1917.] Chapman, Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia. 189 



Char. — Crown wholly or largely sooty black; occipital crest well-developed. 



Specimens examined. — Barbacoas, 2. 



5. Tinamus major fuscipennis Salvad. Type-locality, Escondido River, Nica- 

 ragua. 



Char. — Crown largely or wholly sooty black; no occipital crest. 



Specimens examined. — Nicaragua: Pena Blanca, 1; Rio Grande, 2; Chontales, 

 2; Matagalpa, 1; San Rafael del Norte, 2; Rio Tuma, 4. 



In default of specimens of rohusius I am unable to determine whether 

 fuscipennis is separable from that form. The close relation between 

 fuscipennis and castaneiceps is shown by the occurrence of a virtually 

 typical specimen of the former in the Canal Zone and by Salvadori's refer- 

 ence of a specimen from Veragua, the type region of castaneiceps, to fusci- 

 pennis! 



Of ' Tinamus serratus' (Spix) I have seen no specimen. 



' Tinamus solitarius' (Vieill.) is obviously only a large race of T. major. 

 I have, however, but one specimen. 



(8) Tinamus major castaneiceps Salvad. 



Tinamus castaneiceps Salvad., Cat. Bds. B. M., XXVII, 1895, p. 507, pi. vi 

 (Chiriqui). 



Tinamus major Cass., Proc. Acad. 1^. S. Phila., 1860, p. 195 (R. Truando). 



Inhabits the Tropical Zone of the Pacific Coast, evidently intergrading 

 at the south with T. m. latifrons and at the north with T. m. fuscipennis. 

 Colombian specimens have the feathers of the occiput decidedly longer than 

 those from the Panama Canal Zone and thus approach latifrons in this 

 respect. This character first appears in specimens from Tacarcuna in 

 eastern Panama, but is more pronounced in those from the Atrato. 



A specimen collected by the Shiras Expedition, near Gatun, in the Canal 

 Zone, has the crown sooty black with only a trace of ochraceous. It can 

 be exactly matched by specimens of T. m. fuscipennis from Nicaragua (if 

 that race be valid), which has the crown apparently always sooty, with 

 sometimes traces of ochraceous. 



; R. Salaqui, 1; R. Atrato, 1; Andagueda, 1; Baudo, 1. 



(9) Tinamus majorjatifrons Salvad. 



Tinamus latifrons Salvad., Cat. Bds. B. M., XXVII, 1895, p. 506 (Balzar Mts., 

 Ecuador). 



I refer to this species, of which I have seen no authentic specimens, two 



