446 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



region and anterior portion of forehead; margin of chin and most oi 

 malar region white; rest of chin, together with whole throat deep 

 carmine red," most of the feathers with a minute terminal dot of 

 white; sides of foreneck and chest and posterior portion of malar 

 region deep bluish gray (plumbeous); median portion of foreneck 

 and chest, breast, and abdomen white, the chest sometimes faintly 

 tinged with gray; flanks mostly clear geranium red or deep geranium 

 pink; under tail-coverts, axillars, and under wing-coverts clear sul- 

 phur yeUow; maxilla black, becoming more brownish terminally; 

 mandible pale brownish basaUy (red or pink in life?), dusky termi- 

 nally; iris white;* legs and feet dark brownish (in dried skios). 



Adult male.— Length (skins), 96-103 (100); wing, 43.5-46 (45.3); 

 tail, 32.5-35.5 (34); exposed culmen, 17.5-18.5 (18.1); width of bill 

 at nostrils, 4-5 (4.4); tarsus, 13.5-15 (14.3); middle toe, 8-9 (8.7)." 



Adult female.— Length, (skins), 89-99 (95.8); wing, 42-45.5 (43.9); 

 tail, 31-35 (32.5); exposed culmen, 16.5-19 (17.6); width of bill at 

 nostrils, 4-4.5 (4.2); tarsus, 13.5-15 (14.1); middle toe, 8-9 (8.6).<» 



This exceedingly distinct species (so strangely synonymized with 

 T. suhulatus by most authors) most nearly resembles T. multicolor in 

 the whiteness of the under parts, which, however, are never streaked 

 or suffused with pink as is often the case in the latter; but it differs 

 from T. multicolor in absence of the blue subauriculai area (which is 

 clear gray) and in the bright green lores and forehead, and from aU 

 the other species in the very deep red color of the throat, "solid" 

 pinkish red flank patch, and very narrow bill. It least resembles T. 

 subulatus, with which it seems to occur thjoughout its range, at least 

 in the Santo Domingo portion of the island. 



Island of Haiti (Sanchez, Aguacate, Catare, El Valle, La Vega, 

 Puerto Plata, Puerto Resoli, and Santo Domingo City, Santo 

 Domingo). 



Todus angustirostria Lafebsnatb, Eev. et Mag. de ZooL, ser. 2, iii, Oct., 1851, 

 478 (Santo Domingo).— Sall*, Proc. ZooL Soc. Lond., 1857, 233.— Bryant, 

 Proc. Boat. Soc. N. H., xi, 1866, 91.— Shaepe, Ibis, 1874, 352.— Cory, Birds 

 Haiti and San Dom., 1885, 107, pi. (23), fig. 4; Auk, iii, 1886, 369 (descr.; 

 synonymy); Birds West Ind., 1889, 164. — Cherrie, Contr. Om. San Dom., 

 1896, 20. 



Todus suhulatus angtistirostris Cory, Cat. West Ind. Birds, 1892, 103, 131. 



Subulatus angustirostris Cory, Cat. West Ind. Birds, 1892, 11. 



Todus subulatus (not of Gray) Sharpe, Ibis, 1874, 351, part, pi. 13, fig. 2; Cat. 

 Birds Brit. Mus., xvii, 1892, 334, part. 



o The red of the throat is much deeper in thjs than in any other species. 

 ^ A. H. Verrill, manuscript. 

 " Ten specimens. 

 •J Nine specimens. 



