THE CURASSOWS. 203 



Adult Female. — Differs from the female of C . fasciolata in 

 having the tail-feathers uniform black (the middle pair only 

 being irregularly marked with white in a younger example) ; 

 the thighs, as well as the breast and sides, black, barred with 

 pale buff; and, in the adult, at least, the crest is black, nar- 

 rowly barred with white. Total length, 34*5 inches; wing, 

 15-2 ; tail, 13 5; tarsus, 4-1. 



Range. — South America. District of Para, perhaps to the 

 United States of Colomb'a. 



IV. THE MEXICAN CURASSOW. CRAX GLOBICERA. 



Crax globicera, Linn. S. N. i. p. 270 (1766); Sclater, Trans. 



Z. S. ix. p. 274, pi. xl. (1875) [part]; Ogilvie-Grant, Cat. 



B. Brit. Mus. xxii. p. 478 (1893). 

 Crax rubra, Linn. S. N. i. p. 270 (1766). 

 Crax temmi7ickii, Tschudi, Faun. Per. p. 287 (1844-46). 

 Crax pseudalectcr, Reichenb.Tauben, p. 131, pi. 174, fig 15-16, 



and C edwardsi, p. 134 (1862). 

 Adult Male. — Black, glossed with dark green, except the 

 middle of the belly, flanks, and under tail-coverts, which are 

 white ; a sivollen yelloiv hwb at the base of the upper bill. 

 Total length, 35 inches ; wing, 157 ; tail, 14 ; tarsus, 4-6. 



Adult Female. — Crest feathers widely barred ivith white across 

 the middle ; rest of head, neck, and throat barred with black 

 and white ; mantle and chest black, washed or margined with 

 rufous, and glossed with green ; lower back mostly deep 

 brownish-chestnut ; quills and wing-coverts chestnut, mottled 

 with black ; breast deep chestnut, shading into cinnamon on 

 the rest of the under-parts ; tail black, the median feathers 

 generally mottled with chestnut, and with traces of irregular 

 yellowish-white bars. Size smaller; wing, 14 inches. 



Range. — Central America, extending from Western Mexico 

 to Honduras and Cozumel Island. 



