X^ATALOGUE. 
715 
sometimes, though rarely, returning to the same perch, generally 
taking up a new position, and wandering much about from tree to 
tree. I almost always observed it solitary, occasionally in pairs ; and 
on one occasion four or five were seen together. In the stomach I have 
always found fragments of large coleopterous insects. Its Hindostani 
name is given (says Mr. Elliot) ' from its sitting with its head sunk 
in the shoulders, as if it had no neck, or as if dressed in a faqueer's 
Tcufni^ " — (Jerdon.) 
" In Ceylon, it inhabits the high tree-jungle which the natives 
call Mookoolaney ; it there frequents the summits of the loftiest 
trees, and feeds on spiders, mantidse, and coleoptera. It sits across 
a branch with the head drawn down between the shoulders ; it is 
by no means a solitary bird, being found in small parties of three 
or four in number, which always follow each other when one takes 
wing. It does not appear to extend its range beyond Kandy. 
Dr. Kelaart says it is sometimes very numerous at Newera Elia." — 
(Layard.) 
1038. HABPACTES KASUMBA, Baffles Sp. 
Trogon Kasumba, Baffles^ Trans. lAnn. Soc. XIII. 
p. 282 (1821). 
Harpactes Kasumba, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. Beng. 
p. 80. Gould, Birds of Asia, pt. VIII. (1856), 
tab. 
Trogon fasciatus, Temm., Bl. Col. 321. Lesson, Tr. 
d'Orn.p. 121. 
Trogon Temminckii, Gould, Monogr. of Trogon. t. 29. 
Harpactes Temminckii, Swainson, Class, of B. II. p. 337. 
G. B. Gray, Gen. of B. I. p. 171 ; List B. Brit. 
Mus. pt. II. sect. I. p. 44. Bonap., C. G. Av. 
p. 151. 
Trogon flagrans, Kuhl, TidscJi. Nat. Gesch. (1835), 
p. 336. 
Trogon Kondea, Ouvier. 
Kastjmba, Sumatrans, Baffles. 
Etjeong Kasumba, Malacca. 
a.h.c. c? ? . Malacca. Reserved from Indian Collection, 
Exposition Universelle at Paris, 1855. 
d. ? . Malacca. Presented by Dr. Cantor, 1854. 
