochraceous, and a lateral black fascia bordered outwardly (anteriorly) and inwardly (posteriorly) with ochraceous; basal elevation ochraceous with a black spot at centre and one on each branch near apex. Abdomen sparingly pilose, with the posterior segmental margins ochraceous. Body beneath and legs ochraceous; face castaneous ; disk of abdomen more or less castaneous, posterior segmental margins pale, anal ap- pendage with a central longitudinal fuscous streak. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline; tegmina with the veins fuscous, anastomoses and connecting longitudinal veins (excepting that before the last and lower anastomosis) infuscated, apices of longitudinal veins nar- rowly infuscated. The body is short, the front of the head produced and prominent, the face long and convex, rostrum reaching posterior coxze; opercula small, not covering metasternum. Long. 18 millim.; exp. tegm. 60 millim. Hab. Australia, Swan River. (Coll. Dist.) This species is allied to 7. interrupta, Walk., but larger, body shorter and more robust, and head with the front much more pro- duced. TIBICEN MUELLERI, n. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 6, 6u, 66.) 2 . Body above ochraceous. Head with two small spots at base of front, a spot near anterior lateral angle of vertex, and area of the ocelli fuscous; eyes tinged with fuscous. Pronotum with two cen- tral longitudinal black fascize sinuated at centre and meeting on anterior and posterior margins ; a small oblique fascia commencing from behind eyes and terminating on lateral margins also fuscous. Mesonotum with two small obconical spots, inwardly margined with fuscous, and an elongate fuscous spot on disk in front of basal ele- vation. Scutellum with a central fuscous spot, which is continued and narrowed on the first three segments of the abdomen; anal ap- pendage with a large fuscous spot on each side. Body beneath and legs pale ochraceous, abdominal segments with a transverse series of broad fuscous fasciz. ‘Tegmina and wings pale hyaline; tegmina with the costal membrane and basal half of venation ochraceous, transverse veins at bases of first and second ulnar areas, anastomoses with some of the connecting venation, apical longitudinal veins, apical margins of apical areas, and claval margin fuscous ; transverse veins at bases of second and third apical areas broadly infuscated. The head has the front prominently produced ; and its width, in- cluding outer margin of eyes, is less than that of the base of the pronotum ; the face is large, elongate, and very convex, with a faint longitudinal impression, and somewhat obscure transverse striations. The rostrum reaches the posterior coxe. Long. 11 millim.; exp. tegm. 38 millim. Had. Australia, Peak Downs. (Mus. Godeffroy.) 1882.] MR. W. L. DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADID&. 129 TIBICEN GREGORYI, n. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 7, 7a, 70.) 3. Body above pale ochraceous. Head with the ocelli reddish, the eyes tinged with fuscous, mesonotum with two very obscure central obconical spots, a central discal longitudinal and two sub- lateral fasciee. Abdomen somewhat thickly covered with greyish pilosity. Body beneath and legs pale ochraceous, excepting the abdomen, which is pale fuscous. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline ; tegmina with the venation ochraceous, excepting apical longitudinal veins and apical margins of apical areas, which are pale fuscous ; transverse veins at bases of second and third apical areas broadly infuscated. The head is. broad, and, including eyes, as wide as pronotum, of which the anterior and posterior width is subequal. The face is large, elongate, and very convex, with faint transverse striations. The rostrum reaches the posterior coxze. The opercula are small, broad, and rounded posteriorly, and about reach the posterior edge of metasternum. Long. 10 millim.; exp. tegm. 34 millim. Hab. Australia, Peak Downs. (Mus. Godeffroy.) This species is allied to the preceding (7. muelleri, Dist.), trom which it differs in the broader and less anteriorly produced head, the shape of the pronotum, and in the different markings of the abdomen, tegmina, &c. MELAMPSALTA WARBURTONI, n.sp. (Plate VII. figs. 9, 9a, 96.) Head with the vertex black, the front ochraceous with a black central longitudinal line. Pronotum ochraceous, with a central longitudinal fascia, lateral and posterior margins dark castaneous. Mesonotum dark castaneous, with two pale irregular fasciee on disk, commencing on anterior margin and terminating at anterior angles of basal cruciform elevation; anterior lateral margins narrowly ochraceous. Abdomen ochraceous. Body beneath and legs ochra- ceous ; head black, with the face ochraceous, of which the transverse stria are castaneous. 'Tegmina and wings pale hyaline, with the venation ochraceous. The body is sparingly pilose above ; the anterior femora are armed with three strong spines; the rostrum just passes the intermediate coxee ; the face is narrowly but deeply sulcated longitudinally, and strongly transversely striate. Long. 15 millim. ; exp. tegm. 38 millim. Hab. Australia, Peak Downs. (Mus. Godeffroy ; coll. Dist.) MELAMpsALTA vorResTI. (Plate VII. figs. 10, 10a, 108.) ¢. Body above ochraceous. Head with a transverse black fascia between the eyes, partly surrounding ocelli. Pronotum with the frontal portion of the interior edge of lateral margins narrowly black, and the anterior edge of posterior margin broadly of the same colour; two small obscure fuscous spots on anterior margin. Mesonotum with the following fuscous markings :—two central obconical spots, and two of somewhat like shape near lateral Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. IX. 9 130 MR. W..L. DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADIDEH. [Jan. 17, margins, one commencing near outer edge of anterior margin; the other joins anterior angles of basal elevation ; these angles are bor- dered outwardly by an angulated spot, and inwardly by a small rounded spot with a central longitudinal line. Abdomen with a series of pale fuscous transverse segmental fascize. Body beneath and legs pale ochraceous, inner margin of eyes black. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline, venation ochraceous, becoming darker towards apex. The body above is sparingly pilose, the rostrum just passes the intermediate cox, with its apex black; the face is deeply longitu- dinally suleated, and strongly transversely striate ; anterior femora armed with three strong teeth. Long. 15 millim.; exp. tegm. 41 millim. Hab. Australia, Queensland, Gayndah. (Mus. Godeffroy ; coll. Dist.) The females of this species are somewhat larger than the males, but vary in size. MELAMPSALTA EYREI, 0. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 12, 12a, 126.) 3. Head black, with the anterior and lateral margins testaceous and with a small central basal ochraceous spot; ocelli reddish, eyes dull ochraceous. Pronotum ochraceous, with two very large rect- angular black spots placed somewhat obliquely, commencing on inner edge of lateral margins, and divided on disk by a central longi- tudinal fascia which is widened anteriorly and posteriorly and is marked at base by a small black spot. Mesonotum with two cen- tral obconical spots placed close together, and two larger ones near lateral margins, black. Abdomen with the disk tinged with reddish, the posterior segmental margins bright ochraceous, the apical seg- ment irregularly marked with black. Body beneath ochraceous ; face black, with the anterior margin testaceous, the lateral margins ochraceous ; inner margin of eyes to base of rostrum, a few scattered and irregular spots on sternum, apex of rostrum, and apical segments of abdomen black. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline; venation ochraceous, becoming darker towards apex. The body is sparingly pilose, rostrum just passing the intermediate cox, anterior femora armed with three spines; face broad but com- pressed, broadly and longitudinally sulcated and distinctly trans- versely striate. Long. 16 millim.; exp. tegm. 44 millim. Hab. Australia, Peak Downs. (Mus. Godeffroy ; coll. Dist.) MELAMPSALTA MACKINLAYI, 0. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 13, 13a, 130.) Closely allied to M. warians, Germ., but much smaller ; head broader, including eyes equal in width to base of pronotum ; rostrum just passing intermediate coxee ; opercula small and pale oehraceous ; tegmina much shorter, with the costa more rounded. Long. 13 millim.; exp. tegm. 38 millim. Hab. Australia, Peak Downs. This species has also considerable affinity to M. themiscura, Walk., in markings, but differs much in size. 1882.] MR. W. L. DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADIDZ. 131 MELAMPSALTA OXLEYI, 0. sp. @. Body above ochraceous. Head with the frontal margin, lateral margins of vertex, inner margins of eyes, and area of the ocelli (the last extending to base of head, and connected with inner margins of eyes) very dark castaneous. Pronotum with a pale cen- tral longitudinal fascia, bordered with black on each side, widest anteriorly and narrowed posteriorly ; lateral and posterior margins much paler, inner border of first, and outer third of inner border of the second, narrowly fuscous. Mesonotum with two short central obconical spots and two large sublateral and subtriangular spots dark fuscous, and a small rounded fuscous spot at each anterior angle of basal cruciform elevation. Abdomen with segmental bases very broadly fuscous, and with a large fuscous streak on each side of anal appendage. Body beneath pale ochraceous ; face, rostrum, and two small spots at base of ovipositor more or less fuscous. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline; tegmina with the venation pale ochraceous, transverse veins at bases of second and third apical areas broadly and darkly infuscated ; upper margin of first apical area, outer mar- gin of first to seventh apical areas, gradually increasing in width, till the whole of the sixth and greater part of the fifth and seventh areas are occupied, and apical external margin dark fuscous. The head is broad, and with outer margins of eyes about equals in width the base of pronotum ; the face is moderately convex, with a deep longitudinal sulcation and strong transverse striations. Rostrum reaching the intermediate coxze ; and body sparingly pilose above and more densely so beneath. Long. 18 millim.; exp. tegm. 48 millim. Hab. Australia, Peak Downs. (Mus. Godeffroy.) The tegminal markings render this species very distinct. I have seen but one specimen (here described), which is a female. MELAMPSALTA LANDSBOROUGHI, nu. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 14, 14a, 146.) @. Head black, with a central longitudinal line to front and three basal spots ochraceous. Pronotum dull ochraceous, with a central pale fascia bordered with black, a short angulated fascia on disk and oblique striz also black, lateral and posterior margins more or less shaded with black. Mesonotum black, very faintly and obscurely marked with ochraceous, the basal cruciform elevation pale ochraceous. Abdomen ochraceous with a broad central black fascia ; the anal appendage with the lateral sides also broadly black. Body beneath, with the head, black, lateral margins of face ochra- ceous. Sternum much shaded with black. Legs ochraceous, coxe and femora streaked with black and fuscous markings, anal appen- dage black, with a large spot on each lateral margin and extreme apex luteous. Tegmina and wings pale hyaline ; tegmina with the costal membrane greenish-ochraceous, the veins fuscous. The rostrum about reaches posterior cox; the face is broad, deeply and longitudinally sulcated, and transversely strongly striated ; g* 132 MR. W. L. DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADIDZ. [Jan. 17, the head, including eyes, is considerably narrower than base of pro- notum ; auterior femora armed with three strong spines. Long. 16 millim. ; exp. tegm. 45 millim. Hab. Australia, Sydney. (Coll. Dist.) This species was identified by Walker (List Hom. i. p. 172. 117, 1850) as the Cicada melanopygia, Germ., and thus stands in the collection of the British Museum. Germar’s species, however, belongs to the genus Zibicen, and as such has been fully described by Stal (Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 4, vol. 1, p. 618. 2, 1861.) MELAMPSALTA LEICHARDTI, nu. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 5, 5a, 56.) 2. Body above ochraceous. - Head with the frontal anterior margin, a spot on anterior lateral angles of vertex, an oblique fascia behind eyes, two small linear spots between ocelli and eyes, a trans- verse spot on anterior margin of vertex, and antenne black. Pro- notum with two central linear black lines, not extending to posterior margin, and widened and angulated near anterior margin, oblique strie, and inner border of posterior margin (on centre of which is a round spot) black. Mesonotum with two short contiguous cen- tral obconical spots, on each side of which is a more elongate and broken one, and two small rounded spots in front of basal cruciform elevation, black. Abdomen with a series of dorsal transverse black fascize, decreasing in width towards apex. Anal appendage with a black line on each side. Body beneath ochraceous; base and lateral margins of face, apex of rostrum, and ovipositor black. Legs ochraceous; femora streaked with fuscous; anterior tibie black, annulated with ochraceous near base. Tegmina and wings pale hya- line; tegmina with the costal membrane and area and veins enclosing basal ulnar area pale ochraceous, remaining venation fuscous. Head, including eyes, equal in width to pronotum ; rostrum reach- ing intermediate coxee; face somewhat compressed, centrally and longitudinally broadly sulcated for half its length, and transversely striate. ‘ Long. 10 millim. ; exp. tegm. 25 millim. Hab. Australia, Peak Downs. This small but distinct species is allied to M. sericevitta, Walk. ; and I am indebted to Mr. Pascoe for an opportunity of comparing the same. ‘The figure here given is considerably enlarged. CysTosOMA SCHMELTZI, n. sp. (Plaie VII. figs. 11, 1la, 116.) Closely allied to the only other known species of the genus, C. saundersii, from which it differs in being only one third the size, and principally in the very different venation of the tegmina, the reticulations of which are faithfully portrayed in the figure, and cannot be adequately described, but are different in pattern and less extended in area than in the other species. The abdomen is much smaller and less inflated; the opercula are obscurely sinuated on their lateral and posterior margins. Long. 25 millim.; exp. tegm. 62 millim. Hab. Australia, Gayndah. (Mus. Godeffroy.) 1882.] MR. W. L. DISTANT ON UNDESCRIBED CICADIDZ. 133 The tegmina of this species are bright green; but this is probably a variable character, as C. iiionae was originally described by Westwood as “ pallide lutea,”’ which perfectly agrees with the speci- mens in my own collection. Mr. Scott, overt (Proc. Zool. Soc. 1852, p. 16), states that this is not correct, but that the species is : iets viridis.”’ The fact evidently is that these two colours are common to the species, as is so frequently the case with others, and especially with Australian members of the family. ARCYSTASIA, ND. gen. Head, including eyes, slightly narrower than pronotum. Antennz with the first joints short but stout and prominent. Pronotum with the lateral margins slightly dilated and strongly depressed, the pos- terior angles strongly produced and rounded. Rostrum reaching the intermediate coxee. Tegmina hyaline, much longer than abdo- men ; ulnar veins somewhat widely separated and divergent at base ; apical half of venation reticulated. Wings with the veins of the apical half numerous and slightly reticulated. Abdomen robust ; tympana detached. Opercula of male well developed, not quite reach- ing basal segment of abdomen. Anterior femora strongly spined. Metasternum with a central raised furrow. Allied to Cystosoma by the reticulated venation of the tegmina, but differing in the hyaline condition of the same and the non- dilated abdomen. Ihave placed it next the genus Acrilla, Stal, which has the tegmina shorter, rostrum longer, and the laterai thoracic margins not dilated. ARCYSTASIA GODEFFROYI, n. sp. (Plate VII. figs. 1, la, 14.) 3. Body above dull testaceous and olivaceous. Head with the vertex dull testaceous, with a central fuscous longitudinal impression at base, the front dark obscure olivaceous, area of the ocelli with some slightly pitehy markings. Pronotum dull testaceous with the lateral margins ochraceous, and a central fuscous longitudinal impression, of which the margins and raised base are pale testaceous. Mesonotum olivaceous, with two central obovate testaceous spots, on each side of which is a sublateral, slightly curved black fascia, the margins of which are testaceous; cruciform basal elevation pale testaceous, with a small rounded fuscous spot on inner side of apices of anterior branches. Scutellum pale olivaceous. Abdomen testa- ceous, the basal segment olivaceous. Body beneath pale testaceous ; face, excluding margins, pale fuscous; sternum with olivaceous shadings. Legs olivaceous or testaceous; cox, trochanters, bases and apices of femora, and apices of tibize spotted with casta- neous. ‘Tegmina and wings pale hyaline; the tegmina tinted with pale ochraceous, with the venation darker ochraceous. Wings with the veins ohraceous. The face is long and subdepressed, with a broad central suleation and faint transverse impressions. The opercula are moderately large, but do not reach the base of the first abdominal segment, outer margins almost straight, posterior margins broad and slightly rounded, 134 MR. P. L. SCLATER ON TWO CURIOUS DUCKs. [Feb. 7, inner margins not meeting. Anterior femora armed with three strong spines beneath. as Long. 22 millim. ; exp. tegm. 63 millim. Hab. Ponape (Caroline archipelago). (Mus. Godeffroy ; coll. Dist.) EXPLANATION OF PLATE VII. . Arcystasia godeffroyi, p. 133. . Cosmopsaltria stuarti, p. 125. . Tibicen burkei, p. 126. . —— willsi, p. 127. 5a, 5b. Melampsalta leichardti, p. 132. . Tibicen muelleri, p. 128. . —— gregoryi, p. 129. . —— gilmorei, p. 127. , 9a, 9b. Melampsalta warburtoni, p. 129. 10, 10a, 108. forresti, p. 129. 11, lla, 113. Cystosoma schmeltzt, p, 182. 12, 12a, 12b. Melampsalta eyrei, p. 180. 13, 18¢,.13b. —— mackinlayi, p. 180. 14, 14a, 140. —— landsboroughi, p. 181. Fig. wwe ERNE Conor BENs S) & a eS) I im] CO. AID OV C9 bo DAD B&S8 MID J ~ February 7, 1882. Prof. W. H. Flower, LL.D., F.R.S., President, in the Chair. Mr. Henry Seebohm exhibited a series of intermediate forms between Carduelis caniceps and C’. major (the eastern form of our common Goldfinch, C. elegans), obtained at Krasnoyarsk in Central Siberia. The series showed every intermediate form between one species and the other, the white on the outer webs of the innermost secondaries increasing in exact proportion as the black on the crown and nape diminished. The supposition was that the two forms interbreed in this district and produce fertile offspring. Mr. Sclater exhibited on behalf of Mr. Peter Inchbald, F.Z.S., two curious Ducks which had been shot on some ornamental water near Darlington in the county of Durham. One of these appeared to be the result of a cross between the Pochard (Fuligula ferina) and one of the freshwater Ducks, possibly the Teal or Mallard; the other presented nearly the appearance of a female Scoter (Zdemia nigra), but was rather darker below. The following papers were read :— 1882,] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE EZLUROIDEA, 135 1. On the Classification and Distribution of the /luroidea. By St.-Grorcr Mivart. [Received January 13, 1882.] The Proceedings of this Society contain three papers, of pro- gressively increasing importance, on the classification of the order Carnivora. The first of these is a paper by Mr. Waterhouse’, wherein he proposes to divide the order into six coordinate families, named by him Canide, Viverride, Felide, Mustelide, Urside, and Phocide. These divisions are based on cranial and dental cha- racters. He associates Arctictis with Procyon, Nasua, Cercoleptes, Ailurus, and the Bears in his Urside; and adds in a note, “ from an examination of the external characters of Bassaris astuta it ap- pears to me that it belongs to this group.’ As to the true Bears, he remarks that they differ from the other terrestrial Carnivora ‘in having a projecting process on the underside of the ramus, and situ- ated a little in advance of the angle of the jaw. The same character is also found in many Seals (Phocide), which, in several other respects, appear to approach the Bears.” He expresses the opinion that “the Cats appear to bear the same relation to the Mustelide as the Dogs to the Viverride.”’ As to the last-named family, he tells us ‘the Viverride have the same general form of skull as the Canide, but differ in having the poste- rior portion more produced ; the bony palate is carried further back ; and the small back molar observable in the lower jaw of the Dogs is here wanting.” The Hyena he is “inclined to regard as an aber- rant form of the Viverride ;’’ adding, “‘in the general characters of the cranium, and especially in the curved form of the lower jaw, it differs considerably from the Cats, and approaches the Viverras. If, however, it be placed with the Viverride, it will form an excep- tion as regards its dentition, having only one true molar on either side of the upper jaw. ‘The ‘carnassiére’ has a large inner lobe, and in this respect also resembles the Viverras, and not the Cats.” The second paper I have referred to is that by the late Mr. H. N. Turner’, wherein he refers to, and much further elaborates the views propounded in, Mr. Waterhouse’s paper, but objects to a division of the order into six groups of similar rank. He divides the terrestrial Carnivora into three primary groups, to each of which he gives the rank of a family, namely (1) Urside, (2) Felide, and (3) Canide. The first family he divides into the three subfamilies Ailurina, Procyonina, and Mustelina, classing Bassaris in the second of these, and saying *, ‘‘ from the characters presented by the cra- nium, I do net feel the slightest hesitation in referring this animal 1 Pp. Z. S. 1839, p. 135. * “ Observations relating to some of the Foramina at the base of the Skull in Mammalia, and on the Classification of the Order Carnivora,” P. Z, 8. 1848, p- 9v. 8 Loc. cit. p. 81. 136 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, to the subursine section. It is true that the teeth have some resem- blance to those of Viverre; but this only results from the greater or less development of different cusps, being an adaptation to a more caruivorous diet.’ He observes, as to Proteles’, that it ‘has the cranial characters common to the Cats and Hyznas: from the dentition, so singularly modified by arrest of development, but little evidence of zoological affinity can be adduced; I should therefore be rather inclined to consider it a modified Hyzena, since in the external characters it so closely resembles the animals of that genus.’ As to the Hyzenas themselves, he declares himself disposed to consider them, judging from their cranial characters, as rather more approaching the Cats than the Viverre, but proposes to obviate the difficulties thus arising by a division of his family Felide into three subfamilies, one for the Cats, another for the Viverre, and the third for the Hyzenas and Proteles. The characters and subdivisions of his family Felide are expressed as follows * :— Fam. Fevip&. Auditory bulla rounded, frequently showing indications of being divided into two parts. Paroccipital process flattened, and applied to the back part of the auditory bulla. Foramen condyloideum more or less concealed. Foramen gle- noideum very small or wanting. Czecum small or moderate, simple. Cowper’s glands present. Prostate gland salient. Subfam. Viverrina (confined to the Old World). A distinct alisphenoid canal (with very few exceptions). Auditory bulla distinctly subdivided. Canalis caroticus distinct, though sometimes only as a groove. True molars on each side . Galictis. Cynogale. Ryzena. Paradoxurus. Cynictis. —_—— Herpestes. Prionodon. —_—_—. Genetta. Arctictis. Viverra. Subfam. Hyznrna (confined to the Old World). No alisphenoid canal. Division of auditory bulla scarcely perceptible. Canalis caroticus indistinct, or very small. : 0 oh te True molars on each side 4 <~ ; premolars on each side = Proteles. Hyena. 1 Loe. cit. p. 82. ? Loe, cit. p. 86. 1882.] PROF. sT.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 137 Subfam. Fexrna (of general geographical distribution). No alisphenoid canal. Division of auditory bulla slightly or scarcely perceptible. Canalis caroticus indistinct or not perceptible. : 1 Se True molars on each side ; premolars on each side °. Felis. The genus 4rctictis is placed in the above list amongst the Viver- rina without any observations in the text. It should be noted that this subfamily is divided, by horizontal lines, into three sections, the two genera Genetta and Viverra standing nearest to the Hyzenas, and Herpestes and Ryzena remote from them. Certain genera are not enumerated ; and on this subject Mr. Turner tells us’, ‘‘ The lists of genera include only those whose crania I have examined ; and therefore I must not be considered as rejecting any that I have omitted, nor do I pledge myself to adopt all that are inserted.” The third paper on the classification of the Carnivora is that of our president, Professor Flower®. Therein he refers to the paper by Mr. Turner, which he supplements by a number of new and ori- ginal observations and inferences of great value, intentionally con- fining his remarks, however, to existing terrestrial (fissipedal) genera. He conclusively establishes the true Procyonine nature of Bassaris and the Paradoxurine affinity of Arctictis ; while as to Cryptoprocta, he regards it as the type of a distinct family*, though he considers it “as a perfectly annectent form, as nearly allied to the Viverride on the one hand as to the Felid@ on the other.’ Proteles he also con- stitutes the type of a distinct family, which he interposes between the Suricates and the Hyzenas, as he interposes Cryptoprocta between the Civets and Genets on the one hand and the Cats on the other. He fully adopts Mr. Turner’s threefold division of the fissipedal Carnivora, but raises each of Mr. Turner’s families to the rank of a suborder. Professor Flower’s ARcrompEA and CyNnoipEa corre- spond respectively to Mr. Turner’s Urside and Canidae, while Mr. Turner’s Felide is divided by Professor Flower into the five families Felide, Cryptoproctide, Viverride, Protelide, and Hyenide—these five families being united into one suborder, for which he first in- stituted the term ALurorpgA, the affinities of which are suggested by his diagram * (fig. 1). The following characters common to the ASLUROIDEA may be gathered from this paper :— 1. Bulla greatly dilated, rounded, smooth, thin-walled, with one exception osseous, and almost always divided by a septum into two distinct portions. 2. Bony meatus short or with its inferior wail imperfectly ossified. 1 Loe, cit. p. 85. * “On the Value of the Characters of the Base of the Cranium in the Classi- fication of the Order Carnivora, and on the Systematic Position of Bassaris and other disputed forms,” P. Z. S. 1869, p. 4. 3 Loe. cit p, 23. 4 Loe, cit. p, 37. 138 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, 3. Paroccipital process applied to and, asit were, spread over the hinder part of the bulla. 4, Mastoid process never very salient, often obsolete. . Carotid canal small, sometimes very inconspicuous. . Condyloid fissure concealed. . Glenoid fissure extremely minute or absent. . Czecum short and simple, very rarely absent. . Bone of penis generally small and irregularly shaped. . Cowper’s gland present. . A distinctly lobed prostate. —-CODOONOO —_—— Fig. 1. In the above diagram the Herpestine genera are represented as somewhat separated by a constriction from the Civets and Para- doxures. In the text the author tells us! “all the Herpestine members of the Viverride (Cynopoda, Gray) present certain com- mon characters of this region by which they can be readily recog- nized. The bulla is very prominent and somewhat pear-shaped, the larger, rounded end being turned backwards and somewhat outwards ; a well-marked transverse constriction separates the two chambers, which are directly anterior and posterior. . . . The Suricate presents the same essential characters in a very modified form.” As to the Hyznas, Professor Flower appears to hesitate some- what as to whether they should form ‘‘a fourth primary division of 1 Loe. cit. p. 20. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 139 the Carnivora, or be added, as rather aberrant members, to the Elu- roid section. On the whole,” he adds, “I am inclined to the latter arrangement,” especially from the support given to it by the genus Proteles. Asto the characters of that genus, he observes! :—*“ In the first place they are thoroughly #luroid, but they do not exactly the agree with either of the families of that group as hitherto defined. On the whole they approach nearest to the Herpestine section of the Viverride, but deviate from this, and approximate to the Hyenida, in two points. . . . If Cuvier had called Proteles a Hyznoid Ich- neumon instead of a Hyzenoid Genette, exception could scarcely have been taken to the description.” The object of the present paper is to carry further the examination of the affinities and interrelationships of the genera constituting Professor Flower’s Aluroidea, and especially to discover what divisions below the rank of families can be most conveniently and naturally established in it. In order to effect this, I have, to the best of my ability, studied the animals living in our gardens, prepa- rations preserved in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, and the skins, spirit-specimens, and osteological treasures of the British Museum, and I have dissected such individuals as good fortune has thrown in my way. I have especially wished to note the cranial characters of such genera as are not referred to in the three papers already noticed, namely the genera Fossa, Prionodon, Poiana, Hemigalea, Arctogale, Galidia, Galidictis, Bdeogale, Helo- gale, Cynictis, Rhinogale, Crossarchus, and Eupleres. I have endeavoured also to ascertain and enumerate such papers and illus- trations as may be most useful for reference or may have some historical interest. It will, I think, be most convenient if I state at once the conclu- sions I have arrived at as to classification, and afterwards notice, seriatim, the several genera, giving separately the characters and references which refer to each. In the first place I am profoundly convinced that the great group ARLUROIDEA Is a natural one, and that the Hyzenas must, without any question whatever, be included within it. The only doubt is as to their claim to rank as a distinct family, so closely connected do they seem to me to be with the Herpestine group of Viverride. Anyhow I am unable to divide the suborder into so many primary groups as those of Professor Flower. I have examined with as much care as I could the skeleton of Cryptoprocta, and considered the evidence recorded as to its soft parts, and have come to the conclusion that it is distinctly Viverrine, and not at all unquestionably intermediate, as I at first supposed, between Viverra and Felis. Its dentition is of course almost feline ; but the more I study comparative anatomy, the more impressed I am with the little value of dental characters as evidences of affinity, save as regards allied species or genera. Nandinia, Arctictis, and Cynogale may be cited as evidence of divergences in dental charac- ters from the more normal Viverrine type, to which other structural 1 Loe, cit. p. 29, 140 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, divergences do not run parallel. Professor Flower himself has remarked !:—“ Too exclusive attention has been paid to the characters of the teeth in defining the family divisions of the order. The difficulty in the taxonomic use of these organs arises from the fact that the teeth of all the members of such a limited and well-defined group as the terrestrial or fissipedal Carnivora are formed on the same general type, but with infinite modifications of this type. And as these modifications are mainly adaptive, and not essentially indica- tive of affinity, they reappear in various degrees and combinations in many of the great natural divisions of the order. Their teeth alone afford us no satisfactory means of diagnosis between the very distinct groups of the Procyonide and Viverride. The teeth of Proteles, though demonstrating undeniably its right to a place in the order, are so rudimentary or generalized that they afford no help whatever to determine its special position. Again, the teeth of Gulo are so similar to those of Hyena, that, if this character alone were used, these two otherwise widely differentiated forms would be placed in the closest proximity. Enhydris, among the Mustelide, and Cyno- gale, among the Viverride, might also be cited as examples of strangely modified dentition, with comparatively little corresponding ‘ change in other parts.’’ I thoroughly agree with every word here cited ; and, until unexpected evidence as to the anatomy of its soft parts comes to my knowledge, I must rank Cryptoprocta as merely the type of asubfamily of the Viverride. As to Proteles, the words just quoted from Professor Flower con- cerning it confirm the previously cited remark of Mr. Turner *, that from a “ dentition so singularly modified by arrest of development, but little evidence of zoological affinity can be adduced.” It differs from the Hyzenas in having a developed pollex ; but such differences occur in the Herpestine section of the Viverride, yet no one on that account would erect Bdeogale and Suricata into a distinct family, any more than A¢eles or Colobus amongst the Anthropoidea. A careful consideration of the characters of Proteles have convinced me that it should be included within one family along with the Hyzenas; and Professor Flower, in his paper on the anatomy of Proteles, concludes * by saying that, though still “inclined”’ to retain it in a distinct family, yet his examination of its soft parts shows its affinities with the Hyzenas ‘are closer than the examination of the skull alone led”? him ‘‘ to suppose.” I would, however, while merging it in the Hyzena family, yet retain it as the type of a distinct subfamily of the Hyenide. If my views are correct, then the suborder Aluroidea will consist of three families—(1) the Felide, (2) the Viverride, and (3) the Hyenide. As to the first of these families, it is evidently impossible to group any of its existing forms in distinct subfamilies. Indeed, in a recent careful study of the Felide, I have been quite unable to find satisfac- tory characters whereby to divide that family into more than the two genera Felis and Cynelurus. 1 PZ. 8: 4860npr 5. 2 P. Z.8. 1848, p. 82. 3 P, Z.8. 1869, p. 406. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 141 It has been proposed to separate off as a distinct genus the Cats with a vertical pupil and an orbit inclosed behind by bone, and to divide the round-pupilled Cats into two genera, according to the presence or absence of a first upper premolar. These characters do not appear to me capable of serving as marks of generic distinctness. Some Cats—as F. macrocelis, F. serval, and F. chaus—are described as having a pupil neither round nor linear when contracted, but oblong; and while in most of the smaller Cats in which the point has been ascertained the pupil is linear, in some, as I’. eyra, it is round. The length of the postorbital processes varies even in the same species, and much more in forms which must be connected as close allies; while the morphologically second upper premolar. may also be present or absent in the same species, as in F. scripta, F. pajeros, and others, while in F. planiceps it is large and two-rooted. In the skull of an old Lion! I have found the upper two molars not only absent, but every trace of their alveoli also. The ears of the Lynxes are pencilled, but those of F chaus, F. ornata, and F. caudata are more or less pencilled likewise. The Lion stands alone with its large mane (though the Ounce has a small one), and the Tiger is distinguished from every other Cat by its stripes ; but these no one would take to be generic distinctions. We might indeed separate off the Lion, Puma, Jaguar, Eyra, F. aurata, F. planiceps, F. badia, and F. rutila as Cats of a uniform colour, neither spotted nor striped when adult. The group, how- ever, would not be a natural one. Similarly, we might associate together the most distinctly spotted Cats, while distinguishing others (as F. marmorata, F. macrocelis, F. megalotis, I’. pajeros, F. cali- gata, F. manul, F. neglecta, F. torquata, and F. catus) as rather “clouded” than “spotted.” Almost every transition, however, exists between the spotted and clouded Cats, and some spotted forms occasionally have their spots very slightly marked; so that generic distinctions reposing on any such characters would be most futile. It is not the object of this paper to define species ; nevertheless the question as to the distinctness of certain of them will have to be occasionally considered. I may therefore perhaps be excused for remarking that I have examined a large quantity of skins of the Lynxes known as F. borealis, F'. canadensis, F. rufa, and F. macu- lata, and found amongst them so very many intermediate conditions as to both coloration (ground-colour and markings) and length of fur, that I cannot but regard them as forming but a single species. This opinion is also confirmed by the close resemblance which exists between their skulls. As to the Lynx F. isabellina, I was at first inclined to regard it as a good species ; but Dr. Scully has very kindly allowed me to examine the skins obtained by him in Central Asia, and amongst them is one intermediate in coloration between the F. isabellina of the British Museum and certain specimens of the Northern Lynx. The Pardine Lynx (F. pardina) 1 am disposed to regard as a distinct species on account of the form of its skull. When the skull is seen * No, 4504 in the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons. 142 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [ Feb. 7, in profile, it differs from the skulls of the varieties F. borealis, F. canadensis, F. rufa, and F. maculata in that the part between the orbits is more raised and convex, and the nasal bones extend back- wards beyond the nasal processes of the maxillee. Considering the length of time during which we have had power in India, it is remarkable that our collection of Indian Cats should be so imperfect as it is. I am, however, not without the hope of being hereafter able to exhibit here a new collection of the skins and crania of these animals. The species known as FP. bengalensis espe- cially requires investigation, as, if its range of variation both in size and markings is not very extensive, several distinct species must be included under that name. Amongst African Cats that described by Lesson’ under the name F. senegalensis was probably but a young Serval. There is unfor- tunately no specimen of it in the Paris Museum ; and the type was a cat living at the hospital of Rochefort-sur-Mer. We have as yet, so far as I know, no specimen of J’. colocollo in this country ; and we much need more skins and skulls from America to help us to determine the value of the forms distinguished as F. tigrine, F’. mitis, and F. macroura. The second Ailuroid family, the Viverride, presents a great con- trast to the first in the great variety of the forms it contains. In- stead of being unable to divide it into subfamilies, the difficulty is to avoid making too many. Two subfamilies, Viverrine and Herpes- tine, must, I think, be instituted for the Viverrine and Herpestine sections of the group. In the former must stand Viverra, Viverri- cula, Fossa, Genetta, Prionodon, Poiana, Paradoxurus, Arctogale, and Hemigalea. In the latter I would place Herpestes, Helogale, Cynictis, Bdeogale, Rhinogale, Crossarchus, and Suricata. As to Nandinia, Arctictis, and Cynogale, arguments are by no means wanting in favour of the erection of each of these three genera into a distinct subfamily. I hesitate, however, so far to multiply groups of that rank ; and I would retain them all, at least provision- ally, amongst the Viverrine. The genera of this subfamily seem to group themselves in two sets (as was indicated by Mr. Turner’), one set being that of the Civets, the other that of the Paradoxures, as follows :— A. Viverra, Viverricula, Fossa, Genetta, Prionodon, and Poiana. B. Paradoxurus, Arctogale, Arctictis, Hemigalea, Nandinia, and Cynogale. The subfamily Herpestine seems divisible into two sets—one (A) including Herpestes, Helogale, and Cynictis ; while the second set (B) will comprise Crossarchus and Suricata. 1 cannot certainly deter- mine to which set Bdeogale and Rhinogale should belong till more of their anatomy is known. It is to the latter set that I regard the Hycnide as specially allied, while Cryptoprocta (in spite of its claws and dentition) seems : Guérin’s Mag. de Zool. 1889, t. x. (Mammifeéres). 2 P, Z.8. 1848, p. 87. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 143 to me to be not improbably a much modified relative of the first Herpestine series of genera. There remain the curious Madagascar Viverrines known as Gali- dictis, Galidia, and Eupleres. 1 thinkit better not to include these in either of the foregoing subfamilies, in spite of their greater affinity to the Herpestine than to the Viverrine; while Galidia olivacea and G. concolor seem to me to merit generic distinction, the former being the type of a distinct genus, Hemigalidia. The last, with Galidia and Galidictis, I would include in a separate sub- family, Galidictine, with which the singularly aberrant Eupleres seems to me to be nearly allied; yet, on account of its aberrant cha- racters, I would keep it separate in a special subfamily, the Euple- rine. According to this view, the #luroid forms will be grouped as follows :— Suborder HLUROIDEA. Fam. I, Fevip2. Genera: Felis, Cynelurus. Fam. II. Viverripa. Subfam. 1. ViveERRINz. Genera :—A. Viverra, Viverricula, Fossa, Genetta, Priono- don, Poiana. B. Paradoxurus, Arctogale, Hemigalea, Arctictis, Nandinia. C. Cynogale. Subfam. 2. GaLipIcTIN&. Genera: Galidictis, Galidia, Hemigalidia. Subfam. 3. EuvpLerin&. Genus: Zupleres. Subfam. 4. CrypropRoctTinz&. Genus: Cryptoprocta. Subfam. 5. Herrrstin. Genera:—A. Herpestes, Helogale, Cynictis, (Bdeogale?,) (Rhinogale ?) B. Crossarchus, Suricata. Fam. II]. Hya#nip#. Subfam. 1. ProTeLinz. Genus: Proteles. Subfam. 2. Hyaninz. Genera: Hyena, Crocuta. 144 PROF, ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, The distinctive characters of the Felide are :— (1) There is a short pollex with a claw not, or hardly, reaching to distal end of metacarpal of index. (2) The hallux is only represented by a rudimentary metatarsa bone. (3) The ungual phalanges are greatly arched, with a wide lamina to shelter the base of the claw. (4) The claws are greatly arched, sharply pointed, and, except in Cynelurus, completely cM (5) The auditory bulla is much inflated, smooth, and rounded, but hardly shows any external sign of division into two chambers. (6) The bulla is more prominent towards its inner than towards its hinder border. (7) There is an almost complete bony septum between the two chambers of the bulla, which are one behind the other. (8) The bony meatus auditorius is short and neither produced anteriorly nor inferiorly; neither is it imperfectly ossified below. (9) There is no carotid foramen anywhere visible on the surface of the basis cranii. (10) There is no alisphenoid canal. (11) The palatine foramina are situated in the hinder half of the palate. (12) P-1 and py ure not developed *. (13) There is no lower tubercular molar, no 5-5, and no =< (14) always very small and transversely extended. (15) The antero-external cusp of ~* is fairly developed, but is much smaller than the two others. (16) 3,5 has hardly any talon. (17) The outer incisors but little exceed the middle ones in size. (18) Humerus with a supracondyloid foramen. (19) Bone of penis small. (20) The ears not very long, erect and pointed. (21) Tarsus and metatarsus hairy. (22) One small plantar pad, and one beneath each digit. (23) The anus does not open into a saccular depression. (24) Two anal glands only. (25) No preserotal glands. (26) Always a more or less small czecuin. (27) Many very hard, horny, sharp-pointed, conical papillee on the dorsum of the tongue. (28) Hippocampal gyrus not? completely separated from the autero- 1 The mandible of a Tiger with j-, killed in British Burmah, is described and figured by B, A. Lydekker in the Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. vol. xlvii. (1878), p- 2, plate ii. * So far as I have had an opportunity of examining. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 145 internal portion of the superior lateral gyrus, which is behind the cranial sulcus, by any continuation forwards of the cal- loso-marginal sulcus to join the crucial sulcus. (29) Angle of mandible not greatly flattened beneath, and coronoid process high and inclined backwards. (30) Proportional length of limbs considerable. (31) Muzzle short compared with cranial length. (32) Dentition extremely sectorial. (33) Tail long, moderate, or extremely short. (34) Clitoris never traversed by urogenital canal. (35) Dorsal vertebree thirteen. (36) Postorbital processes more or less strongly developed, some- times enclosing orbits by a bony circle. (37) Paroccipital processes not depending, or else only slightly projecting, as a rough tubercle beyond the bulla. (38) Mastoid rather prominent. (39) No carotid foramen perforates or notches the sphenoid. (40) Nose and upper lip medianly grooved. (41) Palate very little or but moderately produced beyond last molars. (42) Pterygoid fossa very small. (43) Size of species generally moderate, never very small, some- times very large—the largest of the Aluroidea. Of the genera of existing Felide, Cynelurus is distinguished from Felis by its imperfectly retractile claws and the rudimentary con- dition of the internal cusp of P.4. The characters of the Viverride and Hyenide will be given after a brief review of the genera com- posing those two families. The typical genus Viverra seems to include four species—(1) V. civetta (from Fernando Po, Sierra Leone, and Abyssinia), (2) V. ztbetha (from India, China, and Penang), V7. tangalunga (from Malacca, Borneo, Sumatra, Luzon, and the Negros and Philippine Islands), and V. megaspila (from Malacca, Saigon, and Lower Cochin China). The anatomy of this anciently-known genus has been described * by Perrault in a paper entitled ‘‘ Description anatomique de deux Civettes,” in the ‘Memoirs’ of the Academy of Sciences of Paris, vol. ii. (1611-1699), with two plates reproduced in a work published by Fierre Mortier, of Amsterdam, in 1736, and entitled ‘ Mémoires pour servir 4 histoire naturelle des Animaux et des Plantes.’ Therein is given a tolerable figure of the external form of the Civet, and representations of the scent-pouch and glands of both sexes, 1 See also Castellus, ‘Hyena odorifera, vulgo Civetta, Messone, 1638; Bar- tholin, ‘‘ Anatome Civettz s. Hyene odorifere,” in Hist. Anat. Cent. iv. 1657, p- 199-213; Meéry (Jean), ‘Observations sur les canaux lactiféres de la Civette,” in Mém. Acad. Se. de Paris, 1666-1699 ; Morand, “ Nouvelles obser- vations sur le sac et le parfum de la Civette” (with a plate), Mém. Acad. Se. de Paris, 1728; and De la Peyronie, ‘‘ Description d’un animal connu sous le nom de Muse (V%verra),” with four plates, Mém. Acad, Se. de Paris, 1731, pp. 443-464. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. X. 10 146 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, with (for the period) a very full account of the structure of the animal. The Civet and Zibet are well figured and described by Daubenton in Buffon’s ‘ Histoire Naturelle,’ vol. ix. pp. 299-342, pls. 31 to 35. Anatomical notes on these animals are also given by John Hunter, pp. 51-55 of vol. ii. of his ‘ Essays and Observations,’ collected and published by Professor Owen in 1861. The hindmost upper milk-molar De Ts quite like pan though not nearly so antero-posteriorly extended as is the deciduous upper sectorial; it is (as in the P.4 to M.1 Cat) larger in relation to it than is The inferior deciduous sectorial 5 is quite like ;;+, except that the antero-exterior cusp is much smaller than that immediately behind it. In this difference it agrees with the Cat’s = but it has not that excess of talon compared withee+ which poa bas 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE HLUROIDEA. 155 internal portion, while in both ;— and the talon is larger, that M.1 of 41 (if not that of py also) bearing three small cusps’. ara 18 quadricuspidate, and may be quinquecuspidate. The milk- teeth of Viverra differ from those of Genetta in that 2~” has a less Milk-teeth of Viverra civetta, No. 4265, from Coll. Surg. A. Grinding-surface of teeth of right side of upper jaw. B. Side view of teeth of upper jaw. C. Ditto of those of lower jaw. D. Grinding-surface of lower jaw. developed prominence in front of the maia cusp ; D:3 is less extended antero-posteriorly in proportion to its transverse diameter ; it has its posterior lobe smaller and undivided, and has a more strongly developed ridge running from the inner to the anterior cusp, with in the Cat. The proportion borne by the length of the upper molar series com- pared with the base at 100, is in the Genet 128°5, in the Cat 88:4. The length from the front of the lower canine to the hinder side of 5-4, compared with the length from the canine to the hinder surface of the mandibular angle at 100, is in the Genet 63-6, in the Cat 50-7. 1 Well shown in Viverra zibetha, pl. xii. of De Blainyille’s ‘ Ostéographie’ of the Viverras. 156 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, the accessory tubercle on that ridge larger ; D4 is the largest deciduous tooth, and nearly as extended antero-posteriorly as is the D.3. finally, pq bas a larger talon, which by itself constitutes nearly half the tooth. The external form of the Genet is figured by Buffon, and three kinds (“de Barbarie,” “de Sénégal,” and “ panthérine”) by F. Cuvier in his ‘ Planches des Mamm.’ De Blainville (Ostéogra-: phie,’ Viverra) gives the skull (plate vili.), details of the axial skeleton (plate ix.), and of the appendicular sketeton (plates x. and xi.). A very important difference between Genetta and Viverra consists in the absence in the former of the pouch or sac for storing the a. Anus, a.g. Needles inserted into the aperture of the two anal glands. 9, 99°. Folds of scent-gland. _ v.. Vagina. secretion of the scent-gland. Instead of this I found, in a female Genetta tigrina, only a shallow cutaneous fold or longitudinal median depression. This groove or fold extended from the small orifice of the vagina towards, but not nearly to, the anus. From this median. superficial depression two longitudinal grooves extended forwards and outwards on either side, whereof the two posterior were the larger. Beneath these grooves were two scent-glands, the product of which could be forced (by squeezing) through a multitude of minute pores into the depressed parts of the folds—the hinder rather than the anterior of the two pairs of diverging ones. Similar glands and folds were found by M. Chatin in the male of Genetéa, 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE £ZLUROIDEA: 157 senegalensis, and have been described and figured by him in the Ann. des. Se. Naturelles, 5° sér. vol. xix. (1874) pl. iii. fig. 14. These glands were described and figured by Daubenton in Buffon’s Hist. Nat. vol. ix. p. 343, pls. 36-40. Therein the Genet dissected (a female) is described as having a distinct orifice at the bottom of each lateral depression, leading thence into the interior of the gland ; but such is certainly not the case in my G. tigrina, any more than in Chatin’s G. senegalensis, in both of which the secretion had only a multitude of minute pores through which to exude. The genus Genetta agrees with Viverra in all the characters of the latter before enumerated, except Nos. 24, 38, and 42; and there are, besides, the differences in size and markings and in the more inflated condition of the anterior part of the bulla. The beautiful Viverrine animals known as the Linsangs differ from the foregoing forms sufficiently to warrant their separation as members of the genus Prionodon, which may be said to have been first instituted by Horsfield, since in his ‘Zoological Researches’ (1824) he proposed for it the term Prionodontide to denote a subdivision of the genus Felis. He there describes it under the name of Felis gracilis’, and gives a representation of its external form, and also separate figures of its head, dentition, and paw. Hodgson, in the 2nd part of the 2nd volume (1842) of the ‘Calcutta Journal of Natural History,’ p. 57, plate 1, describes a so-called second species of the genus Prionodon (P. pardicolor); and a third species, P. maculosus, has been described by Mr. Blanford in the 2nd part of the 47th vol. of the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal (1878), p- 152, pl. 6 (external form) and pl. 7 (skull), the skin and skull of which are deposited in the British Museum, and some points in the anatomy of which I have examined. In Prionodon the ground-colour of the coat is white or whitish grey, , is unlike that of Genetta and is quite like 5-4, except that the postero-external cusp is rather larger compared with the anterior one, and that the talon is a trifle smaller relatively. Prionodon has all the characters enumerated as those of Viverra, except Nos, 1. 2, 12, 18, 42, 45, and 46. The genus Poiana was founded by Dr. Gray on the Genetta poénsis described by Mr. Waterhouse °. Its coloration is very like that of Prionodon; but the spots are smaller and show no tendency to run into transverse bands or stripes, except on the middle of the back of the head, and except a broad mark on each side descending from the back of the head to above the shoulder. The tail is ringed with dark rings, alternately broad and narrow. The muzzle is very pointed. The length of the head and body is about 38 inches, that of the tail 40°5 inches. The animal comes from Sierra Leone and Fernando Po, and differs from Prionodon not only remarkably as to geographical distribution, but also in that it has a narrow bald line running up towards the tarsus, as in Genetta. I have been able to find no cranial distinctions between Poiana and Prionodon, save that in the latter the cerebellar chamber of the cranium is smaller, and that the coronoid process of the mandible is intermediate in form between that of Genetta and that of Poiana. The teeth are also quite like those of Prionodon, except that wry 18 rather less laterally compressed, its three cusps being not placed so nearly in an antero-posterior line. Thus this animal might be considered an African Prionodon which had acquired a Genet-like tarsus; and this determination * The dentition (copied from Horsfield’s plate) is given by De Blainville, Ostéographie, Viverras, pl. 12. » P. ZS. 1838, p. 59. See also P. Z.8. 1864, p. 520, and Brit. Mus. Cat. p. 54, fig. 8 (skull). 160 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE £LUROIDEA. [Feb. 7; could be the less objected to, since I have found in Prionodon pardicolor a tendency to a narrow prolongation upwards of the plantar pad, which I have not found in Prionodon gracilis. I hold them therefore distinct quite provisionally and doubtfully. As this species seems never. to have been represented, I have thought it well to figure it now. Fig. 7. External form of Potana. The genera yet noticed (Viverra, Viverricula, Fossa, Genetta, Prionodon, and Poiana) form a distinct and very closely allied group, the characters of which may be most conveniently given when the next set of forms has been passed in review. The genus which it seems to me may best be taken next is the large and polymorphic genus Paradozurus. It contains about a dozen (mostly more or less imperfectly defined) species, which all come from the Asiatic region, from China, Formosa, Nepal and Tenasserim, to Madras, the Andaman Islands, Ceylon, Malacca, 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA, 161 Sumatra, Borneo, Java, and the Philippine Islands. They all agree in having the pollex and hallux well developed, with the metatarsus bald beneath, and also the tarsus, save beneath the heel, where the hair extends across in an evenly curved line. The claws are at least as sharply curved and retractile as in the Genets (cf. fig. 14 B, p- 192). The tail seems to be, at any rate in some species, slightly prehensile. The best description I know of the genus is in Temminck’s ‘Monographie de Mammalogie,’ vol. ii. p. 312. As illustrations of this genus we have :—some plates in Cuvier’s ‘Mammiferes,’ vol. ii.; Ogilby, Zool. Journ. iv. tab. 35, suppl. ; Horsfield, Zool. Research. in Java (Viverra musanga); Buffon, Suppl. iii. pl. 47 (Genette de France) ; Gray, ‘ Indian Zoology,’ tabulze 7, 8, 10, and 11; (P. ¢typus) Otto, Nov. Act. Nat. Cur. xvii. 2, tabule 72 & 73; Temminck, Monographie de Mammal. ii. pls. 64— 66 (skulls) ; Marsden’s ‘Sumatra,’ t. 12 (the Musang); Jacquinot & Pucheran, Voy. au Pole Sud, Zool. iii. p. 25, pl. 6; P. Z.S. 1856,, pls. 47 & 48, and P. Z.S. 1877, pl. 71. Skull: in Brit. Mus. Cat, (1869), pp. 67 (fig. 9), 70 (fig. 10), 71 (fig. 11); Cuvier, ‘ Planches des Mammifeéres,’ Le Pargouné and Paradoxure de Nubie; De Blain- ville’s ‘ Ostéographie’ (Viverra), pl. 2 (skeleton), pl. 6 (skull), pl. 7 (skulls), pl. 9 (parts of axial skeleton and hyoid), pl. 10 (fore limb), pl. 11 (hind limb), pl. 12 (teeth), adult and young. In this old and well-known genus the skull is less elongated than in Viverra. The auditory bulla is, as Prof. Flower has remarked’, shaped more like that of Viverra than that of Genetta. It is ‘conical, broad, aud truncated behind, pointed ia front, and rather compressed at the sides, which meet in a ridge.’ The anterior part: of the bulla is very small indeed. The opening of the auditory meatus is not large; and its hinder lip is slightly the more pro- minent. The postorbital processes are generally (not always) rather long and pointed ; and the skull is much pinched in laterally behind them. The condyloid foramen is quite covered in and concealed. The paroccipital process is depending; and the mastoid is much as in the Civet. There is an alisphenoid canal. There is a distinct but short carotid canal, the hinder end of which opens near the anterior end of the inner wall of the hinder (and larger) chamber of the bulla. The teeth, as is well known, are less sectorial in character than are those of the genera as yet noticed; but there are considerable differences in different species. On comparing the teeth of what seems to be an average specimen of Paradoxurus with those of Viverra, I find = * broader in pro- portion to its length and less vertically extended, with a well- developed cingulum ; ** with its postero-outer cusp very much smaller and its inner cusp more massive. M1 is more quadrate, and * [.c.p.19. He says also:—* The inner or posterior chamber presents, in some species at least, the peculiarity of being permanently distinct and move- able, not only from the other axial bones, but also from the tympanic portion of the bulla.” Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XI. ll 162 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, its inner cusp is much larger relatively ; it is really the largest tooth, and has three roots. ™“? is shaped like Ms 1. but is smaller, with two outer cusps and one large inner cusp; it has two roots. p_q 18 broader in proportion to its ength and has less talon, but a more marked anterior tubercle. 3,5 is much broader in proportion to its length, and itscusps are less pointed and prolonged. Its talon is raised to the level of the front part of the tooth, and forms the tooth’s hinder half with four small cusps arranged in a semicircle, while the front half of the tooth bears three larger cusps, one foremost and the other two side by side. 5,5 is quinquecuspidate, with two large cusps in front (not side by side), and three smaller ones behind arranged in a semicircle. Comparing the deciduous teeth with those of Viverra, I fin with less talon, 2% (the deciduous sectorial) with a relatively smaller internal cusp and with the fourth cusp a little smaller. This tooth is decidedly more sectorial than is the permanent sectorial tooth, its posterior cusp being relatively larger. P-* is much like that of Viverra, but is rather more quadrate. pop and 5s have less talon than in the Civets. 5-4 is more sectorial than the eccee sectorial tooth, and is very like that of the Civet, except that its talon is rather smaller and the tuberosities upon it (especially the innermost one of them) less developed. As examples of the considerable differences in the forms and sizes of the teeth in different species or races, I may perhaps be permitted to remark that the British-Museum specimen called P. macrodus by Dr. Gray well merits its name fr° a the large size of its teeth’. There is no skin of this species in the collection; and its habitat is unknown. + are very small in the skulls named P. larvatus, P. grayii, and P. lanigera in the national collection ; and they are rather small in P. zeylanicus and P. bondar. aa (the sectorial teeth) are very sectorial in character in the forms named P. herma- phroditus, P. bondar, and P. lanigera. They are, on the other hand, more quadrangular and very unsectorial in form in P. macrodus, P. nigrifrons, P. larvatus, P. grayii, P. philippensis, P. zeylanicus, P. leucomystaz, and P. fasciatus. In the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons there is a skull (No. 4304 s) in which are entirely absent. It comes from Nepal. In the British Museum there is also a skull (No. 1546), which was purchased from the Zoological Society and said to have come from Manilla, in ‘aaa _ 5 are also entirely ler tei 2a But the q 2:2 Manilla skull has ** and M! “Mt ! more quadrate and F:3 much thicker ; also 3,4 is wider and ace 18 larger; and 5 is wider and more , P: 4.8. 1864, p. 538, M.2 On the left side of the skull there are two small holes in the place where — would be were it present. These holes, however, look more like small fractures or some pathological condition than like alveoli. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 163 cuspidate than in the College of Surgeons’ skull. Thus, if a fresh genus were to be made for these two skulls, the two species would differ greatly in the form of their teeth, though agreeing as to the number. I hesitate, therefore, to separate them, not being able to es eas hae M. 2 ascertain if any external distinctions accompany the absence of \;-5- Though the skull from Manilla is quite adult and more ridged than that from the College of Surgeons, yet it is much smaller than the latter, its length being only 8!'"6 instead of 9'°6. The scent-glands lie beneath the surface of a valve-like antero- posteriorly directed cutaneous inflection, more or less naked, and situated between the penis and the testes in the male, and analo- gously in the female. Temminck says’, “‘ Le plus grand nombre des paradoxures est muni d’un organe semblable.”” With the kind assistance of Mr. Bartlett I have verified the existence of this pouch in one of the Paradoxures, named P. typus, living in the Gardens ; and I have also noted that the skin around the anus is naked. The pupil is linear. Thus the genus Paradorurus has the characters before enumerated as those of Viverra, except Nos. 6 (sometimes), 24, 45 (sometimes), and 47. As to character 26, it is possible in some species the anus may open into a saccular depression ; but I have not observed it or any record of its so doing. Chatin is silent as to the genus Para- doxurus. Ido think it probable that when the species of this genus have been well worked out, it will be found to be subdivisible into two or more genera. As it is, however, I can find no characters to justify the separation of any Paradoxures into the genus Paguma of Gray; but it is otherwise as regards Arctogale. The genus drctogale was instituted by Prof. Peters, but not published by him. It was adopted from him, and _ published by Dr. Gray*. The type species of the genus is described in Temminck’s ‘ Monographies,’ vol. ii. p. 333, under the name of Paradoxurus trivirgatus ; and he figures (pl. 63) the entire skeleton (§ size of nature), with the skull and dentition (of the natural size). It has been described under the same name by Gray in P. Z.S. 1832, p. 63, and by G. S. Miiller in Verhand. i. sp. 3, p. 55. Its external form does not appear to have been figured hitherto, and has therefore been given here. There are nine skins and three skulls of this species in the British Museum, one skull (No. 1656 a) being labelled Paguma stigmatica, which is really but a synonym. Arctogale trivirgata comes from Singapore and Burmah, and also from Java and Sumatra according to Temminck (where he says it inhabits the mountains of from 3000 to 3500 feet elevation), and from Tenasserim according to Blyth. A. stiymatica is said by Temminck (‘ Esquisses Zoologiques,’ p- 121) to have been found in the south of Borneo. The size attained is considerable, the length of the head and body being sometimes 58-4, and that of the tail 43/'-2. * L.c.p. 313. ? P.Z.8. 