BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA. 537 



Phopipara canora Sclatee, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1855, 159, in text. — Shakpe, 



Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xii, 1888, 144. 

 P-lltonipani] canora Baied, BREWBEj.and Ridgway, Hist. N. Am. Birds, ii, 



1874, 93. 

 Euethia canora Cabanis, Journ. fiir Oni., iv, Jan., 1856, 7 (descr. eggs). — Thiene- 



MAN, Journ. fiir Orn., v, 1857, 150 (descr. eggs). — Brewer, Proo. Bost. Soc. 



X. H., vii, 1860, 307.— Gijxdlach, Repert. Fisico-Nat. Cuba, i, 1866, 284; 



Journ. fiir Orn., xxii, 1874, 123; Orn. Cuba, 1878, 92,— Chapmax, Bull. Am. 



Mus. N. H., iv, 1892, 308 (near Trinidad, Cuba). 

 Euetheia canora Coey, Auk, iii, 1886, 209; Birds W. I., 1889, 96; Cat. W, I. Birds, 



1892, 16, 113, 129 (Cuba; Isle of Pines).— Merriam, Auk, y, 1888, 322 (Som- 

 brero Key, Florida, 1 spec). — American Ornithologists' Union, Check 



List, abridged ed., 1889, no. 603.1. 

 [^Euetheial canm-a Coey, List Birds W. I., 1885, 12. 

 E. {tietheki} canora Ridgway, Man. N. Am. Birds, 1887, 451. 

 [Prtsserraa] canora Gray-, Hand-list Birds, ii, 1870, 98, no. 7453. 

 Pyrrhula collaris Vigors, Zool. Journ., iii, no.' xi, Dec, 1827, 440 (near Habana, 



Cuba). 

 Passerina collaris Gundlach, Journ. fiir Orn., vi, 1858, 317. 



EUETHEIA BICOLOR BICOLOR (Linnaeus). 

 BAHAKA eRASSaUIT. 



Advlt male. — Above plain dull olive-green, becoming darker and 

 duller oh pileum, where sometimes quite dusky anteriorly; rest of 

 head and under parts as far backward as, and sometimes including, 

 abdomen, plain black; sides and flanks dull olive or olive-grayish; 

 abdomen usually blackish, with or without dull whitish or pale graj'ish 

 margins to the feathers; under tail-coverts dusky, broadlj^ margined 

 with white; bill black; tarsi Vjrownish, toes darker; length (skins), 

 103.63-118.11 (109.22); wing, 50.80-55.88 (53.85); tail, 38.61-43.69 

 (41.91); exposed culmen, 8.89-10.16 (9.40); depth of biU at base, 7.37- 

 7.87 (7.62); tarsus, 15.75-18.54 (17.02); middle toe, 11.43-13.21 (11.94).^ 



Adult female. — Above similar to adult male, but pileum concolor 

 with back or more grayish (rarely more dusky); under parts olive- 

 grayish, sometimes slightly clouded with dusky on chest or throat, the 

 abdomen nearly white, and flanks tinged, more or less, with olive- 

 yellowish or buffy; mandible paler than maxilla; length (skins), 98.04- 

 109.73 (107.44); wing, 50.0^54.86 (62.32); tail, 38.10-41.40 (39.88); 

 exposed culmen, 9.14-10.16 (9.65); depth of bill at base, 7.11-7.62 

 (7.37); tarsus, 16.26-17.78 (17.02); middle toe, 11.18-12.45 (11.68).' 



Young. — Similar to adult female but rather paler. (Immature 

 males are variously intermediate in plumage between adult males and 

 females.) 



' Twenty-four ,,specimens. ^ Eleven specimens. 



