229 



*324a. Cerchneis isabellinus ochracea Cory, Field 

 Mus. Pub. Orn. Ser., i., p. 298 (1915). 

 [Colon, Tachira, W. Venez., type in Field 

 Mus.] 

 Venezuelan Kestrel. 



Wing S 178-184, tail 127 mm. ; ? wing 190- 

 196, tail 133 mm. ; ^ above darker rufous, 

 with only a few black spots and bars ; head 

 blackish slate with no rufous patch when 

 adult ; primaries barred right across inner 

 webs ; tail with broader black subterminal 

 band (25-30 mm.) ; below decided rufous 

 cinnamon, unspotted in ad. (less mature 

 with a few black spots on sides) ; $ and 

 juv. (J isabelline rufous below with dark 

 brown streaks and spots ; crown with 

 more or less rufous. 



Venezuela, 

 (Merida, Colon, 

 VaUe, Ohama, 

 Montana de la 

 Sierra, Cutata, 

 Margarita I.) ; 

 N.E. Colombia, 

 Andes region of 

 Colombia.^ 



324b. Cerchneis isabellinus brevipennis 

 J.f.O., 1892, p. 91. [Curacao.] 

 Curacao Kestrel. 



Berl. 



Wing shorter ; cj av. 165, ? 175 mm. ; 

 simifir to last form but with a greater 

 tendency to banding above and to heavy 

 black spotting below in less mature birds ; 

 ad. iS below isabelUne rufous unspotted ; 

 tail band av. 25 mm. [Barely separable 

 form.] 



Curacao, 

 Bonaire, 

 Aruba Is., 

 Venezuela. 



off 



i C. i. intermedia Cory (Field Mus. N. H. Orn., i., p. 325 (1915), seems to be 

 non-separable. The average wing of his examples is the same as the measurement 

 of his type of ochracea ; the narrower band on the tail seems scarcely a, reliable 

 distinction, while the white spotting on outer webs of primaries is a very variable 

 character. C i. margwritensis Cory (T. c, p. 297), I am also unable to distinguish, 

 as examples with the paler under parts occur in the Merida district along with the 

 darker birds. His C. i. perplexa (t. c, p. 327) I am unable to distinguish, dark and 

 pale -breasted birds occurring together as I have before pointed out ; while C. i. 

 distincta (t. c, p. 297) is most certainly typical isabellinus, the principal character, 

 the obsolete bars on inner webs of primaries, being present in Brit. Guiana examples. 