1864, p. 542; and Catalogue of Carnivora, p. 75, Hee 164 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, It is by cranial and dental characters that this genus is distin- guishable, as was pointed out by Dr. Peters and Dr. Gray. The palate is much more prolonged behind the last molars than in any Paradoxure. In Paradoxurus grayw (in which itis more prolonged than iu any other Paradoxure) the first molar’s length is only 10, the whole cranial length being taken at 100, whilei n A. ¢rivirgata it is 12°6 or even 14°8, and in the specimen named A. stigmatica 13°0. Moreover the hinder portion inclines more or less strongly Fig. 8. External form of Arctogale, upwards as it proceeds backwards, and there is a deep notch with a semicircular or more than semicircular outline on each side of the prolonged median portion. The hinder portion of the alveolar border of the mandible is also singularly everted. The teeth of Arctogale are remarkable for their small size and : P. 4 M.1 : very unsectorial character. —— and — are very nearly equal in 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ELUROIDEA. 165 size; and 2 are fairly developed. In other respects the cranial and dental characters are those of Paradoxurus. Temminck says nothing about the scent- or prescrotal gland, which I presume is as in Paradovurus. 8. Miiller is also silent about it. Arctogale, then, differs from Viverra as to Nos. 24, 33, 47, 48, 49, and 50. $~—_. = Half basis cranii (A) and half mandible (B) of Arctogale. a, Anterior opening of the alisphenoid canal ; 0, foramen oyale; ¢, carotid canal, The genus Hemigalea was instituted by Jourdan (Compt. Rend. 1837, p.442, Amn. des Sc. Nat. vol. viii. Pp. 277) for the Paradoxurus derbianus of Gray (P. Z. S. 1837, p. 67, and Loudon’s Mag. Nat. Hist. i. 1837, p. 579). It is the Viverra hardwickii of Gray (Spic. Zool. ii p. 9, t.i.), the Viverra boiei of S. Muller (Zoog. Ind. Arebip. p- 121, t. xviii., which contains a representation of the external form, skull, and dentition), and the Hemigale zebré of the 166 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, ‘ Voyage de la Bonite,’ p. 28, pl. v., which is a good coloured repre- sentation of the animal, with outline of skull and teeth, which are also figured (under the name Paradoxurus derbyanus) on pls. vii. and xii. of De Blainville’s ‘Ostéographie’ (Viverra). It is an inhabi- tant of Malacca and Borneo. It differs strikingly from most other Viverride by its system of coloration, as it has transverse stripes instead of longitudinal markings and spots. It is in this respect only approached by the Linsangs. Its ground-colour is whitish Fig. 10. Pads of Hemigalea. A, left manus ; B, left pes. yellow, with red-brown markings. The tail is ringed at its proximal part, but is black distally. There are three stripes on the head, two down the neck, and it is irregularly marked on the shoulders. The hair on the dorsum of the neck is reversed in direction. The claws are sharp and retractile. The pads, besides those beneath the five toes, are concentrated, so as to form a considerable naked space (pointed upwards) on the metatarsus, while the tarsus is almost, if not quite, entirely hairy. No hairy interval divides the proximal and distal portions of the palmar pad. The claws are strongly arched (cf. fig. 14 D, p. 192. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 167 The pollex and hallux are very well developed. In its cranial characters Hemigalea resembles Paradoxurus. Its bulla is of the same form, but ankylosed into one piece. The par- occipital is depending, the mastoid very slightly marked ; there is an alisphenoid canal ; and the condyloid foramen is concealed ; but the hinder opening of the carotid canal is rather more anteriorly situated with respect to the bulla. Its anterior end notches the alisphenoid as always hitherto. The postorbital processes are ver small, that of the malar almost obsolete. When the skull is looked at in profile, the dorsum of the muzzle is very concave, and a deepish groove runs antero-posteriorly along the junction of the nasal bones. There is a peculiar depression or notch in the upper alveolar border to receive the apex of 5-5. The teeth are the teeth of Paradozurus ; but the outermost upper incisor of each side is more separated from the incisor next it, and ake are very well developed. P-3 has a distinct internal tubercle ; and there is even a very small one to ©”. ps Isvery much ex- tended vertically, and is received into the upper alveolar notch just mentioned. Length of head and body about 38!-1; of tail 40!'-6. Nothing is said as to any scent-gland in the ‘ Zoology of the Voyage of the Bonite ;? nor do I find any other notice about it. Ina female specimen most kindly presented to me by Mr. A. D. Bartlett, and which I dissected (portions of its anatomy being preserved in the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons), I found superficial folds something as in Genetta—two oblique shallow folds extending ob- liquely upwards and outwards from near the anus to the vicinity of the vagina. The secretion could be squeezed into these folds, just as in the specimen I examined of Genetta tigrina. The tongue exhibited an oval patch of much enlarged but soft papillz on the anterior half of the dorsum of that organ. A very peculiar plate-like enlargement of the radius is to be found on its outer border a little above its styloid precess. Into this are inserted the supinator longus, the pronator radii teres, and, espe- cially, the large pronator quadratus. Hemigalea agrees with Viverra as to the characters so ofter: referred to, except Nos. 2 (perhaps), 24, 42, 43, 51, 52, and 53. The Binturong (Arctictis), the systematic position of which was for a time so much mistaken, is a good example of the small value of dental characters as guides to the essential affinity of an animal. Were it not for Arctogale (which tends to bridge over the dental differences between Arctitis and Paradoxurus), the Binturong would be an exception amongst the Viverride, something as Proteles is amongst the Hyenide. Arctitis may be confidently affirmed to be an aberrant Paradoxure. The animal seems to have been first described by Sir Stamford Raffles (as Viverra binturong). in the Trans. Linn. Soe. vol. xiii. p. 253. 168 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE £LUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, The genus Arctictis was instituted by Temminck, who gives it in the ‘Tableau Méthodique’ (1827), p.. xxi, in the beginning of his first volume of the ‘ Monographie,’ in the second volume of which, p- 305, is a full description, with a figure of the skeleton half the size of nature, and one of the skull and dentition of the natural size. De Blainville, in his ‘Ostéographie’ (Suwbursus), gives a figure of the entire skeleton on pl. 4, of the skull and dentition on pl. 7, with some details of the axial skeleton on pl. , of the appendicular skeleton on pls. 9 & 10, with the adult and milk-dentition on pl. 11. F. Cuvier has figured the dentition in the ‘ Dents des Mammiferes,’ pl. 3 dis. F. Cuvier also figured the animal (Mém. du Mus. vol. ix. p-. 44, t. 4) under the name Paradoxurus albifrons; and another figure of a semi-adult individual (under the name Binturong) in his ‘ Mammiferes,’ vol. ii. Valenciennes has also figured it (under the name Ictides albifrons) in Aun. des Se. Nat. vol.iv. p.57, pl. 1. In the ‘ Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal,’ vol. xv. 1846, p. 192, there is a short but interesting account of the animal. It is referred to in 8. Miiller’s ‘ Zoog. Ind. Archipel,’ p. 32. The anatomy of this animal has been described by the late Prof. Garrod in P. Z.S. 1873, p. 196, with a further note (as to the occasional absence of the czecum’) in 1878, p. 142. The animal comes certainly from Borneo ; and some say, from Java, Sumatra, and Malacca also. The ears are tufted, the tail long and, to a certain extent, pre- hensile ; and the tarsus and metatarsus are both entirely naked. As to the cranium, the bulla is formed on the type of that of Paradox- urus, except that the two parts are completely ankylosed in the adult. There is an alisphenoid canal, but no pterygoid fossa. The external opening of the auditory meatus is small and oval. The postorbital processes are very short and blunt (the malar hardly indicated) ; and the cranium is not laterally constricted behind them. The condyloid foramen is concealed. The cranial ridges are not largely developed ; but the paroccipital process depends, and the mastoid is rather marked. ‘The carotid canal opens posteriorly at the middle of the inner side of the auditory bulla, while anteriorly it notches the alisphenoid. There is no foramen or fissure in the floor of the auditory bulla’s anterior chamber ; but there is a very deep pit (to receive the cornu of the hyoid) on the side of the bulla just behind the external auditory opening. The palate is greatly prolonged behind the hindmost molars. The angle of the mandible is very small. The zygomatic arches present a rather concave instead of a convex out- line medianly when viewed from above or below. The premolars and molars are small and separated one from another by small but marked intervals. The number of teeth varies slightly, as either “? or 1 may be wanting, and (according to Raffles) there may be six teeth in the lower jaw; i. e. pi 18 probably present sometimes, ' That there is much variation as to this part is shown by the record, in vo]. xv. p. 193 of the ‘Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal,’ that the caecum is half an inch long. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 169 M.2 though I have never seen it. —“, if present, is very small, one- rooted, and much less than half the size of M.1 M1 is much like the same tooth in Paradoxurus, but is less transversely extended in proportion to its length; it has three tubercles and three roots. P.4 is like that of Paradowurus, save that it is modified by the very great reduction of the foremost and hindmost outer cusps, which are each connected by a ridge (the cingulum) with the largely-developed ‘ Pada: : . inner cusp. ‘*-2 is a trihedral tooth with rounded angles; 4:2 P gies 5 AGES Ys P.1 : P f is similar but smaller ; and —— may be wanting, but if present is long and conical. poi is wanting. 5 po and paeons conical teeth, increasing in breadth progressively backwards. j,4 is much as in Paradoxurus, but is broader in proportion to its length. The talon does not form quite half the tooth. j,-; is more rounded than generally in Paradozurus ; it is not much smaller than pi: As to the milk-dentition, the deciduous upper sectorial (2:8) is mueh more sectorial than is the permanent sectorial tooth. It is very narrow from side to side, having either a mere rudiment of an internal cusp SE ie mee ne ie a . ae ; or none. ~~ is quite like —-. ;,, is rather more sectorial than is The infraorbital foramen opens above *~*. pq does not bite P. 4° _at all against M1} but against *-* and *-4, The pollex and hallux are very well developed. The claws are strongly arched and pointed (¢f. fig. 14 C, p.192), and more or less retractile. There is a prescrotal gland, which exudes its secretion into a naked cutaneous invagination placed, like a vulva, in front of the anus. Arctictis agrees, so far as I can ascertain, with Viverra, except in the characters numbered 9, 17 (sometimes), 24, 28 (sometimes), 33, 37, 43, 45 (often), 47, and 50. The next form is one the nature and affinities of which are to me doubtful. It has, however, so much the general appearance and character of the Paradoxures (with which it was at first associated) that I feel compelled to place it in proximity to them, in spite of the very exceptional character of the auditory region of its cranium. Indeed the non-ossification of parts of its bulla may be taken as a great exaggeration of that separate, movable condition of its hinder chamber which we have seen to be the case in Paradowurus. Its claws are like those of the last-mentioned genus, as also the naked condition of its tarsus and metatarsus. The genus Nandinia was instituted by Gray (P. Z.S. 1864, p- 529) for the species previously described by him as Paradoxurus? binotatus (P. Z.S. 1832, p. 68) and P. hamiltonii (P.Z.S8. 1852, p- 67, and Illus. Indian Zool.). It is the P. binotatus of Temminck (*‘ Monographie,’ vol. ii. p. 336), who figures the skull (pl. 65. figs. 7, 8, & 9) and refers to it in his ‘ Esquisses Zool.’ p. 119. Its external form is represented in Gray’s ‘ Illustrations of Indian Zoology.’ The skull and teeth are figured by De Blainville, ‘ Ostéographie,’ 170 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, Viverra, pls. 6 & 12, under the name Paradoxurus hamiltonii. There is a short description of its anatomy, by Prof. Flower, in P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 683. It comes from Fernando Po and Western Africa, and also, it is said, from Zanzibar. The Viverrine section of the Viverring are rather more African than Asiatic; but this is thé only African form of the Paradoxurine section of that subfamily. It seems to be a Paradoxure separated from the others by a more carnivorous dentition, and from all other A8luroidea by the non-ossification of the hinder and larger portion of the auditory bulla, which remaius cartilaginous. There is but one known species, the head and body of which measure about 43/2, and the tail 30'°5. It is of a greyish- brown colour, black-spotted, and with the tail indistinctly ringed. There are three short black stripes on the nape (one from the forehead and one from each ear); and there is a yellow spot on each shoulder. The belly is dirty white. The tarsus and meta- tarsus are about as bald as in Paradoxurus. The muzzle is shorter than in any other of the Viverride. Not only is the hinder part of the bulla cartilaginous, but its anterior part is rather more bullate than (at least generally) in Puradocurus. The opening of the auditory meatus is not large. ‘There is no pterygoid fossa. The postorbital processes are long and pointed; and the skull is much contracted just behind them. The sagittal and lambdoidal ridges, especially the latter, are largely developed. The muzzle is relatively shorter than in any other Viverrine yet reviewed. The paroccipital appears to be depending (though this cannot be asserted in the absence of the bulla); and the mastoid is larger than in any genus as yet here noticed. ‘There is an alisphenoid canal close to the foramen ovale ; and the condyloid foramen is very much exposed. There is no auterior carotid foramen other than the usual foramen lacerum. The ascending ramus of the mandible is flattened beneath in a way not existing in any genus yet reviewed, and certainly not in Para- doxurus; and the angle is pressed up exceptionally towards the condyle. The teeth are formed on the type of those of the Genet, M. but are modified in a more sectorial direction. “= is very minute, and sometimes aborts altogether’. M.1 is smaller than in the Genets. PS has a posterior cusp as large as in the Genets, and the inner cusp even a little smaller. = has its talon°much smaller than in Genetta; and x is a rounded rudimentary tooth, smaller than that of the Genets. ; , P.3 mrKe . : No infraorbital foramen opens above ——; and 3q,j bites against of, There is no czecum, as was ascertained by Prof. Flower*. I can find no record as to the existence of prescrotal® or anal glands. 1 As on both sides of a skull in the Royal College of Surgeons’ Museum, and on one side of another skull there. 2 P. Z.8. 1872, p. 683. 3 Through the kindness of Mr. Forbes I have been able to’ ascertain the presence, in a female Nandinia, of a bald patch, no doubt glandular, in the situation of the prescrotal glandular structure of Genetta. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ELUROIDEA. 171 “ The tongue is much like that of the Civet, and with no patch of greatly enlarged papillz on its anterior half. The characters before given of Viverra apply also to Nandinia, except nos. 3, 7, 14, 24, 28, 35, 37, 38, 40, 42, 43, 45 (sometimes), 46, and 54. With Nandinia closes the second set of forms of the subfamily Viverrine ; and the characters of these two sets may be expressed as follows :— In the Viverrine section of the Viverrine we find :-—— (1) Auditory bulla entirely ankylosed into one mass. (2) Bulla not always, or greatly, narrowing anteriorly. (3) Palate never much prolonged beyond hindmost molars. (4) Mastoid never very prominent. (5) A czecum constantly present. (6) Teeth always sectorial, never very small ; anterior premolars not very long. (7) Margins of palate not nearly parallel. (8) A supracondyloid foramen to the humerus. (9) A median groove beneath the nose on the upper lip. (10) Tarsus and metatarsus often entirely hairy, never entirely naked. (11) Tail long. In the Paradoxurine section we meet with the following cha- arcters :— (1) Auditory bulla often in two pieces; hinder chamber in one species not ossified. (2) Bulla, when ossified, always greatly narrowing anteriorly. (3) Palate sometimes much prolonged beyond last molars. (4) Mastoid in one form very prominent. (5) Caecum sometimes absent. (6) Teeth sometimes but little sectorial and occasionally very small; anterior premolars not very long, (7) Margins of palate not nearly parallel. (8) A supracondyloid foramen to humerus. (9) A median groove beneath the nose, on the upper lip. (10) Tarsus and metatarsus often entirely naked, never entirely hairy. (11) Tail long. The genus Cynogale was founded by Gray’ on a skin in the col- lection of our Society, supposed to have formed part of the collec- tion of Sir Stamford Raffles, and therefore to have come from Sumatra. It was described and figured in 1837 by De Blainville, under the name Viverra carcharias, who gives some anatomical details (Ann. Sc. Nat. 2° sér. vii. p. 280, pl. 8); and in 1839 by S. Miiller (Zoog. Ind. Archip. p. 115, pl. 17, showing the external form, skull, and dentition), under the name Potamophilus barbatus ; and in 1841 by MM. Eydoux and Souleyet (in ‘Voyage de la 1 P.Z.8. 1886, p. 88, 172 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, Bonite,’ p. 24, pl. 6), who have given an excellent figure of the external form, with an outline of the skull and teeth. The entire skeleton is represented by De Blainville on pl. 3 of his ‘ Ostéo- graphie’ (Viverra) ; while its skull is admirably figured in profile on pl. 7, the atlas, axis, sternum, and hyoid on pl. 9, its appendi- cular skeleton on pls. 10 and 11, and its dentition, both young and adult, on pl. 12. The animal comes from Borneo. It was erected by Dr. Gray, first into the tribe Cynogaline’ and then into the family Cynogalide’, mainly on the ground of the nose having no median groove beneath it, a character very useful for zoological purposes, but, as it appears to me, trivial as the mark of a family or subfamily. I do find, however, a groove beneath the nose, though none on the upper lip. Fig. 11. Pads of left pes of Cynogale. Its webbed feet, short tail, long moustaches*, together with its exceptional upper lip, serve, however, to mark it as a very distinct genus, as does also the absence of the supracondyloid groove of the humerus. The feet are much less bald than in Arctictis. The metatarsus, indeed, is hairless; but the tarsus is clothed beneath with short hairs. The claws are rather elongated (cf. fig. 14 E). The pollex and hallux are very well developed. P. Z.8. 1864, p. 521. 2 Cat. of Carnivora, p. 78. 3 When the head of this animal is viewed from above (as in 8. Miiller’s figure) it presents a singular resemblance to the head of Potamogale. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 173 The colour of the coat is red-brown, with no markings save a very narrow black line along the crown of the elongated head. The ears are small, the whiskers very long. The hair is crisp, short, and thick. The tail is very short, tapering rapidly. A bunch of whisker grows from below each ear as well as on each side of the nose. The claws are strong, sharp, and retractile. Length of head and body about 68''*5, that of tail about 14!°5. The cranium is of an intermediate type—somewhat Civet-like and Paradoxure-like. The bulla is shaped like that of the Civet, but is less prominent. The anterior part of it is especially flattened. The opening of the external auditory meatus is small. The postorbital processes are very small indeed ; but the skull is extremely narrowed and pinched in behind them. The condyloid foramen is quite con- cealed. The sagittal ridge is pretty well developed, and the lamb- doidal ridge is very large. The paroccipital is depending. The mastoid is prominent, though not so markedly so as in Nandinia. There is an alisphenoid canal which opens posteriorly opposite and close to the foramen ovale. The carotid canal opens pos- teriorly near the middle of the inner margin of the larger chamber of the bulla; while anteriorly the carotid artery enters by the fora- men lacerum, notching the sphenoid. There is a pterygoid fossa, and a very large infraorbital foramen, which opens above the *-*. The palate is exceptional in shape, having nearly parallel lateral margins. Dentally, Cynogale is a much modified Paradoxure. The differences are mainly as follows :—“” is relatively larger and more nearly equal to Mt, %** is almost quite as large as E4 which has its inner tubercle still larger in proportion to the rest of the tooth than in Paradoxurus. It has three external cusps, the first and third being largely and equally developed, and the middle cusp not descending very much below them, a form of tooth unlike that of any other yet here-described Viverrine animal. *= is of very great vertical extent (relatively greater than any yet described here) ; and . ae Powe the same may be said of ——-, which is somewhat recurved towards its apex. *— is a longish caniniform tooth, recurved towards its apex and placed close behind the canine. The lower premolars are correspondingly developed. 5-3 has two small posterior basal cusps. p-q has a very long talon with two cusps (one before the other), and then also an accessory anterior cusp. 3;; has a talon which is so large that it forms half the crown of the tooth, and bears three or four tubercles. Bia Das As to the milk-dentition, is very much like 2, 2-3 ig intermediate in character between '* and bie but is more like P32. Instead of being much like the permanent sectorial (as in Genetta and so many other forms), its very small inner tubercle is placed inside quite the hindest part of the tooth. 2-4 is very peculiar: it is like the permanent sectorial, but with the inner part rather more posterior in position, and with a talon (bearing an inner D. 2 174 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, and outer tubercle and a posterior cingulum) added on behind it. pri 38 like 5, and p.» Is like 5, with a small basal anterior cusp added. p.3 18 like poy Only with rather more talon; but >; is a quite extracrdinary tooth: it is like = of Genetta, with the addition of an enormous talon bearing five tubercles, three external and two internal; it is like both ;— and ,, of the permanent dentition ankylosed together, only the three anterior cusps are not in the same antero-posterior line as they are in ,— P.4 I can find no record as to the existence of any prescrotal gland, or Fig. 12. di de ds da Milk-teeth of Cynogale. A. Grinding-surface of upper series, with the addition of d, twice the natural size. B. Side view of upper series. C. Side view of lower series. D, Grinding-surface of lower series. E. Fourth lower molar, twice the natural size. as to the condition of its anal region. De Blainville says that “la langue est garnie de papilles cornées,” that the large intestine is 6 inches long, the ceecum 6 lines, and the small intestine 4 inches. Cynogale, so far as known, agrees with Viverra in the characters before given, except as regards nos. 23, 24, 35, 37, 40, 43, 44, 47, 55, and 56. The characters of this small third section of the Viverrine sub- family may be thus drawn out :— 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 175 (1) Auditory bulla ossified and in one piece. (2) Bulla narrowing and much flattened anteriorly. (3%) Palate not much prolonged behind last molars. (4) Mastoid rather prominent. (5) Ceecum very small. (6) ‘Teeth suited for catching fish ; anterior premolars very long. (7) Margins of palate nearly parallel. (8) No supracondyloid foramen to humerus. (9) No median groove on upper lip. (10) Tarsus hairy ; metatarsus naked. (11) Tail short. The following characters are common to the Viverrine :— (1) Claws strongly curved, sharply pointed, and more or less deeply retractile. (2) Orbits never enclosed by bone. (3) Hinder chamber of auditory bulla never everted outwards. (4) Posterior margin of the external auditory meatus as pro- minent as, or more so than, the anterior or inferior margin. (5) Floor of external auditory meatus and adjacent part of bulla neitber fissured nor with a foramen ora deep pit on its surface. (6) Angle of mandible never everted. (7) Mastoid rarely prominent. (8) Paroccipital processes almost always depending. (9) Aperture of external auditory meatus not triangular. (10) Alisphenoid canal generally elongated. (11) Carotid canal notching the sphenoid, and not showing as a couspicuous foramen in the basis cranii. (12) Prescrotal scent-glands generally present. (13) Anus opening on the surface, and not into a cutaneous invagi- nation’. (14) Only a pair of anal glands. (15) A supracondyloid foramen to humerus, save in Cynogale. (16) An alisphenoid canal present, save generally in Viverricula, where, when absent, its place is not indicated by bony processes. (17) Both pollex and hallux present. (18) Czecum sometimes absent. (19) Tarsus and metatarsus hairy or bald. The very large and polymorphic genus Herpestes was divided by Dr. Gray (P. Z.S. 1864, and Cat. Carnivora, p. 154) into the genera Athylax, Calogale, Galerella, Calictis, Ariela, Ichneumia, Urva, Teniogale, Onychogale, and Helogale. Not one of these, save possibly the last, can be maintained as a distinct genus. Mr. Oldfield Thomas, who has been working with great care at these animals, told me he had come to this conclusion; and my examination of the skins and skulls in the British Museum has only served to confirm the justice of this view. * I give this character with hesitation, from what I have (as before said) obseryed in a living Paradoxurus. 176 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE £LUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, The genus is found in South Europe, all Africa, Asia Minor, Persia, and nearly the whole of the Oriental zoological region, and Foochow. The genus contains about twenty-one species, of which thirteen are Asiatic and seven African. The Asiatic species (thirteen in number) have been carefully worked out by Dr. J. Anderson’; for the rest (the African sever species) I may refer to Mr. Oldfield Thomas’s paper, recently read before this Society”. All the species have five digits to each foot ; but the pollex and hal- lux are very small. The claws are longer and less curved than are those of the genera as yet described (cf. fig. 14 G, p. 192). The body and tail are always long, and the legs short. The amount of hair to be found beneath the tarsus varies much. Generally both the tarsus and metatarsus are naked beneath ; but in some indi- viduals of a species in which these parts are naturally naked, the tarsus may be more or less hairy, the hairy part having an ill-defined limit. Thus the specimen of Herpestes paludosus* (No. 61. 6.1. 3) has the tarsus hairy beneath, while in another specimen it is quite naked. The hair of the body is generally clothed with annulated fur, without any special markings on either shoulders, sides, or belly ; while a few have neck-markings, and one or two species have uni- formly-coloured fur. In all the African forms the hair seems to be more or less annulated; but in three Asiatic species it is not so. The ears are short and rounded. There is no scent-gland between the penis and testes; but the anus often opens into the middle of a sac-like depression, deepest on its hinder side, into which depres- sion more or less numerous anal glands and glandular follicles open. The skull is elongated, with postorbital processes which are long and pointed, generally enclosing the orbit posteriorly, though some- times not nearly joining the malar. As Prof. Flower has pointed out’, the auditory bulla is somewhat pear-shaped—the larger, rounded end being turned backwards and somewhat outwards, a well-marked transverse constriction separating the hinder (and here outer) chamber from the (also dilated and bullate) anterior (and inner) chamber. As Prof. Flower has also remarked, the aperture of communication in the osseous partition between the two chambers is rather larger than in the Civets, Genets, and Paradoxures. There is always an alisphenoid canal; but thisis very short. The external auditory opening is very small and triangular, one angle being directed downwards. There is a foramen or a notch in the floor of the anterior (and inner) chamber of the bulla a little within the opening of the auditory meatus; and thus we have here an incipient defect of ossification in the floor of that passage; in Herpestes urva this defect is more marked, being rather a fissure than a foramen. The 1 «Zoology of Weslern Yunnan,’ p. 168. ? On Jan. 3, i882. 8 Or H. galera. This is the Vansire of Buffon, Hist. Nat. vol. xiii. p. 157, make BY P. Z.S. 1869, p. 20 and fig. 9. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 177 anterior margin of the external auditory opening is slightly more produced than is the posterior one. The pterygoid fossa is small or absent. The condyloid foramen is concealed. he cranium is much pinched in behind the postorbital processes. The cranial ridges are small or moderate. The paroccipital processes do not depend. The mastoid is considerably developed (as in Cynogale), forming a con- siderable external ridge. The carotid canal begins near the anterior end of the inner wall of the hinder (and outer) chamber of the bulla. It opens anteriorly at the outer or inner end of the anterior (and inner) chamber ; and there is a mostly conspicuous foramen in the basis cranii between the alisphenoid close to the basisphenoid, through which the internal carotid artery passes up into the cranial cavity beside the hinder part of the sella turcica.. The palate is greatly prolonged behind the last molars. The infraorbital P. 3 foramen opens generally above ——. In dentition Herpestes generally much resembles Genetia, espe- cially in the excessive transverse extension of “+ and". Some- times, as in H. persicus (No. 1436 6 in the British Museum), “2 is very minute ; and occasionally, as in H. smithii (No. 979 a, the skin also in the collection), “ is wanting (with no trace of an alveolus) on one side, and very minute on the other. Generally mA has two small outer and one large internal cusps. Generally also “* is more transversely extended and more trihedral than in any yet here described genus, and its posterior margin is rather more con- cave ; otherwise it is shaped as in Genetta and Viverricula. EA is quite like the homologous tooth of the Genets. 7-8 is somewhat broader behind than in Genetta, and has a small posterior inner cusp; and it is therefore more like the *~* of Paradoxurus. 7 is much as in Viverra. *— is smaller, and may be absent altogether (as in No. 4324 of College of Surgeons’ Museum and No. 148 ¢ of British Museum). The teeth of the lower jaw are like those of the Genet, except that the inner cusp of ;; is rather more developed. pq is rather broader posteriorly, and 5 is sometimes wanting. The teeth of H. paludosus are exceptionally stout, as are also those of H. robustus, which are represented in P. Z. S. 1864, p. 558, and Cat. of Carniv. p. 157. The teeth of Herpestes are represented by De Blainville, ‘ Ostéo- graphie’ (Viverra), pl. 12, the entire skeleton on pl. 1, and skulls and parts of the appendicular skeleton on intermediate plates. For the basis cranii see P. Z.S. 1869, p. 21, fig. 9. H. galera is the Vansire of Buffon (Hist. Nat. t. xiii. pl. 21). H. sanguineus is figured in Riippell’s ‘ Fauna of Abyssinia,’ pl. 8, and the skull on pl. 10; H. mutgigella, pl. 9. fig. 1; H. gracilis, pls. 8 & 10; HA. undulatus and H. ornatus (external forms, skulls, and foot-pads) on pls. 25 and 26 of Peters’s ‘ Reise nach Mossambique ;’ H. smithii, P. Z.8. 1851, pl. 31; H. albicaudus, Mag. de Zool. 1839, pl. 11; and H. albescens, loc. cit. pl. 12; H. vera, Calcutta Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XII. 12 178 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, Journ. Nat. Hist. ii. pl. 13. fig. 2; H. villicollis, Madras Journal, 1839, pl. 2. M. Chatin, in vol. xiv. (1874) of the 5th series of the Ann. des Se. Nat. pp. 79-88, figs. 34-37, describes and figures the anal glands of three species of Herpestes. Hoorsfield describes the anal pouch of another under the name Mungusta javanica. The pupil contracts so as to present a horizontally extended aperture ; at least it does so in living examples examined by me and Mr. Bartlett. In H. auropunctatus the anus opened most distinctly on the surface of the body, and not into a saccular depres- sion. This fact, and the difference of the teeth in different species, incline me to believe that the genus will hereafter be divided into two or more genera when the structure of all the forms has been thoroughly worked out. The genus Herpestes exhibits the characters before enumerated as existing in Viverra, except nos. 18, 20, 21, 22, 24, 26 (often), 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 35, 36, 37, 38, 40, 42, 43, and 53. The (to me doubtful) genus Helogale was founded by Gray', and contains two species, H. parvula, from Natal and other parts of South Africa, and H. undulata from Mozambique. It is a very small, herpestiform animal, with a bald or nearly bald tarsus. Both its cranial and dental characters are those of Herpestes, save that both aa are wanting, while at the same time end placed close behind the canine, so that there is no diastema. The length of the head and body is 25", of the tail 13!. The genus Cynictis was instituted by Ogilby in 1833°, who has figured the skull and external form in the first volume of our “Transactions.” There is one species which comes from South Africa. It is of a reddish colour with more or less annulated hair and a bushy tail, with a tarsus which seems to be constantly very hairy ; and the metatarsus is also hairy. The animal is herpestiform, but slender, and has no hallux; and the pollex is very short. The orbits are completely encircled by bone; and all the cranial and dental charac- ters are like those of Herpestes, save that the infraorbital foramen opens above the interval between FP? and **, and we 1S rather larger. Its outer internal cusp is more prominent, and sometimes bifurcates at its apex, as it also does in Herpestes albicaudus and robably in some others. The skull (including the basis cranii) of Cynictis is figured by De Blainville, Ostéog. (Viverra), pl. 5; the appendicuiar skeleton on pls. 10 & 11, and its dentition on pl. 12. The length of the head and body is 45!-6, of the tail 30-4. I can find no record of the anatomy of its soft parts or the con- dition of the anus; but the condition of the skins seemed to me to indicate that the anus opens into a depression as in certain species of Herpestes. This suspicion has been confirmed by the exami- nation of a living specimen at our Gardens. Cynictis agrees with Herpestes, save as above indicated. fee Z. 8. 1861, p. 308; see also P. Z.S. 1864, p. 570, and Cat. of Carnivora, p- De. 2 See P. Z. 8. 1833, p. 48, and Trans. Z. 8. (1835), vol. i. p. 29, pl. 34. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 179 The genus Bdeogale was first proposed by Dr. Peters in November 1850', and a full description (with figure of external forin, skull, teeth, and feet-pads) given by him in 1862 in his ‘ Reise nach Mossambique,’ Zoology (Mamm.), p. 119, pls. 26& 27. The genus comes from Zanzibar and Eastern Africa. Peters describes the existence of two kinds of fur (as in Herpestes), viz. a thick soft wool, with longer less numerous hairs projecting from amongst it. The snout is rather long and pointed, but has the usual median groove. The pupils are horizontally elliptical ; the ears are short and rounded. There isno external trace of either pollex or hallux ; the third and fourth digits are of nearly equal length. The tarsus is quite hairy ; and so is part of the metatarsus ; the tail is bushy. The skull is said to be quite like that of Herpestes, but appears broader, the premolars and molars to be Pm. 4, M. 4, and to resemble in shape those of Crossarchus (described infra, p.181). Prof. Peters says:—‘‘Bdeogale presents the following peculiarities: —( 1) The outer side of the upper sectorial is scarcely longer than its anterior side, whilst in Herpestes and Crossarchus it is considerably longer 3 (2) there is on the postero-internal side of the upper sectorial a low tubercle placed between the greater inner tubercle and the long middle external cusp ; (3) the anterior part of the lower sectorial has a fourth small external cusp (instead of being tricuspidate, as in Herpestes, Crossarchus, and Suricata), so that a horizontal section of this division is not triangular but irregularly quadrangular. There are 14 thoracic, 6 lumbar, 3 sacral, and 25 (or 24) caudal vertebree. The clavicle is absent. The sternum consists of 8 sternebrze, to which 9 pairs of the ribs are attached. There is both an olecranal and a supracondyloid perforation to the humerus. A minute rudiment of a first metacarpal is attached to the trapezium ; but there is no rudi- ment whatever of the first metatarsal. The tongue, like that of Herpestes, bears a patch of large backwardly directed spine-like papillee on the anterior half of its dorsum. The stomach is elon- gated and bent in the form of a horseshoe. The small intestine is 135" long and 08 thick; the large intestine is 24! long and 0'-15 thick. The anus opens into the middle of a sac or pouch, as in Crossarchus*. ‘The aorta gives off a common trunk for the carotids and right subclavian, and then the left subclavian separately.” In the stomach of one specimen Prof. Peters found a large Vipera rhinoceros (Schlegel). millim. Length of vertebral column from atlas to end of sacrum., 290°0 enzinror enudel vertebra’. 22. nae ee ee tes a OOO Meneth of the snl Fons SAL BEN ayte ge Pas Cae, Re emcHethy (Opi yoomiath os bio ierela. Mise ettig + biel aye ad are 42°5 Length of humerus .........-. siapstal v-cisia\etahe s '9 © Ws wie? ieee Levee ' Mittheilung in der Gesellsch. naturforsch. Freunde zu Berlin, Noy. 19, 1850. * Dr. Peters says, “ Der Analsack ist ganz so wie bei den Mangusten gebildet ;” and so I find it. 12* 180 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ELUROIDEA. [ Feb. 7, millim. Lenpthmfimmdinssizeic. oii. oan 200 Sones {ithe dele Bee Reneiivioiiimanus 24.036). 6. soul eee kind eee see 51:0 iengathvof thitd digit... . ..).}.2iconmiul, beacons oe 21:0 Bemathiet femora s.)5 . . - visi sli tleneted oklie ae eRe tees UOT Cee Whenethvof fibia.s .wiz... zcuiygiss). Abies eich: Wales WR Length of pes ...... 82:0 Length of fourth digit: of pes, ic d.tis.. 1e . see gud). okie Bae Dr. Peters describes the liver as consisting of three main lobes, the middle one of which has the ligamentum teres on its lett and the gall-bladder on its right—the lett lobe being single, with the right lobe divided by notches into secondary lobes. Dr. Giinther had the kindness to place at my disposal for examination the viscera of the specimen in the British Museum. Unfortunately its liver was in a very bad state and much injured; it appeared to me, however, to consist of three main lobes, corresponding respectively (1) to the left lateral, (2) to the left central, and (3) to the right central and right lateral united, and containing the gall-bladder. The caudate lobe seemed to be of much the same size as in Herpestes. 1 could not distinguish the Spigelian lobe. Dr. Peters does not describe the anal glands ; but, from the form of the anal sac, there are probably more than two pairs of them, as in Crossarchus. Length of head and body 40", of tail 30". There are said to be three species—two from the Mozambique, and one from the Gaboon. Except as above pointed out, the characters of Bdeogale are those of Herpestes. The genus Rhinogale was formed by Dr. Gray, in 1864 (P. Z. S. p- 573), for a rather large Herpestiform animal, brought from Eastern Africa by Dr. Meller. The skull is represented by Dr. Gray, and also in his ‘ Catalogue of Carnivora,’ p. 173. The external form has been just represented by Mr. Oldfield Thomas in our ‘Proceedings.’ ‘The creature differs from all those yet here noticed, except Cynogale, in that the nose has no central groove below. There is both a hallux and a pollex ; the hair is annulated ; and the tarsus is hairy. The skull in the British Museum (No. 1437 a, from skin, 64. 8. 23. 1) has an herpestiform bulla; but the anterior chamber is very much less than the posterior one. The external auditory meatus is small and triangular, with one angle downwards. The postorbital processes of the frontal nearly join the much smaller ones of the malars. The condyloid foramen is exposed. The lambdoidal ridge is rather large, and the sagittal ridge moderate. The paroccipital process does not depend. ‘The mastoid is much as in Herpestes ; the pterygoid processes are very long, and the pterygoid fossee very small. There is a distinét, but very short, alisphenoid canal. The carotid canal is as in Herpestes. The anterior part of the bulla has a distinct round perforation in its floor, just below and within the 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 181 margin of the meatus auditorius externus. The muzzle is short ; but the palate is much prolonged behind the last molars. Its dentition, compared with that of Herpestes, presents the fol- z Des lowing characters :—“~” is more quadrate and more nearly equal in size to Mt, Ml is very quadrate. Bet iy very slightly sectorial, with a large internal tubercle, and resembles the same tooth in the least sectorial Paradoxures. P:-3 is very large, and has a well- developed internal tubercle, with a small cusp behind the large external one, and another small one in front of it, larger, however, than the hindmost outer cusp. P.? hasa rudimentary internal cusp, and both a minute anterior and a minute posterior external cusp. tt tis very small. Besides these four upper premolars and the molars, there is also a small tooth, with a minute basal cusp, placed close behind each upper canine; yet the skull is that of a rather aged individual. 1 regard this extra tooth as something abnormal. yea 1S much larger and more quadrate than in Herpestes. 3,4 is also more quadrate than in Herpestes, and has apparently been quadricuspidate, but is much worn. pq, py pp and pq are much as in Herpestes. Unfortunately I have no means of ascertaining the condition of the anal region. From an examination of the dry skin, the anus appears to me to open into a depression, as in some Her- peste. Except as above indicated, the characters of Rhinogale are those of Herpesies. Length of the head and body about 53''1, of the tail 38/1. The genus Crossarchus’ was founded by F. Cuvier in 1825 for the Mangue, of which he has givena figure (Mammiféres, iii.). It is referred to in Temminck’s ‘ Esquisses,’ p.117. Its anatomy was described by Mr. W. Martin (P. Z. S. 1834, p. 113). The genus is widely spread over Africa :—one species, C. obscurus, from Abyssinia to Gambia and the Camerocns, and another, C. fasciatus, from Southern Africa; a third, C. gambianus, from Gambia; and a fourth, C. zebra, from Abyssinia. All have the hair annulated, the ears small and rounded, the tarsus bald; and they are devoid of a median groove beneath the muzzle. The snout is elongated, hairy beneath, and more or less turned upwards towards the tip. They also have a pollex and hallux ; but these are shorter in C. fasciatus than in C. obscurus. The claws are much elongated. In C. fasciatus there are transverse bands or lines, more or less marked, across the back; these are absent in C. obscurus. The pupil is round. The length of the head and body is 36'8, of the tail 17'*1, in C. obseurus; and 45''*8 and 22'9 in C, fasciatus. The skull of the typical form, C. obseurus, has a bulla on the type of Herpestes, but with its character exaggerated. There is an alisphenoid canal, but very short, and often imperfectly ossified ; but bony processes tending to enclose it may always be detected. ! This genus includes the genus Mungos, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1864, p. 575, and Cat. of Carnivora, p. 174. 182 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, If perfect, it is very short. The opening of the external auditory meatus is small and triangular, and, as it were, somewhat cut away below ; and there is a deep groove and a defect of ossification on the floor of the anterior chamber of the auditory bulla. The frontal postorbital processes are well developed ; and the skull is much pinched in behind them. There are small pointed malar processes; but these do not nearly join the former. The condyloid foramen is concealed. The cranial ridges are moderate. ‘The paroccipital process does not depend. The mastoid is much as in Herpestes, as also is the carotid canal ; and there is a conspicuous carotid foramen in the basis cranii; and the artery enters the skull beside the posterior boundary of the sella turcica. The palate is greatly prolonged behind the last molars. In C. fasciatus the cranial characters are similar, except that the short alisphenoid canal is better marked, the palate is rather less prolonged, and the postorbital processes more nearly join, and there may be but a very minute foramen instead of a slit beneath the auditory meatus. The dentition of C. obscurus is represented by De Blainville (Ostéog., Viverra, pl. 12). Its MAY quite two thirds the size of M1 but is triangular, not quadrate. “+ is less trihedral than in Herpestes, and has two equally developed external cusps, external and parallel to which is araised straight cingulum. There is a large internal cusp; and the hinder border of the tooth is concave. as has a rather diminished posterior tubercle (compared with Her- pestes) ; so that the large inner cusp is placed rather more towards the middle of the tooth, the length of which is rather less in proportion to its breadth. The inner cusp also descends as much as do the outer ones; and the outer middle cusp scarcely descends below the anterior outer cusp. P23 and © are as in Herpestes. ee . . : ; : —— is wanting. j,-5 is large, with five cusps. In ,,; the anterior cusp has become more decidedly internal, so that we have an external cusp opposite the internal one. There is a moderate talon. jz has one very large cusp, in front of which may be a well-developed or a minute accessory cusp, while behind it there is a well-developed cusp, which has a more or less marked talon or minute accessory cusp at its base. 3 and 5 are as in Herpestes. pr isabsent. In C. fasciatus, M-? is rather smaller in proportion to a and ae and ae are larger. In a specimen in the British Museum, labelled Mungos gambianus (No. 55. 12. 24. 22 6), eee and ™:" are very narrow antero-posteriorly. In another skull, labelled M. zebra (No. 75. 2. 24. 18), there is a minute M:? on each side, which measures 0!'*] antero-posteriorly and 0''-25 transversely. The dimensions of the skins seen by me are as follows :—of C. obseurus, head and body about 37”, of tail 17’; of C. fasciatus, head and body about 45'S, of tail about 23”. 1882.] PRUF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 183 The anus opens into the middle of a very large and deep fossa, into which several pairs of anal glands also open. The structure of these parts is described by M. Chatin as they exist in both species. The condition found in C. obscurus is described by him (in a paper entitled “Recherches pour servir 4 l’histoire anatomique des glandes odorantes chez quelques Mammifcres”’) in a_ periodical named ‘Comp. Rendu Assoe. frangaise,’ vol. i. (1872), p. 557. The parts of C. fasciatus are described and figured by him (under the name Herpestes fasciatus) in the Ann. des Se. Nat. vol. xix. (5th series), 1874, p. 89, figs. 29-33, and 38. No less than five pairs of glands are arranged about the anus, and pour their secretion into the capacious and naked anal pouch. C. fasciatus is described and figured in Buffon, vol. siii. p. 150, 119. ; Except as above indicated, the characters of Crossarchus are (so far as I know) those of Herpestes. The Suricate was formed into the genus Suricata by Desmarest (N. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. xxiv. p. 16, 1804), and was called Ryzena by Illiger (Prodromus, p. 134). It is figured and described by Buffon and Daubenton (H. Nat. vol. xiii. p. 72, pl. 8). Its anatomy has also been described by Hunter (‘ Essays and Observations,’ vol. ii. p. 55) and by Prof. Owen (P. Z. 8. 1830, pp. 39, 51). The animal is from South Africa, and is called ‘* Meer Kat” at the Cape. The hair is annulated, and so marked as to form trans- verse bands across the loins. The ears are very short. The tarsus is hairy. There is no pollex or hallux, there being mere rudiments of the first metacarpal and the first metatarsal beneath the skin. The nose is pointed, rather elongated and movable, and has no median groove on its underside. Length of head and body 38'"8, of tail 21". The skull is relatively very broad; especially behind, facial portion short. The basis cranii shows the Herpestiform cha- racter of the bulla carried to a yet more exaggerated degree than in Crossarchus ; but it is flattened beneath, and the hinder chamber does not geuerally depend below the anterior chamber. The opening of the external auditory meatus is small and triangular ; and its anterior margin projects most. Prof. Flower has pointed out (P. Z. S. 1869, p. 20) that the much elongated meatus is fissured along the whole extent of its floor. The anterior chamber of the bulla is very prominent ; and the opening between the two chambers is rather larger than heretofore. There is a distinct but short alisphenoid canal. There are long postorbital processes which enclose the orbits; but the cranium is very little pinched in behind them. The cranial ridges are moderate. The condyloid foramen may or may not be concealed. The paroccipital process is flattened, and does not depend. The mastoid is very marked, more so relatively than even in Nandinia. The carotid canal commences towards the hinder end of the auditory bulla. There is a conspicuous carotid foramen in the basis cranii on either side; and it is almost, if not quite, surrounded by the sphenoid. 184 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, The palate is but moderately prolonged behind the last molars. The angle of the mandible is somewhat everted, 7. e. bent in the opposite way to that in which it is bent in Marsupials. The skull of the Suricate is figured by De Blainville (Ostéog., Viverra) on plate 5, its appendicular skeleton on plates 10 and 11, and its dentition (including the milk-teeth) on plate 12. The teeth are also figured in F. Cuvier’s ‘ Dents des Mammiféres,’ plate 35. I find “2 and “:" to be very much extended transversely, but to be very slightly trihedral in horizontal section. P* is also much ex- tended transversely. M:? is shaped very much as in Crossarchus, Fig. 13. Half basis cranii (A) and half mandible (B) of Suricata. c, carotid foramen ; f, fissure in floor of auditory meatus. while “=! differs in having its hinder margin hardly, or not at all, concave. *-* has its inner tubercle still larger than in Crossarchus ; and it descends quite as much as does the middle one of the three outer cusps, which very little exceeds in size the other two outer f 2 : ones. ** and = are larger and stronger than in Orossarchus ; and well . . . F1 is again absent. arp 18 much as in Crossarchus, but smaller. aca 3S higher and antero-posteriorly shorter; its talon bears two cusps side by side, or three cusps in a semicircle; its anterior part bears two large cusps side by side. The postero-internal cusp of the front part of this tooth of Crossarchus has here become rudimentary. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 185 p-q has become much raised anteriorly ; its talon is large, while the anterior cusp of the same tooth in Crossarchus here aborts. jx and P.3 py are very long and strong. 5 is absent. The anus opens into the middle of a very deep fossa, deeper than that of Bdeogale, and like that of Crossarchus. There is also a curious scrotum-like prominence between the vagina and the anus. I have not met with any description of the anal glands other than that of Daubenton, who says':—“ Il se trouvoit de chaque cété de l’anus une poche qui avoit quatre lignes et demi de longueur, et trois lignes et demie de largeur, et trois lignes d’epaisseur; le tuyau excrétoire de chacune de ces poches aboutissoit au dedans de Panus.” I strongly suspect, from the form of the anal pouch, that there are here, as in Crossarchus, several pairs of anal glands. The claws of the manus of Suricata are enormously elongated (cf. fig. 14, u, p. 192). Those of the pes are much less so, but still are long. Except as above indicated, the characters of this genus agree with those of Herpestes; and with it closes the list of the genera of the subfamily Herpestine. That subfamily is divisible in various ways, according to the number of digits, the number of teeth, the presence or absence of a subnasal groove, and the number of anal glands, as follows :— Section A. Anal glands a single pair....Herpestes, Helogale, Cynictis?, Rhino- gale? » B. Anal glands in several pairs .. Crossarchus, Suricata, Bdeogale® Or, Section A. Toes5—5............ Herpestes, Helogale, Ethinogule, Cros- sarchus. ee OCS ac tape ys CHICHS. eG.) Boer 4 — Sees MME es Bdeogale, Suricata. Or, Section A. A subnasal groove ...... Herpestes, Helogale, Cynictis, Bdeogale. » 3B. No subnasal groove......2hinogale, Crossar- chus, Suricata. Or, Section A. Pm. ; Ache -+++-...Herpestes (generally), Cynictis, Bdeogale. PE Ba :, ;, no diastema ....Helogale, Crossarchus, Suricata. a C. Pint? 4: ovale wid . saeu PRhinogale, The characters of the subfamily Herpestine will be as follows :— (1) Claws not strongly curved and not retractile, but pointed and very long. (2) Orbits sometimes enclosed by bone. 1 Buffon’s Hist. Nat. vol. xiii. p. 80, 2 Probably an abnormalit . 186 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, (3) Hinder chamber of auditory bulla always everted. (4) Anterior margin of opening of external auditory meatus more projecting than the posterior margin. (5) Floor of external meatus or adjacent part of bulla with a fora- men and fissure in a deep pit. (6) Angle of mandible sometimes everted. (7) Mastoid always prominent. (&) Paroccipital processes depending below bulla. (9) Aperture of auditory meatus small and triangular. (10) Alisphenoid canal always very short. (11) Carotid artery perforating or notching tke sphenoid, there being a conspicuous carotid foramen in the basis cranii. (12) Never any prescrotal glands’. (13) Anus very generally not opening on the surface of the body, but in a sac or cutaneous invagination. (14) Anal glands sometimes in several pairs. (15) A supracondyloid foramen to humerus. (16) An alisphenoid canal, in rare instances not completely enclosed by bone, but then its place indicated by bony processes. (17) Pollex alone, or both pollex and hallux sometimes absent. (18) Caecum always present, but small or moderately long. (19) Tarsus and metatarsus hairy or bald. A very different animal from any hitherto here reviewed is that to which the generic name Galidictis was given in 1837 by Isid. Geoff. St.- Hilaire’, and again by him in the Magasin de Zool. 1839— 1841, where the external form and skull, including the basis cranii, are well represented, and a full description given in a long note beginning on page 32. It is also the A/ustela striata of Geoffroy St.-Hilaire (Cat. des Mamm. p. 98), and the Putorius striatus of Cuvier (Régne &c. 2nd edit. p. 144). The external form has been figured in our P. Z. 8., 1848, pl. 1, with a short description and notes as to habits on page 21. The skull is also given by De Blainville (Ostéog., Viverras) on pl. 5, and the dentition on pl. 12, under the name Mangusta (Galictis) striata. ‘There are two species, both from Madagascar—one the original G. striata of Isid. G. St.-Hiliare, and the other G. vittata, described and figured by Gray (P. Z.S. 1848, p- 21, pl. 1) the skin and the (immature) skull of which are in the national collection, where are also four skins and two skulls of the former species. The length of the head and body of the latter is about 35":5, of the tail 33". In each species the body bears longitudinal dark stripes on a lighter ground. ‘The claws are long, but considerably curved (cf. fig. 14, 1, p. 192). The claw of the pollex reaches to the end of the proximal phalanx of the index, and that of the fifth digit to the end of the proximal phalanx of the fourth digit, which is slightly longer than the index, the median being the longest. The claw of the hallux reaches nearly tothe end of the proximal phalanx of the index, and that of the fifth digit of the pes nearly to the ' The nature of the prominence in Suricata has to be seen. 2 Comptes Rendus, Zud semestre de 1887, p. 578. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE EZLUROIDEA. 187 end of the second phalanx of the fourth digit, which is longer than the index and nearly equals the medius in length. The snout is very pointed in G. vettata, but does not appear to be so much so in G. striata. In both, the tail has long hairs and the muzzle is medianly grooved beneath; the tarsus is more or less completely bald. The claws are slightly more curved than in the Herpestine. As to the skull, the auditory bulla is formed on the Herpestine type, and has a partition between its chambers, with a considerable aperture for intercommunication. There is a well-developed ptery- goid fossa. The external opening of the auditory meatus is small and slightly oval, its anterior margin being produced outwards, but hardly more than is its posterior margin. The postorbital processes are only moderately developed, and do not even nearly meet ; the skull is not much pinched in behind them. The paroccipital does not depend ; and the mastoid is much as in Herpestes, as also is the carotid canal. There is no alisphenoid canal ; and the foramen ovale is very near that for the entrance within the cranium of the internal carotid, which is pretty conspicuous. There is no fissure or foramen in the floor of the auditory meatus ; but there is a marked depression where such a foramen is found in Herpestes. The palate is but little prolonged behind the molars; but this region is concave, each side of it sloping into a median depression, the cranium being turned with its base upwards. The palatine foramina are in the anterior part of the palate, which is remarkably broad. The symphysis of the mandible is extremely long, viz. 1''-7, the length of the skull being 6'-2. The zygomata are arched strongly outwards. In the dentition the most noteworthy point is the large size of the canines, and especially the length, strong curvature, and stoutness of the lower ones, each having a marked prominence at the posterior part of the base of its crown. The upper outer incisors also prepou- derate greatly over the inner ones. The molars and premolars are formed on the Herpestine type; but 2 are absent, and P-? is close Pp yP P.1 to the canine and small, though with two roots. P:-4 is very sectorial ; and the talon of 5; is small. The inner condyle of the humerus is imperforate. I can find no record of the condition of the anus, or of the number of anal glands, neither any note as to prescrotal glands. I, however, anticipate that the latter are wanting, that there is but a single pair of anal glands, and that the anus opens on the surface of the body, and not into a pouch. Galidictis agrees, so far as I know, with Viverra in the charac- ters before enumerated, save as regards nos. 7, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 23, 24, 29, 31, 32, 35, 36, 37, 38, 42, 43, and 53. Another genus instituted by Isidore Geoffroy St.-Hilaire for three Viverrine animals from Madagascar, is the genus Galidia (Compt. Rendus, 1857, p. 580, and Mag. de Zool. 1839, pls. 14-17). The type of the genus must be taken to be that first described, namely G. elegans. The skull and dentition of this species are given by De Blainville (Viverras), plate 6. 188 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, G. elegans is represented in the British Museum by skins and skulls ; and there is a skeleton in the Royal College of Surgeons. The fur is of one colour, save that the tail is ringed with black, the hair notannulated. ‘The length of the head and body is about 45'''2, and that of the tailis 30'"5. The muzzle seems rather obtuse. The claws are long, but considerablycurved, The tarsus and meta- tarsus are covered beneath with sparse short hairs, or are,more or less inclined to be bald, but are not so as in Galidictis. The skull is very like that of Galidictis; but the muzzle and palate are narrower relatively, and the mandibular symphysis is much shorter. There is, again, no alisphenoid canal. The condyloid foramen is exposed. The palate is flat, and not concave posteriorly as in Galidictis. The zygomata are not quite so much arched out- wards. The auditory opening is a more elongated oval. In other respects the skull is as in Galidictis. As to the dentition, it is quite like that of Galidictis, save that the canines are smaller, especially the lower ones, the external inci- sors less preponderating. *~* is smaller relatively. ™“? may be quite small and placed within the hinder part of “?", The preparaticn No. 2147 B in the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons shows that there is a single pair of rather large anal glands ; aud the anus does not seem to open into any cutaneous de- pression. The two other species described by Isid. G. St.