608 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. vol. xxxv. 



* Entomophila Brookes, Museum Brookesianum, Feb., 1830, p. 90. 



Type, " Entomophila cmstralis" or "Southern Insect Harrier." 



[ A Icedinidw " '. \ 

 "Evropa, insects; ^/Aos", loving. 

 Eopodoces Zarudny and Loudon, Ornith. Monatsb., X, No. 12, Dec, 

 L902, p. 185. 

 Types, Podoces biddulphi Hume, and P. hendersoni Hume. 



[ Corvidse. ] 

 (Proposed as a subgenus of Podoces.) 

 ''Hods, the east; -{-Podoces {7todooKi]^ swift-footed). 

 fEosphgeniscus Wiman, Bull. Geol. Inst. Univ. Upsala, VI, Pt. 2, 1905, 

 p. 250. 



Type, Eosphaen iscus gunnari Wiman [Spheniscidse.] 



'i/oj?, dawn; + Spheniscus (ff^tjriGKog^ dim. of (?$?}v^ a wedge). 



*Epops Morris, in N. Wood's Naturalist, II, No. 9, June, 1837, p. 121. 

 Type, u Epops ujmpa" or i4 Hoopoo" [of his list of British 



birds] [ Upupidee.] 



"K7roi/^ the hoopoo. 

 fEremopezus Andrews, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1904, I, Pt. 1, June, 

 1904, p. 168. 



Type, En mopezus eocaenus Andrews. — [StruthionesJ] 



Eprj/xos, desert; 7reZ<>>, walking. 

 Erionetta Coues, Key N. A. Birds, 2d ed., 1881, p. 709. 



Type, Anas spectabilis Linnaeus [Atiatidm.] 



(Proposed as a subgenus of S<»nateria.) 

 "Epiov, wool, down; vijrra^ a duck. 



" x "Eriornis Brookes, Museum Brookesianum, Feb., 1830, p. 96. 

 Type, "Eriornis antarcticus" or "Southern Eriornis." 6 



| I 'net rtse sedis.] 

 "Epiov, wool; opvis, bird. 



*Erythropus Bltth, Analyst, V, No. XVII, Oct., 1836, p. 89. 



Type, ii Erythropus gallicus" "Redfoot, or Red Partridge." 



[Tetraonidde.] 

 (Sec Rujlpes.) 

 Epvdpog, red; novg, foot. 



"Eubates Ridgway," Zool. Record, XXX, for 1893, Aves, p. 49, 

 index, p. 6; and Index Zool., 1902, p. 131. A misprint for 

 Eribati s. 

 f Eucallornis Ameghino, Anales Soc. Cien. Argentina, LI, 1901, p. 78. 

 New name for Callornis Ameohino, preoccupied. 



[ Stereornithes. ] 

 Ev, very; + Callornis (kcxXXoc;, beauty; opvis, bird). 



a Compare also IIorsfieM, Zool. Researches in Java, No. 4, 1822, text to Alcedo hint, 

 i' Possibly the " Mutton " bird, one of the Tubinares. 



