REPORT ON THE BIRDS — PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. 13 



11. Entomobia gularis, Kuhl. 



Alcedo gularis, Kuhl, Buff, and DAuben., Fig. Av. Col. Norn. Syst., p. 4, 1820; Proc. Zool. 



Soc, 1877, pp. 541, 822; 1878, pp. 108, 341, 943. 

 Entomobia gularis, Walden, Trans Zool. Soc, vol. ix. p. 154. 



[No. 350, $ . | Ilo _ iki _ E bkck , and biU dark red Stomach had ingectg. 

 No. 351, t . J J ° 



' > Pasanauca. Eyes black : feet and bill red.] 

 No. 416, ? . ) • J 



Luzon, Negros, and Zebu individuals agree well with these Panay and Mindanao 



examples. The last island is a new locality for the species. 



12. Sauropatis chloris, Bodd. 



Alcedo chloris, Bodd., Tabl. PI. Enl., p. 49, 1783 ; Proc. Zool. Soc, 1877, pp. 541, 690, 758 



823; 1878, pp. 108, 282, 341, 709, 937 ; 1879, p. 69. 

 Sauropatis chloris, Walden, Trans. Zool. Soc, vol. ix. p. 155. 



" [ Ilo-ilo. Eyes black. Stomach had insects. 

 No. 354, ?.) 



No. 371, $.) Zebu> E black> 



No. 372, ?.) 



No. 387, 2 .) n ■ . -, 

 ' > Camio-uin. 



No. 388, ?.f ° J 



A Zebu male (No. 371) has the pectoral and lateral feathers conspicuously margined 

 with greyish brown ; and this is observed in a less degree in a female (No. 354) from 

 Ilo-ilo. Panay and Camiguin are new localities. 



13. Batrachostomus se2)timus, Tweedd. (PI. II.). 



Batrachosiomus Septimus, Tweeddale, Proc. Zool. Soc, 1877, p. 542; 1878, p. 944. 



[No. 427, ? . Pasananca. Eyes brown. Stomach had insects.] 

 Rufous phase. — Head, interscapulars, and elongated occipital crest rufous brown, 

 most of the feathers with a pair of pale rufous spots on either web, and defined by a 

 narrow brown transverse bar. Elongated auriculars barred alternately with brown and 

 rufous. A patch before the eye albescent rufous. A conspicuous nuchal collar formed 

 by a series of very broad feathers brown at the base, then an irregular subdued brown 

 transverse narrow band, followed by a pale rufous band, then another narrow zig-zag 

 brown band, which is succeeded by another pale rufous band, bounded below by a broad 

 transverse dark In-own almost black band, which is succeeded by a still broader white 

 band, bordered again with black ; the white band is separated from the black above and 

 below by a rusty margin. Feathers of the back, rump, and upper tail-coverts rufous, 



