BOBWHITE IN MEXICO 75 
from Jalapa to Isthmus of Tehuantepec (500 to 5,000 
feet). 
“6. Colinus godmani (Nelson). Godman’s bob- 
white. Lowlands of southern Vera Cruz; probably also 
ranging into Tabasco. (From sea-level to 1,500 feet. ) 
“7 Colinus coydlcos (Mull.). Coyolcos bobwhite. 
Pacific coast of Oaxaca and Chiapas; from city of 
Tehuantepec to Tonala. (From sea-level to 3,000 feet. ) 
“8. Colinus atriceps (Ogilvie-Grant). Black-headed 
bobwhite. Putla, western Oaxaca. (About 4,000 feet.) 
“9. Colinus salvini (Nelson). Salvin’s bobwhite. 
Coast plains of southern Chiapas, near Guatemalan bor- 
der. (Sea-level to 500 feet.) 
“to. Colinus insignis (Nelson). Guatemala bob- 
white. Valley of Comitan in Chiapas, into adjacent 
border of western Guatemala (3,000 to 6,000 feet). 
“T1. Colinus nigrogularis (Gould). Yucatan bob- 
white. Yucatan. (Sea-level to 500 feet.”’) 
Very different in appearance from the bobwhite 
group are the striking quails of the western and south- 
western portions of the United States. Of these birds 
there are almost a dozen forms, some of them plumed, 
others helmeted, others with full, soft crests, but all 
very unlike the bobwhites. These are among the most 
beautiful of North American birds, and in many of 
the regions which they inhabit are extremely abundant. 
