706 Mr. W. GoodM\ow—Ornitholo(/ical 



not rare^ but, like Myiozetetes granadensis, very local in 

 these parts. 



203. Myiodynastes chrysocephalus (Tsch.). 

 A male from Gualea, Western Ecuador. 



204. Megarhynchus pitangua (Linn.). 

 A male from Gualea. 



205. Myiobius cinnamomeus (Lafr. & D'Orb.). 



Three (^s, 3 ? s, 1 c? jr. Papallacta, Eastern Andes, 

 11,500 feet. Our seven specimens were all shot on the 

 morning of Feb. 10th, when they must have been changing 

 their feeding-ground, for we did not come across any more 

 of them during the whole of our stay there. 



206. Myiobius ornatus (Lafr.). 



Eight c? s, 3 ? s, 1 (^ jr. Santo Domingo and Gualea. 

 This species inhabits the dense forests, and was common at 

 the former place in trees that were thickly covered with 

 creepers. I never saw it in the open clearings. 



207. Myiobius flavicans (ScL). 



Three (J s, 1 ? . Pichincha and Papallacta, Western and 

 Eastern Andes, at altitudes of from 8000 to 11,500 feet. 



208. Myiobius pulcher Scl. 



Five c?s. Gualea and Nanegal, Western Ecuador. This 

 is another species which lives chiefly among the dense 

 creepers that so heavily clothe the trunks of most of the 

 forest-trees. 



209. Myiobius villosus (ScL). 

 Myiobius villosus Scl. Cat. B. xiv. p. 201. 



One male, Gualea. I should think it doubtful whether 

 one of the types of this species (as stated in the Brit. Mus. 

 Cat.) came from the Rio Napo, Eastern Ecuador. 



210. Pyrocephalus rubineus (Bodd.). 



Eight (J s, 3 ? s, 2 c? s jr. Popaydu, Colombia, 5600 feet ; 

 Ibarra, North Ecuador, 6600 feet ; and the Cliillo Valley, 

 near Quito, about 7000 feet. We first met with this widely 

 distributed bird on the higher Western Andes of Colombia 



