CHERRIE: ORNITHOLOGY OF THt; ORINOCO REGION. 22,2, 



(No. 10,768, 10,769 Coll. G. K. & Stella M. Cherrie) were apparently 

 year-old, abandoned nests of the common yellow Oriole {Icterus 

 xanthornus). A few small dead leaves of the Salada tree formed 

 a lining, but whether they had been carried in by the birds or had 

 fallen there by chance seemed open to question. The first of those 

 nests contained a single tgg,, the second contained two eggs. In each 

 case the parent birds were collected, the female taken with nest Xo. 

 10,768 Cherrie Coll. having an egg in the oviduct. A nest without 

 eggs, together with the owners, taken at Caicara, May 4, 1905, is 

 exactly similar in materials employed and style of structure with an- 

 other nest of Icterus xanthonuis, containing eggs, that hung within a 

 few feet of it in the same tree. Also in the same tree were nests con- 

 taining eggs of Pitangus derbianus riifipennis and Myiosetetes super- 

 ciliosus columbiamis. 



An egg collected with the nest (one originally built by the yellow 

 Oriole), and female parent bird at Auga Salada de Cuidad Bolivar 

 April 17, 1907. is ovate in form and measures 22 x 15 mm. The ovi- 

 duct of the female contained two imperfect eggs indicating that the 

 full set would have been three. On the 7th of May, at Caicara a nest 

 containing one egg just on the point of hatching and a day old chick, 

 was collected ; the full set in this case was evidently two. 



MVIOZETETES CAVANENSIS RUFIPENNIS LawrCUCC. 



Myiocetetes nifipennis Lawrence, Ann. Lye. N. Y. IX. p. 267. (Type, 



Puerto Cabello.) 

 Myiocetetes cayeiiiioisis rnfipenuis Berlepsch & Hartert, p. 45. 

 M[yioaetetes] cayaiiensis rufipennis Hellmayr, Novit. Zool., XV, 1908, 



p. 49 (N. Venezuela, Orinoco Valley). 

 M[yiozetetes] c{ayaneusis] rufipennis Hellmayr, P. Z. S., 191 1, p. ii34- 



(Ciudad Bolivar, Altagracia, Caicara, Quiribana de Caicara, Orinoco 



River). 



Native name Pccho amarillo, a name applied to all the yellow- 

 breasted flycatchers. 



An abundant species throughout the sparsely wooded portions 

 of the savanna regions. 



Adults have the eye dark sepia brown ; bill and feet black. 



Young birds in juvenal plumage are dark brown with a faint 

 olive wash above ; head black without colored crest, broad superciliary 



