^Biy 



EOPHONA MELANURA. 



Black-tailed Grosbeak. 



Le Gros-bec de la Chine, Sonn. Voy., torn, ii. p. 199. 



Lowia melanura, Gmel. Edit. Linn. Syst. Nat, torn. i. p. 853.— Lath. Ind. Orn., vol. i. p. 389.— Daud. Orn., torn. ii. 



p. 385.— Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. ix. p. 312. 

 Grey-necked Grosbeak, Lath. Gen. Syn., vol. iii. p. 145. — lb. Gen. Hist., vol. v. p. 250. 

 Coccothraustes melanura, Jard. and Selb. 111. Orn., vol. ii. pi. 63. 



melanurus, Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. ii. p. 358, Coccothraustes, sp. 2. 



Hesperiphona melanura, Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av., p. 506. 



It cannot be said that this bird represents our common Grosbeak in China, inasmuch as the two 

 birds not only inhabit the same country, but are even found in the same districts ; they differ much in 

 external appearance, and it is probable that when the present bird becomes as well known as the European 

 species, there will be found as great a difference in their habits. In a collection of birds obligingly lent 

 me by J. R. Reeves, Esq., there are fine examples of this species, which had been procured in the neigh- 

 bourhood of Shanghai : Sir William Jardine gives the neighbourhood of Canton as a locality from which 

 he had received specimens ; and I have also others from the island of Chusan ; it is evident, therefore, 

 that its range extends over all those parts of China best known to Europeans. On a label attached to one 

 of Mr. Reeves' specimens, it is stated that the crop was filled with grain and a small admixture of gravel 



A very considerable difference is found to exist in the colouring of the bills of different individuals, 

 some having that organ of a rich orange-yellow, and others of the same hue clouded at the base and tip 

 with slaty purple, a colour which appears to pervade the whole of the bill during the breeding-season. 



Head, cheeks and throat deep black, with steel-blue reflections ; back wood-brown, fading into greyish 

 brown on the back of the neck, and nearly pure grey on the rump and upper tail-coverts ; wings black, the 

 greater coverts with steel-blue reflections ; spurious wing tipped with white ; the first, second, third and 

 fourth primaries largely tipped with white, the fifth tipped with white for half an inch from the point, the 

 sixth tipped with white for an eighth of an inch, the seventh, eighth and ninth with a narrow line of white 

 across the tip ; secondaries largely tipped with white ; tail deep black, with steel-blue reflections ; lower 

 part of the neck and breast dull grey ; abdomen and flanks buff, washed with chestnut ; vent and under tail- 

 coverts bufiy white ; bill fine yellow ; irides red ; legs pale pink. 



The female has the general plumage greyish brown ; wings very dark brown, the primaries margined 

 externally at the tip with white, and the secondaries tipped with white ; two central tail-feathers grey, tipped 

 with dull black ; lateral feathers very dark brown. 



The Plate represents two males and a female of the natural size. 





