1877.] DISTRICT or LAMPONG, S.E. SUMATEA. 499 



113. Htpothtmis azurea. 



Musdcapa azurea, Bodd. Tabl. PI. Enl. p. 41 (1783). 

 Muscicapa ccerulea, Gm., Raffles, t. c. p. 312, " Sumatra." 



114. MUSCIPETA AFFINIS. 



TcMtrea affims, A. Hay, J. A. S. B. 1846, p. 292, " Malacca." 

 Sumatran specimens similar to typical. 



115. Ctornis elegans. 



Musdcapa elegans, Temm. PI. Col. 596. f. 1, " Sumatra" (1836). 



The species obtained by Mr. Everett at Marup, in North Borneo, and provisionally identified 

 by me with C. elegans (Ibis, 1872, p. 373*), is not to be specifically distinguished from the typical 

 example in Mr. Buxton's collection. 



116. Leucocekca javanica. 



Musdcapa javanica, Sparrm. Mus. Carls, fasc. iii. t. 75, "Java " (1789) ; Raffles, t. c. p. 312, 

 " Sumatra." 



Agrees with typical and Malaccan specimens. 



117. HiRUNDO JAVANICA. 



Hirundo javanica, Sparrm. Mus. Carls, fasc. iv. t. 100, "Java" (1789). 

 Neilgherry examples {H. domicola, Jerd.) cannot be separated. 



118. Ctmborhtttchus macrorhtnchus. 



Todus macrorhynchus, Gm. S. N. i. p. 446 (1788). rbis. 1S77, 



Eurylaimus lemniscatus. Raffles, t. c. p. 296, "Sumatra" (1821). 



Cymhorhynchus malaccensis, Salvadori, Atti R. Ac. Sc. Tor. ix. p. 425, "Malacca" (1874). 



Six examples are in Mr. Buxton's collection, and they all possess the three outer pair of 

 rectrices more or less marked with white on their inner webs. Therefore, according to Count 

 Salvadori's view, the Sumatran bird should fall under C. malaccensis, Salvad. But if the 

 Sumatran and Malaccan birds are really specifically distinct from the B<irnean, and if the 

 Bornean is the true Great-billed Tody of Latham, a title already exists in lemniscatus. Raffles ; 

 and that o{ malaccensis, Salvadori, is, in any case, unnecessary. 



119. Caltptomena viridis. 



Calyptomena viridis. Raffles, t. c. p. 295, "Singapore, Sumatra" (1821). 



Raffles affirms that the sexes do not ditfer ; but this statement has not been supported by 

 recent research (conf. Salvadori, t. c. p. 107). The species inhabits the Malay peninsula and 

 Borneo, specimens from these regions not differing from Sumatran. 



* lAntea, p. 226.— Ed.] 