-Hilaire differ con- siderably from G. elegans, as that author himself pointed out, and as has been more decidedly indicated by Dr. F. A. Jentink”. I have not had any opportunity of examining G. concolor ; but, on account of its declared resemblance to G. olivacea* (which is represented by skins, skulls, and a skeleton in the British Museum), it must be separated generically from G. elegans if G. olivacea is to be so sepa- rated. Now two courses seem to me feasible: one is to institute a new genus for the species olivacea and concolor; and the other is to unite Galidia and Galidictis in a single genus. But the differ- ences between the last-named genus and G. elegans seem to me to be as great as those which separate Cyne@lurus from Felis; and as G. olivacea (and, as I infer, concolor) seems to me to differ as much from G. elegans as does this last from Galidictis, the more reason- able course seems to me to be to separate them, which I now accord- ingly propose to do under the generic name Hemigalidia. In external characters Hemigalidia differs from Galidia in the non-annulation of the tail, in the more pointed muzzle, and especially in the less arched (more Herpestine and less Viverrine) form of its claws (cf. fig. 14, 3 and x, p. 192). In the skull the bulla is rather more decidedly Herpestiform than in Galidia. The carotid foramen (for the entrance of the carotid artery) is more conspicuous ; the hind part of the palate is not so 1 Asin the specimens in the Roy. Coll. of Surg. museum. ° See ‘ Notes from the Leyden Museum,’ yol. i. p. 181. 3 On some notes as to the habits of these forms, see Pollen’s ‘Faune de Madagascar’ (1868), p. 28. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ELUROIDEA. 189 uniformly horizontal; the anterior lip of the external auditory Opening is more prominent; and the zygomata are much less arched outwards. pe are both relatively much larger. ™“~ is also large relatively, while a *~* is developed; 7-4 has a larger internal tubercle ; 5 is also relatively larger. Dr. Jentink tells us that the teeth of concolor are quite like those of olivacea. It appears that itis a species of this genus which is the Vansire of Buffon (Hist. Nat. xiii. p. 167, pl. 21), as had it been Galidia the black-ringed tail would surely have been indicated. These three genera seem to me to forma section apart, somewhat intermediate between the Viverrine and the Herpestine sections, though (as before said) I regard them as more nearly allied to the latter than to the former. To the characters to be derived from digits, claws, skulls, teeth, colour, and habitat may be added that of the absence of an internal condyloid canal to the humerus. I propose then (as I before said) to separate this section as a subfamily under the name Galidictine. The characters of the Galidictine will be as follows :— -(1) Claws not strongly curved and retractile, but yet sometimes more Viverrine than Herpestine. (2) Orbits never enclosed by bone. (3) Hinder chamber of auditory bulla rather crested. (4) Anterior and posterior margins of auditory opening about equally prominent, in the anterior one slightly more so. (5) Floor of anterior part of bulla not perforated or fissured, but deeply pitted. (6) Angle of mandible not everted. (7) Mastoid prominent. (8) Paroccipital processes not depending. (9) Aperture of auditory meatus small and oval. (10) No alisphenoid canal. (11) Carotid artery passing through a conspicuous foramen in the basis cranii. (12) No prescrotal glands. (13) Anus opening on the surface of the body, and not into a cutaneous invagination (?) (14) One pair of anal glands. (15) No supracondyloid foramen to humerus. (16) No bony processes indicate the place of an alisphenoid canal. (17) Pollex and hallux both present. (18) Czecum present, moderately long. (19) Tarsus and metatarsus hairy or bald. A more anomalous form of the Viverrine family is that which has been taken to constitute the genus Hupleres by its describer Doyére’, who figured the animal and its (immature) skull. The immature skull has been also fully fignred by De Blainville2, with the skeleton of the hind leg and foot and the milk-dentition. The ? Ann. Se. Nat. 1835, iv. p. 281, pl. 18. 2 Ostéog., Viverras, pls. 8, 11, and 12, 190 PROF, ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, external form and part of the skull of an adult have been figured by Dr. Gray from a specimen now in the national collection’; and the whole adult skeleton, skull (though not the basis cranii), and dentition have been described and figured by Paul Gervais?. It has been abundantly shown that this animal is not, as was at first supposed, an Insectivore, but really a Viverrine Carnivore. Externally Hupleres is remarkable for its small head, very long, slender, and pointed snout ; but its dentition is the most anomalous part of its organization so far as yet known. The body is clothed with woolly annulated fur of a uniform general olive tint above, minutely punctulated with yellow. Tt appears, from Doyére, that the young has black bands across the shoulders, which are wanting in the adult. The ears are large; the pollex and hallux are well developed ; the tail is rather short, but bushy ; the feet are very slender; the tarsus and metatarsus are covered with short hair beneath. The length of the head and body is about 52", that of the tail 17'-7. The nose and upper lip have a median groove beneath. The claws are elongated and Herpestiform (ef. fig. 14, L, p- 192). There are two skins, several skulls, and one good skeleton in the British Museum ; and there is a good skeleton in that of the College of Surgeons. The skull is remarkable for its extraordinary length and slender- ness. The shape of the auditory bulla is intermediate between that of the Herpestine and that of the Viverrine sectious of the Viverride: its most prominent portion is at its postero-external part ; and so far it inclines towards Herpestes. There is no pterygoid fossa. The opening of the external auditory meatus is generally rather small and more or less oval ; it is the hinder portion of its margin which projects slightly the more. There is no fissure or foramen in the floor of the auditory meatus ; nor is there a depression in the adjacent part of the bulla as in Galidia and Hemigalidia. The anterior part of the bulla, however, is well marked off by a groove from the pos- terior part. There is no alisphenoid canal, nor any postorbital processes. Cranial ridges are very faintly marked, save the lamb- doidal ridge. The paroccipital is long, but does not depend. The mastoid is not more prominent than in Genetta. The condyloid foramen is exposed. ‘The carotid canal is as in Herpestes; and the artery enters the cranial cavity through a foramen or deep notch in the sphenoid. The zygomata are very slender; and there is a very small glenoid cavity and postglenoid process. The palate is very little prolonged behind the last molars. There is a very conspicuous and exceptional prominence in the middle occipital region to shelter the middle part of the cerebellum. The dentition is especially remarkable for the small size of the canines, the canine-like character of the anterior premolars, the resem blance of the true molars to the premolars, and the wide diastemata between the three most anterior premolars both above and below. 1 Pp. Z. 8. 1870, p. 824, pl. 51. ? Journal de Zoologie, vol. iii. (1874), p. 257. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 191 The outermost upper incisor is caniniform, and nearly as large as is the adjacent canine. P-1 is alittle separate from and a little larger than the canine, which it closely resembles. *? is also caniniform, with a talon: it is separated by a long diastema from Pl and another about as long separates it from P53 F:3 is a narrow, antero- posteriorly elongated tooth, with a conical backwardly-directed middle cusp, and with a small anterior cusp and a larger posterior one, at the base of the middle cusp. 3, &*, ** and M2 all join without diastemata. <4 has one large median cusp, with one small anterior and one rather large posterior cusp, and with a small internal cusp placed opposite the junction of the anterior and middle cusps. ™-" has two equal-sized outer cusps, and an inner cusp (larger than that of **) opposite their junction. The anterior outer cusp answers to the anterior outer one of **. ™“-! shows also a minute rudiment of a cusp answering to the postero-outer one of Sl ee is very similar to M:1. but its inner cusp is smaller, and placed uppo- site to the more anterior of the two outer cusps. The outermost lower incisor has the postero-outer angle of its crown slightly produced. The canine is like it, save that this angle is more produced. The teeth 5 poy ppp and pare all separated by diastemata (of which that between 5-5 and 5-; is the longest), while retires and “== adjoin the one to the other. py 1S caniniform, Poy 18 also caniniform, with the addition of a minute anterior cusp and a slight talon. 5-3 has a talon which develops two small cusps, while the anterior cusp is more developed than in p3. 4 is like ;-j, with all its cusps more developed save the principal cusp. 5; has three external cusps (whereof the posterior cusp is the smallest), with an internal cusp placed opposite to the hinder part of the middle outer cusp. 5,5 18 similar to x, 4, save that the postero-external cusp is relatively larger and subdivided, and that the internal cusp is connected with it and with the antero-external cusp by ridges. Here 5, not only equals, but (at least sometimes) even exceeds 5,5 in Size. In the milk-dentition (judging from De Blainville’s figure) 2-3 and 2:4 may resemble Ab ang ee ; but pg and pq are unlike any of the permanent teeth, since they seem each to consist of two nearly equally developed external cusps, and they are much more sec- terial in character than are the teeth which succeed them, whether from below or from behind. In a word, the milk-dentition is more carnivorous and less insectivorous than are the permanent teeth. Both the internal condyle and olecranal fossa of the humerus are perforated. ‘There are no signs of scent-glands. I can find no record of the anatomy of its soft parts. It appears to me that, of all other Viverride, Eupleres comes nearest 192 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, to the genus Hemigalidia; but the presence of the intercondyloid canal of the humerus and the very exceptional dentition—exceptional not only amongst the Viverride, but amongst all Carnivora—in- clines me to consider it the type of a subfamily, the Huplerine. = Claws of Viverride, drawn to the same scale. A. Genetta senegalensis. B. Paradoxurus. ©. Arctictis. D. Hemigalea. E. Cynogale. F. Cryptoprocta. G. Herpestes. H. Suricata. I. Galidictis striata. J. Galidia elegans, K. Hemigalidia olivacea. LL. Eupleres. The characters of that subfamily will be :— (1) Claws herpestiform. (2) No postorbital processes. (3) Hinder chamber of bulla not distinctly everted. (4) Hinder margin of auditory opening the more projecting. (5) Floor of anterior part of auditory bulla not fissured, or per- forated, or deeply pitted. (6) Angle of mandible not everted. (7) Mastoid not prominent. (8) Parocciptal processes not depending. (9) Aperture of auditory meatus small and more or less oval. (10) No alisphenoid canal. (11) Carotid artery passing through a conspicuous foramen in the basis cranii. (12) No prescrotal glands (?) (13) Anus opening on surface of body (?) (14) One pair of anal glands (?) (15) A supracondyloid foramen to humerus. (16) No bony processes indicate the place of an alisphenoid canal. (17) Pollex and hallux both present. (18) Czecum (?) (19) Tarsus and metatarsus clothed with short hair. (20) Nose and upper lip medianly grooved. 882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE HLUROIDEA. 193 (21) Snout very slender. (22) Zygomata very slender. (23) Median cerebellar prominence in skull very marked. (24) Canines very small. ‘Aceh Lega! 72 3 (25) Wide diastemata between 5 , 5-3 5-5: (26) x : a3 very like ? ; a in shape. By characters 21-26 the Huplerine differ from all the other Viverride. In reviewing the Viverride so far, we have found what seem to be curious modifications of one and another section of the family. Thus, in Cynogale we seem to have a Paradoxure specially adapted for an aquatic and fish-catching life—a sort of Viverrine Otter with a singular superficial resemblance to Potamogale. In Arctictis, on the other hand, we have a Paradoxure specially arboreal, and with teeth so little carnivorous that, but for Arctogale, we might hesitate to assign it a close connexion with Paradoxurus. Both are Asiatic forms; and Asia is the special home of the Viverrine subfamily of Viverrid . The special home of the Herpestine subfamily is Africa. Of the Viverrine animals of Madagascar yet noticed, we have the Fossa and Rasse as examples of the Viverrine ; and we have the singular little intermediate group of Galidictine and the very excep- tional Euplerine. While the most carnivorous Viverrine yet here considered (Nandinia) is African, the most insectivorous is from Madagascar, where we might expect to find the most anomalous Mammalian forms. But if I am right ina suspicion I have already expressed, Madagascar is yet more remarkable as presenting the most exceptional development of the Herpestine root of the Viver- ride ; for it seems to me by no means impossible that Cryptoprocta may be a very diverging root-form more or less allied to Crossar- chus and Herpestes. My examination of the skeleton of Cryptoprocta has left no doubt upon my mind that, so far as it is concerned, it is an altogether Viverrine, and not at all a Feline, animal. I cannot, therefore, see my way at present to regarding it as the type of a distinct family, although when its soft parts have been described it may turn, out to merit that distinction. Whatever its ancestral affinities may have been, it has clearly attained the rank of a subfamily; and at first I was inclined to regard it (as had been suggested by P. Gervais’) as a form allied to, and a sort of exaggeration of, the African genus Vandinia; but the only portion of its visceral anatomy yet known to me seems to point to another affinity, namely to that I have just indicated. It will, I suspect, be found to have Cowper’s glands, a Viverrine prostate gland, and a Viverrine brain, but no scent-gland—no pouch or glandular grooves just behind the genital aperture. The situation of its anal opening in the midst of a fossa, as described by Mr. Bennett*, is unlike the Viverrine and Galidic- 1 Hist. Nat. des Mammif. vol. ii. p. 41. ? Trans. Zool. Soe. vol. i. p. 137. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XIII. 13 194 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, tine; but is a character which is commonly present in the Herpes- tine. 'The remarkable os penis of Cryptoprocta is certainly a very distinctive character ; but the generative apparatus of Hyena crocuta is far more so, and no one would on that account raise that animal to the rank of even a subfamily. Moreover it is interesting to note that while the os penis is so small and so often absent in the Viver- ring, “il n’en est pas de méme dans les Mangoustes; il y est méme assez développé”’'—an assertion confirmed by the figures on De Blainville’s plate 9: it is equally developed in Herpestes palu- dinosus. 'The claws are strongly arched (cf. fig. 14 F, p. 192). As regards the teeth of Oryptoprocta, they are, as every one knows, extremely feline; but the longer I live, the more convinced am I that dental characters are valueless as indices of affinity, save as existing in closely allied forms—the different species of one genus. Amongst the Viverride we have seen how little the dental peculia- rities of Arctogale, Arctictis, and Cynogale tell against the weight of other characters; the exceptional teeth of Galo, amongst the Muste- lide, teach the same lesson; and, as I shall shortly endeavour to point out, what I believe to be the affinities of Proteles to Hyena and of Hyena to Herpestes very strongly reinforce it. Oryptoprocta, when first described (Trans. Zool. Soe. i. p. 137, plate 21), was ranked by Mr. Bennett, its describer, amongst the Viverride. De Blainville, in recognizing this affinity as especially justified by the milk-dentition, regarded it as especially allied to Crossarchus. He has figured the young skull and the milk- dentition’. The osteology of Cryptoprocta has been carefully described and figured by Alphonse Milne-Edwards and Alfred Grandidier in the Ann. des Sc. Nat. 1867, p. 314, pls. 7-10. The animal has also been described, and various details as to its habits given, by Messrs. Pollen and Van Dam in their ‘ Faune de Madagascar’ (1868), p. 13. Skeletons and two skins exist in the British Museum ; and there is a skeleton in that of the Royal College of Surgeons. The length of the head and body of the largest specimen in the British Museum is about 81''°3, that of the tail 73"°7._ The body is of one colour. The claws are sharp, very curved, and semicontractile; the tarsus and metatarsus is naked. The skull has an auditory bulla, which is neither distinctly Her- pestine nor Viverrine; it is more prominent than in Paradoxurus. The alisphenoid canal is constant®. The pterygoid fossa is very small. The external opening of the auditory meatus is rounded and of moderate size. The postorbital processes of the frontal are rather small, and very distant from the exceedingly small malar processes. The skull is but little pinched in behind the orbits. The condyloid foramen is more or less concealed. The cranial ridges are rather strongly developed. The paroccipital process is long, but not de- pending. The mastoid is well marked, and more developed than in 1 De Blainville, ‘ Ostéographie,’ Viverra, p. 39. 2 Ostéog. Viverras, pls. 6 & 12. 5 Present in all the specimens I have examined. 1882.] PROF, ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 195 the Civets. The carotid canal is as in Herpestes; and the artery enters the cranium by a well-marked foramen in the basis cranil. There is no foramen, fissure, or fossa on the floor of the auditory meatus. The palate is considerably prolonged behind the last molars. The angle of the mandible is rather short. Fig. 15. Soles of the paws of Cryptoprocta (after Alphonse Milne-Edwards). a. Manus; 5. Pes. The teeth of Oryptoprocta are most feline. ¥:* more resembles the corresponding tooth of Felis than of Viverra; but “ is elon- gated transversely as in Hyena striata, and more so relatively than in the Cats. *+* is cat-like, save that the talon is perhaps rather larger. P.4 is also very feline. FP? is much larger than in the Cat, and two-rooted. There may beasmall*. In the lower jaw aaa is like the last, save that it has a talon. 5; is like the Cat’s; but its talon is a little larger. 5— is larger relatively than in the Cat. pa has two roots. In the miik-dentition, 2~* is very much larger relatively than is at PS (agin the Cat) has its posterior cusp less developed than in the permanent upper sectorial, and its internal cusp more poste- rior. The lower deciduous sectorial 5 has a smaller anterior cusp, and a more exterior talon than has the permanent sectorial. This is as in the Cat; though the difference as to the development of the talon between the deciduous and the permanent sectorial is less in Cryptoprocta. 13* 196 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, The stomach! is much bent on itself, but has a considerable cardiac pouch. The small intestines are 4 feet 3 inches long; the large intestine is 54 inches, and the cecum 14 inch. The latter narrows gradually to its extremity. There is a very large supracondyloid foramen, and a very large bone to the penis. The characters of the subfamily Oryptoproctine will then be as follows :— (1) Claws very curved, sharp, and semiretractile. (2) Postorbital processes long, but not enclosing orbits. (3) Hinder chamber of bulla not distinctly everted. (4) Hinder margin of auditory opening rather the more projecting. (5) Floor of anterior part of bulla not fissured or pitted. (6) Angle of mandible not everted. (7) Mastoid rather prominent. (8) Paroccipital processes not depending. (9) Aperture of auditory meatus rounded, of moderate size. (10) An alisphenoid canal. (11) Carotid artery not perforating the basis cranii conspicuously. (12) No prescrotal glands ? (13) Anus opening into a sac. (14) One pair of anal glands ? (15) A very large supracondyloid foramen to humerus. (16) Pollex and hallux both present. (17) Cecum moderate. (18) Tarsus and metatarsus bald. (19) Nose and upper lip medianly grooved. (20) Dentition very feline, save that there is a double-rooted ae (21) Tail long. ; (22) Os penis very large. With Cryptoprocta ends the list of genera which I am disposed to class in the family Viverride, following, as I do, Mr. Turner and Professor Flower in ranking the Hyznas as a group of proximately coordinate value with the Feline and Viverrine families. Nevertheless I believe that the Hyenide are closely allied to the Herpestine—so much so that, had the Madagascar Viverrines no existence, I should feel a certain temptation to exclude the Ichneu- mons and their allies from the Viverrid@, and make of them a family Herpestide, under which the Hyzenas could then be grouped. As it is, however, the plan I have adopted seems to me to be perhaps best calculated to express the affinities of the existing luroidea. The characters of the entire family Viverride, thus understood, may be expressed as follows :— (1) There may or may not bea pollex ; but in the large majority of species there is one. (2) There may or may not bea hallux ; but in the large majority of species there is one. (3) The ungual phalanges may or may not be strongly arched ; but ' Bennett, /. c. p. 189. 1882.] PROF. sT.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE EZLUROIDEA. 197 there is not so wide a lamina of bone to shelter the base of the claw as in the Felide. (4) The claws may be considerably arched, or they may be long and very slightly so. They are hardly ever (not except perhaps in Prionodon and Poiana) completely retractile, and often are not at all so. (5) The auditory bulla (except in Nandinia) is ossified, much in- fated, and shows externally that it consists of two chambers. (6) The bulla is not more prominent towards its inner than towards its hinder border. (7) There is an almost complete bony septum between the two chambers of the bulla, which may or may not be one behind the other. (8) The bony meatus auditorius is almost always short, and may have its anterior, posterior, or inferior margin most project- ing ; and it may be imperfectly ossified below. (9) There is a carotid foramen, or two carotid foramina, visible on each side of the basis cranii. (10) There is (except often in /% tverricula) an alisphenoid canal. (11) esi palatine foramina are situated in the anterior half of the palate. Gay = "is generally and 5 constantly developed. (13) There is always an mm and generally an “?, (14) **7 is always present, generally large. (15) The antero-external cusp of + is generally very small. (16) 57, has almost always a considerable talon. (17) The outer incisors may greatly exceed the middle ones in size. (18) The humerus sometimes wants the supracondyloid foramen. (19) The bone of the penis is small, save in Cryptoprocta. (20) The ears are not very long, erect, and pointed. (21) The tarsus and metatarsus are very often bald. (22) One plantar pad (small or large), and one beneath each digit. (23) Anus opening on the surface or in the middle of a saccular cutaneous invagination. (24) Anal glands from one to five pairs ; generally one pair. (25) Very often prescrotal scent-glands. (26) Caecum generally present and small or moderate, but occa- sionally absent. (27) No very hard, horny, sharp-pointed, conical papille on the dorsum of the tongue. (28) Hippocampal gyrus completely separated from that anterior internal portion of the superior lateral gyrus which is behind the crucial sulcus, by the continuation forwards of the calloso- marginal sulcus to join the crucial sulcus. (29) The coronoid process of the mandible is almost, if not quite, always less lofty relatively, and less backwardly produced than in the Felide. 198 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, (30) The proportional length of the limbs to the body is shorter than even in F’ eyra. ’ (31) The muzzle is large in proportion to the cranium. (32) The dentition may or may not be markedly sectorial. (33) The tail is almost always long, but may be short (Cynogale); but it is never so rudimentary as in the Lynxes. (34) Clitoris never traversed by urogenital canal. (35) Dorsal vertebree never more than fourteen. : (36) Postorbital processes generally developed, rarely enclosing orbit posteriorly. (37) Paroccipital processes depending or not. (38) Mastoid prominent or not. (39) There may be a conspicuous carotid foramen (deeply notching the sphenoid) in the basis cranii, for the entrance of the carotid into the cranial cavity. (40) Nose and upper lip generally medianly grooved, but not always so. (41) Palate not much, moderately, or much prolonged behind molars. (42) Pterygoid fossa present or absent. (43) Size of species generally moderate or small, sometimes very small—the smallest of the Aluroidea. The Hyznas form three well-marked species, whereof one (cro- cuta) is so much more distinct from its geographical ally (1. brunnea) than is the latter from the third form, H. striata, that I think it should rank asa distinct genus. 4H. striata is found in India, Persia, Asia Minor, and North Africa. The other two Hyzenas are South-African only. The anatomy of the genus (besides the notices in Cuvier and Meckel) has been given in part by Hunter (‘ Essays and Observations,’ vol. ii. p. 57), by Cuvier and Daubenton (Hist. Nat. ix. p. 268, pls. 25-30), by Dr. Murie (Trans. Zool. Soe. vol. vii. p. 503, pl. 63), and by Dr. Watson (P. Z. S. 1877, p. 369, pls. 40 & 41; P.Z.S. 1878, p. 416, pls. 24 & 25; and P. Z.S. 1879, p. 79, pls. 5 & 6). In Hyena the muzzle is medianly grooved beneath. The hair is harsh and long, and forms a sort of mane along the middle of the back. There are but five digits either in front or behind. The legs are rather long, behind as well as in front. The tarsus and metatarsus are both hairy. Each foot has a single palmar or plantar naked pad, and one such pad to each toe. The claws are blunt and non- retractile, rather long, but not as we find them in the Herpestine. The body is either greyish or brownish, with blackish bands extend- ing vertically on each side of the body and horizontally on the limbs, or is more or less uniformly brownish. The ears are erect and very long and pointed, such as exist in none of the Felide or Viverride. There is an anal pouch, with two (H. striata) or three! (H. brunnea) pairs of anal glands on each side of the rectum ; and in one, if not ' Dr. Murie, /. c. p. 506. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 199 in both species, there is a transverse band of isolated follicles at the bottom of the anal pouch. The penis is long and pendulous, and entirely devoid of any bone. There are fifteen dorsal vertebre. The cranium of Hyena differs from every Viverrine cranium by its enormous sagittal and lambdoidal ridges, and strong and greatly arched zygomata. The general type of its construction is Viverrine, though there is no alisphenoid canal or septum between the anterior and posterior portions of the auditory bulla. As to the first point, we have seen that the canal is generally wanting in Viverricula, and constantly so in the Galidictine and Eupleres. As to the auditory bulla, it is interesting to note that the aperture between the chambers is enlarged in the Herpestine (which by their circumanal pouch resemble the Hyenide) ; and though there is no septum, yet I have detected in both species of Hyena, inside the auditory bulla, two osseous ridges or laminze, which if further developed would divide off a small anterior chamber from the much larger and externally more prominent posterior portion. The anterior portion of the margin of the external opening of the auditory meatus (which has no fissure or foramen in its floor) is much more produced than any other part—an exaggeration of a character we have already seen in the Herpestine. There isno pterygoid fossa. The postorbital processes are short and blunt, and widely separated from the malar processes. The skull is not pinched in behind them. The condyloid foramen is concealed. The paroccipital is long and depending. The mastoid is rather prominent. ‘The carotid canal is much more Viverrine than Feline : its posterior opening is always larger, and generally situated much more anteriorly than in the Felide, and more approaching its situa- tion in the Viverrine. There is no carotid foramen in the sphe- noid; but it enters the cranium (beside the hinder end of the sella turcica) through the foramen lacerum, and covered in by the auditory bulla. The palate is much prolonged behind the last molars. The lower border of the mandible is much curved ; the angle is flattened along its inferior border, and is pressed up nearer to the condyle than in Felis or in any other #luroid I have seen—Nandinia (which also has rather strongly developed cranial ridges) being most like it in this respect, except, of course, Crocuta and Proteles. The teeth of Hyena’ are so well known that I hesitate to re- describe them ; but I feel any utility this paper may possess would be greatly impaired if their resemblances and differences to other Eluroids, and especially to the Cats, were not shortly noted in it. The outer upper incisors are canine-like, and much more preponde- rant over the inner onesthanin the Cats. The canines, on the other hand (both above and below), are relatively shorter, more flattened internally, and without longitudinal grooves either outside or inside. + is relatively larger than in Felis (though I have observed it to be ' Figured by De Blainville (Hyénes, pl. vi.) and Ouvier (Dents des Mamm, pl. 25). For osteology, see Cuvier’s ‘Ossemens Fossiles,’ 4th edition (1835), yol. vii. p. 311, and Atlas, vol. ii. pl. 190. 200 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, wanting in a specimen of H. brunnea). pp. * is like the Cats’, save that the anterior and posterior external cUSps are nearly equal and more nearly approach in size the median external cusp, that the internal cusp is much larger and stouter, while the base of the antero-external angle of the tooth is not prominent. The antero- external fang is much more slender relatively, while the postero- external one and that of the internal tubercle are stouter. 7 differs from that of the Cats in its greater relative vertical and less antero-posterior development, and that its small talon seems never to be bilobed. Its basal ridge is much more developed within, and still more at the hinder part of the tooth. It has two very long roots, the anterior one of which is slightly the stouter. *~? differs from that of Felis (except that of F. planiceps) in having two roots ; it is like ¥*, only smaller and less powerful. It is vastly more power- z y ae Pp af p ful than is =~" of Felis. = * is close to (or almost close to) the canine ; it is conical, with a basal ridge all round (much marked within and behind), and has a cutting-edge extending from the poste- rior outer to the antero-inner parts of the tooth. j-— is absent. => 1s much larger than a but smaller than ze. it is conical, but P.2 8 laterally compressed, with an antero-posterior cutting-edge, and a basal ridge all round it, but especially behind, where it develops a second, small tubercle. It is like the Cats’ pop but it is a little more vertically developed relatively, and is more quadrate when viewed from above. It has two subequal fangs. - is more canini- form ; it differs from the Cats’ in its large basal ridge, and has two large roots, the anterior of which is rather the larger. 5 has two fangs, the posterior of which is rather the larger; it is like the last tooth, save that its talon is larger and bears two tubercles side by side. It differs from the Cats’ in its smaller talon and merely rudimentary anterior cusp. ;7 1s like that of the Cats; but the cusps are relatively shorter, and there is a talon which bears two small cusps; there is also a cusp within the more posterior of the two large cusps. Comparing the milk-dentition of Hyena with that of the Cats, I find that 2-2 has two roots ; it is very like the Cats’ eS and there- fore very unlike 7 of Felis. ?-? (the milk sectorial) is very like the Cats’ deciduous sectorial; but its inner tubercle is larger rela- tively ; it is similarly situated. The deciduous outer incisors do not exceed the inner ones nearly so much as in the permanent dentition. D-a 18 just like the Cats’ 5-5. pq is like the Cats’ 5, only larger relatively. * is very different from that of the Cats, because it has a very large talon-with three small cusps as well, on and inside (and side by side with) the hinder principal cusp, half the size of the latter ; it is a slight exaggeration of the permanent lower sectorial. There is no supracondyloid foramen to the humerus. There is 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 201 only a rudimentary metacarpal or metatarsal bone for either pollex or hallux. The genus Crocuta, instituted by Gray’ for the Spotted Hyzena of South Africa, differs from the two species of true Hyzenas as to coloration, and in that its ears are not so elongated and are rounded instead of pointed. The hind legs are shorter than the fore limbs ; there is no dorsal mane; and there is buta single pair of anal glands, one on each side of the rectum, and a transverse band of follicles. The clitoris is enormous, and perforated by the urogenital canal2, as has been excellently described in our ‘Proceedings’ by Dr. Watson’®. The cranium of Crocuta is like that of Hyena, but that theincipient division between the two parts of the auditory bulla is more rudi- mentary. As to the dentition’, “1 has a quite minute rounded crown. *:* has antero-external cusp much smaller than the two other external cusps ; 73 is very long, as is also 5—; 5 has not two subequal tubercles side by side on its talon, there being the merest rudiment of the inner tubercle. am Das no cusp inside the more posterior of its two large cusps; and its talon is quite minute. The penis is large and pendulous, and boneless. The dorsal vertebree are fifteen in number. The characters presented by the group of Hysenas—the subfamily Hyenine—are as follows :— (1) There is no pollex. (2) There is no hallux. (3) The ungual phalanges are not strongly arched. (4) The claws are but slightly arched, blunt, and not retractile. (5) The auditory bulla is inflated, and shows no external evidence of division. (6) The bulla is most prominent posteriorly, where it is not everted. (7) Only a rudiment of a bony septum. (8) The bony meatus auditorius is short; but its anterior lip is produced. (9) There is a carotid foramen not situated quite so far forward as in the Viverride. (10) There is no alisphenoid canal. (11) The palatine foramina are situated on the anterior half of the palate. (12) = and pr» are developed. (13) There is no “2 or M3. ' P. Z. 8. 1868, p. 525. 2 It may be interesting to note that, in the ‘ Journal of Anatomy and Physio- logy,’ vol. xiv. (1879), p. 95, there is recorded (in a paper on the homology of the sexual organs) the case of a woman formed in the same way as is the female Crocuta, 3 P.Z.S. 1878, p. 416. 4 Figured by De Blainville; Ouvier,Ossem. Foss. ii, pl. 190; Gervais, Mamm. p. 97 202 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, (14) M1 is small and minute, occasionally absent. (15) The anterior and posterior external cusps of %&* are about equal, and nearly approach in size the median external one. (16) 35 has a large or small talon. (17) The outer incisors greatly exceed the middle ones. (18) The humerus wants the supracondyloid foramen. (19) The penis is boneless. (20) The ears are long, erect, and (with one exception) pointed. (21) The tarsus and metatarsus are entirely hairy. (22) There is one small plantar pad and one beneath each digit. (23) The anus opens into a sac. (24) The anal glands vary from one to three pairs. (25) There are no prescrotal scent-glands. (26) There is a moderate ceecum. (27) The tongue is furnished with large conical papille on its dorsum ; but these are not hard as in the Felide. (28) The calloso-marginal sulcus joins the crucial sulcus. (29) Angle of mandible flattened along its inferior border, and pressed up nearer to the condyle, relatively, than in the Felidae. (30) Proportional length of limbs longer than in Viverride. (31) Length of muzzle to cranium intermediate between Viverride and Felidae. (32) Dentition extremely sectorial, while it is nevertheless formed for crushing. (33) Tail rather shorter, but not as in Lynxes. (34) The clitoris may be traversed by the urogenital canal. (35) Dorsal vertebree not less than fifteen. (36) Postorbital processes short and blunt. (37) Paroccipital processes depending. (38) Mastoid rather prominent. (39) No carotid foramen in sphenoid. (40) Nose and upper lip medianly grooved. (41) Palate not much prolonged behind last molar. (42) No pterygoid fossa. (43) Enormous cranial ridges. The genus Proteles, long known’ as regards its skin and skeleton, had its anatomy first fully described by Professor Flower *, who pointed out previously * the characters of the basis cranii, and its affinity, thus indicated, to the Herpesting and the Hyenine. Save for its greater slenderness, the animal has the general form of an Hyeena, with similarly long, erect, and pointed ears, and with a well- developed dorsal mane. There are five fore digits (though the pollex is short), but only four digits to the hind foot. There is a single 1 First described in Sparrman’s ‘ Voyage to the Cape of Good Hope, 1772- 1776. See P. ZS. 1869, p. 475. 2 P. Z. 8. 1869, p. 474, pl. 36, with various anatomical woodcuts. 3 P.Z.S. 1869, p. 28. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ELUROIDEA. 203: palmar or plantar pad, and one pad for each toe; and the tarsus and metatarsus are hairy. The nose is medianly grooved beneath. The fur is woolly, of a yellowish or reddish brown, with a few vertical black bands on the sides of the body, and others, more or less hori- zontal, on the limbs. The claws are blunt, non-retractile, and rather long. There is an anal pouch with one pair of anal glands, and a supraanal band of follicles, as in Crocuta. The penis is boneless; and there are fifteen dorsal vertebrae. As to the skull, its auditory bulla is (as Prof. Flower has pointed out) large, pyriform, and everted posteriorly as in Herpestes, divided by a septum into two chambers, one in front of the other. The margin of the external opening of the auditory meatus (which has no fissure or foramen in its floor) is most prominent anteriorly. There is no alisphenoid canal ; the carotid canal is as in Hyena; the par- occipital process is flattened, and does not depend; the mastoid is rather strongly prominent ; the postorbital processes of the frontal are pointed and well developed ; the skull is not pinched in behind them; the malar processes are moderately developed ; the cranial ridges are weak ; but the zygoma is rather strongly arched outwards ; the condyloid foramen is concealed ; the palate is very wide, and is considerably prolonged ; and the pterygoid bones come very near the bullz ; the mesopterygoid fossa is very wide. The angle of the mandible is singularly flattened behind; and its apex is produced directly backwards. The hinder part of the horizontal ramus is bent up as in Hyena. The teeth, as is universally known, are quite abnormal and rudi- mentary. There are only three small, conical, blunt upper molars, whereof only *-* is two-rooted. There are only two lower molars, whereof only the hinder one is two-rooted. Proteles agrees with the Hyzenas in the characters just enumerated except Nos. 1, 5, 6, 7, 13, 15, 16, 17, 31, 32, 34, 36, 37, 41, and 43. These characters, then, serve to differentiate the Proteline from the Hyenine. The characters common to the whole family Hyenide will then stand as follows :— (1) There may or may not be a pollex; but in the majority of species there is not one. (2) There is never a hallux. (3) The ungual phalanges are never strongly arched ; nor is there a wide lamina to shelter the base of the claw. (4) The claws are never more than slightly arched ; they are blunt and non-retractile. (5) The auditory bulla is inflated, but generally gives no external indication of division. (6) The bulla entirely ankylosed into one mass, and is not more prominent towards its inner than towards its hinder border. (7) There is generally only a rudiment of a septum within the bulla. (8) The bony meatus auditorius is shorter, and has the anterior 204 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, part of its margin prolonged, but is never imperfectly ossified below. (9) A carotid foramen is visible on the inner side of the bulla, but is placed more posteriorly than in the Viverride. (10) There is no alisphenoid canal. (11) The palatine foramina are situated in the anterior half of the palate. 12) = and =, are developed. P.2 4 (13) There is never either 2 or aaa (14) M:1 ig absent or small. (15) ses may abort; butif present, it has its anterior and posterior external cusps about equal and nearly approaching the median external cusp in size. (16) 35 has a large or small talon, or is absent. (17) The outer incisors generally exceed greatly the inner ones, and are caniniform. (18) The humerus wants the supracondyloid processes. (19) The penis is boneless. (20) The ears are long, erect, and generally pointed. (21) The tarsus and metatarsus are entirely hairy. (22) There is one small plantar pad with four small pads for the digits of the pes. (23) The anus opens into a sac. (24) The anal glands vary from one to three pairs. (25) There are no prescrotal scent-glands. (26) There is a moderate ceecum. (27) The tongue is furnished with much-enlarged conical papillee on its dorsum ; but they are not placed as in the Felidae. (28) The calloso-marginal sulcus joins the crucial sulcus. (29) The angle of the mandible is much flattened beneath. (30) Proportional length of the limbs larger than in the Viverride. (31) Length of muzzle to cranium generally intermediate between the conditions presented by the Felide and the Viverride. (32) Dentition extremely sectorial, and yet formed for crushing, or else altogether rudimentary. (33) Tail rather short, but not as in the Lynxes. (34) The clitoris may be traversed by the urogenital canal. (35) Dorsal vertebrze never less than fifteen. (36) Postorbital processes short and blunt or moderate ; but orbits never enclosed by bone. (37) Paroccipital processes generally depending, but not always. (38) Mastoid rather prominent. (39) No carotid foramen in sphenoid. (40) Nose and upper lip medianly grooved. (41) Palate may or may not be much prolonged beyond the molars. (42) No pterygoid fossa. (43) Size of species always large, 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. 205 The following tabular arrangement may be convenient for refe- rence :— (Claws completely retractile; inner ois: cusp of upper sec- torial moderate. (no pp noalisphenoid | canal; bulla not ex- | ternally constricted, but internally di- ie Hi. Clawsincompletely \ ) vided ; metatarsus retractile ; inner | entirely hairy; and cusp of upper } 13 dorsal vertebree. i Cynelu F rus. sectorial rudi- | | \ mentary. ) ARLUROIDEA: with @5-5; generally an alisphenoid canal; bulla externally constricted, and internally divided ; ; VIVERRID. metatarsus hairy or naked ; and 13 or 14 dor- sal vertebree. | & 55) n0 alisphenoid canal; bulla divided and constricted, or not so; metatarsus hairy ; 15 dorsal vertebre. HYANIDZ. ( almost always an alisphenoid canal and supracon- dyloid foramen; claws strongly curved and more or less retractile; bulla not posteriorly } ViyERRINz. everted ; large canines; generally prescrotal glands, and anus not opening into a sac. claws moderately curved, not retractile ; bulla posteriorly everted; large canines; no pre- scrotal glands ; anus not opening into a sac. ) No alisphenoid canal or supracondyloid foramen ; GALIDICTINE. no alisphenoid canal; a supracondyloid foramen ; Viverride : claws elongated, not retractile ; bulla hardly a with everted posteriorly ; very small canines; no EUPLERINE. prescrotal glands ; anus? an alisphenoid canal; a large eae foramen; claws very curved and retractile; | bulla not distinctly everted ; large canines; no prescrotal glands; anus opening into a sac. ORYPTOPROCTINZ. claws elongated, not retractile; bulla dis- tinetly everted ; large canines; no prescrotal (glands; anus opening into a sae. an alisphenoid canal ; a supracondyloid foramen ; | HERpPESTINe. VIVERRIN. A. Upper lip medianly grooved, tail long. I. Tarsus and metatarsus entirely hairy; ears M.2 : never tufted. —— present.......... oo ee Viverra. M. 2 Z — absent .:.... ee seee.. Prionodon. 206 PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE ZLUROIDEA. [Feb. 7, II. Not so; ears rarely tufted. a. A bald line on tarsus. “ present.. .... Genetta. See aDReEE a Poiana. f. Two bald spots on tarsus .. .. 4 nyey, LOSES y. Tarsus half bald ; auditory bulla ‘only partly ossified . . .-- Nandinia. 8. Tarsus half bald ; ; " auditory bulla entirely ossified .. 1. Back marked with transver se bands i Hemigalea. 2. Not marked with transverse bands. a. Teeth small; hinder part of alveolar border of mandible everted ..... Arctogale. 6. Teeth not small; hinder part of alveolar border not everted ...... Paradozurus. e. Tarsus absolutely naked ; ears tufted .. Arctictis. B. Upper lip not medianly grooved; tail short .. Cynogale. HERPESTIN A. A. Toes 5—5. I. A groove beneath nose. a. eT at att pete ae Herpestes. pB. Pm. : rapes tie Helogale. II. No groove beneath nose. et COTSUA DANY fo \ 6 com oes 2 itssn cas NOU OIE: Bo Tareas bald O25 22050 459 225 eC possarchiis. Ba OCR anon ne ce tans ne etn ee mein. CY TNCLESs C. Toes 4—4. a. A groove beneath nose .......... Bdeogale. 8. No groove beneath nose ........ Suricata. GALIDICTINZ. A. Inferior canine very large ............-+.. Galidictis. B. Inferior canine not very large. I. &+ absent ; a very small... +:).. 02-0, \Gelidia. |W Ps present ; M:? of moderate size ........ Hemigalidia. Distribution of the Aluroidea. The suborder extends (apart from the arctic and antarctic regions) over the whole world except Australia, New Guinea, New Zealand, Polynesia, and the Antilles—extending even into the Moluccas, Philippines, Celebes, and Madagascar. The family Felide is almost as cosmopolitan as is the entire suborder, but it is not found in the Moluccas, Philippines, Celebes, or Madagascar. It alone of the Aluroidea extends into the New World; but, as was long ago remarked by Buffon, the Cats of the Old and New Worlds are markedly distinct. Only one species, the northern Lynx, is common to both worlds. 1882.] PROF. ST.-GEORGE MIVART ON THE HLUROIDEA. 207 The Asiatic and African Cats are distinct, except the Lion, Leo- pard, Caracal, and Chetah. Twenty-six species seem to be peculiar to Asia, and only six to Africa. Ten species are peculiar to America. The Indian archipelago is very rich in species; and the island of Bali seems their extreme limit. The Tiger is found there. Two species of Lynx and the Wild Cat are European. The Hyenide are almost entirely African, and three of its five species South-African. H. striata alone extends into Western Asia and Northern Africa. The family Viverride is exclusively confined to the Old World, and has but two representatives—a Genet and an Ichneumon (Genetta vulgaris and Herpestes ichneumon)—in Europe. Apart from the Ichneumons and Paradoxures, twelve species are Asiatic and twenty African. The Ichneumons are divided, as before- said, into thirteen Asiatic and seven African. The Paradoxures are all Asiatic, but are not well defined as to species ; if we accept provi- sionally the number (twelve) of Dr. Gray ', that will give a total of thirty-seven Asiatic forms of Viverride, and thirty-two African forms. Besides these, eight species are found in Madagascar. No species is common to Asia and the continent of Africa, except Genetta vulgaris and Herpestes ichneumon. No species appears to be common to Madagascar and the conti- nent of Africa, a species of Crossarchus found there having been probably introduced by man. No species is common to Madagascar and Asia except Viverricula, that wandering Jew amongst the Viverride, the extensive range of which has been already indicated °. The other Madagascar species are Fossa, Hupleres, and the four species of. Galidictine and Cryptoprocta. Thus Madagascar, containing as it does examples of all five sub- families of Viverride, has by far the most peculiar Viverrine fauna of the whole world. Next to it comes Borneo, with its Prionodon, Arctictis, Cynogale, Hemigalea, Parodoxuri, and Herpestes ; and the Indian Archipelago generally is rich in Viverrine life as well as being inhabited by the Cats F. maerocelis, F. marmoratus, F’. planiceps, and F. badia. The Viverrine section of the subfamily Viverrine are pretty equally divided between Asia and Africa; with the exception of the West- African Nandinia, the paradoxurine section of the Viverrine are en- tirely Asiatic. As a rule the Viverrine as to species are predominantly Asiatic, while the Herpestine are predominantly African, and especially South-African, As regards genera, the Viverring have six genera peculiar to Africa, and one to Madagascar, while three (Viverra, Viverricula, and Genetta) are common to both the continents. As regards genera, the subfamily Herpestine has no less than six peculiar to Africa, and not one Asiatic genus which is not also found in Africa, the only genus common to the two continents being Her- pestes. 1 Cat. of Carnivora in Brit. Mus., p. 63. 2 See ante, p. 149. 208 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE [Feb. 7, It is interesting to note that the genera of Viverride with nu- merous anal glands and a large cireumanal pouch are African, and especially South-African, like Hyena brunnea. The extreme geographical limits of the Viverride seem to be France, Spain, Shanghai, Formosa, the Philippines, Celebes, Lom- bock, Madagascar, the Cape, and the north-western part of Africa— Cape Verd. The most northern range in the continent of Asia appears to be that of Hyena striata in Asia Minor’. No species of the Viverrid@ is so widely diffused as is Viverricula. Geograpically, then, as well as in some respects structurally, the Viverride (apart from the Madagascar forms) seem to divide them- selves into two great sections—one Asiatic and Viverrine, the other African and Herpestine. The Aluroidea being considered as one whole, and Dr. Gray’s twelve species of Paradoxurus and my enumeration of Cats being pro- visionally accepted, we have a total of 5 species of Hluroids in Europe, 7 species in Madagascar, 11 species in America (all Cats), 46 species in Africa, and 68 in Asia, 7 of these being common to both Africa and Asia. Before long I hope to lay before the Society my notes on some parts of the anatomy, and especially on the osteology of the Ailu- roidea. 2. On some Points in the Anatomy of the Indian Darter (Plotus melanogaster), and on the Mechanism of the Neck in the Darters (Plotus),in connexion with their Habits. By W. A. Forszs, B.A., Prosector to the Society. [Received January 9, 1882.] It is to the late Prof. Garrod that we are indebted for our know- ledge of the great differences in the anatomy of the digestive organs of the American? (Plotus anhinga), and African® (P. levaillanti) Darters. The existence of such differences in birds apparently so nearly allied made it very desirable to obtain a knowledge of these parts in the other species of the genus Plotus. On April 8th last, the Society obtained, by exchange from the Zoological Gardens of Calcutta, the first specimen of the Indian Darter (Plotus melanogaster) that it has acquired. The specimen, a 1 P. de Tchihatcheff in his ‘Asie Mineure’ (1856), 2° partie, p.{602, reports good evidence of its existence in Asia Minor. He says :—‘‘Je nel’ai jamais observée 4 Yétat vivant, mais dans plusieurs localités de la Phrygie, dela Mysie et du Pont, les habitants m’en ont positivement constaté l’existence: d’ailleurs 4 Selevké (littoral de la Cilicie pétrée) ; une dépouille de la Hyena striata me fut montrée par un chasseur Arménien qui m’assura d’avoir tué l’animal dans les montagnes yoisines. 2 P.Z.8. 1876, pp. 335-345 ; Scient. Papers, pp. 334-346, pls. xvili.—xx. 3 L. c. 1878, pp. 679-681; 7. c. pp. 346-349. 1882. | ANATOMY OF THE INDIAN DARTER. 209 male, lived in excellent health till December 21st last, when it died suddenly, its death apparently having been caused by some sudden shock produced by too rapid feeding, as a dozen small fishes, just swallowed, were found in its stomach. No disease whatever could be found. It is this specimen that forms the subject of the present communication. As regards its stomach, Plotus melanogaster closely approaches P. levaillanti, the proventriculus being in the form of two quite separate patches, and the pyloric lobe being provided with a similar hair- covered conical and retractile “plug.” In P. anhinga, it will be remembered, the proventricular glands are collected together into a special diverticulum of the stomach, whilst the pyloric lobe, though hairy internally, has no such plug. In P. melanogaster the two gland-patches have the form of watch-pockets, which nearly, though not quite, unite with each other superiorly. They measure 1°1 inch transversely and *8 inch from above downwards, being thus a little larger than the similarly shaped and situated ones of P. Jevaillanti?. There is no trace of the elevated ‘ U-shaped ridge ” situated on the anterior wall of the stomach between the two patches, described and figured by Prof. Garrod in the last-named species. The gland- patches are covered, as is the rest of the interior of the stomach, by the usual yellow wrinkled “epithelium.” This ceases abruptly above at the level of the upper margins of the glandular areas, where it meets the smooth and pink mucous membrane of the cesophagus. Along this line of junction, the epithelial coat is thicker and jagged, an appearance probably due to several thicknesses of this coat having been “ moulted” (as we know happens in the American species) and not come clean away’. The second, or pyloric, stomach is quite as distinct in Plotus mela- nogaster as it is in the two other species of the genus dissected. Like these, too, its pyloric half is covered internally with the pecu- liar hairy mat already described in these birds: the cardiac part, on the other hand, is covered by a yellow “epithelium” continuous with that of the rest of the stomach. The hairy covering forms a complete ring, thickest and best developed inferiorly—on the sur- face corresponding to the ‘greater curvature’’ of the Mammalian stomach—and quite surrounding the equally hairy pyloric plug. This “plug” is not a free process: it is rather a well-defined ridge, nearly cylindrical in section, attached superiorly to the wall of the stomach, but ending freely below. It, particularly towards its ter- mination, is thickly covered with hairs of a similar character to those in the rest of the hairy region. When fully retracted, it completely fills up the centre of the hairy ring already described, the communi- cation of the cavities of the stomach and duodenum being reduced to a narrow aperture situated below the plug, and only capable of allowing the passage of a bristle. 1 In the proyentricular glands being limited to distinct areas, which do not unite to form a zone, Plotus Jevaillanti and P. melanogaster resemble the genus Phalacrocorazx. 2 Cf. Bartlett, P. Z. 8. 1881, p. 247. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XIV. 14 210 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE [Feb. 7, It is not unusual in birds to find a small irregular vipple-like projection guarding the entrance to the pylorus ; and it is, I am in- clined to believe, a greatly developed condition of this structure that forms the hairy “plug” of the Old-World Darters. In the rest of its anatomy Plotus melanogaster resembles in nearly every respect P. anhinga and P. levaillanti. As in the latter, there are two ceca, ‘2 inch long, whilst in most specimens of P. anhinga one only has been observed’. As in P. anhinga, the large intestine is peculiarly long, measuring 5°5 inches; the small intestine has a length of 30 inches. The bursa fabricii, I may add, in the present specimen (a ¢) had the ordinary relations of that organ to the cloaca, opening into that chamber by a small pore. There is only one carotid artery, the left, as in the two other species of Plotus, the genus Pelecanus, and Sula leucogastra and S. piscator, though not in S. bassana, or the other Steganopodes. The patella is only grooved, and not perforated, by the améiens muscle. The structure of the neck in P. melanogaster is almost identical with that of P. anhinga, as described and figured by Garrod. “‘Donitz’s bridge,” situated, as in the other species, on the 9th cervical vertebra, is well-ossified in the present specimen, as it is also in P. levaillanti and P. nove-hollandie, though not in P. anhinga. In addition to this, the similarly-situated fibrous bands—formed by a specialized part of the general cervical aponeurosis—on the 11th cervical vertebra, which are correctly figured and described (in the explanation to the plate) by Garrod* in P. anhinga, are also ossi- fied, each in its median portion being converted, over a small area about the size of a hemp-seed, into bone. Through the canal thus formed on each side, the longus colli posterior, as well as the general mass of posterior neck-muscles, passes. On examination of P. levaillanti, I find these bands also ossified in that species ; in P. anhinga, as already correctly stated by Garrod, they remain fibrous. There is no such ossification of the cervical portion of the longus colli posterior tendon in this species, as was observed by Garrod in P. anhinga; and in this respect again the African and Indian species agree, and differ from their American relative. Prof. Garrod, in the first of his papers already referred to, has fully and accurately described the peculiar osteological and myolo- gical characters of the neck of the Darter. But, probably from never having observed these birds when feeding, he has not pointed out the connexion between this peculiar neck, with its naturally persis- tent “ kink,” of the Darters and their mode of life. The Darters feed entirely, so far as I have been able to observe, under water. Swimming with its wings half expanded, though loco- motion is effected entirely by the feet, the bird pursues his prey (small fishes) with a peculiar “ darting ” or jerky action of the head 1 Ina specimen of Plotus anhinga that has passed through my hands since this paper was read there was, in addition to a single cecum of the ordinary size, a much more rudimentary one developed on the other side of the intestine. ? L.c. pl. xviii. fig. 2 a. 1882. | ANATOMY OF THE INDIAN DARTER. 211 and neck, which may be compared to that of a man poising a spear or harpoon before throwing it. Arrived within striking-distance, the Darter suddenly transfixes, in fact bayonets, the fish on the tip of its beak with marvellous dexterity, and then immediately comes to the surface, where the fish is shaken off the beak by jerking of the head and neck (repeated till successful), thrown upwards, and swallowed, usually head first. A study of the neck in the recently dead bird leaves little doubt A Diagram to show the mechanism of the “ kink” of the neck in the Darters. @, head and anterior moiety of neck (1st to 7th cervical vertebrx); p, posterior moiety of neck (from the 9th cervical vertebra to thorax); 8, 8th cer- vical vertebra; D, “ Donitz’s bridge,” on the 9th cervical; f, the two flexor muscles (vde text); ¢, the extensor muscle (the longus colli ante- rior). In fig. 1 the flexor muscles are supposed to be acting, bending back the anterior part of the neck on the 8th ceryical ; in fig. 2 the extensor muscle has opened out the anterior genu formed by the 8th cer- vical, thereby protruding the apex of the beak (marked B in fig. 1) to B’. as to the mechanism by which this peculiar impaling of the prey is effected. The 8th cervical vertebra is articulated, as has already been described, with the 7th in such a way that the two cannot naturally be got to lie in the same line, but form an angle, open forwards, of about 145°, when the two bones are stretched as far as is possible in that direction. Behind, its articulation with the 9th cervical is such as to permit it to be bent back at an angle a little greater than 90° with that vertebra, beyond which extent, however, 14* 212 ON THE ANATOMY OF THE INDIAN DARTER. [Feb 7, no further flexion is possible. The 8th vertebra is thus so articulated with the 7th anteriorly and the 9th posteriorly as to allow it, when the neck is flexed, to be nearly at right angles to the rest of the neck, the two portions of which, though parallel, are then at different horizons, something like the two bars of a parallel ruler (vide diagram, p- 211, fig. 1). When the neck is bent in this Z-shaped form, any opening out of the anterior angular bend by the action of the’ anterior neck-muscles causes the anterior moiety of the neck to suddenly shoot out, thus causing a corresponding protrusion of the head and beak (diagram, fig. 2). By the flexion of the 6th on the 7th, and of the 9th on the 10th, cervical vertebre, the curve of the neck is increased —the articulations of the 8th vertebra still forming the double hinge round which motion takes place—and the impaling action correspondingly augmented. This protrusion, though only for a short distance, is so violent as to effectually “strike ” the fish which the bird is pursuing. The bending-back of the neck is effected, partly by the action of the longus colli posterior, partly by a special pair of closely approxi- mated muscles, situated anteriorly along the middle line of the neck, which arise close together from the heemapophysial spine of the 11th cervical vertebra, near its anterior articular end, and are in- serted into the sides of the anterior half of the 6th cervical. The opening-out, on the other hand, of the genu formed by the 7th and 8th cervicals—by which, as already described, the impaling action is produced—is caused by the contraction of the tho- racically very powerful longus colli anterior. The main tendon of this is inserted on the long, backwardly-directed heemapophysis of the 8th cervical, playing round the doubly-grooved surface of the inferior arch formed by the hemapophyses of the 9th cervical, to which vertebra, as well as to the 10th, it gives off much smaller ten- dinous slips. It is obvious that considerable advantage is gained by the action in question, the rapid protrusion of the narrow neck and head over a small space by this mechanism necessitating a less amount of exertion than would a similar movement of the whole bird over the same space, and being equally efficacious in striking the prey. The whole mechanism, it may be observed, exists ina less developed form in the neck of the Herons, Cormorants, &c.; and it requires but a slight modification of the arrangement of these parts in those birds—none of which, so far as I know, impale their prey like the Darters—to bring about the perfect adaptation of these structures to a newly acquired mode of feeding. P. Z. 186252 Vir A.S.Foord del.et Lith Mintern Bros imp. = NEW CORALS FROM MADEIRA . 1882. ] PROF, DUNCAN ON CORALS FROM MADEIRA. 