450 



the form of the casque is low, thinly compressed towards the front, 

 and abruptly truncate anteriorly, with a longitudinal ridge on each 

 side in old birds, occasioning a broad shallow groove above and 

 another below it. Length about 29 inches; of wing 11|- inches; 

 tail to tip of middle feathers 13 inches ; to tip of outer feather 10^ 

 inches ; bill from gape 4 J- inches ; length of casque 3 inches ; height 

 from chin to top of casque 1\ inches. 



Mr. A. R. Wallace states, in a letter from Singapore (Ann. Nat. 

 Hist. Feb. 1855), that " B. nigrirostris is the female of B. malay- 

 anus, Raffles ; I satisfied myself of this fact from the dissection of 

 about a dozen specimens shot off the same tree." 



The bill and casque of B. malayanus are allied in form to the 

 corresponding parts of H. albirostris and H. convexus, Temm ; and 

 that of H. nigrirostris to that of the next species. 



We have described these birds as male and female on the authority 

 of Dr. Cantor. 



133. Anorrhinus galeritus. 

 Buceros galeritus, Temm. PI. Col. 520. 

 Hydrocissa galerita, Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av. p. 90. 

 Anorrhinus galeritus, Reichenbach, Syst. Av. (1849) ; Moore, 



Catal. Birds Mus. E. I. C. ii. p. 594. 



Buceros carinatus, Blvth, J. A. S. Beng. xiv. p. 187 (1845), xvi. 

 p. 996. 



Quay Quay, Malays (Cantor). 



Colour green-glossed black, with the basal two-thirds of the tail 

 drab-coloured, the wing-feathers slightly margined paler : head fully 

 crested, composed of broad longish feathers. Throat naked, or 

 merely showing two single rows of ill-developed feathers along the 

 middle. Bill and casque black in the one sex, which seems always 

 to have the abdominal region pale ; in the other yellowish-white, 

 with black along the summit of the casque nearly to the end, and 

 also occupying the basal two- thirds of the lower mandible, and the 

 tomise of the upper one, and, according to Dr. Cantor's MS. notes, 

 the "iris vandyke-brown ; naked space round the eyes, and pouch 

 black. Feet greenish-grey." The casque is low, and with a keel- 

 shaped ridge, sloping off to the front. 



" In a young specimen," remarks Mr. Blyth, " the plumage is 

 quite similar to that of the adult, but has no trace of casque, and the 

 bill is nigrescent with a whitish ridge and tip." 



Several specimens obtained at Malacca. 



134. Berenicornis comatus. 



Buceros comatus, Raffles, Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii. p. 339 (1822) ; 

 Schlegel et Miiller, Verh. Naturl. Gesch. Aves, p. 29. t. 4 ; Temm. 

 Text, de PI. Col. ; Hay, Madras Journ. xiii. pt. 2. p. 149 ; Blyth, 

 J. A. S. Beng. xvi. p. 996. t. 44. f. 2 $ . 



Berenicornis comatus, Bonap. C. G. Av. p. 91 ; Moore, Catal. 

 Birds Mus. E. I. C. ii. p. 594. 



Buceros lugubris, Begbie, Ann. Nat. Hist. xvii. p. 405. 



