Plate 8
IN THE mountainous parts of temperate and tropical Asia and
Malaysia, from Turkestan and Afghanistan in the west, east to
Formosa and Borneo, and south to Ceylon and Java, one often
notices along the forested banks of swift-running watercourses, on the
ground, on rocks, on boulders or on low branches, peculiar dark
birds, always alone or in pairs. They are the Whistling Thrushes of
the genus Myiophoneus.X
Some of them exceed slightly in size the European Mistle Thrush,
while others are somewhat smaller, like the American Wood Thrush.
Their wings are rather large and moderately rounded, as is their
tail, which is comparatively longer in the larger birds than in the
smaller ones. Their long legs and their feet are powerful and al-
ways black.
With the different forms, the bill varies much in strength, but is
always slightly shorter than the head, compressed and hooked at the
tip. It is within the species caeruleus that the greatest differences
are to be found in its depth, which increases continuously and strik-
ingly from north to south. Measured at its thickest part, just beyond
the nostrils, it is 8 mm., on an average, in c. caeruleus (China), and
reaches 15 mm. in c. [tavirostris (Java). As to color, the bill is either
black or yellow with a variable amount of black on the upper man-
dible. In most black-billed forms, the young show a certain amount
of yellow. The nostrils are exposed, round or oval. The iris is al-
ways brown, of slightly differing shades.
All Myiophoneus show blue in their plumage. It is reduced to
shoulder patches in the females of borneensis, castaneus, and blighi;
the male castaneus is half blue and half chestnut; the general color-
ation of all the others is a dark blue, with a greater or lesser admixture
of black and purple.
By their general aspect, build and behavior, Whistling Thrushes
are true turdine birds, only specialized for semi-aquatic life and
particular food, but nevertheless resembling other ground thrushes.
They walk, hop, .run, stop, flit and open their tail and wings, cock
x I agree with G. D. Sherborn (Index Animalium, London, 98: 46-48) that the proper
spelling is Myiophoneus Temminck and Laugier, 8. Myophonus T. and L., 8, is an
orthographic error, as well as Myophoneus in their tables, x859, while Myiophonus Agassiz,
846, is an unnecessary emendation.
their heads, stare, turn over stones and leaves in ways closely recalling
those of the European Blackbird and the American Robin, to name
only two birds that are familiar to everyone. Whoever has watched
them in life cannot have any doubt about their real relationships.
They have little in common with the timaliine birds, always arboreal,
whose legs are coarser and wings shorter. The only objection to
their admission among the Turdinae is indeed more formal than real,
arising from the fact that in most cases the young birds in first
plumage are not plainly spotted. Those of M. blighi, however,
are distinctly marked, having broad pale shaft-lines to their brown
feathers on the head and under parts; also the immature borneensis
is clearly streaked with white on the chest and abdomen. In all other
forms, immatures are a uniform sooty or brownish black, with variable
blue and purple suffusion; but they all have white or pale-brown
shafts, more or less visible, on the feathers of the breast, abdomen,
flank and lower back. This, I believe, is a sufficient, if not a very con-
spicuous indication of their affinities. Once more, however, I wish to
call the reader's attention to the artificiality of family or subfamily
divisions among passerine birds, particularly in the present group.
As pointed out at the beginning of this paper, Whistling Thrushes
are strictly hill birds, completely absent in the plains, except during
the winter along swift-flowing streams at the foot of the mountains.
They live near or on the ground, in the vicinity of running water,
where there is a sufficient cover of trees and bushes on which they
perch at times. They feed on all sorts of invertebrates, many of
which are caught in the water. Snails seem, however, to be their
staple diet. The birds' strong, hooked bills are well adapted to
dealing with this sort of prey; they have a habit of cracking them on
a particular rock; a great heap of empty shells is found near by.
They are more abundant near limestone cliffs where snails are more
numerous.
All Whistling Thrushes have similar nesting habits. The nests
are placed on ledges, in crevices of rocks, among boulders and logs or
even among thick branches, always close to the water. They are
large cups O f green moss mixed with twigs and muddy roots, lined
inside with thin black roots and some leaves. In China and in west-
ern India, they are sometimes built under the eaves of temples and
houses. The eggs, usually three, sometimes two or four in number,
resemble those of many other thrushes, particularly of the subgenus
Oreocincla. Rather elongated, their ground-color is gray, pinkish,
buff, or greenish, with indefinite spots and freckles of pale reddish
brown and secondary markings of gray and lavender.
The various species have a long, full and melodious whistle, often
uttered, and in India they are called the 'Whistling School Boys.'
In some of the smaller species the whistle is weaker. Their alarm-
note is harsh and short, not unlike that of the European Blackbird.
I have never heard them sing properly either in the wilds or in
captivity, but Pre David and several aviculturists record a veritable
song. The question of their vocal possibilities remains open, but I
doubt that the}, can emit anything more elaborate than their well-
known whistle.
