BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA. 135 



plain deep citrine or between this and medal bronze,'^ duller on 

 outer webs of primaries, the rectrices dusky terminally and medially 

 (next to shafts) ; loral, suborbital, and auricular regions deep citrine 

 or light brownish olive (Saccardo's olive) ; a rictal stripe (originating 

 on lower edge of frontal antiae) of dull orange-yellow (antimony 

 yellow), passing into buff-yellow or pinard yellow posteriorly (on 

 subauricular portion) ; a broad malar patch of carmine red, succeeded 

 by a broad stripe of uniform brownish olive or olive-brown on sides 

 of neck (beneath the yellow subauricular stripe); chin and throat 

 immaculate light cinnamon-buff; rest of under parts light cinnamon- 

 buff or dull light orange-yeUow (deepest on chest, much paler on 

 under taQ-coverts) everywhere regularly and rather narrowly barred 

 with dusky olive-brown; axiUars and under wing-coverts immaculate 

 pinkish cinnamon or light vinaceous-cinnamon ; under surface of 

 remiges light cinnamon-rufous, with distal portion abruptly dusky; 

 bni dark horn color, with terminal portion of maxilla darker and 

 basal portion of mandible slightly paler; legs and feet dusky horn 

 color (in dried skms); length (skins), 204.5; wing, 124.5; tail, 67; 

 exposed culmen, 23; tarsus, 20.5; outer anterior toe, 19.^ 

 Eastern Panama (Marraganti). 



Chloronerpes chrysochlorus aurosus Nelson, Smithson, Misc. Coll., vol. 60, no. 3 

 (pub. 2143), Sept. 27, 1912, 3 (Marraganti, 150 miles east of Canal Zone, 

 eastern Panama; coll. U. S. Nat. Mus.). 



CHLORONERPES CALLOPTERUS Lawrence. 



PANAMA WOODPECKER. 



Adult male. — PUeum and hindneck carmine red, more or less broken 

 on forehead and crown by slate-grayish, only the tips of these 

 feathers being red; back, scapulars, wing-coverts, and secondaries 

 plain bright orange-brown (nearest raw-umber but more orange- 

 yeUowish or greenish), the outer webs of secondaries with inner portion 

 (next to shaft and concealed, except terminally, in closed wing) light 

 cinnamon-rufous, rather distantly barred or spotted (except sometimes 

 on proximal feathers) with black; primaries clear cinnamon-rufous 

 rather distantly spotted with blackish, their distal portion uniform 

 brownish dusky or sepia brown; under wing-coverts deep pinkish buff, 

 or cinnamon-buff; inner webs of remiges light cinnamon-rufous w4th 

 distal portion, abruptly, dusky (extensively on longer primaries), 

 the distal portion of cinnamomeous area on secondaries sho\ving a 

 greater or less number of bars or transverse spots of dusky next to 

 shaft; primary coverts olive-brown, the innermost ones spotted with 

 light cinnamon-rufous; rump and upper tail-coverts light olive or 

 yellowish olive, the former transversely spotted or broadly barred 



a Of the author's "Color Standards," pi. iv, colors 2ll and 19m. 

 b One specimen (the type). 



