ORDER PASSERES. 377 



The foreign species of blackbirds are numerous. 

 Belonging to the Old World may be noted, 



T. Senegalensis, Gml. PI. Enl. t. 563. f. 3. 

 Fuscous-gray; belly whitish; quills and tail brOAvn, 

 Africa. 



7\ Ornatus, Vieil. Vail. O. A. t. 86. 

 Black ; golden-green gloss ; tail short, nearly equal. 



T. Nigricapillus, Vieil. Vail. O. A. t. 108. 

 Olive-brown ; beneath bluish-ash ; crown black. Africa. 



r. Perspicillatus, Gml. PI. Enl. t. 604. 



Greenish-brown, beneath yellowish ; head and neck 

 ash ; forehead and band on each side of the eye black. 

 India. 



T. Dominicanus, Gml. PI. Enl. t. 627. f. 2. 

 Brown, glossed with violet and blue j beneath brownish- 

 white ; tail-base bluish, end greenish. 



T. Squammeus, Vieil. Vail. O. A. t. 116. 



Head, neck, and chest black ; feathers of belly and 

 beneath dirty- white, black tipt ; of wing-coverts and 

 back black, yellow -edged ; tail subcuneate. Africa. 



T. Tibicen, Vieil. Vail. O. A. t. 112. f 2. 



Brown-spotted, beneath pale-gray; tail wedge-shaped, 

 pointed. Africa. 



T. Pho^nicurus, Vieil. Vail. O. A. t. 111. 



Olive ; eyebrows white ; eye-streak black j quill and 

 two middle tail-feathers bay ; sides, throat, and chest 

 red. Africa. 