213 8. On some Recent Corals from Madeira. By Prof. P. Martin Duncan, M.B. (Lond.), F.R.S., Pres. Royal Micros. Soc., &c. (Communicated by the Secretary.) [Received January 19, 1882.] (Plate VIII.) In the autumn of 1881, Mr. J. Y. Johnson, of Madeira, sent me a small collection of Corals which he had obtained, from a few fathoms depth, in the sea off Funchal and other places near the island. Some of the specimens were adherent by their bases to a small species of oyster, and others to the bases of Gorgonide. As the collection has species in it representing the Mediterranean, Flori- dan, and North-Atlantic deep-sea coral-faunas, I thought that its description would be of some importance. The new species are three in number; and two of them are very interesting. One, Cerato- trochus johnsoni, belongs to a genus which has a recent species on ' the American side of the Atlantic and fossil forms in the Mediter- ranean Pliocene and Miocene and in the Australian Miocene strata. Another, Caryophyllia endothecata, reveals a decided interseptal structure like the endotheca of the family Astrzeidze. Description of the Species, and Remarks. MADREPORARIA. Section APOROSA. Family TURBINOLIIDS. Subfamily Caryophylline. Genus Carvoruyiui, Milne-Edwards & Haime. This genus and its divisions were noticed at some length in the description of the Madreporaria dredged up during the expedition of H.M.S. ‘ Porcupine,’ published in the ‘Transactions’ of the Society, vol. viii. pt. v. 1873. It is not necessary, therefore, to recapitulate, and especially as there has been no increase of know- ledge on the subject of any importance since that date. There are some fine specimens from Madeira of a species of Caryo- phyllia which was not obtained during the ‘ Porcupine’ expedition, but which is a very well-known Mediterranean form. The specimens came up in deep water off Madeira, attached to a valve of Ostrea cochlea, which, in its turn, rested upon a hexactinellid sponge. One specimen was mature ; a second was smaller ; and there were two very small individuals. The larger specimen has the parts above the base perfect ; but Cliona-borings have destroyed the broad base of attachment, 214 PROF. P. MARTIN DUNCAN ON [Feb. 7, Caryophyllie with more than four perfect cycles of septa. CARYOPHYLLIA CYATHUS, Lamarck, Syst. des Anim. sans vertéb., 1801. The corallum is tall, slightly bent, subturbivate, slightly com- pressed, and has a base much narrower than the calicular opening. The cost are only distinct for a short distance from the calice; and then they become flat and only occasionally visible, being separated by indistinct lines and ornamented by numerous small granules which are placed across the costee. The whole surface is, as it were, shining and varnished-looking; near the base the costz are not visible, but the granulations and varnished appearance prevail. The calice is longer than broad, elliptical in outline, very deep centrally and shallow at the margins. Some of the septa are slightly exsert, but they do not project much higher than the others; and this is the case with the primaries and other large septa which have no pali before them. The septa are close, stout, and unequal, and there is but little space between them; they are rounded at their upper edge and towards the columella; they are straighter and some are rather large internally. There are many septa of the fifth cycle. The columella is deeply sunken, fasciculate, elliptical in outline, rounded above, and composed of eleven processes well separated. The pali are higher than the columella, stout, and as large as the ends of the septa to which they belong, and from which they are well separated above. There are eighteen of them; and they are separated by a space from the columella. The height of the coral is 1,4, inch, and the length of the calice 3 inch, its breadth being =; inch. i This description corresponds specifically with that of MM. Milne- Edwards and Jules Haime in their Hist. Nat. des Corall. vol. ii. p- 13. The columella, however, has fewer processes ; but it is found that there is much variation in that structure in specimens from the Mediterranean, some of which have the same number as the Madeiran form. A smaller specimen has a widely open calice, the columella deeply seated, and the septa barely exsert. The columella is made up of about five twisted processes. The pali are thin, separate, and eighteen in number; they have granules with little cup-shaped cavities in them, and are much higher than the columella, from which they are well separated above. They are wavy at the edges. The septa, thin and not over close, are wavy here and there at their inner edge, and are granular at the sides. HA; The calice is more circular than that of the larger form; and the body is shorter. Height 2? inch. This form can be comprehended by studying sections of larger and mature forms made near their bases. There the granular and more or less distant septa hardly seem possibly to belong to a coral which could develop such a close-set septal arrangement as is seen above, 1882.]. CORALS FROM MADEIRA. 215 Both these specimens came from off the same shell. A smaller individual of this species presents the peculiar ornamen- tation of the costz near the calice and the shining epitheca. It is cylindrical in shape, and is just beginning to curve at the top; and it is fixed, by a base with two small offshoots, within the hollow of the valve of a shell. The calice is widely open, but has sharp margins and very slender and somewhat exsert and tolerably bent primary and secondary septa. The primaries and secondaries are nearly equal; the tertiaries are much smaller; and the fourth and fifth orders of the fourth cycle of septa are very small. The larger septa are wavy within, very slender, and well separated. The columella occupies considerable space, and is composed of about eight twisted band-like lamellee, which are separate. The pali are very small, and closely resemble the trabecule of the collumella ; but their union low down with the septa can sometimes be seen. They are before the second and third orders of septa. The corallum is excessively slender and transparent. Height of the coral =5; inch. At the base of the specimen just described, and within the same valve of a shell, is a very minute coral, which appears to be a still smaller form of Caryophyllia cyathus. It has a circular calice, six primary and six smaller or secondary septa; and there are twelve very small rudiments of the tertiary cycle. The larger septa are slightly enlarged at their inner ends; and there are no pali, the columellary trabeculz being very small and apparently in one little bundle. It is evident from the study of these specimens that the peculiar shining costal covering which has been termed a pellicular epitheca, but which does not appear to be a true outer thecal covering, is always present. The thickness of the septa and their crowded state seen in the adults is a matter of growth; and it is clear that the first stage of the coral shows three cycles of septa, the tertiary being rudimentary, and that in a more advanced stage there are four perfect cycles. The full number of septa is obtained during adult age ; and the whole of the calcareous tissues increase then in thick- ness. In examining some pieces of worn coral, probably originally form- ing part of a large Dendrophyliia, I found a small Caryophyllia cya- thus. It has the peculiar epitheca, and is just in advance of the smallest specimen just noticed, so far as its growth is concerned. There are four cycles of septa in some of the systems, and in the others only three. The columella is a twisted piece of tissue ; and the pali are small but distinct and are before the secondaries. Hence the coral with three cycles of septa in its early stage has no pali; they appear before the secondaries a little later, and subse- quently before the tertiary ; and this takes place when the fourth and fifth orders of septa are complete in a system. Then pali are developed before a higher order and eighteen result. The pali are deep in the ealice, but project upwards; and they send processes 216 PROF. P. MARTIN DUNCAN ON [Feb. 7, inwards to join the twisted trabecule of the columella. The septa are marked low down by oblique rows of granules; but there is not a trace of any endotheca. CARYOPHYLLIA CLAVUS, Scacchi, var. TINCTA. The common British shallow-water coral is represented by a form at Madeira which cannot be separated from it specifically. Indeed it seems to be a simple variety, having a small columella, fewer septa, smaller pali; and the tint of the columella is pearly white, whilst that of the septa and coste is reddish brown. The British variety smithi of Stokes is white, and is found below tide-mark in Devonshire. The corallum is short, with a broad incrusting base, an ephitheca reaching far towards the margin ; there are well-developed granular costee above the epitheca, some projecting, and four complete cycles of septa with some orders of the fifth. The calice is deep, slightly elliptical in outline; and the columella is small, elongate and narrow, and is formed of a few tall twisted ribbon-shaped processes. The primary septa are exsert ; and the secondaries are lessso. The pali are small, and are before the third cycle of septa. The granulation of the sides of the septa is in arched rows, one above the other; and the lateral projection of the granules from the free inner ends of the septa is decided. Length of the calice inch. Subdivision CARYOPHYLLIZ ENDOTHECATZ. Amongst this collection of corals from Madeira is one which, whilst it presents all the characters of the genus Caryophyllia, pos- sesses a distinct endotheca between its septa, occluding more or less the interseptal loculi here and there. It is a most important form, especially when it is considered in relation to Asterosmilia, a genus of Trochocyathacee or Caryo- phyllize with a double row of pali, and possessing endothecal dis- sepiments ; for the possession of an endotheca has been considered to be of sufficient classificatory value to place genera with and without it in different families. I propose including the new form amongst the species of Caryo- phyllia, giving it a subgeneric position. CARYOPHYLLIA ENDOTHECATA, sp. noy. (Plate VIII. figs. 1-4.) The coral is small, with a broad flat base, from which rises a more or less cylindrical body slightly constricted above the base, and narrowed and reentering at the calicular margin somewhat. The calice is circular in outline, rather shallow near the margins, but much deeper at the columella, which consists of four or five dis- tinct nodules. The septa are unequal, well apart, slightly exsert according to the order, and dip down, not reaching the columella. They are thin, slightly wavy in some instances ; and the size of the primaries and secondaries distinguishes them. There are four cycles of septa in five systems and in one half of the sixth; but in 1882. ] CORALS FROM MADEIRA. 217 the other half the higher orders are not developed. The pali follow the ordinary rule, and are before the tertiary septa in all systems where the higher orders are fully developed ; and consequently there are eleven long, narrow, wavy, very distinct, and well-developed ali. ? There is a decided endotheca just within the margin, whose edge is somewhat inverted ; and it covers some of the pali and occludes several interseptal loculi. In other parts dissepiments may be seen stretching between the septa. The costz are numerous at the base, and are in lines of granules or in faint ridges. Near the calice the costee of the larger septa are the most projecting; and all are marked with granules, which, in some instances, assume a serpentine arrange- ment. There are faint traces of a pellicular epitheca. Height of coral ;5; inch, length of calice ;'; inch. From Madeira. Subfamily Trochocyathacee. Genus Paracyatuus, Milne-Edwards & Haime, 1848. PARACYATHUS STRIATUS, Philippi, sp. Several specimens of this widely-distributed form, with unlobed pali and well-developed costz, are from Madeira. The species is common in the Mediterranean and in the Caribbean Sea. Subfamily Turbinoline. There are four specimens of a simple coral in the collection from Madeira, which were dredged at a depth of 30 fathoms in Funchal Bay; and they represent three stages of the growth of the species. Genus Ceratotrocuvs, Milne-Edwards & Jules Haime, 1848. CERATOTROCHUS JOHNSONI, sp. nov. (Plate VIII. figs. 5-8.) The coral is horn-shaped, bent, and has several growth-rings on it; it was attached by a narrow circular base, which has broken from its support. The calice is wider than the rest of the body, is almost circular in outline, and its marginal wall is thin. The axial space is wide and deep; the septa are thin, wide apart, and rather bent ; they are unequal, very slightly exsert, and do not reach far into the calice except in the instance of the larger ones. There are several quite rudimentary septa in some parts of the calice; but they correspond to costz which are much larger in every respect. Omitting these, the septa are twenty-seven in number, and counting them, are forty-four in all. The arrangement in cycles is irregular ; and there appear to be five primaries only. The margin between the septa has a festooned edge; and the interseptal spaces are wide. It is at the lowest point of the concavity of the festoon that the minute septa arise. The tertiary septa are smaller than the secondaries, and they project well from the wall and reach down into the depths of the calice. The septa are rounded above; their edge is rather straight within ; and they are sometimes bent; and 218 PROF. P. MARTIN DUNCAN ON [Feb. 7; their sides are ornamented with very decided elevations and depres- sions, forming series of close arches, the convexity being upwards and slightly inwards. The small size of the origin of the septa from the broad costz is sometimes evident. The columella is small and very deeply situate, and is formed by four or five lax trabeculee, which unite with some of the septal ends. The coste differ considerably near the base and close to the calice. Near the base they are not numerous ; and in some parts they are slightly developed, subequal or alternately large and small, distinct, and either subcristiform or marked with a row of long, narrow, flat, separate elevations or granules, whilst in others they are alternately large and small, and the intercostal tissue is granu- lar. In the middle of the outside of the coral the coste are larger, subequal, and subcristiform, thin and wavy, and alternately broader, flatter, and granular. Close to the calice they become more nume- rous, cristiform, wavy and oblique, and subequal, the intercostal areas being minutely granular. The fractured base shows a thick wall, a columellary tissue, and twelve irregular and short septa. 1 The length of the coral is 7 inch, and the length of the calice is inch. A second and smaller specimen with the same external shape and prevailing decided growth-rings, is younger than that just described. The septa have all the characteristics of those of the first specimen; but the rudimentary ones are absent; their caste exist however. There are not three complete cycles; and the interseptal loculi are very broad. The columella is deeply seated, and is formed by tissue, coming irregularly from the ends of some septa. The rough ridges of the sides of the septa are very evident. The costee are very distinct, but, as in the other specimen, small ; and their characteristic is their narrow wavy crest near the calice, and their broader and granular nature near the base. The fractured base shows nine septa, some primaries and the others secondaries ; but it is not possible to define them. Height of the coral 2 inch, length of the calice rather less than 4 inch. “ The other two specimens are young, and their curved form has only just commenced; they have three perfect cycles of septa, and a small columella deeply seated. The costze of one are broadly granular and subequal near the base ; and near the calice they become shorter, with a tendency to a wavy cristiform shape here and there. In the other the cost are decidedly wavy and crested near the calice and lower down near a growth-ring, and then to the very base. In one instance the base has become incrusted by a Bryozoan. Height of coral ~% inch. As regards the negative characters, it may be said that there are no pali, and that the endotheca is deficient ; moreover the epitheca is only faintly indicated in a young form. The columella is smaller than in the species typical of the genus. The positive characters 1882. ] CORALS FROM MADEIRA. 219 are the costal ornamentation and distribution, the large interseptal loculi, the small columella, and the very marked curved ridges on the sides of the septal laminee. Family OcuLINID#. Subfamily Stylophorine. Genus Mapracis. MADRACIS ASPERULA, Milne-Edwards and Jules Haime, 1850. This well-known Madeiran coral is in the collection; and the speciman shows calices with eight, nine, and ten septa. The range of the species is considerable; for it was found by Pourtales on the other side of the Atlantic. Subfamily Oculinacee. Genus AMPHIHELIA, Milne~Edwards and Jules Haime, 1849. AMPHIHELIA OcuULATA, Linn. sp. A small fragment of this coral was fuund with one of a variety of AMPHIHELIA RAMEA, Sars. Family ASTRHID&. Subfamily Cladocoracec, Genus Ciapocora, Ehrenberg, 1834. CLapDOcoRA DEBILIS, Milne-Edwards and Jules Haime, 1849. Specimens of this common Madeiran coral were sent by Mr. Johnson, and do not present any new points of interest. Section PERFORATA. Family MADREPORID&. Subfamily Lupsammine. Genus BALANOPHYLLIA, Searles Wood. BALANOPHYLLIA BREVIS, sp. nov. (Plate VIII. figs. 9-12.) The corallum is short, compressed in the direction of its length somewhat, with an elliptical deep calice, a broad, flat, attached base, and a small, very deeply-seated, elongate trabecular columella, flat on its surface, and united to the septa by six small processes. The epitheca is dense, reaches close up to the calicular margin, and ends there in a definite linear ridge. The septa are in six systems ; and in four of them there are five cycles, whilst in the others there are three cycles and one half of the fourth, the septa of the higher order being developed between the primary and tertiary septa only. The lamine are stout, very granular, and subspinulose, and more ragged, even on the edges, curved above, where they occupy much space on the edge of the calice, and dipping down suddenly on all sides of the large, elongate, and deep axial space. The septa are very 220 PROF. DUNCAN ON CORALS FROM MADEIRA. [Feb. 7, unequal in length and size. This produces a festooning of the margin of the calice, the primaries being the highest and the septa next to them only slightly lower. The secondaries are high, but lower than the primaries ; and they have a higher order of septa next to them just below their elevation. The lowest point of the calicular edge is over the tertiary septa, which are the smallest. The six primary septa are well developed and are free’, and do not reach the columella, but pass lower by its side to the base. The secon- daries of four systems are next in size to the primaries and are free at their inner ends and straight; but in two systems, where the fourth cycle is incomplete, they unite with a process of the septa placed next to the primaries by a process which reaches, after junc- tion, a radiating projection of the columella. The tertiary septa are the smallest and are free, being included in the loops formed by the higher septa in their junction with each other and the columella. The septa of the fourth and fifth orders, in four of the systems, unite in front of the tertiary septa; and thence a process passes in front of the secondary to reach one from the columella. These processes are continuations of the septal edges, and also of columel- lary structure, and are stout and well separated. The coste are visible at the margin before they are covered with the epitheca. They are very sharply granular and unequal. The tint of the coral is brownish red, the columella being white. Height of the coral 1 inch, length of calice not quite ,*; inch, breadth of calice 1 inch, length of base } inch. Locality. Madeira. The smaller specimen has the epitheca more distant from the calicular edge, a more defined columella ornamented with a few spiny granules on its surface, the same number of septa in the four systems, and a large deep axial space. This small Balanophyllian has its specific characters well marked, and has not hitherto been noticed. It is probably a young form ; and certainly, although it has the characters of the genus, the walls are imperforate. Probably it is the growth of the coral that de- cides this. List of the Corals dredged from Madeira. Caryophyllia cyathus, Lamarck. | Madracis asperula, Rdw. & Haime. clavus, Scacchi. Amphihelia oculata, Linn. sp. —— endothecata, sp. nov. ramea, var., Sars. Paracyathus striatus, Philippi, sp.| Cladocora debilis, Edw. & Haime. Ceratotrochus johnsoni, sp. nov. | Balanophyllia brevis, sp. nov. The presence of Caryphyllia cyathus and Caryphyllia clavus in the sea of Madeira was almost to be expected, and that of Para- cyathus striatus also, they all being Mediterranean forms and Atlantic also. The Madracis is found also on the American side of the 1 In one instance there is a faint union with the columella. P.Z2.8 1862 PRIX Hanharl.imp Berjean lth SPECIES OF ( re b=) ORALLIIDA — = 1882. ] MR. S. O. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIIDE. 221 Atlantic. The Amphihelie are found in the North Atlantic and Florida seas, besides off Madeira; but Cladocora debilis appears to be a local species. The Balanophyllia is new, and has no definite alliances. Ceratotrochus johnsoni is a remarkable form of a genus of very great distribution ; and Caryophyllia endothecata is so im- portant a coral that I shall venture to write a separate memoir about its bearings on classification. EXPLANATION OF PLATE VIII. Caryophyllia endothecata, p. 216, natural size. ——, the calice, magnified, —— ——,, interseptal loculi, magnified. , costze, magnified. . Ceratotrochus johnson, p. 217, natural size. , a second specimen, natural size. — —, the calice, magnified. —— ——,, the cost, magnified. . Balanophyllia brevis, p. 219, natural size. 10. —— ——, magnified. 11, —— ——,, calice, magnified. 12, —— ——, diagram of the septal arrangement. Fig. 0 90ST SUYR O9 bo On the Arrangement of the Coralliide, with Descriptions of new or rare Species. By Sruarr O. Riprzy, M.A., F.L.S., &c., Assistant in the Zoological Department, British Museum. (Communicated by Dr. Ginrunr, V PES:) [Received January 23, 1882.] (Plate IX.) The small group of species which has been thought worthy of separation from the rest of its Alcyonarian allies as a distinct family under the name Corallide (more correctly Coralliide), is chiefly remarkable in its structural characters for possessing a continuous stony axis, covered by only a thin cortical layer of a softer spiculi- ferous material, into which the polypes are retractile. Its best claim to general notice lies in the fact that the Precious Coral of commerce (Corallium rubrum, Costa, rectius nobile, Pallas) is one of the only three species hitherto known to exist in the seas of the present time which have been included in it. The other two species are scarcely known, even to students of the group. Thus but one specimen of the species described by Dana (U. 8. Expl. Exped., vol. vii. p. 641, pl. lx. fig. 1) under the name of Corallium secundum seems to have ever been described ; and but one specimen of the third species, described by the late Dr. Gray (P. Z. 8. 1860, p. 393, Rad. pl. xviii.) under the name of Coralliwm (subsequently altered to Hemicorallium) Johnsoni, was obtained in the first instance, and I know of no other authentic specimen. The original specimen of this species, how- ever, is fortunately preserved in the national collection ; that of 222 MR. S. O. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIID&E, [ Feb. 7, C. secundum is no doubt in America, in company with the other specimens obtained at the same time by the United-States Exploring Expedition. ‘The Red Coral (C. zodile) occurs in the Mediterranean, and among the islands (e. g. Cape-Verd Islands, see Wyville Thomson, Voy. ‘ Challenger,’ Atlantic, i. p. 76) lying off the N.W. coast of Africa; it occurs nowhere! else, so far as I have been able to discover. C. secundum is recorded with doubt as from the Sand- wich Islands; it was probably obtained in the Pacific Ocean at any rate; C. johnsoni was obtained from Madeira. In the present paper is described a fourth species, and one which is probably not new, belonging to this remarkable and beautiful family: the one was obtained from the island of Mauritius, and is now in the collection at the British Museum; the other is stated to come from Japan, and will shortly be incorporated with the same collection. Arrangement of the Family.—The only attempt which has been made at classifying the species is that of Dr. Gray in a Note read before this Society, and published in its ‘ Proceedings’ for 1867 (p. 125), and somewhat amplified in ‘ Catalogue of Lithophytes or Stony Corals’ (1870), p. 22. Dr. Gray divided the family and the original single genus Corallium into 3 genera, based mainly on the distribution of the “ polypes”’ (meaning polype-cells, verruce of Verrill) on the branches, viz. :— (1) Corallium, with the verruce slightly elevated from the cortex and scattered on all sides of the branches (incl. C. nodile). (2) Pleurocorallium, branching in a single plane; the verruce slightly raised, confined to one surface, and mostly placed on small branches chiefly found near the edges of the main branches (incl. C. secundum, Dana). (3) Hemicorallium. The verruce prominent, all occurring on one side of the branches (incl. C. johnsoni, Gray). With regard to this arrangment, it seems well to point out that the characters on which it is founded appeal entirely to the naked eye. In the allied members of the same group, the Alcyonaria, Prof. Kolliker (see ‘Icones Histiologice’) and Verrill (see various papers in the Proc. Essex Institute, Trans. Connecticut Academy, American Journal of Science, &c.) have shown good reasons for the belief that the majority of those characters, such as colour, manner of branching, presence or absence of anastomosis between branches, to which alone those writers can appeal who do not make use of a microscope in their researches, must be regarded as usually of no more than secondary importance in the estimation of the mutual affinities of the different subdivisions and species of this group. From personal study I can testify to the truth of this principle in the ease of the Melitheide, which are probably the nearest allies of this family. In them anastomosis of branches may be simply a varietal circumstance ; coloration of the internal parts is open to the same remark, and external coloration is far more frequently so; the manner of branching is much the same in all ; so that, for classifi- ‘ It is found fossil in the Upper Pliocene and Quaternary deposits of South Italy, cf. Seguenza, Atti Ac. Line. (3) Mem. se. fis. mat. nat. iii. pp. 331, 373. 1882. } MR. S. O. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIIDE. 223 cation, recourse has to be had mainly to the characters of the spicula and of the verruce. The want of good series of individuals of any known species of Coralliide except C. nobile is an obstacle to the full discussion of the natural relations of the different forms; a few facts only can be noted at present as bearing on the subject. Beginning with the comparatively common Corallium nobile, Pallas (rubrum, Costa) we find a cylindrical axis, usually branching seldom, but dicho- tomously and most commonly in an arborescent manner, which, though tending towards growth in one plane, yet almost invariably is actually in various planes ; the cortex quite conceals any inequalities of the surface ; and the verrucz! (or calicles) project dome-like from all sides of the branches. Variations are frequent, especially in mode of growth ; but these are by far the commonest characters of the species. The colour of the axis varies not uncommonly from crimson to pale red, rarely to yellow, and more rarely to white; the spicules are of one type, viz. a hexahedral oblong form, the angles being formed by broad truncate but microtuberculate tubercles, which preserve the chief features of their characteristic form throughout all varieties of the external form of the coral. (Cf. Lacaze-Duthiers, Hist. Nat. Corail, p. 70—‘‘ toutefois en recherchant bien, on finit par découvrir une forme qui, résumant toutes les autres, peut étre regardée comme la type.’’) Corallium (Hemicorallium, Gray) johnsoni, P.Z.S. 1860, p. 393, Radiata, pl. xviii., differs in several particulars from the former species, besides the branching essentially in one plane, the strictly anterior position of the verrucee, and their considerable protrusion from the surface, which are the chief points insisted on by Dr. Gray. Thus the cream-coloured cortex is about *5 mm. thick, about twice the thickness which it has in C. xobile; on the terminal branches the calicles rise abruptly from the surface, are truncate above, and measure 1°5 to 2 mm. in average diameter. The spicules have not hitherto been described; and their characters, in the one case, are so remarkable, and have such an important bearing on the affinities of both the genus and family to which the species belongs, that I now proceed to describe them. Spicules of two kinds :—(i.) cylindrical, octoradiate, having a short stout shaft terminated at each end by a tubercle; two pairs of tubercles also project from each end of the shaft, in the same plane as the terminal ones, but at right angles to its long axis; on the anterior side (reckoning the two pairs of tubercles just mentioned as lateral) a tubercle projects at right angles to the long axis of the shaft, and also to the plane in which the lateral tubercles lie ; on the posterior side a similar tubercle is similarly placed, but at the opposite end of the spicule ; the ends of the short, broad, truncate tubercle are micro- tuberculate with few, sharp, smaller tubercles ; size 08 by ‘053 mm.: this form is exactly similar to that of C. nodile, but is slightly smaller. Spicule no. ii. bilobate, having the form of a pair of ‘ T think it best to adopt Verrill’s term for those parts of the cortex which are specialized for the reception of the polypes. 224 MR. S. O. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIIDZ, [Feb. 7, opera-glasses, or of two short globose bottles united by their sides ; consists of two globose masses, often somewhat flattened at distal end, separated by a more or less deep constriction, their surface microtuberculate ; to the proximal extremity of each is attached a short handle-like process, of variable shape, bearing several long tubercles, and About one third the length of the larger lobes; average maximum size ‘053 mm. long by ‘053 mm. across the two lobes; thickness of lobes, antero-posteriorly, about -044 mm. The thickness of the cortex appears to be correlated with the smoothness of the hard axis in the stem (higher up this is distinctly striated) ; for in the other species of Hemicorallium, H. secundum, the thinner cortex appears to be associated with a striated stem. The explanation (physiological) appears to be that the ccenosarcal canals, which would have grooved the surface of the axis, find sufficient protection in the cortex when this is thick. Turning to O. (Pleurocorallium, Gray) secundum, Dana (U.S. Expl. Exp., Zoophytes, vol. vii. p. 641, Atlas, Zooph. pl. lx. fig. 1), we find again the mode of branching to be substantially that in one plane; here too the polypes are said to be confined to the front or sides of the branches, but to be borne mostly on small branchlets or pinne scattered over the edges and front of the main branches—an arrangement differing from that of both the preceding forms, but agreeing with that to be described below in the new species C. stylas- teroides, with which this species further agrees in the growth in one plane. Unfortunately the spicular characters are unknown ; but, from resemblances which have been found to exist between this and a form described below as a variety of it and agreeing in all generi- cally important characters with Hemicorallium johnsoni, I have little doubt of its similar generic identity with that species: therefore one of the genera Pleurocorallium and Hemicorallium must give way, and the former must stand, having precedence in description. Hemicorallium therefore = Pleurocorallium; and Hemicorallium johnsoni = Pleurocorallium johnsoni. Looking at the relations of C. nodile to the species described below as new under the name of C. stylasteroides, we find a thin cortex in both, a low polype-verruca, and a spicule differing only in size; and it is only in those characters which, as I have stated, I believe to be less essential in the classification of this Order, viz. mode of branching, colour, and form of axis (7. ¢. cylindrical or oblong in section), that we find great differences ; and the first two of these have been already seen to vary widely in C. rubrum, and in their variation to approximate that species to C. stylasteroides. No other recent species has been described. __ The only other species with which I am acquainted are the fossil forms C. pallidum, Michelin (Iconogr. Zoophytol. p. 16, pl. xv. fig. 9), from the Miocene of Italy and Tertiaries of Scinde, and C. deckit, M.-Edw. and Haime (Distr. méth. polyp. paleeoz. p. 188), from the White Chalk of Faxde. The former is distinguished from our species by having the method of branching of C. nobile, viz. cylin- drical branches given off at considerable intervals ; and it appears to 1882.] MR. S. O. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIID&. 225 belong to Corallium s. str., and is perhaps identical with C. nobile (see below, p. 232). In C. beckii the branches anastomose and are terminally dilated, both of which are characters quite wanting (as constant characters) in C. nodile as in all other known species ; its systematic position in the family is quite uncertain. 4, I will now proceed to describe, first, the new species, and next the form which I have said is probably distinct, and then give a table showing the arrangement which these additions to our knowledge seem to render necessary. I will conclude with some remarks on the family and its allies, and some further notes on the fossil forms. CoORALLIUM STYLASTEROIDES, sp. nov. (Plate IX. figs. 1-4). Normally branching in one plane. Stem stout, irregular in transverse section. Branching luxuriant, apparently normally dicho- tomous, but subject to considerable variation. Branches tortuous, decidedly compressed laterally in the case of all but the peripheral members, arising from the antero-lateral rather than the postero- lateral aspects of the stem or branches from which they may be derived, diminishing gradually in thickness towards the peripheral part. A few small branchlets are scattered on sides of the larger branches irregularly, and are, together with the terminal branchlets, generally subclavate in form, consisting of a slightly contracted basal portion and an enlarged, pointed, and polyhedric terminal portion. Posterior aspect of main branches very convex, of lesser branches less so. Axis of corallum hard, compact, but perforated by a few canals (normal, or due to parasites?) of about 1 mm. diameter, which issue distally at various points on the lateral aspects of the branches, the openings being often covered by a curved lamina of hard material; colour pure white throughout. Longitudinal strie of surface fine, about four to 1 mm.; grooves for polypes generally with a narrow raised lip on each side; length of grooves 1°5 to 2 mm. long (in direction of branches) by about *75 mm. broad, and about *5 mm. deep in the centre, which consists of a smooth- walled hemispherical pit. Surface of hard axis covered by a very thin spicular cortex, which does not conceal the subjacent striz; it is beset with minute projecting points (visible only with the aid of a lens) arranged along the striz of the hard axis; colour of cortex extremely pale orange. Verruce placed in the grooves above men- tioned, not projecting beyond their margins, or in slight depressions distributed over all parts of the corallum, but most abundantly on the lateral aspects of the main branches, and on the small ter- minal and lateral projecting branchlets ; their peripheral part con- sists of a pale pink collar, slightly darker than the general crust; the eight valves are very pale yellow in colour, actual diameter about °79 mm. Spicules of cortex of one kind only, viz. small, cylindrical, with one terminal tubercle at each end, and a whorl of 3 tubercles sur- rounding each end, and leaving a slight median space usually bare of tubercles ; the tubercles are broad and truncate, the ends bearing Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XV. 15 226 MR. S. O. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIIDA. [Feb. 7, several smaller angular tubercles which point outwards; size ‘053 to 058 mm. long by ‘035 mm. broad (including the tubercles); shaft, excluding tubercles, about ‘02 mm. broad. Hab. Mauritius, 75 fathoms. This species is based on a single dry specimen very finely preserved, obtained recently by the British Museum from a collector in Mauri- tius, Mr. V. De Robillard, together with some remarkably fine specimens of species of Gorgoniide. Its chief larger measurements are:—Main diameter of common stem’ 11 mm.; largest branch— antero-posterior diameter at base 10 mm., lateral diameter 7 mm. ; at 50 mm. from origin the same diameters are 7 mm. and 5 mm, respectively. Maximum transverse breadth of the whole corallum 135 mm., maximum height 105 mm. The species differs from all to which names have been hitherto assigned in the elaborateness and peculiarities of its method of branching, with the exception of a specimen which was assigned by Dr. Gray (P. Z. 8. 1867, p. 126) to his Hemicorallium johnsoni, and which then belonged to the Liverpool Free Museum. This specimen, differing as it does from the typical example of that species in the collection of the British Museum in its slender and strongly arborescent habit, appears to me to be entirely distinct from Dr. Gray’s species, a fact which is apparently meant to be indicated by his subsequent statement (Cat. Lithophytes, p. 24) that the so-called animal of his figure is a fleshy Alcyonoid parasitic on a stony coral. The present species agrees in the mode of branching in one plane with C. secundum, Dana(U.S. Expl. Exped., Zoophytes (vii.), p. 641, pl. Ix. fig. 1), and also in the fact that many of the polypes are borne on small lateral branchlets; but differs from it (judging by the description) in having polypes on the posterior as well as the anterior surface, as also in the very pale pinkish colour of the cortex (that of C. secundum being scarlet), and the pure white of the hard axis (that of C. secundum being white and red). The small points which project from the cortex in the lines of Dana’s striz are, perhaps, represented by the small dots represented in Dana’s enlarged figure of a polype with adjacent cortex; but these may just as well be pits as dots, according to the figure. Nothing is known of the spicules of C. secundum; but, as we have seen above, that species must be referred to the genus Pleurocorallium. Those of C. stylasteroides differ from those of the white variety of C. nobile only in their size, which is about one third less than that of the latter; but the excavations for the verruce (Plate IX. fig. 3), and the thinness of the cortex, are amply sufficient to prevent its being confounded with that form. The apparent anastomosis between some of the branches is due to fracture and subsequent adherence of the broken pieces to the remainder of the corallum, the reunited pieces having apparently contrived to live. With regard to the axial tubes of 1 mm. diameter, alluded to in my diagnosis in uncertainty as to their import, they may possibly 1 Broken off from the actual base. 1882. } MR. §. O. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIID. 227 be due to the same causes as those which produce certain per- forations, open at both ends, in the base of some of the small branches, and which are seen in parts forming passages covered in by a thin lamina of hard matter. The latter resemble so much the passages which are seen among the branches of many Stylasteride, and which are said (see Moseley, Report on Corals of the ‘Chal- lenger’ Expedition, p. 78) in this case to be produced by the growth of the coral over an intruding Aphroditacean Worm which has adhered to the branches, that I must attribute with probability a similar origin to those of the Corallium. It is a different matter with the deeper tubes belonging to the main stem and branches. In the present base of the main stem, they are seen by its fracture to be excentric in position, somewhat variable in size: one of them contains a fine yellowish deposit containing minute siliceous particles and siliceous spicules, viz. spined acuates and acerates, about ‘14 mm. long and ‘009 to ‘0177 thick, and acerates about ‘28 by 024 mm., with fragments of spinulates, triradiates, and some minute anchorate spicules. Lacaze-Duthiers (Hist. Nat. du Corail, Paris, 1864, p. 333) mentions small Annelids allied to the Serpule as sometimes attaching themselves to the surface of the Red Coral, and being covered up by the centrifugal growth of the corallum; but these tubes present no such distinct lining of carbonate of lime as this hypothesis demands. If not merely remains of the ccenosarcal canal-system, they are probably produced by the burrowing of boring Sponges (e. g. Cliona, Samus, Alectona), such as are common in Stylaster and Astrid Madre- pores, or Worms (e. g. Sipunculus), such as occur in Heteropsammia. Lacaze-Duthiers attributes such cavities generally to “la érosion des €éponges ou des vers,” and mentions that such perforated Specimens of coral are technically described as “‘ piqué” by dealers. Some of the spicules mentioned above as occurring in one of the tubes appear to have been simply introduced with some bottom-material which has been accidentally washed into the tube, as their forms do not belong to any of the boring Sponges; but the spined forms mentioned may very well belong to a boring species allied to Cliona purpurea, Hancock, or Alectona millari, Carter, two species of boring Sponges. Kolliker (Icon: Histiol. p. 146, pl. xvi. fig. 8) mentions and figures a smaller central cavity as occurring in some of his transverse sections of the Red Coral, but is unable to explain its occurrence. The question of the origin of the present passages receives, however, no help from Kolliker’s observations, as his figure shows a dis- coloured ring surrounding the passages ; they probably represent the horny axial tract found in the stems of most coralligenous Alcyona- rians. In this case, if they prove to be constant in their occurrence, they would seriously interfere with the value of the coral for jewellery- purposes, should it be attempted in the future to put it, like the pale varieties of the Red Coral, to such a use. But the absence of a subtle tint of any kind, such as that which the varieties of the Red Coral generally possess, renders such an attempt improbable. The 15 228 MR. S. O. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIIDZ. [Feb. 7, considerable depth at which this specimen was obtained, not being greater than that from which Corallium is brought to the surface in the Mediterranean, need not of itself prevent such an undertaking. PLEUROCORALLIUM SECUNDwM, Dana, var. ELATIOR. (Plate IX. figs. 6-11). Branching normally in one plane. Stem strong, oval in trans- verse section, the longest diameter being the lateral one. Mode of branching normally dichotomous combined with pinnation. Distance between points of origin of main branches considerable, but sides of branches occupied in these intervals by small branches or pinne, irregular in size and point of occurrence, occasionally found on the anterior surface ; branches of main system decreasing gradually in thickness to the extremity of the corallum, somewhat tortuous, decidedly compressed from front to back in most places, the lateral diameter being to the antero-posterior about 11:9; pinne short, coming rapidly to a point, circular (or almost so) in transverse section, generally curved or tortuous, and not exceeding 20 mm. in length. Axis of corallum hard, not easily indented with a knife, solid ; in main stem, and for a considerable distance up the main branches, of a deep crimson-red colour with a tinge of scarlet, resembling the colour of dried salmon’s flesh ; in the upper branches and the pinne the central portion of the axis becomes paler, being at first pink and finally white, this axial pale tract widening as it approaches the extremity of the branches or pinne, the axes of whose apices are white throughout. Surface of hard axis very finely striated in the longitudinal direction, with about five striz to 1 mm., more deeply striated on smaller branches and pinnz; surface otherwise even, with the exception of a tendency to roughness at the ends of the pinne, and very slight (almost imperceptible) shallow depressions beneath the calicles. Cortex about ‘3 mm. in thickness, completely concealing all inequalities of the axis, except at ends of pinne; friable, of a pale vermilion colour; posterior and lateral surfaces even, and devoid of verruce, with the exception of a few scattered ones on and near the stem and at the ends of some pinne ; anterior surface beset with verrucze at intervals of 1 to 3 mm., and with minute punctiform elevations, visible only by the aid of a lens, uniformly distributed over the intermediate spaces to the number of about 25 in a square millimetre. Verruce broad, truncate above, rising abruptly from surface; of same colour as the general cortex ; in retraction they may be completely closed; wrinkles between the 8 valves generally obsolete or very slight in the retracted state; dia- meter of verruce 1 to 1:25 mm., projection from cortex about *5 mm. Spicules of cortex of two kinds, viz. :—(i.) Cylindrical, sexradiate, colourless, with short thick axis; at each extremity two tubercles project from the side of the shaft (which does not project beyond them), at right angles to it; on each of the anterior and posterior aspects of the spicule (reckoning those which bear the above-mentioned four tubercles as the lateral ones) one tubercle is set at right angles to the long axis of the shaft, near its extremity, but at opposite ends 1882. ] MR. S. 0. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIIDZ. 229 of it; the spicule is thus sexradiate. (Varieties of the typical form oceur, in which both the tubercles of the antero-posterior faces may be on one side; in this case one of them may be double, or one of them may be subterminal and appear to project beyond the end of the shaft; or one of them may be wanting, or one may occur in addition at one or both ends; in the latter case the result is an octoradiate like that of Corallium nobile.) Tubercles short, broad, expanding from their base into fungiform disks, themselves tuber- culate with numerous short, rather blunt, small tubercles. Size (average maximum) 0°7 by 0°53 mm. (ii.) Second form of spicule shaped like an opera-glass, viz. like two short globular bottles attached by their sides; it consists of two subspherical lobes sepa- rated by a constriction, generally with tubercular excrescences borne on secondary lobes on their surface, and minute tubercles on their surface and edges; the upper margin of each lobe is produced into a short, strongly tuberculate, handle-like process of variable shape. Generally coloured pale red. Average maximum size :—length (across lobes) 0°6 mm., breadth (from apex of handle to lower extre- mity of lobes) 0°53 mm., maximum thickness of lobe from front to back 0°35 mm. (It is practically identical with the similar spicule of P. johnsoni.) Hab. Said to come from Japan. This most interesting form is represented by two portions, perhaps, but not certainly, belonging to the same colony. The long diameter of the present common stem of the larger specimen is 11 mm., the lesser diameter (antero-posterior) 9 mm.; these thicknesses are maintained approximately for most of the first internode, which is 25 mm. long; probable maximum lateral spread of branches 60 to 70 mm.; height above present base probably, when complete, about 200 mm. Mr. Moseley has very liberally presented the specimens to the national collection ; and I am much indebted to him for this oppor- tunity of describing them. They were stated by the dealer from whom he obtained them to have been received from Japan, whence it was said that hundredweights came into the market, which, however, found but little sale. The locality is perhaps correct ; but I have been unable, after diligent search, to find any record, either in scientific writings and travels, or in works of general information, of the occur- rence of any native Japanese coral which was at all likely to belong to the Coralliide. To Messrs. Franks and Read, of the Ethnological Department inthe British Museum, I am much indebted for informa- tion bearing on the subject. Mr. Franks has in his private collection a number of Japanese carved figures, called in Japan “ netsuki,” in most of which small dark men of a peculiar physiognomy, not Japanese, are represented as carrying coral, or (though this point is not so certain) as bringing it up from the sea. The coral thus depicted is either of actual specimens of Corallium or consists of carvings apparently representing it. Japanese writings call these men “black men.” It is certain that they are not intended for Japanese ; and as the men associated, whether in the ornaments 230 MR. S. 0. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIID. [Feb. 7, or writings, with Precious Coral appear to be always of this foreign type, it seems certain that it is generally known in that country as a foreign product. The pieces of coral which actually form part of the ornaments, and which the men clasp or carry, is certainly not the form under notice, but appears to be Corallium nobile in all cases; it was of rather a pale colour in all the specimens which [ have seen. All these specimens are antecedent in date of manufacture to the period at which the Japanese ports were opened to European commerce. Prof. Moseley has drawings of quite a similar character. Precious coral is widely used in the East for ornaments, especially in China, where Mr. Franks informs me that an Empress’s necklace has been made of alternate pieces of jade and coral. In this case it is probably all derived from the Mediterranean, as the value placed upon it in the instance just mentioned is more than the Chinese would have set upon a native production, or probably even on one from Japan. Prof. Moseley says that the Japanese use Oorallium as an ornament and in “ netsukis” abundantly, that he imagined it came from the Mediterranean, but that several residents have told him that it occurs native in Japan. None was found there by the ‘Challenger.’ A friend of Prof. Moseley told him that he had seen plenty of Red Coral which had been obtained at Japan, but subsequently was doubtful that it might not have been a Distichopora. After considering all the evidence, I have still doubts as to whether the present specimens really are from Japan. It seems certain that much Corallium nobile has been imported into that country, probably by way of China. This is shown by Mr. Franks’s ornaments to constitute at any rate the main origin of this substance for manufac- turing-purposes in Japan. As the present species, from its hardness, compact structure, and deep colour, is hardly less fitted for those purposes than C. nobile itself, it would almost certainly have been thus employed if it were generally known in the country. In regard to the relations of the form, it may be seen at once to agree very closely with Pleurocorallium johnsoni (Pl. UX. fig. 5) in all essential characters, as the two forms of spicules, which are almost exactly identical in the two species—the cylindrical radiate of var. elatior having, however, but 6 radii as a rule; the axis, also, is striated and party-coloured in the stem, instead of white and smooth ; and the cortex, besides being thinner, is: scarlet instead of cream- coloured. However, it is undoubtedly a Pleurocorallium. Its rela- tions to the original form of the species of which I have made it a variety are less certain. Unfortunately, as mentioned above, we are not acquainted with the characters of the spicules of Pleurocorallium secundum. From its resemblance to the present species in the party- coloured axis, pinnated branches, scarlet cortex with truncate Pleu- rocorallian verruce, it appears at any rate to be nearly related to it ; but as the verruce are said to be placed mainly on the pinnee and not, as here, on the face of the branches, I think it may possibly be distinct. In that case I should propose the name elatius for the present form, on account of its more erect and ramose habit ; mean- while it may stand as var. elatior. The pinnate arrangement of the 1882. ] MR. S. 0. RIDLEY ON THE CORALLIIDS. 231 lateral small branches on the sides of the large ones, the antero- posterior flattening, the rigidly anterior position of the verrucz of the general surface, their abrupt projection and truncate extremity, separate it from all other species; while the minute characters, such as the double spicular complement, with its very remarkable form no. ii.—absent as it is from two of the recent Coralliide in which the spicules are known, and approximating the genus (as it appears to me to do) to the Melitheide, from its resemblance to the “ Blattkeule ”’ so widely distributed in that family—unmistakably show its true position to be by the side of Pl. johnsoni. The chief differences between the species are the red colour of the greater part of the hard axis and of the cortex, the absence of the terminal tubercles to the cylindrical spicule no. i., and the smaller size of the verrucee, in the present form. Key to the Genera, Species, and Varieties. I have here endeavoured to present what appears to be the natural relations of the different forms, while giving characters which may readily distinguish them. I. Spicules of one kind, viz. octoradiate cylindrical. Ver- ruce distributed over whole surface of corallum, promi- Meni mont Culars Ale ks Bsctisehsdss: CoRALLIUM s. str. 1. Corallum branching in more than a single plane. i, Axis cylindrical; spicules about ‘09 mm. long. Known habitats. Sada ra cae baie a C. nobile, \ Mediterranean ; ; Ba nae Fd era form, Cape Verd Isl. . Axis and cortex yellowish- { C. nodile, ; : white to white ........ 4 whakeecust { pale yar. } Moditarmnean. Fossil: Tertiaries of Italy and ii, Spicules ?; axis pale ............... { ie sermaey pet , ee ear. an Miocene. 2. Corallum branching in but one plane, calicles sunk in pits in axis. Axis oval in transverse section, white ; spicules about ‘06 mm. long; cortex very pale orange, very thin C. stylasterotdes, Mauritius. II. Spicules of two kinds, radiate cylindrical and opera-glass- shaped ; calicles rising abruptly, truncate, those of stem and main branches confined to anterior surface. Corallum with lateral pinnz to main branches. Axis oval in transverse section......... PLEUROCORALLIUM, Gray, emend. 1. Axis partly red, partly white; cortex scarlet. i. Calicles chiefly on lateral pinne ... Pl. secundum)...“ Sandwich Is. ?” ii. Calicles chiefly on main branches ; cylindrical spicules normally 6- A Pl. secundum, PAUTAHO UG 3 500 sin ace 233 SEE } New Lepidoptera from N.W. Hinislaye £ «Jaca «67s sate og een XII. Fey oeaestion teyroshousirislis ob sev oeelea ed tot cae e e 265 Mus nigricauda....++....ceeeerer cess teeeeee ot XIV. { FE 9 2. Saccostomus lapidarius Peper pees NOTICE. a According to present arrangements the ‘ Proceedings’ are issued i in four parts, ; as follows:— 7 Part I. containing papers read in January and February, on June Ist re Spaeore * » March and April, on August Ist. TE: 3 x », May and June, on October Ist. Ae Ties ‘ ,, November and Devember, on April Ist, The be is 12s, per eat for the edition with coloured, and 3s. per ae for x that with uncoloured Plates. € Beers Te nee PROCEEDINGS SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, FOR THE YEAR 1882. PART II. CONTAINING PAPERS READ IN — PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY, SOLD AT THEIR HOUSE IN HANOVER SQUARE. ’ LONDON: 1] Aeicaiiecruncaiie: [Price Twelve Shillings. _ me i LIST OF CONTENTS, PART II.—1882. March 7, 1882. Page 1. On some Points in the Anatomy of the Great Anteater Ose ai jubata). Ss W. A. Forses, B.A., Prosector to the Society. (Plate XY.)........- «+. Be OE, 2.List of the Birds sent home by Mr. Joseph Thomson from the River Rovuma, East Africa. By CaptainG. E, Suznizy. (Plate XVI.).........-- ae sie dee ccleaner 302 3. A second List of Birds recently collected by Sir John Kirk in Eastern Africa. By Captain G. E. Sazriny. (Plate XVID) . rr er ary ; March 21, 1882. The Secretary. Report on the additions to the Society’s Menagerie in February 1882.... 311 Mr. J. E. Harting. Exhibition of, and remarks upon, a mummified bird from an island On tho Coast OF wPerUs ai= 6 ais o's tic prinieieioi= qisioesinls aidleilatlaig'y oh vneetee su Kieran Mr. Sclater. Remarks on the use of the term “Lipotype” ...-..+- + +++e+seeeeeeeees 311 Dr. Giinther, F.R.S. Exhibition of, and remarks upon a skin of a variety of the Teagan (Felis pardus) ....++ sip eels shen Merve ox oipetele ieleiale totals av elules eam alereiate ae Wide eletetea eek Dr. Ginther, F.R.S. Exhibition of, and remarks upon, the shell of a new Tortoise of the ~ genus Geoemyda from Siam........-seeee eee ce teen ee ee ee tan eeereees SAE aml, Mr. R. Bowdler Sharpe. Exhibition of, and remark upon; a specimen of a Guia from Iunipary ee sac aver tuslee es sa 'eleete atlakta ne ness SBbion oes ttt Ser Hoe .ct 312 1. On some Points in the Anatomy of Prerocles, ‘with Remarks on its Systematic Position. By Hans Gavow, Ph.D., C.M.Z.S. ....-...0ses ees ce et ee cece ew ee ee ccecees «-- 312 2. Note on a Peculiarity in the Trachea of the Twelve-wired Bird-of-Paradise (Seleucides nigra). By W. A. Forszs, B.A., Prosector to the Society a | 3. A Note on Strix oustaleti, Hartlaub. By R. Bowpuer Swarre, F.L.S., F.Z.S., &., Department of Zoology, British Museum .......- 1... 0- cece ce cece nce te neeeee 335 4. On some nd Species of Birds from South Africa. By Captain G. E. Sueniry. (Plate ERVEDD) ria: ante) tore Sitar See coe Ws eels ow a cigs cele wide o0.t's aero sis o's aisles cieemids 5. On a new Species of Agrias from the Valley of ihe Amazons. By F. D. Gopman and O. Sarvix. (Plate XIX. 6. On some Crustaceans “oh lg at the Mauritius. ee EpwaArD % Miers, F.L.S., F.Z.S. (Plate, AX)... cae eee te Macias wieisis's- sip ale stn ste sola aiehis'a.s ses oso seinen eit eo eOOe Casiiate cides on page 3 ve wrapper. PZ.0 16620 ey. = — = maa oes oD = re oS ————— ae ey ee Fig. 3. J. Smitlith ‘ Hamhart. imp. ANATOMY OF MYRMECOPHAGA. 1882.] MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. 287. 1. On some Points in the Anatomy of the Great Anteater (Myrmecophaga jubata). By W. A. Forsss, B.A., Prosector to the Society. [Received February 28, 1882.] (Plate XV.) The literature relating to the anatomical structure of the Edentata, though very considerable, is unfortunately much scattered, and with many blanks as regards special points. The genus Myrmecophaga may be considered—thanks chiefly to the labours of Owen' and Pou- chet”, who have elaborately described many parts of its organization— to be the best known, as regards anatomical structure, of all the existing Anteaters. Two adult female specimens of this animal haying lately * passed through my hands in my prosectorial capacity, I have had the opportunity of confirming a large part of the already published accounts of its anatomy, as well as of correcting, or adding, certain details, which I now lay before the Society. 1. Alimentary Canal and Appendages.—The palate (fig. 1, p. 288) is not absolutely smooth, but presents anteriorly a series of irregular transverse ridges notched along their margin, best developed and nearly meeting mesially anteriorly, posteriorly becoming much more oblique backwardsand less regular, the ridges not being opposite each other but more or less alternating. In all there are about seven of these ridges. The floor of the mouth to about 2 inches beyond the most posterior opening of the submaxillary glands, the gums over the tip of the lower jaw, and the lateral callous pads which are present as in T'a- mandua, are all covered with minute, retroverted, closely-set papillz. 1 “On the Anatomy of the Great Anteater,” Part I., Trans. Zool. S oe. iy. pp. 117-140, pls. xxxvii.—xl.; Part II., 7. ¢. pp. 179-181, pls. li—lii. 2 Mémoires sur le Grand Fourmilier: Paris, 1874. In addition to these, there are brief references to Myrmecophaga jubata in Rapp’s ‘ Edentaten’ (2e Aufl., Tiibingen, 1852), and Prof. Flower’s Hunterian Lectures (Med. Times and Gazette, Nov. 30, 1872, p. 591). The submaxillary glands have been described by Gervais (C. R. Ixix. pp. 1110, 1111 [1869}); and the brain by the same author (“ Mémoire sur les formes cérébrales propres aux Edentés vivants et fossiles,” Nouv. Arch. Mus. v. pp. 1-56, pls. i.—v.), and by G. Pouchet (“Mémoire sur lencephale des Edentés,” Robin’s Journal de l’'Anatomie, 1868, pp. 658-675, and 1869, pp. 1-18, &c.). 3 The first of these, from Buenos Ayres (spec. d of the List of Vertebrates), was presented to the Society by the Hon. L. 8. Sackville West (now H. B, M’s. Minister at Washington) on Sept. 7, 1877. It died Nov. 29, 1881, from severe inflammation of the connective tissues lying in and around the submaxillary glands. The second (specimen @) was presented so long ago as October 4, 1867, by Dr. J. A. Palin, C.M.Z.S., and, after living for more than 14 years in the Society’s Gar- dens, died on the 5th of February of the present year. The only disease detected in it, on post mortem examination, was a considerable enlargement of the thymus gland, and acute inflammation of the laryngeal mucous membrane. This second specimen, though an aged animal, was by no means so large as the first, having a total length of 6 ft. 1} in. (from the tip of the nose to the end of the tail, which was 2 ft. 4 in. long), as against 7 ft. 5} in. in the other. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XX. 20 288 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. [ Mar. 7, The tip of the tongue is quite glabrous and globular ; but the greater part of the rest of its extent, anterior to the pair of circumvallate papillz, is dorsally and laterally covered with similar, but smaller, retroverted papille, best developed towards the tip of the organ, and gradually getting smaller and smaller towards its base, till they are scarcely visible to the unaided eye except in certain lights. There is a median glabrous line, or shallow groove running along the Fig. 1. Palate of Myrmecophaga jubata; from a preparation in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, prepared from specimen a. tongue till near its apex; but this is ventral in position. According to Owen there is a similar dorsal one; butif so, it is not very evident (/.c. p- 129). The dorsal surface, however, is slightly fluted towards the apex. In front of the circumvallate papille a slightly raised median longitudinal ridge extends for some 5 inches. My observations on the salivary glands agree well in most points 1882.] MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. 289 with those of my predecessors, except as regards the number and openings of the ducts to the submaxillary glands, regarding which very different statements have been made at various times. Of these, Gervais’s description, as given in some remarks accompanying the exhibition before the French Academy of Sciences of some models of these glands (C. R. s. e.), agrees best with my observations. He says :—‘‘ Deux paires des canaux dont il s’agit viennent aboutir sepa- rément dans la bouche en se rendant a deux poches situées auprés de la symphyse mentonniére ; la ¢roisiéme paire verse un peu en arriére, également dans une petite dilatation terminale.” A similar arrangement is described by J. Chatin in the genus Tamandua’, except that he says that there are two openings on each side at the symphysis. Pouchet, on the other hand, maintains (‘ Mé- moires’ &c. pp. v and 88) that there are only ¢wo ducts on each side, one of these being formed by the confluence of two of the three pri- mary ducts coming from the corresponding three lobes of which each gland is composed. He only describes a single pair of openings close to the symphysis. Owen, finally, describes the three ducts of each side as eventually uniting, and opening, also by a single aperture, close to the symphysis. An examination, however, of his specimen (now preserved in the Hunterian Museum, where, by the kind permission of Prof. Flower, I was allowed to examine it), demonstrates the existence of a second pair of apertures in the floor of the mouth situated some 2 inches behind the first pair, which lie immediately behind the symphysis, in this respect quite agreeing with Gervais’s description, and with my own observations on the second of my (fresh) specimens (vide Plate XV. fig. 3c). This second pair of apertures, which lie close to each other on each side of the median line and are very minute, are the openings of the deeper ducts, which, one on each side, arise from the more anterior (cervical) portion of the gland’. As these lie quite behind the other pair of apertures, any injection passed into the latter can of course only fill the two pairs of ducts (a, 6) which debouch intothem. This may easily explain, therefore, Pouchet’s only, having found ¢wo ducts on each side, though it is possible that individual specimens may vary in this respect. I must at least notice that in the first speci- men that passed through my hands (the submaxillary ducts of which were injected from the anterior pair of apertures alone), I found on the left side a single duct only, and on the right ¢wo, which united together at about the level of the articulation of the lower jaw. This specimen, however, had, it is to be remembered, extensive inflamma- tion in these parts, which may possibly have effected an alteration in the relations and number of the ducts. It is pretty clear, however, that three pairs all together is the ordinary number of these ducts, 1 Ann, Sci. Nat. 5, (Zool.) xiii. art. no. 9. 