CHERRIE: ORNITHOLOGY 01^ THE ORINOCO REGION. 169 



i. Black above and below, with white under wing-coverts 

 and shoulder patch. 



j. Larger; wing more than 75 mm. (males) Tachyphonus rufus. 



j'. Smaller; wing less than 75 mm. (males) Tachyphonus lucluosus. 



1'. General color above and below not black. 

 j. Pileum (but not sides of head) dark grey with a more 



or less concealed olive green crown patch (female) .. . . Tachyphonus surinamus 



surinamus. 

 j'. Pileum not dark grey. 



k. Smaller; wing not over 65 mm. (female) Tachyphonus lucluosus. 



k'. Larger; wing over 6s mm. (females). 



I. Above plain rufous chestnut Tachyphonus rufus. 



v. Above bright olive brown; bases of crown 

 feathers bright buffy or yellowish olive forming 



a more or less concealed crown spot Phoenicolhraupis rubica 



rubica. 



Tanagra chlorotica Linnaeus. 

 Tanagra chlorotica L., Syst. Nat. ed. 12. I. 1766. p. 317. 

 Euphonia chlorotica Berlepsch & Hartert, p. 17. 



During the first expedition to the Orinoco, a series of Uuphonia 

 from Altagracia, Caicara, Ouiribana de Caicara and Maipures were 

 sent to the Tring Museum and identified by Berlepsch and Hartert, 

 as pertaining to this species. At that time I seemed to have observed 

 many more examples of this species than I did of H. trinitatis, but dur- 

 ing the two last expeditions specimens of the latter species only have 

 been collected. 



No specimens of this species were found among the birds sent to 

 the American Museum by Klages either from the neighborhood of 

 .Ciudad Bolivar or from points on the Caura River. 



Tanagra trinitatis (Strickland). 

 Buphonia trinitatis Strickl., Contr. Orn. 1851. p. 72; Berlepsch & Hartert. 



p. 17. 



Venezuelan common name " Fin-fin" or " Sin-fin." On the recent 

 expeditions I found this species common. 



A female in adult nuptial plumage (taken June 14th) is a rich 

 olive-green above, below, chrome yellow with sides of breast and 

 flanks a deep olive yellow. Females in what is probably the first 

 nuptial plumage are quite different from those in adult plumage and 

 resemble greatly birds in juvenal dress. A female in what I con- 

 sider the first nuptial plumage, taken April 17th, is greyish olive- 

 green above; below, the throat, sides, flanks and under tail-coverts are 

 olive yellow brightest on the under tail-coverts, centre of breast grey- 

 ish, centre of abdomen greyish white. 



A male in juvenal plumage, taken May 30th is greyish olive- 

 green above (of a lighter shade than the female of May loth) ; below, 

 breast greyish, abdomen white, sides of breast light greyish olive; 



