364 The Gardens of the Sun. 



grey, the primaries white along the basal part of the outer web, 

 giving the wing a conspicuous white outer aspect ; tail-feathers dark 

 slaty grey, shading into blackish at the end of the feathers ; entire 

 crown and nape, as well as the sides of face, ear-coverts, and fore 

 part of cheeks deep chestnut-red, the under cheek -feathers slightly 

 tipped with ochraceous ; frontal plumes with lanceolate tips of light 

 ashy grey or hoary whitish ; under surface of body dull ochraceous 

 brown, with lighter shaft-lines of pale ochraceous, imparting a striped 

 appearance to the throat and breast ; the sides of the body more 

 ashy grey ; chin chestnut, like the sides of the face ; thighs dark 

 grey, with a few chestnut feathers near the tarsal bend ; under tail- 

 coverts chestnut ; under wing-coverts ashy grey, slightly marked 

 with ochraceous ; quills sepia-brown below, paler along the edge of 

 the inner web. 



Four specimens are sent by Mr. Treacher, all adult, and exactly 

 similar in plumage. On comparing them with Sumatran specimens 

 of I. mitrata, a very marked difference presents itself, which shows 

 that the Kina Balu bird belongs to a new species. Although similar 

 to I. mitrata in its general coloration and white- edged quills, it is 

 distinguished at once by its chestnut ear-coverts, while the chin and 

 fore part of the cheeks are also chestnut. 



16. TURDUS PALLENS. 



Turdus pattens, Pall. ; Salvad. torn. cit. p. 256. 

 An adult specimen, sent by Mr. Treacher. 



17. MONTICOLA SOLITARIES. 



Monticola solitarius (P. L. S. Mull.), Walden, Tr. Z. S. ix. p. 192. 



A specimen sent by Mr. Treacher. 



This is the second occurrence of the bird in Borneo, the first 

 having been recorded by me under the name of Monticola pandoo 

 (Ibis, 1877, p. 13), from Mr. Alfred Everett's Bintulu collection. 

 Mr. Treacher's specimen is in full blue-and-red plumage, with the 

 usual margins to the feathers found in the winter dress. 



For permission to use the foregoing Papers, I am 

 under obligations to James Britten, Esq., Editor of the 

 Journal of Botany, and to P. L. Sclater, Esq., Secretary 

 of the Eoyal Zoological Society of London. 



; 



BRADBURY, AQNEW, & CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS. 



