set att peeoeisies! $3 Sectecttatate a agers is Sisbebrts i ry Seatac opt on DN st ak . oan ’ ‘ton y tet, : - ’ & { et t} hel f ev = i { oe 4 j i y - H \ e 7 ba ’ id i . aan ee FRONTISPIECE.—Viridian Dacnis, Mielero Esmeraldino, Dacnis viguieri. Qk Cd| WS4t D-+t4 Pee DS «2 Seyi THM SoONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOLUME 150, Part 4 THE BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC i OF PANAMA vA Part 4.—Passeriformes: Hirundinidae (Swallows) to Fringillidae (Finches) By ALEXANDER WETMORE Research Associate (Deceased) Smithsonian Institution ROGER F. PASQUIER International Council for Bird Preservation Smithsonian Institution AND SLORKS E) OLSON Curator, Division of Birds Smithsonian Institution SAATHSON/Apy FEB 26 1985 LIBRARIES SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS City of Washington 1984 Copyright © 1984 by the Smithsonian Institution. All rights reserved. Published in the United States by the Smithsonian Institution Press. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data (Revised for volume 4) Wetmore, Alexander, 1886— The birds of the Republic of Panama. (Smithsonian miscellaneous collections ; v. 150) Pt. 4 by Alexander Wetmore, Roger F. Pasquier, and Storrs L. Olson. Vols. 1-2: Publication 4617, 4732. Includes bibliographical references. Supt of Docs; no.: Sl 12=B53/27/pr4 CONTENTS: 1. Tinamidae (tinamous) to Rynchopidae (skimmers).—pt. 2. Columbidae (pigeons) to Picidae (woodpeckers) .—[ etc. |—pt. 4. Order Passeriformes, suborder Passeres, Hirundinidae (swallows) to Fringillidae (finches). 1. Birds—Panama—Collected works. I. Pasquier, Roger Fil) (Olsony Storrs ie i iitles Vee Senitess OlMS7 Vvolals0eete: 598.297287 66-61061 ISBN 0-87474-122-X (v. 3) Part 1 of The Birds of the Republic of Panama by Dr. Alexander Wetmore was published by the Smithsonian Institution in 1965 as volume 150 of its Miscellaneous Collection series. It covers in systematic sequence the Tinamidae (Tinamous) through the Rynchopidae (Skimmers). Part 2 of The Birds of the Republic of Panama by Dr. Alexander Wetmore was published by the Smithsonian Institution in 1968 as volume 150, Part 2, of its Miscel- laneous Collections series. It covers in systematic sequence the Columbidae (Pigeons) through Picidae (Wood- peckers). Part 3 of The Birds of the Republic of Panama by Dr. Alexander Wetmore was published by the Smithsonian Institution in 1972 as volume 150, Part 3, of its Miscel- laneous Collections series. It covers in systematic sequence the Dendrocolaptidae (Woodcreepers) to Oxyruncidae (Sharpbills). Introduction CONTENTS aéu'aiie, (eke) e)ie 70) (eo) sal elie Lela), e@ .@) 610) oe: 76) (8) 88) (6/18). 6) \8 (0) 8) 18) ev ole! (8) 66 (a (0) 8)) ofa) e016) 16 Ke MMT Gl TTT E TIE Seep heer e ere rents Aes Sache ant ai ala iat Be hy wn) 5S Ugh og Sal EEPROM OR MeBSI a! phan c eo Sie asen tase oh ahem ay sabentelishae, Oe eae decane ae Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Family Liiruneimidae: swallows. Golondrinas 2257 Ge. <2. 4-6 Corvidae: Crows and Jays, Cuervos y Urracas ....... Cmchdac- Wippers, Minlos, AcHaticos.)) 52260 a iieten ns ee iicoclodytidac-)VWinens, Cucarachetos, 2.7)... usc Mimniddes Mhrashers, Mockingbinds 22i2-224s24 205... sninaidae seb mnushes; Zorzahes ibiniice. SA ase seers wir Ptilogonatidae: Solitaires and Silky-flycatchers, Solitamosys Wordles “Sedososm-ics «sons wie eater neo ays Sylviidae: Gnatwrens and Gnatcatchers, Cazajejenes .. Motacillidae: Pipits and Wagtails, Bismitasmy mMbavandenrdSt ens isl. scr. Gale = lee eee sere de Bombyellidae: Waxwines, Chinitos .2-..2:2.--.-..- Mioceidde- \Veaver inches, minzones Mejedores...4-. - Strnidae: Stamines. Wi stominos: 2). 22 sees cineca d Vireonidae: Vireos, Peppershrikes and Shrike-Vireos, NWAthe@ Seavae uOll cle hOStus tenance hie een ony ee. 8 Barulidaec Wood: Warblers, Remitas, .25. 002... 