Birds from Kina Balu. 885 



than the male does not amount to much. The great differ- 

 ence between C.jefferyi and C. minor is found in the whitish 

 inner secondaries, which have no subterminal black bar at all, 

 and the bar before the end of the tail-feathers is very much 

 narrower. 



Fam. MusciCAPiDiE. 



2. MuscicAPULA MACULATA (Tick.) ; Sharpc, Cat. B. Brit. 

 Mus. iv. p. 207. 



No. 1907. " Met with from 3000 to 8000 feet. I have a 

 nest with one egg. Bill, feet, and iris black.'^ I cannot see 

 any difference between this male bird and specimens from 

 the Himalayas. The bird Mr. Whitehead sends as the 

 female is undoubtedly the same as my Muscicapula wester- 

 manni (P. Z. S. 1888, p. 270), so that if these two birds are 

 sexes of one species, the latter may have to be separated on 

 the female alone, as the males appear to be exactly alike, 

 while M. westermanni is certainly different from any Hima- 

 layan specimens of M. maculata. 



3. Muscicapula hyperythra (Blyth); Sharpe, t. c. p. 206. 

 Nos. 1957, 2325. '' Bill and iris black; legs dirty white. 



From 4000 to 8000 feet. I found a nest and eggs, but the 

 latter were hard set." 



Apparently identical with Himalayan specimens. New to 

 Borneo. 



4. Cryptolopha trivirgata (Strickl.) ; Sharpe, t. c. p. 396. 

 Nos. 2072, 2106. "Iris black; bill dark brown; feet 



slaty grey ; soles yellow. Met with from 5000 to 9000 feet." 

 This species is also recorded from Borneo for the first 

 time. 



5. Rhinomyias gularis, sp. n. 



Adult male. General colour above dark ochraceous brown 

 of a russet tint ; upper tail-coverts more rufous brown ; wing- 

 coverts like the back, the median and greater coverts dusky, 

 edged with the same colour as the back ; bastard-wing, 

 primary-coverts, and quills dusky brown, edged with rufous 

 brown, the inner secondaries with dusky cross-bars under 



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