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Bulletin American Museum of Natural History. [Vol. XXXVI, 



stellatus our western Colombia examples may be properly referred to that 

 form ; if the Rio de Oro specimen is true stellatus then our western Colombia 

 specimens are intermediate between stellatus and ornatus. They agree with 

 stellatus in size and in the absence of a continuous white frontal band, but 

 in their olive-green breast and amount of rufous in the tail are like ornatus. 

 Choco (probably either Bagado or Andagueda), 1; Novita Trail (alt. 

 4000 ft.), 1; Gallera, 2; Cocal, 2; Buenavista, Narino, 6. 



(3031) Myiotriccus phoenicurus (Scl.). 



Tyrannulus phxnicura Sol., P. Z. S., 1854, p. 113, pi. 66, fig. 1 (Rio Napo, Ecua- 

 dor). 



A single specimen from the eastern slope of the Eastern Andes (alt. 

 2500 ft.), below Andalucia. 



(3044) Pyrocephalus pyrocephalus rubinus (Bodd.). 



Muscicapa rubinus Bodd., Tabl. PI. Enl., 1783, p. 42 (Brazil). 



In its heavily streaked white underparts, showing no trace of pink (the 

 crissum being yellow) ; a female from La Morelia agrees with this race. 

 La Morelia, 1. 



(3046) Pyrocephalus rubinus heterurus Berl. & Stolz. 



Pyrocephalus rvhineus heterurus Berl. & Stolz., P. Z. S., 1892, p. 381 (Lima). 

 Pyrocephalus rubineus Sol. & Salv., P. Z. S., 1879, p. 515 (Medellin); Stone, 

 Proc. Acad. N. S. Phila., 1899, p. 306 (Ambalema). 



Pyrocephalus rubinus Allen, Bull. A. M. N. H., XIII, 1900, p. 144 (Valencia). 



