BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA. 681 



Tyrannus caudifaficiatus D'Orbigny, in La Sagra's Hist. Nat. Cuba, Oia., 1840, 

 70, pi. 12 (Cuba).— GuNDLACH, Jouni. liost. Soc. N. II., vi, 1852, 318 (Cuba); 

 Journ. fur Orn., 1861, 328 (Cuba); 1871, 293 (Cuba); 1872, 424 (Cuba; 

 habits). — Cabanis, Joiu-n. fiir Orn., 1855, 478. — liREWEU, Proo. Bost. Soc. 

 N. H., vii, 1860, .307. 



Tlyrannns] caudifascialus Bonaparte, Consp. Av., i, 1850, 192, part. — Cabanis 

 and Heine, Mus. Hein., ii, 1859, 80 (Cuba). 



Pitangus caudifasciatus (not of Sclater, 1861) Gundlach, Repert. Fisico-Nat. 

 Cuba, i, 1866, 2.38; Orn. Cub., 1893, 83.— Cory, Auk, ill, 1886, 232, part 

 ((\iba); Birds West Ind., 1889, 119 (do.); Cat. West Ind. Birds, 1892, 13, 

 108, part (Cul)a).— Sclater, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xiv, 1888, 179, part (San 

 Cristobal, Cuba).— Chapman, Bull. Am. Mus. N. H., iv, 1892, 302 (near 

 Trinidad, Cuba; habits). — Bancs and Zappey, Am. Nat., xxxix, 1905, 206 

 (Isle of Pines). 



[Piiangus] caudifasciatus Gray, Hand-list, i, 1869, 357, no. 5421, part (Cuba). — 

 Sclater and Salvin, Nom. Av. Neotr., 1873, 50, part (Cuba). — Cory, List 

 Birds West Ind., 1885, 15, part (Cuba).— Sharpe, Hand-list, iii, 1901, 128. 



Tolviarchus caudifasciatus Ridgway, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., xviii, Sept. 2, 1905, 

 209. 



TOLMARCHUS CAYMANENSIS (Nicoll). 



GRAND CAYMAN PETCHARY. 



Similar to T. caudifasciatus but color of back more olivaceous, 

 pileum sooty slate color instead of black, and bill larger; similar also 

 to T. jammcensis, but bill larger, dusky of head much lighter, color of 

 back, etc., grayer and with a decided olive tinge. 



Adult male. — Pileum dark sooty slate, the crown with a large 

 concealed patch of saffron yellow underlaid laterally and posteriorly 

 by white; hindneck dusky grayish brown; back, scapulars, rump, 

 and lesser wing-coverts plain dark smoke gray, slightly tinged with 

 olive; upper tail-coverts darker, margined with rusty brownish; tail 

 dusky, rather broadly tipped with pale grayish brown, passing into 

 dull wliite terminally, the outer web of lateral rectrix pale grayish 

 brown, the inner webs of all (except middle pair) with basal third, 

 or more, abrupt!}^ yellowish white; wings dusky, the middle coverts 

 broadly margined terminally with pale brownish gray and dull whit- 

 ish, the greater coverts edged with pale brownish gray, secondaries 

 edged with grayish white or yellowish white (more broadly on inner 

 secondaries), the primary coverts and primaries very narrowly edged 

 with pale grayish; loral region pale grayish anteriorlj", more dusky 

 posteriorly; suborbital region and auricular region dark sooty brown 

 or dusky, like pileum; malar region, lower edge of auricular region, 

 and under parts white, the chest and sides very faintly tinged with 

 pale gray, passing into pale primrose yellow on flanks, lower abdo- 

 men, anal region, and under tail-coverts; axillars and under wing- 

 coverts pale primrose yellow; inner webs of remiges broadly edged 

 with yellowish white; bill black, the mandible more brownisli l^asally; 



