390 ICTERID®. 
3. North America (J. G. Bell: Tris- Crowley Bequest. 
tram Coll.). 
2. North America (Henshaw Coll.). Salvin-Godman Coll. 
2. Chester, Pennsylvania (C. J. Princeton University, N.J. 
Pennock). [E. }. 
6. Louisiana (Henshaw Coll.). Salvin-Godman Coll. 
4. Princeton, New Jersey, 15th June Princeton University, N.J. 
(W. E. D. Scott). [ E. ]. 
4. Philadelphia (Tristram Coll.). Crowley Bequest. 
1. New Mexico (S. F. Baird: Tris- Crowley Bequest. 
tram Coll.). 
Icterus pyrrhopterus (Vicill.). 
Icterus pyrrhopterus, Sel. Cat. Birds B. M. xi. p. 368 (1886); Sel. & 
Huds, Arg. Orn. i. p. 107 (1888) ; Sharpe, Hand-l. vy. p. 499 (1909) ; 
Nehrk, Kat. Eiersanmil. p, 344 (1910). 
An egg said to be that of the Chestnut-shouldered Hangnest 
resembles eggs of J. spurius in lacking the tracery of lines. It is 
faint greenish-white, with small blotches and spots of chocolate- 
brown and lilac-grey, mostly confined to the larger end. It 
measures °87 by ‘6. 
1. [S. Brazil.] Crowley Bequest. 
| 3 | 
Icterus cayanensis (Linn.). 
(Plate XVII. fig. 14.) 
Icterus cajennensis, Thien. Fortpflanz. ges. Vog. tab. xxvii. fig. 6 (1845- 
54), 
Icterus cayanensis, Scl. Cat. Birds B. M. xi. p. 369 (1886); Nehrk. 
Kat. Eversammi. p. 102 (1899), p. 8345 (1910) ; Lhering, Rev. Mus. 
Paulista, iv. p. 222 (1900) ; Sharpe, Hand-l. v. p. 499 (1909). 
Four eggs believed to be those of the Yellow-winged Hangnest 
are of a broad and blunt oval shape, and glossy. They are stone- 
colour or pinkish-grey, marked, almost entirely in the form of a 
zone or cap at the broad end, with spots, blotches and short lines 
of black, chocoiate-brown and lavender. ‘They vary from ‘88 to 1 
in length, and from -64 to °71 in breadth. 
Nehrkorn describes eggs of this species as being blue-grey spotted 
with violet and black over the entire shell. 
4, South America. Old Collection. 
Icterus wagleri, Sclater. 
(Plate XVII. fig. 17.) 
[cterus wagleri, Salv. Ibis, 1859, p. 468; Sel. Cat. Birds B. M, xi. 
p: 872 (1886) ; Saiv. § Godm. Biol. Centr.-Amer., Aves, i. p. 466 
