Flycatchers. jgi 



Himalaya it certainly occurs, and there meets B. pyrrhops. In immature 

 plumage B. longicaudata might, by a superficial observer, be mistaken for B. 

 pyrrhops. But in adult full dress it is as distinct as it is from B. atra, with 

 which, however, it was also for long confounded. By some B. leucophcea, B. 

 intermedia, and B. pyrrhops might be considered as constituting one species, 

 but no author who had studied the subject would unite them with B. longi- 

 caudata. The D. cineraceus, Horsf., apud Blyth (J. A. S. B. 1846, p. 299), 

 and there described by Mr. Blyth from a Malaccan specimen presented by me 

 to the Calcutta Museum, was an example of B. leucogenys, in the young 

 plumage before the pure white cheeks are developed, and in which phase of 

 plumage it may be easily mistaken for B. leucophaa. It ranges from Malacca 

 through Siam, Camboja, and China, to Japan. It is not unlikely that it, 

 as well as B. longicaudata, may be found to occur in Tenasserim. Mr. 

 Blanford gives the last (Ibis, 1870, p. 468) from the Bassein district.] 



443. DlCEUEUS ANNECTENS (J. 279). 



Nipal, Tenasserim, Malacca. 



[Rangoon ( W. R.). B. affinis, Blyth, is synonymous.] 



Fam. Tchitread.se. 



Flycatchers. 

 *444. TCHTTKEA AFFINIS (J. 289). 



Arakan, Tenasserim, Malacca. 



[Thayet Myo {W. R.). The oldest and correct generic title is Musci- 

 peta, Cuvier. Count Salvadori (Uccelli, Borneo, p. 137) adopts Terpsiphone, 

 dogger, a more recent title for an undefined genus.] 



[445. T. paradisi (J. 288). 



Mr. Hume thus identifies, but with doubt (Str. Feath. iii. p. 474), a 

 single example of an "immature female" obtained at Lemyne by Mr. 

 Davison.] 



[446. Philentoma velatum. 

 Drymophila velata, Tem. P. C. 334. 

 Om-ben-gwen {B.).~\ 



*"447. Hypothymys azukea (J. 290). 



Arakan, Tenasserim, Malay countries, Philippines. 



[Thayet Myo (0.).] 



Common. 



