DIC4EUM ilNEUM, Jacq. et Pucker . 
Bronze-shaded Flower-pecker. 
Dicee bronzee, Hombr. et Jacq. Voy. Pole Sud, Atlas, pi. 22. fig. 4 (1845). 
Dicceum, sp., Gray, Gen. B. ii. p. 100 (1847). 
Dicceum ceneum, Jacq. et Pucher. Voy. Pole Sud, texte, iii. p. 97 (1853). — Hartl. J. f. O. 1854, pp. 165, 168. — 
Gray, Cat. Birds Trop. Isl. Pacific Ocean, p. 10 (1859). — Id. Hand-1. B. i. p. 115, no. 1434 (1869). — 
Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1869, p. 118. — Salvad. Ann. Mus. Civic. Genov, xvi. p. 68 (1880). — Id. Orn. 
Papuasia, etc. ii. p. 281 (1881), iii. App. p. 540 (1882). 
Micro chelidon cenea, Reichenb. Handb. Spec. Orn. Scans, p. 244, Taf. 558. fig. 3797 (1853). 
Dicceum erythrothorax, Ramsay, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. W. iv. p. 77 (1879, nec Less.). — Salvad. Ibis, 1880, p. 129. 
The family Diceidce , or Flower-peckers, is distributed over the greater part of the Indian and Australian 
regions, having a few representatives in the forests of Western Africa. They are particularly abundant in 
the Austro-Malayan subregion, nearly every island of the Moluccas and Papuasia having its own peculiar 
representative species of Dicceum . 
The px*esent bird is a native of Ugi, one of the Solomon Islands ; and as most of the species inhabiting 
this Archiplago are nearly allied to others from New Guinea, it is not surprising to find that Dicceum ceneum. is 
a representative form of the scarlet-chested Flower-peckers found in the latter country and the neighbouring 
Moluccan islands. It resembles Dicceum pect or ale of New Guinea, but is easily distinguished by the bronzy- 
greenish colour of the upper parts, the lighter blue-grey colour of the sides of the face, extending on to the 
sides of the fore neck and chest, and forming a large patch on the breast below the scarlet prsepectoral spot ; 
the flanks and sides of the body are also olive-yellow. 
The following is a description of the adult male and female : — 
Adult male . General colour above glossy oil-green, with a bronzy gloss ; head like the back ; sides of 
rump with a slight wash of olive-yellow ; upper tail-coverts oily green ; lesser and median whig -coverts 
glossy oil-green like the back ; the greater coverts, bastard wing, primary-coverts, and quills blackish, 
externally glossed with oily green ; tail-feathers greenish black ; lores dull ashy grey ; cheeks, ear-coverts, 
and sides of neck clear ashy grey, descending down the sides of the fore neck and occupying the whole of 
the breast ; throat white, the sides of it ashy grey, blacker at the base of the malar line ; a large triangular 
patch of scarlet occupying the whole of the fore neck ; sides of breast and flanks bright olive-yellow ; 
abdomen yellowish white ; thighs ashy grey, white on their inner aspects ; under tail-coverts white washed 
with yellow and having dusky bases ; axillaries and under wing-coverts white, the edge of the wings 
blackish; quills blackish below, ashy white along the edge of the inner web. Total length 3-1 inches, 
culmen 0‘45, wing 2*0, tail TO, tarsus 0*5. 
Adult female . Differs from the male in wanting the scarlet patch on the fore neck, and in not having the 
patch of ashy grey on the breast ; the throat and breast are yellowish white, with a few dusky margins to the 
lateral feathers of the breast ; otherwise the under surface of the body is exactly like that of the male, the 
sides of the neck being ashy grey, descending on to the sides of the breast, and the rest of the sides of the 
body being bright olive-yellow; the upper surface resembles that of the male, being entirely oily or bronzy 
green ; but there is a slight local streak of white, and the base of the lower mandible is pale, characters not 
seen in the adult male. Total length 3 - 25 inches, culmen 0‘45, wing T95, tail 095, tarsus 0 5. 
For the loan of the two specimens described above, we have been indebted to the kindness of Mr. E. P. 
Ramsay. The same birds are figured in the Plate, of the size of life. 
[R. B. S.] 