2 Such was, at least, the condition in the only specimen of Myrmecophaga in which these ducts had been satisfactorily injected examined by me. In Taman- dua, according to Chatin’s figure (op. cit. pl. 14), it is the ducts from the posterior (sternal) part of the gland that open here. This point requires re- examination, as also the number of apertures anteriorly. 20* 290 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. [ Mar. 7, that having been found in Gervais’s specimen (perhaps in two), in Owen’s, and in one of mine for certain. I found the opening of the two other ducts exactly as described by Pouchet (J. ¢. p. 89) and Gervais, one of these being dilated ter- minally, the dilatation receiving the other duct and opening bya single aperture into the mouth (wide Plate XV. fig. 3). At the point where the three submaxillary ducts of each side, coming from the three lobes of the gland, converge, and become united intimately by their walls to each other, they become surrounded by a bulb-like mass of muscular issue, the exact relations of which I shall describe below. But I could not perceive that this structure, which externally looks like a bulbous reservoir surrounded by a muscular coat, corresponded to any dilatation of the ducts which pass through it ; on the contrary, these seem to preserve a nearly uniform diameter throughout this part of their course, a condition correspond- ing to that described by Chatin in Tamandua. The terminal reservoirs, I may add, of the two pairs of submaxillary ducts lie just above the long thin median tendon of the genio-hyoid, the contraction of which muscle may possibly, by compressing the fluors of these reservoirs, aid in the ejaculation of the fluid contained in them. The stomach of Myrmecophaga generally resembles Prof. Owen’s figures and description ; but the thick pyloric pads are softer and more vascular, and the whole less gizzard-like, than I had been led to anticipate from his account. The gyriform folds of the mucous membrane of the cardiac part of the stomach, which quite resemble those of the stomach in many other animals, are, in particular, not happily represented in his fig. 1, pl. li. The liver of both specimens agrees very well with Prof. Flower’s description of this viscus. Both caudate and Spigelian lobes are practically absent. As accurately described by Pouchet (‘ Mémoires,’ pp. 191,192), the pancreatic duct ends in a vesicle, in the walls of which the hepatic duct runs for a little way and then opens into it, the vesicle then opening by a separate aperture into the duodenum. In the first (larger) specimen examined by me the intestines measured as follows :—small intestine 24 ft. 10 in., large intestine 2 ft. 34 inches. The cxecum can hardly be said to exist as a separate part. The median longitudinal ridge of mucous membrane was continuous for the posterior 15 feet 3 inches of the small intestine, and reappeared above this at intervals in a less regular and less developed way. I could see no longitudinal folds of mucous membrane, such as are described by Owen, in the rectum, which, however, had dis- tinetly ¢ransverse ones, irregularly disposed in a gyriform way, well marked. The right lung is trilobed, with an azygos lobe superadded ; the left lung is bilobed, the lowest lobe in each lung being biggest. The kidneys are quite smooth externally: there are no distinct Malpighian pyramids, the tubules opening internally on a single 1882. ] MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. 291 slightly-elevated ridge, which in one specimen is divided into three or four slightly-marked papille. 2. Brain.—The late Prof. Gervais has given, in his memoir on the brain of Edentata, figures of the superior, inferior, and lateral aspects of the brain of Myrmecophaga jubata, as well as of the cranial casts of that and the other species of Anteater’. Pouchet, in his ‘ Mémoires,’ also gives figures of the cranial casts of Myrmecophega, and, in the article in the ‘Journal de |’Anatomie’ above cited, re- presentations of the brain itself of Zamandua and Cycloturus, that organ having been previously figured in the latter species by Tiede- mann °*. As I find Gervais’s figures of the brain in some respects unsatis- factory, I have taken this opportunity of giving representations of the brains extracted from my two specimens, including one showing the disposition of the deeper parts (figs. 2, 3, 4, pp. 292, 293). The olfactory lobes are very large, projecting forwards for ‘7 inch in front of the cerebral hemispheres: in the lateral view of the brain they occupy, at least anteriorly, almost the lower half of the parts there exposed. They are continuous basally with the well- developed ‘‘ hippocampal lobe,” in front of which appears a large oval swelling of grey matter, on the middle root of the olfactory lobe, of an antero-posterior extent of more than half aninch. Towards their base, the olfactory tracts are curiously marked by slight trans- verse impressions (fig. 3) giving them a striated appearance, which may also be observed in the corresponding regions in the brains of Tamandua and Orycteropus. The cerebral hemispheres are but little arched superiorly® ; but the vermis ceredelli is very prominent, rising above the general level of the hemispheres (fig. 2). Viewed from above, the hemispheres appear somewhat truncated posteriorly, though they here completely conceal the corpora quadrigemina, abutting on the cerebellum (fig. 2). Attaining their greatest breadth anterior to this, a little in front of the level of the posterior end of the median fissure (1°95 inch long), they taper somewhat rapidly anteriorly. The cerebellum is well convoluted, with its lateral extent (1°5 inch) greater than its antero-posterior (1°15). The vermis is much narrower than the lateral lobes; it is prominent, and in one specimen (the larger) considerably twisted on itself. The flocculi are distinct. The nates are much larger than the testes: the latter are very narrow from before backwards as compared with their combined transverse extent (‘075 : °6 inch), and are not distinctly separated from each other. The nates are larger, more prominent, and distinctly paired, being separated by a well-marked constriction ; they are somewhat triangular in shape, with their longer axis trans- verse. 1 Nouv. Arch. v. pl. i. figs. 3, 3a, 30, pl. ii. figs. 1-3. 2 Icones cerebri Simiarum, pl. v. fig. 8. 3 Gervais’s figure, /. c. fig. 3a, makes their outline much too convex antero- posteriorly. 292 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. [ Mar. 7, The pineal gland has a distinct hard mineral deposit ; its peduncles are easily made out. There is no very distinct corpus mamillare, it being only represented by a white swelling on theinfundibulum. The hypophysis cerebri is very large. The anterior commissure is distinct, but not particularly Brain of Myrmecophaga jubata (specimen @) from above. large, its antero-posterior extent being *15 inch. The soft com- missure is very large ("25 inch long); the posterior distinct. The third nerves are small, the optic not large. There is a good septum lucidum (‘25 inch deep anteriorly), with a contained fifth ventricle. The fornix is very well developed, with but few precommissural fibres. The corpus callosum is very well developed, more than an inch long, and nearly horizontal in position, with but a slight genu anteriorly. Posteriorly it forms, with the fornix, a prominent pad (bourrelet). The cerebral sulci are not exactly alike in my two specimens, the brain of the bigger of the two animals, though of the same dimen- 1882.] MR, W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. 293 sions as its fellow, being more richly convoluted by the development in it of minor fissures and impressions not present in the other. It is that of which the lateral and internal views are here figured (figs.3, Fig. 3. Fig. 4. The same, from the inside. All these figures are of the natural size. a, Limbic fissure, inferior are of (Broca); 4, fissure of Rolando (Broca) ; ¢, primary parietal sulcus ; d, e, additional sulci of circumsylvian gyrus ; s, fissure of Sylvius; J. s.s, island of Reil (lobule sous-sylvien, Broca) ; ¢.m, c.m', c.m'', calloso-marginal sulcus (superior are of limbic fissure, Broca); 2, hippocampal sulcus; @.c, anterior commissure ; opt, optic nerve; 7. (fig. 4), “ Pli de passage rétro-limbique” (Broca) ; + (fig. 2), bridging convolution between frontal and parietal lobes. 4): the description of the main sulci is taken from the simpler specimen (represented in fig. 2), but applies in all essential respects to both. The olfactory lobe is separated from the cerebral hemispheres 294 MR, W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. [Mar. 7, above by a shallow fissure (a), which, at the level of the anterior extremity of the prominent “hippocampal lobe,” turns downwards, and runs along the external and inferior face of that lobe till it terminates on its inner face (fig. 4, a), not, however, reaching the hippocampal sulcus (2). At the point where its downward course commences there is a small triangular area (/. s.s.) exposed on the lateral surface of the brain, from which a short curved shallow sulcus (s) runs a short way upwards, forming with the descending part of a a forwardly- convex curve. In the larger specimen figured (fig. 3) this short upwardly-running sulcus (s) is separated, as will be seen, by a narrow bridging fold from the triangular depression and its posterior continu- ation (a). From the antero-inferior angle of this triangular space, but separated by a very narrow, more or less deep, bridging convolu- tion from a, another sinuous fissure (0) runs forwards and upwards to terminate near the anterior angle of the hemisphere’. Above, on the supero-lateral aspect of the brain, and nearly parallel with the median longitudinal fissure, is a distinct longitudinal suleus (c), convex upwards, which runs in an antero-posterior direction for a space of 1*2 inch. Finally, parallel with the posterior edge of the hemisphere, dividing the external surface of this “temporal lobe,”’ is a vertically-directed sulcus (d@) about *75 inch in extent. On the internal aspect of the brain (fig. 4) runs a well-marked “ calloso-marginal” sulcus (¢.m), broken up into three or more parts, the most posterior being nearly vertical in position, and sepa- rated by but a little space from the posterior extremity of fissure a. In its usual position is a well-marked hippocampal sulcus (/), with a broad “ fuscia dentata’’ between it and the corpus fimbriatum, the fuscia dentata being continued, as described by Prof. Turner in Dasypus*, as a thin layer of longitudinally-disposed fibres over the corpus callosum to near its genw. The hippocampal sulcus does not extend as high as the corpus callosum. The lateral ventricle is fair- sized : I can see not a trace of any posterior cornu. The hippocampus major is strongly convex. The ‘hippocampal lobe” has, on its inferior aspect, a few irregular dentations developed near its antero- internal angle. In the smaller and simpler brain of Tamandua (represented dia- grammatically in fig. 5, p. 295), the only sulei present are those corresponding to a, 6, ¢ in the larger species, with some slight repre- sentatives of d. Adopting the late Prof. Broca’s ideas * as to the nature and com- position of the ‘‘ scissure imbique,” the inferior are of this is clearly represented by the fissure a, which is separated by a narrow “ pli de pussage rétro-limbique” (fig. 4, 7./) from its superior are, represented 1 In the smaller specimen (fig. 2), this fissure is, on the right-hand side only, broken up into two by a narrow bridging convolution (+). ? Journ. Anat. Phys. i. p. 314 (1867). _° “Anatomie comparée des cireonvolutions cérébrales. Le grand lobe lim- bique et la scissure limbique dans la série des Mammiféres,” Revue d’ Anthro- pologie, vii. pp. 885-498, 1882. ] MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER, 295 by what we commonly call the “ calloso-marginal sulcus’’ (c.m, &c.). The slight sulcus at s, developed above the triangular depression, will accordingly be the Sylvian fissure. 4% is then, following Broca’s identifications, the fissure of Rolando, the gyrus lying anterior to and below it being the reduced equivalent of the frontal lobe. As has already been pointed out, this gyrus is connected posteriorly by a small, sometimes deep, bridging fold with the triangular space (J. s.s.) below the Sylvian fissure. This triangular space is Broca’s ** lobule sous-sylvien,” its equivalent in the Primates being the lobe of the island of Reil (/. c. p. 430). The longitudinal sulcus ¢ corresponds probably to Broca’s “ si/lon pariétal primaire ;”’ the gyrus above and internal to it will thus be the “ circonvolution sagitiale,” that below it the “ circonvolution sylvien,” which in the more-convoluted of the brains figured (fig. 3) becomes divided up by smaller sulci (d, e, &c.) into a number of imperfect gyri. Fig. 5. Diagram of right cerebral hemisphere of Twmandua tetradactyla, from above. From my study of the brains of the remaining genera of Edentata, I have little doubt that the sulci a, 4, and c, here described, can be traced, with various modifications, in nearly all the members of this group. Orycteropus in its cerebral characters seems to approach Myrmecophaga more nearly than any other form, the sulci and gyri of the brains of the two forms, as well as their general conformation, being very similar ; Munis seems to possess the three typical sulci well developed ; and these are also present in the larger Dasypodidee, though apparently much reduced in the smaller forms of that group. The Sloths conform to the same general type. But, in the absence of a larger series of brains of this group than is at present available for comparison, satisfactory generalization on this subject is impossible, most of the published figures of Edentate brains being very unsatis- factory in detail, whilst nothing of importance is known as regards the develo pment of the sulci in any member of this group. 296 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. [ Mar. 7, 3. Female Generative Organs (fig. 6, p. 297).—These have been briefly described by Pouchet', as well as by Rapp ; but their accounts will, in some respects, bear supplementing. A cloaca, in the true sense of the word, is not present in the Great Anteater. The labia majora, which bound the vertical urino- genital fissure, are very prominent and hirsute. Above them, but separated by a distinct perineal space, slightly hair-clad, is the trans- verse anal aperture, the mucous membrane lining which is pink, quite different from that of the lower passage and its boundaries, which is grey. Slightly inclosing these two apertures above is a widely-open V-shaped tegumentary fold, with its apex situated superiorly towards the root of the tail. There are no labia minora visible; and no clitoris is present as a free organ, though the corpora cavernosa can be felt as tough bodies lying in the walls of the vulva. The length of the urino-genital canal is 2°7 inches: about 1 inch from its external orifice may be seen, on each side of the middle line, two or three small pore-like depressions; a bristle passed through the largest of these enters a short duct, connected with one of a pair of globular compact glands about the size of a small cherry, which lie in the walls of the urino-genital canal above, between it and the rectum. They are, no doubt, “ vulvo-vaginal” glands, or glands of Bertolini, corresponding to the male Cowper’s. The urino-genital canal is lined by smooth, vascular, mucous membrane. Communication between this and the next section of these organs is effected by means of two small apertures, each admitting readily enough the passage into the vagina, through the here constricted walls of the common tube, of a probe. From between these apertures is prolonged downwards, for a slight distance along the dorsal wall of the urino-genital canal, a slight ridge of mucous membrane, on each side of which are visible numerous small pore-like apertures, arranged in series in lines running outwards from the middle line. On laying open the vagina along its anterior wall, it is seen to pass above with no marked constriction or “os uteri”’ into the pyriform simple uterus, the only distinction between the two parts being afforded by the thicker and more muscular walls of the uterus, and by the difference in the character of the mucous membrane, this being quite smooth and spongy in the uterus, whilst that of the vagina is thrown into a close-set series of thick, more or less longitudinal, somewhat foliaceous plaits. For about the lower inch of the vagina there extends a complete median septum, attached to both dorsal and ventral walls of the tube, extending a little further along the dorsal wall, and terminating superiorly by a free semilunar margin, concave upwards. Hence the terminal part of the vagina consists of two quite separate tubes, fused together above, but each opening into the urino-genital sinus by a single aperture of its own below. The vagina proper measures about 4 inches in length. The pyri- form uterus is not more than 2 inches long: it presents not the slightest sign of being double. Its walls are very thick and muscular ; 1 Mém. p. 194, 1882.] MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER, 297 Fig. 6. ‘AN i Le i ] Female generative organs of Myrmecophaga jubata, from before, reduced, and somewhat diagrammatic. The walls of the tube have been laid open anteriorly to show the vaginal septum (v.s), beneath which an arrow is passed, appearing above in the vagina (v), and below emerging by the vaginal aperture of that side (v. a) into the urino-genital canal (wg). The opening of the vagina into this on the other side is laid open. 6.9, openings of Bertolini’s glands; ves, bladder, turned to one side; «, uterus; f,f, Fallopian tubes (cut short, with the rest of the uterine appendages on the left side) ; 0, ovary ; 2, hydatid of Morgagni; 0, /, broad ligament of the uterus, cut short. 298 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. [ Mar. 7, but there is no constriction or valve at all at its junction with the vagina. It receives the Fallopian tubes, not at its supero-external angles as in Homo &c., but at a point about one third down its total length. These are not particularly long, nor much convoluted, and lie along the anterior edge of the broad ligament. The ovaries are completely covered by a peritoneal coat superiorly, but by their ventral faces open into a spacious peritoneal pouch, open anteriorly, in the floor of which is the very considerable aperture of the morsus diaboli, surrounded by the expanded extremity of the Fallopian tube. This is not much fimbriated, and is externally prolonged to meet the external border of the ovary of the same side. On this surface of the ovary may be seen a few scars, probably due to the eruption of Graafian follicles, as well as a couple of small clavate processes which depend freely from it into the cavity of the pouch. Towards the outer part of the broad ligament, and lving anteriorly to the ovary and round ligament, is a large “ hydatid of Morgagni”’ nearly the size of a pea. The opening of the vagina into the urino-genital sinus by two distinct apertures seems to be characteristic (according to the state- ments of Owen! and Rapp ®*) both of the Anteaters and the Sloths, though Pouchet considered it in his specimen as ‘‘sans doute une anomalie” (J. ce. p. 195). The latter author describes as the ‘uterus ’’ what I have here considered to represent both uterus and vagina, whilst what he calls ‘‘ vagina” is only so in a functional sense, being morphologically the urino-genital canal. Rapp also describes these animals as having a single uterus with two ora (‘‘einfache Gebirmutter mit doppeltem (rechten und linken) Mut- termund,” l.c. p. 104). Nevertheless I see no reason for doubting the view adopted by Prof. Oweu, that the genital tube above the urethral opening represents in reality both uterus and vagina. The presence of a vaginal septum, a remnant of the coalescence of the primitively paired Miillerian ducts, in I/yrmecophaga is a pecu- liarity shared, judging from Owen’s account, by the genus Cholapus* only amongst other families of Edentates. In the Indian Elephant there is, at least sometimes, a similar but more perfect septum dividing into lateral halves not only the vagina, but the uterus (here provided with a distinct os uteri) also*. In other cases this disappears completely, except externally, forming then the so-called “hymen” of Miall and Greenwood. In the genus Logostomus, on the other hand, as first described by Prof. Owen’, the accuracy of whose statement I have lately had an 1 Anat. Vert. iii. p. 690. 2 De. p. 102. 3 “In the Unau (Lradypus didactylus) the rudiment of a uterine septum appears as a longitudinal ridge from the inner surface of the anterior wall in the unimpregnated state: in this species also the same condition having been already noted in Bradypus tridactylus), the utero-vaginal canal communicates in the virgin animal by two distinct orifices with the short urogenital tract.” Anat. Vert. ili. p. 690. 4 M. Watson, ‘On the Anatomy of the Female Organs of the Proboscidea,” Trans. Z. 8. xi. p. 116 &e. pl. xxii. fig. 1. ° P.Z.S8. 1839, p. 177; Anat. Vert. iii. p. 686. 1882. ] MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. 299 opportunity of verifying, this median septum is develoned along the proximal (uterine) part of the vagina, instead of the distal (external) as in Myrmecophaga'. As Pouchet, though describing the two apertures, does not men- tion any median septum, it is possible that this vaginal septum may disappear, as there seems to be good reason for supposing that it does in Elephas indicus, in the gravid state. The penis in Myrmeco- phaga is so small that during coitus it is, I expect, entirely con- tained in the urino-genital tube, and does not enter the vagina, as is also the case in Elephas; the disappearance of the vaginal sep- tum can therefore hardly be due, in this species at least, to the non- virgin condition of any particular female. 4. As regards other points, I may mention that the external and internal iliac arteries come off separately, as in many other mammals’, there being no common iliac arteries, As in Manis tridentata as described by Rapp*, the chevron bones in the tail contain a curious caudal rete mirabile, composed of both venous and arterial elements, which completely surrounds, as in a sheath, a central artery of large size, which is the direct coutinuation onwards of the abdominal aorta, and gives off here no branches at all to the rete. The arterial elements of this reée are derived from several small trunks on each side, which arise from the caudal artery beyond the origin of the internal iliacs, and then break up into a number of more or less parallel, rarely anastomosing, branches, mixed up with which are similar venous trunks. A similar rete occurs in Zamandua, and also, as I am informed by Prof. Flower, in the Spider Monkeys of the genus Afeles. The paired eyelids are very small, and hardly exist as special organs; there areno eyelashes. The third eyelid, on the other hand, is very large and well-developed. It contains a large cartilage of coneayo-convex shape; on the internal surface of this eyelid, just below the inferior border of the contained cartilage, opens the minute aperture of the Harderian gland, which is very large, almost completely surrounding the orbit, and concealing the much more minute lachrymal gland. As described and figured by Pouchet, it consists of three chief lobes. As already suggested by Chatin, I have little doubt that it is the Harderian gland that has been described by Cuvier (Anat. Comp. 2me éd. iv. part 1, pp. 430, 431) and Owen (J. e. pl. xl. fig. 3 4) in Cycloturus as a salivary gland opening into the mouth. Clavicles are frequently supposed to be absent in the Great Ant- 1 A similar condition of things to that here described in the genus Myrmeco- phaga occurs sometimes, it may be observed, as a malformation, known as “vagina duplex et uterus simplex,” in the human female, the vagina being more or less completely divided into two chambers by a median septum, and open- ing externally by ¢wo quite separate orifices. Cf. a paper by Dr. T. Matthews Duncan, Journ. Anat. Phys. i. pp. 269-274, and Dr. Morrison Watson’s paper, “Phe Homology of the Sexual Organs illustrated by Comparative Anatomy and Pathology,” /. c. xiv. pp. 60-62, 2 Cf P.Z.8. 1881, p. 188, =e ir as 8 300 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. [Mar. 7, eater, though present as rudiments in Tamandua, and well developed in Cycloturus’. In the larger specimen of the two examined by me I find, how- ever, a distinct one present on each side, lying in the muscles, about an inch long, nearly straight, of flattened form, with one end cylin- drical. Similar ones were also present, closely attached to the sternum, but of smaller size, in the second specimen. Rapp (i... p- 40) found a rudimentary cartilaginous one in Myrmecophaga, though he (erroneously) denies one to Tamandua. There is also an accessory ossicle developed at the head of the fibula, as in some of the fossil forms. In the anterior cornu of the hyoid bone, I find in both specimens three distinct ossifications*. The proximal of these is a small nodule of bone, *3 inch long, articulating below with the basihyal; it is called the “ apohyal” by Pouchet, but, according to the nomenela- ture now ordinarily employed, must really be the cerato-hyal*. The other two long curved ossifications of the anterior cornu must there- fore be the epi- and stylo-hyals respectively. Both Rapp (/. e. p. 61) and Pouchet (‘ Mémoires,’ p. 95, pl. xii. figs. 1-3) describe the posterior cornu as articulating externally with the anterior one. But in neither of my specimens can I find any evidence of such a joint, as the two cornua, when in their undis- turbed condition, are separated by a considerable space, in part occupied by a muscle (the ixtercornualis, Owen, l. c. p. 127); and in the cleaned bones I also find it impossible, without violence, to bring the two arches into such contact together. In Tamandua, though there is a distinct ligament between the two arches, they are nevertheless similarly separated; and neither Duvernoy*, whe dissected this species, nor Owen, in his account of Myrmecophaga, allude to any such interarticulation existing ; Owen’s figure (pl. xxxix. fig. 2) indeed clearly shows the two cornua separated by the inter- cornualis muscle, as also observed by me (cf. Plate XV. fig. 1, int). At the place where the three main ducts of the submaxillary glands of each side converge to become intimately connected to- gether by their walls, though they still remain quite separate tubes, they are covered by a mass of muscle which forms a bulb-like swelling for an extent of 1? inch on the inferior aspect of the con- joined ducts (Plate XV. fig. 1). It is this mass of muscles that has been described by Owen (/.c. p. 126) as the “ constrictor salivaris,” a name adopted by Pouchiet subsequently. The external aspect of the ducts is also, for the posterior half inch of this space, covered by a thick muscular coating, so that in this portion the three ducts are encircled by a broad ring of muscular fibres. These fibres arise from the anterior edge of the anterior hyoid cornu, on each side of the junction of the stylo- and epihyal 1 *Osteology of the Mammalia,’ by W. H. Flower, p. 235: London, 1876. 2 The accounts given by different authors of the compositon of the hyoid bones in the Anteaters differ considerably inter se. Cf. Pouchet, ‘ Mémoires,’ pp. 93-95. ° In Tamandua I am unable to find any corresponding ossification, though both the epi- and stylo-hyals are well developed. * Mém. foe. Hist, Nat. Strasbourg, 1830; and Cuvier’s Anat. Comp. 2me éd. iv. part 1, p. 476. 1882.] MR. W.A. FORBES ON THE GREAT ANTEATER. 301 bones ; running then forwards and outwards, they pass beneath and to the outside of (in a sternal view) the conjoined ducts, and then ascend to fan out and form the muscular bulb. The more anterior of these fibres are inserted into the internal and upper part of the combined ducts, and cease there. The most posterior, on the contrary, completely encircle the ducts, runninginwards over the ducts, and then, recurving on themselves, ascend on the deep aspect of the ducts, to be inserted on the stylohyal bone for the greater part of its length, not, however, extending to either of its extremities. Along the anterior (free) border of the ascending part, at the point where it is in contact with the ducts and the deep part of their muscular ring, is developed a strong tendinous edge (s.A. m. ¢), the “commissural tendon” of Owen. The muscular fibres inserted on this and attached to the stylo- hyal (ceratohyal of Owen’s nomenclature) are described by that author as the “‘cerato-hyoideus,”’ whilst Pouchet more correctly applies to it the name of “‘stylo-hyoideus,”’ the rest of the muscular arrangement here described forming, as already stated, the ‘‘con- strictor salivaris” of both authors. It appears to me that the whole muscle may be more correctly considered as the stylo-hyoideus, which has developed this remark- able course round the submaxillary ducts in order to aid the ejaculation of the saliva therein contained by the constriction, on contraction of the muscle, of their walls between the circularly-dis- posed fibres surrounding them and the tendon developed on its anterior margin. In the genus Tamandua’ (Plate XV. fig. 2) there is no special muscular envelope developed round the ducts in this position, The most posterior fibres of the mylo-hyoideus (m.h') arise from the posterior end of the stylo-hyal bone, running inwards and forwards, and blending internally with the genio-hyoid. To this point also run backwards aud inwards the fibres of a narrow flattened muscle (s.4. m), which crosses the hyoid origin of the mylo-hyoid superficially, and, as it arises from the stylo-hyal bone, must be considered to represent a stylo-hyoideus. At the point where it meets the genio-hyoid and mylo-byoid, all three muscles become closely connected together, the stylo-hyoid developing here an anterior tendinous edge (s.h. m. f). Between this tendon and the conjoined mylo-hyoid and genio-hyoid run the three ducts of the submaxillary gland, so that contraction of these muscles here also serves a purpose similar to that produced by the more specialized arrangement found in the larger species. [P.S. July 13, 1882.—I have found the disposition of the salivary ducts and the arrangement of the s¢y/o-hyoideus muscles exactly the same as those here described in a third specimen of Myrmecophaga just dead.—W. A. F.] EXPLANATION OF PLATE XV. Fig. 1. Dissection of the left suprabyoidean region of Myrmecophaga jubata, to show the course and relations of the stylo-hyoideus muscle. * Cf. Duvernoy, Mém. Strasb. 1830, “Mémoire sur la langue” &., p. 3. 302 CAPT. G. E. SHELLEY ON BIRDS [ Mar. 7, sh, stylo-hyal; e¢.p, epihyal; ¢.h, cerato-hyal; 5.2, basihyal; 7h, thyro-hyal; s.h.m’, origin of the stylo-hyoideus ; s.h. m, its insertion ; s.h.m.t, its tendinous edge (this, being deep of the muscle and ducts, is diagrammatically represented by a dotted line); m.h, m.h', mylo- hyoideus, cut and reflected ; s.g, sterno-glossus (cut short) ; g.h', gento- hyoideus, at its origin, cut short and reflected; h.g, hyo =glosst ; ep, epipharyngeus (Owen); hy, hyopharyngeus (Owen) ; int, inter- cornualis; 1, 2, 3, the three ducts of the submaxillary gland, con- verging to be surrounded hy the stylo-hyoideus. 2. The same parts in Zamandua tetradactyla, enlarged. The letters as before, except s.h.m, stylo-hyoideus muscle, with its anterior teu- dinous edge (s.h.m. 2), blending here with the mylo-(m.h.) and genio- hyoid (g./) muscles, and surrounding the three submaxillary ducts (s.m.d), which are cut short and reflected ; m.h', hyvid origin of the mylo-hyoid. 8. Diagram to show the openings into the mouth of the three ducts of the submaxillary gland in Myrmecophaga. a,b, the two ducts from the more posterior parts of the gland, opening together ; c, the third duct, from the cervical part, opening posteriorly to the other twoducts. 2. List of the Birds sent home by Mr. Joseph Thomson from the River Rovuma, Fast Africa. By Captain G. E. SHELLEY. [Received February 25, 1882.] (Plate XVI.) . Mr. Thomson is well known as one of the most successful East- African explorers. On him devolved the task of carrying through the expedition in which Mr. Keith Johnston lost his life; and no praise can be too strong for the manner in which he fulfilled his mission. Like all successful African travellers, he has again returned to the Dark country, this time to explore the river Rovuma and to report on the value of the coal-fields said to exist in that valley ; and an in- teresting account of his journey has been given by himself (Proc. R. Geogr. Soc. 1882, p. 65). The Rovuma runs from the south-west into the sea at 10°30! S. lat.; and Mr. Thomson explored. this valley to nearly 37° E. long. During this journey the present collection of birds was made, whereby two interesting new species are added to the African Avifauna. 1. Astur tachiro (Daud.). 16. Cossypha heuglini, Harél. 2. Falco minor, Bp. 17. Crateropus plebejus (iipp.). 8. F. dickersoni, Sedat. 18. Oriolus notatus, Peters. 4. Coracias caudata, Linn. 19. Pachyprora molitor (Hahn & 5. Halcyon orientalis, Peters. Kust.). 6. Merops dresseri, sp. n. 20. Bias musicus (Viedll.). 7. Melittophagus builockoides 21. Platystira pellata, Sundev. (Smith). 22. Muscicapa cerulescens, Hart. 8. M. pusillus (Miil7.). 23. Erythrocercus thomsoni, sp. n. 9. Upupa africana, Bechst. 24. Trochocercus cyanomelas(7%eill.). 10. Irrisor er ythrorhynchus (Lath.). 25. Smithornis capensis, S7ith. 11. Rhinopomastes cyanomelas 26. Parus niger, Vie7il. ( Vieill.). 27. Melanornis ater, Sundev. 12. Cinnyris microrhynchus, Shelley. 28. Buchanga assimilis (Bechst.). 15. C. gutturalis (Zzvn.). 29. Telephonus erythropterus (Shaw), 14. Motacilla vidua, Sundev. 30. Laniarius cubla (Shaw). 15. Turdus libonyanus, Smith. 31. L. boulboul (Shaw), “EL. 1682. Pl, Ke J. Smit lith Hanhart imp LDWEROPS DRESGERI.. . 2,.ERYTHROCERCUS THOMSONI. ual ae ge ch mM ean Sere) 5! ‘ r ey ] carts Gah 1882. } FROM THE RIVER ROVUMA. 303 32. L. quadricolor, Cass. 39. Ureginthus pheenicotis (Swains.). 33. L. sulphureipectus (Less.). 40. Hypargus niveiguttatus (Peters). 34. L. poliocephalus (Licht. ). 4, Gallirex chlorochlamys, Sh2lley. 35. Nicator gularis, Hartl. § Finsch. 42. Pogonorhynchus melanopterus 36. Prionops talacoma, Smith. (Peters), 37. Sigmodus tricolor ( Gray). 43, Dendropicus fulviscapus (ZU/.). 38. Lamprocolius chalybeus, Hempr. § Ehr. ERYTHROCERCUS THOMSONT, sp. n. (Plate XVI. fig. 2.) Upper parts olive-yellow; rump and upper tail-coverts rufous washed with yellow; tail rufous, the feathers slightly washed with yellow on their edges and crossed by a broad black subterminal band ; in one specimen the outer feather alone is without any black baud, and the next feather is only banded on the outer web, with a black spot on the inner one; in the second specimen the four outer feathers on each side are without any black at all; rictal bristles black, forehead rather narrowly margined with brownish buff; lores and in front of the eye white (but the state of the skins prevents me from seeing the limits of this colour on the sides of the head) ; wings dark brown, all the feathers broadly edged with olive-shaded yellow excepting towards the ends of the primaries; entire under surface bright yellow ; under wing-coverts yellow, basal portion of the inner webs of the quills rather narrowly edged with rufous buff. Bill—upper mandible brown, lower one flesh-colour. Legs and claws pale brown. ‘Total length 4:5 and 4°1 inches; culmen 0°25; wing 1°9 and 1°8; tail 2-1; tarsus 065. On referring to Mr. Sharpe’s Cat. B. Brit. Mus. iv. p. 208, pl. 9, we at once recognize Erythrocercus livingstonii as the nearest ally of this new species; and I shall propose the following addition to his key of this genus :— a. Tail uniform, without a bar : to include C. macalli and C. living- stonii. b. Tail with a broad black subterminal bar: C. thomsoni. The present species further differs from C. livingstonii in the crown and sides of the head being the same colour as the back, the forehead alone being margined with brownish buff, and the chin scarcely shows a trace of white. MEROPs DRESSERI, sp. n. (Plate XVI. fig. 1.) Crown and nape fawn colour, the tips of the feathers slightly - washed with greenish yellow ; remainder of the upper parts green; the basal portion of the inner margins of the quills pale fawn colour ; the primaries have the remainder of their inner margins and their ends dusky black ; the secondaries are rather broadly tipped with black, with the exception of the inner feather, which, like the longer scapulars and upper tail-coverts, is washed with blue towards its end; two centre tail-feathers green, gradually shading into black on their long narrow ends, which are slightly widened at the tips; remainder of the tail square, the feathers with broad black end, narrowly tipped with white on the outer ones, and rather more broadly so with blue as they approach the centre pair; on the sides of the Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XXI. 21 304 CAPT. G. E. SHELLEY ON BIRDS [Mar. 7, head a broad black band runs through the eye, margined beneath by a rather narrower pale blue one; chin and throat fawn colour, with the ends of the feathers slightly more strongly washed with greenish yellow than the crown ; remainder of the under surface green, with the feathers of the abdomen and under tail-coverts washed with blue towards their edges; under surface of the quills brown, the basal portion of their inner margins and the under wing-coverts pale fawn colour ; under surface of the tail ashy brown, with a black terminal bar. Bill and legs black. Total length 9:8 inches, culmen 1, wing 3:1, tail 5°5, tarsus 0°4. I have named this bird after my friend Mr. Dresser, who is about to publish a monograph of the Meropide, in acknowledgment of the valuable services rendered to ornithology by his large work on the Birds of Europe. 3. A second List of Birds recently collected by Sir John Kirk in Eastern Africa. By Captain G. E. SHELLEY. [Received February 25, 1882.] (Plate XVII.) The collection of which the present paper treats was made by Sir John Kirk chiefly in the neighbourhood of Mamboio, on the eastern slopes of the mountain-range which separates Ugogo from the Zanzibar Province, but also contains some specimens from Ugogo country and two from Brava in South Somali-land, 1° N. lat. This paper is intended as a supplement to my former one (P. Z.S. 1881, pp. 561-602). 1. CircaiTus CINEREUS. Circaétus cinereus, Vieill.; Shelley, P. Z.S. 1881, p. 562. Brava, in South Somali-land. 2. FALco CUVIERI. Falco cuvieri, Smith ; Shelley, P. Z.S. 1881, p. 562. Ugogo. The head quarters of this Hawk is probably the unexplored regions of Central Africa. This specimen, I presume, from its size is a female. In colouring it is almost identical with my specimen from Lamo, but is, if any thing, a shade duller. Lamo, ¢? Total length 10°4 inches, wing 8.7, tail 4-9, tarsus 1°30. Ugogo, 2? 5 12:2. 8 $y 80ST 5253, 5s. 3. ASTURINULA MONOGRAMMICA. Asturinula monogrammica (Temm.); Shelley, P. Z. S. 1881, p- 562. T Ugogo. "TA dad VaIedoL VEAVulNn X id 488L SZ d 1882. ] FROM EASTERN AFRICA. 305 4, ACCIPITER MINULLUS. Nisus minullus, Finsch & Hartl. Vog. Ostafr. p. 85; Fischer & Reichenow, J. f. O. 1878, pp. 251, 272. Accipiter minullus (Daud.) ; Sharpe, Cat. B. Brit. Mus.i. p. 140. Mamboio. I have also a specimen from Rabbai near Mombas, collected by the Rev. T. Wakefield. It ranges from Abyssinia southward throughout East and South Africa. 5. MELIERAX POLIOPTERUS. Melierax poliopterus, Cab. in v. d. Decken, Reisen, iii. p. 40; Finsch & Hartl. Vog. Ostafr. p. 90; Sharpe, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. i. p. 88. Brava in South Somali-land. This species is, as far as we yet know, exclusively East-African. The type came from the Umba river in the interior, and is I believe the only other specimen known. South of the Zambesi it is repre- sented by the closely allied J. eanorus. 6. MELIERAX NIGER. Nisus niger, Finsch & Hartl. Vog. Ostafr. p. 89. Melierax niger (Vieill.) ; Sharpe, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. i. p. 91. Micronisus niger, Cab. J. f. O. 1878, p. 242, Mamboio. This species ranges over the whole of South and East Africa, extending northward into Abyssinia and Kordofan, and thence crosses the continent to Senegal and Casamanse. 7. GLAUCIDIUM CAPENSE. Glaucidium capense (Smith); Shelley, P. Z. 8. 1881, p. 563. Mamboio. This is the most northern limit yet recorded for this species. 8. SYRNIUM WOODFORDI. Syrnium woodfordi (Smith) ; Shelley, P. Z. S. 1881, p. 561. Ugogo. 9. CAPRIMULGUS EUROPAUS. Caprimulgus europeus, Linn.; Finsch & Hartl. Vog. Ostafr. p- 117. Mamboio. The Common European Goatsucker ranges throughout the whole of Africa, but is everywhere migratory. 10. CosMETORNISVEXILLARIUS (Gould) ; Shelley, P. Z. S. 1881, p- 564. Mamboio. With regard to its range as given by me /. c., instead of Zambesi read Limpopo as its southern known limit in Eastern Africa. 21* 306 CAPT. G. E. SHELLEY ON BIRDS [ Mar. 7, 11. PsALIDOPROCNE HOLOMELZENA. Psalidoprocne holomelena (Sundev.); Sharpe, P. Z.S. 1870, pp- 288, 320. Mamboio. New to East Africa. The range of this species is very uncertain, as it is found on the Gold Coast and in South Africa from Cape Colony to Natal, but has not previously been recorded from any portion of South Tropical Africa. 12. HAPALODERMA VITTATUM, sp. 1. Very similar in size and general colouring to H. narina, but differs as follows: bill smaller and much narrower, scarcely more than half the breadth ; head darker and of a more olive-green ; neck entirely surrounded by a bluish-bronze collar; wing-coverts with narrow distinct white bars not freckled with white as in H. narina ; dark portion of the tail violet-blue, very partially edged with green ; white portion of the tail very distinctly barred with bluish black. Culmen 0-6, wing 5, tail 7, tarsus 0°65. Hab. Mamboio. The only specimen is in extremely bad condition, so much so that I cannot say how far the blue may extend on the throat ; but it ap- pears to be only a narrow ring round the neck. The bars on the wing-coverts and the colouring of the tail, especially the barring of the white portion, are sufficient characters to distinguish it at a glance from H. narina and H. constantia. 13. RH&INOPOMASTES CABANISI. Irrisor cabanisi, De Fil.; Heugl. Orn. N.O.-Afr. p. 219. Mamboio. New to East Africa. This species is closely alied to &. minor, but may be readily distinguished by the white patch on the primaries, which is not present in &. minor. It ranges from the Upper White- Nile district to Mamboio. 14. Sax1coLa PLESCHANKA (Lepech.). Saxicola morio, Seebohm, Cat. B, Brit. Mus. v. p. 372. Mamboio. New to East Africa. It ranges in Africa ; from Egypt to Mam- boio, and possibly occurs in Algeria. 15. Moracriia tonercaupa, Riipp. Ugogo. New to East Africa. This species ranges from Abyssinia, where it was first collected by Dr. Riippell, to Durban in Natal. 16. GRAUCALUS PECTORALIS. Graucalus pectoralis, Jard.; Sharpe, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. iv. p. 29. Mamboio. New to East Africa. It inhabits the whole of Africa between 15° N. lat. and 22° S. lat. 1882. ] FROM EASTERN AFRICA. 307 17. StGMODUS TRICOLOR. Stgmodus tricolor (Gray); Shelley, P. Z.S. 1881, p. 581. Mamboio. Five specimens, three with white on the wing, and two without. 18. S1GMODUs SCOPIFRONS. Sigmodus scopifrons, Peters, Shelley, P. Z. S. 1881, p. 582. Mamboio. 19. EuRYCEPHALUS RUEPPELLI, Bp. Eurycephalus anguitimens, Cab. J. f. O. 1878, p. 225 (?); Fischer & Reichenow J. f. O. 1879, p.347 (?); Shelley P. Z.S. 1881, p. 582. Mamboio, Ugogo. I suspect that Drs. Cabanis, Fischer, and Reichenow fell into the same error as I did J. c., and overlooked the white rump which separates this species from the South-African Z. anguitimens. At any rate my reference /. c. should be cancelled. This species ranges from Shoa, about 9° N. lat., where it was collected by Dr. Riippell, to Mamboio and Ugogo, about 7° S. lat. 20). DiLopHus cARUNCULATUS (Gm.). Mamboio. New to East Africa. This species ranges from Abyssinia through- out East and South Africa. 21, AmypRus morio (Linn.). Amydrus rueppelli, Shelley, P. Z. S. 1881, p. 583. Mamboio. I have come to the conclusion that .A. rueppell, Verr., is not specifically distinct from A. morio: in colouring I can detect no dif- ference; but one of M. Verreaux’s specimens in my own collection is slightly larger than sixteen specimens from East and South Africa, the Natal ones being generally the smallest and the East-A frican ones intermediate ; but this slight variation in size does not in my opinion constitute a specific character. In Natal specimens three of those compared belong to what I consider a variety, differing from the others in having the greater portion of the primary-coverts rufous, and in the rufous of the quills extending onto the outer secondaries. This species ranges from Abyssinia, throughout East Africa to Natal, and thence to the Cape of Good Hope. 22. TEXTOR DINEMELLI. Textor dinemelli, Horsf.; Finsch & Hartl, Vég. Ostafr. p. 386 ; Cab. J. f. O. 1878, p. 233; Fischer & Reichenow, tom, cit. pp. 299, 351. Mamboio. This species ranges f om Shoa, in about 10° N. lat., to Mamboio, in about 7° S, lat. 308 CAPT. G. E. SHELLEY ON BIRDS [Mar. 7, 23. PENTHETRIA ARDENS. Penthetria ardens (Bodd.) ; Finsch & Hartl. Vég. Ostafr. p. 423. Mamboio and Ugogo. New to East Africa. From the above-mentioned localities it ranges southward into Natal and Caffraria, and westward to the Loango coast. 24. AMBLYOSPIZA UNICOLOR. Amblyospizaunicolor, Fischer & Reichenow; Shelley, P.Z.S. 1881, p- 589. Mamboio. This is the most southern limit we can yet accord to this species. 25. FRINGILLARIA ORIENTALIS, Sp. 0. Very similar to F'. major, Cab., but smaller, with the bill and legs slightly longer and stouter ; the eyebrow and white central band on the crown broader and more distinctly marked. Total length 5:7 inches, culmen 0°55, wing 3°2, tail 3°1, tarsus 0°8. Mamboio. In my opinion this is only one of three races of a single species ; but I have here described it as a new species, as many ornithologists may prefer to consider it such. By the term race I intend to indicate that the form is so nearly allied to one or more others that, in my opinion, further research is sure to discover intermediate forms which may be placed as well with one as with the other. The three races are :— 1. F. cabanisi, Reichenow, J. f. O. 1875, p. 233, pl. 2. figs. 2, 3. Hab. Cameroons. This race is only known to me by the description and plate Z. ¢. 2. F. orientalis. Hab. Mamboio. 3. F. major, Cab. J. f.O. 1880, p. 349, pl. 2. fig. 2. Had. Angola. As regards F. cabanisi, Bocage, Orn. Angola, p. 371, I have a specimen in my own collection of this form from Caconda. It differs from the plate given by Dr. Cabanis (/. c.) in the central stripe on the crown being white, not grey, and in the feathers of the mantle being more striped and less scale-like, their dark centres generally extending quite to the tips of the feathers. 26. MIRAFRA TORRIDA, sp. n. (Plate XVII.) Upper parts rufous-brown, with dark central stripes to the fea- thers of the crown, nape, and greater portion of the back; rump and upper tail-coverts with obsolete shaft-stripes ; some of the feathers of the mantle very partially edged with buff. Wings rufous, the coverts and secondaries edged with buff; median and greater coverts partially barred with black; secondaries somewhat similarly barred, and with a waved black line encircling each feather near the edge ; primaries browner, without black markings, and broadly edged exter- nally and internally with rufous. Tail, two centre feathers rufous; outer tail-feathers, with the exception of an inner edging, and the outer 1882. ] FROM EASTERN AFRICA. 309 webs of the next pair fawn colour; remainder of the tail dark brown. Underparts rufous buff, as well as an eyebrow, cheeks, and ear- coverts: sides of the head mottled with rufous; sides of the neck similar in colouring to the back; middle of the throat slightly mottled with rufous; lower throat and crop strongly mottled with rufous-brown, and with partial black central stripes to a few of the feathers ; under surface of the quills brown, with broad rufous edges to the inner webs ; under wing-coverts rufous-buff; lower half of the bill flesh-colour, remainder shading into dark brown towards the culmen; legs flesh-colour. Total length 5:7 inches, culmen 0°5, wing 3°1, tail 2°4, tarsus 0°95. Hab. Ugogo. This seems to be a very distinct species of Lark; and I cannot find any description that suits it. Looking at Mr. Sharpe’s Key to the Species of Mirafra found in Africa (P. Z. S. 1874, p. 638), it appears to be different at once by its entirely rufous colour and the two rufous central tail-feathers. Of the species mentioned by Mr. Sharpe, it would appear to have its nearest ally in M/. cheniana ; but its entirely rufous colour above and the fawn-coloured outer tail- feathers distinguish it. 27. TURACUS MUSOPHAGUS. Corythaizx musophaga, Dubois; Finsch & Hartl. Vog. Ostafr. p- 475. Mamboio. This species is here recorded for the first time from East Africa north of the Zambesi. It ranges throughout South Africa, and extends northward on the east coast to Mamboio. 28. TuRACUS LIVINGSTONII. Turacus livingstonii, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1864, p. 44. Corythaix livingstonei, Finsch & Hartl. Vog. Ostafr. p. 476, pl. 8; Fischer & Reichenow, J. f. QO. 1880, pp. 141, 189. Ugogo. This species ranges from the Mombas district, where it has been procured by Dr. Fischer, to Delagoa Bay, and crosses the continent to Benguela. 29. CucuLUS CANORUS. Cuculus canorus, Linn.; Sharpe, P. Z. 8. 1873, p. 580. Mamboio. The single specimen sent home by Sir John Kirk is fully adult but remarkedly small; total length 11-7 inches, culmen 0°8, wing 8, tail 7, tarsus 0°8. It agrees well in colouring with British and Abyssinian specimens with which I have compared it, as also with Mr. Sharpe’s description /. c., excepting that it shows no signs of a greenish gloss on the back. C. eanorus ranges throughout Africa, but is everywhere migratory. 310 ON BIRDS FROM EASTERN AFRICA. { Mar. 7, 30. CuCULUS SOLITARIUS. Cuculus solitarius, Steph. ; Sharpe, P. Z. S. 1873, p. 582. Cuculus hevglini, Hartl. Abhandl. nat. Ver. Brem. vii. p. 113. Mamboio. The four specimens sent me by Sir John Kirk I have compared with South-African examples and with one from Lado collected by Dr. Emin Bey and referred to C, heuglint by Dr. Hartlaub J. c., and can find no difference between them. This species ranges through- out Africa south of about 8° N. lat, 31. TURTUR LUGENS. Turtur lugens (Riipp.) ; Shelley, P. Z.S. 1881, p. 596. Mamboio. This is its southern limit as yet known. 32. FRANCOLINUS INFUSCATUS. Francolinus infuscatus, Finsch & Hartl. Vog. Ostafr. p. 578. Pternistes infuscatus, Cab. J. f. O. 1878, p. 214. Mamboio. This species is confined to East Africa, and was hitherto only known by the type specimen, which was collected by the Baron von der Decken near Lake Jipe, which lies about 100 miles north-west of Mombas, and by a specimen procured by Herr Hildebrandt also in the Teita country. 33. HopLorTeRus SPINOSUS. Hoplopterus spinosus (Linn.); Fischer & Reichenow, J. f. O. 1879, pp. 296, 301, 337. Mamboio. This Plover ranges in Africa from Mamboio to the mouth of the Nile, and crosses the continent to Senegal. 34. ANAS ERYTHRORHYNCHA. Anas erythrorhyncha, Gm.; Finsch & Hartl. Vog. Ostafr. p. 808. Mamboio. This species ranges throughout South Africa, extending north- ward on the east coast to Zanzibar, and is also found in Madagascar. 1882. ] MR. SCLATER ON THE WORD “‘ LIPOTYPE.”’ 311 March 21, 1882. Prof, W. H. Flower, LL.D). F.R.S., President, in the Chair. The Secretary read the following report on the additions to the Society’s Menagerie during the month of February 1882 :— The total number of registered additions to the Society’s Mena- gerie during the month of February was 59, of which 22 were by presentation, 26 by purchase, 3 by birth, 2 were received in exchange, and 6 on deposit. ‘The total number of departures during the same period, by death and removals, was 89. The most noticeable additions during the month of February were as follows :— 1, Four Warty-faced Honey-eaters (Xanthomyza phrygia), and 2. Two Musk-Ducks (Biziura lobata), purchased February 8th. Both these Australian species are new to the Society’s Collection ; and, so far as I know, examples of them have not been previously brought alive to Europe. 3. A young Tapir, born in the Gardens February 12th, and thriving well, is the produce of our male T'apirus roulini (received May 25th, 1878) and the large female Yapirus americanus from Paraguay, received January 16th, 1873. It isthe first of the genus bred in the Society’s Gardens. 4. A female Mule Deer (Cervus macrotis) from the Western United States, presented by Dr. J. D, Caton, C.M.Z.S., and received February 15th. . Thanks to Dr. Caton’s kind exertions we have now a fine pair (besides an odd male) of this beautiful Deer, and shall, I trust, succeed in breeding them. The female just received is in excellent health and very tame. Mr. J. E. Harting exhibited a mummified bird forwarded by Mr. George Holland of Swansea, and received by him from an island on the coast of Peru, whence it was brought home by the master of the ship ‘Nero.’ It was evidently a young Gannet, and most probably referable to Sula fiber, a species common on the South-Pacific and South-Atlantic coasts. The island in question appeared to be a great breeding-haunt of sea-fowl ; and the deposit of guano there was very considerable. The bird was found in a sitting posture completely buried in the guano at a great depth. It had accordingly been so well preserved as to be easily recognizable, although it must have been buried for some considerable time. Three eggs exhibited, in much the same con- dition, were obtained at the same time and place. One was probably the egg of a Gull, the others those of a Tern. Mr. Sclater stated that in the course of some lectures lately given at the Royal Institution on the geographical distribution of animals, he had found it convenient to coin a term for the designation of a 312 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [ Mar. 21, type of animal life the absence of which was characteristic of a particular district or region. This term he proposed should be ** Lipotype””’. Thus the order Insectivora and the families Bovidee and Viverride were “ lipotypes”’ of the Neotropical Region ; the Bears \(Urside) and the Deer (Cervide) of the Aithiopian Region; and the Wood- peckers (Picidze) and Vultures (Vulturidz) of the Australian Region. The term was of course more specially required and more appropriate in cases where the “lipotype”’ was a form that might primd facie have been expected to occur in the Region or district in question but was remarkable by its absence. Dr. Giinther, F.R.S., exhibited a flat skin of a very remarkable pale sandy-coloured variety of the Leopard (Felis pardus), from the Matabele district, South Africa, and pointed out its superficial resemblance in colour to the Woolly Cheetah (Felis lanea, Sclater). Dr. Ginther also exhibited and made remarks upon the shell of a new Tortoise of the genus Geoemyda from Siam, which he proposed to describe as new at a subsequent meeting. Mr. R. Bowdler Sharpe exhibited a specimen of a Goldfinch from Hungary, which had been sent to him by Dr. J. von Madarasz of the Museum of Buda-Pest, and which had been described by that gentleman as Carduelis elegans albigularis. Mr. Sharpe pointed out that a variety of the Goldfinch with a white throat was by no means unplentiful in England, and that a figure agreeing with the specimen now exhibited would be found in the late Mr. Dawson Rowley’s ‘ Ornithological Miscellany’ (vol. i. p. 91, fig, 3 in the plate). The following papers were read :— 1. On some Points in the Anatomy of Pierocles, with Remarks on its Systematic Position. By Hans Gapow, Ph.D., C.M.Z.8. [Received February 18, 1882.] Amongst the unfinished manuscripts of the late Prof. A. Brandt, in St. Petersburg, there were some notes by him preparatory to a discussion on the anatomical characters of the Pterocletes. His son, now Professor in Charkow, was good enough to put these notes into my hands, while others were distributed amongst those naturalists who specially interested themselves in the other different groups to which that distinguished naturalist had devoted some of his atten- tion. The Society will see, therefore, that it was with peculiar Aci, deficio, et rizos, forma. 1882.] DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 313 pleasure that a specimen of Pterocles arenarius in the flesh was received by me during the short time that I was intrusted with the duties of its prosector during his absence from England’. INTEGUMENT. The arrangement and form of the feather-tracts in Pterocles and Syrrhaptes is almost the same as that in the Pigeons ; but too much weight has been laid upon the peculiar bifurcated shape of the shoulder part of the spinal tract. Nitzsch himself, in his description of the Gallinacei, mentions that a very similar arrangement of the shoulder-tract we meet with in Numida and Penelope and partly in Tetrao and Crypturus. He points out that in this respect Numida in particular approaches the Columbine type. Again, the Charadriide and many Laride present nearly the same type of feather-tracts, although they differ in the lower and ventral part of the spinal tract. The contour-feathers of Pterocles possess a very small after-shaft, whilst this organ, although likewise small, is present in the Limi- col and Gallinacei, but altogether absent in the Pigeons. The number of the rectrices and of the primaries is of no systematic importance in these birds, as will be seen from the following table :— Total number Which of the Wiiiaveide of quills. Primaries. bate meat, aaaene Pteroeles ......... 27-28 10 first 16 Pigeons... J1s80 | up to 25 10 second 12, 14, 16 HVOVGrS ercresceest 24-26 10 first 12 OWLS: Os cerciaccites 22-29 10, 11 | 4th, 5th, 6th 10-20 1 Principal books and essays referred to in the text :— W. K. Parker. ‘On the ere of Gallinaceous birds and Tinamous,” Trans, Zool. Soc. vy. pp. 149-241. A. H. Garrop. ‘On certain Muscles of the Thigh of Birds &e.”, P. Z. 8. 1873, pp. 626-677, and 1874, pp. 111-128. ——. ‘On the Disposition of the deep Plantar Tendons in different Birds,” P. Z.8. 1875, pp. 339-848. —. “On the Carotid Arteries of Birds,” P.Z. 8. 1878, pp. 457-472 (for Pteroeles see p. 468). ——. “Nasal Bones of Birds,” P.Z.8. 1873, pp. 33-38 (Péerocles, see pp- 36, 37). Nirzscu. ‘ System der Pterylographie,’ 1840. HE. Brancnarp. “Caractéres ostéologiques des Gallinacés ou Gallides,” in Ann. Sciences Natur. sér. 4, tome vii. (1857), pp. 91-106, plates 10-12. M. Ousrater. ‘“ Monographie des Oiseaux de la famille des Megapodiides,” Op. cit. sér. 4, tome x & xi. (1881). H. Gavow. “Beitrage zur vergleich. Anat., Verdauungssystem d. Vogel,” Jenaische Zeitschrift, 1879. Bocpanow. In ‘Mélanges biologiques,’ 1880, pp. 49-55. , D. G. Exuor. “A Study of the Pteroclide or Family of the Sandgrouse,” P. Z. 8. 1878, p. 233-264. 314 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLEs. [Mar. 21, d The general coloration of the Sand-Grouse is thoroughly protective, and is very distinctly marked throughout the genus by the dark crescent on the breast and the dark colour of the under surface of the wings. Though pronounced and apparently peculiar to the Sand-Grouse, a similar pattern is found in some of the Pigeons, as well as in the Plovers and in Grouse. The nestling plumage of the Sand-Grouse consists of a thick downy cover with fine terminal hairs to each down-feather, much like that of the Plovers and Fowls, whilst the Pigeons, when hatched, are almost nude and are entirely devoid of downy feathers. The oil-gland is present and quite naked -in Sand-Grouse and Pigeons (in some Pigeons wanting), whilst in the Gallinacei and Limicole this organ is tufted. In both form and structure the “tarsus”? and the claws of the Sand-Grouse closely resemble those of the Gallinacei, but are re- markable for the tendency to suppression of the first or hind toe, which in Syrrhaptes is entirely aborted. This never occurs amongst the Pigeons and Fowls, but is a common feature in the Pluvialine tribe. The dc// and the nostrils of Pterocles are like the same parts in the Turnicide, which, like Pterocles and the Columb, are schizorhinal, whilst the Rasores proper are what Garrod termed holorhinal. OsTEOLOGY. As the osteology of Péerocles and Syrrhaptes has been fully described by Professors Parker and Garrod, it will be superfluous for me to do more than indicate some of the salient points. Prof. Parker says :— ‘«There is no vomer inthe Syrrhaptes to tie the two palatines together; and this is a sudden assumption of a columbaceous character.” However, this is not of great importance, because most of the Tetra- onidze have also no vomer, or at least this bone is very much suppressed. The skull certainly bears many striking affinities to the Columbee. The Syrrhaptes keeps close to the Fowls in respect of its vertebral characters. Number of cervical vertebree. Dorsal. Sacral. Caudal. Syrrhaptes........ 16 4 15 6 Pterocles arenarius. . 15 5 15 7 Columba livia.. .... 14 4 14 7 Gall seas pias ce 16 4 15 6 “There is much that is Pigeon-like in the pelvis of the Grouse and the Syrrhaptes.”’ All the wing-bones, and in particular the humerus, strikingly resemble those of the Pigeons (see Garrod, P. Z. S. 1874, p. 255, fig. 1). Muscunar System. I myself have examined specially only the muscles of the pelvic region and those of the hinder extremity. As regards the * Parker, /. c, 1882.] DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLEs. 315 muscles of the shoulder-girdle I am indebted to Prof. Fuerbringer for the information that P¢terocles approaches nearer to the Pigeons than to the Fowls. Mm. iliaci externi (mm. glutei).—This group in Pteroeles con- sists of only two muscles, an anterior and a posterior. Of these the latter is the larger; it arises from the broad latero-dorsal plane of the preeacetabular part of the ilium, andis inserted close to the external trochanter of the femur. The iliac muscles have their nerve-supply from the crural plexus. MW. iliaeus internus.