BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA. 121 



KEY TO THE SPECIES AND SUBSPECIES OP ARA.° 



a. Under parts of body red, orange, or yellow. 

 6. Under parts of body orange-yellow or orange; pileum blue, sometimes passing 

 into yellowish, green on forehead. 

 c. Tail blue. 

 d. Under parts of body orange-yellow. 

 e. Forehead green; upper throat and lines of feathers on face dull black. 

 (Panama to Guianas, Amazon Valley, and Bolivia). .Ara ararauna (p. 122). 

 ee. Forehead blue; upper throat and lines of feathers on face green. Para- 

 guay) Ara caninde (extralimital).& 



dd. Under parts of body orange or orange-red. (Martinique; extinct.) 



Ara martinica (p. 125). 

 cc. Tail red. (Unknown island in the West Indies; extinct.) 



Ara erythrura (p. 125). 



bb. Under parts of body red; pileum red or yellow. 



c. Hindneck red; larger (wing more than 350 mm.). 



d. Greater wing-coverts blue; middle coverts green or green and blue; naked 



loral and suborbital regions crossed by lines of small red feathers; red of 



plumage darker. (Panama to the Guianas, Amazon Valley, and Bolivia.) 



Ara chloroptera (p. 125). 

 dd. Greater and middle wing-coverts yellow; naked loral and suborbital regions 

 without lines of small feathers; red of plumage lighter. 

 e. Three lateral rectrices, on each side, blue. (Southern Mexico to the 



Guianas, Amazon Valley, and Bolivia) -Ara macao (p. 128). 



ee. Whole of tail red. (Guadeloupe, Lesser Antilles; extinct.) 



Ara guadeloupensis (p. 131). 

 cc. Hindneck yellow; smaller (wing less than 300 mm.). 

 d. Forehead and crown orange-red; back dull red, the feathers margined with, 

 greenish yellow; tail brownish red and blue. (Cuba; extinct.) 



Ara tricolor (p. 136). 

 dd. Forehead and crown yellow; back scarlet; tail red and yellow. (Jamaica; 



extinct) Ara gossei (p. 137). 



aa. Under parts of body green. 

 6. Rump and upper tail-coverts light blue; under wing-coverts wholly green; 

 larger (wing more than 350 mm,), 

 c. Bill smaller (culmen 53-63); rump and tail-coverts turquoise blue; general 

 green color darker, less yellowish. (Ara militaris.) 



° Besides the six extinct West Indian species characterized in the "Key," another 

 species of Ara formerly existed on the island of Dominica. This has been named Ara 

 atwoodi by Mr. Austin H. Clark (Auk., xxv, July, 1908, 310, in text), but so little is 

 known of the bird that the characters mentioned are exceedingly vague, and I am 

 therefore unable to place it in the "Key." It is mentioned in "The History of the 

 Island of Dominica" (1791), by Thomas Atwood, after whom the species is named. 



& S[ittace] caninde Wagler, Mon. Psitt., 1832, 674 (ex Canindi Azara, Apunt. Parag., 

 i, 400). — Sittaee caninde Finsch, Die Papag., i, 1867, 413. — A[ra] caninde Gray, Gen. 

 Birds, ii, 1845, 412. — [Macrocercus] caninde Bonaparte, Rev. et Mag. de Zool., 1854, 149 

 (Consp. Psitt., p. 6). — Ara caninde Salvador!, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xx, 1891,153. — 

 Sittaee azarae Reichenow, Journ. fur Orn., 1881, 267 (new name for S. caninde Wagler, 

 on^rounds of purism); Consp. Psitt., 1882, 155; Vogelbild., 1883, Nachtr. 73. 



