516 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



Bowie Agency, and Mount Graham, Arizona; habits). — Ridgway, Nona. N. 

 Am. Birds, 1881, no. 319. — Brewster, Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, vii, 1882, 205 

 (Santa Rita Mts., Arizona).— Scott, Auk, iv, 1887, 19 (Santa Catalina Mts., 

 Arizona, 4,000 ft.). — Thorne, Auk, iv, 1887, 265 (Fort Lyon, Colorado, 1 spec, 

 date not given). — Mearns, Auk, vii, 1890, 256 (Bakers Butte, Mogollon Mts., 

 Arizona, July, Aug.). — Ladd, Auk, viii, 1891, 315 (Yavapai Co., Arizona; descr. 

 nest and eggs).— (?) Lantz, Trans. Kansas Ac. Sci. for 1896-97(1899), 222 

 (Limoncito [Sonora?]). 



[Contopus] pertinax Coues, Key N. Am. Birds, 1872, 173, part. 



Clontojms] pertinax Coues, Key N. Am. Birds, 2d ed., 1884, 439, part.— Ridgway 

 Man. N. Am. Birds, 1887, 337, part. 



Contopus pertinax pallidiventris Chapman, Auk, xiv, July, 1897, 310 (Pima Co. 

 Arizona; coll. Am. Mus. N. H.). — American Ornithologists' Union Com 

 mittee, Auk, xvi, 1899, 112.— Bailey (Florence M.) Handb. Birds W. U. S. 

 1903, 257.— Swarth, Pacific Coast Avifauna, no. 4, 1904, 24 (Hua'chuca Mts. 

 Arizona, breeding at 7,000 to 10,000 ft.; habits). 



C[ontopus] pertinax pallidiventris Coues, Key N. Am. Birds, 5th ed., i, 1903, 524 



Contopus p[ertinax] pallidiventris Swarth, Condor, vii, 1905, 79 (Santa Rita Mts. 

 Arizona, from 6,000 feet upward). 



Horizopus pertinax pallidiventris Oberholser, Auk, xvi, Oct., 1899, 331. 



[Horizoptis] pallidiventris Sharpe, Hand-list, iii, 1901, 141. 



MYIOCHANES LUGUBRIS( Lawrence). 

 LUGUBRIOUS FLYCATCHER. 



' Adults; (sexes alike). — Alxjve plain dark olivaceous-slate, the pileiim 

 darker, with feathers darker centrally or mesially, producing more or 

 less distinct wedge-shaped streaks ; t ail dusky grayish brown with oliva- 

 ceous slate-gray edgings, the outer web of lateral rectrix paler brown- 

 ish gray; wings dusky, the middle coverts narrowly and indistinctly 

 margined terminally with slaty, the greater coverts narrowly and 

 indistinctly edged (as well as terminally margined) with the same; 

 primaries and primary-coverts still more narrowly and indistinctly 

 edged; secondaries distinctly edged (except basall}^ with pale olive- 

 grayish or dull whitish; sides of head and neck, throat, chest, and 

 sides similar in color to upper parts but slightly paler, passing into 

 pale grayish or didl whitish on chin, and into dull yellowish white 

 on center of abdomen and under tail-coverts, the latter more or less 

 extensively olive-grayish medially (the pale yellowish or dull yellowish 

 white sometimes restricted to a mere edging); maxilla brownish 

 black or blackish brown, mandible yellowish; iris brown; legs and 

 feet black. 



Adult waZe.— Length (skins), 146-169 (162); wing, 89-99 (93.5); 

 tail, 71.5-81.5 (75.8); exposed culmen, 15.5-18 (17.2); tarsus, 14-16.5 



(15.5); middle toe, 9.5-11 (10.2).« 



a Twenty specimens. 



