872 APPENDIX. 



Vol. I!, p. 1. Timalince. On more mature consideration of the extensive 

 and varied nature of the birds of this group, I now think that 

 they should form a distinct family, Timalid^e. 

 „ p. 16, No. 386. — Pyctorhis longirostris. "This form,"' writes Mr. 

 Blyth, " is allied to Acanthoptila." In this I quite agree, hav- 

 ing seen one specimen in the possession of Captain Pinwill, H. 

 M. 27th Regt., shot in long grass in the Terai. 



„ p. 29, No. 401, bis.— Pomatorhinus Phayrei, Blyth, 



must be added to the Indian Fauna, as that gentleman writes 

 me that he has seen specimens from Nepal. It is described 

 1. e., 7th line from the bottom. 



,, p. 56. — Artamus cucullatus of Nicholson, which has loug per- 

 plexed both Mr. Blyth and myself, and which I, in the text, 

 likened to a species of Sibia, turns out, Mr. Blyth writes me, 

 to have been founded on a bad native drawing of Sylvia orpliea ! 

 p. 78, No. 446. — Hyjmpetcs Ganeesa turns out to be the same 

 as my IVeilgherriensis, which last therefore must be suppressed, 

 although kept distinct by most systematists. 



„ p. 127, No. 485-6, bis.— Pratincola rubetra (Linmeus) 

 Sax. rubetroides, Jameson, ( MSS. ) The Whinchat. This 

 European bird, or a closely allied race, has been procured by 

 Mr. W. Jameson on the Salt range of the Punjab. 



M p. 128, No. 487. — The female of Rhodophila melanoleuca is 

 brown above, dirty white beneath ; and undoubtedly cogeneric 

 with Pratincola f err ea, No. 486. 



„ p. 146, No. 508. — Blyth writes me that Zusciola cyanura as 

 figured in the Fauna Japonica appeai-s to be quite different from 

 his Ianthia rvjilata ; yet Pallas' cyanura appears to me the 

 same. 



„ p. 157, No. 518. — Arundinax olivaceusz=Salicaria aedon, Pallas, 

 fid., Blyth in epist., and must therefore staud as A. aedon. 



„ p. 159, No. 520. — This species should be named the Streaked 

 Reed Warbler, the lesser Reed Warbler having been already 

 applied to another species, 516. 



,, p. 161. — The genus Tribura = Lusciniopsis. 



., p. 162, No. 525.— This, writes Blyth, is " apparently the same 



as my adult state of N eomis jlaoolivacea." 

 „ p. 1 63.— The genus Eoreitcs appears to have only 1 I ail- feathers. 



