1863.] MR. A. NEWTON ON DISPERSION OF SEEDS BY BIRDS. 127 



7. Pliasianus wallichii. 



8. Thaumalea pieta. 



9. Euplocamus vieilloti. 



10. erythrophthalmus. 



1 1 . nychthemerus. 



12. lineatus. 



1 3. horsfieldi. 



14. melanotus. 



15. albocristatus. 



16. Gallus bankiva. 



1 7. Gallus sonneratii. 



18. furcatus. 



15). Ceriornis satyra. 



20. melanocephala. 



21. Pavo cristatus. 



22. nigripennis. 



23. muticus. 



24. Polyplectron chinquis. 



25. Argus giganteus. 



N.B. Of the species printed in italics we have examples now alive 

 in the Gardens. 



5. On an Illustration of the Manner in which Birds may 



OCCASIONALLY AID IN THE DiSPERSION OF SeEDS. By 



Alfred Newton, M.A., F.Z.S. 



Last summer, my friend Mr. Henry Stevenson, the Secretary of the 

 Norfolk and Norwich Museum, showed me the singular specimen 

 which, by his liberality, I now exhibit. It will be seen that it is 



0>Im, 



the leg and mutilated foot of a French Partridge {Caccabis rufa, 

 G. R. Gray), a great part of which is imbedded in a mass of clay. 



