206 LLOVYD’S NATURAL HISTORY. 
rufous, the rufous bars being margined with black ; primaries 
barred with buff and dusky; belly fawn-colour, the breast in- 
distinctly barred with rufous ; tail-feathers black, with narrow 
buff bands. Wing, 16 inches; tail, 14; tarsus, 4. (/eschenow.) 
Range. Unknown. 
_ This species, recently described by Dr. Reichenow from a 
female specimen, appears to belong to a form intermediate be- 
tween C. panamensis and C. grayi. It seems to resemble the 
latter in having the back barred, but differs from both in 
having the neck banded with black and white. Dr. Reichenow 
says that during the two years this bird lived in the Zoological 
Gardens at Berlin, the plumage underwent marked changes, 
the white bars becoming more pronounced with age. 
VII. GRAY’S CURASSOW. CRAX GRAYI. 
Crax grayt, Ogilvie-Grant, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. xxi. p. 480 
(1893). 
(Plate XXX VII.) 
Adult Male—Unknown. 
Adult Female——Easily distinguished from the female of C. 
fasciolata and those previously described by having the 
primary and secondary quills, as well as the tail-feathers, 
widely barred with black and white, the white bars being about 
as wide as the black interspaces: the lower back, rump, 
and upper tail-coverts tawny buff, indistinctly barred with 
black, “Total Tength, ~22 inches; jwing, 13°60 “otal lense 
tarsus, 3°8. 
Range.—South America. ‘The exact locality is as yet un- 
known. 
VIII. THE WATTLED CURASSOW. CRAX CARNUCULATA. 
Crax carnuculata, Temm. Pig. et Gall. iii. pp. 44, 690 (1815) ; 
Ogilvie-Grant, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. xxii. p. 481 (1893). 
Crax rubrirostris, Spix. Av. Bras. il. p. 51, pl. Ixvii. (1825). 
Crax yarrellit, Jardine and Selby, Ill. Orn. n. s. pl. vi. (1836). 
