BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA. 791 
slender, decurved, antrorse bristles; feathers of chin and malar apex 
antrorse, forming slender bristles, the former strongly recurved; 
auricular feathers with elongated filamentous tips, curved outward 
terminally; sixth primary longest, the seventh slightly shorter, the 
tenth (outermost) much less than half as long as eighth; tail much 
longer than wing, the middle rectrices truncate, the lateral ones sub- 
truncate at tip, the outermost pair strongly bowed basally. Tarsus 
about as long as longest anterior toe (without claw), the lower half 
naked; anterior toes united for basal phalanx only. 
Coloration.— Adult male with upper parts, including wing-coverts, 
metallic green, the middle rectrices, with outer web, metallic greenish 
blue, inner web grayish bronze, the throat, chest, and breast slate- 
gray, the abdomen and under tail-coverts red, the lateral rectrices 
broadly tipped with white; adult female similar, but wing-coverts and 
secondaries blackish, narrowly barred with white. 
Range.—Island of Haiti, Greater Antilles. (Monotypic.) 
TEMNOTROGON ROSEIGASTER (Vieillot). 
HAITIAN TROGON. 
Adult male—Pileum rather dull metallic bronze-green or greenish 
bronze; back, scapulars, anterior lesser wing-coverts, and upper 
rump brighter bronze-green, passing into pure metallic green or 
slightly bluish green on lower rump and upper tail-coverts; outer 
web of middle pair of rectrices dark metallic blue or greenish blue, 
except a small subterminal (usually triangular) area of grayish 
bronze or olive bronze, the inner web grayish bronze, bronze-gray, or 
bronzy olive, broadly tipped with dark metallic blue; next two pairs 
of rectrices wholly dark metallic blue or greenish blue, the three outer 
pairs similar but extensively white terminally, the white area occu- 
pying a much greater portion of outer web (most of outer web on 
outermost pair), which has a subterminal spot of dark metallic blue 
or blue-black; under surface of inner web of three lateral rectrices (on 
each side) with an area (more or less well defined) of metallic grayish 
between the basal dark metallic blue and a subterminal spot of dark 
metallic blue or blue-black; posterior lesser, middle, greater and pri- 
mary wing-coverts, alula, and secondaries blackish, more or less 
glossed with bronze-greenish (at least on coverts) and narrowly but 
very regularly barred with white; primaries black, their outer web 
marked with quadrate spots of white, except proximal portion of 
longer quills, which are more or less continuously white or edged with 
white; lores dusky, passing into slate color on orbital, auricular, and 
malar regions, chin, and upper throat, the lower throat and chest 
slate-gray, more or less strongly glossed (especially on chest) with 
bronze-green or greenish bronze: breast, upper abdomen, and ante- 
