a ee Ae) x GW po * FA (6) “EO n sa a al re ™ et ™ — ) WS7Yo iS CG NAA | AO wwe: Om AN see a a te PYRRHULA NIPALENSIS, Aoadgs. Nepaulese Bullfinch. Pyrrhula Nipalensis, Hodgs. Asiat. Res., vol. xix. p. 155.—Blyth, Cat. of Birds in Mus. of As. Soc. Calcutta, p. 122.—List of Sp. and Draw. of Mamm. and Birds presented to Brit. Mus. by R. H. Hodgson, Esq., ee iil —_——— nipalensis, Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. 11. p. 387, Pyrrhula, sp. 3. nepalensis, Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av., p. 525, Pyrrhula, sp. 5. A smmmarrty of colouring is found to prevail amongst the members of almost every well-defined genus of birds; to this general rule, however, as in every other case, exceptions sometimes occur, and the present bird is an instance in point; the red colouring which pervades the breast of the under surface of the males of every other species being absent in the Pyrrhula Nipalensis, besides which the colouring of the sexes is very similar, while in all the other known members of the genus, as now restricted, they are very dissimilar. The rich forests of Nepaul and the regions skirting the great Himalayan range are the localities ‘n which this bird is to be found in a state of nature ; and it was there Mr. Hodgson procured the specimens from which the subjoined descriptions were taken. In size the Pyrrhula Nipalensis exceeds all the other known Pyrrhule, which, coupled with its sombre colouring, precludes the possibility of its being confounded with any of its congeners. The following is Mr. Hodgson’s descriptions above referred to :— « Form as in erythrocephala but the bill grosser, with the tomial line of its upper mandible less even, and the tail still more conspicuously forked and graduated. «¢ Male. Brown, smeared slaty-blue (like common slate-stone) ; with black rump, wings and tail all reflecting a brilliant purplish blue gloss ; cap picked out with dusky, and a band of the same hue round the base of the bill; a white spot under the eye ; band across the rump; lower belly, vent and under tail- coverts white ; outer web of the last tertiaries fiery red; bill greenish horn, with black tip; legs fleshy brown ; iris brown. “« Female. Rather less, exactly like the male, save only that the outer web of the last quill towards the body is invariably yellow, and not fiery as in the male; the young at first want this distinctive sexual mark. « Habitat. Northern and central Nepaul.” The figures represent the two sexes of the size of life.