All species of Myiophoneus appear to be common in suitable
situations, with the exception of blighi, which remains scarce in the
mountain forests of Ceylon. Some forms seem to be fairly local,
particularly robinsoni, glaucinus and its subspecies. Some Whistling
Thrushes are shy birds, but many become easily accustomed to the
presence of man and are often observed in the vicinity of human
dwellings when they are not molested; horsfieldi is particularly fear-
less; also, to a lesser degree, caeruleus and melanurus. A good illus-
tration of their confiding nature is given by an amusing incident
which took place during my Sixth Expedition to Indo-China in
1931-1932. At Thateng, on the Boloven Plateau in southern Laos,
a torrent was rushing through the thick jungle, just back of our
camp. Both subspecies, M. c. caeruleus and M. c. eugenei, were nu-
merous along its course during the winter months. Within a few
days of our arrival, we trapped a few of them and kept them on our
verandah, each in a box cage. They were given biscuit meal, meat
and boiled eggs, and they took readily to such food. After having
remained two weeks in captivity, one eugenei escaped. We thought
that it would quickly return to its nearby native stream. Great was
our astonishment when we found that the bird did not leave the
eaves of our hut, but came down to eat from the cages scraps which
it evidently preferred to its natural diet. We could easily have
recaptured it, but we let it remain free in order to watch its behavior.
When several weeks later we left Thateng, the bird was still living
in the roof. I imagine that it returned only reluctantly to the torrent
when no more artificial food could be found.
The systematic arrangement of the different forms of Myiophoneus
is not simple, and there have been various differences of opinion on
the subject.
As previously said, in the majority of Whistling Thrushes, the
general coloration is a deep blue, with a variable admixture of black,
violet and purple. Even in the few cases where brown or chestnut
is dominant, there is always some blue in the plumage (shoulder
patch). In several species the body-feathers terminate in a lustrous
blue spot, forming a spangle, a unique feature among thrushes.
These spangles are either round or elongated, according to the species
or subspecies, and also to the location on the body. They are usually
pointed on the head and neck.
All Myiophoneus show a shining blue or violet patch on the
shoulder, formed by the large decomposed margins of the lesser wing-
coverts, and on the bend of the wing. They have the forehead, lores,
long plumelets and bristles around the bill deep black. Most of
them have a silky blue band across the anterior crown, close to the
forehead, but a few lack this. In the great majority of cases, both
sexes are either alike or differ only slightly in the intensity of the
colors, but in blighi the female is a uniform reddish chestnut; in
castaneus she is also chestnut with a black crown, bluish in front,
while the hen borneensis is dark brown. In all of them the female
is slightly smaller than the male.
With the exception of horsfieldi, eugenei, melanurus and blighi,
all forms possess concealed white feather-bases, running up the shafts,
usually on flanks, sometimes on abdomen, breast and back. In some
of them, there are indications of a white patch on the outer median
under wing-coverts, but this appears to be individual.
In all forms of the caeruleus group except eugenei, and exception-
ally fiavirostris, there are also glossy white spots, more or less tinged
with mauve, at the tip of the median upper wing-coverts. The larger
species, including horsfieldi and caeruleus, have a proportionately
longer tail than the smaller ones; but the fact that two of the small,
short-tailed forms, melanurus and robinsoni, show to a greater or lesser
extent the same gleaming spangles as caeruleus, indicates close affini-
ties. On the other side, the large, long-tailed forms of horsfieldi,
without spangles, are obviously nearly related to the short-tailed
glaucinus, while they are not far removed from caeruleus, which they
replace geographically. All these different characteristics are dis-
tributed irregularly among the different forms and cannot be used
for generic distinction, all the more since Myiophoneus has no very
near relatives and forms a homogeneous group.
It seems that their closest allies are the Celebean Heinrichia, which,
although much smaller, appears not very distant from the slenderer
Whistling Thrushes, particularly blighi. Furthermore Heinrichia is
nothing but a large Brachypteryx, very similar to B. poliogyna from
the Philippines and B. erythrogyna from Borneo, in both sexes. Be-
sides its much-reduced size, Heinrichia differs from Myiophoneus
mainly in the absence of glittering blue patches on the lesser wing-
coverts.
We have therefore to consider that all Whistling Thrushes should
be placed in the genus Myiophoneus Temminck and Laugier, Planches
Colories, 2: 29, Dec. 1822 (type: M. metallicus---M. flavirostris).
Arrenga Lesson, 1838 (type: Turdus cyaneus--M. glaucinus) and
Myiophaga Lesson, 1838 (type: Pitta glaucina--M. glaucinus) fall
into synonymy.
The American Museum of Natural History, New York, possesses
large or sufficient series of all forms. Their study, supplemented by
that of other specimens lent by the museums of Washington, Cam-
bridge and Philadelphia, and by information supplied by Messrs.
H. G. Deignan and R. M. de Schauensee, has led me to the following
conclusions, as to their specific and subspecific status:
The two long-tailed South Indian and Formosan forms without
spangles, horsfieldi and insularis, are conspecific.
