Vol. xxxi.] 18 



of brownisli ; breast and sides of the body pale brown 

 indistinctly mottled, with whitish ; belly and under tail- 

 coverts whitish. Wing 82-85 mm. ; tail 57-58. 



'^The present species resembles P. reichardi Reich, in the 

 coloration of the upperparts, but the breast and sides are 

 not streaked. It seems quite certain that P. elgonensis is 

 not founded on fully adult examples of P. reichardi, for the 

 latter has been found breeding in its striped plumage. 



" Hab. Mt. Elgon, 6000 ft. 



''Type in the British Museum : S- Mangiki, 14. vi. 00. 

 Presented by Mr. F. J. Jackson." 



Mr. F. J. Jackson forwarded the description of a new 

 species of Cuckoo-Shrike from Uganda, which had hitherto 

 been confounded with the West African Campophaga quis- 

 calina Finsch ; he proposed to name it 



Campophaga martini, sp. n. 



Adult male. Similar to the male of C. quiscalina. 



Adult female. Differs from the female of C. quiscalina in 

 having the chest and rest of the underparts much paler 

 yelloWj and the white throat, chest, sides of the breast and 

 flanks finely barred with dusky. Wing 100 mm. 



Hab. British East Africa and Uganda, 6000-7000 ft. 



Types in the British Museum : S • Nandi, 6500 ft., 

 2. V. 98. ? . Bavine, 7500 ft., 23. viii. 97. F. J. Jackson coll. 



Obs. This species, which had hitherto been overlooked, I 

 have named in honour of Mr. James Martin, of the Mabira 

 Bubber Estate, who is well known throughout East Africa 

 and Uganda. 



I have presented the types of this Cuckoo-Shrike to the 

 British Museum. 



Mr. Ogilvie-Grant exhibited a Golden-eye which had 

 been shot by Mr. F. Menteith Ogilvie on the Biver Aide, 

 Suffolk, on the 1st of February, 1908. This bird was at 

 the time believed to be an immature male of Barrow's 

 Golden-eye (Clangula islandica) [cf. Bull. B. O. C, xxiii. 

 pp. 63-65 (1909)], but it had now been conclusively proved 

 to be a Common Golden-eye (C glaucion). 