5... - Icteridae: Blackbirds and Orioles, dhinpialesmy ACUACATCLOSe 6 58 SCN eka se hearse Thraupidae: Tanagers, Tangaros, MD AMASEASH Y MEMMUITCHOS eveio tara k ales ctaheyers sie cua ds Coerebidae: Honeycreepers, Mieleros ............... Fringillidae: Finches, Gorriones y Pinzones ......... RenpeMGina.) Nddenda ito (Volumes 13, a0. sea oe cs sks vale wis e's 639 Mist (Or TMicw St RA Tons FRONTISPIECE— Viridian Dacnis, Mielero Esmeraldino, Dacnis vigumert. FIGURE 1 z: oe Mangrove Swallow, Golondrina Manglera, Tachycineta albilinea White-thighed Swallow, Golondrina Muslos Blancos, Neochelidon NO BNES. CONTEC NE TATE Se SRS DE UMMA EAN GEV OTe en Le Portion of outer primary feather of the Rough-winged Swallow, Golondrina Ala de Sierra, Stelgidopteryx ruficollis, showing lrora anime ahi) arb Shays Mies bn SoNM RLM asa cae su. 4 . Black-chested Jay, Chocho, Cyanocorax affims geledom ........ . Silvery-throated Jay, Urraca Garganta de Plata, Cyanolyca ar- IG NU ARGC TULUG ULC Ny ey EVN SAIN Ae gia tale Ma iy SMa au 8 oaliauee . American Dipper, Mirlo Acuatico Americano, Cinclus mexicanus LE GHLGIES ENC MUM On LNAI ODB A MTLE TV aGU i ay AG SMI SU ect . Black-capped Donacobius, Paralauta de Agua, Donacobius atri- COPS: HOCH DEE ISN ER USA Cann eae) EA ARR Monie nia Ry tren re . White-headed Wren, Cucarachero Cabeciblanco, Campylorhyn- CPS: HOD TLE ISS MALATESTA DU COMO Ue Se NUE TAL RG aa NG aa . Band-backed Wren, Cucarachero Listado, Campylorhynchus MO AUGACOSEOMUGEIESTS Mi un NN Te oe LU RIC NY AAACN NEE ash tele . Bay Wren, Cucarachero Cabecinegro, Thryothorus nigricapillus . White-breasted Wood-wren, Cucarachero Pechiblanco, Hent- BOM CLUGO SEDC LEW nied Ss ick ese n egy Us bey hacia sie nen ape ean ne INI 8 | . Slaty-backed Nightingale-thrush, Zorzal Pizarrefio, Catharus [PUSCORCE® SINAN UE ECG ISIS AIR OIE SE HARA SDN OUR ONAN . Black-faced Solitaire, Solitario Carinegro, Myadestes melanops . Long-tailed Silky-flycatcher, Capulinero Colilargo, Ptilogonys COMME SS AMAIA NIN CONES AVN VAIS EE cE cu TAO AUT aN Rats . Tropical Gnatcatcher, Cazajején Tropical, Polioptila plumbea, eR ADElOW) r teltaley CADOVE)) seis core ec len nie ave a Ura L. . Yellowish Pipit, Bisbita Amarillenta, Anthus lutescens parvus. . Cedar Waxwing, Chinito Cedroso, Bombycilla cedrorum ....... . Rufous-browed Peppershrike, Pajaro Perico, Cyclarhis gu- A DIEOLA STS! BN SUITS SERIE AIG SO EO DS Mn PNR IN gS i AA OR . Green Shrike-Vireo, Follajero Verde, Smaragdolanius pulchellus. . Yellow-winged Vireo, Vireo Aliamarillo, Vireo carmioli ....... . Scrub Greenlet, Verdecillo Rastrojero, Hylophilus flavipes. .... . Black-and-white Warbler, Reinita Trepedora, Mniotilta varia, IAMS ee Ae SMa UR SR UNCC nO GUN Yt Mg A SEO CUTE MRM RR 110 154 168 a7 179 191 195 199 205 ZN2 238 V1 Zoe BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Yellow Warbler, Reinita Mangletera, Dendroica petechia, a male of the erithachorides (Mangrove Warbler) group. -..-.2.22. . Collared Redstart, Candelita Collareja, Myioborus torquatus ... . Buff-rumped Warbler, Reinita de Rabadilla Anteada, Basileuterus fulviCaUda. oe. eh RR a ee ee . Zeledonia, Zeledonia, Zeledonia coronata ......... 25. . Montezuma Oropendola, Chacarero de Montezuma, Psarocolius WMONTECZUING oa es hacen Bin 8 ORR 5 eas ake en See . Chestnut-headed Oropendola, Chacarero Comtun, Psarocolius waglert; male 6.0.6.2. he AE, See . Giant Cowbird, Vaquero Gigante, Scaphidura oryzivora, male .. . Bronzed Cowbird, Vaquero Bronceado, Molothrus aeneus aeneus, female Ceft),’male (right)! 2s.) ae oe . Yellow-tailed Oriole, Parao Coliamarillo, Icterus mesomelas ... . Swallow-Tanager, Azulejo Golondrina, Tersina viridis occiden-— tals, male te ao ee. oe ne . Spot-crowned Euphonia, Tanagra Coronimanchada, Euphonia imioans, male (above), temale (below) 2)... 47 eee . Spangle-cheeked Tanager, Tangaro Carirrayado, Tangara dow . Crimson-backed Tanager, Sangretoro Comtn, Ramphocelus dimidiaius, male (above); female (below) ©. =.. 2.5 .cmeee . Rosy Thrush-Tanager, Frutero Rosaceo, Rhodinocichla rosea exi- MAD eS ORE ETE UES 7 . Black-and-yellow Tanager, Frutero Orinegro, Chrysothlypis chry- somelas, male” (below), female (above)... 2... 75s eeeeee ; Bananaquit, Mielero Platanero, Coereba jlavcola. . 7. ae . Slaty Flower-piercer, Mielero Picaflor, Diglossa baritula plumbea, male. ee oO EE 2G AE . Scarlet-thighed Dacnis, Mielero Patirrojo, Dacnis venusta, male . Black-headed Saltator, Saltator Cabecinegro, Saltator atriceps lacertosus oo. oe ee ee ee eee . Buff-throated Saltator, Saltador Gargantianteado, Saltator ma-i- Mus © 0 © © © e@ 0 8 © « ¢ © 6 (0 0 «© ©. (6 © 6 0 0 © © © « 0 0 © 0 « «, © ©) 6 © 6 © ‘e je fe 6) (s) (6) [s) eee) salle . Streaked Saltator, Saltador Pechirayado, Saltator albicollis .... . Slate-colored Grosbeak, Piquigrueso Apizarrado, Pitylus grossus Saturatus, Male oo) oss onde wl ees ee eee . Blue-black Grassquit, Arrocero Piquiagudo, Geospiza jacarina splendens, temale (lett); males (cight). 