Major Carwithen says :—" The bill and legs were, when the
bird (a female) was shot, of a bright pink."
T H E PLATE is tolerable, but the lower parts in the male require
a slight olive tinge, those of the female a rather warmer tint;
the eyelid ring in the female, at any rate (and possibly in the'
male likewise), should be black ; the bills and feet should be a
much richer, and the former a brighter red, and the white
markings on the head of the male should have been in two continuous
and regular lines, not broken up into patches.
N o OTHER species of this genus is known.