UAE EAS) OP OW NAS sy © AED EQ: A (fh COBY SAAN FO A NAR SAR aE i 7 en Bons 4 ‘ AA FOREN PITTA USSHERI. Ussher’s Pitta. Brachyurus ussheri, Sharpe, Proc. Zool. Soc. February 6, 1877. Ir is satisfactory to naturalists to find that Governor Ussher, whose zeal in the cause of science led to the discovery of so many rare and interesting birds during his residence on the west coast of Africa, has become Governor of the island of Labuan, where fresh zoological fields for his energy await him. Nor has he been long in reminding us of the fact; for soon after his arrival he dispatched the trained collector bequeathed to him by Mr. Hugh Low to the mainland of Borneo to search for Bulwer’s Pheasant. At present this collector, the identical man who obtained the original specimen of that splendid Pheasant, has not succeeded in getting any more; but amongst the birds which he brought back from the Lawas river are a second species of Lodbiophasis and the Pitta which forms the subject of the accompanying plate. Mr. Bowdler Sharpe, to whom the specimens were consigned by his friend Mr. Ussher, has named the species after the latter gentleman; and it gives me great pleasure to add my appreciation of the important results contributed by His Excellency to our knowledge of birds. Ussher’s Pitta finds its nearest ally in the Pitta venusta of Java; but it is distinguished at once from that species by its black colour, washed with purple above, as well as by the throat and chest being of this same purplish black. The enamel-like blue markings on the wing are also very much larger and brighter. The following is a careful description of the typical example:— General colour above black with a distinct shade of purple everywhere, excepting on the head, which is glossy black, as well as the lores and sides of the face ; from above the eye to the nape runs a distinct super- ciliary streak of pointed feathers, silvery cobalt in colour, slightly shaded with purple on the hinder plnmes) wings blue-black, the median and greater coverts bright cobalt at the tips and on the outer webs, forming an enamel-like patch on the wing; quills black, the inner secondaries externally deep blue; tail deep blue ; throat and chest black, the latter strongly washed with purple, shading into the crimson of the breast; rest of the under surface of the body deep crimson ; thighs brown ; under wing-coverts black. Total length 6°8 inches ; culmen 0°89, wing 3°45, tail 1-3, ee 1-6. The figures in the Plate represent the old bird in two positions, as well as a nestling which I discovered . . ry - ¥ = - in my own collection, and which doubtless belongs to this species. he figures of the adult are drawn from the typical specimen.