MENURINAE. 
The 
the d'ff 8 ^ 60168 t ^ 11S S enus are peculiar to the warmer parts of South America. They live usually in societies, and 
in j.]^ eient species sometimes congregate together. Their food consists of insects, which they seek for on the ground 
rarel CQSe ^ orests - They run quickly, and are at times seen leaping about among the low branches ; their flight 
y extends beyond a short distance, and then not far from the ground. 
1. Q 
Bras t y ,lf y atus (Gmel.) — Turdus scolopaceus Licht. Spix, Av. 
2 p 9- f. 1 . ; Opetiorhynchus turdinus Pr. Max. ? 
3 ' * on atus (Less.) Cent. Zool. t. 70. 
4 c ' zona toides (Lafr.) Rev. Zool. 1846. p. 92. 
5 c ‘ b, ' unn eicapillus (Lafr.) Mag. de Zool. 1833. Ois. t. 43. 
g c ' 3utta tus (Gould), Proc. Z. S. 1836. p. Sg. 
rh ynchn r " mfr,Jtws (Less.) Rev. Zool. 1842. p. 1 74. — Campylo- 
s r uflnucha Lafr. Rev. Zool. 1845. p. 339. 
7. C. brevirostris (Lafr.) Rev. Zool. 1845. p. 33g. 
8. C. megalopterus (Lafr.) Rev. Zool. 1845. p. 339. 
9. C. cinnamomeus (Less.) Rev. Zool. 1844. p. 433. 
10. C. pallescem (Lafr.) Rev. Zool. 1846. p. 93. 
11. C. unicolor (Lafr.) Rev. Zool. 1846. p. 93. 
12. C. unicoloroides (Lafr.) Rev. Zool. 1846. p. 316. 
March, 1847. 
