A Sie Ns BA NI GB) AR GQAEYO * FR (SW OO) By ceweyve “BO MOe” Waser BU BW Bese Oe 2 PYRRHULA ERYTHROCEPHALA, Fiz. Red-headed Bullfinch. Pyrrhula erythrocephala, Vig. in Proc. of Comm. of Sci. and Corr. of Zool. Soc., part i. p. 174.—Gould, Century of Birds, tab. xxxii.—Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. ii. p. 387, Pyrrhula, sp. 2.—Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av., p. 525, Pyrrhula, sp. 4.—List of Sp. and Draw. of Mamm. and Birds presented to Brit. Mus. by B. H. Hodgson, Esq., p. 111. ———— erythrocephalus, Blyth, Cat. of Birds in Mus. As. Soc. Calcutta, p. 123. Tuts fine species possesses the general characteristics of the common Bullfinch of Europe, except in the form of the tail, which is decidedly forked, while in our bird it is even; and in the colour of the head, which is bright rufous inclining to scarlet, instead of being black as in our native species. The occurrence of this bird in the collections of Europe was formerly so rare, that the single specimen belonging to the Andersonian Museum at Glasgow, from which my original figure and description in the “Century of Birds” were taken, was the only one then known. Shortly afterwards two other examples arrived in England, one of which was deposited in the British Museum, the other in that of the Zoological Society of London; and these three were all the specimens then m Europe. During the interval which has elapsed between 1832, when the “‘ Century of Birds” was published, and the date 1853 at which I now write, the great chain of the Himalayan and adjoining hills which extend towards the peninsula (the native country of the P. erythrocephala) has been traversed by men whose love for natural history has prompted them to procure and send to Europe numerous collections of the productions of those districts ; among them many examples of both sexes of this beautiful species have been sent; in order therefore to make known the female I unhesitatingly give a new Plate, comprising accurate representations of both sexes; and figures of every species of the genus will now be found in the “ Birds of Europe” and the “ Birds of Asia.” Fine examples of both sexes, but especially of the female, are contained in the collection of Indian Birds belonging to Andrew Murray, Esq., of Aberdeen, to whom I am indebted for the loan of them; they were collected I believe in the neighbourhood of Agra. As is ordinarily the case with the other members of the genus, the sexes differ considerably ; they may be thus described :— The male has a band of black around the base of the beak ; crown of the head, occiput and back of the neck bright rust-red ; back and wing-coverts olive-grey, the latter crossed by a band of black; wings black, the secondaries glossed with bluish green and exhibiting indistinct bars; rump white; tail-coverts and tail black, the coverts and centre tail-feathers glossed with bluish green and exhibiting bars similar to those on the secondaries ; under surface pale orange-red, passing into olive-grey on the lower part of the abdomen ; under tail-coverts white ; bill black ; feet flesh-colour. The female differs in having the under as well as the upper surface olive-grey, and in having a wash of wax-yellow on the occiput and at the back of the neck, instead of the rich rufous-red of the male. I remark also that the depth of the colouring of the female seems to be subject to variation, some being much paler than others, and having only a faint indication of the wax-yellow wash at the back of the neck. The figures represent the two sexes of the natural size.