» CATHARLS. 7 



Catharus. 

 Cattaarus melpomene. 



Tardus melpomene, Gab. Mus. Hein. I, 1850, 5 (Xalapa). — Catharus 

 melpomene, ScL. P. Z. S. 1859, 323.— Ib. Cat. Am. Birds, 1861, 1, 

 No. 1.— Cabams, Jour. 1860, 322.— Salvin, Ibis, 1860, 29. 



Catharus aurantiirosiris, Sclatek, P. Z. S. 1856, 294 (uot of Haktlaub). 



Hah. Mexico (Cordova, Orizaba, Oaxaca) ; Guatemala; Costa Rica. 



Specimens vary somewhat in the shade of coloration and the in- 

 tensity of the rufcscence of tail and wings. The bill is generally 

 (in the dried skin) bright yellow, sometimes orange, a little dusky 

 towards the tip above ; sometimes this latter shade encroaches on 

 the culmen ; in one specimen (Xo. 22,362) the whole upper mandible 

 is light brownish, and in No. 2 of Mr. Lawrence's Collection it is 

 nearly as black as in G. occidentalis. Some specimens have a shade 

 of grayish in the feathers of the chin ; but in none is there any in- 

 dication of the yellowish-brown of the jugulum of occidentalis. The 

 legs are always yellowish, though varying in the shade of this color. 

 The rump and tail are always more rufous than the back, as in 

 Turdus pallasii and its allies, though the contrast is not so striking. 



A specimen (30,484) from Costa Rica, in imperfect plumage, 

 differs in the prevalence of a grayish olive shade in the back, and a 

 less intense shade of rufous on the rumj? and tail.* It is not im- 

 probable that this may be the true C. aurantiirostris of Hartlaub, 

 which is said to differ in the more olive back. Although Hartlaub 

 describes the whole upper parts as uniformly olivaceous, includfng 

 the wings and tail, his figure represents the latter as being more 

 rufous. 



If the species of Hartlaub and Cabanis should hereafter prove to 

 be the same, it is somewhat of a question to which of their names 

 the priority should be assigned. The date of the aurantiirostris 

 is March, 1850, exactly coeval with Bonaparte's " immaculatus." 

 The name " vielpomene^' appears on page 5, of sig. 1, of Museum 

 Heineanum, but without any signature date affixed — this practice 

 not having been introduced until the appearance of the fourteenth 

 signature, where the date of Jan. 1851 is printed at the bottom of 

 page 10*7. There is nothing whatever to show that even if the first 

 signature was published in 1850, it appeared as early as March. 



' Turdus aurantiirostris, Hartlaub, Rev. Zool. March, 1850, 158 (Vene- 

 zuela) ; Ib. Jard. Cont. Orn. 1851, 80, pi. Ixxii. Catharus aurantiirostris, 

 ScLATER, P. Z. S. 1859, 323. Catharus immaculatus, Bon. Consp. Marcli, 1850, 

 278 (Caraccas). 



