162 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



in an open pasture near Mamatoco, May 23, 1913. These were the 

 only ones ever noted in this region. 



59. Falco sparverius isabellinus Swainson. 



Tinnunculus sparverius (not Falco sparverius Linnaeus) Salvin and Godman, 

 Ibis, 1879, 206 (Manaure; plum.); 1880,1177 (Vatencia). — Gurney, Ibis, 

 1881, 548, in text, 549, 553 (Manaure; meas. ; crit.). — Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. 

 Nat. Hist., XIII, 1900, 13,1 (Salvin and Godman's and Bangs' references). — 

 ApOLiNAE Maria, Bol. Soc. Cien. Nat. Inst. La Salle, II, 1914, 105 (Santa 

 Marta localities). 



Falco sparverius Bangs, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, XII, 1898, 172 (Palo- 

 mina and San Miguel). 



Additional records: Macotama, La Concepcion (Brpwn) ; Taquina 

 (Carriker). 



Fifteen specimensi: Mamatoco, San ' Miguel, Fundacion, Pueblo, 

 Viejo, and Maco'tama. 



Although both Mr. Cory (Field Museum Ornithological Series, I, 

 1915, 311-335) and Dr. Chapman (Bulletin American Museum of 

 Natural History, XXXIV, 1915, 372-382) have recently reviewed the 

 races of the Sparrow Hawk found in northern South America, neither 

 had access to any specimens from the Santa Marta region of Colombia. 

 Dr. Chapman, however, had before him a pair of birds from Turbaco 

 (near Cartagena), Colombia, which he was unable to place satisfac- 

 torily. We have one adult male from Cartagena; it agrees absolutely 

 (save for a rufous crown-spot) with a specimen from Maripa, Rio 

 Caura, Venezuela, identified (we think rightly) by Dr. Chapman as 

 isabellinus. The series from the Santa Marta region certainly be- 

 longs to the same pale form, the range of which is thus shown to ex- 

 tend westward along the coast from eastern Venezuela. The males 

 show all the variations in the marking of the outer rectrices to which 

 these authors have called attention; the under surface, too, is paler in 

 some individuals, more rufescent in others, showing an approach to 

 F. s. ochraceus, the range and status of which will be discussed in an- 

 other connection.. 



This is not a common bird in the immediate vicinity of Santa Marta, 

 and, indeed, was not taken at all by Mr. Smith's collectors. Tt ranges 

 over the whole region from sea-level up to 8,000 feet, but is more 

 common in the parts where open grass-land's or pastures prevail. It 

 was very common from San Miguel up to Macotama in the valley and 



