'54 



LLOYDS NATURAL HISTORY. 



T>hassa. The latter birds are now in the Paris Museum, and 

 Dr. Oustalet regards them as merely varieties of C. tibetaiium^ 

 or hybrids between this species and the slate-grey C. aiiritum^ 

 Pallas, which has th 2 greater part of the outer tail-feathers white. 

 We entirely agree with Mr. Seebohm in believing this con- 

 clusion to be a mistake, for C. aurituni, we may further remark, 

 has the tail composed of twenty-four, not twenty feathers. 



It appears that the range of C. leucuruui overlaps that of C. 

 tibetanum in Eastern Tibet, and it may be that in this locality 

 the two forms interbreed, so it is just possible that Hodgson's 

 type of C. tibelanum^ which has some white markings on the 

 six outer pairs of tail-feathers (see previous footnote, p. 252) 

 may be a cross-bred bird of this description, but the exact 

 locality where it was obtained is quite uncertain. 



in. THE MANCHURIAN EARED-PHEASANT. CROSSOPTILON 

 MANCHURICUM. 



Crossoptilon auritiun sive 7nantc]iuriaim^ Swinhoe, P. Z. S. 



1862, p. 286, and 1863, p. 306. 

 Crossoptilon auritum, Sclater {nee Pallas), List of Phasian. p. 



6, pi. 5 (1863); Milne-Edwards, N. Arch. Mus. Bull. i. 



p. 12, pi. i. figs. I and 2 (1865); Gould, B. Asia, vii. p. 



22 (1870). 

 Crossoptilon jnafitchicriawi, Elliot, Monogr. Phasian. i. pi. 16 



(1872); David and Oustalet, Ois. Chine, p. 405, pi. 106 



(1877); Sclater, P. Z. S. 1879, p. 118, pi. viii. fig. 5; 



Ogilvie-Grant, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. p. 294 (1893). 

 Adult Male. — Differs chiefly from C. tibetanum in having an 

 indistinct white band across the crown, the neck black, shading 

 into brown on the mantle, the lower back and rump dirty 

 white ; chest blackish-brown ; rest of under-parts lighter. Tail 

 with tive?ity-two feathers, the basal part dirty white and the 

 ends brownish, glossed with rich purplish-blue. Total length, 

 40 inches ; wing, 127 ; tail, 22*6 ; tarsus, 4'i. 

 Adult Female. — Differs only in having no spurs. 



