> ———E ee OO Oe 
ARTAMIDES. 481 
Balabac (Hverett); Calamianes (Bourns & Worcester); Palawan (Steere, 
Everett, Lempriere, Whitehead, Steere Exp., Bourns & Worcester, Celestino, 
White). 
Adult male.—Except wings and tail, nearly uniform pale gray, palest 
on uropygium and crissum, much lighter gray than in A. striatus or A. 
mindorensis ; no black on forehead, lores, and chin. A male from Pala- 
wan measures: Wing, 158; tail, 115; culmen from base, 29; bill from 
nostril, 21; tarsus, 25. 
Adult female.—General color pale gray like the male; rump and upper 
tail-coverts white, barred with black; black bars on under parts narrower 
than the white spaces, and under tail-coverts with only one or two bars 
on each feather. An immature female from Palawan measures: Wing, 
145; tail, 108; culmen from base, 25; bill from nostril, 18; tarsus, 25. 
Young.—The young male is barred like the young female and the 
young of both sexes have white fringes on the rectrices, remiges, and 
wing-coverts. 
“Fairly common ; frequents high trees. Three males average: Length, 
282; wing, 155; tail, 121; culmen, 32; tarsus, 23; middle toe with claw, 
26. A female, length, 279; wing, 150; tail, 114; culmen, 30; tarsus, 
25; middle toe with claw, 26. Iris pale yellow; bill, legs, feet, and 
nails black.” (Bourns and Worcester MS.) 
446. ARTAMIDES GUILLEMARDI Salvadori. 
GUILLEMARD’S ARTAMIDES, 
Artamides pollens GUILLEMARD, Proc. Zool. Soe. (1885), 258. 
Artamides guillemardi Satvapori, Ibis (1886), 153; SHARPE, Hand-List 
(1901), 3, 288; McGrecor and WorceEsTER, Hand-List (1906), 76. 
Bongao (Everett); Lapac (Guillemard); Sibutu (Hverett); Sulu (Platen, 
Bourns & Worcester) ; Tawi Tawi (Bowrns & Worcester). 
Male.—Under parts uniform gray; feathers covering nostrils, lores, 
and space in front of eye deep black. Tail, about 144. 
Female.—Entire upper and under parts uniform gray as in A. mindo- 
rensis. Wing, 170; tail, 142. 
In naming this species Salvadori compares it with A. schistaceus 
from the Sula Islands and does not state in what way it differs from 
the previously described Philippine species, but the diagnoses given above 
are sufficient to distinguish it. 
“Fairly common; frequents high trees in the forest. ‘Three males 
average: Length, 307; wing, 172; tail, 137; culmen, 34; tarsus, 26; 
middle toe with claw, 30. Four females, length, 316; wing, 168; tail, 
137; culmen, 35; tarsus, 25; middle toe with claw, 28. Iris very dark 
brown; legs, feet, nails, and bill black.” (Bourns and Worcester MS.) 
