544 BIKDS OF BRfTTSH GUIANA. 



proportion to tlio size of the bird itself. Its widtli and deptli at tlie 

 b;ise are eqiuil, which is about two-thirds the length of the exposed 

 cuhuen ; the ti[) of the upper mandible is slightly hooked, but there 

 is no trace of a tooth on its cutting edges. There is a tuft of 

 velvet-like feathers immediately behind the nostrils. The wing is 

 rounded, the second, third, and fourth primaries are longest and 

 equal, the first is slightly shorter than the fourth but much longer 

 than the fifth. The tail is square at the tip and about two-thirds 

 the length of the wing. The tarsus exceeds the length of the 

 exposed culmen by about one-third. Coloration : male and 

 female slightly different. 



694. Lamprospiza cliarniesi. 



Charme's Black-and-white Shining Tanager. 



Lfunprospiza cTiarmesi Penard, Vogels van Guyana, ii. p. 463, 1910. 

 Lamprospiza mclanoleuca Brabourne & Chubb, B. S. Amor. i. p. 480, 



no. 4429 part, 1912 ; Beebe, Tropical Wild Life in British Guiana, 



p. 137, 1917 (Bartica). 



Adult male. Entire upper surface glossy blue-black like the 

 throat and a band of feathers on each side of the breast and the 

 thighs ; inner webs of flight-quills dull black with pale margins ; 

 sides and middle of breast, abdomen, sides of body, under tail- 

 coverts white, like the axillaries, under wing-coverts, and base of 

 flight-quills below ; remainder of quill-lining dull blackish bke 

 the lower aspect of the tail. 



Total length 150 mm., exposed culmen 15, wing 90, tail Gl, 

 tarsus 22. 



Adult female. Differs from the adult male in being ash-grey on 

 the hind-neck, entire back^ upper tail-coverts, and scapulars. 

 Wing 90 mm. 



Habits. Beebe (Tropical Wild Life in British Guiana, p. 137) 

 records this species from Bartica, which, so far as I have been able 

 to gather, is the first known occurrence of the species in the 

 colony. It may be mentioned, however, that Messrs. Penard 

 (Vogels van Guyana, ii. p. 463) described a new form of this 

 species, founded on its larger wing-measurement, viz., i''0. This 

 does not appear to be of any great importance, however, when we 

 find that the wing-measurement of some of the Cayenne birds 

 reaches 9-1. If, on the other hand, Messrs. Penard's bird should 



