GARRULTNyK. 
1. p. morio (Licht.) Mus. Senck. 183?. t.4. f. 3. — Pica fuligi- 
nosa Less. ; Psilorhinus inexicanus liiipp. 
2. P. Bullockii (^Vagl.) — Pica formosa Swains. ; Garrulus 
Burncttii Gray ; Pica Collitii Vigors, Zool. of Beechey's Voy. pi. ; 
G. ultraniarinus Audub. B. of Amer. pi. 96. 
3. V. gubernatrix (Temm.) PI. col. 436. 
4. P. sinensis (Linn.) PI. enl. ()22. — Corvus erythrorhynclius 
Bodd. Le Vaill. Ois. d'Afr. t. 57., Gould's Cent, of B. pi. 41. ; 
Coracias nielanocephala Lath. 
CissA Boie.* 
Bill strong, large, Avith the culmen elevated and curved to the tip, which is emarginated and hooked; 
the sides much compressed, the lateral margins nearly straight, and the gonys long and ascending ; the 
nostrils basal, lateral, rounded, and partly covered by the frontal plumes. Wings moderate and rounded, 
Avith the first four quills graduated, and the fourth and fifth the longest. Tail more or less lengthened 
and graduated. Tarsi longer than the middle toe, moderately strong, and scaled. Toes long, strong, 
and much scutellated, with the inner scarcely shorter than the outer ; all the claws long, strong, and 
curved. 
These bii'ds inliabit the Indian continent and its archipelago ; but their habits and manners have not yet been 
recorded. 
1. C. sinensis (YioAA.) PI. enl. 620 Corvus specicsus Shaw; 2. C thalassina {^VGmm.) PI. co!. 401. 
Corapica bengalensis Less. ; Kitta venatoria Gray, III, Ind. Zool. i. 
pi. 24. 
* Established by M. Boie (1826) in the Isis. Corapica of IM. Lesson (1831), and Chlorisoiha of Mr. Swainson (1837), are coequal with 
the name adopted. 
March, 184.';. 
