APPENDIX, 
497 
“Total leiigfcli, 6| iuclies; beak to gape^ 11 lines; to frontj 
7 lines; breadth, 4 lines; height, 2^ lines; "miig, 3:| inches; 
medial rectrices, 3 inches; external, 2| inches; tarsus, f inch; 
middle toe and claw, 8 lines; hind ditto, 6 lines. 
Habitat. Fernando Po, West Africa, 
“ In this species the beak is considerably depressed, and formed 
like that of a Miiscicapa], the teeth of the upper mandible are 
distinct and regular, but disappear about the middle of the 
beak. The lower mandible is also furnished with five or six 
serrations, but very low and indistinct. Tlie wing is much 
rounded, the fifth cpiill being longest, and the rest graduated. 
The colour and texture of plumage are much like that of the 
East Indian Fi/cnoaotits flavirostris. (Strickland.) 
Described from speciuions brought to England by Mr. Fraser. 
Andropadics graciUrostris. (Strickland, in Proc. Zool. Soc. 
Lond., June, 1844.) 
And. corpore toto supra olivaceo, remigibus primariis fuscis, 
extus olivascente, intus pallide ochraceo liinbatis, corpore subtiis 
pallide olivaceo'-cinerasceute, nionto, gulaque, albidis, abdomine 
medio crissoque pallide flavescentibus, alarum tectricibus inter- 
nis pallide ochraceis. Rostrum, pedesque corneo fusco ; rostrum 
lougiusculuiu, turdinum, deutibus maxillte duobns, mandibulie 
nullis. 
Total length, 7 inches; beak to gape, 10 lines; to front, 7 
lines; breadth, 3 lines; height, 2^ lines; wing, 3^ inches; 
medial rectrices, 3 inches 1 line; external, 2 inches 11 lines; 
tarsus, 9^ lines; middle too and claAv, !) lines; hind ditto, 6 
lines. 
Habitat. Fernando Po, West Africa. 
“ This species difiers from the former one in several points of 
structure; the beak is considerably narrower at the base, and 
more slender; the upper mandible has only two dentations, with 
a faint trace of a third, and the lower mandible exhibits only a 
slight subtorininal omargination. The wings also differ, being 
more pointed; the first quill is subspurious, and the second, 
third, and fourth, nearly equal the third longest. These two 
species agree, however, in the structure of the tail and feet, and 
in the texture, and almost in the colour of the plumage; the 
YOL. II, 2 K 
