PITTA MEGARHYNCHA, Setieg.
Large-billed Pitta .
Pitta megarhyncha, Schleg. Yog. Nederl. In d ., pi. 4. fig. 2.—Elliot in Ibis, 1870, pp. 408, 409, 414.
Brachyurus megarhynchus, Elliot in Ibis, 1870, pi. xii.
O n reference to th e opposite p late, whe re th e p re s en t b ird is re p re se n te d o f life-size, i t will be re adily seen
th a t it offers a close alliance to Pitta cyanoptera an d P . nympha ( th a t is if th e la tte r be really a spec ie s), and
more distantly to P . oreas and P . bengalensis.
The special use of the very large bill with which this bird is furnished has not been ascertained ; in all
probability it is intended for the breakage of the shells o f the mollusks peculiar to the little island whereon the
bird is found. Its ochraceous crown, black and well-defined nuchal band, fulvous-white throat, and great
black bill have been given as the specific characters of the species ; in other particulars ( i. e. its green back,
shining blue shoulders, and upper tail-coverts, the white markings of the first four or five primaries, the buff
colouring of the abdomen, and the scarlet under tail-coverts) it resembles P . cyanoptera.
Of this well-marked species a single but fine example graces the Museum of Leyden ; this unique specimen
was kindly transmitted to London for the use of M r. Elliot in his résumé of the Pittidæ, published in ‘The
Ibis ’ for 1870. I also was allowed to make a drawing of it for the present work ; and I would here record
my obligations to Professor Sclilegel, the worthy director o f the ‘ Musée de Pays-Bas,’ and to Mr. Elliot for
the assistance they have thus rendered me.
The following brief remark is all that Mr. Elliot has recorded respecting this bird, and I believe that no
one else has written a sentence in any other publication :—
“ This bird bears a close resemblance to P . cyanoptera, but possesses a bill very different, both in shape
and colour, the latter being black. It also differs in having the reddish brown of the head extending to the
nape, without being broken by a black bar ; the lower p a rt of the neck behind bordered with black.”
The Plate represents the same bird in two positions, of the size of life.