576 List of Birds, collected in the Jungles [Nov. 
27. M. Rusrcapmna. Rusty-crowned Warbler, T. Female. 5 
inches, eyes reddish hazle; bill and legs pale horn, crown of head rusty; 
feathers of nostrils, over the eyes, auriculars and sides of neck, pale 
yellowish green; upper parts olive, throat and breast pale yellow, 
shafted black. Found in the thick underwood, hollows, ravines, &c. 
Lively and agile, with a frequent piping note and occasional chatter. 
28. M. Canrator, Chiming Wren, T. 4 inches. Male. Eyes 
hazle, upper mandible dark, lower pale orange ; legs pale horn, crown 
black, with a longitudinal central yellow stripe; black stripe through 
eye and a yellow one over it; throat bright yellow, extending towards 
breast, lower parts lint-white, vent yellow ; plumage above, clear olive- 
green. Frequents trees in the thickest parts of the jungle. Has a loud 
and incessant note, ‘‘ pio, pio, pio, pio.” Bill rather gross, as in Win- 
chat, not flattened, not hooked as in Regulus, slightly notched : nos- 
trils large, oblong, almost pervious. 
29. Syuvia Lonercaupata. Long-tailed Warbler. Gml. (Malurus 
of Veillot.) Male. 53 inches, of which tail 23, bill and eyes dark, legs 
orange-horn color. Upper parts a pale dull brown, on face ashy. 
Under parts satin-white ; quills and coverts pale clear brown ; tail ashy 
brown, tipped obscurely black and then whitish ; wings much rounded 
and short; first quill almost spurious, 5th and 6th longest ; tail cunei- 
form. All the plumage waving and flimsy in texture, scarcely any 
tail coverts. Common. Has a sprightly intermittent song, perching for 
a time on the summit of a bush and then seeking thickest underwood. 
Frequents barren saul jungle. 
30. Moracitia Orrinis. Olive Willow Wren, T. (Willow Wren?) 
54 inches. Male. Upper parts dark olivaceous ashy-brown. Beneath, 
brownish yellow ochre. Clear yellow streak over eye. Upper man- 
dible dark, lower pale horn: legs horn, eyes hazle. Killed in high- 
timbered jungle, on the banks of a stream. 
31. M. Dumericota. Thicket Warbler, T. Male. Nearly 6 inches 
long, eyes reddish hazle, bill as former subject, legs pale fleshy horn ; 
crown dingy rust, face and over eyes dirty whitish brown, auriculars 
darker. Whole of the plumage dull olive-brown, as in the thrush ; tail 
slightly rounded, whole under parts white, streaked with the color of 
back, throat white. Female and malealike. Frequents the thickest foli- 
age, at the top of high trees, andis rarely seen. Has a monotonous 
note, consisting of three sounds, which is heard incessantly during the 
morning. 
32. M. Funicara. Sooty Warbler, Cuvier. (Bill in no way 
allied to the groupe in which Cuvier has placed it.) Male. Size of a 
