S I T T A C I N N A M O V E N T R I S , myth.
Cinnamon-bellied Nuthatch.
Sitta cinnamoventris, Blyth, Journ. of Asiat. So.c. Beng., vol. 3d. p. 459.—lb. Cat. of Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc.
Calcutta, p. 189—Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. i. p. 148, Sitta, sp. 9.
—— castaneoventris, Hodgs.
I t could scarcely have been expected that the discriminating eye o f Mr. Blyth would have failed to detect
the differences which exist in the two Chestnut-bellied Nuthatches of India, and accordingly we find that he
has distinguished them by their size and the intensity of their colouring. To the largest bird with the paler-
coloured breast, accurately represented on the accompanying Plate, he has assigned the name o f cinnamoventris,
and he remarks that it “ is altogether a stouter bird, with the bill especially much broader, and not,
as in the other (S. castaneoventris), distinctly and conspicuously compressed for the basal two-thirds . . . .
The generic markings and coloration are so similar, th at really I do not see how they can be further
characterized apart, yet a glance suffices to show their non-identity as species. With respect to colour, the
hues o f castaneoventris are altogether softer and more delicate, and in both sexes the grey of the upper part
of the head and neck is conspicuously paler than that o f the b a c k ; whereas in cinnamoventris, although the
head and nape are seen, on particular inspection, to be somewhat lighter than the back, this would scarcely
be noticed, unless attention were expressly directed to the observation. In castaneoventris the upper
tertiaries are uniformly bluish grey, and in the rest there is no strongly marked distinction between the
dusky o f the inner web and the grey external margin ; but in the other species the external blue-grey
contrasts abruptly with the black o f the internal portion of the feather, which last too extends over a
considerable p art of the outer web, as is not the case in castaneoventris : this distinction may perhaps vary
somewhat in amount o f development in different specimens, but I suspect will always be found to prevail
more or less decidedly. In the male S . castaneoventris the colour of the whole under-parts, from the white
throat to the mottled under tail-coverts, is of a deep dark ferruginous ; while in the female it is not very
much darker than in a British Nuthatch ; in the new species, the fore neck, breast, and lower parts are
uniformly coloured, and much paler than in the male castaneoventris, but deeper than in the female, being
of a dull rusty cinnamon tint, which suggests the term cinnamoventris as a specific appellation.”
This species is an inhabitant of the South-Eastern Himalayas, and its range must extend far and wide
over the districts of India, since specimens occur in nearly every collection brought from thence to this
country.
Upper surface dark blue-grey, paler on the head and back o f the n eck; lores and stripe running from
behind the eye down the sides of the neck black; chin and cheeks wh ite ; primaries, inner webs, and the
portion o f the outer webs of the secondaries next the shaft, slaty black; two centre tail-feathers blue-grey ;
lateral tail-feathers black, margined with grey, with a spot o f white on their inner webs near the tip,
gradually decreasing in extent as the feathers approach the centre ; the external feather has also a mark of
white at the base of the external web; under surface of the shoulder black; at the base of the under side
of the primaries a mark o f white, which is continued along the margins of their inner webs; under,
surface deep rusty cinnamon; under tail-coverts dark brown, mottled with white; eye brown; bill blue-
grey a t the b a se ; front of tarsi and toes blue-grey.
The female only differs from the male, in having the under surface of a very much paler or reddish
brown hue.
The figures represent two males and a female of the size of life.