ME I t OF S B U L L 0 CEO I'DE S..
(A r e s _Pla.te 9.)'
MEROP S BULLOCKOIDES.*—S m ith .
A ves.— P late IX. (M ale.)
M. fronte aubalbida; vertice p&Uide raenrieo-viridi; cernce, pectore, abdomineque snmmo pallidc cinna-
momeis; dorso, humeris, caudaque viridibus; caudso tectricibus superioribus inferioribusque oyameis;
tgenia per oculos nigra subtus albo-marginata; gula alba; gutture coccineo; rectricium seoundariarum
apicibus nigris.
Longitudo, 75 unc.
Merops Bullockoides. South African Quarterly Journal, 1834.
C ol,ouk — Front whitish; top of the head pale bluish green; the back and
sides of the neck, the breast, and the belly, pale cinnamon brown ; vent dirty
green; hack, wings and tail light grass-green; the upper and under tail
coverts, and a spot on each side at the base of the thigh ultra-marine blue. The
side of the head crossed by. a deep black band, edged below with white, which
colour also prevails on the chin ; throat scarlet i the inner surface of the
shoulder, and the edges of the inner vanes of quill feathers fulvous, the
secondaries broadly tipt with black; the inner vanes of the tail feathers, with
the exception of the two centre ones, margined with dull brown. Bill and
claws black ; legs and toes greenish black. Eyes crimson.
F orm, &cS-Bill broad at the base, slightly curved, the culmen carinated
and moderately arched; nostrils oval and partially covered by recumbent
wiry feathers or short black bristles. Wings, when closed, reach to about the
commencement of the last third of the tail; the third and fourth quill feathers
the longest, the second and fifth nearly equal, the first about half the length
of the third. One or two of the tertiary wing feathers nearly as long as the
primaries. The extremity of the tail square or very slightly rounded.
* So named from its general resemblance to Merops Bullockii.