786 BULLBTIir 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



black (most developed laterally) followed by large, mostly concealed, 

 spdts of pale tawny or pale ciimamon-buffy ; back, innermost scapu- 

 lars, wing-coverts, rump, and upper tail-coverts with a greats or less 

 number of minute irregular (often V-shaped) spots or bars of pale 

 buffy brownish, buflFy, or whitish, these markings mostly concealed; 

 exterior scapulars with large spots of bufify or buffy white on both 

 webs, the spots largest, however, on outer webs; outermost middle 

 and greater wing-coverts with larger spots of white ; primary coverts 

 plain dark brown, darker terminally, their inner webs, however, 

 spotted with white ; remiges dusky grayish brown, their outer webs 

 with transverse spots or broad bars of paler grayish brown, these 

 becoming white or partly white on distal secondaries and distal portion 

 of longer primaries; tail dark to dusky grayish brown, crossed by 

 six or seven interrupted bars of white, these much broader on inner 

 webs, and on both webs falling far short of the shaft; "eyebrow" and 

 lores duU white, the latter with conspicuous black bristly shafts; chin 

 and malar region immaculate white ; a band of brown across throat, 

 this in middle portion lighter and more or less barred or flecked with 

 paler, darker and nearly (sometimes quite) immaculate laterally 

 (behind white subauricular area) ; foreneck and median line of breast 

 and abdomen immaculate white; sides of chest brown, more or less 

 tinged with tawny, transversely spotted with pale cinnamon-buff, the 

 sides more grayish, irregularly spotted with white; rest of under 

 parts white broadly streaked with dark brown, the streaks becoming 

 black or brownish black on flanks and next to the immaculate white 

 median area; under wing-coverts buffy white to very pale buff, with 

 a line of black streaks on outer side, parallel with edge of wing; under 

 primary .coverts pale buff or buffy white, broadly tipped with black; 

 under surface (inner webs) of remiges banded with pale buff or buffy 

 white and grayish brown, the pale bands narrower than the darker 

 ones on outer primaries, but much broader on secondaries ; legs soiled 

 duU white (becoming more brownish on thighs), more or less mot- 

 tled with grayish brown; bOl pale grayish yellow, darker basally (in 

 dried skins); iris lemon yellow; toes light yellowish brown (in dried 



skins). 



Rufeicent phase.o 



Adults (sexes alike). — Similar in pattern of coloration to the grayish 

 brown phase, but general color of upper parts much browner (bister 

 or deep snuff brown to verona brown) with the spotting (especially 



a This ruf escent phase seems to occur maifily if not exclusively in the extreme 

 southern and eastern parts of the range; at least the only examples I have seen are 

 those from Michoacan and one each from Galiado, Tamaulipas, and an unknown 

 locality in Nuevo Leon, there being also grayish brown specimens from the last two 

 but none from the first. The only specimen seen from the State of Morelos is in the 

 grayish brown plumage. 



