176 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



region either duller red or else dark sooty tinged with red, black of 

 foreneck, upper chest, and upper parts duller, and bars on under parts 

 much less sharply defined. 



Young female. — Similar to the young male, but loral, orbital, and 

 malar regions sooty, slightly, if at all, tinged with red. 



Southern Mexico, in States of Oaxaca (Tehuan tepee City; Santa 

 Efigenia; Chihuitan; Tolosa; Rio Givlcia), Tabasco (Frontera; 

 Teapa), Campeche (Apazote), Yucatan (Tunkas; Labna; Buctzotz; 

 Izamal; La Vega), and Chiapas (Tumbala; Huehuetan; Palenque; 

 Canjob; Teopisca), and southward through Guatemala (Savana 

 Grande; Duenas; Medio Monte; Volcan de Agua; Rabinal; San 

 Geronimo; Retalhuleu; Los Amates, Yzabal; Patuliil, Solola; 

 Chapulco), British Honduras (Belize; Cayo; Orange Walk; near 

 Manatee Lagoon), Honduras (Omoa; Truxillo; Yaruca; Rio Segovia) 

 Salvador (San Carlos; San Salvador; Volcan de San Mgu^l), Nica- 

 ragua (Lavala; Matagalpa; San Geronimo, Chinandega; vSan Rafael 

 del Norte; Grenada; Ocotdl; Rio Escondido ; Virgin Bay; Realejo), 

 and Costa Rica (Grecia; Angostura; San Jose; La Palma and Rancho 

 Redondo de San Jose; La Palma de Nicoya; Cerro de la Candelaria; 

 Santo Domingo de San Mateo; Bebedero; Volcan de Miravalles; 

 Tenorio; Lepanto; LasTrojas; Trea Rios; Pigres; Barranca; Pozo 

 del Rio Grande; Paso Real; Boruca; Copey and Santa Maria de 

 Dota; Jimenez; Guayabo; Bonilla; Siptirio), to western Panama 

 (Divala; Santiago de Veragua). 



Picus guatemaUnsis Hartlaub, Rev. Zool., vii, 1844, 214 (Guatemala; coll. 

 Bremen Mus.?). — Sundevall, Consp. Av. Picin., 1866, 5, part. 



[Picus] guatemalensis Giebel, Thes. Om., iii, 1876, 156. 



C[ampephilus] guatemalensis Gray, Gen. Birds, ii, 1845, 436. — Reichenbach, 

 Handb. Scansores, Picinse, 1854, 392, part.— Ridgway, Man. N. Am. Birds, 

 1887, 281, part. 



Campephilus guatemalensis Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1867, 157'(Santiago de 

 Veragua, w. Panama). — Lawrence, Ann. Lye. N. Y., ix, 1868, 130 (San Jose, 

 Grecia, and Angostura, Costa Rica); Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., no. 4, 1876, 34 

 (Chihuitan and Tehuantepec City, Oaxaca). — Gray, List Birds Brit. Mus., 

 Capit. and Picid., 1868, 57, part (Honduras). — Frantzius, Joum. fiir Om., 

 1869, 363 (Costa Rica).— Boucard, Liste Ois. recol. Guat., 1878, 27; Proc. 

 Zool. Soc. Lond., 1883, 452 (n. Yucatan; habits). — Sumichrast, La Natu- 

 raleza, v, 1882, 240 (Santa Efigenia, Oaxaca). — Nutting, Proc. U. S. Nat. 

 Mus., V, 1882, 398 (La Palma de Nicoya, w. Costa Rica; habits); vi, 1884, 387, 

 406 (Sucuyd and Los Sabalos, Nicaragua). — Zeledon, Cat. Aves de Costa 

 Rica, 1882, 23; Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., viii, 1885, 111 (Costa Rica); Anal. 

 Mus. Nac. Costa Rica, i, 1887, 123 (Grecia, Jimenez, Las Trojas, and Cartago, 

 Costa Rica).— Ridgway, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., x, 1887, 582, 591 (Truxillo 

 and Rio Segovia, Honduras).— Stone, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1890, 206 

 (Timkas and Labna, Yucatan).— Cherrie, Auk, ix, 1892, 327 (San Jos6, 

 Costa Rica, accidental; common coastwise). — Richmond, Proc. U. S. Nat. 

 Mus., xvi, 1893, 518 (Rio Escondido, Nicaragua).— Underwood, Ibis, 1896, 

 443 (Volcan de Miravalles, Costa Rica).— Dearborn, Pub. 125, Field Mus. 

 N. H., 1907, 91 (Los Amates and Patulul, Guatemala). 



