660 MANUAL OF PHILIPPINE BIRDS. 
Male.—Very similar to the male of A. chlorigaster, but smaller and 
with the breast and abdomen bright yellow. A male from Palawan 
measures: Wing, 68; tail, 48; or from base, 18; bill from postril, 
14; tarsus, 17. 
Female.—Similar to the female of A. chlorigaster but smaller. A 
female from Palawan, wing, 62; tail, 42; culmen from base, 16; bill from 
nostril, 13; tarsus, 15. 
“Ten males from Palawan average: Length, 131; wing, 66; tail, 47; 
culmen, 21; tarsus, 17; middle toe with claw, 16. Ten females, length, 
123; wing, 61; tail, 42; culmen, 20; tarsus, 16; middle toe with claw, 
15.” (Bourns and Worcester MS.) 
673. ANTHREPTES WIGLESWORTHI (Hartert). 
WIGLESWORTH’S SUNBIRD. 
Anthreptes malaccensis wiglesworthi HARTERT, Novit. Zool. (1902), 9, 209.* 
Anthreptes wiglesworthti McGrecor and WorcEstTER, Hand-List (1906), 
100. 
Bongao (Everett); Pangamian (Bartsch); Sulu (Guillemard, Platen, Bourns 
é& Worcester, Bartsch) ; Tawi Tawi (Hverett). 
Hartert does not give a full description of this bird, but states that the 
sides of the head are almost as red as with A. rhodolema and that 
the under side is like A. chlorigaster. I have not seen specimens of 
Anthreptes from any of the Sulu group of islands. 
674. ANTHREPTES CAGAYANENSIS Mearns. 
CAGAYAN SULU SUNBIRD. 
Anthreptes cagayanensis MEARNS; Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. (1905), 18, 6; 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. (1909), 36, 445; McGrecor and WORCESTER, 
Hand-List (1906), 100. 
Tal-lu-gus-li-gus, Moros of Cagayan Sulu. 
Cagayan Sulu (Mearns). 
“This is a slight insular form, most closely related to Anthreptes 
wiglesworthi (Hartert), from Sulu, P. I., from which it differs in being 
decidedly yellower below; the sides of the head are more reddish; the 
greater wing-coverts are narrowly edged with olive instead of broadly 
with ferruginous; and the bill is smaller. Iris hazel; bill all black; 
feet greenish olive, with under side of toes yellow.” (JMearns.) 
* Hartert’s remarks on Anthreptes malaccensis wiglesworthi are as follows: 
“Kopfseiten fast so roth wie bei rhodolaema, Unterseite wie bei chlorigaster 
(siehe oben). (Meinem zu friih verstorbenen ornithologischen Freunde Wigles- 
worth gewidmet, der mit A. B. Meyer zusammen in den ‘Birds of (elebes’ 
interessante Notizen iiber diese Gruppe gab.) Sulu Inseln. Typus Tring Museum, 
Sulu I. vy. 83, Powell coll. Alle Stiicke von den Sulu Inseln, die ich sah, sind ohne 
Zweifel zur gleichen Form zu rechnen.” 
