450 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



LEPTOTILA VERREAOXI RIOTTEI (Lawrence). 



RIOTTE'S DOVE. 



Similar to L. v. verreauxi but coloration much darker, the upper 

 parts much browner (olive-brown to bister), the foreneck and chest 

 cinnamon-drab to fawn color. 



Adult male.— Length (skin), 268; wing, 140; tail, 111; exposed cul- 

 men, 17; tarsus, 29.5; middle toe, 24.° 

 • Eastern Costa Kica (Navarro; Bellavista? b ). 



Leptoptila riottei Lawrence, Ann. Lye. Nat. Hist. N. Y., ix, 1868, 137 (Navarro, 

 e. Costa Rica; coll. U. S. Nat. Mus.).— Frantzius, Journ. fur Orn., 1869, 

 371 (Costa Rica). 



Leptoptila riotii Salvin, Ibis, 1874, 312 (crit.). 



Peristera riottei Giebel, Tb.es. Orn., iii, 1877, 67. 



Leptotila verreauxi riottei Thayer and Bangs, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., xlvl, 

 Sept., 1905, 148, in text, part. 



Leptoptila verreauxi (not of Bonaparte) S alvadori, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xxi, 1893, 

 548, part (in synonymy). — Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr.-Am., Aves, 

 iii, 1902, 260, part (Navarro, Costa Rica; Bellavista, Costa Rica?). 



LEPTOTILA VERREAUXI NUTTINGI Ridgway. 

 OMETEPE DOVE. 



Similar to L. v. verreauxi but with much less of vinaceous-russet 

 (or cacao brown) on inner webs of remiges, this color forming merely 

 a broad edging, at the widest part not more than one-fourth the width 

 of the web; upper parts browner (but much lighter brown than in 

 L. v. riottei). 



Adult male. — Length (skin), 260; wing, 141; tail, 107; exposed cul- 

 men, 15; tarsus, 30.5; middle toe, 24.5. c 



Adult female. — Length (skin), 260; wing, 147.5; tail, 104; exposed 

 culmen, 17.5; tarsus, 31; middle toe, 25. c 



In the coloration of the inner webs of the remiges this form is pre- 

 cisely intermediate between L. verreauxi and L. fulviventris; since, 

 however, specimens of the latter from northern Nicaragua have no 

 more of the cinnamomeous or vinaceous coloring on the inner webs 

 of the remiges than those from extreme northern localities, actual 

 intergradation, while not improbable, is by no means proven. In 



° One specimen (the type), from Navarro, on tbe Caribbean slope. Only one other 

 example seen by me; this being a specimen collected by Boucard, but without 

 locality and with sex undetermined. 



b According to Carriker, Bellavista is another name for Agua Calierte (sometimes 

 called Hervidero), "a small village, situated on a river of the same name [Agua Cali- 

 ente], about 4 miles south of Cartago, and at a considerably lower altitude (about 

 3,800 feet) . " I have not seen a specimen of this species from Agua Caliente, but think 

 that specimens from that altitude on the Caribbean slope probably represent this 

 form. Navarro, the type locality, is "on the Caribbean Blope," south of the Rio 

 Reventaz6n, "at an altitude of probably 2,500 to 3,000 feet." 



e One specimen. 



