458 Lieut. Wardlaw Ramsay's Notes 
131. Yunx torquilla. 
Arrives in October, and remains throughout the cold season, 
both in the hills and plains. 
135. ClJCULUS CANORUS. 
The European Cuckoo is abundant on the open tableland 
o£ Karen-nee, hut, as far as I know, does not occur in the 
plains. Mr. Hume, however, has received it from Prome 
(S. F. iii. 78). 
138. Cacomantis rufiventris. 
The Rufous-bellied Cuckoo is a very common bird in the 
plains and at moderate elevations in the hills. In Karen-nee it 
is especially abundant. In nearly every garden in Tonghoo 
a pair of these birds are to be found. The note is a long 
mournful whistle., which is kept up throughout the day and 
sometimes the greater part of the night. 
140. Chrysococcyx maculatus. 
A specimen obtained in the Karen hills at 4200 feet has 
the whole throat, neck, and part of the breast uniform emerald- 
green like the back. 
141. Chrysococcyx xanthorhynchus. 
Iris lake-red. Bill dull orange, reddish at base and gape. 
The rim round the eye vermilion. Legs dull olive-green. 
Karen-nee, 1600 feet, March 1874; this locality is not 
given in Blyth's catalogue. 
144. CoCCYSTES JACOBINUS. 
Does not occur as far as I know to the eastward of the Pegu 
Yoma range. 
169. Macropteryx coronatus. 
The following is a description of a young bird shot near 
Tonghoo:—Plumage above shining dark green, with a faint 
trace of ashy on the head and back; primaries tipped with 
white; tertiaries greyish, broadly tipped with white; throat, 
cheeks, and some of the tips of the feathers of the back of 
the neck ferruginous; crest dark bottle-green, tipped with 
rusty white; lower surface ashy, with the feathers dark at 
the tips. 
