8. COLLOCALIA. 



501 



ThVch tho e fron. P ? ' '"1 .^•'^"•;'^ ^"^^^ ^P^°^^^ ^« found, to 

 Zl V;l V'^'^'^'''" ^'''^ ^^^''^^ «^so bdon-. They sometimes 



inhabit the same localities as C. fnciphaga, and certainly form a 



et^ent'/:r:/= '"d '' ""^\'^ admiited'that th^^ t^^^oTm: 



«-f/. Ad. sk. 

 e, /. Ad. sk. 

 S, h. Imm. sk. 

 i, k. Ad. sk. 

 /. Pull. sk. 

 m. Ad. sk. 

 n-q. 6 ad. ; $ 



ad. sk. 

 n 6 ad. sk. 



!!. c? 2 ad. sk. 



Ad. sk, 



6 ad. sk. 



Ad. sk. 



Ad. sk. 



c? ad. sk. 



u 



z. Adi. sk. 



a'-d'. (S ; e'. 2 



ad. sk. 

 /V-c?? ad.sk. 



?', r'. Ad. sk. 

 a'. Ad. sk. 

 *'. S ad. sk. 

 m'-2'. Ad. sk. 



h". 2 ad. sk. 

 d" ad. sk. 



<Z' 



Java (Horsfield). 



Java (iy. i5/yM). 



Sarawak. 



Borneo. 



Borneo. 



Lawas Eiver, Borneo. 



Valencia, Negros, August (H. 



A. Everett). 

 Damaguete, Negros, Feb. 

 Macassar. 

 Celebes. 



Timor Coupang. 

 Morty Is. 

 Duke of York Is. 

 Chauniont Is., Louisiade Ar- 



chipel., July 5. 

 Astrolabe Eange, S.E. New 



Guinea. 

 Kotegurh, N.W. Himalayas. 



India Museum. 

 Jardine Coll. 

 C. Hose Coll. 



Cuming Coll. 

 Veitch Coll. 

 Tweeddale Coll. 



Moseley Coll. 



Wallace Coll. 



AVallace Coll. 



Wallace Coll. 

 Wallace Coll. 

 Hev. Ct. Brown [0.1. 

 Voy. H.M.S.' Rattle- 

 snake.' 

 A. Goldie [C.]. 



Hume Coll. 



Hume Coll. 



Vingorla, S. Konkan, April (G 

 Vidal). ' ^ K • 



BramahglieiTies, June (Darling). Hume Coll. 



Ooonoor, Aug ( W. Bamsmj). Tweeddale Coll. 



Coonoor, April ( W. Davison). " 



Tiger's Cave, Ootacamund, Dec 

 {A. O. H.). ' 



Ootacamund, April {W. Da- 

 vison). 



Bridge, S. Travancore, March 

 18 (J. W. Bourdillon). 



Hume Coll. 

 Hume Coll. 



Hume Coll. 



Hume Coll. 



Subsp. a. Collocalia brevirostris. 



Hirundo brevirostris, McClelland, P. Z. S 1839 t, I55 

 Collocalia brevirostris, ^(<»(f, ,SYray i^(=a/A ii; n 9^9 n's~(t\ -j 

 ^^_ p. 290 (Assam) ^mU^^'r^i^^^^^i^ 



Adnh Similar to the true C. fxtcij^liar,a, but the wings are verv 

 long and the tarsi thinly feathered, 4en%he bird is fresh and not 

 damaged in skinning or by the strings of labels, whereas the tarsi 

 seem to be quite nnfeathered in the birds from the N llhenS 

 \\ mg 5 inches to 5-1. -L^iJofleriies, 



Hah. Replaces the typical C.fuciphar,a (the 0. unicohr of most 

 Indian ornithologists) in the Himalayas aid Manipur, but in the 