—This small muscle is comparatively long, as it arises from nearly the middle of the ventral aspect of the preeace- tabular ilium. It is inserted as usual, between the internal trochanter and the neck of the femur. M. sartorius—Flat and very broad, from the greater part of the lateral and dorsal margin of the preeacetabular ilium. The muscle is partly blended with the m. ilio-tibialis at the distal third of the thigh ; the rest passes over the patella as a flat but nevertheless rather fleshy strip, and then extends into part of the head of the m. extensor digitorum communis. The muscle is supplied by nerves from one of the first branches of the crural plexus. M. ilio-tibialis (m. quadratus femoris).—This muscle is rather feebly developed; it arises with an aponeurotic sheet, which super- ficially covers the mm. iliaci externi, and which also takes origin from the regio posttrochanterica of the ilium. The muscle is com- pletely blended with the m. femoro-tibialis, with the m. gluteus posterior, and with the m. sartorius. It is inserted together with the tendon of the mesial and external part of the m. femoro-tibialis into the head and rest of the tibia. Nerve-supply from the crural plexus. The m. gluteus posterior + m. tensor fascie late (m. tensor fascize late) arises rather fleshy from the lateral plane of the postace- tabular part of the ilium, and is inserted indirectly into the head of the tibia by being attached to the distal’part of the m. ilio-tibialis. Nerve from the ischiadic plexus. The m. gluteus anterior (m. gluteus quartus) is very small ; its muscular part consists of only a few fibres. Its aponeurosis arises from the space left between the origin of the m. iliac. ext. post. and the antitrochanter. Its short but broad and flat tendon runs over the external trochanter, passes the tendons of the external iliac muscles, and is inserted just distad from their insertion into the outer aspect of the femur. The nerve to this muscle is given off from the pl. ischiadicus ; it passes round behind the antitrochanter out of the ischiadic foramen. The m. ambiens arises with a short and distinct tendon from the pubic spine ; its roundish and somewhat ribbon-shaped belly tapers out into a long slender tendon, which, after partly piercing that of the m. femoro-tibialis, passes over the knee into its outer side and then supports one of the heads of the m. flexor perforatus digiti 11. Between the proximal part of the ambiens muscle and the inner trochanter of the femur, that long nervous branch which is sent off 316 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [ Mar. 21, from the posterior part of the crural plexus passes out, and then runs along the inner side of the thigh, superficially to the inner side of the proximal end of the leg (Ruge’s branch, as termed by me in my paper on the Ratitz). The ambiens muscle, on account of its nervous supply, belongs to the crural plexus, as the nerve of this muscle is one branch of the large nervous stem which passes laterally from the m. ambiens into the inner head of the m. femoro-tibialis (m. rectus internus femoris). The m. femoro-tibialis (mm. vasti or m. crureeus) consists of three heads. The inner one (m. rectus internus femoris) is the biggest and most distinct ; it arises from the whole inner and hinder aspect eae Deeper adductor muscles of the right thigh of Pterocles arenarius of the femur, and is inserted, independently of the others, into the anterior crest of the tibia. The middle head is also very fleshy, arises from nearly the whole of the anterior aspect of the femur, takes up the distal part of the m. ilio-tibialis, and is inserted into the patella and into the head of the tibia. The third or outer head is quite separate from the others, and is inserted into the outer edge of the caput tibie by the help of the ligamentum tibio-patellare. All these three heads are supplied by nerves from the crural plexus. The m. ilio-fibularts (m. biceps) takes its origin from the lateral 1882.] DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 317 margin of the postacetabular ilium and from the lateral plane of the distal half of this bone. Its tendon passes through the tendinous loop near the poplitea, and is inserted into the neck of the fibula. Its nerves come from the ischiadic plexus. M. caude ilio-fleworius (m. semitendinosus). See fig. 1. This ribbon-shaped muscle arises from the lateral processes of some of the first caudal vertebre and from the outer plane of the spina ilio-cau- dalis. The so-called accessory part of this muscle is well developed ; it descends from the outer and lower surface of about the distal third of the femur ; and its fibres join those of the long or main part nearly at right angles. The line of junction is indicated by an oblique tendinous raphe. The two combined parts are inserted, first into the neck of the tibia by a strong tendon; secondly, a small tendon, looking like the continuation of the raphe, descends superficially to the back of the leg and joins the caput femorale internum m. gastrocnemii. Nerve-supply, together with the next muscle, from the ischiadic plexus. The m. ischio-flexorius (m. semimembranosus) is feebly developed, and loses its independence by becoming blended with the m. caudz ilio-flexorius, which completely covers it externally. It arises from a small part of the middle line of the lateral margin of the ischium. The m. caude ilio-femoralis consists of two chief parts. The most lateral one, or long head (long head of femoro-caudalis), is a very narrow, slender, muscular ribbon, which arises from the proc. lat. of the last caudal vertebree, and is inserted by a narrow thin tendon into the latero-posterior plane of the end of the proximal third of the femur. Towards its insertion the fleshy part of this long head is to a great extent blended with the more proximal or greater part: the latter (accessory femoro-caudal) arises from part of the membrane of the foramen oblongum, and from the outer plane of the hindmost or distal part of the ischium, whilst only a few fibres arise from the adjacent part of the ilium. The nerve which supplies these two muscles comes from the ischiadic plexus, and passes externally over the m. ischio-femoralis. I must mention here a peculiar little muscular slip which I have not often observed in birds. It arises (see fig. ]) as a small fleshy flat slip from the outer aspect of that region where the pubis and ischium approach each other; it is then partly covered by the long head; its thin tendon unites with that of the long head. It was present also on the other side, and was supplied by the same nerve-branch together with the two large heads. The presence of this little muscular slip is an instance of the great variation to which this group of the m. caudz ilio-femoralis is subject. The m. ischio-femoralis (m. obturator externus) arises with fleshy fibres from the dorsal, distal, and ventral margins of the foramen oblongum ; its strong tendon is inserted into the outer plane of the femur, just distad from the insertion of the m. obturator. It receives its nerve from the ischadic plexus. The m. obturator arises from that part of the inner plane of the ischium whieh bounds the foramen obturatum and also from the 318 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [Mar. 21, adjoining part of the pubis. It is inserted by means of a very strong tendon into the externo-posterior plane of the outer trochanter. Another muscle, which we may call an accessory muscle to the m. obturator, is very small, and arises from the most proximal and lateral part of the ossa pubis et ischii near the acetabulum ; its fleshy but short belly is separated from that of the m. ischio-femoralis by the tendon of the main obturator muscle. It is inserted just between the tendons of these two muscles. As this small muscle is not supplied by the pl. ischiadicus, but together with the m. obturator, we cannot consider it to be a representative of the gemelli muscles, nor of part of the m. obturator internus of mammals. But the m. obturator of birds, together with its accessory muscles, might corre- spond to the m. obturator externus of Mammalian anatomy. The m. pubi-ischio-femoralis (m. adductor) consists of two layers, a lateral and more proximal and a median or distalone. The lateral part is ribbon-shaped, and arises from the latero-ventral margin of the middle third of the spines, opposite the pubis. It is covered laterally by the m. caud. ilio-femoralis, and is inserted into the hinder aspect of the distal half of the femur, lying mesiad from the femoral portion of the m. caudee ilio-flexorius (femoral portion=‘‘ accessory part”). The inner layer arises from the lateral margin of the distal two thirds of the ischium, but not from the os pubis or the ischio- pubic membrane. This flat muscle forms scarcely any tendon, and is inserted as a broad, but flat and vertical sheet into the distal half of the femur, including the internal condyle, and into the hinder surface of the head of the tibia. The m. popliteus is developed as usual. The m. tibialis anticus consists of two heads. The external or femoral is represented simply by a long tendon arising from the anterior inner margin of the internal condyle; its short belly soon fuses completely with the tibial or chief head, which latter takes its fleshy origin from the crest and head of the tibia. The strong tendon of this muscle passes under the transverse ligament of the leg, and is inserted into the anterior or dorsal sulcus of the tarso-metatarsal bone, not far from the joint. The whole muscle is covered superficially by the m. gastrocnemius (inner head) and by the m. peroneus superficialis. Nerve-supply, as in all the following muscles, from the ischiadic nerve. M. peroneus superficialis—The most superficial muscle on the anterior and outer side of the leg. It arises from the crest of the head and from the anterior plane of the neck of the tibia, and some- times from the head of the fibula. Its broad tendon passes round the outer side of the leg to the hinder aspect of the intertarsal joint, and then divides into two tendons: one is very broad, and forms the deep sheet of the susceptaculum ; the other one is much narrower, passes laterally over the external malleolus of the tibia, and then joins the tendon of the m. flexor perforatus dig. 111. A m. peroneus profundus was not present in my specimen of Pterocles. However, this muscle is subject to much variation. I found it well developed in Luplocamus prelata, but wanting in Gallus 1882.] | DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 319 bankiva and in Penelope superciliosa, whilst in our common Domestic Fowl it is generally present. In the Pigeons it is often absent. If present, this muscle arises with a long but narrow and fleshy belly from the anterior plane of the angle between the lower end of the fibula and the middle third of the tibia; its strong tendon then passes laterally over the joint and is inserted into the proximal margin of the plantar tarso-metatarsal bone, near the external malleolus. When contracted, the muscle bends the tarso-metatarsus slightly dorsad and inwards. M. gastroenemius.—This large muscle consists in Pterocles of two parts, each of which arises with two distinct heads (fig. 2) :— Lateral posterior view of the gastrocnemius muscle of right side of Pierocles arenarius. I. Median part. a. Cap. tibiale: from inner and anterior aspect of the head and neck of the tibia, blending with the tendons of the m. femoro- tibialis. 6. Cap. femorale: from hinder aspect of the intercondyloid region, and at the same time from the ligam, femoro-tibiale internum. II. Lateral part. a. With a slender but distinct tendon from the intercondyloid region and from the outer margin of the femur ; its belly Proc, Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XXII. 22 320 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [ Mar. 21, passes between the two principal branches of the ischiadic nerve, and is supported by the descending tendon of the m. semitendinosus = m. caudeze ilio-flexorius. This head is the larger of the two, and is the most super- ficial one at the hinder and external aspect of the leg, as it arises from the external condyle of the femur. The “tendo communis” of these four heads is inserted into the hinder margin of the tarso-metatarsal bone, but principally into the tibial and median margin. The m. extensor digitorum communis appears after the removal of the superficial peroneal and of the tibialis muscle, being completely covered by the latter. It arises from the anterior plane of the head and neck of the tibia; its tendon passes through the transverse liga- ment and the bony bridge just above the intertarsal joint ; it then runs down on the anterior surface of the metatarsal bone, and sends a tendon to the dorsal part of the bases of the phalanges of the three front toes. The mode of splitting up of the common tendon into the special tendons and of their insertion varies much. M. perforatus digiti 11.—This muscle appears after the removal of the most superficial of the flexor muscles on the outer side of the leg. It comes with fleshy fibres from the ligam. fem. tibiale externum and from the hinder part of the neck of the tibia. Its long and slender tendon, after crossing the legs, passes right through the susceptaculum in the middle of the hinder aspect of the inter- tarsal joint, where it lies deeper than all the other tendons. It is inserted into the ventral side of the phalanges 11. et 111. digiti 11. M. perforatus digiti 111. consists of two very fleshy heads. The outer one is completely fused with that of the m. perforatus dig. 11. ; it arises partly from the external condyle of the femur and from the tendinous loop; one part of this head forms the continuation of the tendon of the ambiens muscle. The znzer head arises with a distinct tendon from the hinder aspect of the middle part of the intercondy- loid region. The combined tendon of the whole muscle, when passing over the intertarsal joint, is quite flat, and lies between the susceptaculum and the broad tendon of the gastrocnemius muscle. Thus in this region it is the most superficial of all the flexor tendons. At the middle of the metatarsal bone the tendon gives off a slip to that of the m. perforaus et perforatus dig. 111. M. flex. perforatus dig. 1v.—Its thick belly arises from the hinder aspect of the external condyle of the femur and from the intercon- dyloid region. Its tendon, simply covered by the tendo Achillis, passes as the most superficial one over the joint and is inserted into the basis phal. 11. dig. rv. The m. flex. perforans et perforatus dig. 111. arises with a long slender head together with the m. perforatus dig. 111. and with the m. perforatus dig. 1. ; its tendon sends a slip to that of the m. per- foratus, which it also perforates, and is inserted into the bas. phal. ir. et 111. dig. 111.; on the other hand, this tendon is pierced by that of the m. flexor profundus. we 1882. ] DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 321 M., flew. perforans et perforatus dig. 11.—The strong and fleshy belly of this muscle arises with a short tendon from the hinder plane of the intercondyloid region ; it passes through a special canal in the susceptaculum, and is one of the deepest muscles. It is inserted into the cap. phal. 1. dig. 1. The m. jlex. profundus s. communis digitorum consists of two principal heads. The outer one arises with fleshy fibres from the fibula and is partly fused with the m. tibialis; its strong tendon passes the intertarsal joint superficially to the susceptaculum, and is only covered by the tendo Achillis ; it passes the pulley on its outer or lateral, not on its ventral or posterior margin. The inner or chief head takes its origin from the hinder plane of the greater part of the tibia; its tendon runs as the deepest of all through the pulley, and then unites with that of the outer head; the tendon then divides into three, each of which is inserted into the basis of the last or distal phalanx of the 11., 11., or Iv. digit. Although Pterocles possesses a rudimentary hallux, which consists of two very small bones not articulated with the metatarsus, there was no trace of am. flewor hallucis longus to be found. But there wasam. flexor hallucis brevis, which arose from the hinder aspect of rather more than the upper two thirds of the tarso-metatarsal bone, and was inserted into the cap. phal. 1. dig. 1. An abductor brevis. dig. 1v. and an abductor brevis dig. 11. were likewise present—the former pulling the fourth toe inwards, ¢. ¢. towards, the latter drawing the second the away from the middle one. Both consequently move these two toes tibiad, and are mor- phologically abductors. For the m. flexor brevis dig. 111. see note, § 4. Note.—Mr. Forbes has kindly drawn my attention to Mr. A. Has- well’s paper ‘“ Notes on the Anatomy of Birds. ILI. The myological characters of the Columbide,”’ in Proc. Linn. Soc. New South Wales, 1880, p. 306 ; and has expressed grave doubts about the correctness of some of the statements made in it. Mr. Haswell, at the end of his paper, mentions five points ‘‘which seem to be especially charac- teristic of the family.”” But I find that of the five points, one is totally incorrect, and three others, viz. nos. 3, 4, 5, are not charac- teristic of the Columbide. These points are :— 1. The absence of a posterior belly of the m. latissimus dorsi. Mr. Forbes and I, on examining the following birds, which were at hand—Carpophaga, Chaleophaps, and Columba—found this muscle consisting of two bellies, the posterior one being just as well developed in these Pigeons as in Astwr, arising from the anterior margin of the ilium and from the last dorsal vertebree, and inserted by means of a tendon below that of the anterior belly into the humerus. Through- out their whole length the two bellies were connected by a fascia. 3. The absence of the m. glut. externus and the presence of the adductores brevis et longus, the semitendinosus and semimem- branosus. Now the m. gluteus externus (=glut. anterior) is gene- rally very small, but plainly visible in many birds, such as Pigeons, Passerine birds, &c., and not absent as stated by Mr. Haswell. 22" 322 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEKOCLES. [ Mar. 2], The four other muscles are well developed in most birds, as Prof. Garrod has stated over and over again, and as the dissection of any fowl will show. 4. “The special relation of the tendon of the ambiens (when pre- sent) to the fibular head of the flexor perforatus secundus tertii digiti.’” The distal end of the ambiens muscle, when typically deve- loped, always forms the continuation of one of the heads of the m. flexor perforatus dig. 11. et 111. 5. * The presence of lumbricales in the foot.” The muscle which Mr. Haswell takes to be the representative of the lumbricales muscles of mammals has not ‘‘ hitherto escaped the notice of anatomists,” and it is not ‘‘ peculiar to the Pigeons,” since it is also present in many other birds, e. g. the Ratitee, and has been described by Meckel, although he gave no name to it, in his ‘System der vergleich. Anat.’ ill. p. 388, and in his ‘Archiv fiir Anat. u. Physiol.’ pp. 278 & 279. With regard to the muscles of the leg, I am unable to point out any typical differences between Sand-Grouse, Fowls, and Pigeons. The absence of the m. flexor hallucis longus in Péerocles is of no importance, as this muscle is generally absent in birds which have no hallux or only a small one, and, moreover, as the absence of this toe itself affords no family character. Of course there are many points, e. g. the mode of origin and the arrangement of the tendons of the muscles, and even the absence of the m. plantaris and of the m. peroneus profundus, which are noteworthy in Pterocles; but all these things are variable, and give us no characters which hold good throughout the Gallinaceous or the Columbine group. It is the same with the m. ambiens: this muscle is present and well developed in Pterocles and most probably in all the Rasores ; in the Pigeons its presence is variable. Of all the other muscles connected with the leg, there is none that shows any practical difference between Sand-Grouse, Pigeons, and Fowls, and even (if we include them in our comparison) the Plovers. On the whole, however, the myology of Péerocles indicates that it is more nearly allied to the Pigeons than to any other group of birds, VISCERA. “The trachea is cartilaginous; and it has at its bifurcation what the Grouse is bereft of, viz. a pair of laryngeal muscles, as in the Pigeons, Talegalla, and Plover ” (Parker). The crop (ingluvies) of Pterocles is a simple dilatation of the an- terior and lateral walls of the cesophagus, without any constriction in the middle line, although it is broader than long. Its walls are very thin on its anterior parts, and show longitudinal folds and glands ; the dorsal part, the prolongation of the dorsal half of the cesophagus, is thicker and slightly muscular, the external sheath consisting of transverse, the inner one of longitudinal smooth muscular fibres. In the Pigeons the crop is different. It consists of two lateral and symmetrical dilatations of the lateral walls, whilst the middle part is simply the continuation of the cesophagus, slightly widened 1882. | DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 323 out at the upper and lower end of the crop. The glands are nearly equally distributed over the inner lining of its walls, and are arranged in very irregular longitudinal folds. The proventriculus of Péerocles is a long oval, and comparatively small; its walls are thick and full of glands, which are ‘ ovoidal and simple as in the Pigeon and Plover, not botryoidal as in the Grouse and Fowls.” The ventriculus or gizzard is of a subquadrangular shape, much flattened and very muscular, showing on the right and on the left side a speculum tendinosum ; the posterior wall is deeply bent in Fig. 3. Right lateral view of intestines of Péerocles arenarius. re, right cecum; I, II, III, IV, intestinal loops. towards the middle line. Its inner lining consists of a hardened and much thickened excreted mass, without however forming any dis- tinct triturating planes. The duodenum, ileum, and rectum form four distinct ‘‘ closed” loops, which are arranged as follows :—The first, or duodenal loop is very short and straight, as it only extends over the posterior mar- gin of the gizzard; its diameter is slightly larger than that of the ileum ; the length of the duodenal loop in Péerocles is about 4°5 324 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [ Mar. 21, centim. The second loop is nearly double the length of the first, and has its apex doubled up into an irregular knot, as is characteristic of the Gallinacei proper. The third loop is of about the same length but straighter. ‘The fourth loop is almost three times as long as the duodenal one ; it is stowed away in the most ventral and lowest part of the abdominal cavity, between the gizzard and the vent; throughout its whole length it is accompanied by the two ceca, which are closely attached to this loop, as they are supplied by the same branch of the mesenteric artery. The rectal part of the intes- tinal tract is slightly wider than the ileum and the duodenum. The ceca (see fig. 4) are extremely well developed in Pterocles, being 16 centim. long, and are inserted at a distance of 15 centim. from the anus. They are very wide and have very thin walls ; their Fig. 4. a, Cxca of Pterocles arenarius; b, Ceca of Syrrhaptes paradosus (after Brandt). inner lining forms about 6 longitudinal slightly elevated folds. (Prof. Parker says that the czeca of the Sand-Grouse have 12 longi- tudinal folds, not 7 as have the Ptarmigans.) The ceeca of Syrrhaptes, according to Brandt, are yery wide and long too, but differ from these organs of Pterocles in the shape of their terminal parts, as shown in fig. 4. The liver of Pterocles I found to consist of two principal lobes— the right lobe being about three times larger than the left one, which exhibits on its inner side a small Spigelian lobe. The sharp 1882.] DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 325 lower edges of both lobes have several slight emarginations ; and there is a strong commissure between the lobes. The gall-bladder in my specimen of Pferocles is large, forming a very distinct cylindrical lateral pouch ; its cystic duct opened into the ascending end of the duodenal loop, whilst the hepatic duct was inserted opposite to the cystic duct, just below the pylorus. This arrangement of the ducts, however, seems to be subject to much variation; for Prof. Brandt found that the cystic duct in Syrrhaptes either opened into the terminal part of the duodenal Fig. 5. Ly | J ah. Duodenum of Péerocles arenarius, with the bile- and pancreatic ducts. loop, together with the hepatic duct, or in other cases near the pylorus, when the hepatic duct was inserted into the duodenum opposite the pylorus. (See figs. 5, 6, 7.) The pancreas in Pterocles and in Syrrhaptes opened by two ducts, one into that bile-duct which was inserted near the pylorus, the second just in front of the other bile-duct. The arrangement therefore was as follows :— Pterocles arenarius: d. hepatic + Ist d. pancreat. inserted near the pylorus. 2nd d. pancreat. + d. cystic (see fig. 5) in- serted opposite the pylorus. I. Syrrhaptes paradoxus: 1st d. pancreat. + d. cyst. inserted near the pylorus (fig. 6). 2nd d. pancreat. + d. hepat. inserted opposite the pylorus. 326 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [Mar. 21], Fig. 6. > 5 ae N — er = Z Duodenum of Syrrhaptes paradoxus, with bile- and pancreatic ducts (after Brandt). Fig. 7. Duodenum of Syrrhaptes paradocus, with bile- and pancreatic ducts (after Brandt). 1882.] DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 327 Il. Syrrhaptes paradoxus: \st d. pancreat. inserted near the pylorus (fig. 7). 2nd d. pancreat., -++d. hepat. +d. cystic. inserted opposite the pylorus. | | Total length | Relative | Length of | Distance of of gut. length. | czcum. |ceca from anus. centim. centim, centim. Pterocles arenarius ...... 83 7-8 16 15 ——- ——(after Brandt) 80 155 & 185 12 Syrrhaptes (after Brandt) 87 on 13 Perdicula cambayensis ... 38-42 6-7 5 3-4 Perdix cinerea ............ 75 17 6 Phasianus pictus ......... 106 75 10-15 8-12 swinhoei ............ 106 7 13 Euplocamus prelata...... 122-152 7-75 22 & 23 8-12 Orax alberti ..............- 222 9 10 & 14 15 Columba livia ............ 96-125 12-13 | 05-08 4-5 Oalcenas nicobarica ...... 125 10-11 0 Peristera geoffroii......... BE. 4 0:3 4 Erythreenas pulcherrima 41 55 0 The liver of the Rasores, as well as that of the Columbe, is quite different. The left lobe is divided again into two by a deep fissure, so that the whole organ might be called trilobed. The right lobe is generally the larger; a Spigelian lobe is present in most of these birds. The outline of the lower margin varies much in the different Fowls and Pigeons. The existence of a gall-bladder in the Pterocletes might be looked upon as a strong indication of difference between them and the Pigeons, as in the Gallinaceous birds this organ as a rule is well developed. However, it must not be forgotten that in several typi- cal Rasores, as in EHuplocamus, Numida, and Penelope, there is sometimes scarcely any pouch-like dilatation of the bile-ducts. In the Rasores the czeca are, without any exception, very well developed, and have mostly an extremely large and wide lumen. The length of both the czeca compared with the length of the intestinal tract (from pylorus to anus) is in the proportion of 1:7 (Craz), or even 1: 2°2 (Perdix). In the Pigeons, on the other hand, the czca are always in a rudimentary condition, their sum total being in the proportion of 1:75 in our domestic Pigeon, and 1: 0 in Goura, Calenas, Chalco- phaps &c., as they are either completely wanting in most of the Columbee, or are only represented by very small, often barely visible, vermiform-like appendages. It has sometimes been stated that Pigeons have to rank with such birds as do possess czeca, because such organs, although very small, a a my paper in the ‘Jenaische Zeitschrift fir Naturwissenschaft,’ 1879, p. 369. 328 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [Mar. 2], exist in our common Pigeon, and thus they are in contrast with those birds in which czeca are altogether wanting, like Woodpeckers, Parrots, and others. Garrod likewise included the Passerine birds amongst the Menotyphla (to use a Heckelian term for animals possessing ceca). Now I think this is not correct; and we must consider this matter a little further. Garrod himself came to the conclusion that the an- cestral bird-stock did possess czeca; as this is undoubtedly true, it follows that all those birds which are now found without czeca must have lost them, either phylogenetically or even during their ontogenetic development. In fact we see, in embryos of such birds as have when adult only very small quite rudimentary ceca, that these organs are, in the embryo, just as well developed as in birds with long ceca; but these ceca, in a Pigeon for instance, do not grow any further. They are in early life stopped in their deve- lopment, and thus remain inarudimentary state. Again, in all those birds which are completely devoid of caeca the tendency to suppress these organs is simply carried out to the extreme. We cannot, therefore, group the birds into birds with czeca and birds without czeca ; and this is especially wrong, as there exist many birds which, although apparently allied to each other, differ greatly in the pre- sence or absence of czeca, If we want to take the ceeca into consideration at all, we must take another point of view: that is, are the czeca of any use to the birds in question or are they not? Now, apparently, in all birds which have well-developed ceeca they are useful, although we must confess that we do not know in what way. Again, in birds with very small caeca, where these organs are simply vermiform-like pro- cesses, and which never contain any chyle in their extremely small lumen, they cannot have any physiological function, else they would not have been suppressed. No doubt in some cases, in which they are not quite aborted, as for instance in the Crows and in our common Pigeon, the glands in their walls may still produce some secretion, which then may be made the best of. But this is one of the cases in which. rudimen- tary organs are not completely stopped in their functions although they are useless, simply because the animal hitherto has not been able to get rid of them entirely: thus, for instance, the appendix vermiformis of man, or another example still more striking, our thymus gland, which, although a gland, is now without a duct, and thus rather a paradox. But to return to our question. It is clear that birds with rudi- mentary ceca have to be grouped together with lipotyphlous birds, z. e. birds which have lost these organs. The great development of the ceeca therefore constitutes a consider- able difference between the Pteroclidze and the Columbide, as the former and the Gallinacei are decidedly menotyphlous and the Columbe lipotyphlous. In the Gallinacei the whole digestive tract always forms four very distinct loops: the duodenal one is the first ; the next two loops are formed by the ileum ; in birds which, like Perdiz, have a compara- 1882.] DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 329 tively short gut, these two loops are very short, and are stowed away on the right side of the abdominal cavity ; when the ileum is re- latively long, the number of the loops is not increased nor do the two loops grow in a straight direction, but the apex of each turns backwards so as to give the loops a horseshoe shape. The fourth loop is formed by the last third of the ileum, and is accompanied by the ceeca; the whole loop is never a “ closed”’ one, its terminal branch is nearly straight, the other one much shorter and, if the gut be long, irregularly curled. We meet with a totally different arrangement in the Columbe. There are invariably only three loops formed by the intestinal tract. The first, the duodenum, is very wide, and sacculated at the apex. The second is very long, and, in all those species where the total length of the intestine is not (as for instance in the fruit-eating Carpophaga latrans) extremely short, is entirely coiled up into a left- handed spiral. As a rule there are in this spiral 3 direct and 2 re- trograde turns; the number of these, however, wholly depends on the relative length of the ileum: thus in the common Pigeon, with the relative length of the gut about 12, the apex of the ileum-loop has turned round 33 times ; whilst in others, like Chalcophaps, the number is less; and, lastly, in Pigeons with very short guts, as in Carpophaga, a spiral is not developed at.all (because, as far as we know at present, the intestinal spiral in certain birds is only one of the means of stowing away the longitudinally growing gut). But it must not be forgotten that in Columba as well as in Carpophaga, whether the ileum be long or short, we never have more or less than three folds. The last, or third loop is a very long one too, en- tirely closed or double throughout its whole length. Mops or LIFE AND PROPAGATION. The Sand-Grouse differ greatly from the Pigeons in their mode of drinking. It is well known that the latter, during the act of drink- ing, dip their bill into the water as far as the cleft of the mouth, and then suck the water in without raising their head till they have finished drinking. Pterocles and Syrrhaptes, on the other hand, drink as Fowls and other birds do, by taking up water mouthful by mouthful and letting it run down the throat. This peculiarity is probably the result of a special mechanism of the muscles of the throat and glottis, but is as yet unexplained. Their flight consists of rapid uniform movements of the wings, and generally resembles that of the Pigeons more than that of the Plovers; but they do not glide or soar as the Pigeons do. From their voice we cannot gather much information as to their affinities ; but certainly they do not coo. During the greater part of the year they are gregarious, They are monogamous like Pigeons and Plovers, differing in this respect greatly from the Rasores, which are typically polygamous. Their nest is extremely simple and situated on the ground. The number of eggs laid by Pterocles is three ; while according to Radde Syr- 330 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [ Mar. 21, rhaptes lays four, which in general appearance and so-called structure resemble those of certain Partridges. The Plovers lay the same number. The Pigeons, on the other hand, invariably lay only two; and this is so characteristic of the whole group that Bonaparte named them Bipositores. Again, all the true Gallinaceous birds produce a great and indefinite number of eggs. Therefore in this respect the Sand-Grouse are more nearly allied to the Plovers than either to Grouse or Pigeons. According to an observation made in the Zoological Gardens of London in August 1865, the period of hatching seems to be a little more than three weeks : twoeggs were laid at the beginning of August; and the young birds came out on the 29th of the same month. But one of the most valuable points, as regards the systematic position of the Pterocletes, is the fact that the young when hatched are thickly covered with hairy down, and that as soon as their plu- mage has dried they are able to leave the nest and seek their food. This removes them far from the Pigeons, which are the most de- cided peedotrophic or gymnogenous of all the birds we know. Now to sum up. We have seen that there are many points in which the Pteroclide have striking resemblances to the Columbide ; but there are also many points in which they approach the Rasores; and it is difficult, if not impossible, to made out which characters are the more important. Prof. Parker was the first to point out clearly that there is a rela- tionship between Sand-Grouse and Plovers; and Prof. Garrod, in his classification of birds, groups the Columbz, including Pteroclide, and the Limicole, including Charadriide, together under his order Charadriiformes.. But the Columbide undoubtedly are related to the Rasores through such forms as the Cracide (Peristeropodes, Huxley) and the Tetraonide; and, in addition, they are linked together by Pterocles and Syrrhaptes. These circumstances show that there exists a close relationship between Rasores, Columbe, Pterocletes, and Limicole. Phylogenetic tables as a rule are faulty from being highly hypothetical, and from the imagination being frequently drawn upon in their compilation. However, they can be useful, even if they only show where our knowledge is yet insufficient, or why systems hitherto made do not agree with more recent ideas. 'There- fore I venture to draw the outlines of a branch of the avian stock, not led by preconceived ideas, but solely guided by the consideration of facts we know, or at least we have a certain right to believe we know. 1. Rasores, Columbee, and Limicole are nearer related to one another than to the rest of the birds. 2. If the Columbee approach nearer to the Charadrii than to the Rasores, we can express this idea by a stock which gives off two main branches :—one for the Rasores ; and another one which again soon divides into two—one Columbine, and one for the Plovers (see fig. 8). 3. As the Pigeons have closer affinities to the Fowls than the latter have to the Plovers, the Pigeons must be represented by the middle branch, that to the extreme left remaining for the Plovers. 1882. | DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. 331 4. The most specialized of the Rasores (that is to say, the typical Alectoromorphz) we have to put at the end of the right branch. The Tetraonidz and the Cracide are those which, of all the Rasores, show the greatest resemblance to other families ; they must there- fore form the earliest or lowest twigs of the Rasorial branch ; con- sequently we have to put their special roots nearest to the biggest and at the same time more indifferent stock. But now as to Pterocles. 1. No doubt the Sand-Grouse are more nearly allied to the Rasores than the Pigeons are. Consequently we must seek for their root between the Rasorial and the Columbine branch. 2. Again, the Sand-Grouse are more nearly allied to the Pigeons than to the Plovers; thus their branch must be put nearer to the Columbine branch than to that of the Plovers. Vig. 8. Diagram showing the supposed relationship of the Pteroclide. This conclusion and the former can be reconciled only if we put the Sand-Grouse branch at x; and as this places them pretty nearly in the centre of our hypothetical table, it proves that our final conclusion cannot be far from right. The fact is that birds just a little less specialized than Péerocles —in other words the direct ancestors of Pterocles—would contain all that is necessary to develop them into either Fowls, Pigeons, or Plovers. Considering these circumstances, we see once more that, as Mac- gillivray and Professors Sundevall and Garrod have maintained, the ee are not so closely related to the Fowls as is generally sup- osed. It would be extremely difficult to arrange the birds represented in our table into families and groups as is required in a practical system. If we want to divide them into only three groups—Plovers, Pigeons and Fowls—of course Péerocles has to go with the Pigeons ; but this would not express its close relationship to the Tetraonide. Again we cannot include the Pigeons and Fowls under one large group, and the Plovers under a second, because the Pigeons must be placed along with the latter. And Pigeons and Plovers cannot form one 332 DR. GADOW ON THE ANATOMY OF PTEROCLES. [Mar. 21, large group and the Fowls the other, because then this Plover- Pigeon group would include a form, viz. Pterocles, which we know to be more closely allied to the Rasores than to Charadrius. It must also be remembered that Snipes and Gulls are closely related to the Plovers ; and of course Pterocles cannot be placed in such a position as would indicate that it is more closely related to the Gulls than to the Grouse. Thus it will be best to make a group or family Pterocletes, as Mr. Sclater has done, coordinate with those of Pigeons, Plovers, Gull, Fowls, and the like. On the other hand, if we are to answer the straightforward question Is Pterocles more nearly allied through its ancestors to the Pigeons or to the Fowls? we are compelled to say that they are nearest to the Pigeons. Of course they have many features in common with the Fowls ; but in no case we can include them under the latter, for the following reasons :— Pterocles shows some, although only a few, anatomical points which we only find amongst the Columbide, whilst all the other numerous points in which it resembles the Fowls are such as must have been common to the old ancestral Stork, as we find them again in some of the Limicole. But some of its Columbine features it is impossible to trace so far back, as they indicate a very high degree of specialization. Pterocles must have branched off from those birds which we may term “ incipient Pigeons,’’ and then, for reasons we can only suggest (perhaps similar conditions of life, and the like), have preserved and developed many of those old characters which the Fowls have also inherited from the same source, and have them developed in a similar way, as living under the same conditions. The main part of the ancestral or incipient Pigeons at the same time started in another direction, losing, as they proceeded, many of the old characters’, and acquiring numerous new ones, till they became that highly specialized group which is now called Columbe. 1 Among the most important characters common to the ancestral stock which the Pigeons haye lost, or are in process of losing, are the following :— 1. The Pigeons have nearly completely lost the cecal appendages of the rectum, 2. There seems to be a tendency to lose the ambiens muscle, as in many of the Pigeons it is completely absent, and in others this muscle is unstable in its presence. 3. They have lost the aftershaft to the feathers. 4, They have almost completely lost their nestling plumage, and the old character of being autophagous birds, as" their young are now hatched nearly nude, blind, utterly helpless, and depending entirely on their parents, and have to spend a considerable part of their childhood in a very imperfect state. 1882.] MR. FORBES ON THE TRACHEA OF SELEUCIDES. 333 2. Note on a Peculiarity in the Trachea of the Twelve-wired Bird-of-Paradise (Seleucides nigra). By W.A. Fores, B.A., Prosector to the Society. [Received March 7, 1882.] The death (from congestion of the lungs, with resulting hemor- rhage, and thickening of the walls of the intrathoracic air-cells) on Feb. 22nd last of the male Seleucides nigra, purchased by the Society on March 19, 1881', has given me the opportunity of ob- serving a peculiarity in the construction of its trachea of a nature unlike any thing of the kind yet known to me. The windpipe, for the greater part of its course, has the normal avian structure, the tracheal rings, which. are ossified and, as usual, notched both before and behind, being of the ordinary form, and separated by but narrow intervals from each other. For a space, however, of about 1 inch above the largely developed short pair of intrinsic muscles, the interval comprising 8 tracheal rings, it becomes peculiarly modified, the tube itself becoming slightly dilated and flattened antero- posteriorly, whilst the tracheal rings become broader, and ossified along the middle of their depth, the borders only remaining cartilaginous. This ossified part of each ring is slightly concave, so that when seen laterally the cartilaginous margins project slightly from it, the whole ring being thus like a fluted table-napkin ring, when seen in section. The intervals between these peculiar rings are very much deeper than those above, and occupied by delicate membrane only, so that all this part of the trachea is highly elastic. The sterno-tracheales are inserted just below the lowest of these peculiar rings, which is the last but three of those composing the trachea—the next two, which are very narrow, and the last, which is broad and bears the pessulus, being concealed from view by the largely developed syringeal muscles, of which there are four pairs, all, except the small anterior long muscle, being inserted on the ends of the very strong third bronchial semirings. The lateral tracheal muscles are weak, extending, however, nearly to the thoracic end of the tube. Nothing like the modification of the trachea here described obtains in any other allied form of Paradise-bird that I have been able to examine (including Paradisee papuana and rubra, Ptilorhis alberti, Phonygama gouldi, Manucodia atra, Ptilorhynchus violaceus and smithi) ; nor do I know any structure in other birds quite comparable with that now described, which is probably correlated with the very loud harsh note of these birds’. In all other respects Seleucides is, as might have been expected, a typical oscine Passerine. 1 See P. Z.S. 1881, p. 450. ? Mr. Wallace, speaking of this species, says (Malay Archipelago, ii. p. 254, London, 1869) :—*‘It has a loud shrill ery, to be heard a long way, consisting of c4h, c4h, repeated five or six times in a descending scale; and at the last note it generally flies away.”’ 334 MR. FORBES ON THE TRACHEA OF SELEUCIDES. [Mar. 21, I may take this opportunity of remarking that the various pub- lished figures of Seleucides nigra do not give a very accurate idea of the bird, as they fail to represent the peculiar way in which the leg- feathering ceases altogether some way above the “knee,” leaving Lower portion of trachea of Seleucides nigra g,from before. Twice the natural size. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11. Fourth, fifth, &. (from bottom) tracheal rings, peculiarly modified. III. Third bronchial semiring. s,¢, sterno-trachealis muscle, cut short, the large and muscular legs bare for about an inch or so above that joint. , The eyes are brilliant red; the legs, including the bare skin above the “ knees,” pale red, the claws greyish. The mucous membrane of the mouth and superior surface of the tongue is bright emerald- 1882.] MR. R. B. SHARPE ON STRIX OUSTALELI. 335 green, a narrow line of this appearing at the angle of the mouth when the jaws are closed. When the beak is open, the beautiful green of the mouth and tongue is very conspicuous, and, contrasting with the bright red eye and dark velvety plumage of the head, adds greatly to the general appearance of the bird. It would be interesting to know whether the females of Seleucides also have their mouth thus coloured, or whether it is a peculiarity of the male, developed as a sexual ornament’. 3. A Note on Strix oustaleti, Hartlaub. By R. Bowpter Suarpe, F.LS., F.Z.S., &c., Department of Zoology, British Museum. [Received March 9, 1882.] In the ‘ Proceedings’ of this Society for 1879, Dr. Hartlaub de- scribed a Barn-Owl from the island of Vitu-Levu, which he called Striv vustalett. Ihave recently had a pair of Owls submitted to me by Professor J. F. Blake of the University College, Nottingham— to the Museum of which they had been presented by Mr. Fillingham Parr, who procured them in the Fiji Islands. I recognized, as I thought, Striv oustaleti; and on comparing the birds with Dr. Hartlaub’s description I found there could be no doubt on the subject ; but I could see at the same time that the bird was no true Barn-Owl, but a Grass-Owl, in fact our old friend Strix candida, probably occurring in Fiji on one of its migrations, which have proved so disastrous to the simplicity of its nomenclature. As long as this Owl remained in India its synonymy consisted simply of two names—the original one of candida of Tickell, and longimembris of Jerdon; but on a Philippine specimen being dis- covered, it was named S. amauronota by Dr. Cabanis; and in the same year (1866) Mr. Swinhoe found it in Formosa and called it S. pithecops. Shortly after, it turned up in Queensland, only to be named Strix walleri by Mr. Diggles; and now its last appearance, in the Fiji islands, has gained it the additional cognomen of S. oustaleti. Dr. Hartlaub cannot, I think, have got in the Bremen Museum a specimen of a Grass-Owl, or he could not have failed to see that S. oustaleti belonged to the Strix candida section ; for of course, if compared with Strix delicatula and S. personata &c., the Fiji Grass-Owl comes out distinct enough. I do not think, from the absence of reference on Dr. Hartlaub’s part to my ‘ Catalogue,’ that he has done me the honour of consulting my work, published four years before his paper. On looking at the ‘ Key to the Species’ of the genus Strix as given by me (Cat. B. Brit. Mus. il. p. 290), I had not any difficulty in recognizing Série oustaleti under the name of Strix candida. 1 PS. (April 7)—A young male Rifle-bird (Péilorhis paradisec) now living in the Society’s Gardens has, it is interesting to observe, its mouth and tongue similarly brightly coloured, though of a lemon-yellow colour instead of green. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XXIII. 23 336 CAPT. SHELLEY ON BIRDS FROM souTH arrica. [Mar. 21, 4, On some new Species of Birds from South Africa. By Captain G. E. Saewiey. [Received March 10, 1882. ] (Plate XVIII.) On peace being proclaimed with the Boers, Major E. A. Butler, Major H. W. Feilden, and Captain Savile Reid were quartered for about nine months at Newcastle, Natal. Here they not only made some very valuable collections of birds, but took a large amount of notes referring to over 230 species, which they intend shortly to publish. Meanwhile they have permitted me to describe here the new species brought home. These I propose to name Anthus butlert (a very interesting yellow-breasted Pipit) and Spheneacus natalensis, the Natal repre- sentative of S. africanus, to which I will add the characters of S. intermedius, an intermediate form from Kaffraria. ANTHUS BUTLERI, sp. nov. (Plate XVIII.) Compared with Macronyx croceus, the upper parts and the wings both above and beneath are similarly coloured; but the crown is faintly tinted with yellow, and the under wing-coverts are of a slightly paler sulphur-yellow ; a white patch just in front of the eye ; sides of the head and neck brown, with a few dark-centred feathers towards the throat; chin, throat, and upper half of the breast yel- low ; remainder of the underparts tawny buff with a slight yellow shade down the centre of the abdomen ; the feathers of the crop and sides of the chest are mostly with black central streaks, and are very slightly tinted with brown ; flanks inclining to rufous-brown; sides of the belly rather indistinctly striped with rufous-brown; under tail-coverts with dark brown centres ; under surface of the tail brown, with white on the outer two pairs of feathers; the outer pair white, margined on their inner webs with a brown patch of the same form as the feather itself. Iris dark brown; upper mandible horny brown, lower one lavender-colour; legs pale brown. Total length 7-2 inches, culmen 0:5, wing 3°25, tail 3, tarsus 1, middle toe without claw 0:7. November 9, Newcastle. Four other specimens (one collected 6th June, and two males and a female, July) are apparently in the winter plumage, and differ from the one above-described in having no shade of yellow on the head, in the under surface of the body being tawny buff, only very slightly tinted with yellow on the middle of the breast and fading into white on the centre of the throat and chin. The yellow on the wings is about the same in them all; and this, together with the peculiar Macronyz-like dark mottling on the back, are characters by which the species may be readily recognized. In the specimen collected in ebe LO Sit LNW UET Hug’ L AWA “1d ZeSls 74 1882.] CApr. SHELLEY ON BIRDS FROM SOUTH AFRICA. 337 May the colouring is of a slightly more tawny hue than in the others. SPHENGACUS NATALENSIS, sp. nov. Very similar to S. africanus, but differs in the almost uniform rufous-buff colouring of the under surface of the body, and in the absence of black shaft-stripes to the upper and under tail-coverts ; the sides of the upper chest and crop, in some specimens, are slightly mottled with the dark tips and central stripes to the feathers, but show no distinct black marks; the flanks are generally entirely uniform, but in one specimen I find a few obscure dark central stripes to some of these feathers; the upper and under tail-coverts are always uniform. The characters here given for this species are further borne out by the specimens in the British Museum. Although I separate the Natal form under the title of S. natalensis, I myself would regard it as merely a well marked local race of S. africanus. The only specimen I have examined from Kaffraria is in some respects intermediate, but appears to me to be closer to S. africanus, in that the black markings on the sides of the body are very distinct, though fewer in number and smaller than in the Cape-Colony form. But the upper and under tail-coverts are without dark central stripes ; so perhaps it would be more consistent to separate this form as a third race under the title of S. intermedius. The distinguishing characters for these three races or species may be clearly summed up in the following key :— a. With very distinct black central marks to some of the feathers on the sides of the body. a’. Upper and under tail-coverts with dark central stripes ... S. africanus. b'. Upper and under tail-coverts uniform, with no dark central Rieipeneton thle teaphers: ct-.casestan se attetewastacgcs: coommeneice S. interinedius. b. With no distinct black marks on the sides of the body. Upper and under tail-coverts uniform, with no dark central Bini pes! LOvuMen tea GOT as... ens sats chests ties sap nn dewes nel sani S. natalensis. I have carefully examined the following specimens of these three birds, and find no character in the measurements. S. africanus :—a, 3, Cape (Verreaux) ; 6, c, d, Cape (Butler) ; e, 2, Paal, Cape Colony (Shelley); f, George (Atmore). S. intermedius :—g, Kaffraria (Barratt). S. natalensis :—h, 3 , Pinetown (T. L. Ayres); i,j, k, 1, Transvaal (W. Lucas); m, Swaziland (7. £. Buckley): Shelley Mus. a, ¢, 6, 3, ¢, bd, d, Sd, Newcastle: Butler Mus. a, 3,06, 9,6, oc, Ingagane river ; d, 2, Drakensberg: Reid Mus. 338 ON A NEW AGRIAS FROM THE-AMAZONS. (Mar. 21, 5. On a new Species of Agrias from the Valley of the Amazons. By F. D. Gopman and O. Satvin. [Received March 11, 1882.| (Plate XIX.) Some time ago Mr. A Maxwell Stuart, whilst travelling on the Upper Amazons, captured a magnificent specimen of an Agrias, a genus much prized by all lepidopterists both for its rarity and beauty. On his return to England he kindly made us a present of it ; and as it proves to belong to a hitherto undescribed species, we have much pleasure in naming it after him. AGRIAS STUARTI, sp. nov. (Plate XIX. figs. 1, 2.) Both wings deep purplish-blue, bordered outwardly with a narrow metallic green band, beyond which it is greyish ; primaries with costa and apex black, this colour extends along the outer margin towards the posterior angle, where it fades into grey ; secondaries with costal region and inner margin broadly black: beneath, primaries black, apical third metallic green, reddish orange towards the base; secon- daries, basal half orange, outer half metallic green with three rows of black spots parallel to the outer margin, the middle one having central white spots. Exp. 3°7 inches. Hab. Yquitos, Amazons (4. Maawell Stuart). Mus. nostr. This insect is a close ally of A. deatifica, Hew., from which, however, it differs in the greater extension of the purplish-blue colour of the upper surface. Beneath there is but little difference, but the black spots of the secondaries are rather larger. Mr. Stuart captured a single male example of this fine insect whilst it was pursuing a specimen of Callithea buckleyt, which resembles it both in colour and markings, and with which it appeared to be fighting. No doubt, like other members of the genus, it flies about the tops of the highest trees, settling on the foliage out of reach, and rarely coming near the ground’. A. deatifica has also a Callithea which is found together with it, and likewise resembles it in coloration; this is C. degandii, the sexes of which, though con- siderably different from each other, are alike in the two species. Mr. Hewitson has given a very good figure of the male of a. beatifica in his ‘ Exotic Butterflies ;’ but the female (of which we have a single specimen procured by Mr. Hauxwell at Pebas on the Upper Amazons) differs so much that a short description and figure of it here may be desirable. AGRIAS BEATIFICA 2. (Plate XIX. figs. 3, 4.) Both wings black, with a broad metallic green band commencing 1 On the habits of the other Amazonian species of Agrias, see Bates, Journ. Ent. il. p. 337. me: W Purkiss lith Hanhart. imp NEW SPECIES OF AGRIAS Edwm Wilson delet hth. Peo, LSC e. le, nat.size. Mintern Bros. imp - S) ROBILLARD! . 1382. | ON CRUSTACEANS FROM MAURITIUS. 339 at the end of the cell of the primaries, and passing in a bow to the anal angle of the secondaries, beyond this towards the outer margin fading into grey, apices of primaries narrowly tipped with black : the underside resembles that of the male; but the colours are paler, and the base of the wings is of a tawny yellow instead of a reddish orange. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XIX. Fig. 1. Upperside of Agrias stuarti ¢. 2. Underside of Agrias stuarti S. 3. Upperside of Agrias beatifica 9. 4. Underside of Agrias heatifica 2. 6. On some Crustaceans collected at the Mauritius. By Epwarp J. Miers, F.L.S., F.Z.S. [Received March 15, 1882.] (Plate XX.) The Crustaceans which I have now the pleasure of bringing before the notice of the Society were obtained at the Mauritius by M. Robil- lard, and recently forwarded by him to the British Museum. They are:—(1) a fine Spider-crab, described below as Nawia robillardi, which was dredged at a depth of 30 fathoms [that such a large and interesting a species should have remained so long unnoticed is very remarkable; and I can only account for it on the supposition that this crab lives habitually at considerable depths, and hence has escaped the notice of collectors of the littoral forms, most of which are well known]. (2) an example of Neptunus sieboldi, A. M.-Edwards, a swimming crab hitherto a desideratum to the national collection ; and (3) several specimens of a Hermit Crab which I think is Cano- bita perlata, M.-Edwards: although having the inferior surface of the joints of the first three legs very hairy, these specimens in all other particulars coincide with M.-Edwards’s brief description in the ‘ Histoire naturelle des Crustacés’ (ii. p. 242, 1837), and with the excellent figure in the large illustrated edition of Cuvier’s ‘ Regne Animal’ (pl. xliv. fig. 1). In order to complete the account of the Crustaceans received from the Mauritius through M. V. de Robillard, I have added a brief notice of a fossorial Crustacean of which two examples, both unfor- tunately imperfect, were sent two years ago to the British Museum by the same collector, and which I propose to designate Callianassa mauritiana. Naxra (NAXIOIDES) ROBILLARDI, sp. n. (Plate XX. fig. 1.) The carapace is subpyriform, rather convex, and covered with long stout conical spines ; of these spines about 13, situated on the gastric region, are arranged in three somewhat irregular trans- verse series, behind and in front of which are some smaller spines : 340 MR. E. J. MIERS ON [ Mar. 21, 2 are placed on the cardiac region, of which the posterior is very large, 3 (very large) on the intestinal region, 2 on each hepatic region, and about 7 on each branchial region, besides the marginal spines, of which there are 5 ; 3 are placed on each pterygostomian region, the anterior of which is situated at the antero-lateral angle of the buccal cavity ; there is also a distinct but not very large pree- ocular spine. The orbits are rather small, with a lateral aspect, and with two fissures above and a large hiatus below. The spines of the rostrum are subcylindrical and very long (in the male as long as the carapace), straight, and very slightly divergent distally ; they bear an accessory spine on their upper surface at some distance from the distal end, which is acute. The basal antennal joint is longer than broad, and bears a strong spine, directed obliquely downward, at its antero-external angle; the next joint is slender and very much elon- gated, the third also slender; these joints and the flagellum are scarcely visible in a dorsal view. The epistoma is large, but broader than long; the ischium joint of the outer maxillipedes is longer than broad; the merus joint truncated at its distal end, and with only a very small notch at its antero-internal angle above the place of articu- lation with the next joint. The chelipedes in both sexes are slender ; in the male, however, somewhat more robust thanin the female; the merus joint is cylindrical, elongated, with a strong spine above at its distal end. Carpus short, armed on its upper and outer surface with two or three small spines or tubercles; palm smooth, subcylindrical (in the male about 33 times as long as broad) ; fingers slender, more than half as long as the palm, somewhat incurved, having between them when closed (in the male) a small hiatus at base; both fingers in their distal halves are denticulated and meet along their inner edges ; the mobile finger has in the male a tubercle on its inner margin near the base. The ambulatory legs are slender and much elon- gated, the first pair very much longer than the following; there isa spine at the distal end of the upper surface of the merus joints in all the ambulatory legs. The dactyli, although shorter than the pre- ceding joints, are yet elongated and slightly curved, and terminate in a small corneous claw. The segments of the postabdomen are all of them distinct in both sexes; in the male all, except the last, have a small median spine, on each side of which, on the second and third segments, is a lateral spine; in the female the first four are armed with a small median spine or tubercle. The animal is covered with a short dense yellowish-brown pubescence, which, however, is absent from the palms and fingers of the chelipedes, and partially so from the penultimate and terminal joints of the ambulatory legs, the ground-colour of the integument being, in these places, in the two dried specimens I have examined, purplish-red. Length of the carapace to the base of rostral spines in an adult male about 23 inches (68 mm.), which is also the length of the spines themselves ; of a chelipede about 43 inches (113 mm.), of the first ambulatory legs nearly 93 inches (242 mm.). Two specimens, a male and a female, were collected. In the female the carapace is somewhat more pyriform and convex, the 1882. | CRUSTACEANS FROM MAURITIUS, 341 rostral spines shorter, the chelipedes rather slenderer, and the first pair of ambulatory legs somewhat less elongated. The nearest ally to this species with which I am acquainted is Navia (Naxioides) petersii (Podopisa petersti, Hilgendorf, Monatsb. Ak. Berlin, p. 785, pl. i. fig. 5, 1878), from Mozambique, which is very probably identical with Nazioides hirta, Alph. M.-Edwards (Ann. Soc. Entom. France, ser. 4, v. p. 143, pl. iv. fig. 1, 1865), from Zanzibar. NV. robdillardi is at once distinguished by its greater size, by having the carapace covered with strong conical spines in the place of small irregular tubercles, and by the double hiatus in the upper orbital margin. In the last-mentioned character it resembles certain species of Pisa (e.g. Pisa (Aretopsis) lanata) ; but it is distinguished from that genus by the greater length and slender- ness of the chelipedes and first ambulatory legs, by the narrower basal antennal joint, and the accessory spines of the rostram ; yet it may be regarded as establishing a transition to Pisa. In my revision of the Maioidea’ I adverted to the insufficiency of the characters assigned to Nazivides, A. M.