Bulluh. 135 



467. Otocompsa monticola. 

 Isms monticolus, M'Clellaud, P. Z. S. 1839, p. 160 ; Ibis, 1867, p. 440. 

 Khasias, Tenasserim provinces. Probably 0. joeosa, var. sinensis, J. 

 Anderson, from Bhamo. Barely separable from 0. joeosa of .Bengal and 

 Northern India, which, again only differs from 0. fuscioaudata, Gould, of 

 South India, by having white spots on its rectrices. Another instance of 

 different local races or conspecies. Mason remarks that this is one of the 

 most common birds in the neighbourhood of Tavoy. 



[Eangoon, Tonghoo, Karen nee, Karen hills (W. £.). The Bengal 

 bird must take the specific title of emeria, Lin., even if the Chinese race, 

 Lanius jocosus, Lin., is identical with it, as stated by Mr. Swinhoe, and 

 who is doubtless correct. Linnaeus described the Bengal Bulbul twice 

 over in the 12th edition of the Systema, once under the genus Lanius, 

 and again under Muscicapa, but both times with the same specific title, 



•ia.~] 



*468. Pycnojtotus h^mokrhotts (J. 462). 

 Turdus cafer, Gm., founded on Merle hwppi du Cap de bonne esperanee, P. E. 563, fig. 1. 



Specimens from Arakan and South India appear to me to be undis- 

 tinguishable, although the larger and much blacker P. pygmus takes its 

 place in Lower Bengal. 



[Thayet Myo, Tonghoo, Eangoon (W. P.). Rangoon examples more 

 properly fall under the race named pygmus by Hodgson. This appropriate 

 title, which had been adopted by Jerdon, Blyth, and other accurate authors, 

 was changed, through misprint or other error, in the Hand-List, No. 3957, 

 to the inappropriate title of pygmmus. S. pusillus, Blyth, founded on the 

 South Indian bird, is a synonym of true P. htzmorrhous.] 



469. P. NIGBIPILETJS. 

 P. nigropilem, nobis, J. A. S. B. xvi. p. 472. 



Tenasserim provinces. Common. Another representative race of the 

 preceding, which again only differs from P. crocorrhous, Strickland, of Java, 

 in having the lower tail-coverts crimson.* 



[Tonghoo, Karen hills (W. R.) ; Moulmein, Amherst (2).).] 



* P. xanthorrhous, J. Anderson (P. A. S. B. 1869, p. 265 ; P. andersoni, Swinhoe), 

 is a species described from Tunan and from the Ichang gorge of the Upper Yang-tsze. 



