184 BIRDS OF BRITISH GUIANA. 



median and greater upper wing-coverts blackish brown edged 

 with sulphur-yellow ; outer webs of the secondary-quills narrowly 

 fringed with sulphur-yellow ; bastard-wing and primary-coverts 

 dusky brown ; flight-quills dark brown with white edges to the 

 inner webs; tail pale brown, the feathers slightly edged with 

 green ; sides of face like the crown of the head, with whitish 

 shaft-lines to the feathers ; throat whitish ; breast and sides of 

 the body greyish green ; abdomen and under tail-coverts lemon- 

 yellow ; under wing-coverts pale sulphur-yellow ; quills below 

 brown with pale inner edges ; lower aspect of tail pale brown. 



Total length 95 mm., exposed culmen 8, wing 48, tail 43, 

 tarsus 17. 



The male from which the description is taken was collected on 

 the Anarica River in 1913. 



Breeding-season. Unrecorded in British Gruiana. 



Ifest. See Beebe infra, p. 185. 



Effgs. See Beebe infra, p. 185. 



Range in British Guiana. Bartica, Anarica River (McConnell 

 collection) ; Mount Roraima, Kamakusa, Bartica ( Whitely). 



Extraliinital Range. North Brazil. 



Habits. The following notes are copied from Beebe (Tropical 

 Wild Life in British Guiana,-p. 221) : — " Idly I watched a tiny 

 bird, a flycatcher, flitting about overhead, in the very summit of 

 a mango tree. Presently it dived into a bunch of moss, one of a 

 dozen on some dead branches, but did not immediately appear 

 again. I waited and still it remained invisible. From a condition 

 of. lazy inattentiveness, I sat up, imbued with concentrated 

 interest, and felt for my glasses, my eyes never leaving the tuft 

 of moss. The closest scrutiny revealed nothing, and I was half 

 tempted to believe that the bird had eluded me. But the 

 insatiable, inexplicable will-to-learn — the fluid life, as Bergson 

 would have it — overcame the sloth of the material bc^dy, and up 

 I went. I climbed swiftly,, so that I might keep beyond the ever- 

 increasing area of irate ants, and finally tracked the branch. My 

 flycatcher shot out, and raising his diminutive crest, scolded me 

 roundly for my unwarranted intrusion. The nest was most 

 ingeniously hidden, and I could not find the entrance until 1 had 

 carried it to the ground and examined it carefully. The owner 

 was a Gruiana Tyrantlet, one of the most inconspicuous of his great 

 Flycatcher family, and one of the smallest, less than four inches 



