CHAP. XVIII.] 



BIRDS. 



209 



Hebrides, and Tasmania ; Artamides (1 sp.), Celebes ; Pteropo- 

 docys (1 sp.), Australia ; Q'"^ i^so 1257 ms^ Campephaga (16 sp.), 

 Austro-Malaya, and New Caledonia, Philippines, the Ethiopian 

 region; Vohocivora (8 sp.) the Oriental regijii (excludino- 

 Philippines) ; Lalage (18 sp.), the whole Malay Archipelago to 

 New Caledonia and Australia ; Symmorphus (1 sp.), Australia ; 

 Oxynotus (2 sp.), Mauritius and Bourbon ; (^^04^ Cochoa (3 sp.), 

 Himalayas, Java. The position of this last genus is doubtful. 

 Jerdon puts it in the Liotrichidae ; Sundeval in the Sturnida ; 

 Bonaparte in the Dicruridse ; Professor Newton suggests the 

 Pycnonotidee ; but it seems on the whole best placed here. 



Family 16.— DICEUPtlD^. (6 Genera, 58 Species.) 



General Distribution. 



Neotropical 

 Sttb-regions. 



Nearctic 

 sub-begions. 



PaL/EARCTIC 



Sub-regions. 



Ethiopian 

 Sub-regions. 



Oriental 

 Sdb-kegions. 



Australian 

 sub-beoions. 



1.2.3.4 



1.2.3.4 



1.2—- 



The Dicruridae, or Drongo Shrikes (Dicruridae of the Hand 

 List, omitting the genus Mclcenornis), have nearly the same 

 distribution as the last family, with which they are sometimes 

 united. They are, however, most abundant and varied in the 

 Oriental region, much less so both in the Australian and Ethio- 

 pian regions. The distribution of the genera is as follows : — 



Dicrurus (46 sp., in several sub-genera), has the range of the 

 whole family, extending east to New Ireland, and one species in 

 Australia ; Chcetorhynchus (1 sp.). New Guinea ; Bhringa (2 sp.), 

 Himalayas to Borneo (Plate IX. vol. i. p. 339) ; Chihia (2 sp.) 

 Himalayas eastward to North China ; Chaptia (3 sp.), all India to 

 Malacca and Formosa ; Irena (4 sp.). Central India, Assam, and 

 Burmah to Borneo and the Philippine Islands. This last genus 

 is placed by Jerdon among the Pycnonotidse, but seems to come 

 most naturally here or in tlie last family. 



