294 Journal of the F.M.S. Museums.  [Vov. XI, 
Iris purplish crimson, bare spot on lower eyelid pale 
greenish yellow, bill black, feet black or blackish, soles 
brownish yellow. 
The immature bird has the feet blackish and quite 
young birds have them grey with blackish brown spots. 
Wings, ¢ 123, 127, 129, 130, 121 (subad.), 113 (imm.) ; 
2 127, 128, 115, 117 (subad.) mm. 
Younger birds are paler and browner than adults ; 
they have an indistinct median whitish area on the abdomen, 
obscured with brown, which is broadest on the immature 
specimen. 
Very common in secondary jungle, plantations, brush- 
wood and also, but rarer, in old forest. It travels in small 
flocks of six to ten birds, progressing from one tree to 
another with clumsy flight and never flying a great distance. 
The birds are very noisy, producing a great variety of 
whistling, crowing, scraping, and rolling sounds, which 
are difficult to describe. They are very curious and most 
ageravating to huntsmen, for as soon as they are alarmed 
by some strange appearance the whole party keeps up a 
concert of the most confounded cries, by which all the 
game in the neighbourhood is warned. 
238. Garrulax palliatus palliatus (Temm.). 
R. & K., I, p. 184. 
26, 9. Mt. Talamau, Ophir Districts, 1300- 
1500 M. 
2, @.. Tanangtalu, Ophir Districts, 1000 M. 
26, 2 imm. Sungei Kumbang, Korinchi, 1400 M. 
26. Rimbo Pengadang, Lebong, Bencoolen, 
1000 M. 
Iris dark brown, dark crimson, dark grey, or yellowish 
brown, orbital skin pale bluish grey, pale greenish blue or 
pale blue, bill black, feet and claws slaty black, soles dirty 
brownish yellow. 
The Korinchi female had the orbital skin yellowish blue 
and was yellow at the gape ; apparently an immature bird. 
Wings, 6 127, 127, 128, 128, 130, 132, 135; ¢@ 123, 135, 
139 mm. 
Contents of stomach : fruit and insects, in one instance 
the bones of a lizard or frog. 
The birds live in old forest and travel in small flocks, 
sometimes numbering a dozen or more birds. They have 
the same clumsy flight of the G. bicolor and creep along 
the boughs like small mammals. 
The birds are shyer than G. bicolor and less noisy, 
but they produce also a great variety of sounds. 
