FARU Ss LE GAN S, Lesson. Klegant Tit. Parus elegans, Lesson, Traité d’Orn. p. 456 (1831).—Pucheran, Rev. et Mag. de Zool. 1854, p. 68.—Bonaparte, Comptes Rendus, xxxviii. p. 63 (1854).—-Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 34, note.—Gray, Hand-list of Birds, i. p. 231 (1869).—Sharpe, Transactions of the Linnean Society, 2nd series, Zool. vol. i. (1877). Parus quadrivittatus, La Fresnaye, Rev. Zool. 1840, p. 129. Machlolophus elegans, Walden, Transactions of the Zoological Society, vol. ix. p. 199 (1875). In the Plate which accompanies the present article ornithologists are presented with a portrait of a Tit which differs somewhat in style of markings from any of the other familiar genera of the Paride. There are several groups of Tits, nearly all of which have been figured in one or other of my ornithological works ; and, strange to say, nearly all these groups are represented in the species found in the British Islands. Thus :—our Marsh-Tit (P. palustris) is one of several sober-coloured species which are found in the northern parts of both the Old and the New World; our common Blue Tit (P. c@ruleus) has its representatives in the Mediterranean subregion and in Northern Asia; and the same may be said of the Coal Tit (P. ater) ; the little Bottle-Tit (P. caudatus) has several allies in the northern portions of the Old World; and, lastly, the crested species (Lophophanes cristatus) has a great many representatives in the Himalayas. It is in the last-named range of mountains that we must look for a bird which will in any way compare with the beautiful species represented in the Plate ; and it is probably on account of the characteristic white spotting on the wings that Mr. Blyth was inclined to place it in the genus Machlolophus along with some of the Himalayan species. The entire absence, however, of the enormous crest which distinguishes the Philippine bird must be our warrant for not placing it in the genus Machlolophus; and in my opinion it ought to stand alone, perhaps to be included in a separate genus, which would also contain the lately described species from Balabac, Parus amabilis, Sharpe. We know nothing of the habits of this pretty species; and until recently we had no knowledge of its exact home, beyond the fact that it was a native of the Philippine archipelago. My own specimen is from Manila; and Dr. Steere procured it in Guimaras and in Palawan. The following description is taken from my own specimen above mentioned :— Head and hind neck glossy blue-black, with a patch of sulphur-yellow feathers dividing the hind neck ; mantle blue-black, the feathers having all terminal white spots wasbed with pale greenish; scapulars light yellowish green, with black bases to the feathers ; lower back and rump light greenish, the feathers grey at the base; upper tail-coverts glossy blue-black ; tail blue-black, tipped with white, the three outer feathers with a white mark about the middle of the outer web; wings blue-black, all the wing-coverts with a large ovate spot of white occupying nearly the terminal half; primaries narrowly edged with white, and the innermost tipped with white, which increases in extent towards the secondaries, mnie the white terminal spots are as large as on the wing-coverts ; lores, region of the eye, cheeks, and entire throat blue-black, llow, continuing in a band down the sides of the neck; rest of under surface of the ear-coverts lemon-ye | ashed with greenish ; under wing-coverts white washed with yellow. body yellow, the flanks somewhat w a6 . 5 ° 3 cea ie Total length 4 inches, wing 3s, tail 14, tarsus s. The figures in the Plate are drawn from the foregoing bird, and are life-sized.