LYNGIPICUS AURITUS. Malayan Pygmy Woodpecker. Petit Pic des Moluques, Daubent. Pl. Enl. pl. 748. fig. 2. Le petit épeiche brun des Moluques, Buff. Hist. Nat. Ois. vii. p. 68. Picus moluccensis, Gmelin, Syst. Nat. i. p. 439 (1788, ex Buff.).—Steph. Gen. Zool. ix. p. 178 (1815).—Vieill. Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. xxvi. p. 86 (1818).—Horsf. Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii. p. 177 (1822).—Bonn. et Vieill. Enc. Méth. iii. p. 134 (1823).—Vigors, Mem. Raffles, p. 669 (1830).—Gray, Gen. B. ii. p. 435 (1845, exclus. syn.).—Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. As. Soc. Beng. p. 63 (1849).—Bp. Consp. i. p. 137 (1850).— Temm. & Schlegel, Fauna Japonica, p. 74 (1850).—Cab. & Heine, Mus. Hein. Th. iv. p. 61 (1863).— Gray, List Picide Brit. Mus. p. 42 (1868).—Id. Hand-l. B. ii. p. 184, no. 8588 (1870). Picus minor (non Linn.), Raffles, Trans. Linn. Soe. iii. p. 290 (1822). Picus variegatus (non Lath.), Wagler, Syst. Av., Picus, no. 27 (1827)—Malh. Mion@aie, Mieke, 1, jp, lee ’ pl. xxiii. figs. 8-10 (1861).—Sundev. Consp. Av. Picin. p. 28 (1866).—Gray, List Picid. Brit. Mus. p. 43 (1868).—Id. Hand-l. B. ii. p. 184, no. 8580 (1870). Tripsurus auritus, Eyton, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. xvi. p. 229 (1845). Yungipicus moluccensis, Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 675 (1854).—Bp. Consp. Volucr. Zygod. p. 8 (1854). Yungipicus auritus, Bp. Consp. Volucr. Zygod. p. 8 (1854). Baopipo variegata, Cab. & Heine, Mus. Hein. Th. iv. p. 54 (1863). Beopipo aurita, Cab. & Heine, t. c. p. 59 (1863). Picus auritus, Gray, List Picide, Brit. Mus. p 41 (1868).—Id. Hand-l. B. ii. p. 183, no. 8575 (1870). Picus sondaicus, Wall. MSS.; Gray, Handl. B. ii. p. 184, no. 8589 (1870).—Wall. in Salvad. Uce. di Borneo, p. 43, note (1874): Iyngipicus fusco-albidus, Salvad. Ucc. Born. p. 42 (1874).—Nicholson, Ibis, 1879 p. 165.—Sharpe, Ibis, 1879, p. 240. Iyngipicus auritus, Hargitt, Ibis, 1882, p. 42. Tuer present species is one of the group of Pygmy Woodpeckers where the centre tail-feathers are spotted with white, and the under surface of the body is always distinctly striated. The range appears to be strictly Indo-Malayan, as it occurs in the Malayan Peninsula and in the islands of Java, Sumatra, and Borneo. To the north, in Tenasserim and Burmah, it is replaced by 1. canicapillus, which, again, is represented by J. nanus in the North-west Himalayas. In Borneo a closely allied race, Z. prcatus of Mr. Hargitt, occurs ; and in the islands of Lombock and Flores its place is taken by a larger form, Z. grandis of Hargitt. It is apparent to any one who has studied these little Woodpeckers that the birds above mentioned constitute so many races of one form of Zyngipicus, the geographical distribution of each race, however, being tolerably clearly defined. Nothing, as far as I am aware, has been written concerning the habits of this little species ; but they are no doubt precisely similar to those of the allied Indian species. The Plate represents a male and female, of the natural size, drawn from specimens lent to me by Mr. Hargitt. [R. B. S.J ee eee ee rated Or, aS he PY a oy ee 4 =a eI cfg! Ne % J Sg RIG Sra A Fa a C) id. a) J C ), g