252 FIPRIDJ2. 



Sj>. 2. Pa. striatus. 



Pipra striata. Steph. v. x. p. 20. pi. 4. — Van Dicmcn's Land. 

 Sp. 3. Pa. gularis. 



Pipra gularis. Stcph. v. x.p. 1 7. — Sylvia hirundinacca. Steph. 

 v. x. p. G13. — The Society Islands. 

 Sp. 4. Pa. superciliosus. 



Pipra superciliosa. Steph. v. x. p. 34. — New Holland. 

 Sp. 5. Pa. Australis. 

 Pa. olivaceo-viridis, dorso Jidvo macidato; guld pectore tcctrici- 



busque caudcc injerioribus Jlavis ; ventre pallide Juscesccntc ; 



vertice nigra albo macidato ; lined alba a nares ad oculos. 

 Olive-green Pardalotus, with the back spotted with fulvous; the 



throat, breast, and under tail-coverts yellow ; the belly pale 



brownish; the crown black, spotted with white; a white line 



from the nostrils to the eyes. 

 New Holland Manakin. Lath. Gen. Hist. v. \u.f. 238. 



" Length four inches and a half: beak black : the 

 crown black, marked with round white spots : from 

 the nostrils to the eyes a white streak : sides under 

 the eyes, and of the neck to the wing, grey and dusky 

 mixed : the back glossy olive-brown : on the middle 

 of each feather a glossy buff-coloured spot : rump pale 

 tawny, or ferruginous : chin and middle of the neck 

 before, as far as the breast, fine yellow, growing wider 

 as it approaches the latter : belly dirty pale brown, 

 or buff-colour : under tail-coverts fine yellow : wings 

 and tail black ; on the ends of the wing-coverts and 

 second quills are white spots : the greater quills fringed 

 with a paler colour at the tips : tail remarkably short, 

 all but the two middle feathers marked at the tips 

 with white : legs dusky. The female with the throat 

 scarcely tinged with yellow." 



