•Xdaald' & JFBart. ¡Ui/ttWh
EUCICHLA- BOSCHII.
warn
Van der Bosch’s Pitta.
Pitta boschii, Mull, et Schleg. Verb. Nat. Gesch. Ned. Ind., pp. 5, 16, pi. 1.—Moore, Proc. of Zool. Soc., 1854,
p. 273.—Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. i. p. 213.—Elliot, Mon. Pittidse, pi. xxxi.—Gould, Birds
of Asia, part 25 (1873).
Pitta elegans, Less. Voy. de la Bonite, pi. 3.—Temm. PI. Col. text.
Pitta (Eucichla) elegans, Gray, Hand-1, of Birds, part i. p. 296.
B e a u t i f u l in coloration as is the lovely group of birds termed Pittas, the present species is certainly one
o f the most charming o f them. Mr. Elliot, in his Monograph of the family, restricts the generic term
Pitta to this bird and its two elegant allies, Pitta cganura and P . schwaneri; while Reichenbach, as long
back as the year 1850, applied to the three species the subgeneric term Eucichla. In my ‘ Birds
of Asia ’ I retained all these Old-World Ground-Thrushes under the genus P itta ; but I think it more
convenient in the present work to subdivide them according to my own views or those of the various
ornithologists who have paid attention to the subject with a view to their classification. That the species
above mentioned form a natural section, I have for many years clearly seen. Specimens o f both sexes of
Pitta boschii were brought from Sumatra by the late Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles; and I remember
I shortly after formed the intention o f naming the species Pitta rafflesi, an intention never carried oufcr*.
which I now much regret, as it would have been very pleasing to me if the bird had borne the name
of our celebrated countryman. The specimens referred to ornamented for many years the interesting
Museum o f the Zoological Society of London, the contents of which have since been scattered to the
winds. Sumatra is unquestionably the native country of this fine b ird ; Mr. Elliot has added that of
Malacca also—I believe, on the authority of Dr. Cantor; and he is probably correct in so doing, although,
as yet, I have no positive evidence that any examples have been sent from there. The present bird not
only differs from its two immediate congeners in being more redundantly coloured, but also in the female
being more finely decorated than those o f the other species; but, as will be seen on reference to the
opposite Plate, she wants the blue and rich cross bars of the under surface.
Most ( if not all) of the Pittid® are solitary in their habits, and frequent the innermost and sterile parts
of the forests almost too rugged for man to traverse, and which he would not venture to traverse did not his
knowledge o f birds tell him that the monotonous call he hears proceeds from one of Nature’s living jewels.
Messrs. Muller and Schlegel, when writing on this species, say “ the mission to Sumatra with which
we were intrusted in the first half of the year 1833, by the then Governor-General Baron Von der Bosch,
enabled us to increase our collection by a considerable harvest, both as regards the department of
animals and that o f plants. Under obligations of gratitude towards his Excellency for the execution of
our coveted enterprise, we chose to introduce into the realm of science one o f the handsomest birds
discovered in the island of Sumatra under his venerated name.”
The male has the centre of the crown deep black, bounded on each side by a broad band, which commences
with rich yellow at the nostrils, gradually passes into rich orange, and finally on the nape into fiery or reddish
orange; below this another band o f black encircling the eyes, embracing the cheeks, and passing round the
back of the neck; throat white, narrowly edged with yellow, which colour becomes rich orange on the sides
of the n e c k ; upper surface and wings cinnamon-brown, the tips of the coverts and outer edges o f the
secondaries margined with white slightly tinged with b lu e ; upper tail-coverts and tail deep bright blue;
under surface rich deep indigo-blue, crossed on each side of the breast with narrow crescentic lines of fiery
orange-red, which nearly meet in the c e n tre ; on each side near the vent a patch of yellowish buff; bill
black, apparently flesh-colour on the base of the under mandible; legs and feet fleshy brown.
The female is coloured like the male on the upper surface; but the under surface, in lieu of the indigo-
blue and red lines, is crossed from the throat by narrow concentric lines of dark brown and dull yellow.
The figures represent the two sexes, of the natural size.