236 Journal of the F.M.S. Museums. Vor ssViEIie 
0 ® : 5 P : 
while the mantle in the female is much more greenish than in 
O. maculatus. 
164 Oriolus xanthonotus (Horsf.). 
Ortolus xanthonotus Horsf., Trans. Linn. Soc. xill, p. 153 
(1821). 
a *. imm. Siolak Daras, Korinchi Valley, Suma- 
tra, 3,000 feet, - 28th March. [No. 484.] 
“Tris red, bill maroon brown, feet grey.” 
165. Oriolus cruentus subsp. consanguineus (Wardl. Rams.). 
Analcipus cruentus, Wardl. Rams., P. Z. S. 1880, p. 15; 
Vorderman, Nat dnjd\eNederls windy xlix, spr 4uein non sos 
(1889). 
Ortolus cruentus, Buttikofer (nec. Wagl.), Notes Leyden 
Mus. 1x, p. 72 (1887). 
Analcipus consanruimeus, WWardl. Rams., Ibis, 1881, p. 33, 
OW, les 2,35 Salwvacl. Amin, Wiis, Cie Com, (@) sai, jo. 7x 
(1891). 
Oriolus consanguineus, Sharpe, Ibis, 1887, p. 438; Ogilvie 
Grant, Fascic. Malay Zool. in, p. 68 (1905) ; Robinson, Journ. 
Fed. Malay States Mus. u, p. 211 (1909). 
a-m. 6éad.,1 6 imm.,6?%. Siolak Daras, Korinchi 
Valley, Sumatra, 3,000 feet.  15th-28th 
March, 1914. ([Nos. 126, 147, 148, 232-3, 
286, 302, 305. 323, 334-5, 463, 499-] 
n—b'. to 6 ad., 1 S$ imm., 5 %. Sungei Kumbang, 
Korinchi, Sumatra, 4,700 feet. 31st March- 
5th May, 1914. [Nos. 520, 546, 636, 734, 
797, 809, 835, 865, 875, 964, 966, 1049, 1060, 
1067, 1580. | 
cs td Koninchimkeal Ssunaatray 7400) tee: seit 
May, 1914. [No. 1434.] 
d'-f’. 34. Barong Bharu, Barisan Range, West 
Sumatra, Lat. 2° S. 4,000 feet. \4th-roth 
June, 1914. [Nos. 1902, 1918, 1968. | 
“Tris hazel, bill bluish slate, tipped with black, feet bluish 
slate.” 
Very common singly or in pairs in heavy jungle, in the 
lower slopes, but not found in the open and scarce above 5,000 
feet. 
Grant (loc. cit.) has remarked that specimens of this 
species from the Malay Peninsula are larger (wing 5.4 in. or 
137 mm.) than those from Sumatra (wing 5.1-5.2 in. or 
I29-131.5 mm.), and our large series bear out his statements: 
eleven fully adult birds from Sumatra range from 126 137 mm. 
in wing length and average 132.8, while ten from the mount- 
ains of the Malay Peninsula have a range of 133-145, and 
average 138.25. The bills of the mainland birds are also 
noticeably longer. 
Expedition to Korinchi; 