-Edw. (Podopisa, Hilgendorf) for distinguishing this genus from Nazia. As the species now described has a distinct preocular spine, even this character can no longer be cited as peculiar to the last-named genus, CALLIANASSA MAURITIANA, Sp. Nn. Both the specimens sent by M. Robillard are imperfect ; and the large chelipede, from which the principal distinctive characters are derived, does not appear to belong to either example, but to a distinct and larger individual. In the analytical table appended to M. A. Milne-Edwards’s monographic revision of the genus Callia- nassa’, our new species will be arranged with Callianassa subterranea and C. longimana, inasmuch as there exists a small median rostral tooth, the terminal segment of the postabdomen and the eyes are well developed, and there is a tooth or lobe, which is itself den- ticulated, at the proximal end of the inferior margin of the merus joint of the larger chelipede, whose penultimate joint or palm about equals the wrist in width. It is distinguished from both the above- mentioned species, however, by the broad spinulose inferior basal lobe of the arm or merus, and by having the distal end of the palm between the bases of the fingers deeply excavated as in C. califor- niensts and C. uncinata ; the inferior margin of the merus is armed with small granulations ; the carpus (in the large chelipede) is some- what shorter than the palm, with its upper margin acute; the palm, which is not once and a half as long as broad, narrows very slightly toward the distal end, its upper margin is rounded, except at its proximal end; the lower margin, both of wrist and palm, is minutely serrated; the upper or mobile finger is longer than the lower, and is sharply uncinated at its distal end, it has a strong blunt tooth on its inner margin near the base. I may add that the 1 Journ. Linn. Soe., Zool. xiv. p. 658 (1879). * Nouvelles Archives du Muséum, vi. p. 101 (1870). 342 MR. P. L. SCLATER ON CYANOMYIAS C@LEsTIS. [Apr. 4, terminal postabdominal segment is shorter than in C. subéerranea, not as long as its greatest width. Length about 3 inches 10 lines (98 mm.) ; of the larger chelipede, from the base of the merus joint to end of the dactylus, about 2 inches 10 lines (72 mm.). From the American C. californiensis and C. uncinata, this species is distinguished by the much longer palm of the larger chelipede, and the much broader, less prominent, denticulated basal lobe of the arm or merus. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XX. Fig. 1. Nawia (Naxioides) robillardi (p. 839), adult male, reduced to about half natural size. la. Lateral view of the carapace of the same in outline, showing the elevation of the dorsal spines, reduced about half natural size. 1). Antennal, orbital, and buccal regions of the same, viewed from below, natural size. le. Postabdomen of the same, natural size. April 4, 1882. Professor Flower, LiL.D., F.R.S., President, in the Chair. Mr. Sclater exhibited what appeared to be an adult male example of Cyanomyias colestis (Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iv. p. 278), which belonged to the Museum of Zurich, and had been sent to him for determination by Dr. Moesch, of that city. Mr. Sclater remarked on the 1nore brilliant colours and finely developed crest of the male of this species, which rendered it readily distinguishable from the female example (figured by Lord Tweeddale, P. Z.S. 1878, pl. vii. Head of Cyanomyias celestis 3. fig. 1), the only specimen hitherto known of this superb Fly- catcher. The present example was received from Manilla, but was probably originally from Dinagat, as the type specimen, now in the collection of Mr. Wardlaw Ramsay, had been procured in that island. Besides the highly developed crest and more brilliant 1882. ] DR. A. GUNTHER ON A NEW TORTOISE. 343 colours, the male seemed to have the lazuline blue of the throat carried entirely over the breast, instead of being confined to the throat. Mr. Sclater laid before the Meeting the skins of the two specimens of the Subcylindrical Hornbill (Buceros subcylindricus), which had been formerly living in the Society’s Gardens’, and stated that a re- examination of these specimens had confirmed his opinion as to the validity of the species. In the second specimen, which had died on the 9th June 1881, although the tail was imperfect, it was manifest that the two central tail-feathers were black almost to their tips as in the first specimen; and the well-defined ashy margins of the feathers on both sides of the head were alike in both examples. It was likewise of great interest to find that an example of this Hornbill had been recently received by the Imperial Museum of Vienna? in a collection made by Dr. Emin Bey between Lado and the Albert Nyanza in Central Africa, so that we were now acquainted with the true locality of this rare species. Mr. Sclater proposed to arrange for the deposit of these typical specimens in the British Museum. The following papers were read :—- 1. Description of a new Species of Tortoise (Geoemyda impressa) from Siam. By Dr. A. Ginruer, V.P.Z.S. [Received March 20, 1882. ] The British Museum has received from Siam the shell of a fresh. water Turtle without any other part of the animal, which seems to be undescribed. It is 11 inches long; and sufficiently resembles the shells of Geoemyda spinosa and G. grandis to warrant the supposition that this species belongs to the same genus. It may be named Geoemyda impressa, from the peculiar shape of the-principal upper plates, which are not merely flat, but distinctly concave. The shell is much depressed and broadly flattened above. Its anterior margin is deeply excised in front of the nuchal plate, and serrated ; also the lateral marginals project slightly at their posterior corners, and the hind margin is deeply and regularly serrated. The plates are nearly smooth; but concentric striation is distinct, espe- cially on the costals. Of a vertebral keel the faintest possible trace is visible on the fourth or fifth vertebral. The sternum is excised in front, and deeply notched behind; its width between the front ' See P. Z. S. 1870, p. 668, pl. xxxix.; 1871, p. 489, and 1879, p. 550. 2 Cf. Von Pelzeln, “ Ueber eine Sendung von Végeln aus Central-Afrika,” Verh. k.-k. zool.-bot. Gesellsch. Wien, 1881, p. 153. 344 DR. A. GUNTHER ON A NEW TORTOISE. [Apr. 4, Geoemyda impressa (upper surface). 1882.] DR. A. GUNTHER ON A NEW TORTOISE. 345 Geoemyda impressa (lower surface). 346 DR. A. GUNTHER ON A NEW TORTOISE. [Apr. 4, incisions is equal to that between the hinder, and a little more than one half of its length. Areole distinct. Nuchal plate broad, much broader behind than in front, with truncated anterior margin. First vertebral much broader than long, concave, with parallel lateral margins; second, third, and fourth very much broader than long; posterior margin of the fourth only half as long as anterior; fifth vertebral but slightly broader than long, and rather convex behind. Caudal divided. Costals deeply impressed in their areolar portion, more so than the vertebrals. Gulars subrhomboid, but rather irregular, Fig. 3. Geoemyda impressa (side view). joined at an obtuse angle in front and behind. Postgulars enlarged at the expense of the pectorals, which are very narrow, the length of their median suture being only one fourth of the suture between the postgulars. Abdominals very large, as long as the preceding three pairs of plates together. Preeanals broader than long. Anals similar in shape to the gulars, but larger, and joined at an acute angle posteriorly. The prominent colour is yellow in the areolar portion, but each of the vertebral, costal, and sternal plates is ornamented towards the margin with broad black radiating bands, and the anterior half or third of each of the marginals is black. 1882. | ON THE TRACHEA OF MANUCODIA ATRA ETC. 347 2. On the Convoluted Trachea of two Species of Manucode (Manucodia atra and Phonygama gouldi) ; with Remarks on similar Structures in other Birds. By W. A. Forszs, B.A., Prosector to the Society. [ Received March 21, 1882.] The subcutaneous convolution on the pectoral muscles of the trachea in the Manucodes of the genera (or subgenera) Manucodia and Phonygama, originally described and figured by Lesson in Phonygama keraudreni so long ago as 1826", has lately excited con- siderable attention, Prof. Pavesi? having shown that a similar struc- ture, though less developed, exists in Manucodia chalybeata, and Dr. Meyer* having demonstrated the same for its representative form M. jobiensis. From their figures and observations it is clear :— 1. That the trachea of Phonygama ** keraudreni”’ * may be convo- luted in both sexes, that of the males being most complicated, consisting, when best developed, of a complete spiral of several coils, whilst in younger males, and females, it is reduced to a simple loop with a bend to the right. Intermediate forms of all kinds are tobe found, as shown by Pavesi’s interesting series of figures. 2. That in Manucodia chalybeata and M. jobiensis the adult males possess a trachea provided with a simple loop, extending about two thirds down the surface of the pectoral muscles. This is apparently absent in the females and young males. The specimen, a male, of Manucodia atra, purchased by the Society on March 19, 1881 °, having died on March 11th inst., I have now been enabled to examine the condition of the trachea in this species also. As will be seen from the drawing I exhibit (figure, p- 348), representing it in situ, it too is convoluted, but to a much smaller extent, only forming a short loop lying on the interclavicular air-cell, between the rami of the furcula, much as in many specimens of the genusCraz. This quite confirms D’Albertis’s description given by Count Salvadori’. In the female the trachea will probably be found to be quite simple. Of Phonygama gouldi, the Australian representative of P. kerau- dreni, I have been euabled to examine three detached trachez, as well as three entire birds collected at Cape York by H.M.S. 1 Voyage de la ‘ Coquille,’ Atlas, pl. xiii. fig. 2. 2 Ann. Mus. Genova, vi. pp. 313-324, pl. x., and ix. pp. 66-77. 3 Abbildungen Vogel-Skeleten, pl. vii. a, p. 5. 4 All but one of Pavesi’s specimens (fig. 6 of his second paper) are, it is to be observed, really P. gouldi, having been obtained at Cape York by D’Albertis. ® On its arrival it was supposed to belong to the species M. viridis (seu chalybeata), and was noticed as such (P. Z. 8. 1881, p. 450). 5 “Non pare che questa specie possegga vere circonyoluzioni externe della trachea, ma, secondo le osservazioni del D’Albertis, i maschi adulti avrebbero soltanto uw ansa piegata ad § nella fossetta della forchetta.”—Ornitologia della Papuasia e delle Molucche, ii. p. 509, 348 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE TRACHEA OF [Apr. 4, ‘Challenger,’ and kindly intrusted to me by the late Sir Wyville Thomson. The first three are those already mentioned by Mr. Tegetmeier in his appendix to the ‘Natural History of the Cranes’’. All are convoluted, though that of the female specimen is least so, and those of the two males vary slightly in the amount of convo- lution. They very closely resemble that of P. keraudreni figured on p. 68, fig. 2, in the second of Prof. Pavesi’s papers already quoted, but have eight instead of nine folds, counting along a trans- verse line drawn through the centre of the coil. Of the three ‘ Chal- lenger’ birds, one, a female *, has a trachea with a single curved loop, like Pavesi’s fig. 8, whilst in the two others the trachea is Trachea of Manucodia atra. quite straight, with no trace of a curve. One of these is a male, probably young, whilst the other is an adult female, as shown by the oviduct containing an egg nearly ready to be laid. It is clear therefore that in this species, too, the female may sometimes have no tracheal loop at all. As regards the habits of P. gouldi, I reproduce here some extracts from the notes accompanying the receipt of the first three trachez sent—I believe, by Dr. George Bennett of Sydney—the substance of which Mr. Tegetmeier has already published (from the original MS. in my possession) in his work on Cranes :— * London, 1881, pp. 87, 88. 2 One of the specimens referred to in Mr, Murray's notes, ¢f. ‘ Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger,’ Report on the Birds, p. 87. 1882. ] MANUCODIA ATRA AND OTHER BIRDS. 349 “ Having recently purchased a pair of those elegant birds, the Manucodia gouldi, which had been shot at Cape York by Mr. J. A. Thorpe (now taxidermist to the Sydney Museum), he directed my attention to the peculiar formation of the trachea in them, some of which he has preserved in a dried state and presented to me; of these I have sent you three, one from a female and two from males. That of the female is much smaller in size than those of the males ; and even in the males the convolutions assume different forms. This formation of the vocal organs enables the male bird to utter a very loud and deep guttural sound, indeed more powerful and sonorous than any one would suppose so small a bird could be capable of producing. Mr. Thorpe states to me that it was a long time before he could believe that so powerful a sound emanated from this bird. No information could be obtained respecting the note of the female, as only that of the male was heard. These birds were found about the same locality as the two fine species of Rifle-birds obtained also at Cape York—Ptilorhis alberti and P. victorie. “Mr. Thorpe gave me some information respecting the habits of these birds as follows :—‘ During a residence of seventeen months at Cape York in 1867 and 1868 I shot several of the Manucodia gouldi, and took particular notice of their habits. They frequent the dense palm-forests, and are usually seen high up in the trees; they utter a very deep and loud, guttural note, rather prolonged, and unlike that of any other bird with which I am familiar. Their movements are particularly active and graceful; on appreaching them they evince more curiosity than timidity, looking down at the slightest noise, and apparently more anxious to obtain a full view of the intruder than for their own safety. They are almost invariably in pairs; and both birds can generally be secured.’ ”’ I may remark that, in all the specimens of the convoluted trachea in Manucodia and Phonygama I have seen, the descending limb of the loop in the natural position of the bird is to the left, the ascending to the right. The same peculiarity is observable in all the figures yet published, excepting the original one of Lesson, and in one of those of Pavesi (/. c. ix. p. 64, fig. 4). The reversal, in the first figure, is obviously due to the trachea being represented from the dorsal, instead of the ventral aspect, it being represented as quite separated from the body: Pavesi’s figure, representing the parts im situ, does not admit of this explanation, if correctly drawn. As regards the two forms Phonygama and Manucodia, which Mr. Sharpe adopts as genera in the ‘ Catalogue of Birds,’ vol. iii. pp. 180, 182, it is interesting to observe that the validity of the separation is confirmed by what we now know of the tracheal con- formation of the two groups in question. Phonygama (as represented by P. keraudreni and gouldi) has the trachea (at least usually) convoluted in doth sexes, that of the adult male being spirally convoluted several times, whilst that of the female forms a single curve with a loop to the right. Munucodia (in M. chalybeata, jobiensis, and atra), on the other hand, has the trachea convoluted in the male only, the convolution being in the form of a 330 MR. W. A. FORBES ON THE TRACHEA OF [Apr. 4, simple loop, extending, in the first two species, onto the pectoral muscles, but confined in J. atra to the interclavicular area. As regards the occurrence of convoluted tracheze in the class Aves generally, it may be useful to give as complete a list as is in my power of all the hitherto recorded instances. Pavesi has already (J. ec. vi. pp. 317, 318) given such a list, compiled from various authors; but the opportunities for observation of my predecessor and myself have enabled me to give, as will be seen below, a much fuller and more complete one. I have endeavoured to state exactly in what species this convolution has been observed, or has been found to be absent, as well as to state precisely the sexes of the individuals presenting the peculiarities. Unless otherwise stated, the observation has been made by Prof. Garrod or myself. A. The convolutions of the trachea are superficial, lying beneath the skin, extending often mure or less onto the pectoral, or even abdominal, muscles. OscINEs. Phonygama keraudreni. ¢ [Lesson, Pavesi, Meyer]. [Probably ® also. ] —— gouldi. g : present, much less developed (sometimes absent) il -—— jobiensis. ¢. [Condition in 2 not known.] Ny Ve Manucodia chalybeata. 3 {Pavesi, Meyer]. ——atra. 3. (Condition in 2 not known. ] At present it has been found in the males only of these three species, and, as already indicated, is, from Beccari’s observations on M. chalybeata, probably absent altogether in the females. Fam. ANATIDZ. In the males of Anseranas melanoleuca the trachea forms a very extensive double loop, extending to quite the end of the pectoral muscles. The female has simply a slight bend in the neck- Fam. ScOLOPACID. The females only of Rhynchea australis [according to Gould] have a convoluted trachea, forming several folds on the pectoral muscles, and extending onto the abdomen. In the males it is simple’. In R. capensis, as Mr. Wood-Mason has lately shown (P. Z. S. 1878, pp. 745-751, pl. xlvii.), the mature females only have a slightly extrathoracie loop, the trachea of the younger females and of the males being quite simple. | Two specimens showing different degrees of development of this structure may be seen mounted in the Hunterian Museum (Preps. 1156, D & E). 1882.] MANUCODIA ATRA AND OTHER BIRDS. 351 Fam. CRAcip&. In the males of the genera Crax, Pauxis, Mitua, and Ortalis the trachea forms a loop of variable extent, often extending, particularly in the last three genera, to the end of the carina sterni, and then turning up a little way on the left side before it returns. In other cases it extends only about as far as the anterior end of the carina. In the females this loop is altogether absent, or at most the trachea presents a slight curve in the neck. Species examined. Crax globicera. 3,9. alector. 3,92. selateri. S,¢@. daubentoni. 3,9. alberti. 3,9. carunculata. 3, @. [The females only of C. gloéulosa and C. incommoda have yet been examined. The trachea is simple.] Pauwxis galeata. 3,2. Mitua tuberosa. 3,9. tomentosa. 3,Q. Ortalis albiventris. 3,9. garrula. 3. [The 92 according to Humboldt’ has the trachea simple. | —— motmot. 3. [The female has a simple trachea according to Latham, who describes this species” under the name of Phasianus parraka. | In Penelope jacucaca the trachea is convoluted in doth sexes; and the same is the case in the male of P. pileata, the condition of the female being unknown. [In Penelope cristata and P. purpurascens the male has zo loop ; and the same is the case in Pipile cwmanensis and P. jacutinga. Only females of Pipile cujubi and Nothocrar urumutum have yet been examined : these had simple trachee ; and the same is the case in both sexes of Aburria carunculata. | B. The trachea has a considerable superficial loop in the cervical region, anterior to the thoracic muscles. Fam. PHasiaNnIp&. Tetrao urogallus. The male only, apparently. C. The trachea has a loop entering into, and inclosed by, a bony cavity formed by the clavicular symphysis. Fam. Numipip&. The Guinea-fowls of the genus Guttera, as seen in both sexes 1 Humboldt and Bonpland, ‘Recueil d’observations de Zoologie,’ &e. p. 5. Paris, 1811. 2 Linn. Trans. iv. p. 100 &e. Proc. Zoou. Soc.—1882, No. XXIV. 24 852 ON THE TRACHEA OF MANUCODIA ATRA ETC. [Apr. 4 of Guttera cristata and G. pucherani. ‘The same conformation occurs in G. eduardi; but the sex of my specimen is not, unfortu- nately, recorded. [In Numida proper (N. meleagris, ptilorhyncha, and mitrata have been examined), as well as in Acryllium Real Leino, the trachea is quite simple in both sexes. | D. The trachea has several inérathoracie convolutions. Fam. Ciconup&. Tantalus ibis, in the male (ef. Garrod, Coll. Papers, p. 286). [The condition of the female is unknown. ] [In both sexes of 7. loculator, as well as in the females of T. leucocephalus (the other sex not yet having been dissected) the trachea is unconvoluted. | Fam. Isipipz. Platalea leucorrodia. $. (9, Nitzsch). [In Ajaja rosea the trachea is known to be simple in both sexes, though the bronchi are peculiarly long. Cf. Garrod, J. c. p. 288. ] E. The trachea is convoluted, the convolution impinging on, or entering, the carina sterni. Fam. CyGnip&. In the Swans of the Cygnus ferus group, the trachea, as has long been known, has a number of zztrasternal convolutions, which may extend to near the end of the bone. This is well known to occur in both sexes of Cygnus ferus: it is likewise the case in both males and females of C. buccinator, C. americanus (according to Macgillivray, Sharpless, &c.), and C. bewichi (Yarrell). [In Cygnus olor, C. immutabilis (Macgillivray), C. nigricollis, and C. coscoroba the trachea is quite simple in both sexes. | According to Yarrell, in Cygnus atratus there is a slight down- wardly-directed loop of the trachea in the interclavicular region. Fam. Gruipz. The genus Grws, as a rule in both SEXES, POSSesses a convoluted trachea, which usually enters the carina sterni, which it may excavate to its posterior extremity. The amount: of convolution varies much in different specimens of the same species. Species examined. Grus cinerea. 3,2. (Yarrell, &c.) —— antigone. 3 (Tegetmeier). : —— americana. 2 (cf. Roberts, Am. Nat. 1880). carunculata. 3, Qe —— leucogeranos. 3,9. As regards these two species, it appears from Prof, Garrod’s MS. 1882. ] ON RARE BIRDS’ EGGS FROM MADAGASCAR. 353 notes that the male of G. leucogeranos has a convoluted trachea, only slightly folded in the carina sterni, extending in it for less than half its extent’; whilst in the female “ there was formed a genu of small size, that does not enter the carina sterni.’ The female of G. carunculata examined had a trachea as well convoluted as the most developed forms of G. americana, whilst in the male the con- dition was as in the female of G@. leucogeranos. Grus australasiana. 3 [? 2]. —— canadensis. 3. In Tetrapteryx paradisea, according to Yarrell and Tegetmeier, as well asin Anthropoides virgo according to Parsons and Yarrell, the trachea is convoluted, but does not enter the carina sterni, being contained in a special groove developed along the anterior margin of that bone. [In both species of Balearica the trachea is known to be quite simple ; and the same is probably true in Aramus scolopaceus.] 3. On the Eggs of some rare Wading Birds from Madagascar. By J. E. Harring, F.L.S., F.Z.S. [Received March 21, 1882.] Amongst a large collection of eggs recently brought from Mada- gascar by the Rev. W. Deans Cowan, many of which are of con- siderable interest as being hitherto undescribed, are the eggs of three species of Limicole which I should like to bring before the notice of this Society, since they belong to members of a group to which I have for some years been paying special attention. Mr. Deans Cowan collected in the neighbourhood of Fianarantsoa in the Betsileo country, situated in the south central portion of Madagascar ; and the extent of his collection shows how rich a field for ornithologists is the district in which he has for some years resided. The three species of Wading-birds of which I now exhibit the eggs, as well as the skins, are a Pratincole (Glareola ocularis, Verreaux), a Sand-Plover (Ayialitis geoffroyi, Wagler), and a Snipe (Gallinago macrodactyla, Bonaparte). ‘The Pratincole and Snipe, which so far as I am aware have not been met with out of Madagascar, are both very rare in collections; the Sand-Plover, being generally distributed throughout Southern Asia, the Malay Archipelago, and Eastern Africa, is very much better known. 1. GLaAREOLA ocuLARis, Verreaux, was first brought to the notice of naturalists by the late Jules Verreaux so long ago as 1833, when at a meeting of the South-African Institution at Cape Town in that year he exhibited and described a specimen, which, with other skins, he had then lately received from Madagascar. ? The observations of Mr. A. O. Hume (cf. Tegetmeier’s ‘ Cranes,’ p. 39, &c.) do not, therefore, always hold good for this species, ; Za 354 MR. J. E. HARTING ON RARE . [Apr. 4, Equal in size to the well-known Collared Pratincole (G. pratincola), which, dispersed throughout Southern and Eastern Europe, Africa, and a great portion of Southern Asia, occasionally visits the British Islands, it is distinguished from that species by having no “collar,” the head and nape black, a white spot under the eye and passing be- hind it, the quills much blacker than in G. pratincola, the tail squarer and blacker, the outer feathers scarcely longer than the rest, and with a white spot on their distal half. The species is well figured in the excellent work of Messrs. Pollen and Van Dam (Recherches sur la Faune de Madagascar,’ 1868), who, however, give no account of its bree ting-habits, nor describe its eggs. It was not until thirty years after this bird had been described that any information concerning its habits was published. In 1863 Messrs. Roch and Edward Newton, in an account of their visit to Madagascar printed in ‘The Ibis’ for that year, recorded their having met with it near Tamatave. They remarked :— « At our first halting-place on the road from Tamatave to the capital, on the Ist of October, we saw and shot several Pratincoles. The river Hivondrona runs out into the sea about a mile and a half- below a village bearing the same name, and has on its left bank a treeless sandy plain. Here we found these birds, together with Sanderlings and two species of Plover. Unfortunately, those that we skinned were destroyed, and we have no specimens by which to identify them ; but we have little doubt that the Pratincoles were of the same species as an example afterwards obtained by Dr. Roch ;”” who says :—‘‘ At Nossi-bé a small village to the north of Tamatave, I found many Pratincoles in the native burial-ground, which appeared to be their breeding-place, though I was unable to discover either eggs or young, Their manners strongly reminded me of those of the Lapwing, screaming high in the air, and then darting along the ground as if to draw my attention away from their broods. I thus easily obtained several specimens.” The following year Mr. Edward Newton observed these birds in the same locality in September (‘ Ibis’ 1863, p. 455). Dr. Roch has described the flight of this Pratincole as reminding him of that of the Lapwing ; but the late Mr. Swinhoe was doubtless more accurate when, describing the habits of Glareola orientalis as observed by him in Formosa, he likened its appearance on the wing to the Golden Plover; for, like that bird, the Pratincoles have long, pointed, narrow flight-feathers, unlike the full rounded wing of the Lapwing. Their food consists chiefly of sand-beetles and flying ants, of which they are especially fond. Like other species of the Limicole, the Pratincoles lay their eggs in a depression of the ground, with very little nest, and the young run as soon as they are hatched. The egg of Glareola ocularis is much paler than that of G. pratin- cola, and assimilates both in shape and colour to the eggs of Cursorius, showing an affinity to that genus of birds, which is also indicated in the anatomical structure. 1882. ] BIRDS’ EGGS FROM MADAGASCAR. 355 It may be described as of a pale stone-colour, or, to be more accurate, of the colour described and figured by Werner in his ‘ No- menclature of Colours’ as cream-yellow, spotted or speckled chiefly at the larger end with yellowish-brown and paler brocoli-brown (Werner). It measures 1*4 inch by 11 at its greatest diameter. Only one nest was found, containing two eggs. The native name for this bird according to Mr. Deans Cowan is Hitsikitsidrano. 2. AGIALITIS GEOFFROYI, Wagler. In ‘ The Ibis’ for 1870 I gave as complete a life-history of this species as the materials then available enabled me to prepare, with a figure of the bird in its nuptial plumage. Reference to this account will show that the species is widely distributed and has frequently come under the observation of naturalists at the periods of its migration, or in its winter-quarters; but I was obliged to confess my inability to describe the ege (tom. cit. p. 383). Jerdon, writing of its habits in India, thought it “ retired northwards to breed ;”’ and Dr. Leith Adams believed he had found it breeding on the banks of the Chimouraree Lake in Ladakh (P. Z.S. 1859, p- 188), but the description of the bird given by him in his ‘ Wan- derings of a Naturalist in India’ (p. 283) shows that it was the closely allied, but smaller, Zyialitis mongolica that he met with. 44. geoffroyi, according to Swinhoe, is abundant on the sandy shores of Formosa ; and from the fact of the young being found in the island, he conjectured that it breeds there. There can be little doubt that it does so; for several eggs which he took there, and supposed to be those of the Eastern Golden Plover, Charadrius fulvus, are evidently too small for that species, and can only belong to 4. geoffroyi. These eggs are now in the collection of Mr. H. Seebohm, and resemble those now exhibited from Madagascar. As its smaller congener &. mongolicus does not occur in Mada- gascar, there is no ground for supposing that the eggs now exhibited can belong to that species ;_ while the eggs of such other Sand-Plovers as are known to occur in the island are so much smaller in size, and so different in markings, that they cannot for a moment be con- founded. 4. geoffroyi is common enough in Madagascar, frequent- ing saudy shores and going up the rivers for some distance inland to breed. The egg is of a cream-yellow, blotched chiefly at the larger end with pitch-black. It measures 1°4 inch by 1 inch. The native name for this bird, and applied to all the Sand-Plovers which are found there, is Vikiviki. 3. GALLINAGO MACRODACTYLA, Bonaparte. G. bernieri, Pucheran. This Snipe, a very rare one in collections, is characterized by the unusually long toes, and by the extraordinary length of bill which distinguishes it from all its congeners. Hardly any thing has been published concerning it beyond the 356 ON RARE BIRDS’ EGGS FROM MADAGASCAR. _ [Apr. 4, mere identification of the species under the name bestowed upon it by Pucheran (Rev. Zool. 1845, p. 279). Thus, it appears in a col- lection of Madagascar birds brought home by Mr. W. Gerrard, and described by Professor Newton in the ‘ Proceedings’ of this Society, 1865, p. 832; it is noted as amongst the birds observed in Mada- gascar by M. Grandidier between the years 1865-67 (Rev. et Mag. de Zool. 1868, p. 4); and it appears again in a collection made in Madagascar by Mr. Crossley in 1869, and described by Mz. Sharpe, P.Z.S8. 1870, p. 399. Dr. Hartlaub has of course included it in both his works on Madagascar (Orn. Beitrag Faun. Madagasc. 1861, p. 78, and ‘ Die Vogel Madagascars,’ 1877, p. 333); but little information is given concerning it beyond what had already been made known by Messrs. Roch and Edward Newton in their remarks on Madagascar birds, published in ‘ The Ibis’ in 1863, where the fullest notice which has appeared of this bird is given. These gentlemen state that they found it tolerably common along the coast, where it had evidently just been breeding, as Dr. Roch found a young one about four days old, on the 3rd October, between Tranomaro and Mamorack ; unfortunately it was not preserved. In colouring it was said to approach the young of Gallinago scolopacina more thau either G. major or G. gallinula. In the valleys near Ambohitroni, about ninety-four miles from the coast, Messrs. Roch and Newton found it more numerous, and in about half an hour killed nine couple. Their flight was slow and steady, and they did not twist in the least. These were evidently not breeding. The largest measured was 19°25 inches in extent of wing, and 17-5 inches from the tip of the bill to the end of the tail. According to Messrs. Roch and Newton sixteen appeared to be the normal number of tail-feathers in this Snipe, or two more than originally ascribed to the species by Bonaparte. Unfortunately, of the three specimens of this bird now before me, not one of them has the tail perfect, so that at present I am unable to check the obser- vations of my predecessors upon this point. With regard to the breeding of this species, Dr. Hartlaub has briefly described the egg (Végel Madagascars, p. 335), and Dr. Roch, as already stated, found a young one which he was unable to preserve. I have now before me both egg and young, brought home by Mr. Deans Cowan from Fianarantsoa, Betsileo, where the bird is called Kekakeka, The native name Rava-rava referred to this species by Prof. Newton, in the Catalogue already referred to (P.Z.S. 1865, p- 832), is, according to Mr. Deans Cowan, properly applicable to the Painted Snipe (Lthynchea capensis). The egg, which measures 1-7 inch by 1°2 at its greatest diameter, is of a honey-yellow colour (Werner), spotted chiefly at the larger end with umber-brown. The young bird when a few days old is scarcely to be distinguished from the young of our Common Snipe (G. scolopacina) at the same age, save for its greater length of bill, legs, and toes. As regards 1882. ] MR. E. P. RAMSAY ON A NEW TEPHRAS, 357 coloration, a description of the one would apply almost equally well to the other. The measurements of a young bird of G. macrodactyla less than a week old, and consequently unable to fly, are :—Bill 1°5, wing 2°5, bare portion of tibia *5, tarsus 1*7 inch. Before concluding my remarks on this species it seems desirable to say a few words on the synonymy, since the bird has hitherto been usually known as Gallinago bernieri of Pucheran, who named it after the first collector who brought specimens of the bird to Europe. Pucheran’s description was published in the ‘Revue de Zoologie,’ 1845; but some years prior to this, namely between 1832 and 1841, Bonaparte’s ‘ Iconografia della Fauna Italica’ appeared in parts (unpaged). In one of these parts, in the course of a notice of Gallinago brehmi (a variety of the common European Snipe), of which the part in question contains a coloured figure, a review of the various species of Gallingo known to the author is given, in the course of which two new species are described : —one from Madagascar, named by Bonaparte macrodactyla; the other from the Cape, named by him nigripennis, and subsequently by Riippell (1845) equatorialis. His description of macrodactyla, which applies to the present species, was founded upon a specimen in the Paris Museum, which had been brought by Dr. Bernier from Madagascar, and was in all probability the same type from which Pucheran subsequently de- scribed and named his Gallinago bernieri. It is evident, therefore, that Bonaparte’s name for this species, Gallinago macrodactyla, has precedence. I have seen no specimen of this bird from any part of Africa; and, so far as at present known, it appears to be confined entirely to Madagascar. 4. Description of a new Species of Bird of the Genus Tephras. By E. P. Ramsay, F.L.S., C.M.Z.S. [Received March 14, 1882.] The species which I propose to describe is based on a specimen from a collection made along the south coast of New Guinea and at the Aru Islands by the late S. White, Esq., of South Australia, I propose to call it TEPHRAS WHITEI, Sp. nov. All the upper surface dull brown washed with olive-yellow, tinged with brown on the head; brighter on the rump and upper tail- coverts, and on the outer margins of the webs of the wing- and tail- feathers ; the wings and tail brown above and below; axillaries and under wing-coverts whitish, inner margin of the webs of the quills towards the base whitish ; shafts of the wing and tail-feathers below white, above brown; all the under surface of the body, chin, margins of shoulders below, and the under tail-coverts citron-yellow, deeper 358 PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTATA. [Apr. 18, in tint on the chest, breast, and under tail-coverts; bill brown, whitish on the lower margin and on the under mandible; no ring round the eye; ear-coverts and sides of the face like the head. Length of skin 3°7 inches, wing 2°5, tail 1-9, tarsus 0°7; bill from forehead 0°5, from anterior margin of nasal groove 0°3, from ape 0°6. ; The flank-plumes are rather elongated and somewhat decomposed. Hab. Aru Islands ? April 18, 1882. Prof. Flower, LL.D., F.R.S., President, in the Chair. The following report on the additions to the Society’s Menagerie during the month of March 1882 was read by the Secretary :— The total number of registered additions to the Society’s Mena- gerie during the month of March 1882 was 54, of which 26 were by presentation, 16 by purchase, 3 by birth, and 9 were received on deposit. The total number of departures during the same period, by death and removals, was 81. The most noticeable addition during the month was :— A Radiated Fruit-Cuckoo (Carpococcyx radiatus) from Sumatra, purchased March 31st. The gait and actions of this remarkable Grownd-Cuckoo remind one more of a Gallinaceous bird or a Gallinule than of any of its arboreal relatives of the same family. ‘The form is quite new to the Society’s Collection, The following papers were read :— 1. On the Mutual Affinities of the Animals composing the Order Epenrata. By Witi1am Henry Frowrr, LL.D., F.R.S., Pres. Zool. Soc., &c. [Received April 4, 1882.] The name assigned to this order by Cuvier is often objected to as inappropriate, as, though some of its members are edentulous, others have very numerous teeth; and the Linnean name Bruta is occasionally revived by modern authors. But that term is quite as objectionable, especially as the group to which Linneus applied it is by no means equivalent to the order as now understood, but con- tained all the animals then known which are comprised in the modern orders Proboscidea, Sirenia, and Edentata, together with the Walrus, one of the Carnivora. If retained at all, it should rather belong to the Prodoscidea, as Elephas stands first in the list of genera of Bruta in the ‘Systema Nature,’ and was probably in the mind of Linnzeus when he assigned the name to the group. 1882. ] PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTALA. 359 Cuvier’s order included the Ornithorhynchus and Echidna, animals of which the structure was then imperfectly known, but which are now by almost universal consent removed to an altogether different section of the class. Otherwise its limits are those now adopted. The name Ldentata, moreover, is now so generally used, and its meaning so well understood as a conventional term, that it would be very undesirable to substitute any other for it. In fact similar reasons might be given for ceasing to use nearly all the current ordinal desig- nations of mammals. It might be equally well objected that all the Carnivora ave not flesh-eaters, many of the Marsupialia have not pouches, and so forth. 7 The few common characters by which the Edentata are associated are too well known to need repetition. The principal one is the absence of any trace of the typical heterodont and diphyodont den- tition, found in a more or less modified form in all other placental mammals’. The one genus Tatusia presents a startling exception, in the presence of a set of milk-teeth, with (according to Burmeister) distinct rootsimplanted in separate alveoli, and (according to C. Tomes) distinct enamel-organs, if not enamel. This is one of the most im- portant facts bearing upon the evolution of the Edentates yet dis- covered, though its full signification is not yet evident. It is highly probable that most, if not all, of the existing Eden- tates are the very much differentiated representatives of a large group, the greater number of which are now extinct, and which have become so without ever attaining a high grade of organization. The great diversity of structure, the high degree of specialization to which many have attained, the paucity of species and even of individuals, their limited area of distribution, and their small size compared with known extinct forms, all show that they belong to an ancient and waning race, the members of which still hold their own either by the remoteness and seclusion of their dwelling-places, their remarkable adaptation of structure to special conditions of life, or by aid of the peculiar defensive armature with which they are invested. Their former history can, however, only be surmised, rather than read, at present; for though we have ample evidence of the abundance and superior magnitude of certain forms in the most recent and post-Tertiary geological age, and in one part of the world, beyond that time (7. e. in the true Tertiary period), and in other parts of the world than America, their fossil remains hitherto discovered are only fragmentary, giving a most imperfect idea of their actual condition, as well as affording no indications that serve to connect them with certainty to any other branch of the class. The existing Edentates readily group themselves into five distinct families, of the limits of which there is no reasonable doubt. These are :—1. The Brapyrop1p4, containing two genera, Bradypus and Cholepus. 2. The MyRrMECOPHAGID4, containing three distinct modi- fications, worthy of generic rank—Myrmecophaga, Tamandua, and * The Cetacea are possible exceptions ; but embryological and palzeontological researches appear to show that their dentition may be derived from the ordinary mammalian type. 360 PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTATA. [Apr. 18, Cycloturus. 3. The Dasypop1p&, which may be divided into two sections, one containing the genus 7’atusia, which, in the presence of milk-teeth, the structure of the fore feet, as well as in many characters of the visceral anatomy, stands apart from all the other Armadillos' ; and another, including the genera Dasypus, Xenurus, Priodon, Toly- peutes, and Chlamydophorus, which are clearly all modifications of a common type, although the last-named shows such a striking difference in the character of its dermal armature that it might make a section apart, if its internal structure were not so closely similar to that of Dasypus. 4. The Manip, containing about seven species, the slight modifications of which are scarcely worthy of being considered generic. 5. The OrycrrEroropip#, with one genus containing two closely allied local forms and species. The three first-named families are inhabitants of the New, the last two of the Old World. The families of which all the members are extinct are the Mega- THERID#& and GLYPTODONTID, both American and post-Tertiary, the one related to the Bradypodide, and the other to the Dasypo- dide. The Tertiary forms are less known; but those of the New World may be provisionally grouped under Marsh’s name of Moro- PoDID#, and those of the Old World as MacroTHERIID&. As to the mutual relationship of these families, it has been customary with all recent zoologists to group them into two divisions, often called suborders :—the PHyYLLoPHAGA, PHyTOPHAGA, or TAR- DIGRADA, containing the Bradypodide ae and the Enromo- PHAGA or VeRMiineua, including all the others, unless, as in some systems, Orycteropus is placed apart as forming a distinct section. Whether these distinct suborders are adopted, or the families merely arranged in their supposed relationship, the Old-World Ant- eaters, or Manid@, are invariably closely associated with the New- World Anteaters or the Wyrmecophagide, and the latter are widely separated from the Sloths, This being (I think I am not wrong in saying) the view universally accepted at the present time, it is my purpose to investigate it a little more closely than has hitherto been done, and to see whether it is really based upon important structural relations, or only upon what may be called superficial or adaptive modifications. The bonds which unite the Manide to the Myrmecophagide are mainly to be found in the structure of the mouth, especially the extensile character of the tongue, the great development of the sub- maxillary glands, and absence of teeth. These characters are exactly analogous to those found in the Echidna among Monotremes, the Woodpeckers among Birds, and the Chameleon among Reptiles. The explanation probably lies in the fact that in countries where termites and similar insects flourish, various distinct forms of verte- brates have become modified in special relation to this abundance of nutritious food, which could only be made available by a peculiar structure of the alimentary organs. 1 See Garrod, “ Notes on the Anatomy of Tolypeutes tricinctus, with remarks on other Armadillos, ” Proc. Zool. Soc. 1878, p. 222. 1882.] PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTATA. 361 In tracing true affinities we must not look to these obviously adaptive characters, but to others of really deeper significance. To commence with the skeleton, one of the most striking characters by which the Myrmecophagide differ from ordinary mammals is the presence on the posterior dorsal and the lumbar vertebra of accessory articulating surfaces, in addition to the true zygapophyses common to all mammals, and causing a remarkable interlocking of the arches of these vertebra. Such articulations are found equally well-developed in the Megatheriide and in the Dasypodide, and in a comparatively rudimentary state in the Bradypodide, especially in Bradypus’. The whole vertebral column of the Sloths, especially the dorsal and lumbar region, is poorly developed, evidently in relation to the subordinate function of the muscles attached to it. In the ordinary position the animal hangs below the branches of the trees in which it dwells, the trunk being merely slung between the two pairs of extremities ; progression is effected chiefly by the body being dragged along by the fore limbs; the hind legs, which usually take so active a part insupporting and propelling the trunk, aresmall and weak, and the functions of walking, running, and jumping are alike in abeyance, Hence all the processes of the vertebral columu—the spinous, trans- verse, and accessory—are but feebly developed. The existence then, even in a rudimentary form, of these additional articulations is ex- tremely significant. It may almost be said that they prove that the Sloths are descended from animals in which they existed in a fully developed form, On the other hand, like as in some respects the vertebral column of Manis is to that of Myrmecophaga, not a trace of either of these articulations or of the processes on which they are situated are to be found in the former. ‘There is a strong inter- locking of the lumbar vertebree ; but it is formed by the greatly curved form of the true zygapophyses, and not by the addition of any superadded parts. In Orycteropus also they are entirely absent. On this ground alone we might be justified in assuming that the Old-World Edentates are not closely related to the American forms. Nothing can be more different than the characters of the sternum of My: mecophaga and of Manis. In the former the numerous meso- sternal segments are small, laterally compressed, and articulated with each other and with the strongly ossified sternal ribs by synovial joints. In Manis the sternum is broad and flat, and the sternal ribs only partly ossified, and connected with it in the normal manner. In these characters, the Bradypodide, Megatheriide, and Dasy- pedide agree with the Anteaters, and Orycteropus is more nearly related to Manis. The gigantic post-Tertiary Edentates of the New World, Mega- therium and its allies, throw much light upon the close affinity of the Sloths and true Anteaters. By common consent they have been placed among the former when the order is divided into two divisions, and are spoken of as ‘‘Ground-Sloths;” yet in many important characters, perhaps in all those not relating to the functions of 1 See ‘Osteology of Mammalia,’ 2nd edit., 1876, p. 55. 362 PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTATA. __[Apr. 18, prehension and mastication of food, they are quite as near, if not nearer, to the Anteaters. They may truly be regarded as intercalary types, bridging over the gulf which now exists between them. The teeth are certainly those of the Sloths, even to the actual number in most genera ; but the diminution of that number in Celodon leads to- wards their total suppression in Myrmecophaga. In the lengthening of the anterior part of the skull in Megatherium, but more strongly marked in Scelidotherium, the commencement of the Myrmecophaga type is clearly seen; and that they had tongues longer and more protractile than those of existing Sloths (perhaps even prehensile, as Professor Owen suggests) is very probable. The vertebral column, ribs, sternum, and tai! were far more Myrmecophagine than Brady- podine. In the scapula they possess a character which is shared by both Sloths and Anteaters but by no other mammal. The coracoid bone and the coracoid border of the scapula join over the coraco-scapular notch, converting it into a foramen. The recent discovery of clavicles in a rudimentary state in all three species of Myrmecophaga’ adds another common character to the group, though perhaps not one of first-class importance. It must, however, be noted that in no species of Manis has any trace of a clavicle been found. The flattening of the femur, and development of a linear ridge along its external border, is common and peculiar to the Sloths, Anteaters, and Megatheres. The special characters of the manus in these three families are all derivations from a common type; but in this portion of their organization the Megatherioids show their rela- tionship with the Anteaters much more than with the Sloths. In the mode of setting the foot to the ground, and in the absence of claws upon one or more of the outer digits, the likeness is most surprising. The manus of the Pangolins, on the other hand, although presenting some superficial resemblances, is formed on a different type, in most respects more conformable to that which is normal among mammals ; but it has the peculiarity (which it shares with all known Carnivora) of connate scaphoid and lunar bones, and in the deep median clefts of the ungual phalanges it resembles Perameles among the Mar- supials. Passing from this brief review of the osteological characters, we find in the arrangements of the arterial system of the limbs a close resemblance between the Sloths and Anteaters; and though the tail is so reduced in the former, its caudal artery is surrounded by a well-developed plexus, such as we could hardly account for, except upon the supposition that it were a remnant of a condition in which the tail resembles that of the Anteaters or Megatheres. In Manis, no reéia mirabilia appear to be developed in connection with the arteries of the limbs—although one has been found, in at least one species, in the tail; but it is also present in animals as far removed as the Spider Monkeys. A part of the organization to which it is natural to attach much importance in tracing affinities is that concerned in the reproductive function. The organs of both male and female Sloths and Ant- ' See W. A. Forbes, P. Z.8. 1882, p. 287. 1882. ] PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTATA. 363 eaters are closely similar in structure, while those of Manis are formed upon a totally different type. In the former families the testes are placed exactly in the same situation, close to each other, lying on the rectum, between it and the bladder; the penis is quite rudimentary, consisting of a pair of small corpora cavernosa, not directly attached by their crura to the rami of the ischium, and having a glans scarcely larger than that of the clitoris of most mammals, and, as in birds and reptiles, without any true corpus spongiosum. The number and development of the accessory glands vary apparently in different species of both families. In the females of both Anteaters and Sloths the uterus is simple and globular, and the vagina, at least in the virgin state, is divided into two channels by astrong median partition. Lastly, the placen- tation, as far as it is known, if not identical, is similar in principle. The placenta of Cholepus has been fully described by Turner ; it is deciduate, and composed of a number of lobes aggregated into a dome-like mass. There is nothing in the descriptions, certainly less complete, of the placenta of Zamandua and Cycloturus to show any differences except in detail of form. In Manis, on the other hand, the testes are totally different in position, lying in the inguinal canal. The penis is external and wel] developed. The uterus is truly bicornuate, the vagina not divided, and the placenta diffused and non-deciduate. ll the organs and foetal membranes are formed very much on the plan of those of the typical Ungulata, without a trace of the special peculi- arities of the American Edentates. As regards the tegumentary system Myrmecophaga closely re- sembles Bradypus in the character of its hairy covering; while Manis, in its very remarkable horny scales, shows a type entirely different from both and from every other mammal. Many other minor considerations might be adduced ; but I think I have brought forward enough to establish the fact beyond reason- able question, that Munis, if allied at all to Myrmecophaga, must have separated from the original common stock before this had given off the Bradypodide—or, in other words, that the Sloths and Anteaters, with the Megatherioids intervening, are far more nearly allied to each other than either is to the Pangolins, It now remains to examine the position of the other families. Dasypodide. In many respects this family is remarkably specia- lized, more particularly in the characters of the integumentary structures, in which it differs from all known mammals. In dental characters it presents nothing fundamentally different from those of the Sloths. In lingual, salivary, and digestive organs, on the other hand, it is more nearly allied to the Anteaters, though presenting a less extreme form of modification, showing in fact one of the stages by which such modification may have been brought about. It is therefore so far a connecting link between these families. In the extremely important character of the presence of inter- locking accessory zygapophyses to the lumbar vertebre, and in the structure of the sternum and sternal ribs, it follows the type of Myr- 364 PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTATA. [Apr. 18, mecophaga and Megatherium ; but in the peculiar form and ankylosis of some of the cervical vertebrae, common to all existing members of the family, it stands apart from all other Edentates. In the presence of a clavicle it resembles the other American forms; but it differs in the shape of the scapula, and in the existence of a third trochanter to the femur. The structure of the extremities, especially the manus, presents many modifications, some of which are quite comparable to, though not identical with, those of the Myrmecophagide. The reproductive organs differ in the presence of a largely de- veloped copulating organ in the male, and of a simple vagina of cor- responding length in the female; these, as long ago suggested by Professor Owen, appear to be correlated with the difficulties which would otherwise be interposed to sexual congress by the arrange- ments of the dermal armour, and which of course do not occur in the Sloths and Anteaters. The testes are still abdominal, though not in the same position; and the penis, notwithstanding its size, wants (as pointed out by Morrison Watson’) both the glans and bulb, generally formed in mammals by the corpus spongiosum. The uterus is as simple, or nearly so, as that of the Sloths wnd Anteaters ; and there is no reason to suppose, from what is at present known, that the placentation differs in principle from that of those families ; for if deciduate, whether the whole mass assumes an oval, discoidal, or bell-shaped form is only a matter of detail. The Armadillos, then, have undoubtedly near affinities to the other American Edentates, and are probably members of the same group, though not so nearly related to either of the other families as they are to each other, and are moreover remarkably specialized in a particular direction. The Glyptodonts form an allied group, agreeing in most essential features, but also presenting some very singular special modifications. Lastly, Orycteropus is a form in most respects perfectly apart from all the others. ‘The structure of its teeth alone would almost entitle it to be placed in an order by itself, were it not for the practical inconvenience of doing so. Its vertebral column is formed on the normal type of mammals. Its limbs also present com- paratively few specializations ; but it resembles the Armadillos in pos- sessing a third trochanter to the femur. Its digestive organs are also comparable to those of the Armadillos, as its mode of feeding is similar. But its reproductive organs, both male and female, and placentation are formed upon a principle unknown in other Eden- tates, or, in combination, in other mammals. The testes, in a specimen I once examined, were inguinal, though they appear to descend, at all events temporarily, into a scrotum; but the penis is almost as small as in the Great Anteater. ‘The uterus is more bicornuate than in Manis, the two lateral chambers opening separately into the vagina, as in some Rodents. The placenta, as described by Prof. Turner, is broadly zonular; but whether deciduate or not is at present un- determined, probably the latter. As Balfour remarks, this type of placenta is capable of being easily derived from that of Manis, 1 P.Z.8. 1878, p. 677. 1882. ] PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTATA. 365 by the disappearance of the foetal villi at the two poles of the ovum ; while the small size of the umbilical vesicle indicates that it is not, like the zonary placenta of the Carnivora, directly derived from a type with both allantoic and umbilical vascularization of the chorion. Although paleontology has revealed the existence of a vast number of the Edentates by which the New World was tenanted in the Pleistocene age, and has given us a more perfect idea of their characters than is known of most other extinct forms, unfortu- nately the history of the group throughout the period of the true Tertiaries is at present almost a blank. The presence of a large species probably allied to Manis in the Siwalik fauna is indicated by a single phalanx, described and figured by Lydekker under the name of M. sindiensis. No animals, attributed with any certainty to the Edentata, are known of Eocene age. The few scattered and imperfect remains of supposed Edentates, Macrotherium and Ancylotherium, of the European later Miocene formations, and the similarly imperfect and as yet not fully described bones of Moropus and Morotherium of corresponding ages in North America, indicate that animals existed at that time of large size, presenting characters in some respects allied to the recent members of the order, but in others so different that they cannot be placed in any of the existing families. Macro- therium, for instance, appears to have limb-characters which ally it to the Ungulates. As far as can be surmised at present, the affinities of these early forms were rather with the existing members which survive in their own part of the world, than with those of a different hemisphere. Macrotherium certainly appears to present more resemblance to Manis than to the American Edentates. The first fragments of it which were found were attributed by Cuvier to a “* Pangolin gigantesque.” But some evidence has since been found in favour of its having possessed teeth. So far this is quite what might be expected; but it certainly throws very little light either upon the mutual relations of the existing forms, the steps by which the present state of things has been brought about, or, what would be still more interesting, their affinities with mammals of other groups. The tabular form (see p. 366) into which the result of these inquiries have been thrown will show what I conceive to be the relationship of the existing forms ; but it also shows the great deficiency of our knowledge of the group in past ages. The general conclusions to which a study of this group have led me may be summed up as follows:—AlIl the American Edentates at present known, however diversified in form and habits, belong to a common stock. The Bradypodide, Megatheriide, and Myrmeco- phagide are closely allied, the modifications seen in the existing families relating to food and manner of life. The ancestral forms may have been omnivorous, like the present Armadillos, and gradually separated into the purely vegetable and purely animal feeders ; from the former are developed the modern Sloths, from the latter the Anteaters. The Armadillos are another modification of the same type, retaining some more generalized characters, as those [Apr. 18, PROF. W. H. FLOWER ON THE EDENTATA. 366 ‘W CITY ALOWVN ‘Ww dIdodouon “ported auoooryy 2 SIsUaIpUrs seuDyT “TUN LOY JOALO TT *pomog euad01[ ‘WwW didod ‘WCaINVIA “OULOAUO ‘SNUOY ATHO\M\-ATC Sa oe ae ee a ‘W CITYHH LV Oa iPOed: WALLNOGOLdAs9\\ wWaidodasva Oat ? 9ua009S10[ F Prt AA Ht "y Hr iyy ii 2 A SN jae vod Lal lee tatey hip # Vay Tail ett yey ea. Hei i, AN | eee vs ry se AA 1) Shans ee | ata i Oe a mn Tay SD a oie ! \ [a fess puyol 1 \ W dIdOdASVa WdaiDoVvad WAIdOd 9 ‘“poreg “OOC NYA “ACVUR Juesorg “SINUOT ATWO -MAN VIVINGGA 1882. ] DR. VAN DYCK ON SYRIAN STREET-DOGS, 367 of the alimentary organs, but in other respects, as their defensive armature, remarkably specialized. The two Old-World forms Manide and Orycteropide are so essentially distinct from all the American families, that it may even be considered doubtful whether they are derived from the same primary branch of mammals, or whether they may not be offsets from some other branch, the remaining members of which have been lost to knowledge. Alphonse Milne-Edwards, in discussing the inferences to be derived from the study of the foetal membranes of the Edentates', has maintained that one of two views must be accepted :—either that it shows that no value can be attached tothe placentation in seeking natural affinities ; or that the Edentates as we know them now are not a homogeneous order, but should be separatedinto several distinct natural groups. It is the latter view to which he gives the preference. It need scarcely be remarked that the observations made in the present communi- eation lead to a similar conclusion. 2. On the Modification of a Race of Syrian Street-Dogs by means of Sexual Selection. By Dr. Van Dycx. With a Preliminary Notice by CuHartes Darwin, F.R.S., F.Z8. [Received April 4, 1882. ] Most of the naturalists who admit that natural selection has been effective in the formation of species, likewise admit that the weapons of male animals are the result of sexual selection—that is, of the best- armed males obtaining most females and transmitting their masculine superiority to their male offspring. But many naturalists doubt, or deny, that female animals ever exert any choice, so as to select certain males in preference to others. It would, however, be more correct to speak of the females as being excited or attracted in an especial degree by the appearance, voice, &c. of certain males, rather than of deliberately selecting them. I may perhaps be here permitted to say that, after having carefully weighed to the best of my ability the various arguments which have been advanced against the principle of sexual selection, I remain firmly convinced of its truth. It is, how- ever, probable that I may have extended it too far, as, for instance, in the case of the strangely formed horns and mandibles of male Lamellicorn beetles, which have recently been discussed with much knowledge by W. von Reichenau*, and about which I have always felt some doubts. On the other hand, the explanation of the development of the horns offered by this entomologist does not seem to me at all satisfactory. 1 Annales des Sciences Naturelles, Zoolugie, 6me série, tome viii. p. 6 (1879). 2 « Ueber den Ursprung der secundiren miinnlichen Geschlechtscharakteren &e.,” Kosmos, Jahrgang y. 1881, p. 172. Proc. Zoou. Soc.