562 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



comta (Cabanis and Heine) ; Sublegatus incaneicens from Minca 



(ex Salvin and Godman) with Phyllomyias griseiceps (Sclater and 



Salvin) ; and the range of Empidochanes fuscatus cabanisi is given 



as including Santa Marta. 

 1905. Hellmaye, Carl E. [On Four New Species of South American Birds.] 



— Bulletin British Ornithologists' Club, XV, March 24, 1905, 54-57. 

 Compares his new species of Automolus with A. rufipectus of the 



Santa Marta region (page 55). 

 1905. Stejne'ger, Leonhard. The Birds of the Genus Cinclus and their 



Geographical Distribution. — Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 



Quarterly Issue, XLVIII, April 5, 1905, 421-430. 



Lists C. rivularis Bangs among the South American species of the 



genus. 

 1903. Bangs, Outram. Descriptions of Seven New Subspecies of American 



Birds. — Proceedings Biological Society of Washington, XVIII, June 



9, 1905, 151-156- 



Describes Crypturus soui mustelinus, subsp. nov., from the Santa 



Marta region. 

 1905. Thayer, John E., and Bangs, Outram. The Mammals and Birds of 



the Pearl Islands, Bay of Panama. — Bulletin Museum of Comparct- 



tive Zoology, XLVI, September, 1905, 137-160. 



Contains a few' incidental references to Santa Marta birds. 



1905. Allen, Joel A. Supplementary Notes on Birds Collected in the Santa 



Marta District, Colombia, by Herbert H. Smith, with Descriptions 

 of Nests and Eggs. — Bulletin American Museum of Natural His- 

 tory, XXI, October 4, 1905, 275—295. Review, Ibis, 1906, 187—188. 



In this paper Dr. Allen undertakes to bring his former list (pub- 

 lished in 1900) up to date, first, by recording a number of addi- 

 tional species (seven) and specimens received from Mr. Smith, and 

 secondly, by correcting certain of his earlier identifications. He 

 follows with a list of seventeen new forms which had in the mean- 

 time been described from this region (mainly by Mr. Bangs), giv- 

 ing their collation with the . names he had originally used. The 

 bulk of the paper consists of very full and accurate descriptions of 

 the nests and eggs of forty-two species of the birds of this region, 

 based on material forwarded by Mr. Smith. (These descriptions 

 have been quoted, more or less fully, in the present paper.) The 

 description of the nest and eggs of " Megarhynchus pitangus " on 

 page 283, however, almost certainly applies instead to those of 

 Pitangus sulphuratus rufipennis. 



1906. Thayer, John E., and Bangs, Outram. Vertebrates from the Savanna 



of Panama. III. Aves. — Bulletin Museum of Comparative Zoology, 

 XLVI, January, 1906, 213-224. 



Contains a few incidental references to Santa Marta species. 



