Imperfectly Described, Species of Birds. 



15" 



lateral bands hardly observed in G. religiosa, and so marked 

 in G. Java?ius, occur in this species only before and behind 

 the eye but not over it ; thus causing a hiatus which is re- 

 placed by the proper feathers of the head ; in size the G. 

 Javanusis the largest, and the Peninsular species the smallest, 

 while the only distinction in the general plumage of this 

 species, and which is perhaps merely the effect of age, is, that 

 the primaries and secondaries are edged with rusty brown, 

 thus almost forming a band across the wing. 



I shall now add the dimensions of all three species. 



The Peninsular Species. 

 G. Religiosa, Linne. 



Total length 8^ 



5A 



Wing. 



Tarsus 1 T ^ 



1* 



L T.'0 

 1 



1* 



Middle toe. 



Hallux 



Tail 



Bill from base . . . 



,, from the 



rictal angle 



Malay Species. 

 G. Javanus, Cuvier. 



10 



D To 

 1 * 



h\ 



3 T B o 



1A 



Northern Indian Species. 

 G. Indicia. 



9rV 



1* 

 1* 



9 



TiT 



3-rV 



1A 



It 3 * 



1A 



The difficulty attending the description of species so 

 apparently similar and yet differing so materially in parti- 

 culars, will I trust plead some excuse for any faultiness in the 

 above remarks ; should Cuvier's name of Indicus be found 

 to apply to our common species, or to the Malay bird, I would 

 propose that of intermedins for the species I have provision- 

 ally retained to G. Indicus. 



The outline of the bill given in Swainson's synopsis agrees 

 with our Peninsular species, and is evidently meant to repre- 

 sent that of Linne's G. religiosa. 



Ceblepyris Culminatus— New Species. 



I received this species from Malacca, and it seems to differ 

 from any that have as yet been described. General cast of 

 the plumage iron-gray, uniform on the head, back of the neck 

 and black under parts, and upper tail coverts, lighter, speckled 

 and striated with white ; a black mark from the base of the 



