( 475 ) 



*i''l. Anorrhinus galeritus (Temm.). 



A series from Bunguiuu. One apiiareutly I'lilly adult tnalc has the bill entirely 

 black. Another apparently younger tmale has a pale bill, sjwtted with blackish, and 

 its abdomen is a little jialer. A third mtde has a very pale breast and abdomen, 

 throat l)lackish, and the bill mottled dark at base. One nndoubtedly fully aged 

 female has the breast, abdomen, and thighs dark blackish brown, quite diiFerent 

 from the chocolate-brown of the male ; only the belly, thighs, and under tail-coverts 

 are of about the same colour as in the 7>iale, though also more greyish. The bill 

 has a very well developed black cask ; the mandible is black at base for about 

 two-thirds ; the maxilla black at utmost base and along basal half of cutting edge ; 

 the rest of the bill white. This female agrees with two other specimens from 

 Sumatra, which, from their small size, I take to he /?ma/es. Therefore, I think, the 

 female does differ from the male in colour (see Gat. B. XVII. p. 391). 



62. Eudynamis honorata (L) fXov. Zool. I. p. 4«1). 

 <S. Pulu Laut 



*63. Chalcococcyx xanthorhynchus (Horsf.). 

 Two males, June and August, Bunguran. The former is very much more 

 purple than the latter, which has almost steel-blue borders to the feathers above. 

 Distributed over the surrounding countries. 



64. Zanclostomus javanicus (Horsf.) (Nov. Zool. I. p. 481). 

 Bunguran. 



*65. Rhopodytes sumatranus (Raffl.). 

 6. .Sinubing, Bunguran. 

 S. Mt. Ranai, Bunguran (lOOi.) feet). 



Distribution according to Shelley, Cat. B. XIX. p. 391 : S. Tenasserim, down 

 the Malayan Peninsula, to Java, Sumatra, and Borneo. 



*66. Phoenicophaes microrhinus Berl. (antea, p. TO). 



Two specimens from Bunguran, both marked male, though one is, I believe, 

 a female. The characters assigned to the sexes by Count Berlejjsch seem to be 

 right. 



This is another case of the representative Bornean form, and not the Malaccan, 

 inhabiting the Natunas. 



*67. Centropus sinensis (Steph.). 



S. Bunguran. This is the fine Centropus we used to call C. eunjcerciis. 

 Shelley, Cat. B. XIX. pp. 343, 344, unites the Chinese, Malayan, and Indian forms, 

 thus using for it the oldest name, C. sinensis (Steph.), and giving its distribution : 

 Indian Peninsula and Ceylon, Burmese countries to China, Malayan Peninsula and 

 Indo-Malayau Islands. 



•68. Ceiitropus javanicus ( Dumont;. 

 ?. Bunguran. ('{'. Cat. H. XIX. pp. ;!.')4, :i.j.">. 



