BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA, 873 



T[ityra] personata Cabanis and Heine, Mus. Hein., ii, 1859, 83, part (.Talapa, 

 Vera Cruz). 



[Tityra] personata Gray, Hand-list, i, 1869, 367, no. 5586, part.— Sclater and 

 Salvin, Nom. Av. Neotr., 1873, 56, part. 



T[ityrc] semifandata personata Berlepsch, Joiirn. fiir Orn., Jan., 1889, 3, in text 

 (crit.). — Hartekt, Kat. Vogelsamnil. Senckenb., 1891, 105 (Mexico). 



Tityra semifasciata personata Bangs, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., xxxix, 1903, 149 

 (Ceibaand Yaruca, Honduras). 



P saris mexicanus Lesson, Rev. Zool., ii, Feb., 1839, 41 (Mexico; coll. Abeille). 



Tityra mexicana Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1856, 141, part (Cordova, Vera 

 Cruz), 297 (Mexico). 



Psaris tityroides Lesson, Rev. Zool., v, July, 1842, 210 (San Carlos, Salvador; coll. 

 Lesson?). 



T[ityra] semifasciata (not Pachyrhynchus semifasciatus Spix) Cabanis, in Wieg- 

 mann's Archiv. fiir Naturg., 1847, i, 239, part (Jalapa). 



Tityra semifasciata Sclater, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xiv, 1888, 330, part (Jalapa, 

 Vera Cruz; Merida, etc., Yucatan; Belize, British Honduras; Choctum and 

 Barranco Hondo, Guatemala; San Pedro, Honduras). — Salvin and Godman, 

 Biol. Centr.-Am., Aves, ii, 1890, 118, part (Real del Monte, Hidalgo; Jalapa, 

 Huatusco, San Lorenzo, Orizaba, and Playa Vicente, Vera Cruz; Tapana, 

 Oaxaca; Merida, Yucatan; Belize, etc., British Honduras; Guatemalan 

 localities and references; San Pedro, Honduras). — Lantz, Trans. Kansas Ac. 

 Sci. for 1896-97 (1899), 221 (Naranjo, Guatemala). 



[Tityra] semifasciata Sharpe, Hand-list, iii, 1901, 161, part. 



TITYRA SEMIFASCIATA GRISEICEPS (Ridgway). 

 GEAY-HEADED TITYRA. 



Adult male apparently not distinguishable from that of T. s. per- 

 sonata (possibly averaging very slightly darker), but adult female 

 exceedingly different, the general color of upper parts light brownish 

 gray (between smoke gray and drab-gray), the pileum not darker, 

 but becoming paler on forehead and more or less distinctly, though 

 narrowly, streaked with darker. 



Adult male.— Ijength. (skins), 196-238 (214); wing, 130-142 (134.7); 

 tail, 76-85.5(79.8); exposed culmen, 23.5-27 (25.8); tarsus, 26.5-28.5 

 (27.4); middle toe, 19.5-22 (20.9).« 



Adult female. —'Length (skins), 213-225 (218); wing, 121-135.5 

 (129.7); tail, 74.5-81.5 (76.4); exposed culmen, 24.5-27.5 (26); 

 tarsus, 26.5-29 (27.3); middle toe, 19-21 (20).'' 



Western Mexico, in States of Sinaloa (Mazatlan; Presidio de 

 Mazatlan; Rosario; Escuinapa; Plomosas; Los Pieles; Mount Juan 

 Lisiarraga), Durango (Chacala), Jalisco (Tolima; Beltran), Colima 

 (Sierra Madre; Santiago near Manzanillo), Guerrero (Dos Arroyos; 

 Omilteme; Acapulco; Nuevo Egido; Acahuitzotla), and Oaxaca 

 (Pinotepa; Pluma; Cacoprieto), and Territory of Tepic (Santiago; 

 Santa Teresa) . 



« Ten specimens. 



