BIRDS CORVIDAE — CYANURA MACROLOPHDS. 



583 



la inUlition to the peculiarities of colovatiou, the bill is much more sleader, ami the tail less 

 rounded. 



The bird figured by Richardson in Fauna Boreali Americana appears to be this species, from 

 the white forehead and patch above the eye ; the description, on the contrary, applies pretty 

 well to slt^Ueri. 



Recognizing fully the close relationship which the present species bears to C. coronata^ of 

 Swainson, I am yet inclined to consider it as di.stinct, notwithstanding a previous impression to 

 the contrary. Swainson's species appears to have the same long crest and the white superciliary 

 patch, but it is described by him as blue, the sides of the head blackish, the wing coverts 

 and tertials with blackish lines. As no mention is made of such lines on the tail, it is presumed 

 that they are wanting. Bonaparte says the bird is entirely blue, the head duller, but with a 

 bluer crest, the quills and tail feathers obsoletely banded. He adds that the adult has the head 

 blackish ; the young with the head blue. Cabanis says that the crest is blackish blue, the rest 

 of the head and fore neck more or less blackish according to age. In the present bird the head 

 and neck all round are black, and the crest having only a gloss of blue, scarcely appreciable, 

 and the tail is very distinctly banded with bhuk. 



There seems to be a regular succession of jays of the present group between two extremes of 

 color. Thus, the C. stelleri has the head and neck opaque black, with a frontal wa.sh of dark 

 blue. C. macrolophus has the head even blacker, the crest only glossed with blue terminally, 

 the frontal wash and a superciliary spot whitish ; the tail and wings strongly banded with 

 black. C. diademata, Bonap., from southern Mexico, apparently lacks the superciliary white 

 spot, the general color is ashy, the rump and abdomen blue. Tiie qviills and tail feathers are 

 conspicuously banded. It differs from luacrohjjhus in having the crest only black, and the color 

 more ashy. C. coronata has the head and neck with the crest bluish, the sides of the head black, 

 a whitish frontal and superciliary sjrot ; and finally C. galeata, Cab., (Mus. Hein, 222,) from 

 Bogota, has the head entirely blue, the borders of the crest only blackish. 



The Garrulus slelleri of the F. B. A. appears to be the present species, and one strong reason 

 for believing it distinct from the coroiiala is the fact, that Swainson did not identify his supposed 

 slelleri with the bird he had described only a few years before as Garrulus coronatus. 



List of specimens. 



Ctancra coronata, Swainson. 



Garrulus coronatus, Swainson, Phil. Mag. I, 1827, 437. Table lands Mex. — Jardine & Si^lby, 111. lab. Ixiv. 



Pica coroiiala, Waoleb, Isis, 1829, 750. Possibly C. macrolophus. 



Cyanurus coronatus, Swainson, F. Bor. Am. II, 1831, 495. 



Cyanocorojc coronatus, Bonap. Pr. Zool. Soc. V, 1837, 115. 



Cyanogarrulus coronatus, Bon. Conspectus, 1850, 377. 



CyanocUta coronata. Cab. Mus. Hein, 1851, 222. 



