CYMBIRHYNCHUS AFFINIS, poyva. Allied Eurylaime. Cymbirhynchus afinis, Blyth, Journ. Asiat. Soc., vol. xv. p. 312.—Ib. Cat. of Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Caleutta elie: » SOC. Lc a, ‘Tur discovery of a second species of a form only one of which had been previously known is always interesting; hitherto the Cymbirhynchus macrorhynchus stood alone, and it is to Mr. Blyth that we ae indebted for the description, if not for the discovery, of another species of this singular form. The example from which my figure was taken was obligingly lent to me by H. E. Strickland, Esq., to whom it had been presented by Mr. Blyth. This latter naturalist has so ably pointed out the characters distin- guishing the C. affinis from the C. macrorhynchus, that 1 cannot perhaps do better than transcribe the entire passage from one of the many valuable papers communicated by him to the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, with the trifling alteration of substituting the original appellation of macrorhynchus for the more recent one of nasutus employed by him. «In this, while the general character and colouring are the same as in C. macrorhynchus, the bill is invariably much smaller and flatter, as in the restricted Ewrylame, but the nostrils are placed forward as in the other. The general dimensions are also less, the usual length of wing in C. affins being three inches and a half, rarely three and five-eighths, and the middle tail-feathers three inches; in C. macrorhynchus the wing measures three and seven-eighths to four inches, and the tail three and five-eighths to three and three- quarters. C. affinis has also, constantly, an oblong red spot margining the tip of the outer web of two of its tertiaries, and a third margining the inner web of the uppermost tertiary; in what appear to be the females the latter spot is red, as in the supposed males, while the former are white; these spots do not occur in C. macrorhynchus. Lastly, the white upon the tail is more developed in C. afins, and placed nearer the tips of the feathers: a white spot at the base of the inner primaries is also larger and more conspicuously shown.” At present Mr. Strickland’s specimen is the only one in this country, 0 ' n ‘ Ure 2OPe 7 f > most welcome to the Collection at the East India House from any of the Company’s officers who- may have According to Mr. Blyth, Aracan is the natural habitat of the species. consequently examples would be an opportunity of procuring then. The figures are of the natural size. — > ' NUL ceTpay rear se ee