212 CAMPEPHAGA IGNEA 
Abyssinia at Kombolsha and Kondura, and writes: “ On each 
occasion a pair was seen in lightly wooded country and in 
the immediate vicinity of a village. It is of tame habits.” 
Mr. J. J. Harrison obtained a specimen at Gardula between 
the Lakes Margarita and Stefanie, and a large series has been 
collected in the Gallaland district towards the Kaffa country 
by Mr. Oscar Neumann, and by Erlanger between Harrar and 
the mouth of the Jub River, which is the most eastern range 
known for the species. 
I have not found any information regarding the breeding 
habits of this species, but we may presume them to be very 
similar to those of C. nigra. 
Campephaga ignea. 
Campephaga ignea, Reichen. J. f. O. 1902, p. 258 Nyangabo ; id. Vég. 
Afr, ii. p. 522 (1903). 
Campephaga phcenicea, Oust. Nat. 1893, p. 126 Ubangi R. 
‘ Differs from C. phenicea only in having the bright patch on the wing- 
coverts much paler, fiery red. Wing 3:76 to 4:0 inches. 
“ The female resembles that of C. phanicea, but the crown, hind neck, 
and upper back are washed with green ’’’ (Reichenow). 
The Flame-shouldered Cuckoo-Shrike inhabits the Ndus- 
suma country on the west side of the Albert Nyanza. 
The types, a male and female, were obtained by Emin at 
Nyangabo, and Dr. Reichenow suggests that the C. phenicea 
of Oustalet, obtained by Dybowski at the Ubangi River, a 
northern tributary of the Congo, possibly belongs to this form. 
But I look upon it as very doubtfully distinct from the typical 
C. phenicea, being apparently intermediate between that 
form and typical C. wanthornoides. To which of these three 
forms belong a female specimen procured by Bohndorff at 
Ndoruman it is impossible to say. 
Tt 