All the large, long-tailed spangled forms of the Asiatic and Malay-
sian countries (caeruleus, temmincki, turcestanicus, eugenei, crassi-
rostris, dicrorhynchus, flavirostris) are likewise conspecific, notwith-
standing anomalies of distribution due to migration, intergradation
and seasonal overlapping.
Among the short-tailed forms, robinsoni is best considered a sepa-
rate species. It has a yellow bill, a primitive character found in
several forms and appearing in the immatures of others; it seems to
be the most generalized bird in the whole genus.
Three others, glaucinus (Java), borneensis (Borneo) and castaneus
(Sumatra), are conspecific in spite of marked differences in color.
Their proportions are the same, and also their retiring habits. While
the male and the female glaucinus are nearly alike and the sexes differ
in the two others, the dark-brown female of borneensis provides a
transition, and fresh adult males of glaucinus and borneensis are very
similar, the latter being only a little larger, duller, and having no
lustrous blue band on the anterior crown. The blue tinge disappears
to a great extent in old specimens of borneensis; those in the American
Museum, collected on Kina Balu by J. Whitehead in 1888, hardly
show any, while two birds in Cambridge, obtained at the same place
by J. A. Griswold, Jr., in August 1937, are almost as blue as fresh
glaucinus. All three forms have large white bases to the feathers on
the breast, abdomen and back.
M. melanurus, from Sumatra, is a very unusual species, slender,
with a short bill, very bright colors and spangles, and no white
feather-bases.
The Ceylon bird, M. blighi, although related to glaucinus, is much
smaller, has no blue on the anterior crown and no white on feather-
bases. The female and the young are conspicuously different. It is
better to consider it a valid species.
It is interesting to note that no Myiophoneus occurs on the island
of Hainan, and that the MalaysJan countries are the richest in species:
Malay Peninsula, two; Sumatra, three; Java, two; while continental
Asia, Formosa, Borneo and Ceylon have only one each.
Evidently Sumatra and the lower Malay Peninsula which, zoogeo-
graphically speaking, constitute but one natural region, are the center
of distribution of the genus. Of the four different species inhabit-
ing this area (M. c. dicrorhynchus, common to both the peninsula
and the island; robinsoni, Malay Peninsula; castaneus and melanurus,
Sumatra), M. robinsoni, restricted in range to the mountains of
Selangor, appears to be the most generalized and consequently the
central form, possessing nearly all the characteristics of the others,
without their being very highly developed. In the dimensions of
wings, tail, bill and legs, as well as in its color pattern, it occupies
an intermediate position between them all. On the other hand,
M. blighi, from Ceylon, appears to be the most primitive form now
living, the nearest to Heinrichia and Brachypteryx, from which Myio-
phoneus probably was derived. It must be pointed out here that
if the long-tailed M. caeruleus and M. hors[ieldi superficially resemble
some forms of Turdus, they are not really closely related to them,
while through robinsoni, glaucinus and blighi they are linked to
Brachypteryx.
The following diagram gives an idea of the affinities of the differ-
ent species and subspecies of Myiophoneus, as they exist today:
In the following key and descriptions, I have tried to give a sum-
mary oœ our present knowledge of the Whistling Thrushes. The
descriptions and measurements have been taken entirely from the
good series of the American Museum and a few other borrowed birds.
In all forms there is a wide range of individual variation which might
prove even greater than indicated in the following pages, if larger
series could be examined. But owing to the personal factor, which
always prevails in measuring birds, I have preferred not to use the
records of other authors.
The length of the culmen has been quoted from its junction with
the skull, and the depth of bill as given is the greatest diameter be-
tween the tip and the nostrils, close to the end of the latter.
Additional notes and information from literature have been utilized.
My thanks are due to Dr. Ernst Mayr, whose opinions have been
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Key to Species and Subspecies
I. Tail longer than 112 min.
1. Body feathers without spangles
A. Anterior crown bright blue ....................... horsfieldi
B. Anterior crown dull blue ......................... insularis
2. Body feathers terminated by a spangle
C. Bill black ........................................ caeruleus
D. Bill mostly yellow '
a. No white spots on median wing-coverts ........... eugenei
b. White spots on median wing-coverts
a' Bill slender (depth: 9-10 min.)
a" Smaller and brighter (wing: 159-180 min.) .... temrnincki
b" Larger and dulier (wing: 178-200 min.) ...... turcestanicus
b' Bill thick (depth: 12-13 min.)
c" Spangles large (abdomen black) ............. crassirostrls
d" Spangles small (abdomen brownish) ......... dicrorhynchus
c' Bill very thick (depth: 14-15 min.) ............. flavirostris
II. Tail shorter than 105 min.
1. Spangles present
A. Bill short and black .............................. rnelanura
B. Bill long and partly yellow ........................ robinsoni
2. No spangles
C. General coloration blue and black
a. Anterior crown black ............................ blighi
b. Anterior crown dark blue ....................... borneensis
c. Anterior crown bright blue ...................... glaucinus
D. General coloration blue and brown, or chestnut, with
a blue shoulder-patch
d. Head, neck and breast blue, rest of plumage chestnut castaneus
e. Crown blackish, rest of plumage chestnut ......... castaneus
f. Whole plumage reddish brown .................. blighi 9
g. Whole plumage dark brown ..................... borneensis
I. MYIOPHONEUS HOKSFIELDI
1. Myiophoneus horsfieldi horsfieldi
Myophonus horsfieldii Vigors, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1831: 35: Malabar.
