15 
Ornithology of Central America. 
thick bushy underwood. Its food consists principally of small 
fruits and berries. 
67. Buarremon brunneinuchus (Lafr.). 
Transmitted by Mr. Skinner. 
68. Buarremon chrysopogon, Bp., Sclater, P. Z. S. 1856, 
p. 86. 
Transmitted by Mr. Skinner, showing that the locality given 
in the Paris Museum (California) is wrong. 
69. Lanio aurantius, Lafr. Rev. Zool. 1846, p. 204. 
Procured in Honduras by Dyson. Mus. Brit. 
70. Phgenicothraupis rubicoides (Lafr.). 
Transmitted by Senor Constancia and by Mr. Skinner. 
71. Pyranga ^estiva (Gm.). (N.A.) 
This bird enjoys an almost universal range throughout the 
Republic of Guatemala. It occurs in December, at the mouth 
of the Rio Dulce, in the pine-ridges near Quirigua, and in fact 
along the whole road from the port of Izabal to the city of 
Guatemala, a distance of about 80 leagues. At Duenas P. 
cestiva is common, occurring during the winter months. 
72. Pyranga hepatica (Sw.); Sclater, P. Z. S. 1856, p. 24. 
Transmitted by Mr. Skinner. 
73. Pyranga ludoviciana (Wilson). (N.A.) 
P. ludoviciana occurs near the village of Alotenango, situated 
between the Volcanos of Agua and Puego, at an elevation of 
about 5000 feet, but is anything but a common species. Speci¬ 
mens also have been sent from the Vera Paz. 
74. Pyranga erythromel^na (Licht.). 
P. erythromelcena is common on the Pacific coast in the month 
of March, and occurs abundantly near Santa Lucia, a village 
distant about 12 leagues from Escuintla. It is also found in 
the Vera Paz. 
75. Pyranga roseogularis, Cabot, Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist, 
v. p. 416; Sclater, P. Z. S. 1857, p. 6. 
Discovered in Yucatan by Dr. Cabot. 
