ART. o BIRDS FROM YUNNAN AND SZECHWAN, CHINA EILEY 43 



in fact, I can not detect any appreciable difference between them. A 

 male from Shensi and another from Hnpeh are not so strongly tinged 

 with yellow below, the occipital dark mark is darker; they evidently 

 represent a different form that for the present I do not wish to add 

 to the confusion by naming. 



Stresemann ^^ has written a review and without more material it 

 would be wise to accept his conclusions. 



155. REGULOmES HUMII PRAEMIUM Mathews and Iredale 



Regulokles hnniil praemium Mathews and Ireoale, Aus. Av. Record, vol. 

 3, 1915, p. 45 (Russia). 



One male, Likiang, 8,200 feet, May 15. 



This specimen is in a bad state of preservation. The wing bars 

 are almost worn off ; only the bar on the greater Aving coverts shows 

 faintly. Above it is moi'e greenish and below more tinged with 

 yellowish than the majority of specimens from east China. It is 

 quite possible that it does not belong to this form at all, but I do not 

 know where else to place it. 



156. REGULOIDES PROREGULUS FORRESTI (Rothschild) 



Phiflloscoiyus proreffulus forresti Rothschild. Nov. ZooL, vol. 28, 1921, 

 p. 45 (Lichiang Range, Yunnan). 



One unsexed, Nguluko, April 13 ; two females, Likiang Moun- 

 tains, 11,000 feet, April and June. 



157. REGULOIDES PULCHER PULCHER (Blyth) 



Phylloscopus pulcJter Blyth, Journ. Asiatic Soc. Bengal, vol. 14, 1845, 

 p. 592 (Nepal). 



One male and one female, Likiang Mountains, 12,000 feet, April 

 and July; one male, Tseh Chung Mountains, Mekong Valley, 

 October; one male, mountains near Yangtza, Mekong Valley, No- 

 vember; two males and one female, Hofuping Mountains, Mekong 

 Valley, November. 



158. OREOPNEUSTE ARMANDI (Milne-Edwards) 



Abrornis armaudi Milne-Edwakds, Nouv. Arch. Mus. Paris, vol. 1, Bull. 

 1865, p. 22, pi. 2, fig. 1 (N. China). 



One unsexed, Heslnve, 10,000 feet. May 2: one female, Bayiwua, 

 east of Likiang Mountains, June; two males and four females, 

 Likiang Mountains, 11,000-12,000 feet, May, June, and September. 



This sj)ecies I failed to recognize from the poor descriptions 

 consulted and sent three of the above specimens to Outram Bangs, 

 who kindly identified them. The English ornithologists compare it 

 in their descriptions with OreopTieioste fuscata, a species which it 



=»0rn. Monatsb., vol. 32, 1924, pp. 8-9. 