Description.--Anterior crown bright glistening blue; head and neck black; upper
parts dark blue, the lesser wing-coverts forming a glistening bright-blue patch;
throat, foreneck and upper breast black; lower breast, flanks and abdomen mottled
blue and black, the feathers having broad blue tips. Bill black.
Dimensions.--Wing, 143-160; tail, 112-121; tarsus, 42-47; culmen, 30-34; depth
of bill, 8 min.
Distribution.--Westem India, from Mr. Abu south to Travancore and east to the
Nilghiris. Non-migratory.
2. Myiophoneus horsfieldi insularis
Myiophoneus insularis Gould, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1862: 280: Formosa.
Description.--Resembles M. h. horsfieldi, but larger, with higher legs; anterior
crown darker and duller blue; upper parts dull black; breast and abdomen appear-
ing bright blue, the feathers having very broad blue tips; concealed white bae
to rump feathers and greater unde- wing.coverts.
Dirnensions.--Wing, 156-170; tail, 116-135; tarsus, 51-55; culmen, 31-34; depth
of bill, 9-10 mm.
Distribution.--The mountains of Formosa. Resident.
Note.--It is astonishing that the close affinity between horsfieldi
and insularis seems to have, so far, escaped notice. In spite of the
strange distribution of the two forxns, they evidently constitute local
races of the same species.
Geographically, they take the place of caeruleus, but the two groups
of birds differ so widely in color pattern that it is impossible to link
them more than generically. At the same time, horsfieldi is un-
doubtedly rather closely related to glaucinus.
II. MYIOPHONEUS CAERULEUS
I. Myiophoneus caeruleus caeruleus
Gracula caerulea Scopoli, Del. Flor. Faun. Ins., 2: 88, 1786: China, restricted to
Canton.
Myiophoneus caeruleus irnmansuetus Bangs and Penard, Occas. Papers Boston Soc.
Nat. Hist., 5: 147, Feb. 27, 1925: Ichang, Hupeh.
Description.--Whole plumage dark violet blue, each feather marked at the end
with a shining spot, except on the lores, abdomen, under tail-coverts, wings and
tail; lesser wing-coverts brighter, silky blue; median wing-coverts with a metallic white
spot at the tip; feathers of the flanks with a variable amount of white on the base
and shaft, sometimes extending to feathers of lower back and lower breast. Inner
webs of tail- and wing-feathers black. Bill small, black.
Dimensions.--Wing, 158-178; tail, 114-132; tarsus, 47-54; culmen, 29-32; depth
of bill, 8-9 ram.
Distribution.--The whole of China, breeding everywhere except in western
Szechuan and in Yunnan, where it is a winter migrant, as it is also in northeastern
Indo-China and northwestern Siam. Partly migratory. Rare in the north of its
range (La Touche).
The western and northern birds (Szechuan, Hupeh, etc.) have
been separated by Bangs and Penard under the name of immansuetus,
as being duller in coloration, with more grayish spangles. But I
agree with Deignan and Greenway that no differences can be discerned
when sufficient series are examined, and the type of immansuetus
(Mus. Comp. Zool., Cambridge, Mass.) cannot be distinguished from
many topotypical caeruleus. The alleged characteristics are due,
once more, to the state of preservation of the skins and above all to
the season in which they have been collected. In all forms of caeru-
leus, the more or less ultramarine, violet and silvery tinge of speci-
mens depends upon the season to a very great degree and changes
tremendously as time goes on after the moult, without relation to
geographical distribution. Foxing in old skins is not very great. On
the whole, however, cacrulcus is a more silvery and violet bird than
the other subspecies, except turc1/2stanicus.
2. Myiophoneus caeruleus eugenei
Myiophoneus eugenei Hume, Stray Feathers, 1: 475, 1873: Pegu.
Myiophoneus stonei de Schauensee, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 87: 469,
1929: Chengmai, northwestern Siam.
?Myiophoneus klossi Robinson, Ibis, 1915: 250: Koh Mehse, Western Island, east-
ern Siam.
Description.--Similar to M. c. caeruleus, but larger, of a brighter and clearer blue;
no white spots on median wing-coverts, no white on base of flank feathers (a char-
acteristic linked to white wing-spots in the species caeruleus); a larger, heavier bill,
bright yellow, with some black on the culmen and at the base.
