1870. ] ON BIRDS FROM HONDURAS. 835 
Eastern Peru to Buenos Ayres on the eastern side of the Andes, and 
Western Peru to Chili on the western side. I have also typical 
specimens of , cristata and E. albivertex of Pelzeln (Orn. Bras. 
p- 177), and am rather inclined to consider these also inseparable 
from Z. albiceps. I have already pointed out that my ZL. griseigu- 
laris is the same bird (see P. Z. 8S. 1867, p. 327). 
4. HE. gigas, sp. nov., ex reip. Hquator. reg. orient. 
5. E. pallatange, Scl., ex. reip. Aiquat. reg. occ. 
6. E. fallax, sp. nov., ex Jamaica. 
Sect. B. Sp. capitis subcristati plumis interne flavis. 
7. E. placens, Scl., ex Am. Centr. a Mexico usque ad isthmum 
Panamensem, et reip. Aquat. litt. occident. 
We have now traced the species down to Panama, and I consider 
my E. implacens (ex rep. ASquator.) no longer tenable. 
8. H. subplacens, Scl., ex reip. Aiquator. reg. occ. 
9. EH. cotta, Gosse, ex Jamaica. 
10. £. elegans, Pelzeln, ex Amazonia, Columbia et Guiana. 
11. £. caniceps, Sw., ex Columbia et Peruvia. 
Sect. c. Sp. paleo unicolori. 
12. #. obscura (Lafr. et D’Orb.), ex Brasil. merid. 
Under this (older) name I now unite the specimens arranged in 
my catalogue under ZL. olivacea and E. rustica. I have additional 
skins from Ypanema (Natterer), and Lagoa Santa (Lund). 
13. HE. mesoleuca, Cab. et Heine, ex Brasil. merid. 
14. £. frantzii, Lawrence, Ann. L. N.Y.vii. p.173, ex Costa Rica. 
15. E. pudica, Sclater, ex Columbia et Chiriqui. 
16. HL. afinis, Burm. Syst. Ueb. il. p. 147; Pelz. Orn. Bras. 
p- 191, ex Brasil. int. 
8. On Birds collected by Mr. George M. Whitely on the 
Coast of Honduras. By P. L. Scrarer, M.A., Ph.D., 
F.R.S., and Osperr Satvin, M.A. 
Mr. George M. Whitely went out to Honduras in the autumn of 
1869 in company with the contractors engaged upon the first 
section of the Interoceanic line, and remained about six months in 
that country. Mr. Whitely’s health unfortunately gave way; and 
he was consequently obliged to return home with much smaller col- 
lections than would otherwise have been the case. But we think it 
nevertheless expedient, in the interests of geographical distribution, 
to place on record an exact list of the species of birds obtained in 
