164 PICIDiE. 



and triffonal : the female wants the red on the 

 head. 



Sp. 18. Pi. principalis. Steph. v. vs.. p. 150. 7;/. 36. — Ivory-billed 

 Woodpecker. Wils. Amer. Orn. v. iii, pi. 29 ; male. — North 

 America. 

 Sp. 19. Pi. pileatus. Steph. v. ix.p. I58.pl. 32. — Louisiana, 

 Sp. 20. Pi. melanoleucus. Steph. v. ix. p. 155. pi. 31. — Surinam. 



Sp. 21. Pi. varius. Steph. v. ix. p. 168. — Yellow-bellied Wood- 

 pecker. Wils. Amer. Orn. v. i. pi. 9.f. 2. — North America. 



Sp. 22. Pi. villosus. Steph. v ix. p. 171. — Pi. leuconotus. Temm. 

 Man. d'Orn. 2 Edit. v. ii. p. 397. — Hairy Woodpecker. IVils. 

 Amer. Orn. v. i. pi. 9.J'. 3. — North America. 



Sp. 23. Pi. pubescens. Steph. v. ix. p. 1/0. — Dovrny Wood- 

 pecker. Wils. Amer. Orn. v. i. pi. 9. J". 4. — North America. 



Sp. 24. Pi. torquatus. Wils. Amer. Orn. v. iii. j)l. 20. J". 3. 

 Pi. niger torque niichali corporeque injrh albis; fronte, malis, et 



mentum rubris. 

 Black Woodpecker with a nuchal collar and body beneath white ; 



the forehead, cheeks, and chin red. 

 Lewis's Woodpecker. Lath. Gen, Hist. v. iii. pi. 27 G. 



Inhabits North America. Length eleven inches 

 and a half: beak dark colour; head, back, Tvings, 

 and tail black : front, chin, and cheeks, beyond the 

 eyes, dark rich red : round the neck a white collar, 

 spreading over the breast, and appearing as if the 

 fibres of the feathers had been silvered : they are also 

 separate in their texture, and mixed with silvery 

 ones : vent black : legs dusky-blue. 



Sp. 25. Pi. querulus. Wils. Amer. Orn. v. ii.jjl. 15.y. 1. 



Pi. supra albo nigroque transversim fasciatiis ; subtus alhus, lateri- 

 bus nigro jiunctatis ; capite, nucha, colloque postice nigro, molis 

 albis; ma ml a nuchnli coccinea ; siriga nigrd a rictu act oculos. 



