336 FIELD MUSEUM OP NATURAL HISTORY ZOOLOGY, VOL. XIII. 



Range: Pacific coast of Central America and Mexico; Tres Marias 

 Islands. 



*Coccyzus minor maynardi (Ridgway). MAYNARD'S MANGROVE 

 CUCKOO. 



Coccyzus maynardi RIDGWAY, Man. N. A. Bds., 1887, p. 274 (Ten Thousand 



Islands, Florida). 

 Coccyzus minor maynardi RIDGWAY, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 50, VII, 1916, 



P-25- 



Range: Florida Keys and Bahama Islands; occasional in Cuba, 

 Haiti (and Grand Cayman?). 



t37: North America (Florida i); Bahama Islands (Eleuthera 6, 

 New Providence 6, Berry Island 2; Andros 3, Watlings Island 3, Caicos 

 3, Inagua 13). 



*Coccyzus minor nesiotes Cabanis. JAMAICAN MANGROVE CUCKOO. 



[Coccygus] nesiotes CABANIS, Mus. Hein., IV, 1862, p. 78, footnote (Greater 



Antilles). 8 

 Coccyzus minor nesiotes RIDGWAY, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 50, VII, 1916, p. 26; 



WETMORE, Bull. U. S. Dept. Agricul., No. 326, 1916, p. 57 (Porto Rico; 



Culebra I.; Vieques I.). 



Range: Jamaica, Cuba, Haiti and San Domingo to Porto Rica, 

 Culebra, etc.; St. John's, Virgin Gorda and Tortola Islands; occasional in 

 Bahamas, Florida Keys and Cayman Islands. 



tsi : West Indies (Haiti 7; San Domingo 30; Jamaica 5; St. Thomas 

 i; Porto Rico i; Virgin Gorda 5; Tortola i, and Montserrat i). 



*Coccyzus minor caymanensis subsp. nov. b CAYMAN MANGROVE 



CUCKOO. 



Range: Cayman Island, West Indies. 

 f28: Grand Cayman Island (including type specimen). 



*Coccyzus minor rileyi Ridgway. RILEY'S MANGROVE CUCKOO. 



Coccyzus minor rileyi RIDGWAY, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 1915, p. 105 (Barbuda, 

 Lesser Antilles); Id., Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 50, VII, 1916, p. 29. 



I suggest Island of Jamaica for the type locality. 



b Type from Grand Cayman Island, West Indies. Adult female, No. 41417, 

 Field Museum of Natural History; collected by D. J. Sweeting, March 22, 1892. 

 Intermediate between C. m. nesiotes Cabanis and C. m. maynardi (RIDGWAY), 

 averaging larger and more tinged with rufous on under parts than maynardi and 

 averaging paler and smaller than nesiotes from San Domingo taken at the same sea- 

 son. (28 specimens from Grand Cayman taken in March, April, May, June, July 

 and August.) 



NOTE. Same specimens are practically indistinguishable from nesiotes and the 

 two approach very closely to maynardi, but the great majority, while but slightly dif- 

 ferent from nesiotes, appear to represent a recognizable local race. 



