528 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



uniform color of throat; upper parts (except pileum, wings, and tail) 

 plain yellowish olive-green, slightly paler or more yellowish on lower 

 rump and upper tail-coverts; wings (except lesser coverts) dusky, the 

 middle coverts broadly tipped with yellow, the greater coverts and ter- 

 tials broadly edged with yellow, the secondaries and primaries more 

 narrowly edged with yellowish olive-green; rectrices dusky, edged 

 with yellowish olive-green, the inner webs of all except middle pair 

 mostly yellow; maxilla blackish, with paler tomia; mandible grayish 

 dusky (bluish gray in life?); legs and feet pale brownish (in dried 

 skins); length (skins), 112-120 (115.3); wing, 61-70 (66); tail, 47-52 

 (49.5); exposed culmen, 11; tarsus, 18-22 (20); middle toe, 12-14 (13).' 



Adult {?) female. — Above plain olive-green, duller anteriorly (espe-* 

 cially on pileum), brighter posteriorly (on rump and upper tail-coverts); 

 wings dusky, with light olive-greenish edgings, these inclining to pale 

 yellow on greater coverts and tertials; tail as in adult male, but with 

 much less yellow on inner webs of rectrices, even the outermost having 

 more dusky than yellow.on inner web; sides of head paler olive-greenish 

 than pileum, the eyelids pale yellowish; under parts dull lemon or 

 gamboge yellow, shaded laterally with pale olive-greenish; wing, 63; 

 tail, 47; exposed culmen, 11; tarsus, 21; middle toe, 13.* 



Ii)imature male. — Similar to the supposed adult female, but chest 

 and sides indistinctly streaked with pale rufous-chestnut, forehead and 

 crown tinged with the same, and the lores, chin, and throat dull orange- 

 yellow. 



Young {female?). — Above dull pale olive, or light brownish gray 

 tinged with olive-green; beneath pale dull butfy.' 



Cai-ibbean coast district of northern Colombia (Cartagena, etc.) and 

 Isthmus of Panama (Buenaventura; Panama City); San Miguel Island, 

 Bay of Panama; Veragua?* 



Sijlvia ruficapilla (not MotaciUa ruficapilla Gmelin) Vieillot, Nouv. Diet. d'Hist. 



Nat., xi, 1817, 228; Gal. Ois., i, 1834, pi. 164. 

 Dendroica erihtachorides (typographical error) Baikd, Kep. Pacific K. E. Surv. 



ix, 1858, 283, in text (South America;* ex Chloris erUhacliondes Feuillfe 



Journ. Observations Physiques, iii, 1725, 413). 

 Dendroica vieilloti Cassin, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., May, 1860, 192 (Cartagena, 



Colombia; coll. U. S. Nat. Mus.).— Baied, Review Am. Birds, 1865, 203, 



part ( Cartagena) . 



' Five specimens. 



'^ One specimen. 



^ From a very poor skin, not admitting of detailed description. 



* No specimens seen by me from Veragua. 



^Actually based on specimens (now in the U. S. National Museum collection) 

 from Cartagena, Colombia, collected by Dr. A. Schott, of Lieutenant Michler's expe- 

 dition, the very same specimens being the types of Dendroica vieillali Cassin, 

 described two years later. Feuill^e being a pre-Linnsean author, it matters not 

 whether his Sijlvia eriihachorides is the same bird as Baird's Dendroica erihtachoridei; 

 and the latter name being accompanied by a sufficiently good diagnosis of the form 

 must, on account of its priority, supersede the name Dendroica vieilloti Cassin. 