Dimensions.--Wing, 165-181; tail, 123-158; tarsus, 48-54; culmen, 34-37; depth
of bill, 9-10.5 min. One exceptionally large male from Hoixuan (northern Annam)
has a wing of 188 min.
Distribution.--Burma, east of the Irrawaddy; Yunnan; western Szechuan (where
it intergrades with c. caeruleus near Tatsienlu and Washan); northwestern Siam,
northeastern and central Indo-China. In southeastern Siam and western Cambodia,
and also once in Peninsular Siam and in south-central Siam, it has been found in
the winter (December and February), probably on migration, twice within the
range of crassirostris.
On the western border of its range, it intergrades with temmincki, and on the
northeastern, with caeruleus. Mostly sedentary, moving southward occasionally
during the winter.
Note.--Myiophoneus klossi was described by Robinson from the
Western Island of Koh Mehse, off the coast of eastern Siam, from one
specimen resembling eugenei, but having pure-white lores and throat,
and white bases to the feathers of the abdomen. Until more speci-
mens are collected, it seems wiser to consider this bird as an abnormal,
semi-albinistic eugenei, just as the so-called Cochoa rothschildi is only
a color phase of 1/2ochoa viridis, appearing here and there within the
range of that species. If, however, it was found that it is a local mu-
tation, stable on the island, M. klossi would have to be recognized
as a good subspecies of caeruleus.
3. Myiophoneus caeruleus temmincki
Myiophoneus temminckii Vigors, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1831: 171: Himalaya.
Myiophoneus tibetanus Madarfisz, Ibis, 1886: 145: Central Tibet.
Myophonus caeruleus rileyi Deignan, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 51: 25, 1938:
Doi Angka, northern Siam.
Description.--Similar to eugenei, but with white spots on the median wing-coverts
and white bases and shafts to flanks and sometimes other feathers as in caeruleus.
Differences in the thickness of bill between temmincki and eugenei are not con-
stant, as Ticehurst (Ibis, 1938: 398) has pointed out.
Dimensions.--Wing, 159-180; tail, 116-141; tarsus, 48-54; culmen, 31-40; depth
of bill, 9-10 min. One male from Mt. Victoria is very large, having a wing of
187 min. According to Stresemann, the two females collected with it (1938) measure
184, 177 min.
Distribution.--Eastern Afghanistan and the Himalayas, Assam, Burma, west to
the Irrawaddy, Tibet, western Szechuan. Found sparsely on high mountains in
northwestern Siam, South Shan States and eastern Burma, probably on winter
migration, within the territory of eugenei. Mostly sedentary, but some probably
move southeast during the winter, which explains their presence in the area oc-
cupied by eugenei.
4. Myiophoneus caeruleus turcestanicus
Myiophoneus temmincki turcestanicus Zarudny, Ornith. Monatsber., 1909: 168:
Russian Turkestan.
Description.--Similar to temmincki, but duller generally, with longer wings and
tail.
Dimensions.--Wing, 178-200; tail, 140-164; tarsus, 48-52; culmen, 34-36; depth
of bill, 9 min.
Distribution.--Russian Turkestan, eastern Tianschan, Alai, Ferghana, Bukhara,
north to the Alatau-Transilien chain. Appears to be sedentary, and according to
Dementiev (Systema Avium Rossicarum) extending its range northward.
5. Myiophoneus caeruleus crassirostris
Myiophoneus crassirostris Robinson, Bull. British Ornith. Club, 25: 99, 1910: Trang,
Peninsular Siam.
Myophonus temminckii changensis Riley, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 41: 207,
1928: Koh Chang Is., southeastern Siam.
Description.--Similar to temmincki, but with a larger, higher, heavier bill, and
more white on the base and up the shaft of the feathers of the lower back, flanks
and abdomen.
Dimensions.--Wing, 167-180; tail, 123-141; tarsus, 49-51; culmen, 32-36; depth
of bill, 12 min.
Distribution.--North of the Malay Peninsula from Bang Tapan in the north,
south to Patani and the Langkawi Islands; also the extreme southeast of Siam and
neighboring islands. A few eugenei (3) have been found in December within or
near the range of crassirostris, but they represent very likely only stray migrants,
like those found on the mountains of southwestern Cambodia and another one
(February) in south-central Siam.
Deignan has compared the type and topotypes of changensis with series of
crassirostris and agrees with Kloss and myself that they are all identical when
account is taken of season, age and wear.
6. Myiophoneus caeruleus dicrorhynchus
Myophonus dicrorhynchus Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civ. Stor. Nat., Genova, 14: 227,
1879: Padang Highlands, Sumatra.
Description.--Spangles very small and .rather dull; lesser wing-coverts dull bluish
purple; very small and dull white spots on middle wing-coverts; upper parts dull
purplish black; under parts brownish; large white bases to flank, abdomen, lower
breast and lower-back feathers; large yellow bill with black on culmen. The dullest
race. Immature birds are dull black all over, with a little blue suffusion on the
primaries only, and a white base to body feathers.
