lâ ïT TH O C I E C I â A R T EM S IÆ .
Allied Ianthocincla.
Cinclosoma Artemisia, David, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., 1871, 4th ser. vol. vii. p. 256.—Swinh., Proc. of Zool.
Soc. 1871, p. 372.
Yantocincla Arthemisia, David, Nouv. Archiv, du Mus., tom. vii., Bull. p. 6.
Yanthocincla Arthemisia, David, ib. p. 14.
T h e Abbé Armand David has the honour of bringing this novelty to the knowledge of scientific ornithologists.
It is most closely allied to the Ianthocincla ocellata ; but as the difference in their colouring, though slight,
is permanent, they, like many other nearly allied species, have been distinguished by separate specific designations
; in wbat these differences consist, a glance a t the figures of the two species in the respective places
will at once render apparent. How these slight differences arise we know not. The countries inhabited
by the two birds are divided by a vast range of mountains, which neither o f them presumes to cross,
but each strictly confines itself to its own native districts.
Mr. Elliot was so good as to favour me with the loan o f the fine specimens from which the figures in the
accompanying Plate were taken, an act o f kindness for which, as well as for many others, my thanks are here
tendered to him. That there will be little, if any, difference in the habits and economy of the Ianthocincla
Artemisice and I. ocellata I consider not improbable ; that they feed on insects, snails, and mollusks of the same
genera, if not of the same species, seems likely ; and that their thick clothing and the lax and silky character
of their feathers indicate that they live in thick and humid brushes will be plain to every one.
The men who make such interesting discoveries as the I . Artemisice are the invaluable pioneers o f scientific
knowledge, to which I lend my aid by giving such representations of them as are contained in the ‘ Birds
of Asia.’ I t will be for future generations to make us acquainted with their history, their actions, the nature
of their food, their mode of nidification, the number and colour of their eggs, &c. ; but this cannot be done
until the exclusiveness o f the Chinese is more completely swept away, and the various tribes not under our
sway have become sufficiently enlightened to enable the scientific explorer to traverse those distant regions
with safety. At present the little we know respecting the I . Artemisice is contained in the following brief
note from the pen of the Abbé David, published in the Bulletin of the * Nouvelles Archives du Muséum
d’Histoire Naturelle de Paris ’ above quoted.
“ This species, which closely resembles the Yanthocincla ocellata, is distinguished a t all ages by its darker
bill, by the spots on the back, which are yellowish and not white, and by the blackness of the head, throat,
and round the eyes, which is very marked.”
The following is the Abbé’s description of the bird, which I give in his own words, as it was probably
taken from a recently killed example :-|§||l|
“ H ead and a broad patch on the throat black, leaving the chin, lores, and under the eye buff-coloured,
and a partial half-eyebrow and a spot in rear o f the ear-coverts whitish. Neck and underparts buff, a little
rufous near the edge of the black gorget ; back of the neck, breast, and flanks banded on each feather near
its tip with an undulating black bar. Scapulars and back as in I. ocellata, but with broader and yellower
tip-spots, and with much narrower black bars. Wings and tail as in its ally, but with the rufous more mixed
with yellow. Length 12'75 inches ; wing 5, tail 6*5. Bill variable in length ; iris yellow. Habitat
Moupin, Western Szechuen.”
The Plate represents the birds of the size of life.