578 U-S. NATIONAL MUSEUM BULLETIN 221 



Genus TANGARA Brisson 



Calospiza florida arcaei Ridgway 



Proc. Washington Acad. Sci. 3: 149, Apr. 15, 1901. 



=Tangara florida florida (Sclater and Salvin). See Hellmayr, Catalogue 

 of birds of the Americas 9: 95, 1936; Zimmer, Amer. Mus. Nov. 1245: 2, 

 1943. 



146386. Adult male. Department of Veraguas, Panama. 1875? Col- 

 lected by Enrique Arce. Received as part of the Boucard Collection. 

 Calliste versicolor Lawrence 



Ann. New York Acad. Sci. 1 (5-6) : 152 [p. 153 in separate], June 1878. 



=Tangara cucullata versicolor (Lawrence) . See Bond, Check-list of birds 

 of the West Indies, ed. 3, p. 160, 1950. 



74079. Adult male. Saint Vincent Island, Windward Islands, Caribbean 

 Sea. February 1878. Collected by Frederick A. Ober. Original 

 number 467. 



74081. Adult female. Saint Vincent Island, Caribbean Sea. February 

 1878. Collected by Frederick A. Ober. Original number 466. 



There were originally five cotypes, three males and two females, of which 

 Nos. 74077, 74078, and 74080 have vanished from the collection without 

 trace. 

 Tangara fucosus [sic'\ Nelson 



Smithsonian Misc. Coll. 60 (3) : 17, Sept. 27, 1912. 



=Tangara jucosa Nelson. See Hellmayr, Catalogue of birds of the 

 Americas 9: 165, 1936; Zimmer, Amer. Mus. Nov. 1245: 2, 1943. 



232996. Adult male. Mount Pirri (at elev. 5,000 feet), near the head 

 of the Rio Limon, Department of Darien, Panama. May 1, 1912. Col- 

 lected by Edward A. Goldman. Original number 15640. Received 

 from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 



Genus IRIDOSORNIS Lesson 



T[anagra]. analis von Tschudi 



Archiv fur Naturgeschichte 10 (1) : 287, 1844. 

 =Iridosornis analis analis (von Tschudi). See Friedmann and Deignan, 



Zoologica, New York 27: 52, 1942. 

 41919. Adult (sex not indicated). Peru. Collected by Johann J. von 



Tschudi. Received from the Neuchatel Museum. 

 This form was described from an undisclosed number of cotypes. Hell- 

 mayr (Catalogue of birds of the Americas 9: 179, 1936) states categorically 

 "type in Neuchatel Museum," but this must be in error, since von Berlepsch 

 and Hellmayr (Journ. fiir Orn. 53: 6-20, 1905) mention no specimen seen 

 by them there. At least one other cotype, received as part of the Sclater 

 Collection, is preserved in the British Museum (Natural History). 



