262 Zoological Society : — 



Fig. 3. Plumularia simills : portion of a plume magnified. 



Fig. 4. The same : gonothecae magnified. 



Figs. 5, 6. Plumularia echinulata : portions of plume magnified. 



Plate VIII. 

 Figs. 1-5. Laomedea angulata, of the natural size and magnified. 

 [To be continued.] 



PROCEEDINGS OF LEARNED SOCIETIES. 



ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 



April 23, 1861.— John Gould, Esq., F.R.S., V.P., in the 

 Chair. 



Description of a New Species of the Family Caprimul- 

 gid,e. By John Gould, Esq., F.R.S., etc. 



Chordeiles? pusillus. 



Crown of the head, back, and lesser wing-coverts dark brown, 

 mottled with grey and rufous, produced by each feather being crossed 

 by interrupted bars of grey on the basal three-fourths, and with ru- 

 fous near the tip ; the greater wing-coverts, tertiaries, and scapu- 

 laries are similarly marked, but the bands are larger and more 

 freckled, and are mingled grey and rufous, these feathers are also 

 largely tipped with rufous ; primaries very dark brown, the three 

 outermost crossed at about two-thirds from their base with a broad 

 band of white, which on the fourth feather assumes the form of a 

 large oval spot ; the remaining primaries are marked near their bases 

 with buffy white ; upper tail-coverts brown crossed by irregular bands 

 of buffy grey, and encircled with rufous at the tip ; two central tail- 

 feathers the same, the lateral ones brown, crossed by bands for three 

 parts of their length from their base, and the two on each side next 

 the central ones with a large spot of white at the tip ; on the throat 

 a large arrow-head-shaped mark of white ; feathers of the chest 

 brown, tipped with buff, forming a band across this part of the body ; 

 under surface crossed by numerous narrow, blackish-brown and 

 greyish- white bars , which latter become larger and whiter as they 

 proceed towards the vent ; under tail-coverts white ; tarsi naked and, 

 with the feet, mealy-brown. 



Total length 5^ inches ; wing 5 ; tail 2\ ; tarsi \. 



Hab. Supposed to be Bahia. 



Remark. — This is by far the smallest Goatsucker I have ever seen, 

 the size of its body not exceeding that of a common Sparrow (Passer 

 domest icus) . Its gape is entirelv destitute of bristles. I believe I 

 have placed it in the right genus ; at the same time I may observe 

 that the wings are more curved, and the primaries less resistant, than 

 in the other members of the genus Chordeiles. It is doubtless a 

 fully adult male. 



