210 CURUCUI. 



quills black with dusky edges; tail cuneiform, six of the middle 

 feathers equal in length and rufous, and the three outer ones on each 

 side transversely barred black and white, and tipped with the latter ; 

 legs dusky. The female in Mr. Bullock's Museum is olive-brown, 

 where the male is rufous ; the striae on the wing coverts not clear 

 white ; and the belly very pale yellow. 

 Inhabits Cayenne. 



7— CEYLONESE CURUCUI. 



SIZE of the other. Head and neck brownish ash-colour ; back 

 cinereous ; wing coverts deep lead, with numerous, transverse white 

 lines; quills black, with white shafts; tail cuneiform, as in most 

 other Curucuis ; the four middle feathers deeply margined with black, 

 the tip also black ; the others half white, half cinnamon-colour, 

 edged with black, as in the others. 



One, said to be a female, has the head ash-colour ; wing coverts 

 rufous grey, with black lines ; all beneath pale cinnamon, or bull- 

 colour ; the rest as in the male, but wholly paler. 



From Ceylon, in the collection of General Davies, and is most 

 probably a Variety of the Fasciated Species. 



8— INDIAN CURUCUI. 



Trogon Indicus, Ind. Orn. i. 201. Gen. Zool. ix. p. 13. 

 Indian Curucui, Gen. Syn. Sup. p. 94. 



BILL bluish, very hooked ; head and neck black, striped with 

 white; from the corners of the mouth, just beneath the cheeks, a 

 whitish stripe; back and wings dusky, marked with round rusty 



