512 



PASSERIFORMES 



Fig. 112. 



Ruticilla 2Jhoeni- 



and a white wing-patch; brown replacing the grey and black in the 

 female. Some species are blacker above, one has a chestnut back 

 and no black throat, another has both rump and tail black, and 

 three have blue on the forehead and crown, one of these again 



having a white gular mark. 

 E. moussieri, linking tbe Eed- 

 starts to the Chats, is black, 

 with orange -rufous rump, tail, 

 and lower surface, a white alar 

 spot, and white extending from 

 the forehead to the face. The 

 Eoljin,^ Urithacus ruhecula, 

 needs no description ; the Per- 

 sian U. hyrcanvs hardly differs ; 

 the similar Japanese Eobin, 

 E. alcahige, has a grey belly ; 

 the Corean E. homadori is 

 orange - chestnut above, black 

 and white beneath. The Blue- 

 throat, Cyanec'ula suecica, is 

 brown, except for a white superciliary streak, bay tail-coverts, and 

 a bright blue throat with a central rufous spot, to which succeed 

 black, white, and rusty bands, and a whitish belly. 0. ivolfi lacks 

 the gular spot, C. leucocyana has it white. Calliope camtschat- 

 censis, C.pectoralis, and C. tschehaiewi, are brown or dark grey, with 

 grey or black breasts, white abdomens, some black and white on the 

 face, and glossy scarlet throats. Daulias luscinia, our summer 

 visitor the Nightingale, and the larger eastern D. 2J^i''i'lomela are 

 russet-brown in both sexes, with redder rump and tail, and whitish 

 lower parts. D. hajizi of Persia is intermediate {rf. p. 506). 



Our Hedge-sparrow, Accentoi^ modularis, is brown streaked 

 with blackish, and shews bluish-grey on the head, throat, and 

 breast ; but the Alpine Accentor, A. collaris, which rarely visits 

 Britain, has a white throat spotted with black, and flanks mottled 

 with chestnut ; while their congeners exhibit rufous lower parts or 

 pectoral bands, black throats, or whiter wings and tails. E2dit]ii- 

 anura is grey, brown, black and white above, with the crown, 

 rump, and breast crimson in one species and yellow in two ; 



^ The American Redstart is Setophaga ruticilla (Mniotiltidae), the Cape Robin is 

 Cossypha caffra, the Indian Robin Thamnobia, the New Zealand Robin Miro. 



