BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA. 425 



Young male. — Similar to adult fcMiialo, hut toxturooi" plumage dif- 

 ferent (much looser): color of head more olive, and sides and flanks 

 more brownish. 



Isliind of Jamaica, Greater Antilles. 



(?) [.l/o/oriZ/a] campentria Linn.eus, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, i, 1766, .S29 (based on 

 Amcrinin Hedge Sprirroiv FAlwardi', Nat. Hist., iii, pi. 122, fig. 2). 



GlossnptUa eumpesiriit I.,rc.\s, Pro(!. U. S. Nat. Mus., xvii, Nov. 15, lS!t4, .SO], in 

 text. 



[Tanagr(i'\ riifieoUix (Jmklin, 'Sy«t. Nat., i, i)t. ii, 1788, 894 (l)ase(l <in liiijnas- 

 throiited Tanagrr Latham, Gen. Synop. Jlirds, ii, pt. i, 241). 



Tanagrella rnficolJiK Gosse, Birds Jamaica, 1847, 286; lilustr. I*>irds .fam., 1849, 

 pi. 58. 



T[<magrelld] rufirollisihiAy, Gen. Birds, App., 1849, 17. — Bonaparte, Consp. Av., 

 i, 1850, 236. 



IPyrrhulngra] ruficoHi^ Bonaparte, Consp. Av., i, 1850, 49.'?, exel. S3'n. 



Glos^iptUa rvficoJUs Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1856, 269 (monogr. ); 1861, 

 73; Cat. Am. Birds, 1862, 54; Cat. Birds. Brit. Mns., xi, 1886, 48.— Albrecht, 

 Journ. fiirOrn., 1862, 196.— March, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1863, 296.— 

 Baird, Review Am. r?irds, 1864, 163, fig. 1 (fig. of tongue). — Cory, Auk, 

 iii, 1886, 54; Birds W. L, 1889, 68; Cat. W. I. Birds, 1892, 17, 117, 130. 



[r.7o.s.s'(^/(7o] ri/^ra?//.s ScLATER and Salvin, Noin. Av. Neotr., 1873, 17. — Cory, 

 List Birds W. L, 1885, 9. 



fi'lIoKniptila] ?'H /?>(>///.'<■ Newton (A. and E. ), Handb. Jamaica, 1881, 104. 



[Cerlhlola] rufcoUln Gra\', Hand-list, i, 1869, 120, no. 1510. 



Tadiyplioniis nifo-gularis h.\FiiESH WE, Rev. Zool., ix, Sept., 1846, 320. 



Neorniscaerulea Hartlath, Nachtr. z. Verz. Mus. Brem., 1846, 8 {nonien inuhnn). 



Family MNTOTILTID.E. 



THE WOOD WARBLERS. 



Slender-1)illed or flat-hilled " nine-primaried" acutiplantar Ose/nes^ 

 with neither the tertials nor hind claw elong-ated ' nor the tonofue 

 deeply cleft nor laciniate at tip.' 



Bill usually slender-conoidal, sometimes rather stout, rarely short- 

 subulate; if slender-cuneate with acute tip, not strong-ly. if at all, 

 decurved terminally, and tail not lono-er than distance fi'om bend of 

 wing to tips of secondaries;^ if depressed, with triangular vertical 

 profile, the rictal l)ristles strongly developed (reaching more than 

 halfway to tip of hill), and tail rounded; if comparatively stout, 

 decidedly compressed with culmen decidedly convex, the tip of maxilla 

 not uncinate and without distinct subterminal tomial notch.* Tongue 

 moderately slender, with tip hut slightly bifid or fimbriate. Skull 

 with interpalatine process well developed; trans-palatine process short, 

 bluntly angular; palatines not produced l)ackward over pterygoids.'' 



'To exclude Motacillidae. 



^To exclude Ccerebida;. 



^This last character to exclude species of Omirnxtniw, usually referred to the 

 Cterebida>, but not imj)robably belonging to the Mniotiltid;«\ (See under Cccrebidpe, 

 on page 377. ) 



*To exclude the "nine-primaried" Vireonidre. 



*See Lucas, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mas., xvii, 1894, 299-310. 



