STACHYRIS PYRRHOPS, Hodes. Red-eyed Stachyris. Stachyris pyrrhops, Hodgs. Journ, Asiat. Soc. Beng., vol. xiii. p. 379.—Gray, Cat. of Spec. and Draw. of Mamm. and Birds pres. to Brit. Mus. by B. H. Hodgson, Esq., p. 75.—Blyth, Cat. of Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, p. 150.—Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av., tom. i. p. 332.—Horsf. and Moore, Cat. of Birds in Mus. East Ind. Comp., vol. i. p. 232. Timalia pyrrhops, Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. iii. app. p. 10, app. to p. 228. Stachyris pyrops, Hodgs. in Proc. Zool. Soc., part xiii. p. 23.—Id. Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. xvi. p. 193. ————— chrysea, Adams in Proce. of Zool. Soc., part xxvii. p. 184. I musr plead guilty to having led my friend Dr. Leith Adams into error by sending him the wrong name for this little bird, a specimen of which was kindly presented to me by that gentleman. The name of Stachyris chrysea, which appears in his ‘List of the Birds of Cashmere,” in the twenty-seventh part of the ‘Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London,’ has reference, therefore, not to the true Stachyris chryseus, but to the bird here represented, which is undoubtedly the S. pyrrhops of Mr. Hodgson, as I have ascertained by carefully comparing it with the specimens sent by him from Nepaul to the British Museum. Dr. Adams’s discovery of the bird in Cashmere proves that the species enjoys a wide range, which probably extends over the whole of the southern and temperate regions of the Himalayas. Of its habits and economy nothing has yet been recorded. Dr. Adams states that its bill is reddish towards the gape, and black at the tip; that its irides are red; and that it frequents bushy places in the Lower Himalaya ranges, but is by no means numerous. In all probability, there is little difference in the colouring of the sexes; but this and all other particulars respecting it must be left for the attention of future explorers. The followimg is Mr. Hodgson’s description of its colouring :-— ‘Olive-brown above, sordid rusty below and on the sides of the head and neck; beneath and before the eye and under the chin a black spot; bill sordid sanguine, dusky on the ridge; legs horn-colour ; eyes sanguine.” The figures on the Plate are of the natural size. The plant is the Dendrobium pulchellum. vi o - ° GNX EO) a 5 ~ r 2 4 ~ Ss D > > Z » MS 7 Te: 1/7 A mee ea = WE) ORG I SOON . tL SF fiery , CAT C/KS) AS od