N0.12C7. LIST OF GENERIC TERMS OF BIRDS— RICHMOND. 677 
Dafiliila Coues, Auk. XIV, Apr., 1897, p. 207. 
Type, Querquedula eatorii Sharpe {Anatidm.'\ 
DaJiJuJch dim. of DafiJa. 
Dammeria Hartert, Bull. Brit. Oru. Club, VIII, Jul}^ 4, 1899, p. Ivii. 
Type, Dammeria henrici Hartert [Muscicaj/idce.] 
From Dtimmer, an island in the Banda Sea. 
Daphcenositta De Vis, Ibis, ser. 7, III, July, 1897, p. 380. 
Type, Da'phmwsitta miranda De Vis {^Sittidce.'] 
/la(f)oiv6^, bloody, blood-red; + Sitta {gItti]^ a kind of wood- 
pecker). 
t Darwinornis Moreno and Mercerat, Anales Mus. La Plata (Paleon. 
Argen., I), 1891, p. 60. 
T3"pe, Dannhwrnis copei Moreno and jNIercerat (fir^ species 
mentioned) {^Sterewnithes.^ 
Named for Charles Robert Darwin. 
Deconychura Cherrie, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XIV, Sept. 4, 1891, 
p. 338. 
T3'^pe, Deconychura ti/pica. Cherrie [Dendrocolaptidce.^ 
AeKa, ten; ovv^^ claw; ovpd, tail. 
Leltarhynchus Ridgway, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XVI, Oct. 25, 1893, 
p. 606. 
T^^pe, Ifi/iarckus flammidatus Lawrence \^Ty7xmnid(Je.^^ 
(A subgenus of 3£yiarGhus.) 
AlXra. delta; pvyx^^^, hill, from its ^-shaped bill. 
Dendrophaps Blyth, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, XIV, Pt. 2, 1846, 
p. 855. 
Type ^ [ Columhidcef] 
Ah'dpov^ a tree; <l>ocij^. pigeon. 
Dendrophassa Gloger, Hand- und Hilfsbuch, I, 1842, p. 359. 
Type, Columha aromatica Gmelin . . \^Treron{d(]eS\ 
Atvdpov^ a tree; ({)aaGa^ a wood pigeon. 
Dendrophila Hodgson, Madras Journ. Ijit. and Science, V, Apr., 1837, 
p. 432. 
New name for ArhoropJiila Hodgson, on grounds of purism. 
\^Phasianidce.^ 
Asvdpov, a tree; (f)iK.eGo, I love. 
Dendrotreron "Hodgson," Blyth, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, XIV, Pt. 
2, 1846, p. 867 (note). 
Type, Columba nijpalensis Hodgson ( = (7. hodgsoni Vigors). 
\^Columhidce.'\ 
Aavdpov^ a tree; -|- Treron {rpripcov^ a dove). 
^"At least three subgenera occur [of Carpophaga, as known at that time], at the 
head of which may be placed Lopholaimus, G. R. Gray, founded on the Col. antardica, 
Shaw (v. dilopha, Temminck) , of Australia; then follow the ordinary Dunkuls, of 
which the two Indian species are characteristic; and finally a short-winged type, with 
bill and feet as in the former, and colouring as in the division Chalcophaps (of the 
next subfamily), to which I apply the name Dendrophaps.'' 
