470 



Bulletin American Museum of Natural History. [Vol. XXXVI, 



stellatus our western Colombia examples may be properly referred to that 

 form; if the Rio de Oro specimen is true stellattis then our western Colombia 

 specimens are intermediate between stellatus and ornatus. They agree with 

 stellatus in size and in the absence of a continuous white frontal band, but 

 in their olive-green breast and amount of rufous in the tail are like ornatus. 

 Choco (probably either Bagado or Andagueda), 1; Novita Trail (alt. 

 4000 ft.), 1; Gallera, 2; Cocal, 2; Buenavista, Narino, 6. 



(3031) Myiotriccus phoenicurus (Scl.). 



Tyrannulus ■phmnicura Scl., P. Z. S., 1854, p. 113, pi. 66, fig. 1 (Rio Napo, Ecua- 

 dor). 



A single specimen from the eastern slope of the Eastern Andes (alt. 

 2500 ft.), below Andalucia. 



(3044) Pyrocephalus pyrocephalus rubinus (Bodd.). 



Mv^cicapa rubinus Bodd., Tabl. PI. Enl., 1783, p. 42 (Brazil). 



In its heavily streaked white underparts, showing no trace of pink (the 

 crissum being yellow) ; a female from La Morelia agrees with this race. 

 La Morelia, L 



(3046) Pyrocephalus rubinus heterurus Berl. & Stoh. 



Pyrocephalus rubineus heterurus Bekl. & Stolz., P. Z. S., 1892, p. 381 (Lima). 

 Pyrocephalus rvMneus Scl. & Salv., P. Z. S., 1879, p. 515 (MedeUin); Stone, 

 Proc. Acad. N. S. Phila., 1899, p. 306 (Ambalema). 



Pyrocephalus riiMnus Allen, Bull. A. M. N. H., XIII, 1900, p. 144 (Valencia). 



