244 Mr. W. R. Ogilvie-Grant on American Gallinse. 
4 a. Odontophorus atrifrons. 
Odontophorus atrifrons Allen, Bull. Anier. Mus. xiii. 
pp. 127-128 (1900). 
Hab. Valparaiso, Sierra Nevada, U.S. Colonibia, 4500- 
5500 feet. 
This appears to be a distinct species most nearly allied to 
O. parambce, which has been procured in Northern Ecuador 
and in Antioquia, U.S. Colombia. Certain parts of the 
description seem, however, to suggest that the bird under con- 
sideration may not be fully adult. Dr. Allen writes : — '^ The 
scapulars with the inner vanes black, broadly barred and edged 
with chestnut, with light shaft-stripes, and central portion of 
outer vane gray ; . . . . upper breast similar to the mantle 
(olivaceous gray, vermiculated with black), but varied slightly 
Avith buffy white, which takes the form of ill-defined apical 
spots on the lower border of this area ; lower bi'cast ochra- 
ceous rufous, with indistinct cross-bars and shaft-stripes of 
black.'' 
4 b. Odontophorus paramb^e. 
Odontophorus parambce Rothsch. Bull. B. O. C. vii. p. vi 
(1898) ; Hartert, Nov. Zool. v. p. 505, pi. iii. fig. 1 (1898). 
Hab. Paramba, N. Ecuador; Antioquia^ U.S. Colombia. 
10. Odontophorus guttatus (Cat. B. xxii. p. 439). 
Odontophorus consobrinus E-idgw. P. U. S. Nat. Mus. xvi. 
p. 469 (1893) [Mirador, Vera Cruz, Mexico]. 
Mr. Uidgway's supposed species is unquestionably founded 
on two females pecimens of O. guttatus (Gould) and was 
correctly placed under the synonymy of that species in the 
Cat. B. Brit. Mus. xxii. p. 439 (1893). 
Crax sulcirostris Goeldi, Boll. Mus. Paraense^ iii. no. 4, 
p. 409. 
The description (translated) reads as follows : — 
" A female which is of the same size as the preceding 
species (C carunculata) . A broad groove runs on each side 
of the beak from the nasal fossa to near its point. The tarsi 
resemble those of the preceding species, but are covered in 
