BIRDS- 
5 — ICTER1DAE- — ] 
■ICTERUS MELANO C'EPH ALUS. 
543 
The bill of this species is shaped very much as in /. baltimore, a little more attenuated at the 
tip, but not more decurved. The tail is long and much graduated; the outer feather 1.10 of an 
inch shorter than the inner. 
In this species there is no yellow below the black of the feathers of the head, the basal portion 
being plumbeous. The outline of the black on the upper neck is at the same distance from the 
bill all round, except on the throat, where it extends three quarters of an inch further back as 
a semicircular patch on the upper part of the breast. There is a slight orange tinge on the 
breast ; the sides under the wings, and back, more greenish. The tail feathers are entirely 
black to their bases ; some of them tipped with whitish. Females and immature males have, 
sometimes, an elongated patch of dusky greenish yellow on the exterior of some of the tail 
feathers. The white outer edges of the wings are seen only on the terminal half of the prima- 
ries and secondaries ; the band across the wing is scarcely continued to its external edge. 
The third quill is longest ; the fourth and fifth, successively, a very little shorter than the 
second ; the first shorter than the seventh. 
From an examination of the description of Wagler it is, I think, clearly evident that he had 
in view the smaller species of the Black-headed Oriole. (See the next article.) The measure- 
ments are exactly the same, and the narrow grayish margins of the quills and the greenish 
edges of the tail feathers, are merely indicative of immaturity. No mention is made of the 
broad white or yellowish white borders of the coverts and quills. The dimensions given, 
(Length, 8 inches ; bill from forehead, .75 ; tail, 3.88 ; wings, 3.38 ; tarsi, 1.00,) allowing for 
the larger size of the German inch, will be almost exactly those of the smaller bird, and neces- 
sarily much inferior to that from the Rio Grande. 
As far as I can judge, the Icterus graduacauda of Lesson, (alls caudaque nigerrimis,) belongs 
to the smaller bird. The I", audubonii of Giraud, on the other hand, has the white edges 
of the wings and is large enough to belong to the more northern species, which, accordingly, 
should take its name. 
The Xantlwrnus melanocepJialus of Bonaparte probably refers to the northern bird, but the 
description of the young is probably that of true melanocepJialus. 
List of specimens. 
Catal. 
No. 
Sex. 
Locality. 
When col- 
lected. 
Whence ob- 
tained. 
Orig'l 
No. 
Collected 
by- 
Length. 
Stretch 
Wings 
Remarks. 
4063 
3 
Charco Escondido, Tamaul- 
Lt. Coucli 
64 
9.25 
12.25 
4.00 
Eyes dark brown ; bill dark slate. 
Eyes dark brown; bill black; 
lower mandible light blue, lead 
4062 
9 
ipas, Mex. 
63 
8.75 
11.50 
3.75 
4053 
Berlandier. 
6713 
Maj. Emory. . . . 
J. H. Clark 
9.37 
12.25 
4.00 
10202 
ICTERUS MEL ANOCEPH ALUS, Gray. 
Psarucolius nuiaiivcephulus, Wagler, lsis, 182!), 75G. 
Icterus melaiiocephulus, Gray, Genera. — Sclater, Pr. Zool. Soe. 1858, 97. 
Xantlwrnus me lanocephal us, Bon. Consp. 1850, 434. Description of young only. 
? Icterus graduacauda, Lesson, Rev. Zool. 1839, 105. 
Sp. Ch. — Similar to J. audubonii, but without any white whatever on the wing. Head and neck all round, wings, scapulars, 
and tail, uniform pure black. Rest of body, including beneath the wing and tibia and the lesser wing coverts, orange yellow ; 
