238 MANAKIN. 



adds, that the bill is emarginated at the tip, and black ; that most 

 of the quills have a minute spot of white at the outer tip. 



30— SPECKLED MANAKIN. 



Pipra punctata, Ind. Orn. Sup. Ivi. Nat. Misc. t. 110. 



Pardalote, Tern. Man. Ed. ii. Anal. p. lxv. 



Speckled Manakin, Gen. Syn. Sup. ii. 253. Shaw's Zool. x. p. 30. 



LENGTH four inches. Bill black ; tongue bifid at the end ; 

 top of the head and hind part of the neck black, marked with pale 

 spots ; back brownish yellow, middle of each feather dark brown : 

 the wing coverts, quills, and tail feathers black, marked at the ends 

 with white ; all beneath the body yellowish white, tinged with red 

 on the breast; lower part of the back dull yellow; rump crimson ; 

 legs brown. In some only the crown of the head is black, spotted 

 as the other with white; hind part of the neck blue grey: in both, 

 the forehead, and beneath the bill and eye, are yellowish ; and in 

 the last described, the yellow appears to pass through the eye, and 

 is just seen behind it. 



Inhabits New-Holland.— From the drawings of General Davies, 

 taken from specimens in possession of Captain King. 



31.— NEW-HOLLAND MANAKIN. 



LENGTH four inches and a half. Bill black ; the crown black, 

 marked with round white spots ; from the nostrils to the eye a white 

 streak ; sides under the eye, and of the neck to the wing, grey and 

 dusky mixed ; the back glossy olive brown ; on the middle of each 

 feather a glossy buff-coloured spot ; rump pale tawny, or ferruginous; 

 chin, and middle of the neck before, as far as the breast, fine yellow, 

 growing wider as it approaches the latter; belly dirty pale brown, 



