PLANT-CUTTERS. 



475 



a half long. From this grow the feathers to the very point, thus producing the beau- 

 tiful cylindrical plume quite detached from the breast, and forming an ornament as 

 unique and elegant as the crest itself."' 



The other bird figured is the male of the naked-throated bell-bird ( < 'oxunirhiiicos 

 nudicollis), white, with the naked parts green, inhabiting the dense forests of J>ra/il. 

 With its congeners it is especially celebrated for its extraordinary voice, which is 

 compared with the tolling of a bell, or the sound produced by the blows of a hammer 

 on an anvil. Two of the species have most remarkable caruncles on the base of the 

 bill, the 'Campanero' ((".///>"'*) from Cayenne, having one fleshy, erectile, and 

 cylindrical appendage nearly three inches long, black of color, and ornamented with 

 small, white, star-like feathers, while C. trian-unculattits, from Costa Rica, has three 

 enormous band-like caruncles on the forehead where it joins the bill, and one on each 

 side at the corner of the mouth. 



The cotingas are very much like enlarged pipras, and have also some resemblance 

 to our cedar-birds (Ampelis), hence they were formerly classed with the latter. Their 

 structure, outside of the peculiar ornaments already referred to, is rather uniform. 

 Their diet is a mixed one, consisting chiefly of fruits and insects. 



We have finally to mention the last family of the present super-family, the plant- 

 cutters, PHYTOTOMID^:, with a single genus (Phytotomd) consisting of a few species 

 ranging from Bolivia to the Argentine Republic and Chili. In their external appear- 

 ance they closely resemble some conirostral oscines, with which they have been often 

 associated in the systemot. The coloration is brownish, streaked 

 with black, but their internal structure is very interesting since 

 they represent the finches among the mesomyodian Passeres ; 

 hence we are obliged to go a little into detail. 



The skull of the plant-cutter is described by Parker as on 

 the whole " a most remarkable and evidently ancient form, 

 although unique in many of its characters." According to his 

 nomenclature, its palatal structure (Fig. 283) is compound a'gi- 

 thognathous of the feebler type occurring in some mesomyodian 

 forms, for instance Pitta, Pipra, Thamnop/iiltrtf, and which is 

 characterized as a kind of passerine desmognathism produced 

 by the maxillaries coalescing with the ossified alinasal wall, but 

 not with the nasal septum as is the case with the oscinine palates 

 of the compound type. In many other points the palate of 

 Phytotoma, especially in its anterior part, shows considerable 

 resemblance to some of the oscinine conirostres; in the former 

 there is a row of clearly defined denticles, both along the den- 

 taryand palatine ridges of the premaxillary. Professor Parker 

 imagines that these knobs are "remains of what are apparently but recently lost teeth 

 that is, speaking palrcontologically,"- -an interpretation which to us seems doubtful, 

 to say the least. Altogether the palate, in spite of its adaptation to a bill isomor- 

 phous with that of the tanagcrs and finches, shows near relationship to that of the 

 other members of the present super-family, besides that mentioned above, for instance, 

 in the spur-like process from the maxillo-palatincs postero-externally ; but entirely 

 unique, in the present order, arc the plover-like nasal-gland grooves at the orbital cave. 

 We fully agree with Professor Parker that the plant-cutter " is marked off from its near- 

 est known congeners a species representing a genus, and even a family, quite unique." 



FIG. L 1 :::;. I';il;it> of I'lnj- 

 totoma: <7, denticles; 



palatines; pt, pterygoi 

 v, voiner. 



pi, 

 ids; 