Dimensions.--Wing, 165-187; tail, 112-123; tarsus, 50-55; culmen, 35-41; depth
of bill, 12-13 min.
Distribution.--Sumatra and the southern half of the Malay Peninsula, north to
Patani, from the foothills to 3,000 feet.
7. Myiophoneus caeruleus fiavirostris
Turdus fiavirostris Horsfield, Trans. Linn. Soc. London, 13: 149, 1821: Java.
Myophonus metallicus Temminck, P1. CoL, 170, 1823: Java.
Description.--Resembles crassirostris, but a little more purplish, with smaller and
narrower spangles, almost invisible on the head; lesser wing-coverts somewhat
less-bright blue; spots on median wing-coverts small, either blue or white, and a
very large bill. Iramatures are dull black, with blue suffusion on the wings and tail.
Dimensions.--Wing, 160-182; tail, 120-133; tarsus, 48-54; culmen, 36-42; depth
of bill, 14-15 min.
Distribution.--Mountains of Java, up to 3300 feet.
RARKS ON THI SPC2 cacrlcus
The position of the different forms which I have grouped above
as subspecies of M. caeruleus has been complicated by the fact that
several of them have been found in the same territory.
In western Szechuan, Weigold has collected a series of mixed and
intermediate specimens which have been well studied by Stresemann
('Zoologische Ergebnisse der Walter St6tznerschen Expeditionen nach
Szetschwan, Osttibet und Tschili,' Abh. u. Berichte des K. Zool. u.
Anthrop. Mus. zu Dresden, 16: no. 2, 28-29, 1923-24). Translated
extracts of his commentary are given here:
"Myiophonus caeruleus caeruleus (Scopoli).
"Myfophonus caeruleus eugenei Hume.
"The series collected by Weigold in W. Szechuan affords unusual
interest because it shows that two forms, which formerly had been
regarded as separate species, interlock with each other. The species
concerned are Myiophonus caeruleus (Scop. ex Sonnerat), for which
I fix Canton as its type locality, and Myiophonus eugenei described by
Hume from the lower Irrawaddy (Thayetmyo). The difference be-
tween the two forms consists primarily in the following:
Length of Lower Rump Middle Length of
wing mandible feathers wing-coverts bill
caeruleus up to 178 black or with white with white larger in
dusky yel- shaftline terminal the center
lowish spots
eugenei up to 184 yellow without without narrower
white white ter- in the
shaftline minal spots center
"The more primitive form might be eugenei, as its essential char-
acteristics already appear in the juvenal dress, whereas the young
M. caeruleus still possesses the yellowish lower mandible, entirely
black flank-feathers, no white tips on the wing-coverts, and therefore
is difficult to distinguish from eugenei. In the post-juvenal moult,
which takes place in late summer (the remiges and rectrices are not
involved), the final coloration is reached in M. caeruleus.
"Seven M. caeruleus obtained in the Kwangtung Province, after
the post-juvenal moult, measure as follows: wing, 155, 166, 167, 174,
174, 174, 178; culmen, 25, 26, 26, 27, 27, 28, 29 mm. In three cases,
the lower mandible is entirely black; in three cases, it shows traces
of yellow spots, and in one bird even the tip of the upper mandible
shows up much lighter, without, however, being pure yellow. The
width of the white shaftline on the flank-feathers varies widely but
it is always clearly discernible. The white spots on the wing-coverts
are large in all specimens."
The specimens collected by Weigold, with their characteristics, may
be tabulated as follows:
Vol.)-] D,cotR, The Whistling Thrushes 259
94 a
OF
Dv_xcotm, The Whistling Thrushes
GENERAL DISTRIBUTION
THE 'GENUS MYIOPHONEU$
Auk
April
12
,15
1. M.H. HORSFIELDI
2. M.H. l NSULARI$
3. M.C. COœRULFU$
4. M.C. EUGENEI
5. M.C. TEMMINCKI
O.M.C. TURCE$'FANICUS
ZM. C. CRASSIROSTRIS
8.M.C. DICRORYHNCHUS
9. M. C. FLAVIROSTRIS
IOM. ROE)INSONI
ll.M.G. GLAUCINU5
12M. G. 50RNEEN,$15
l!M. G, CASTAN E US
HH. G. MELANURU5
lH. 5LIC-,H I
ß RECORD OF
M.C. TEPIMINC, KI
-!- RECORD OF
M.C. EUGENEI
11
"If the collector had confined himself to preserving only one speci-
men instead of this instructive series, one probably would have
'identified' Nos. 2-10 as cacrulcus, Nos. 11, 12, and 14 as
No. 13 as t1/2nninckii. As it is now, it is shown that a point of con-
tact has been found between M. c. cacrulcus and 1/2ugcn1/2i, in which
both races have hybridized. In this hybrid zone the individuals pre-
dominate which possess a more or less intermediate coloration.
