BIEDS OF NOBTH AND MIDDLE AMEEICA. 7 1 



clouded with blackish, rarely with these broad black streaks \'ery 

 heavy; abdomen and under tail-coverts white, the last with concealed 

 subbasal spots of dusky; maxilla black, mandible bluish gray with 

 blackish tip; legs and feet grayish dusky (bluish gray in life?); length 

 (skins), 137.2-152.4 (147.3); wing, 73.4-81 (77.5); tail, 57.9-65 (61.5); 

 exposed culmen 9.7-13 (11.4); depth of bill at base, 6.1-7.9 (6.9); 

 tarsus, 18.3-20.3 (19.8); middle toe, 13-16 (14.2).' 



Admit female^'- — Above plain, rather light, olive or olive-grayish, 

 the feathers of the pileum very indistinctly darker centrally; wings 

 and tail dusky, the greater wing-coverts and tertials broadly edged 

 with dull whitish or very pale olive, the secondaries more narrowly 

 edged with pale olive, the primaries with outer webs narrowly edged 

 with pale grayish or grayish white and abruptly white at base, forming 

 a more or less extensive spot or patch; rectrices edged (quite broadly 

 toward base) with light greenish olive; si"des of head like upper parts, 

 sometimes with an indistinct paler superciliary stripe, the auricular 

 region with narrow paler shaft-streaks; under parts very pale olive or 

 olive-grayish (sometimes faintly tinged with yellowish), the chin, malar 

 region, lower abdomen, anal region, and under tail-coverts whitish 

 (the last sometimes inclining to buffy) ; throat sometimes with a median 

 space of pale dull yellowish; maxilla blackish, mandible grayish with 

 dusky tips; legs and feet grayish dusky; length (skins), 129.6-149.9 

 (143.3); wing, 72.4-76.5 (74.2)"; tail, 53.8-60.7 (56.9); exposed culmen, 

 10.9-12.7 (11.7); depth of bill at base, 7.4-7.6 (7.4); tarsus, 17.8-20.3 

 (19.6); middle toe, 13-15 (13.5).' 



' Eighteen specimens. 



^The female of this species is very similar in coloration to that of S. pretrei, but is 

 decidedly grayer and has the bill much stouter. 

 ' Eight specimens. 

 Average measurements of specimens from different islands are as follows: 



I regret the necessity of reducing to a synonym of S. zena zena the S. z. st^negeri 

 of Cory, but can not avoid it. Among eight adult males from Eleuthera Island only 

 three show the characters of the supposed subspecies, even in part, while of seven 

 from New Providence three are nearly typical S. z. stejnegeri. 



