ANTICHROMUS ANCHIETA 389 
in the cotton and coffee plantations near the villages of the 
natives. Recently Koenig and le Roi obtained four of 
these Bush Shrikes in the “Sudd” region of the White Nile 
near Bor, as well as at Lado and Redjaf still higher up the 
river. 
The following specimens in the British Museum have 
been examined: Gold Coast Colony—Ashantee type (Gould), 
Fantee (Haynes, Ussher, and Swanzy), Accra (Haynes), Cape 
Coast Castle (Shelley), Krachi, Kpong and Kintampo (Alex- 
ander); Southern Nigeria—Agoulerie (Kemp); Camaroon— 
Manenguba (Alexander) ; Portuguese Congo—Massabi (Petit) ; 
Northern Nigeria—Abeshi, Mutum Biu (Alexander); French 
Congo—Ubangi and Welle rivers (Alexander); ‘Uganda— 
Ruwenzori (Woosnam), Toro (Jackson), Ankole (Doggett) 
Wadalai (Emin), Lake Kagambah, Lake Mutanda (Kemp) ; 
British Hast Africa—Nandi (Jackson); Abyssinia—Mendi 
and Gelangal (Lovat), Bure (Degen), Djimma, Kullo and 
Gumma (Zaphiro). 
Antichromus anchiete. 
Telephonus anchiete, Bocage, Jorn. Lisb. ii. p. 344 (1870) Pongo 
Andongo; id. Orn. Angola, p. 225, pl. 4 (1881); Gadow, Cat. B. M. 
viii. p. 129 (1883); Swynnerton, Ibis, 1907, p. 47, 1908, p. 51 
Gazaland ; O.-Grant, Ibis, 1908, p. 291 N.W. Tanganyika. 
Bocagia anchiete, Shelley, B. Africa, i. No. 750 (1896). 
Antichromus anchietz, Sharpe, Handl. B. iv. p. 301 (1903). 
Pomatorhynchus anchietz, Reichen. Vog. Afr. ii. p. 553 (1903); Neave, 
Ibis, 1910, p. 229 Katanga. 
Telephonus reichenowi, Neum. J. f. O. 1900, p. 120 German Hast Africa. 
Antichromus reichenowi, Sharpe, Handl. B. iv. p. 301 (1903). 
Pomatorhynchus reichenowi, Reichen. Vog. Afr. ii. p. 552 (1903). 
Adult. Very similar to A. minutus, but without any trace of the black 
patches on the scapulars and mantle. In the adults the rufous of the back 
rather richer and darker in tone. The female also differs from that of 
A. minutus in the same particulars. Iris pink, bill black, feet slaty. 
Length 75 inches, wing 3:1, tail 3-2, culmen 0°70, tarsus 0:90. N’Dalla Tando, 
3, 4. 8. 08 (Ansorge). 
July, 1912. 26 
