CARDELLINA. 



263 



Setophaga laclirymosa. 



Basileuterus lac. Bon. Consp. 1850, 314 (from spec, in Berlin Mus.). — 

 Euthhjpis lac. Cab. Mus. Hein. 1850, 19 (Lagunas, Mex. ; same as 

 Bonaparte's spec.)— Sclatek, P. Z. S. 1856, 291 (Cordova) ; 1859, 

 363 (Jalapa).— Ib. Catal. 1861, 36, no. 219.— Sclateb & Salvin, 

 Ibis, 1860, 274 (Alotenango, Guat., Sept. 1859). 



Setophaga lachrymosa, Baibd. 



Hah. Eastern Mexico and Guatemala. 



Above, including top and sides of head, olivaceous-plumbeous ; wing and 

 tail feathers almost black, edged on outside with plumbeous. Beneath yel- 

 low, the breast, jugulum, and flanks waslied with ochry. Crissum dirty wliite ; 

 tibiae and inside of wings tinged with olive. Featliers along base of upper 

 mandible, witli loral region and two stripes on top of head, black, the latter 

 iBclosing a broader median one of yellow. A spot in front of eye, and eyelids 

 white. A white spot at end of all the tail feathers, principally on the inner 

 web, and decreasing in magnitude from outermost to middle. Bill black ; 

 legs pale. 



Length, 6.10 ; wing, 2.75 ; diflFerence between 1st and 4th quills, .25 ; tail, 

 2.90 ; graduation, .35 ; bill above, .60, from nostril, .36, from gape, .70 ; tarsus, 

 .90 ; middle toe and claw, .73 ; claw, .24; hind toe and claw, .50. 



Smith- Collec- 



sonian tor's 

 No. No. 



29,705 

 30,701 



Sex 

 and 

 Ag.-. 



Locality. 



Mexico [Guat. 

 Savana Grande, 



When 

 Collected. 



Received from 



A Sails. 

 0. Salvin. 



Collected by 



CARDELLINA, Dhbus. 



Cardellina, Dubus. (See page 236.) 



Cardellina, " Ddbus," Bojf. Consp. 1850, 312. (Type Cardellina amicta, 

 DDBns = Muscicapa rubrifrons, Girahd.) 



Bill Parine in appearance, much shorter than head, high at base, and the 

 culmen considerably decurved throughout ; the commissure curved and some- 

 what angulated in the middle. Eictal bristles stiff, but not very long, hardly 

 reaching half way from the nostrils to tip of hill, which exhibits scarcely any 

 trace of notch. Wings long and pointed ; the 2d, 3d, and 4th quills nearly 

 equal and longest ; the 1st a little longer than the 5th. The tail is shorter 

 than the wings, nearly even, a very little rounded. Feet small ; tarsi short, 

 the scutellar divisions indistinct externally ; the middle toe without claw 

 little more than half the tarsus. 



This form agrees very closely in the characters of wing and tail 

 with 3Iyiodioctes mitratus. The legs, however, are shorter, and the 

 bill very differently shaped, more like that of a Titmouse. 



