Page:The Fauna of British India, including Ceylon and Burma (Birds Vol 1).djvu/398

 4354r TIMALIIDAE.


 * Mesia argentauris Hodgs., Ind. Kev., 1838, p. 88 (Nepal); Blanf. & Oates, i, p. 244.

Vernacular names. Chi-ro-chi-rit (Kachiu); lJang-rap-cliil-[>lio '(Lepcbii).

Description. — Male, rorehead golden-yellow; crown, nape, lores, cheeks black, produced as a stripe under the ear-coverts; ear-coverts silvery-white; upper back and s-ides of neck fulvous yellow; lower back, scapulars, inner secondaries and wing-coverts alatv, some of the outermost of the latter edged with green;

rump slaty-green; ui)per tail-coverts crimson : tail blackish brown, the three outer pairs of feathers edged with yellowish; wings brown, the first three primaries edged with yellow, the other quills with crimson near their bases and yellow elsewhere; chin and throat deep orange-yellow; lower plumage olive-yellow, brighter on the breast and abdomen, the former of which is obsoletely streaked darker; under tail-coverts crimson.

Colours of soft parts. Iris red-brown to brown; bill yellow- ochre, tinged with greenish or brown at the base; legs and feet fleshy-yellow.

Measurements. Length about 180 mm.; wing 74 to 78 mm,; tail about 4.5 mm.; tarsus about 25 mm.; culmen 12 to 13 nun. The female and young have the upper and lower tail-coverts orange-buft: and the latter also has the crown yellowish.

Distribution. The Himalayas from Garhwal to East Assam North and South of the Bralimaputra, Manipur, Lushai, Chin, Kachin Hills, mountains of Central and S. Burma, Shan States, Siam. East of this it is replaced by a nearly allied race, M. a. cunhacei (Kloss).

Nidification. Every word written on the nidification oP Liothrix lutca would do equally well for this bird also and it is quite impossible to tell nests and eggs of the one from the other. This bird, howeA'er, breeds a little lower down than does the Liothrix. Whilst the latter breeds principally between 4,500 and 7,000 feet this bird breeds for the most part between 3,000 and 5,000 feet and whereas the former prefers pine-forests, the present one likes