113 
Pyriglena nudiceps, mihi, of which Mr. Gould has a specimen from 
Panama, and the MM. Verreaux have lately received examples from 
Santa Martha in New Grenada, 
There are several other birds of this family in the collection that I 
cannot make out. A modern monograph of the group would be a 
great addition to our knowledge of South American ornithology. 
31. Conopophaga aurita (Linn.) (Pl. Enl. 822). 
Agrees with Cayenne specimens. 
TYRANNINE. 
32. Pyrocephalus rubineus (Bodd.), Pl. Enl. 675. fig. 1. 
33. Todirostrum 2, , 
34. TyRANNULA PHa@NIcURA, Sclater, sp. nov. (Pl. LXVI. 1). 
T. flavo-olivacea: dorso imo et ventre flavissimis: capite nigro- 
cinerascente, crista media flava utrinque nigra : fronte lorisque 
albis : gula cinerea : alis nigricantibus, tectricibus majoribus et 
secondariis rufescente limbatis : cauda unicolore clare rufa. 
Long. tota 4:0, alee 2°5, caudee 1°7. 
Obs.—Similis T. ornate, Lafr. Rev. et Mag. de Zool. 1853, p. 57, 
(Pl. LXVI. 2), sed cauda clare rufa et secondariis rufescente margi- 
natis sane diversa. 
35. Elania cayennensis (Linn.). 
TZNIOPTERINE. 
36. Copurus filicauda (Spix). 
TITYRINZ. 
37. Tityra marginata (Licht.). 
AMPELID. 
38. Pipreola Sclateri (Cornalia). 
Euchlornis Sclatert, Corn. Jard. Cont. to Orn. 1852, p. 133. 
pl. 101; Rev. et Mag. de Zool. 1853, p. 104. pl. 4. 
Dr. Cornalia, to whom I owe many thanks for the honour he has 
done me in calling this elegant bird after my name, rightly insists on 
the claims of priority of De Filippi’s genus Euchlornis over Lafres- 
naye’s Pyrrhorhynchus. But both these names must, I think, give 
way to Swainson’s term Pipreola, established in 1838 (Animals in 
Menag. p. 357), the type of which, his P. chlorolepidota, seems 
closely allied to D’Orbigny’s Ampelis viridis. I was rejoiced to see 
this bird in the present collection, as it clears up a mystery about 
its habitat, which Dr. Cornalia supposed to be Peru or Bolivia. But 
I have now no doubt that the type specimen in the Museo Civico at 
Milan, which is the only other I have seen, came, as the present, 
from the province of Quixos, and was probably collected there by 
the enterprising Italian traveller Osculati. 
39. Pipreola Riefferi (Boiss.). 
Ampelis Riefferi, Boiss. Rev. Zool. 1840, p. 3. 
No. CCLXVII.—Procrepinés or THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 
