MYCEROBAS CARNIPES. 



Flesh-footed Grosbeak. 



Coccothraustes carnipes, Hodgs. Asiat. Research., vol. xix. p. 151 — Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng., vol. xiii. part ii. p. 950. 

 pi. . fig. 4. bill.— Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. ii. p. 358, Coccothraustes, sp. 7.— Blyth, 

 Cat. of Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, p. 125— Cat. of Spec, and Draw, of Mamm. and Birds 

 presented to Brit. Mus. by B. H. Hodgson, Esq., p. 105. 



speculigerus, Brandt, Bull. Sci. de l'Acad. Imp. des Sci. de St. Petersb., torn. ix. p. 11. 



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



Coccothraustes albispecularis, Mercatorum, Bonap. 



I find that great care is required in order to ascertain the identity or non-identity of species described by 

 naturalists on the opposite sides of the great Himalaya range, and also to determine with certainty which 

 of the names given by them to the same species has the priority ; thus the Coccothraustes carnipes of Mr. 

 Hodgson and the C. speculigerus of M, Brandt have been considered to be distinct species, but I find that 

 both names have reference to one and the same bird ; and that the term carnipes having been given by 

 Mr. Hodgson two or three years prior to that of speculigerus, it is necessarily the one to be adopted, although 

 the latter is the name by which the bird is more generally known. An example of this species is now before 

 me, from the Indian collection of Andrew Murray, Esq., of Aberdeen ; I have also examined the specimens 

 presented to the British Museum by B. H. Hodgson, Esq., and I find them to be precisely identical with 

 the fine examples lent to me by Dr. Hartlaub from the Museum at Bremen, and a specimen belonging 

 to H. E. Strickland, Esq., all of which had been procured near Semipalatinsk on the Altai. In form this 

 species is precisely similar to that of M. melanoocanthus, and consequently it must be placed in M. Cabanis, 

 genus Mycerobas, and not in that of Hesperiphona, to which it has been assigned by the Prince of Canino. 



The male has the head, neck, back, throat, breast and tail sooty black ; rump, abdomen and under tail- 

 coverts dull wax-yellow ; upper tail-coverts black, margined with dull wax-yellow ; wings greyish black ; 

 primaries white at the base, and narrowly margined with greyish white ; tips of the greater coverts dull wax- 

 yellow ; tertiaries with a large oblong mark of dull wax-yellow on the extremity of their outer webs, fading 

 into whitish on the tip of the inner web ; bill fleshy brown, becoming darker at the tip ; feet fleshy brown. 



The female has the ear-coverts black, streaked with greyish white ; head, neck, breast and upper part of 

 the back dark grey ; remainder of the plumage as in the male, except that the colours are not so bright, 

 that the upper tail-coverts are olive-yellow, and the tail-feathers narrowly edged with the same hue. 



The Plate represents the two sexes of the natural size, figured from the fine specimens belonging to the 

 Museum at Bremen. 







