
J.CouMamlH.Cttc/dtr, M alU k
LOXIA. HIMALAYAN!,* Hofas.
J/iUU„aru{el & WaUan, Irm ,
LOXIA HIMALAYANA, Hodgs.
Himalayan Crossbill.
Loxia Umalayam, Hodgs. in Gray’s Zool. Misc. 1844, p. 85.—Id . Jo um . Asiat. Soc. Beng., vol. xiii. p. 952.—Id.
Proc. o f Zool. Soc., p a r t xxxv. p. 35.—Id. Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. xvi. p. 206.—Cat. o f Spec,
and Draw, o f Mamm. and Birds pres, to Brit. Mus. by B. H . Hodgson, Esq., p. 111.— Blytli, Cat. of
Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, p. 123.—Id . Jo um . Asiat. Soc. Beng., vol. xxiii. p. 213.—Bonap.
e t Schleg. Monog. des Loxiens, p. 6, pi. 7.—Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av., p. 527, Loxia, sp. 5.—Horsf. and
Moore, Cat. of Birds in Mus. E a s t Ind. Comp., vol. ii. p. 453.—Gray and Mitch., Gen. o f B irds, vol.
ii. p. 388, Loxia, sp. 5, and vol.' iii. App. p. 18, app. to p. 388.
T h e Crossbills constitute a well-defined and isolated group among the Fringillidas, all the members o f which
are distinguished by having a greater o r less amount of red in their plumage, and by the crossing of
the tips of their mandibles. In Europe there occur a t least three species, and there are two or three
others in America. In all probability the whole of the European species enter the confines of Asia; certain
i t is that the well-known Loxia curvirostris, our Common Crossbill, frequents China and J a p a n ; at least,
examples from the latter country offer no perceptible difference from others killed in England. Independently
of the species above enumerated, there exists in the great Himalayan range o f mountains a species which
differs from them, and all others known, in its diminutive size. The discovery of this bird is due to
Mr. Hodgson, who has transmitted specimens to this country, and thus furnished both the collection at the
British Museum and that at the East India House with examples of both sexes. Mr. Hodgson merely states
that the bird “ inhabits the Cachar only, near the snows, and is rare there.”
In point of affinity, both as regards structure and colour, the L . himalayana is more nearly allied to the
L . curvirostris than to any other member o f the genus.
The male has the crown of the head, back, scapularies, face, throat, breast, and abdomen fine red, speckled
on the back and more faintly on the breast with dark brown; wings and tail dark brown, the latter paler
ben eath ; vent g re y ; under tail-coverts dark brown, margined with greyish-white; irides hazel; bill and
feet pale flesh-colour.
The female differs in having those parts of the upper surface which are red in the male o f an olive-green;
the throat white, with a crescent of brown in the centre of each feather, and the breast and abdomen yellow
with similar crescentic marks of brown.
The figures represent the two sexes, of the full size, or perhaps a trifle larger than the birds really are.