UROCISSA MAGNIROSTRIS. 



Great-billed Blue Pie. 



Psilorhinus magnirostris, Blyth, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng., vol. xv. p. 27.— lb. Cat. of Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. 



Calcutta, p. 93. 

 Urocissa magnirostris, Cab. Mus. Hem., p. 87, note.— Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc, part xxvii. p. 200. 



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Mr. Blyth, of Calcutta, has the merit of first discerning the differences which exist between the present 

 and the other known species of Urocissa ; and the specific term of magnirostris assigned to it by this gentleman 

 is, and ever will be, a very appropriate one, unless another species should be discovered with a still larger 

 bill. Mr. Blyth states that its native habitat is the Ya-ma-dong Mountains, which separate Aracan from 

 Pegu ; but that it is not confined to that locality is certain, for I have at this moment before me a specimen 

 with an imperfect tail, which was sent to me direct from Siam by Sir Robert Schomburgk, Her Britannic 

 Majesty's Consul at Bankok. In this bird, then, we have a very distinct species of Urocissa inhabiting a 

 country far away from the hilly regions of Upper India, to which nearly all the other members of the genus 

 are confined. ' It is not only in the larger size of its bill that the U. magnirostris is distinguished from its 

 red-billed congeners, it also differs from them in the diminutive size of the patch of white at the nape of the 

 neck, and in the almost total absence of white spots on the feathers of the crown. Subsequently to the 

 publication of his original description of the species, Mr. Blyth was inclined to consider that he was wrong 

 in separating it from U occipitalis ; the bird, however, sent from Siam by Sir Robert Schomburgk is 

 decidedly different from that and every other species I have yet seen. 



The sexes of this and the other members of the genus are so much alike, both in size and colouring, 

 that it is impossible to determine, from an examination of their external characters only, which is the male 

 and which the female. 



Head, sides of the neck, cheeks, throat and breast black; at the back of the neck a small patch of white; 

 all the upper surface brownish blue ; shoulders and the outer webs of the primaries and secondaries fine blue, 

 their inner webs brownish black ; all the secondaries crescented with white at the tip ; central primaries 

 margined along the middle portion of their outer web with white, and with a small patch of white at the 

 tip ; upper tail-coverts dull blue at the base, succeeded by a band of bluish white, beyond which the tip 

 is black ; middle tail-feathers blue tipped with white ; lateral feathers blue at the base tipped with creamy 

 white, the two colours separated by a broad band of black, decreasing in breadth as the feathers recede from 

 the centre; immediately behind this black band a triangular mark of white occurs on the inner web, which 

 in like manner decreases in size as the feathers recede from the centre ; in the outer feather this mark, 

 tinged with blue, is continued in an oblique direction on the outer web ; all the under surface creamy white 

 faintly washed with blue ; bill and legs orange. 



The figure is about three-fourths of the natural size. The plant is the Thunbergia coccinea. 



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