134 
CATALOGUE. 
GiNiHOORA, Ceylon, E. de Jonville {the chestnut bird). 
Tonka Peegeelee-pitta (" LoDg-tailed Bulbul "), Te- 
lugu, Jerd. 
Walkondalatee, Tamul, Jerd. 
In Malayalum, it is called by a name signifying the 
" King of Heaven," Jerd. 
A. B. C. d. Dukhun. Presented by Colonel Sykes. 
e. Calcutta. Presented by the Asiatic Society of 
Bengal. 
/ g. Kumaon. From Captain B. Strachey's Collection. 
h. Himalaya. From Griffith's Collection. 
/. j. Drawings. From Dr. F. (B.) Hamilton's Col- 
lection. 
k. I. Drawings. Ceylon. From E. de Jonville's Col- 
lection. 
" This elegant Flycatcher is dispersed over the whole continent of 
India, but is only at all common in the most woody portions of the 
country, preferring dense bamboo jungle to gardens and groves of 
trees, which it also occasionally visits. In its habits it is restless 
and wandering, flitting continually from branch to branch, and often 
w^andering from tree to tree. It feeds on various insects, which it 
captures in the air, or occasionally snaps off a branch." Colonel 
Sykes says " it feeds on the ground, and chiefly on very small 
insects." " It is generally seen singly, occasionally in pairs. It 
is said to breed in bamboos. It has a loud, harsh, grating cry of 
alarm. When it seizes an insect, it makes a loud snap with its 
mandibles." — (Jerd., 111. Orn.) 
169. TCHITREA AFFINIS, A. Hay. 
Tchitrea affinis. Hay. Blyth, Journ. A. S. Beng. XV. 
'p. 292 ; XYII. 'p. 1179, et Cat. JB. Mm. A. S. 
Beng. p. 203. G. B. Gray, Gen. of Birds, III. 
App. p. 12. 
Muscipeta aflSnis, Bonap., C. G. Av. p. 325. 
Malayan Paradise Flycatcher. 
Ahtap and Miea Jabone, Malayan, Blyth. 
