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respective distinctions was thought of: the only object appears 



therefore to have been the substitution of Pachyrhynchus for 

 Psaris. 



The Lanius Inquisitor. Olfers. This description is insufficient 

 to identify the species intended. It is, indeed, applicable to 

 Psaris Jardinii, but is equally so to another, totally distinct, in 

 our museum. We suspect there is also a third, which perfectly 

 agrees with this description of L. Inquisitor. 



Tityra Viridis. Vieill. Psaris, Cuvierii. These birds may, 

 perhaps, be the same. The former name being changed by M. 

 Vieillot, near two years after we published the species. M. 

 Spix has very properly retained the specific, but altered the 

 generic designation. 



Having personally examined nearly the whole of the species 

 here mentioned, we shall arrange them in their respective affi- 

 nities, and in accordance with the views already detailed in the 

 Zoological Illustrations. (N. S. pi. 41.) 



Psaris. Cuv. 



1. Cayanus. Cuv. 2. Jardinii. New Zool. 111. pi. 35. 



3. Inquisitor. Olfers. 4. Semifasciatus Pachyrhynchus. 

 (Tityra Personata. Jardene and Selby, pi. 24.) 5. Erythrogenys. 

 Selby. 6. Cristatus. Zool. 111. pi. 41. 



Pachyrhynchus, J^ohis. New Zool. III. pi. Al. 



1. Cuvierii. Zool. 111. 1. pi. 32. 2. Niger. 3. Cenerascens. 



4. Rufescens. 5. Validus? 6. Niger. 



296. Trichophorus. The hairs, which are so peculiarly developed in 

 the genus Trichophorus, are dispersed among the feathers of the 

 nape ; they are very slender, and setaceous ; from their elasti- 

 city they may, with propriety, be called bristles. 



307. Tanagra Rudis. Lath, first described by Sparman, is the female 

 of Tanagra Brazilia, of Linn., first detected by us in 1813. It 

 inhabits Brazil, not Coromandel. 