Presence of the white spots on the wing-coverts is always coupled
with white shaftlines on the flank feathers; but the genetic factor,
controlling the coloration of the bill, remains independent (compare
Nos. 15 and 16 with eugenei bill and caeruleus plumage). It is prob-
ably not a coincidence that the largest individuals (Nos. 12, 15,
16) have the eugenei bill.
"The width of the zone of mixture is unknown; undoubtedly
Tatsinlu also comes within its bounds, since Thayer and Bangs men-
tion birds from there with eugenei plumage, while Weigold's No.
16 possesses caeruleus plumage. M. c. eugenei inhabits Yunnan,
Burma, Siam and Indochina. It is interesting that also within this
territory, in the Karen Hills, occasionally individuals with caeruleus
plumage are found (so-called 'temminckii,' in reality progressive
variations of eugenei). Weigold reports that pure caeruleus caeruleus
occur in eastern Szechuan on the Yangtse in and above Wanhsien
on November 5 and March 5 at 185 m. In the boundary mountains
of Omni and Washan and Kwanhsin to Tatsinlu, mixed forms and
hybrids frequently inhabited regions of the wildest torrents, par-
ticularly at the edge of waterfalls, at altitudes of 1200-3000 m. In
the west, in the Yunnan-Tibet region, some, which undoubtedly were,
as the supporting specimen shows, pure eugenei, were recorded at five
points between Batang and Atentsze at an altitude of 2200-3360 m."
The above conclusions dispose of the objection that caeruleus
and eugenei cannot be conspecific because they breed in the same
localities. Their position is the usual one that obtains anywhere
on the distributional borders of two races. Farther south, caeruleus
and eugenei occur commonly together during the cold season in the
southeast of Yunnan, the northeast and the center of Indochina, and
in the northwest of Siam. The differences in the size and the thick-
ness of bill and legs in the two birds are very striking in living speci-
mens and lead one to believe, as I long did, that they represent two
separate species. But it is certain that, in all these areas, caeruleus
is but a winter visitor having been found from October till the be-
ginning of April; it has never been found later in the spring, while
eugenei is the resident breeding form.
There is an interesting bird in the Museum of Comparative Zoology,
a male caeruleus taken on Mt. Angka, northwestern Siam, on March
15, 1937, which has no white tips to the median wing-coverts; it has,
however, some white on the flank feathers. It is an intermediate be-
tween caeruleus and eugenei, probably a migrant from the mixed
area discovered by Weigold.
Curiously enough, and for no apparent reason, both forms of Myio-
phoneus are lacking entirely in the high regions of northern Laos and
northeastern Siam where a great deal of work has been done lately by
collectors, including myself. They have not been found west of the
Tonkin border.
In Yunnan, the breeding bird is undoubtedly eugenei, which has
been found all over the province (Rothschild, 'Avifauna of Yunnan,'
Novit. Zool., 33: 256, 1926). In the west, it intergrades with tem-
mincki and there is a well-marked hybrid in the American Museum,
collected by Forrest on the Lichiang Range, together with several
pure eugenei. Such perfectly normal intergradation and overlapping
take place also along the Irrawaddy, and quite a number of birds
presenting the characteristics of temmincki have been found east of
the river, often a long distance away. Ticehurst (Ibis, 1938, p. 398)
lists the following instances in Burma, where both races have been
recorded: foothills of the Arrakan Yomas, west of thayetmyo; Karen
Hills; Na Noi, west of Inle Lake, South Shan States; Loi San Pa,
Mong Kong State, South Shan States; Htawgaw, Myitkyna Hills.
The case of white-marked birds occurring during the winter on
the mountains of eastern Burma, South Shan States and northwestern
Siam is more puzzling, but they must be considered at present as mi-
grants wandering far to the southeast during the cold season.
Deignan's name rileyi cannot, in my opinion, be accepted for these
birds. Of the characters involved in the description to separate it
from temmincki, the author himself dismisses now those relating to
the size and number of the spangles. Furthermore, the ground color
of temmincki, eugenei and crassirostris is exactly the same on the
abdomen. Normally, it is black in all three, and it only turns brown-
ish in worn plumage, long after the moult. Just as many black-
bellied specimens can be found among Malay birds as among Hima-
layan ones. The only form which is normally browner and duller
is dicrorhynchus. As to the amount of white on the base and shaft
of the feathers of the flanks, abdomen and lower back, it is indeed
on the average greater in crassirostris than in temmincki, but it
varies individually in the latter race, and one can match the speci-
mens of 'rileyi' that I have examined with many Indian and Burmese
birds.
I therefore consider these isolated white-marked birds which have
been found east of the Irrawaddy as stray and migrating temmincki.
Near the southeastern limits of its ranõe, one finds a few specimens of
temmincki which are rather larõer and have more white; although
their bill is not thicker, they evidently show a tendency toward ras-
sirostris. It is an interesting fact in the history of the evolution and
distribution of the species that temmincki seems to be more closely
related to crassirostris than is eugenei.
