SPHENOCICHLA HUMTII. Hume’s Wedge-billed Wren. Heterorhynchus humii, Mandelli, Str. F. 1873, p. 415. Stachyrirhynchus humii, Hume, Str. F. 187 9, p. 95. Sphenocichla humii, Sharpe, Brit. Mus. Cat. vi. p. 283 (1881: ¢). Tis extraordinary bird was described by Mr. Mandelli from specimens procured in Native Sikhim, and was named by him LHeterorhynchus. This title, however, had already been employed by Lafresnaye, and Mr. Hume’s name of Stachyrirhynchus would have had to be used; but before the latter was published, Colonel Godwin-Austen and Lord Tweeddale had described a second species from Munipur, which they had called Sphenocichla; and there can be no doubt that this is the correct generic name 0) be employed. Mr. Hume’s proposed title is a very good one for expressing the affinities of the genus; for the wedge- shaped bill is very similar to that of Stachyris; and at the same time the absence of bristles to the gape proves that it is a true Wren, and its place in the family is probably close to Pnoepyga. As the birds were lent me by Colonel Godwin-Austen as two distinct species, I have figured S. roberti as different from S. Awmii; but I must express great doubts as to their being really two species, and Mr. Sharpe considers them undoubtedly identical. The following is a description of S. hum, taken from the British Museum ‘ Catalogue of Birds,’ where Mr. Sharpe has described it as the male of the species. « Adult male. General colour above scaly, the feathers being brown in the centre, edged with black, the feathers on the head and mantle with buffy-white shaft-lines, less distinct on the lower back and rump, the dorsal feathers indistinctly waved with narrow blackish cross-bars; upper tail-coverts reddish brown, narrowly barred with indistinct blackish cross lines ; wing-coverts like the back, edged and obscurely barred in the same manner; some of the greater coverts more ochraceous brown towards the tips; quills blackish brown, obscurely barred with lighter brown and black externally, the bars a little more distinct towards the end of the secondaries ; upper tail-coverts and tail rather more reddish brown, numerously barred with blackish brown, the bars about twenty-one in number; forehead blacker than the head, with very distinct white shaft-streaks, the lores and sides of the crown similarly coloured; an eyebrow of light-ashy feathers tipped with white, drawn from above the eye to the sides of the neck, whic a heeks blackish, narrowly streaked with white shaft-lines, as also the hers of the throat and breast h is also mottled with the same ashy-spotted feathers ; ear-coverts and ¢ fore part of the cheeks ; under surface of body blackish brown, the feat eee cee obsoletely margined with dull ashy, producing a scaly appearance ; chin ome distinct white shaft-lines ; centre of breast ashy, the lateral feathers blackish, tipped with ashy ; flank-feathers and meu blackish, tail-coverts entirely fulvous brown ; under wing-coverts light fulvous brown, edged with blackish, the outer ones more ashy ; que Leone ashy eu along the edge of the inner web. ‘Total length 6°3 inches, culmen 1:0, wing 2°/, tail 2:6, fone . oa The Plate represent a male bird in two positions ; and the figures are drawn from a fine specimen obtainec in Native Sikhim by Mr. Mandelli and lent to me by Colonel Godw The figures are of about the natural size. [R. B. S.] tipped with fulvous brown ; under in-Austen, in whose collection 1t now 1s. — : AS AN : ves in