19, 6 McGregor: Philippine Birds, IV 697 
he brought to Manila where it lived for some months and became 
fairly tame. It was fed on meat and fish. The bird was sick 
for two or three weeks before it died, in January, 1920. The 
owner brought it to the Bureau of Science for mounting. The 
body was found to be heavily infested with peculiar nodules 
whose nature has not been ascertained. Some trematodes taken 
from the intestines and preserved by Prof. Frank G. Haughwout, 
of the Bureau of Science, have been described as Phagicola pi- 
thecophagicola, a new genus and new species. Faust considers 
this new worm so distinct that he erects a new subfamily, 
Phagicoline, for the genus. 
Fic. 2, Pithecophaga jefferyi Grant; outline ot the tail, X 0.25. 
The following data were taken from this specimen: Iris pale 
blue; cere and face deep plumbeous, base of bill grayer, most of 
bill blackish slate; tarsus and toes dirty barium yellow; weight, 
2.76 kilograms. Fourth, fifth, and sixth primaries nearly equal 
and longest; first primary 75 millimeters shorter than second; 
second shorter than third and about equal to seventh. 
‘Faust, E. C., Philip. Journ. Sci. 17 (1920) 627-633, pl. 1. 
