332 Mr. R. Swinhoe on Birds from Hakodadi. 
129. Turdus naumanni. 
“ I have obtained this species for the first time this year. 
It agrees exactly with my Shanghai specimen/'’ No bird 
sent. He had his Shanghai specimen to identify it with; so 
I think we can fairly enter it. 
130. Calamodyta insularis, Wallace. 
A female of this Molnccan migrant received. Passes north 
to breed. 
131. Artjndinax blakistoni, sp. nov. Plate VIII. fig. 1. 
Upper parts brownish olive; underparts dusky yellowish, 
on sides of breast brownish olive; a yellowish olive super- 
cilium; wing olive-brown, margined paler; tail brown, with 
whitish tips; axillaries pale yellowish, with blackish mot- 
tlings; dingier on yellow under tail-coverts. Upper man¬ 
dible brownish, with yellowish edges; under yellowish, with 
brownish tip ; legs and lores yellowish brown. Length 
4 *7, wing 2 '7, tail 2*1, tarse ‘85, first quill ‘48, second 
*15 shorter than third, narrow, 1*4 shorter than fourth, or 
longest. 
This is like a miniature A. fasciolatus, Gray; and I took it 
at first for Salvador/s A. dories ; but Mr. Sharpe has lately 
figured the latter in ‘The Ibis 3 (1876, p. 41) from Borneo, 
showing that Salvador/s species is nothing more than the 
Locustella ochotensis , Midd., = L. rubescens, Blyth. 
Blakiston adds, “ I have two specimens similar to Cala¬ 
modyta maacki ; but they differ from one another too much. 
Unfortunately the specimen I sent you in 1873 was lost; and 
I must therefore keep these till I get duplicates/'’ 
He further states, “I have also one specimen of what I 
take to be Locustella subcerthiola ; but the typical specimen 
that you identified was also lost in the ( Ariel/ " This may at 
once be recognized from its resemblance to SavPs Warbler, 
Lusciniopsis savii. 
132. Phylloscopus xanthodryas, Swinh. ? 
“ I have a specimen of Willow-Wren which is much larger 
than all my others. I put it down as distinct. It measures 
5f x 2|, . General appearance of P. coronata, but more 
