BLYTH^S STRIATED GREEN WOODPECKER. 
49 
being bufFy white with a yellowish tinge, and by the whole of the aides of 
the neck_, fore neck and chest being uniform pure ocbraceous yellow without 
the slightest trace of any striations. The sides of the head are silvery 
white with black shaft-marks, and not greyish brown as in G. viridanus, 
A specimen collected in Western Siam by Herr Carl Bock is similar to the 
Javan bird. Out of a numerous series of Burmese birds in Mr. Hargitt^s 
museum, many of them collected by myself, not one shows any approach 
to the Javan form. 
Gecinus weberi, recently described by Herr A. Miiller from the island of 
Salanga (Orn. Ins. Salanga, p. 69, 1882), judging from examples in 
Mr. Hargitt^s museum, does not appear to be any thing but an intensely 
green form of G. viridanus. 
The Striated Green Woodpecker is generally distributed over the whole 
of British Burmah. Mr. Blyth records it from all three Divisions. I 
procured it on the Arrakan hills, and I have met with it in every part of 
Pegu that I have visited, and found it abundant in most places suited to 
Woodpeckers. Mr. Davison states that it is extremely common throughout 
Tenasserim, except above the elevation of 3500 feet ; and Capt. Bingham 
says that it is one of the commonest Woodpeckers in the Thoungyeen 
valley. 
To the east it occurs in Siam, and, according to Dr. Tiraud, it is common 
in Cochin China ; it extends down the Malay peninsula, and is found in 
Sumatra and Java. It is also said to occur in Borneo. 
This species appears to prefer the drier forests ; but it may be met with 
in almost all descriptions of jungle, provided there are trees. 
444. GECINUS STRIOLATUS. 
BLYTH^S STRIATED GREEN WOODPECKER. 
Picus striolatus, Bl. J. A. S. B. xii. p. 1000 ; Sundev. Consp. Av. Pic. p. 60. Chlo- 
ropicus striolatus, Malh. Mon. Pic. ii. p. 134, pi. Ixxvii. fig. 1-3. Gecinus 
striolatus, Jerd. B. Ind. i. p. 287 ; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 125 ; Hume, S. F. 
iii. p. 68 ; Bl. ^ Wald. B. Burm. p. 76 ; Anders. Yunnan Exped. p. 585 ; Legge, 
Birds Ceylon, p. 194 ; Hume 8c Bav. S. F. vi. p. 136 ; Cripps, S. F. vii. p. 262 ; 
Scully, S. F. viii. p. 247 ; Hume, S. F. viii. p. 87. 
Description. — Male. Forehead, crown, nape and elongated feathers of the 
occiput scarlet ; back, sides of the neck, wing-coverts, scapulars and ter- 
tiaries green ; rump and upper tail- coverts golden yellow ; tail blackish, 
the central pair of feathers barred with white on the basal half, the others 
obsoletely barred near the base only ; winglet, primary-coverts and pri- 
VOL. II. E 
