214 



REVIEW OF AMERICAN BIRDS. 



[part I. 



abundant throngliout all the West India Islands, as far at least as the Virgin 

 Islands. Not recorded from Mexico or Central America. 



Specimens from the Atlantic slope only of the United States as 

 far north as Massachusetts ; also from — 



Subfamily GEOTHLYPIN^. 



SEIURUS, SwAiNsoN. 



Seiums, Swainson, Zool. Jour. 1827, 171. (Type MotaciUa auricapilla, L.) 

 Enicocichla, Gray, List Genera, 1840. {Uenicocichla, Ag.) 



Seiurus aurocapilliis. 



MotaciUa aurocapilla, LiXN. S. N. I, 1766, 334. — Turdus aur. Lath. ; 

 WiLS. Am. Orn. II, pi. xiv, fig. 2. — Aud. Orn. Biog. II, pi. cxliii. — 

 Sylvia aur. BoN. — Seiurua aur. Swainson, Zool. Jour. Ill, 1827, 171. 

 — Baikd, Birds N. Am. 1858, 260.— Moore, P. Z. S. 1859, 55 (Hon- 

 duras). — Max. Cab. Jour. 1858, 177. — Jones, Nat. Bermuda, 27. — 

 Henicocichla aur. Sclater, Catal. 1861, 25, no. 159. — Gundlach, 

 Cab. Jour. 1861, 326 (Cuba). — Seiurus aur. D'Okb. Sagra's Cuba, 

 1840, 55. 



Tiirdus coronaius, Vieill. Ois. II, 1807, 8. 



Other Localities Quoted. — Cordova, Sclater, P. Z. S. 1856, 293. — 

 St. Domingo, Salle, P. Z. S. 1857, 231.— Guatemala, Sclater & 

 Salvin, Ibis, 1, 1859, 10. — Santa Cruz (winter), Newton, Ibis, 1859, 

 142. — Cuba (winter), Cab. Jour. Ill, 471. — Jamaica, Gosse, Birds, 

 152.— Sclater, P. Z. S. 1861, 10.— Costa Rica, Cab. Jour. 1861, 84. 



Hab. Eastern province of North America, north to English River, H. B. T. ; 

 whole West Indies ; eastern Mexico ; Honduras, Guatemala, aud Costa Rica ; 

 Bermuda in autumn and winter (Jones). 



I do not observe any special difference between skins of this 

 species from a Avide range of localities, excepting that those from 

 the Mississippi Valley appear larger, with proportionally longer 

 wings. The Jamaican, Mexican, and Central American are rather 

 smaller than the average : the Cuban exhibit both extremes. 



