122 COTINGIDZ. 
Platypsaris albiventris, Ridgw. Man. N. Am. B. p. 325"; A. O. U. Check-list N. Am. B., 2nd Suppl., 
Auk, vii. p. 62. 
Platypsaris insularis, Ridgw. Man. N. Am. B. p. 325”. 
Supra nigricanti-cinereus; capite summo pure nigro ; alis et cauda nigricantibus; scapularibus ad basin albis: 
subtus fusco-cinereus, plaga magna gulari rosacea: rostro et pedibus nigricanti-plumbeis. Long. tota 7-0, 
ale 3-7, caude 2-9, rostri a rictu 0°9, tarsi 0°9. 
Q rufa: capite summo nigricante, fronte sordide fusca; alis extus et cauda castaneis: subtus pallidior. (Descr. 
maris et feminge ex Misantla, Mexico. Mus. nostr.) 
Hab. Mexico, Rio Camacho, Villa Grande, Rio de Monterey (Armstrong), Sierra Madre 
above Ciudad Victoria, Soto la Marina, Aldama, Tampico (Richardson), hot, tempe- 
rate, and alpine regions of Vera Cruz (Sumichrast™), Misantla, Colipa (F. D. G.), 
Jalapa® (F.D.G., deOca!, M. Trujillo), Coatepec, Huatusco (F. Ferrari-Perez), Cor- 
dova (Sallé?), Vera Cruz (F. D. G., Richardson), Playa Vicente (Boucard®), Sochiapa 
(M. Trujillo), Rancho de Almihinte in Puebla, Yauhuitlan in Oaxaca (/. Ferrari- 
Perez), Oaxaca (Boucard®), Dondomingillo (Sumichrast'*), Teapa in Tabasco (Mrs. 
H.H. Smith), Santiagoand San Blas(W. B. Richardson), Tres MariasIs. (Grayson 18 33), 
Ysleta in Sonora (W. Lloyd), Presidio de Mazatlan (Forrer), Mazatlan (Grayson, 
Bischoff), Zapotlan, Beltran, and Sta. Ana in Jalisco (Lloyd), Plains of Colima 
(Xantus °°), Amula in Guerrero (Mrs. H. H. Smith), Sola, Juchatengo (MZ. Trujillo), 
Merida in Yucatan (Schott '*), Buctzotz, Peto, Tizimin, Holbox I. (Gaumer), 
Cozumel Island (Devis), Tonila, Cacoprieto, Tehuantepec (Sumichrast ©); Guate- 
MALA, Retahuleu, Barranco Hondo, Calderas on the Volcan de Fuego®, Chuacus 
(Owen®), Chisec, Choctum, Cahabon (0. 8S. & F. D. G.°); Honpuras, San Pedro 
(G. WM. Whitely™); Nicaraeua (Delattre 74), Omotepe I. (Nutting *"); Costa Rica 
(Ellendorf°). 
This species, taken as a whole, is subject to a great amount of variation, not only as 
regards the intensity of the colour of the back and under surface, but also as regards 
the rosy spot on the throat. The females also vary in the intensity of their general 
rufous coloration. The darkest males are found in the province of Tabasco, and thence 
southwards through Eastern Guatemala, and northwards along the coast of the State of 
Vera Cruz to Tampico. At Jalapa and in the Eastern Sierra Madre the back is 
generally a little greyer; and this is the case in birds from the Tres Marias Islands, the 
mountains facing the Pacific coast of Guatemala, and also in those from Nicaragua. ‘The 
palest examples are from Western Mexico, in which the back is grey and the under 
surface nearly white, and with these specimens from the northern part of Yucatan agree 
very closely. The assumption of the rosy spot of immature males appears usually to 
commence at an early stage, and is often of full size before the wing-feathers have 
assumed their adult coloration. In other specimens, which are apparently fully adult 
in other respects, this rosy spot can barely be traced. We have already referred to the 
variation in the rufous colouring of the female; the crown of the head also varies from 
