MYIADESTES. 423 



" Bill blackish ; a white spot on the sides of the throat, and at its origin 

 (the ohiu) immediately below the lower mandible (the two coutiuuous) ; the 

 eye surrounded by the same color. Head, back, rump, two intermediate tail 

 feathers, and the breast of a grayish-slate, paler below. Wing- and tail-feathers 

 blackish, bordered externally by gray, the three lateral on each side of the 

 tail more or less white. Belly and hinder parts brownish-rufous ; a beautiful' 

 yellow in form of a bracelet on the feathers of lower part of leg ; feet brown. 

 Length, 6 inches 3 lines." Vieillot, Ois. Am. Sept. I, 69. 



" Young, before the first moult, grayish-ash above ; head brown with yel- 

 lowish spots ; feathers of throat and hinder parts blackish at their extremity, 

 and yellowish elsewhere." Vieillot, Encyclop. Meth. II, 824. 



According toTieillot this species is found ii} Martinique, wliere 

 it dwells in the elevated regions, and on account of its remarkable 

 note is known as the " Musicien^' or " Siffleur de la Montagne." 



The differences between Vieillot's description and the Jamaican 

 bird usually called armillatus, have already been referred to. Yieil- 

 lot's figure represents the tail as more rounded ; the legs longer and 

 distinctly scutellate, which, however, may be an error of the plate. 



Myiadestes geniliarMs. 



Myiadesies genibarbis, Sw. Jard. Nat. Libr. XIII. Flycatchers, 1838, 

 134, pi. xiii. 

 ITab. Some one of the Windward Islands of the Lesser Antilles ? 



General appearance that of M. solitarius, of Jamaica. Whole upper parts 

 lead blue ; wings and tail marked as in the other species of its section. The 

 throat and upper part of jugulum, the crissum, anal region, belly, and 

 flanks are brownish-red or rufous. The breast is plumbeous, paler than the 

 back. A narrow, dusky or blackish line from the lower edge of the mandible 

 borders the rufous of throat, and cuts off a mandibular stripe, which is reddish- 

 white as far as the eye, but then becomes mixed with blackish, and passes 

 again as far as the end of cheeks into rufous like the throat. The extreme 

 chin is also reddish-white, though somewhat separated from that of side of 

 lower jaw by the dusky line mentioned. The ear coverts are blackish, each 

 with a central streak of whitish, sometimes tinged with reddish. A whitish 

 patch on under eyelid. The axillars are pale rusty, the tibia plumbeous. 

 Legs yellow. Bill black. 



Total length, 7.00 ; wing, 3.40 ; tail, 3.70 ; exposed portion of 1st primary, 

 .81, of 2d, 2.12, of longest ('1th) (measured from exposed base of 1st primary), 

 2.60; length of bill from forehead, .55, from nostril, .25, along gape, .75; 

 tarsus, .86. 



This species, though in general, similar to M. soUtarius, is still 



very appreciably different. Its most striking peculiarity is in the 



dusky line each side the throat, cutting off above it a stripe, first 



reddish-white, then mi.xed with dusky, and then rufous like the 



' throat, this color reaching to posterior end of ear coverts. The ear 



