B1ED8 OF NOKTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA. 



511 



Adult male.— Length (skin), 188-201 (195.6); wing, 80-89 (83.1); 

 tail, 81-92 (86.2); exposed culmen, 20-22.5 (21.4); tarsus, 25-28 (26.3); 

 middle toe, 17-19 (17.8).« 



J-C^mZ^ /emaZe.— Length (skins), 172-198 (188.1); wing, 75-86 (80.7); 

 tail, 79-86 (82.9); exposed culmen, 19.5-23 (20.7); tarsus, 25-26.5 

 (25.9); middle toe, 16-18 (17.1)." 



Southeastern Mexico, in States of Vera Cruz (Cordova; Mirador; 

 Jalapa; Motzorongo; Orizaba; Papantla; San Andres Tuxtla; Paso 

 Nuevo; Misantla), Puebla (Mazatiopam; Metlaltoyuca; Rinconada), 

 Oaxaca (Plaj'a Vicente), and Chiapas (San Cristobal; San Vicente), 

 and southward over parts of Guatemala (Duenas; Choctum; Alote- 

 peque; Volcan de Fuego; Tactic) to Honduras.* 



Picolaptes zonatus Lesson, Cent. Zool., Jan., 1831, 210, pi. 70 ("California"). — 

 Lafresnaye, Eev. Zool., 1846-, 94. 



C[ampylorhynchus\ zonatus Gray, Gen. Birds, i, 1847, 159. — Cabanis, Mus. Hein., 

 i, 1850, 80 (Jalapa, Vera Cruz). — Salvin and Godman, Ibis, 1889, 235, in 

 text (Misafitla, Vera Cruz). 



{Campylorhynchm} zonatus Bonaparte, Consp. Av., i, 1850, 223. — (Jray, Hand- 

 list, i, 1869, 192, no. 2636.— Sclater and Salvin, Nom. Av. Neotr., 1873, 5. 



Campylorhynchus zonatus Sclater, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., viii, 1856, 264 

 (Vera Cruz, Mexico); Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1856, 290 (Cordova, Vera 

 Cruz); 1859, 363 (Cordova); Cat. Am. Birds, 1862, 17 (Guatemala; Mexico).— 

 Salvin and Sclater, Ibis, 1860, 29 (Duenas, Guatemala; habits, descr. 

 nest). — Baird, Review Am. Birds, 1864, 104 (Mirador, Vera Cruz; Alotepeque 

 and Choctum, Guatemala). — Sumichrast, Mem. Boat. Soc. N. H., i, 1869, 

 545 (hot and temp, regions. Vera Cruz). — Boucard, Ois. Eec. Guat., 1878, 



"Ten specimens from States of Vera Cruz and Puebla. 



Although a fairly large series of specimens from Guatemala have been examined, 

 only one specimen in the lot has the sex determined; this, together with examples 

 from several other localities, compares in measurements with the series of twenty 

 specimens from Vera Cruz and Puebla (one male and two females only from the 

 latter State), as follows: 



Although the particular Guatemalan specimen measured is smaller even than 

 specimens from Costa Rica (it is probably a female and not a male), I am not able 

 to discover any differences of color between the rather large Guatemalan series and 

 the still larger one from Mexico. 



t> According to Count von Berlepsch, Auk, v, 1888, 449. 



