Yh & 
EL 
238 on - THE Ou assrioariae 
third, fourth, and fifth, longest ; ‘die 
the tips notched ; the tertials ieee Tail 
derate, slightly forked. Feet as in Oriolus. — 
strong, broad, much curved. §S. America.* — a 2 
D. palmarum. Pl. Enl. 156. f. 2. nuchalis, Part 5. Now 
Spnecotrueres, Vieill. Bill rather short, sronk, y : 
taking of the structure both of Dulus and Oriolus 
the base broad, and the commissure straight; gap 
very wide, reaching to beyond the eye. Nostrils nak . 
the aperture large, oval. Rictus smooth. Wings, t 
and feet, as in Dulus. Tarsus hardly longer than { h 
hind toe and claw. Australia only. " 
S. viridis. Vieil. Gal. pl. 147. canicollis. Part 5.No. 11% 
‘ail 
Famiry SYLVIADA. Warblewa 
Size universally small. Bill very slender, distinctly 
notched. Feet formed for walking, perching, or climbing 
Tarsus slender, lengthened. 
Susram. SAXICOLINA. = Stonechats. 
Bill depressed at the base: gape with diverging bris 2s, 
Feet lengthened. Tail rather short. Head large. __ 
Grittivora, Sw. Bill strong, lengthened, straight 5 , 
the base rather widened ; the sides compressed ; the — 
culmen slightly curved from the base; the tip of the 
upper mandible considerably bent over the lower, 
and deeply notched: gonys rather ascending. Nostrils — 
large, naked, sulcated. Wings moderate, rounded ; 
the three first quills graduated. Tail more or less 
lengthened and rounded ; the feathers broad and ob- 
tuse at their tips. Feet strong. Middle toe as long 
as the tarsus; lateral toes very unequal, the innert 
shortest ; hinder toe shorter than the middle. India, 
Africa. . fe 
G.intermedia. Zool.I1.ii.61.  Jongicauda. O.d’Af.pl.114. _ 
brevirostra. Part 5.No.35. ? Capensis. Ib. pl. 184. 
magnirostra. Ib. No. 33. rosea. Part 5. No. 182. 
* The first appearance of this excessively rare type strongly reminds u 
of the genus Indicator, in the shortness of the bill, which is, however, more a 
compressed ; and the feet, of course, are quite different, 4 
