two partial tawny bars upon their inner vanes; the tips of all pale ochre-
yellow. Bill and claws umber-brown; eyes dark brown; toes livid brown.*
F orm, &c.—Typical. Bill short and slender; wings when folded, reach to
within about half an inch of the point of the tail; first quill feather longest,
and slightly exceeding the second; the remainder successively decrease in
length; the longest of the tertiaries rather exceeding the length of the
seventh primary quill feather ; tail cuneated, the two centre feathers slightly
prolonged beyond those on each side of them and accuminated ; lateral toes
equal.
DIMENSIONS.
Inches. Lines. Inches. Lines.
Length from the base of the bill to the Length of the tarsus................ .......... 1 1
tip of the tail........................ 9 6 of the middle toe ....... .......... 0 A
of the tail................................. 3 3 of the outer toe........... .......... 0 6
of the wings when folded....... 6 5
of bill frofir the angle of the
mouth ................................. 0 7
In the female, the chin, the sides of the head, and the stripe over the eyes
is ochre-yellow, instead of silvery grey; the belly is pale yellowish brown,
barred with dusky white; along its centre the first colour is often almost umber
brown ; the feathers of the flanks are light brown tipt with white ; all the
tail feathers blackish brown, partially barred on both vanes with tawny white
and tipt with ochre-yellow; elsewhere the colour of the plumage is nearly
the same as in the male.
The first specimens of this species which we procured, were obtained at T sin in g , about
thirty miles to the westward of Latakoo. The habit of repairing to springs, or other collections
of water, at fixed periods, to drink, is common to it, with the other species of the genus
P terocles. Early in the morning, between the hours of seven and nine, appeared to be the
time destined for the present species to quench its thirst, and between those hours specimens
were to be obtained in abundance, wherever water was accessible, both to the west and north
of Latakoo. Like Pte ro c le s g u ttu ra lis , they feed singly, or in pairs, and like the latter, congregate
before they reach their drinking-places, and generally appear in larger flights, owing,
no doubt, to the members of this species being more numerous. In their progress to and from
these places of daily resort, in common with P te ro c le s tachypetes, Temm., P . bicinctus, Temm.,
P . simplex, Lesson, and P . g u ttu ra lis , they fly at a great height, and suddenly descend, when
they approach the water, or their feeding grounds, and even on some occasions, the descent is
not commenced before they are directly over the spot where it is their object to alight. On
such occasions they require to form a semi-circular or circular movement before they can reach
the desired spot. In the stomachs of this species were found seeds, small bulbs, and abundance
of fine gravel.
* No two specimens of this species exhibit exactly the same intensity of tints, and often not even what
would be described as the same colour.