_A LIST OF THE BIRDS OF PEGU. 191 
abundant in the Thyetmyo district, and becomes less common 
to the eastward, disappearing altogether, I think, at the sum- 
mit of the ridge of the Pegu range.* 
103.—Gecinus striolatus, Bly. (171.) 
Confined, as far as my experience goes, to the Thyetmyo 
and Prome districts, but I notice that Mr. Blanford records 
it from the Irrawaddy delta, and Lord Tweeddale from 
Tounghoo. 
104.—Gecinus vittatus, Vier. (171 dis.) 
Distributed over all parts of Pegu, and generally abundant. 
105.—Gecinus erythropygius, Elliot. 
There can be little doubt that Mr. Hume’s nigrigenis is 
the same as this.t I have procured it at Tounghoo, and 
it does not seem to cross the Sittang river into my limits 
in large numbers. I know nothing of its habits from 
personal acquaintance with the bird. 
106.—Gecinus occipitalis, Vig. (172.) 
One of the commonest Woodpeckers, and found all over 
the province. 
107.—Chrysophlegma flavinuchus, Gould. (173.) 
Abundant in all thick forests, more especially on hilly 
ground. 
108.—Chrysophlegma chlorolophus, Vieiil. (174.) 
I have observed this bird only in the northern portion of 
the province from Thyetmyo to Tounghoo, between the fron- 
tier and a line parallel to it about 30 miles south of it. It 
is tolerably common. 
109.—Gecinulus viridis, Bly. (177 bis.) 
Common on the Pegu hills between Thyetmyo and Tounghoo 
both in dry and in evergreen forest. I have not observed it 
elsewhere. 
* But reappearing in the plains country between the Sittang and Salween, and 
in the hills further east—Ep., S. F. 
+ Time will show. Elliot’s bird is from Cochin China. I admit that the 
Northern and Central Siamese bird is the same as mine, but I think that the 
Cochin Chinese bird differs as noted in Vol. Il, 471m, for I have ascertained 
that the plate and dimensions given in the Nouvelles Archives are accurate— 
Ep., 8. 
25 
