ORIOLUS BRODERIPIL, Bonap. Broderip’s Oriole. Oriolus broderipi, Bonap. Proc. Zool. Soc. 1850, p. 279, pl. xvili—Id. Consp. Gen. Av. i. p. 348.—Wallace, P. Z. 3: 1863, p. 485.—Schlegel, Mus. Pays-Bas, Coraces, p- 106.—Id. Dierent. p. 179.—Finseh, Neu- Guinea, p. 173.—Gray, Hand-list of Birds, i. p. 291.—Sharpe, Catalogue of Birds Brit. Mus. p. 201. Broderipus refulgens, Bonap. Comptes Rendus, xxxviii. p. 538 (1854). Euchlorites broderipi, Heine, Journ. fiir Ornithologie, 1859, p. 402. Tu subject of the accompanying Plate is one of the most beautiful of all the Orioles. Of the latter family there are about forty species, the majority of them being birds of a brilliant plumage, in which the richest yellow is contrasted with a wing and tail of the deepest black. There are, in fact, four divisions of the true Oriole (Oriolus), without mentioning the Bare-faced Orioles of Australia and Papuasia, which belong to the genus Sphecotheres. There are, first, the Orioles with a perfectly yellow head, to which section belong our own Golden Oriole of Europe and certain allied species ; secondly, there are the Yellow-headed Orioles with a black horseshoe mark on the head; thirdly, the dull-coloured Orioles with olive-coloured or brown plumage ; and, lastly, the black-headed Orioles. Broderip’s Oriole belongs to the second section, which contains the Orioles having a black horseshoe mark on the head. Not one bird of this section is found in Africa or Australia; they are confined to the Indian Region and Malayan archipelago: and in the latter archipelago they seem to reach their utmost development both in size and in richness of colour; for a more beautiful Oriole than the one selected by me for illustration in the Plate probably does not exist. All those who knew the late Mr. Broderip will rejoice that his name is associated with so beautiful a bird, which recalls the memory of a genial and well-beloved man whose claims science has scarcely sufficiently recognized. As the owner, however, of the original specimen of the beautiful Huplectella aspergillum, his name is not likely to be forgotten by those who yO sn the interest with which this remarkable sponge was received in scientific circles when it was first described by Professor Owen. I regret that not a single word has been recorded concerning the habits of this fine bird, which is an inhabitant of the islands of Lombock, Sumbawa, and Flores, and I can only add the description of the species which is given by Mr. Sharpe in his ‘ Catalogue of Birds.’ | oT “ Adult male. General colour above and below brilliant golden yellow, deepening into orange; forehead golden; crown of head and nape, as well as the lores and feathers round the eyes, bad least wing- coverts orange like the back, the greater series bright yellow, the inner ets of this — black ; bastard wing, primary-coverts, and quills jet-black, the prunany eon tipped with Dae ae a speculum, the primaries externally edged with grey, the secondaries narrowly margined with grey near the tips, the nl most more broadly tipped with yellow on the outer web; tail black, the two centre feathers broadly tipped with yellow, the rest orange-yellow at the tip, the black bases markedly decreasing towards the outer feathers of the tail; ‘bill pink; feet black ; iris red’ (allace, MS.). Total length 12 inches, culmen 15, wing 6:2; tail 4°7, tarsus 1-15. : : 4 ai bees | Much paler and more yellow, the black on the head forming a rmg round the nape, leaving the whereas in the adult the yellow is confined to a small frontal patch, the rest of the nish, the primaries externally margined with greyish, the secondaries washed 9 & “© Young’. rest of the head yellow, ‘no black: wings brow crown being black ; wings : ae . and externally edged with yellow near the tip; two centre tail-feathers olive-greenish, tipped Cc a: € with yellow, the rest of the feathers olive-green at base, bright yellow at the ‘ip, ieee : ae less subterminal shade of black ; entire under surface of body bright yellow, ee the unc : ming: and tail-coverts ; the lower surface of the quills dark brown, buffy white - the ies : me ae we : ac The ficures in the Plate represent a richly coloured old male of the size of life, and are drawn from ? S a specimen in my own collection. with olive