III. M3/4IOPHONEUS ROBINSONI
Myiophoneus robinsoni Ogilvie-Grant, Bull. British Ornith. Club, 15: 69, 1905: Mt.
Mengkuang Lebar, Selangor, Malay States.
Description.--Medium size; rather large bill, mostly yellow. Anterior crown
slightly lighter blue than the head; bright-blue lesser wing-coverts; upper parts
dull blackish blue; breast feathers with blue spangles; abdomen dull brownish
black; white on the bases of feathers of abdomen, back and flanks.
Sexes alike, but the female is a little duller and browner below.
Dimensions.--Wing, 131-148; tail, 92-103; tarsus, 42-46; culmen, 30-33; depth
of bill, 9 min.
Distribution.--Malay Peninsula, only in Selangor, from the Semango Pass to
Gunong Mengkuang (at about 5,000 feet).
Note.--This very interesting species has potentially the character-
istics of all the others. The blue fringes of the breast feathers are
distinctly shining and constitute spangles, rather ill-defined, but de-
cidedly different from the silky, but not shining blue fringes of the
same feathers in glaucinus.
IV. MYIOPHONEUS GLAUCINUS
1. Myiophoneus glaucinus glaucinus
Pitta glaucina Temminck et Laugier, P1. Col., 194, 1823: Java.
Turdus cyaneus Horsfield (nec Milllet, 1776), Trans. Linn. Soc. London, 13:
140, 1821: Java.
Description.--Medium size; large black bill. Anterior crown bright blue; head
blackish; general plumage dark blue, with bright-blue lesser wing-coverts and
wide blue margins to the feathers of the breast; white bases in feathers of the
flanks, back, abdomen and lower breast. Female similar to male, but a little
duller and with less bright blue on the crown and on the breast. Young brownish
black.
Dimensions.--Wing, 135-147; tail, 83-92; tarsus, 39-41; culmen, 30-31; depth
of bill, 8-9 min.
Distribution.--Java and Bali, above 2,500 feet.
2. Myiophoneus glaucinus borneensls
Myiophoneus borneensis H. H. Slater, Ibis, 1885, p. 123: Sarawak, Borneo.
Description.--Medium size; large black bill. Male: dark purplish blue, brighter
on the head and breast, duller on the back; lesser wing-coverts bright violet blue;
wings and tail black; much white on the base of the flanks, back, breast and abdo-
men feathers. Female: entirely dark brown, with dark-blue lesser wing-coverts.
Young brown, distinctly streaked with white underneath.
Dimensions.--Wing, 137-147; tail, 86-103; tarsus, 42-48; culmen, 29-32; depth
of bill, 9 min.
Distribution.--Borneo, between 2,000 and 9,000 feet on Kina Balu.
3. Myiophoneus glaucinus castaneus
Myiophoneus castaneus W. Ramsay, Proc. Zool. Sot., London, 1880, p. 16: West
Sumatra.
Description.--Medium size; large black bill. Male: anterior crown bright blue;
head, neck and breast dark blue, passing to chestnut brown on the abdomen;
lesser wing-coverts bright blue; back, wings and tail chestnut; white bases in
feathers of flanks, abdomen, breast and back. Female: anterior crown bluish black,
passing to blackish brown; lesser wing-coverts blue; rest of plumage chestnut.
Dimensions.--Wing, 137-147; tail, 86-103; tarsus, 42-48; culmen, 29-32; depth
of bill, 8-9 mm.
Distribution.--Sumatra, above 3,000 feet.
V. MYIOPHONEUS BLIGHI
.4rrenga blighi Holdworth, Proc. Zool. Soc., London, 1872, p. 444: Nuwara Eliya,
Ceylon.
Description.--Size very small; rather large bill, black. Male: head black; general
plumage uniform dark blue, with lesser wing-coverts lighter blue, remiges and
rectrices black. Female: chestnut brown above, reddish below, with blue lesser
wing-coverts and a slight bluish suffusion on the back and wings. Young reddish
brown, mottled on head and breast. No white on flank feathers.
Dimensions.--Wing, 97-104; tail, 77-86; tarsus, 32-35; culmen, 26-27; depth of
bill, 6-7 min. The smallest species.
Distribution.--Ceylon, above 3,000 feet.
VI. MYIOPHONEUS MELANURUS
Arrenga melanura Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Giv. Stor. Nat. Genova, 14: 227, 1879:
Padang Highlands, Sumatra.
Description.--Small size; short black bill. Anterior crown and supercilium bright
shining blue; very bright-blue lesser wing-coverts; back black, with bright-blue
spangles; remiges and rectrices black; under parts black, with broad blue terminal
spangles to the feathers. No white on the bases of flank feathers. The female is
similar to the male, but duller and more brownish below, on wings and tail.
Dimensions.--Wing, 122-132; tail, 86-94; tarsus, 37-42; culmen, 24-25; depth of
bill, 6 min.
Distribution.--Sumatra, on the mountains, from 4,000 to 9,000 feet.
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