316 
Lord Tvveeddale on Birds from 
meus may be considered the type, is represented both in Su¬ 
matra and Java by a race which it may perhaps be proper to 
separate as a distinct species. Of this form two representa¬ 
tives are contained in Mr. Buxton's collection. It is a smaller 
bird than P. flammeus, and it differs in the orange edgings 
of the outer webs of some of the secondaries uniting with the 
orange-coloured mark lower down, as is to be found in P. 
brevirostris. The female of this form appears to have sup¬ 
plied the type of Lanius xanthog aster, Raffles. 
112. Philentoma pyrrhopterum. 
Muscicapa pyrrhoptera, Temm. PI. Col. t. 596, “ Sumatra. 
Borneo” (1836). 
Examples from Borneo and Malacca perfectly agree with 
the one obtained in the Lampong district by Mr. Buxton. 
113. Hypothymis azurea. 
Muscicapa azurea, Bodd. Tabl. PL Enl. p. 41 (1783). 
Muscicapa carulea, Gm., Raffles, t. c. p. 312, “ Sumatra." 
114. Muscipeta affinis. 
Tchitrea affinis, A. Hay, J. A. S. B. 1846, p. 292, “Malacca." 
Sumatran specimens similar to typical. 
115. Cyornis elegans. 
Muscicapa elegans, Temm. PI. Col. 596, f. 1, “Sumatra" 
(1836). 
The species obtained by Mr. Everett at Marup, in North 
Borneo, and provisionally identified by me with C. elegans 
(Ibis, 1872, p. 373), is not to be specifically distinguished 
from the typical example in Mr. Buxton's collection. 
116. Leucocerca javanica. 
Muscicapa javanica, Sparrm. Mus. Carls, fasc. iii. t. 75, 
“Java" (1789); Raffles, t. c. p. 312, “Sumatra." 
Agrees with typical and Malaccan specimens. 
117. Hirundo javanica. 
Hirundo javanica, Sparrm. Mus. Carls, fasc. iv. t. 100, 
“Java" (1789). 
Neilgherry examples (H. domicola , Jerd.) cannot be sepa¬ 
rated. 
