THE TREE-PARTRIDGES. 



i6i 



Perdix 7negapodiii^ Temm. PI. Col. v. pis. 35 and 36 [Nos. 462, 



463] (1828). 

 Perdix o/ivacea, J. E. Gray, 111. Ind. Zool. i. pi. 57 (1830-32). 

 Arboricola torqueohi, Hume and Marshall, Game Birds of 



India, ii. p. 69, pi. (1879); Ogilvie-Grant, Cat. B. Brit. 



Mus. xxii. p. 207 (1893). 

 Adult Male. — Crown bright chest mit ; back olive-brown, barred 

 with black ; wing widely margined with chestnut, and blotched 

 v;ith black on the coverts ; sides of the face and throat black. 



Fio. 2. 



the feathers more or less edged with white ; fore-neck white ; 

 chest grey, shading into white on the under-parts ; flank- 

 feathers gre}\ edged ivith chestnut and with a white central spot. 

 Total length, ii-8 inches; wing, 6; tail, 27; tarsus, 17. 



Adult Female. — Differs chiefly from the male in having the 

 crown broivn with black shaft-stripes ; the sides of the face, 

 throat, and neck rust-coloured^ spotted with black; and the white 

 central spots on the flank-feathers much larger. 



rather a distinct group of Arboricola, and on examination we find that the 

 supra-orbital chain of hones is wanting in both species (fig. 2), This being 

 the case, Mr. Blanford proposes, very rightly as we think, to place these 

 two species in a different genus, for which the name Tropicoperdix^ Blyth, 

 has already been proposed. 



