THE BIRDS OF SOUTH-WEST AND PENINSULAR SIAM. 209 



ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA, VOL. V. PAGES 1-207. 



Page 2, line 2 from bottom. For the third word read : — British. 



Page 3. Hume's three papers on " The Birds of the Western Half of the 



Malay Penmsula (Stray Feathers, viii, 1879, pp. 37-72, 151-163 ; 

 op. cit. ix, 1880, pp. 107-132) have not been mentioned in the 



synonomy as fully as they should have been : they contain refer- 

 ences to many birds from Peninsular Siam. 



Page 16, bracket 15. For Tropidoperdix in the last two entries 



read : — Tropicoperdix. 

 Page 17, No. 1. The Francolin of Southern Indo-Ohina will possibly 



have to be known, on account of smaller size than the Chinese 



bird, as Francollnus pintadeanus phayrei Blyth (Journ. Asiat. 



Soc. Bengal, xii, 1843, p. 1011 ; id. op. cit. xxiv, 1855, p. 480. 

 Pegu). See Bangs, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist, xliv, 1921, p. 576. 



Do. No. 2. Read : — Rhizothera longirostris longirostris 



(Temm.). 

 Page 20, line 2. For p. 25 read: — p. 28 (Penang). 



The type of Fhasianus castaneus Gray was, therefore, 



almost certainly an imported bird. 

 Page 22, line 1. For 532 read 632. 

 Page 23, No. 15. If the bird of the Malay Peninsula diflers from other 



races, Avith which we have not been able to compare it, it will be 



known as : — ■ 



Turnix pugnax atrogularis (Eyton). 



Ilemi'podius atrogularis, Eyton, P. Z. S. 1839, p. 107. Malay 

 Peninsula. 



Page 29, No. 20. Treron hisincta domvilii of Hainan has wings 

 (Jide Hartert in litt.), 6 6 155, 162, 163, 163, 164, 165; § 9 

 151, 152, 155 mm. 



We associate birds from E. and S. E. Siam Avitli the small 

 Javanese race, T. b. javana Rob. and Kloss (Journ, Fed. Malay 

 States Mus. xi, ]923, p. 53). 



Page 31, No. 23. Mr. W. J. F. Williamson has a pair of Treron 

 olax obtained at Naihoot, Langsuan, thus considerably in- 

 creasing the northern range of the species in the Peninsula. 



VOL. V, NO. 2, 1922. 



