MEGALJEMA FRANKLINI I .
Franklin’s Barbet.
Bucco Franklinii, Blyth, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng., vol. xi. p. 167 ; vol. xv. p. 13.
Megalama Franklinii, G. R. Gray, Gen. o f Birds, vol. ii. p. 430, Megalaima, sp. 25.—J. E. Gray, Cat. o f Spec.
and Draw, o f Mamm. and Birds pr. tp Brit. Mus. by B. H. Hodgson, Esq., p. 114.—Blyth, Cat. of
Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, p. 68.—Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av., tom. i. p. 144, Megalaima, sp. 24.
—Tickell, Joum. Asiat. Soc. Beng., vol. xxiv. p. 278.
Bucco igniceps, Hodgs. in Gray’s Zool. Misc., 1844, p. 85.
Cyanops FranJclinii, Horsf. & Moore, Cat. o f Birds in Mus. East Ind. Comp., p. 643.—Jerd. Birds o f India, vol. i
p. 314.
Kattak-pho, Lepcha (Jerdon).
As there is no other species of Indian Barbet with which this fine bird can be confounded, I am somewhat
surprised at the very different descriptions of its notes recorded by two of our best Indian ornithologists,
Mr. Jerdon and Major Tickell, the former stating that its cry is something like kattak-kattak-kattak, and the
latter that the hills resound with its piow-piow-piow.
It Vill be seen that Mr. Hodgson described this bird under the specific name of igniceps, a term which,
if it could be used, would be a most appropriate one; but the law o f priority forbids its adoption, that of
Franklinii having been applied to it by Mr. Blyth two years earlier. Its native country is the southern slopes
of the Eastern Himalayas, particularly Nepaul and Sikhim ; varied indeed are the colours of these strange
zygodactylous birds, some being of an exceedingly sombre hue, while others have rich green bodies and
their heads fantastically decorated with red, blue, and yellow. Unlike most highly decorated birds both
sexes are alike in their tints and markings, so much so that dissection is necessary to determine which are
males and which are females; the young, during their first autumn, however, are much less adorned, a
general uniformity in the green tint prevailing in birds o f that age.
The following brief notes are all, I believe, that has yet been recorded respecting this gay species:—
Mr. Jerdon informs us that “ this handsome Barbet is very common at Darjeeling at an altitude of from
four to eight thousand feet and upwards. Its usual cry is something like kattak-kattak-kattak. It lives
entirely on fruit, and is found from Nepaul, through Sikim to Assam, Arakan, and Tenasserim, where Tickell
says it is much more abundant than at Darjeeling ;; but Mr. Blyth tells me that during his rambles in Burmah
he only met with two species of Barbet, lineatus and indicus.”
Captain Tickell states that this Barbet swarms in the mountainous parts o f Tenasserim at an elevation of
from three to five thousand feet, not higher nor lower, that from the first level it suddenly and entirely
supplants M. lineata, and that, as long as day lasts, the woods amongst the Dauna hills resound with its cry
pioto, piow, pioto, &c. Is it not probable that Major Tickell has mistaken the note of some other bird for
that of this species ? since the Lepcha name is Kattak-pho.
Forehead and centre of the occiput scarlet, inclining to crimson; centre of the crown fiery glistening
orano-e; space surrounding the orbit and a broad stripe from above the eye down the side of the neck deep
black; chin bright orange, stained near the bill with scarlet, and passing, on the lower part of the throat
and ear-coverts, to light-grey; upper surface green, with a lighter edge to many of the feathers; those
of the nape lighter and with a glossy stripe down the centre of each ; wings and tail dark green; edge and
shoulder of the wing deep blue ; primaries and secondaries black, the first two or three primaries edged on
the basal portion o f the external web with green; the rest and the secondaries broadly margined externally
with green, and internally with straw-yellow, which is also the colour of the under surface of the shoulder;
finder surface of the body pale green; bill blackish above, lead-colour beneath, both mandibles becoming
nearly white at the base ; orbital skin lead-colour; irides brown; legs greenish slate-colour.
The figures.are of the natural size.