— 1882, No. XXY. 2 368 DR. VAN DYCK ON SYRIAN STREET-DOGS. __[Apr. 18, In order to ascertain whether female animals ever or often exhibit a decided preference for certain males, I formerly inquired from some of the greatest breeders in England, who had no thoretical views to support and who had ample experience ; and I have given their answers, as well as some published statements, in my ‘ Descent of Man’!. ‘The facts there given clearly show that with dogs and other animals the females sometimes prefer in the most decided manner particular males—but that it is very rare that a male will not accept any female, though such cases do occur. The following statement, taken from the ‘ Voyage of the Vega,’ indirectly supports in a striking manner the above conclusion. Nordenskidld says :— ‘© We had two Scotch collies with us on the ‘Vega.’ They at first frightened the natives very much with their bark. To the dogs of the Chukches they soon took the same superior standing as the European claims for himself in relation to the savage. The dog was distinctly preferred by the female Chukch canine population, and that too without the fights to which such favour on the part of the fair commonly gives rise. A numerous canine progeny of mixed Scotch-Chukch breed has arisen at Pitlekay. The young dogs had a complete resemblance to their father; and the natives were quite charmed with them.” What the attractions may be which give an advantage to certain males in wooing in the above several cases, whether general appear- ance, such as colour and form, or vigour and strength, or gestures, voice, or odour, can rarely be even conjectured; but whatever they may be, they would be preserved and augmented in the course of many generations, if the females of the same species or race, inhabit- ing the same district, retained during successive generations approxi- mately the same general disposition and taste; and this does not seem improbable. Nor is it indispensable that all the females should have exactly the same tastes: one female might be more attracted by some one characteristic in the male, and another female by a different one; and both, if not incompatible, would be gradually acquired by the males. Little as we can judge what are the charac- teristics which attract the female, yet, in some of the cases recorded by me, it seemed clearly to be colour; in other cases previous familiarity with a particular male; in others exactly the reverse, or novelty. With respect to the first appearance of the peculiarities which are afterwards augmented through sexual selection, this of course depends on the strong tendency in all parts of all organisms to present slight individual differences, and in some organisms to vary in a plain manner. Evidence has also been givenin my book on Variation under Domestication showing that male animals are more liable to vary than females ; and this would be highly favourable to sexual selection. Manifestly every slight individual difference and each more conspicuous variation depends on definite though unknown ? The Descent of Man, second edit. (1874), part ii. Chap. xvii. pp. 522-525. See also Chap. xiv., on choice in pairing shown by female birds, and on their appreciation of beauty,, 2 «The Voyage of the Vega,’ Eng. translat. (1881), vol. ii. p. 97. 1832.] DR. VAN DYCK ON SYRIAN STREET-DOGS. 369 causes ; and these modifications of structure &c. differ in different Species under apparently the same conditions. Statements of this nature have sometimes been misinterpreted, as if it were supposed that variations were indefinite or fluctuating, and that the same variations occurred in all species. In reference to sexual selection, I will here only add that the complete manner in which the introduced dogs and other domestic animals in South America and other countries have been mongrelized, so that all traces of their original race have been lost, often appeared to me a surprising fact. This holds good according to Rengger' with the dogs even in so isolated a country as Paraguay. I formerly attributed this mongrelization merely to the breeds not baving been kept separate and to the greater vigour of cross-bred off- spring; but if the females often prefer strangers to their old companions, as seems to be the case, according to Nordenskiéld, in Siberia, and in Syria as shown in the following essay, then we can readily understand how rapid and complete would be the progress of mongrelization. I will now give without further comment the essay which Dr. W. Van Dyck, Lecturer on Zoology to the Protestant College at Beyrout, who has had excellent opportunities for obser- vations during a residence of twenty years, has been so kind as to send me. On the Modification of a Race of Syrian Street-Dogs by means of Sexual Selection. By W. Van Dyck, M.D. Beyrout is one of the principal ports on the Syrian coast, and has a population of from eighty to one hundred thousand. Like most Oriental cities, its system of street-cleansing is far from perfect, and much of the scavenging is left to the street-dogs, many hundreds of which roam at large through the town and suburbs, picking up a sub- sistence as they best can. Twenty years ago, and previously, these dogs were quite a homogeneous. race, the following being a rough description of a typical specimen :—height at shoulder, 20-22 in. ; length from muzzle to root of tail 32-34 in. ; length of tail, 12-15 in. ; colour sandy grey, with some variety of shades (rarely so light as to pass for dirty white), in most cases distinctly darker above than beneath, and not unfrequently grizzled or brindled ; head of medium size, with rather pointed snout and small pointed semipendulous ears ; tail bushy, usually carried up over the back, sometimes much curled ; general aspect decidedly jackal-like, or semi-wolfish ; disposition cowardly, seldom savage. ‘The only departures worthy of mention from the above type, at the time of which I write, were occasional black dogs, mostly with shorter hair than that of the sandy ones, rarely piebald black-and-white specimens. At the present date, the case is very different. The sandy-grey colour still prevails, it is true ; but there is hardly an imaginable colour or combination of colours ‘ * Naturgeschichte der Saugethiere von Paraguay,’ 1830, p. 154, 25* 370 DR. VAN DYCK ON SYRIAN STREET-DOGS. __[Apr. 18, which may not be found ; and in form, size, and proportions of trunk and limbs, shape of head, form and size of ears, length and closeness of hair, length, bushiness, and carriage of tail there is nearly as much diversity. Twenty years ago but few persons in this city owned dogs of any foreign breed whatsoever; but pointers, poodles, terriers, a few greyhounds and setters, and occasionally Newfoundlands, retrievers, and mastiffs have since been imported, and to some extent bred here. By far the majority of foreign dogs to be found in Beyrout at any time are smaller and decidedly weaker than the original natives ; very few indeed can range the streets unaccompanied by their masters, without running a considerable risk of more or less serious injury from the street-dogs. Despite their marked muscular inferi- ority, however, the foreign dogs have succeeded in mongrelizing the whole race of street-dogs so thoroughly that it is now no easy matter to find one of these which does not bear unmistakable evidence of a foreign strain. To account for this, I can confidently cite the following facts from my own personal observation and experience :—Ist. Native bitches very often manifest a decided preference for certain foreign dogs; and I have repeatedly seen such a bitch reject, one after another, a train of kindred suitors, to accept without hesitation a thorough-bred pointer. My brother once owned a French pointer named Jack, quite small, but beautifully proportioned, and of a uniform golden fawn colour. This dog was so great a favourite with the opposite sex of the native breed,- that he led an exceedingly “gay”’ life. Pointer bitches, on the contrary, not unfrequently refused him for the sake of a street-dog. 2nd. Pointers and other well-bred bitches are frequently so decided and persistent in their preference for street- dogs (usually for some particular individual, unseen it may be, but communicated with by the voice), that they will go barren whole seasons rather than accept mates chosen for them by their masters. In such cases, a moment’s carelessness or inattention is sufficient to ensure a litter of mongrel pups, which, if not destroyed in puppy- hood, are very apt eventually to find their way into the street, there to multiply the chance of infection for the whole race. 3rd. Mongrel strains are most strongly pronounced in the.suburbs, where street-dogs are rather less numerous than in the heart of the city, and where sly and runaway matches are favoured by hedgerows, shrubbery, &c. &c. In the city itself, on the contrary, where the chances are ten to one that claims will be settled by the law of battle, the foreign taint is not so evident; indeed a casual observer might easily overlook it in many instances ; and if any pure-blooded representatives of the old stock are still in existence, it must bein the most thickly stocked quarter, where butcher’s shops are many and very near together and street-dogs proportionately numerous. 1882. ] ON MAMMALIA FROM CENTRAL MEXICO. 371 3. On a small Collection of Mammalia from Central Mexico. By Oxuprietp Tuomas, F.Z.S., British Museum. [Received April 3, 1882.] Mr. A. Forrer, one of Messrs. Salvin and Godman’s collectors, has recently sent to London a small collection of Mammalia from the State of Durango, Central Mexico ; and I have been asked to publish a list of the species contained in it, in order that any additional in- formation to be gained from a collection made in such an interesting locality might be incorporated in the forthcoming Introduction to the Mammalian volume of the ‘ Biologia Centrali-Americana. The specimens were all collected either at Ciudad, a village on the Sierra Madre, 8100 feet above the sea, or at Ventanas, another village in the same district, but only 2000 feet in altitude. It is noteworthy that, of the twelve species in the collection the ranges of which extend beyond Mexico into either North or Central America, just half are Nearctic and half Neotropical, and that, in the case of no less than seven of them, their discovery at Durango adds considerably to their hitherto known ranges. Of these seven, four are Neotropical and were obtained, with the exception of the Raccoon, at the comparatively lowland village of Ventanas, while the other three, of Nearctic origin, were all found at Ciudad, high up in the mountains. 1. VESPERUGO SEROTINUS, var. FUSCUS, Beauv. ? Two specimens. Ciudad. 2. NATALUS STRAMINEUS, Gray. Six specimens. Ventanas. Not hitherto recorded north of Mirador, Vera Cruz. From this series it would appear that the bright orange or straw- colour from which the species derives its name, is confined to the adult males, the females being simply pale grey. 3. ARTIBEUS CINEREUS, Gerv. Two specimens. Ventanas. This is the most northern locality recorded. There are other specimens from Mexico in the British Museum and elsewhere ; but these seem mostly to have been collected in Southern Mexico, and have in no case any exact locality noted. 4, VULPES VIRGINIANUS, Schr. Two specimens. Ciudad, July 21 and Sept. 30, 1881. 5. Procyon cANcrivorus, Cuv. One specimen. Ciudad, Sept. 16, 1881. For remarks on the northern distribution of this species, see Biol. Cent.-Am., Mamm. Supp. p. 208. 6. Mepuitis MAcRuRA, Licht. Two specimens. Ciudad, Sept. 14 and Oct. 1, 1881. 372 ON MAMMALIA FROM CENTRAL MEXICO. [Apr. 18, 7. Scrurus ABERTI, Woodh. Two specimens. Ciudad, Aug. 7 and Oct. 14, 1881. This is the first occurrence recorded of the present species in the region included in the ‘ Biologia Centrali- Americana.’ It has been hitherto only known from Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico. These specimens, however, exactly agree with the figure given by Dr. Baird of his S. castanonotus', which Mr. Allen has determined to be a synonym of S. aberti”. 8. ScruRUS GRISEOFLAVUS, Gray. Two specimens. Ciudad, Sept. 19 and Nov. 14, 1881. 9. TAMIAS ASIATICUS, Var. QUADRIVITTATUS, Rich. Two specimens. Ciudad, July 6, 1881. This is the first time that specimens of the genus Z'amias have been obtained in Mexico. It is true that Mr. Allen® has stated his opinion that another species, 7’. harrisi, Aud. and Bach., probably extends into Western Mexico; but the evidence was not sufficient for Mr. Alston to include the genus in the ‘ Biologia.’ It is interest- ing to observe that it is the bright-coloured variety quadrivittatus, and not the pale washed-out var. dorsalis of New Mexico, Nevada, and Arizona, that is now found by Mr. Forrer in Durango. This fact is of course confirmatory of Mr. Allen’s opinion that 7’. dorsalis is not specifically separable from 7. asiaticus, since we find the usual northern form reappearing as soon as the desert region inhabited by T. dorsalis is past and the country is again fertile and well wooded. 10. SPERMOPHILUS GRAMMURUS, Say. One specimen. Ciudad, August 20, 1881. 11. HespEROMyYs LEUCOPUS, var. SONORIENSIS, LeC. Two specimens. Ciudad. 12. OcuETODON MEXICANUS, De Sauss. Two specimens. Ciudad. 13. ArvicoLta MEXxICANUS, De Sauss. Two specimens. Ciudad. 14. THomomys TALPorpEs, Rich. Two specimens. Ciudad, July 24,1881. The most southern loca- lity yet recorded. 15. Tarusra Novemcincra, Linn. One specimen. Ventanas, Sept. 14, 1881. 16. DipeLPHyYs MuRINA, Linn. Two specimens. Ventanas. The most northern locality recorded. 1 Mamm. N. Am. p. 266, pl. Ixy. 2 Mon. N,-Am. Rod. p. 735, 1877. 3 ‘Tom, cit. p. 812. 1882.] ON MAMMALS AND BIRDS FROM EASTERN PERU. 373 4. On some Mammals and Birds collected by Mr. J. Haux- well in Eastern Peru. By Epwarp Barrterr, Curator of the Maidstone Museum. [Received March 29, 1882.] Some time ago I received a collection of mammals and birds from Mr. J. Hauxwell, collected by him in the neighbourhood of Nauta, Elvira, and Loretoyacu, on the banks of the Peruvian Amazons. I regret to say that, my time having been otherwise occupied, I have been prevented from bringing an account of this collection before the Society sooner. However, I think that my notes will be acceptable to those interested in distribution (to which I have already contri- buted largely), as increasing our knowledge of the avifauna of that vast region. The collection contained 136 species, 121 of which had been previously obtained during my four years’ residence in Peru. But there are 15 species among them not mentioned in my list (which appeared in the ‘ Proceedings’ of the Society for 1873, p. 252); and two of the 15 appear to be new to science, although closely allied to forms already known from the same localities. One belongs to the genus Z’hamnophilus, and the other to the genus Crypturus. It is not my intention to give the names of the 121 species, because they are enumerated in the catalogue above alluded to, but only to refer to those which do not appear in that list. By the list above referred to I find that the number of species collected by Mr. Bates, Hauxwell, and myself, was 473. 1 now add 15 species, raising the total to 488. I here take the opportunity of thanking Mr. Osbert Salvin for his kindness in determining some of the more obscure species, and for pronouncing the two birds new or undetermined. MaAmMALs. The three mammals new to the list were as follows :—Ateles variegata, Wagner (=Ateles bartletti, Gray); Phyllostoma has- tatum (Pall.); and Galera barbara, Retz.,—all from Elvira. Brrps. 1. Hen1icoRHINA LEUCosTICTA, Cab. Elvira, E. Peru. ‘‘ Iris brown.”’ 2. FuRNARIUS LEUCOPUS, Sw. Elvira. 3. SYNALLAXIS HyYPOSTICTA, Pelz. Elvira. “ Iris white, legs greenish.’’ 4. Nasica LoNnGirostRis (Licht.). Elvira. ‘ ¢. Iris brown.” 374 ON MAMMALS AND BIRDS FROM EASTERN PERU. [Apr. 18, 5. THAMNOPHILUS LORETOYACUENSIS, sp. Nov. Similis Th. atricapillo, sed dorso cinereo nigro mixto, nec brunneo. Hab. Loretoyacu. “Iris brown”’ (Haurwell). This bird is so closely allied to Thamnophilus atricapillus, that I am somewhat reluctant to give it a specific appellation, although Mr. Salvin writes to me and says “I think the Thamnophilus sufficiently distinct to be worthy of a name,” and Dr. Cabanis also writes :—‘‘ Concerning your Thamnophilus loretoyacuensis, I believe it to be a good species. This bird is much larger than 7. atrica- pillus, and has the back and vent cinereous.” The bird called T. atricapillus (P. Z. 8. 1873, p. 273, no. 10), which I obtained on the Upper Ucayali river, is the same as the present species. 6. GRALLARIA MACULARIA, Temm. Loretoyacu. A male of this rare species. “‘ Iris yellow.” 7. TiTyRA SEMIFASCIATA, Spix. Elvira.“ Iris red.” 8. GALBULA CHALCOTHORAX, Sclat. Mon. Galbulide, pl. x. 37, Jan. 1880. Elvira. 9. Praya cayana, L. Elvira. ‘‘ Iris red.” 10. Capito nicer (Mill.). Loretoyacu. “Tris red.” ~ p. 11. ArRA macAvuANNA, Wagl. Elvira. ‘Iris grey; naked skin round the eye yellow.” 12. HyporriorcHIs RUFIGULARIS (Daud.). Nauta. “ Iris brown.” A single skin of this bird was in the colleatiens: ; and I am now convinced that many of the small Falcons observed by me during my residence in Nauta were referable to this species, although I could not obtain a single specimen: they were so wild and difficult to approach. 13. GLAUCIDIUM PHALZNOIDES (Vieill.). Loretoyacu. ‘ 9. Ins bright yellow.” 14. TrinGoIpES HYPOLEUCOS, L. Elvira. “Iris brown.” 15. CRyPTURUS BALSTONI, sp. Nov. Species similis C. asperso, sed ventre cinereo et lateribus dorso concoloribus distinguenda. Hab. Elvira. “ &. Iris light brown” (Hauawell). P.£.5 .1882- Ps: Ii: 12. Edwin Wilson.del.et lith . Mintern Bros.1mp . LAND -SHELLS FROM MADAGASCAR \ ' ‘ c ’ ~ ‘ ; , ” ¢ ' ‘ ee ; a e*;> = \y > ' “a, : : eee a) a be oa : * PZ. 1832, Pio eaie 25 Edwin Wilson del et lith Mintern Bros amp. LAND & FRESHWATER-SHELLS FROM MADAGASCAR . 1882.] | ON THE MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MADAGASCAR. 375 Although this species is so closely connected with C. aspersus and C. vermiculatus, I think it deserves to be separated from them at present. Dr. Cabanis, when answering my questions respecting this species, says:—‘‘ Your Crypturus is not very different from C. adspersus, Licht. (which I consider identical with C. vermiculatus, Temm., Wagl.). The chief differences are that the vent is not whitish, but cinereous, and the flanks brownish like the back, not light ferruginous. I would consider your bird as the Peruvian form of the Brazilian C. aspersus.” I have named this bird after Mr. R. J. Balston. I may here mention that Crypturus bartletti, Scl. et Salv. (Proc. Zool. Soc. 1873, p. 311), was obtained at Santa Cruz on the Hual- laga river, E. Peru, not at Santa Cruz de la Sierra, as there stated in error. 5. A Contribution to the Molluscan Fauna of Madagascar. By Enear A. Sita. [Received April 12, 1882.] (Plates XXI. & XXII.) Much still remains to be done before our knowledge of the terres- trial and fluviatile Mollusca of Madagascar will attain any thing like completeness. With the exception of Achatina fulica, Helix mag- nifica, and one or two others, I am not aware that the animals of any of the numerous species of shells already described from this island have been examined. Of non-operculate land-shells about eighty are now known, of operculate species about seventy-five, and about fifty forms have been recorded from the lakes and rivers; this computation includes the new species about to be described, and a few hereafter mentioned for the first time as inhabitants of Mada- gascar, which were originally described without localities. One minute species, Helix barrakporensis, has not previously been met with except in India, where it may have been introduced, as is the case with the large Achatina fulica, a most abundant shell in some parts of Madagascar and also at the Mauritius. A small South- African bivalve shell, Limosina ferruginea, is now cited for the first time as an inhabitant of the island; and Spherium madagascariense of Tristram is scarcely separable from another African species, S. capense of Krauss. Four species belonging to genera not previously known from Madagascar are now described ; these are Vitrina mada- gascariensis, Cleopatra trabonjiensis, Corbicula madagascariensis, and Pisidium johnsoni. Part of the collection which is here reported upon was liberally presented to the British Museum by Mr. W. Johnson, who has re- cently returned to England, and to whom much praise is due for so carefully noting the precise localities where he collected the various species ; and on this account his name will be found associated with 376 MR. E. A. SMITH ON THE (Apr. 18, several of his own interesting discoveries. ‘The remaining portion was obtained from the Rev. W. Deans Cowan, and was collected by him in a more southern part of the island than that visited by Mr. Johnson. It also contains several very interesting forms, notably the species of Vitrina previously referred to, and the Bulimus nigrilineatus of Reeve, belonging to a section (/thachis) of that im- mense group of land-snails which was hitherto unknown in Mada- gascar. A, GASTROPODA. CyYCLOSTOMA MACARES, var. Hab. Betsileo (Cowan). The typical form of this species, described by Petit, was originally collected in the south part of Madagascar, near Saint Augustin. The more northern variety from Betsileo is rather more coarsely sculp- tured, and has a distinct peripherical black zone, and sometimes a broader but less distinct one on the upper part of the last whorl. CyYCLOSTOMA BETSILEOENSE, sp. nov. (Plate XXI. fig. 2.) Shell umbilicated, turbinate-globose, thinnish, finely spirally lirate, encircled with two more prominent white keels, one at the middle of the body-whorl, and the other above, decussated by close lines of growth ; cinereous (except the reddish spire), copiously striped longi- tudinally with a brownish colour, with a few spiral purple-black lines and zones, one just beneath the central white carina, broader than the rest, and a rosy stripe outside the labrum. Whorls 53, separated by a narrowly channelled suture, which is beautifully clathrated by the lines of growth. Two nuclear whorls smooth, con- vex, forming an obtuse apex ; the rest convex, but appearing a little angular at ora little above the middle, where the upper carina is situated. The visible spiral threads are six in number on the ante- penultimate whorl, about twelve on the penultimate (including the two white keels), and nearly doubie the latter number upon the upper half of the body- whorl, the lower part having as many as thirty-two to thirty-five, those around the umbilicus being a trifle coarser than the rest, the interstices being everywhere decussated by the lines of growth. The spiral lineation is constant in three out of five examples, is chiefly confined to the last whorl, and is most conspicuous within the aperture when the shell is held up to the light. There are two lines above the upper white keel, two between it and the lower one, and about six beneath the latter, the uppermost being much broader than the rest. Aperture subcircular, chestnut within, very dark towards the outer lip, showing the external lines and bands, a little higher than wide. Peristome acute, white on the columellar margin, only narrowly reflexed, flatly and more widely expanded on the right or outer margin, pink, except at the upper part towards the suture. Greatest diameter 25 millim., height 25. Hab. Betsileo (Cowan). In some respects C. pu/chellum of Sowerby approaches this species. Q-~ 1882. ] MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MADAGASCAR. 377 The peristome is very similar ; and the sculpture is somewhat of the same character. Still there are differences of form, of colour, in the sutures, and in the size of the aperture, which readily distinguish these forms, which no doubt inhabit different districts of the island. Var. a. Shell with a less elevated spire, shorter and broader whorls, more widely umbilicated, with a larger and more oblique mouth, and the outer lip not stained with rose. Greatest diam. 30 millim., height 24. Hab. Betsileo (Cowan). Var. 6 (Plate XXI. fig. 3). Shell a trifle more ventricose than var. a, with the umbilicus similar to that of the type, but the aperture larger and the peristome white, with the body-whorl smoother, with fewer and subobsolete spiral liree, except within and around the umbilicus. Greatest diam. 30 millim., height 263. Hab. Betsileo (Cowan). CyCLOSTOMA CONGENER, sp. nov. (Plate XXI. fig. 1.) Shell openly umbilicated, subdepressedly turbinate, rather smooth, _ obsoletely spirally sulcate, striated with lines of growth which are puckered and distinct at the sutures; bright yellow, longitudinally streaked with a darker tint, dark cinereous behind the white expanded lip, encircled at the periphery by a vivid purple-brown band and with two or three hair-like lines of a paler colour, both above and below the middle. Spire elevated, conical, ending in a bluish obtuse tip. Whorls 53, very convex; the last large, strongly lirate around and within the umbilicus, where it is stained with purple- brown. Aperture large, oblique, ovate-subcircular, light brown within except near the lip, where it becomes of a very dark chestnut- brown or nearly black, this colour extending along the inside of the columellar edge. External band and lines visible within. Peristome roundly expanded and reflexed, white, broad on the dextral margin, narrower on the columellar side. Greatest diam. 34 millim., height 30. Hab. Tanala province (Cowan). This form approaches most closely to C. consanguineum of Sowerby (= C. obsoletum of Reeve, not of Lamarck), but may be distin- guished by its greater size, its yellow colour, dark apex, and rather more elevated spire. Both species have the same disposition of the spiral bands and lines—namely a single central broad zone, two narrower ones between it and the suture, which are visible on the spire, and two others beneath it and around the lower surface of the whorl. In some specimens of C. consanguineum some of the sulci around the umbilicus are also of a dark colour. On holding up a specimen of C. congener to the light, three lines above and three below the broad band are generally observable. C. obsoletum of Lamarck, according to Delessert’s figure (Recueil, pl. 29. f. 11a) 378 MR. E. A. SMITH ON THE [Apr. 18, has five or six lines on the penultimate whorl, and is a more elevated shell than C. consanguineum (= obsoletum, Rve.), in both these respects agreeing very well with C. madagascariense of Gray, which I consider almost identical with, or at most only a slight variety of, C. unicarinatum of Lamarck (non C. unicarinatum of Sowerby, Pfeiffer, and Reeve, = C. fulvifrons, Sowerby). CycLosToMA JOHNSONI, sp. nov. (Plate XXI. figs. 4, 5.) Shell small but thickish ; white, with a single purple-brown zone a little below the middle of the body-whorl ; openly umbilicated, finely lirate upon the spire, smoother upon the last volution, especially on the lower surface, striated by lines of growth. Whorls 5, convex, separated by a deep suture, first two smooth, the third with about five fine spiral lire, the penultimate with about eight rather finer ones, increasing in number but much more feebly developed upon the upper half of the last whorl, and quite obsolete beneath the periphery, and scarcely traceable within the umbilicus. Aperture a trifle oblique, subcircular, a little longer than wide, white, with the single band. Peristome continuous, expanded all round, rather more so on the columellar side than on the opposite margin. Greatest diameter 14 millim., height 134; aperture 8 long, 63 wide. Hab. South of Trabonjy, north-west central part of Madagascar (Johnson). This very interesting species is not likely to be confounded with any previously described ; and I have much pleasure in associating with it the name of its discoverer. It is a comparatively smooth shell, characterized by the simplicity of its coloration and the non- lirate lower surface of the body-whorl. : CycLosToMA LINEATUM, Pfeiffer. Cyclostoma lineatum, Pfeiffer, Conch. Cab. pl. 45. f. 3, 4; Smith, P. Z.S. 1881, p. 278 (as var. of C. insulare, Pfr.). Hab. Valley of Marohogo near Mojonga, north-west Madagascar (Johnson). The specimen from the above locality is exactly similar in all respects to the type of this species, which at one time I considered a variety of U. insulare. As the localities prove to be different, I now think it better to keep the two forms separate. Some small varieties of C. insulare from the country between Lake Nyassa and the east coast of Africa, referred to by me in the ‘ Proceedings,’ approach very closely the present species. None of them, however, are absolutely identical, the umbilicus being a little more contracted, the spire a trifle lower, and the liration around and within the umbilicus decidedly coarser. In C. lineatum this is unusually fine. Pfeiffer described the shell as smooth; but this is not correct. To the unaided eye such appears to be the case; but on making use of a lens, the fine brown lines are seen to be elevated (dire), and the lines of growth are by no means inconspicuous. The spiral lines number about twelve on the penultimate whorl, alternately fine and 1882. ] MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MADAGASCAR. 379 still finer. C. sarcodes, Pfr., is still higher in the spire, with higher volutions, and more strongly livate, especially on the lower surface of the last whorl. VITRINA MADAGASCARIENSIS, sp. nov. (Plate XXI. figs. 6, 7.) Shell ventricose, depressed, very thin, diaphanous; pale greenish yellow, with a brown line at the suture, and with the upper part of the outer lip of the same colour, brilliantly glossy. Spire small, a little elevated and obtuse at the apex. Whorls 33, convex, deep, and margined above at the suture ; the first 14 microscopically decussated in a beautiful manner by minute spiral striee and very fine lines of growth, the last two lacking the spiral striee. Body-whorl large, with distinct, here and there subplicate, lines of growth, on the lower surface exhibiting indications of interrupted concentric strie. Aper- ture subhorizontal, large. Columella arcuate, thin, wrinkled, as is also the base of the peristome. Greatest diam. 153 millim., smaller 12, height 9. Hab. Betsileo (Cowan). This I believe is the only species of Vitrina at present known from Madagascar ; and it bears some resemblance to certain forms of the genus from South Africa. Heurx (NaninA?) Bausroni, Angas. H. balstoni, Angas, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1877, p. 528, pl. 54. f. 5. Hab. Interior of Madagascar (Angas); forest 36 miles east of Antananarivo (Johnson). The specimen presented to the British Museum by Mr. Johnson is narrowly perforated, in which respect alone it differs from the description of this species given by Angas. Two other shells in the Museum are also narrowly perforate ; and even the above-quoted figure looks as if the example delineated were likewise umbilicate ; so that it is possible the species was described as “imperforate ” accidentally. Hexrx (Nanina?) cLeameEst, sp. nov. (Plate XXI. figs. 8, 9.) Shell very thin, semitransparent, vinous horn-colour, narrowly perforate, suborbiculately conical, keeled at the periphery, marked with curved lines of growth crossed and rendered minutely granular on the spire by fine concentric striz, more finely concentrically striated on the under surface, more glossy and not granulated. Spire with slightly convex outlines, shortly conical, ending in an obtuse tip, Whorls 6, a little convex, regularly increasing, a little depressed near the lower submarginal suture, or, in other words, just above their periphery. Last volution keeled above the middle, the carina being less marked near the outer lip. Base convex. Aper- ture somewhat oblique, lunate. Outer lip obliquely arcuate above the feeble carination, straightish or even a little sinuated below it in a very slanting or receding direction. Columella narrowly expanded and reflexed over the perforation, forming below, with the basal edge, a regular wide curve, 380 MR. E. A. SMITH ON THE [Apr. 18, Greatest width 26 millim., height 17. Hab. Ankafana, Betsileo province (Cowan). There is only one other Madagascar Helix which is likely to be confounded with this species, namely H. balstoni of Angas. The latter has the whoie surface minutely sculptured with raised criss- cross stri@ in addition to the lines of growth. It is also more acutely carinate, has a less convex spire, and the body-whorl is con- siderably smaller and less inflated below the periphery. In H. cleamesi the sculpture consists of concentric strie@ crossing the lines of increase and rendering them beautifully granular on the upper surface. Hewix (KALIELLA) BARRAKPORENSIS, Pfeiffer. Helix (Kaliella) barrakporensis, Pfeiffer, Conch. Cab. pl. 147, f. 20-22; Reeve, Con. Ic. f. 816; Hanley, Conch. Indica, pl. 87. fF. Hab. About 30 miles east of Antananarivo (Johnson). On comparing the three specimens of this species from the above locality with a series from Simla in India, presented to the British Museum by Capt. T. Hutton, and also with the types described by Pfeiffer, I am unable to find any distinction, and consequently con- clude that this species (like Achatina fulica) has been introduced into India. Hexix (HeLicopHaNTA) BICINGULATA, Sp. nov. (Plate XXI. figs. 13, 14.) Helix cornu-giganteum, Angas (non Chemnitz), Proc. Zool. Soe. 1877, p- 527. H. guestiertana, Angas (non Crosse), op. cit. 1878, p. 312. Shell large, ovate, ventricose, imperforate or narrowly rimate ; light olive-brown above, darker brown towards the lip, with the lower surface beneath the periphery still deeper in tint, encircled by two dark-brown slightly raised narrow bands, one at the peri- phery, the other and more distinct one above it. Spire depressed, convex, only a little raised above the body-whorl. Volutions 4, very rapidly increasing, convex, separated by a deepish suture ; two upper ones striated by simple arcuate lines of growth; the third coarsely granular, the lines of growth being but feebly expressed ; the last very large, much descending in front, granular at its com- mencement, the granules gradually disappearing and replaced by close, oblique, short indentations, also exhibiting five or six nearly obsolete concentric ridges above the upper brown zone, and two or three between it and the lower one, the lines of increase being more distinct upon this than the preceding whorl. Lower surface swollen around the umbilical region, marked with arcuate Jines of growth, and oblique, close, short indentations like the upper surface, rounded at the periphery. Aperture obliquely elongate, bluish lilac within. Lip whitish, expanded, reflexed. Columella thickened, arched forward a trifle just beneath the umbilicus, very granular, expanded and reflexed over the perforation, sometimes not quite closing it, 1882. | MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MADAGASCAR. 381 united to the outer lip by a very thin granulated callosity, coating the whorl within the aperture. Greatest diameter 76 millim., smallest 58, height (resting on its base) 35. Hab. Ekongo, South-east Madagascar ( Waters). This is the species erroneously considered by Mr. Angas to be the H. guestieriana of Crosse, which much more closely resembles H. ibaraoensis of the former author. H. guestieriana is a more globose shell, with a higher penultimate whorl, a shorter aperture, a smooth columella, and a smooth callosity upon the body-whorl, which is encircled by several slightly raised ridges of more equal size than in Hi. bicingulata. The granular and slightly arched-forward columella in the latter species, the obliquely indented surface of the body- whorl, and the two very conspicuous brown slightly raised girdles around it, the lower one bordered by an indistinct pale one above, distinguish this from the allied forms, H. cornu-giganteum, H. bet- sileoensis, H. ibaraoensis, and H. guestieriana. ‘The first two are openly umbilicated, the third generally imperforate (in about fifty specimens I have seen a few with a narrow perforation); and the last is said to be “narrowly subrimate.” H. detsileoensis has the columella granular as in the present species; in the other three it is smooth. In H. ibaraoensis the callus uniting the columella and the outer lip and spreading over the whorl within the aperture is con- spicuously granulated, and the epidermis is nearly black towards the lip. All the five species here remarked upon are, no doubt, offshoots from one original progenitor ; still I have found no difficulty in recog- nizing any specimen which has yet beenexamined. Probably notwo exist in precisely the same locality. The following is the distribution as at present known :— fH. cornu-giganteum. Hab. Islaud of Agalega, N.E. of Madagascar (teste Sir David Barclay !). H. guestieriana. Hab. Madagascar (no precise locality known). 1. betsilevensis. Hab. S.E. Betsileo (Angas) ; Tanala country (Deans Cowan). HT. ibaraoensis. Hab. 8.E. Betsileo ( dagas) ; Tanala country (Deans Cowan). Hi, bicingulata. Hab, Ekongo, south-east of the island (/Vaters). Heurx (Macrocycriis?) covani, Smith. (Plate XXI. figs. 10-12.) Helix (Macrocyclis?) covani, Smith, Journ. of Conch. vol. ii. p. 338. Hab. Ankafana, Betsileo province (Cowan). This species was originally described from a single specimen which 382 MR. E. A. SMITH ON THE [Apr. 18, did not illustrate the full size attained by adult shells. The largest and apparently full-grown example recently brought to England by Mr. Cowan has a greatest diameter of 45 millim., is 34 across at the smallest diameter, and 20 high, resting upon its base. The peristome is not thickened or expanded on the upper margin, but is simple and arcuate. Heurx (Ampeuira) sHavi, Smith. (Plate XXII. figs. 1-3.) Helix (Ampelita) shavi, Smith, Journ. of Conch. 1879, vol. ii. p: 339. Hab. Tanala province (Cowan). In this instance also, as with H. covani, the dimensions given in the above work are not those attained at times by this species. The largest before me is 35 millim. across the greatest width, and 28 at the smallest. All retain the character of the last whorl descending in front, and have the labrum more or less (sometimes entirely) violet- brown. Heuix (Ampetita) PERCYANA, Smith. Helix (Ampelita) percyana, Smith, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1880, p. 485, pl. 48. f. 12, 12a. Hab. Ankafana, Betsileo (Cowan). Of this species, originally described from a unique specimen in Dr. Percy’s collection, I have now seen four more, very similar to the type, and differing from one another only in the disposition and quantity of the remarkable opaque creamy-yellow zigzag markings. Sometimes the expanded outer lip is of a livid purple colour. Buximus (RHACHIS) NIGRILINEATUS, Reeve. (Plate XXII. fig. 4.) Hab. Betsileo (Cowan) ; ——? (Reeve). The type of this species, described by Reeve (Conch. Icon. pl. 77. fig. 567), is of immature growth. The name is not a charac- teristic one; for the lines are not black, but of a bronzy brown colour. Their disposition and number appear tolerably constant. There are two around the middle of the last whorl, of which the upper is a trifle the broader; a third is situated above these, inter- mediate between them and the suture; a fourth encircles the base; and at times two or three finer ones are met with in the same part; and in the immediate region of the columella the shell is horny and pellucid, contrasting conspicuously with the rest of the opaque yellow surface. The whorls are seven in number, rather convex, sculptured with lines of growth and microscopical spiral strie. The apex is brownish horn-colour and not very acute. The columella is perpendicular and rather straight, narrowly reflexed above, thus forming a slight rimation. SrenoGyRA (CLAVATOR) JOHNSONI, sp.nov. (Plate XXII. fig. 5.) Shell moderately thick, imperforate, elongate, subcylindrical, slightly shining ; rich brown, with darker streaks here and there, 1882. | MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MADAGASCAR. 383 paler towards the apex, where the epidermis is mostly worn off, leaving a white surface; last whorl indistinctly transversely zoned and lineated with dark brown. Volutions 7, rather convex, regu- larly increasing, longitudinally striated by the lines of growth, which are more or less puckered beneath the suture, and at times some- what wrinkled through being crossed by a few obsolete transverse strie. The extreme upper edge of the whorls is yellow at the suture. Body-whorl scarcely descending in front. Aperture in- versely auriform, blue within, occupying three eighths of the entire length of the shell. Outer lip thickened within, dirty whitish. Inner lip of the same colour, thickened also, narrowly expanded in the umbilical region, joined to the labrum above by a thin callus. Length 53 millim., width 21 ; aperture 20 long, 113 broad. Hab. Near the river Anonive, about fifty miles south of the capital, Antananarivo (W. Johnson). This species might be regarded by some as a dwarf form of S. eximia, Shuttleworth ; but, besides size, there are other distinctions. Mr. Johnson says he never could find the larger species at the above locality, nor did he ever meet with the smaller one in company with it elsewhere. As the last whorl in the present species scarcely descends at all, the suture is less oblique than in S. ewimia; the surface is less puckered by transverse striz,.the breadth of the shell is greater in proportion to its length, the last whorl is less cylin- drical, the columella is not so broadly reflexed or flattened in front, and the aperture is narrower at the base. MELANATRIA JOHNSONI, sp. nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 6, 7.) Shell large, elongate-pyramidal, turreted, thick, covered with an olive epidermis, closely lineated or strigate with longitudinal lines of a darker tint. Whorls —?, the remaining nine excavated at the upper part, very slightly convex beneath, strongly spirally ribbed and grooved. The ribs are six in number on the upper whorls and rounded; the two above are much more slender than the four beneath; the uppermost borders the suture; the next lies in the concavity at the top of the whorls; and the rest surround the slight convexity, and are three times as broad as the sulci separating them, All the whorls, with the exception of the last four, are coronated at the slight angle below the excavation with very short, hollow, oblique spinules; and some of the spiral grooves exhibit rows of fine granules. The last whorl descends somewhat, giving the shell a slightly distorted appearance ; it is girded with about twelve trans- verse costze, a few at the base being smaller than five principal ones around the middle. The aperture is bluish within, faintly stained with olive-brown near the margins. Peristome widely and deeply sinuated on the outer lip in the concavity of the whorl, arcuate and prominent in the middle, then shallowly sinuated again (vide fig. 7). Columellar margin thickened, free, arcuate, reflexed, ending in a distinct basal sinus. Length 78 millim., diam. 24; aperture 24 across diagonally, and 16 in a transverse direction. Proc. Zoot. Soc.—1882, No. XXVI. 26 384 MR, E. A. SMITH ON THE [Apr. 18, Hab. River Kamony, in the north-west of the island (WV. John- son). his very striking shell is not uncommon in the above locality ; and it is surprising that so large a species has not been brought to Europe before. It cannot be confounded with any of the other forms of Melanatria, being so remarkable on account of the very strong spiral ridges. Like many freshwater shells, this is also generally coated with a black earthy deposit. CLEOPATRA TRABONJIENSIS, sp.nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 10, 11.) Shell narrowly umbilicated, turbinate, thinnish, yellowish olive, with several transverse black lines and zones. Apex worn away. Remaining volutions 33, convex, bicarinate. Keels black; the upper one situated rather above the middle of the whorls, giving them a tabulated appearance, the lower one close to the suture; these keels are more or less obsolete on the body-whorl, especially near the lip. In addition the lower part of this volution is finely concentrically lirate, the ridges being rugose in consequence of being crossed by the lines of increment, which are rather conspicuous, and at times puckered at the carinee. The entire surface is also micro- scopically striated in a spiral direction. Aperture roundly ovate, showing the external coloration. Lip thin. Columellar margin a little expanded and reflexed, whitish, joined above to the extremity of the outer lip bya very thin callosity. Operculum very concave exteriorly, brown ; nucleus paucispiral, situated about halfway be- tween the centre and the columellar edge. Length 12 millim., diam. 7 ; aperture 6 long, 42 wide. Hab. A small lake at Trabonjy, in the north-west central part of the island (Johnson). The carination of the volutions, the minute spiral striation, the thinness of the shell, its umbilicus, and other features distinguish this species from Paludomus madagascariensis of Brot. In addition to the two dark keels, the upper part of the whorls has a broad zone at the suture, and the body-whorl has a similar band around the base in addition to one or two narrower ones above. AMPULLARIA MADAGASCARIENSIS, sp. nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 8, 9.) Shell subglobose, narrowly umbilicated, moderately thick, sculp- tured with lines of growth and more or less distinct microscopic spiral striee; greenish olive, with numerous purple-brown transverse lines and zones. Whorls 6, flattened and broadly excavated above, convex at the sides, divided by a deep, pale sutural line; the last malleated in front, the aperture being towards the eye. First three whorls generally eroded and purple-black ; when perfect, in young shells, very distinctly spirally striated. Aperture ovate-pyriform, purple-brown within, yellowish on the columella and towards the lip, where the spiral lines and zones are particularly vivid. Peristome simple, the columellar margin being well curved and a little reflexed, connected with the termination of the outer lip by a very thin 1882. } MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MADAGASCAR. 385 deposit of callus, before the deposition of which the starting-point of the columella is conspicuously defined by a transverse white line, which starts just above the umbilicus and winds round the penul- timate whorl within the aperture. | Operculum generally dirty lilac on the inside, but sometimes white or horny-brown. Height 50 millim.; greatest diam. 49, smallest 38; aperture 36 long, 23 wide. Hab. In a marsh, north of Antananarivo (Johnson) ; Imerina province (Cowan). In form this species is not unlike 4. largillierti of Philippi, but it is quite distinct in several respects. The spiral striation is finer, the umbilicus broader ; the aperture is not angular or effuse at the base, nor has the last whorl the rounded keel or ridge at the base around the umbilical fissure. A. cecillei, Phil., appears to be more ovate, with less tabulated whorls, has a higher spire, and is differently coloured. It is only in adult specimens that the commencement of the aperture near the lip is yellow. The columella is also of that colour in full-grown shells, but bluish white in young ones. This species appears to arrive at maturity after two years’ growth, as all the large specimens exhibit a dark longitudinal stripe or former lip just before the completion of the fifth whorl. In the young state this is very thin, and the colour is horny-brown, and not greenish olive like the last large whorl of the aduit. LIMN#A HOVARUM, Tristram. Limnea hovarum, Tristram, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1863, p. 61. Hat. Ankafana, Betsileo (Cowan). This species grows toalarger size than that of the specimen described by Tristram ; for one from the above locality is as much as ten lines long. In the larger shells the lines of growth become more pro- minent, forming arcuate and tortuous elevated ridges. The columella ‘also is reflexed, appressed to the whorl, yet leaves a slight chink or rimation in the umbilical region. All the specimens examined exhibit traces of transverse or spiral striz, generally interrupted and of a subpunctate character. LIMN#A ELECTA, sp. nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 12, 13.) Shell small, ovate, transparent, corneous, narrowly rimate. Whorls 3-34, convex, rapidly increasing. Spire small, obtuse and reddish at the apex. Last whorl elongate, sculptured with fine lines of growth crossed by a few spiral striee. Aperture vertical, ovate, acuminate above, occupying about two thirds of the entire length of the shell. Columella rather high up, reflexed over the umbilical fissure, the reflexed portion being striated rather coarsely lengthwise. Length 63 millim., diam. 4 ; aperture 43 long, 23 wide. Hab. About 20 miles from Antananarivo (Johnson). This little species has much of the general aspect of the genus Succinea, and is peculiar on that account and the red tip of the spire. 386 MR. E. A. SMITH ON THE [Apr. 18, Prysa MADAGASCARTIENSIS, Angas. (Plate XXII. figs. 18, 19.) Physa madagascariensis, Angas, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1877, p. 528, pl. 54. figs. 2a, 2d. Hab. Ekongo, S.E. Madagascar ( Waters) ; Betsileo (Cowan). The type figured in the ‘ Proceedings’ is larger than any of the specimens from Betsileo, and rather broader and more globose than most of them ; but all agree in the peculiar conspicuous longitudinal subliration or plication which adorns the surface. The suture is deep and channelled, and filled up by the upper terminations of the plicee, which form fine erect lamelle. P. lirata of Tristram has a depressed spire and even stronger lire than the present species, in which the spire is at times considerably higher than in the shell depicted by Angas. PHyYSA LAMELLATA, sp. nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 14, 15.) Shell very fragile, rimate, ovate, not very glossy, olivaceous horn- colour, longitudinally coarsely lamellato-lirate. Whorls 3-4, convex, separated by a deeply channelled suture, the last descending, not square-shouldered above. Aperture occupying a little more than three fourths of the entire length of the shell. Columella but little con- torted, reflexed, joined to the lip above by a thin corneous callosity, more or less striated lengthwise. Length 12 millim., diam. 9 ; aperture 9 long, 5 wide. Hab. Twenty miles from Antananarivo (Johnson). This may be but a variety of P. lirata of Tristram, of which there is a single specimen in the British Museum vbtained from the col- lection of the late Henry Adams. It is chiefly distinguished by the difference in its form, the greater coarseness of the lire, which have a thin lamellar epidermis attached tothem. The last whorl descends near the aperture, and is not so squarely shouldered as P. lirata. PHYSA OBTUSISPIRA, sp. nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 16, 17.) Shell small, transparent, light horn-colour, narrowly rimate, some- what glossy, indistinctly spirally striated, longitudinally plicately ridged, very regularly and strongly upon the spire and upper part of the body-whorl near the suture, the lire on the lower part becoming subevanescent. Volutions 33-4, very convex, rapidly increasing, separated by a deeply channelled suture. Spire very short, only a little raised above the last whorl. The latter descends in front, is large, and rounded at the shoulder above. Aperture inversely sub- — auriform, and occupying about four fifths of the entire length of the shell. Columella very slightly twisted, narrowly reflexed over the umbilical fissure, connected with the lip above by a thin callus upon the whorl, which sometimes exhibits a few white lines uponit, disposed lengthwise. Length 10 millim., greatest diam. 8 ; aperture 8 long, 43 wide. Hab. About 20 miles from Antananarivo (Johnson); Betsileo ( Cowan). This, like all the known species of Physa from Madagascar, is 1882. ] MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MADAGASCAR. 387 strongly lirated for this genus. It is a smaller form than P. mada- gascariensis, has a shorter and more obtuse spire, a narrower per- foration and spiral striation. P. lirata is more strongly lirate than it, has the spire even still shorter, the body-whorl is prominently shouldered above, and the aperture is longer in proportion. PLANORBIS MADAGASCARIENSIS, sp. nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 20-22.) Shell moderately thick, deeply excavated both above and below, corneous brown, rather strongly striated by the lines of growth, and sometimes exhibiting traces of spiral striation. Whorls 4—43, rapidly increasing; the last large, rather high, convex, rather deeply incurved at the suture both on the upper and underside, finely malleated, chiefly round the middle. Aperture largish, broadly lunate, raised above or on a level with the penultimate whorl. Peristome thin, receding at the base, its extremities connected by a very thin deposit of callus on the whorl. Greatest diam. 123 millim., smallest 10, height 43. Hab. Lake Itasy (Johnson). This species is very like P. pfeifferi, Krauss (Sudafr. Moll. pl. v. f. 7), but may be distinguished by the malleation of the last whorl, its greater height, and browner colour. NERITINA GAGATES, Lamarck. Neritina gagates, Lamarck (vide Martens, Conch. Cab. p. 94). Hab. Tamatave (Cowan). Two specimens from the above locality I believe to belong to this species, differing only in the deep red colour of the columellar callosity, and the olive-green tint of the outer lip. The form is the same; and the denticles on the columella, the painting, the micro- scopic spiral sculpture, and the operculum are all similar. NERITINA FULGETRUM, Reeve. (Plate XXII. figs. 23, 24.) Neritina fulgetrum, Reeve, Conch. Icon. pl. 23. f. 103 a, sp. 103. Hab. ? (Reeve) ; south of Tamatave (Johnson). This species has hitherto been represented by a single specimen without any locality in the Cumingian collection, now in the British Museum. As the description in the ‘Conchologia Iconica’ is very short and incomplete, I will here add a few further details. The black zigzag lineolation at times is very close, thus giving the shell a greyish appearance when viewed at a distance ; and a character not referred to by Reeve, but indicated in his figure, is the brown margin to the body-whorl at the suture, beneath which the volution is faintly constricted. The columellar callosity is much thickened and of a red colour, and extends some distance over the whorl. The edge of the columella is pale, straight, with a shallow sinus a little below the middle, furnished with about a dozen denticles. The aperture is rather small, bright yellow far within, then whitish, and again yellow or greenish-yellow at the lip. The operculum is slaty black ex- 388 MR. E. A. SMITH ON THE [ Apr. 18, teriorly, with the arcuate margin red, and reddish on the inner surface, with two pale rays from the nucleus, one central and the other sub- marginal, the extreme edge being blackish. In all these respects it coincides with that of N. gagates, Lamarck, from the Mauritius ; and the terminal processes are similar in both forms. Von Martens’s conjecture that the species might belong to NV. retifera, Benson (Conch. Cab. p. 283), is not to be wondered at, considering the briefness of Reeve’s description, and the fact of only the back of the shell being figured. B. CONCHIFERA. CoRBICULA MADAGASCARIENSIS, sp. nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 25-27.) Shell a little inequilateral, rounded and narrow in front, much broader, squarish, and subtruncate posteriorly, arcuate along the ventral margin, finely concentrically striated; yellowish, greenish down the posterior side. Umbones a little prominent, incurved, situated a little anteriorly. Interior lilac, with two or three rather distant concentric purple zones, stained with dark purple down the posterior side, and with a smaller stain of the same colour at the an- terior side. Length 113 millim., width 14, diameter 7. Hab. Twenty miles from Antananarivo (Johnson). The concentric striz are deep and regular upon the umbones ; but towards the ventral margin they become less regular and finer, and in front are rather more strongly developed than towards the pos- terior side. This is the first record of the genus in Madagascar ; and I have not been able to associate the species with any of the forms described from the adjacent continent. SpH&ZRIUM MADAGASCARIENSE, Tristram. Spherium madagascariense, Tristram, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1863, p.61; Sowerby, Conch. Icon. pl. iii. f. 22, bad ! Hab. Two days west of Antananarivo (T’ristram) ; about 20 miles from the capital (Johnson); Betsileo (Cowan). This species is scarcely if at all different from S. capense of Krauss, and is mainly distinguished by difference in locality. The slight compression of the valves towards the circumference, remarked upon by Tristram, is not constant in all specimens, some exhibiting it ina comparatively decided manner, whilst others are rounded at that part just like the South-African form. LIMOSINA FERRUGINEA, Krauss. Cyclas ferruginea, Krauss, Sudafr. Moll. p. 7, pl. i. f. 7; Clessin (as Limosina), Conch. Cab. p. 247, pl. 46. f. 1-4; Sowerby (as Spherium), Couch. Icon. f. 47, not good ! Hab. The river Knysna, South Africa (Krauss). About 20 miles from Antananarivo (Johnson). Also Mauritius (Brit. Mus.). 1882.] MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MADAGASCAR. 389 The specimens from Madagascar agree exactly with a typical example of this species purchased by the British Museum of Dr. Krauss. The figure in the ‘ Conchylien-Cabinet’ appears to be far more characteristic than that in Krauss’s work. PisIDIUM JOHNSONI, sp. nov. (Plate XXII. figs. 28,29.) BA» Shell minute, ventricose, inequilateral, glossy, finely concentrically striated, pale grey. Umbones large, inflated, without a small pointed nucleus. Posterior side longer and narrower than the anterior, obliquely sloping from the beaks, rounded at the extremity ; anterior end broader, blunter. Length 2 millim., width 21, diam. 13. Hab. About 20 miles from Antananarivo (Johnson). This species is considerably like P. ventricosum of Prime, but is not not quite so swollen or so inequilateral. The beaks take the form of an apical glossy cap without any small pointed apex. The ligament is small and linear. EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. Puate XXII. Cyclostoma congener, p. 377. betsileoense, p. 376. , Var, p. 377. johnsoni, p. 378. . Vitrina madagascariensis, p. 379. . Helix (Nanina) cleamesi, p. 379. 10, 11, 12. (Macrocyclis ?) covani, p. 381. 13, 14. —— (Helicophanta) bicingulata, p. 380. Puate XXII. 8, 9. Ampullaria madagascariensis, p, 384. 10, 11. Cleopatra trabonjiensis, p. 384. 12, 13. Limnea electa, p. 385. 14, 15. Physa lamellata, p, 386. obtusispira, p. 386. 18, 19. —— madagascariensis, p. 386. 20, 21, 22. Planorbis madagascariensis, p. 387. 23, 24. Neritina fulgetrum, p. 387. A 25, 26, 27. Corbicula madagascariensis, p. 388. 28, 29. Pisidiwm johnsoni, p. 389. 390 PROF. FLOWER ON THE LATE MR. DARWIN. [May 2, May 2nd, 1882. Professor Flower, LL.D., F.R.S., President, in the Chair. Before commencing proceedings, the President spoke as follows :— “The Minutes just read recall the fact that at our last Meeting we were honoured by a communication from Mr. Darwin, probably his last contribution to that science to which he devoted his life- long labours. No one who heard that paper, showing, as it did, no sign of faltering from that eager interest which he had always mani- fested in a subject which he had made peculiarly his own, suspected that not twenty-four hours would elapse before those labours would be brought to a close. “During the fortnight that has passed, the whole world has been moved at the loss it has sustained, and Darwin’s work and Darwin’s character have, more than any other theme, filled the minds of thinking people of all countries, classes, creeds, and occupations. “We who humbly follow him in cultivating the science he adorned, must feel elevated at the sight of the full recognition accorded to his work. The general acceptance of Darwin as one who has exercised a powerful influence upon the whole realm of human thought, the cordial reception of his remains in our magnificent Abbey, among the illustrious men of whom our country is proud, are triumphs in the history of Zoology; for it was mainly zoological observation which led to those philosophical speculations which have made his name famous. “The nation’s grief at his loss has already found eloquent and feeling expression in many quarters; the resources of our language seem to have been exhausted in bearing testimony to his worth. No words that I could find would add any thing to what has been so well said by others; and surely here, if in any place in the world, among those who are always occupied with subjects the pursuit of which has been so profoundly modified by his writings, and among many who loved him-as a personal friend, nothing is needed but to mention his name, to call forth the strongest feelings of admiration for his work and reverence for his character. “If it is not given to any of us to emulate him in brilliancy of scientific induction, or to light upon discoveries that will change the current of human ideas, we can at least endeavour to follow the example he has set us of patient perseverance in observation, scru- palous accuracy of statement, deference for the opinions and feelings of others, candour towards opponents, and of that invariable modesty and gentleness of demeanour which shed such a charm round his public as well as his private life.” > ie 33 Contents (continued). Boe, i April 4, 1882. ‘ 3 ; Page Mr. Sclater. Exhibition of, and remarks upon, an adult male of Cyanomyias celestis .. 342 Mr. Sclater. Exhibition of, and remarks upon, the skins of two specimens of the Sub- cylindrical Hornbill (Buceros subcylindricus) ..sccecccceecceccneecccuceccsees 343 1. Description of a new Species of Tortoise (Geoemyda impressa) from Siam. By Dr. A. ORV HARANV REZ. S-\S 7, ots lests AER ORaE REET areas « es eee cs oe 343 2. On the Convoluted Trachea of two Species of Manucode (Manucodia atra and Phony- gama gouldi); with Remarks on similar Structures in other Birds. By W. A. _ Forsss, B.A., Prosector to the Society ........s00+-200-eceeeeecees - 347 3. On the Eggs of some rare Wading Birds from Madagascar. By J. E. Harrine, F.LS., LIVI TT ay Sr ee eiabrreaeh cca was: ea rince aeeeete ED) gas se SS cake Che ahe ace 353 4, Description of a New Species of Bird of the Genus Tephras. By E. P. Ramsay, F.LS., C.M.Z.S jo es Pte mm eet ee tccee sae i a ee ee : ; April 18, 1882. The Secretary. Report on the additions to the Society’s Menagerie in March 1882 ...... 358 1. On the Mutual Affinities of the Animals composing the Order EprnTata. By Wim | Henry Frower, LL.D., F.R.S., Pres. Zool. Soc., &. 2.2... cece cece ccceceseeess 358 2. On the Modification of a Race of Syrian Street-Dogs by means of Sexual Selection. By Dr. Van Dyck. With a Preliminary Notice by Cuartzs Darwin, F.R.S., F.Z.8S. .. 367 _ 3. Onasmall Collection of Mammalia from Central Mexico. By Oxprreup Tuomas, F.Z.S., NibAgle MUBCUI soos oa: «ios ol oe ales ch oer e ee Ridcefajel cist ia/o\e ard ainces Peele areal stetatore 371 4, On some Mammals and Birds collected ‘by Mr. J. Hauxwell in Eastern Peru. By Epwarp Bartuerr, Ourator of the Maidstone Museum ...............0-..--.. 373 5. A Contribution to the Molluscan Fauna of Madagascar. By Epear A. Smita. (Plates - XXI. and XXII.) ...... wie istaeal siete, casts wes s Ate we eece eee secs tent ee reat nesneees 375 May 2, 1882. Prof. Flower, LL.D. Remarks on the death of Charles Darwin ........... «+... etl BOO LIST OF PLATE! Ba ve] sg Re \ , \ j $ A. >. : f ‘ > XV. Anatom cba yafiubeiee: Re rae i Xvi. erops Cresseri....... 0 ...+5. se = ne 2 Tiryitinoeter tained ROEM ae ae hee % XVII. ER ae SR RR OG gatas XVIII. Anthus butleri Seabee ee eet cena eee t ee eran t eee et XTX. New Species of Agrias «..........0csescseeen en evens : XX. Naxia (Naxioides) robillardi- oe ee ae Poe. ©.€ 6 and Shells from ten Shale fos Paha 2 TA . 5 Facey Epi x re rut rcere® YS eS Pe aot z e 7 < * ‘ * ~ dl = ; | 3 NOTICE. According to ant srangomentth Proceedings are issued in as follows :— 3 a ak ile oe a > | She i The price is 12s, . per ae forthe eiion with h coloured, an * that with bigs chs: ca et ae -