272 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [June-Oct., 



first two eggs were destroyed and three more were laid June 5, light 

 pink heavily speckled with rufous brown with wreath effect at large 

 end, .74 x .56 and .75 x .55 in. After these were taken three more 

 were laid and hatched. The boathouse was moved two hundred 

 yards after the nest was built, but the birds were not disturbed by 

 the change of location. 



329. Henicorhina prostheleuca pittieri (Cherrie). Pittier's Wood Wren. 



Male, Gatun, February 22, 1912. Iris brown, bill and feet black. 



330. Leucolepis lawrencii (Sclater). Lawrence's Musician Wren. 



Male and female, Gatun, July 30, 1911, and April 9, 1911. Iris 

 brown, bill black, feet light brown, bare skin around the eye bluish- 

 green. 



A bird of the jungle. 



Nest found in low wet forest two feet from the ground on May 7, 



1911. It consisted of a long tube or tunnel with the nest proper 

 at the far end, built of sticks, twigs and dead leaves, lined with grasses. 

 Eggs two, .65 X .92 and .65 x .89 in., white, very finely and sparingly 

 speckled with brown, one almost immaculate. 



[331.] Pheugopedius hyperythrus (Salvin and Godmaii). Tawny-bellied Wren. 



332. Pheugopedius fasciato-ventris albigularis (Sclater). Panama Black-bellied Wren. 



Male, Gatun, June 25, 1911. Iris bright brown, bill black bluish- 

 gray below, feet bluish-gray. 



Shot in a jungle thicket on a small stream. 



[333.] Microcerculus luscinia Salvin. Panama Nightingale Wren. 



MIMID^. 

 [334.] Dumetella carolinensis (Linnaeus). Catbird. 



TURDID^. 

 335. Planesticus grayi casius (Bonaparte). Bonaparte's Thrush. 



Male, Miraflores, March 5, 1911; female, Pedro Miguel, May 5, 



1912. Iris dark brown, bill dark yellow greenish at base, feet pale 

 yellow. 



Call note resembles that of the American Robin (P. migratorius) . 

 Frequents tall trees in the jungle. 



Nest in fork of a small tree in second growth timber, twelve feet 

 from the ground, Pedro Miguel, April 23, 1911; a typical cup with 

 base of weed and cattle manure, and built of twigs, straw, dead leaves 

 and moss, with a lining of rootlets and tendrils. Eggs three, fresh, 

 .86 X 1.24 and .88 x 1.23 ins., greenish-blue heavily marked with 

 various shades of brown, mainly at the larger end. 



