me / 
Vol. xl.] 156 
The type, which is in the McConnell collection, was collected 
by Mr. F. V. Connell during his expedition to Mount Roraima — 
in October, 1898. 
Henicorhina leucosticta hauxwelli, subsp. nov. 
Adult female. Differs from H. leucosticta leucosticta in 
being darker on the upper surface and flanks and smaller in 
wing-measurement. 
Total length 99 mm., exposed culmen 14, wing 49, tail 23, 
tarsus 20. 
Habitat. Kast Peru and Hast Ecuador. 
The type, which is in the British Museum, was collected 
at Elvira, East Peru, by J. Hauxwell (Salvin-Godman 
collection). 
Dr. C. B. Ticenursrt communicated the following de- 
scription of two new races of Indian birds :— 
(1) Crateropus terricolor sindianus, subsp. nov. 
Like C. ¢t. terricoior, but altogether paler. Upper parts 
paler and greyer, dark streaks ill-defined or almost obsolete; 
throat paler dusky grey; belly paler cream-colour, flanks 
paler. 
No difference in measurements. 
‘ype loc. Karachi, Sind. 
Type-specimen in coll. C. B. Ticehurst, no. I. 1424, g, 
Karachi, 2. 4.1919. 
Distribution. Sind, Mt. Aboo, Punjab. 
None of the various names of this Babbler are referable 
to this race. I have doubtfully accepted Hodgson’s name of 
terricolor for -this species, but it appears to me that the 
first reference (J. A.S.B.) to terricolor hadly'amounts to a 
diagnosis. 
If it should stand, Nepal is the type-locality of the typical 
race. This is, of course, the Babbler known, by some of the 
older authors as Crateropus canorus, which Gray years ago 
pointed out was a Chinese species. Hume was conscious of 
the fact that Sind birds were not typical terricolor, but finally 
lumped all the races together. 
