Ti. Riv Us Sty Ho: 
cating with a collar of the fame, half an inch broad, on the 
breaft; the chin and throat are black: from behind the eye de- 
f{cends on each fide the neck a glofly white ftreak, compofed of 
elongated feathers, and broader than the reft: the lower part of 
the neck, the back, wings, and tail, are mixed rufous olive brown: 
the belly, thighs, and vent, are white: the legs are dufky : the 
tail is an inch and a quarter long, and the wings reach to the end 
of it. 
The female has the head and upper parts like the male: from 
the gape a greenifh band paffes through the eye, under the white 
ear feathers: the chin and throat are white, and the rufous band 
on the breaft is much broader: the reft of the under parts and 
legs as in the male. 
Thefe inhabit Cayenne with the others, and have, like them, 
the general manners of the whole race of Azt-eaters. 
Le Colma, Buf. oif. iv. p. 475.—Pl. enl. 703. f. 1. 
ENGTHH near fovea inches. Bill nearly blackifh : the upper 
parts of the body, wings, and tail, are rufous brown, with a 
collar of rufous at the back part of the neck juft below the hind- 
head: at the bafe of the noftrils is a fpot of white: the chin 
and throat are white; the laft mottled with black: the breatt is 
greyifh brown; and the belly, thighs, and vent, cinereous : the tail 
is fhort, about an inch and a quarter long: the legs reddifh 
brown. 
Some of thefe differ in wanting the rufous mark at the nape of 
the neck. 
Inhabits Cayenne. 
Le 
85 
FEMALE. 
PLace. 
117. 
RUFOUS-NAP- 
ED THR. 
DESCRIPTION. 
Puace, 
