EVOLUTION OF THE COLORS OF BIRDS. 243 



pany with a flock of 8. psaltria, which had the back 

 almost, if not entirely, black. It is probable that these 

 exceptional instances are not stragglers from the south, 

 for the bird is generally a resident wherever found, but 

 rather an unusual manifestation of the melanism which 

 normally only asserts itself in a warmer climate. 



Mr. Kidgway also mentions the following instances of 

 melanism toward the south: " Myiarchus Lawrencii, 

 which, starting with a grayish brown crown in the 

 northern examples (var. Lawrencii) gradually assumes 

 a blacker and blacker crown, as we trace it southward, 

 first through var. nigricapillus (Costa Kica and Panama), 

 and finally ending in var. nigriceps (Ecuador), which 

 has the crown deep black. Sayornis nigricans from 

 California and Northern Mexico, has the crissum pure 

 white; Mirador specimens have it clouded with dusky, 

 while in Costa Kica specimens (var. aquations), it is 

 entirely blackish, only the middle of the abdomen being 

 white. * * * ' The same law as regards the Pacific 

 province of North America is made evident by the well- 

 known cases of Picus villosus var. Harrisii, P. pubescens 

 var. Gairdneri, Sphyrapicus varius var. ruber, the North- 

 west coast forms of Falco peregrinus, F. Columbarius, 

 Bubo Virginianus, Scops asio, and numerous other simi- 

 larly affected species." 



Mr. Bidgway mentions Xanthoura luxuosa and var. 

 guatemalensis , and the different races of Geothlypis as 

 examples of intensification in yellow toward the tropics. 

 In Geothlypis the yellow not only becomes intensified 

 but extended upon the white of the belly both in the 

 warm moist climate of the Mississippi Valley and Gulf 

 States and in Mexico. Sylvania pusilla pileolata and 

 Helminthophila celata lutescens are illustrations of the 

 intensification of yellow in the Pacific provinces. 



Cardinalis virginianus and Piranga cestiva become 