20/2 22) . Distribution of the races of Sporophila americana in Panama (from Olson, 1981)" 27) Ss, oS ee . Volcano Junco, Junco del Volcan, Junco vulcamt ............-. . Rufous-collared Sparrow, Gorrién de Collar Rojizo, Zonotrichia capensis’ Costaricensis oo POR ee eee . Wedge-tailed Grass-finch, Pinzén Yerberero Coliacufiado, Em- berizoides herbicola hypochondriacus .....2.00n00+00++08008 260 312 326 Sl 337 342 356 399 370 389 406 432 441 484 488 501 506 a3 ao i 533 536 545 558 567 610 612 THE BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA PART 4: ORDER PASSERIFORMES, SUBORDER PASSERES, HIRUNDINIDAE (SWALLOWS) TO FRINGILLIDAE (FINCHES) By ALEXANDER WETMORE Research Associate, Smithsonian Institution (Deceased) Rocer F. PASQUIER International Council for Bird Preservation, Smithsonian Institution and Storrs L. OLson Curator, Division of Birds, Smithsonian Institution INTRODUCTION As with so many ambitious works in ornithology, Alexander Wet- more’s Birds of the Republic of Panama unfortunately required more than a lifetime to complete. Those of us around the Division of Birds who were privileged to work with Dr. Wetmore could only hope that he would live to see his magnum opus finished, but even his indefatigable constitution inevitably gave way to the attrition of time. He was 86 years old in 1972, when Part 3 appeared, and it is a tribute to his en- durance that he proceeded as far with the manuscript for Part 4 as he did. When his health failed, he had prepared accounts for almost all of the “ten-primaried oscines.” Alexander Wetmore died at his home on December 7, 1978, at the age of 92 after a long illness. Dr. Wetmore’s colleague and friend of long standing, S. Dillon Rip- ley, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, approached me, when it became certain that Dr. Wetmore would be unable to continue his studies, to inquire into the feasibility of completing Part 4 of Birds of the Republic of Panama. I agreed to be responsible for the identifica- tion of specimens and for systematic decisions, provided someone else could be found to compile the species accounts and descriptions that remained to be done. Happily for all concerned, we were able to enlist the services of Mr. Roger F. Pasquier, who has attended this task with determination and assiduity. In addition to the large collections that Dr. Wetmore himself had made in Panama, he worked simultaneously upon extensive collections I 2 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 from Colombia obtained by M. A. Carriker. When I began work on the project, there still remained thousands of specimens of nine- primaried oscines and a few other families from Panama and Colom- bia that had not been identified or incorporated in the main collections. I have evaluated the geographic variation in each of these remaining species and have made all of the decisions about subspecific limits. In some instances I was not able to recognize taxa that are currently held to be valid, whereas in others I was able to discern undescribed sub- species. Most major innovations I have proposed elsewhere in technical journals. I have made no attempt to try to guess how Dr. Wetmore might have interpreted each species; therefore, the systematics used in the section from the Ptilogonatidae onward is mine alone. An ex- ception is made for the subspecies of North American migrants, where I have deferred to the judgment of my colleagues John W. Aldrich, M. Ralph Browning, and Allan R. Phillips, each of whom has been consulted regarding particular taxa. Any sequence of species is bound to be to some extent arbitrary. Because Ridgely (1976) followed the sequence that Dr. Wetmore had used in the first three volumes of this series, we have simply adopted the sequence of species in Ridgely for the present volume, in order to make the two works compatible. Exceptions are Donacobius, now placed at the beginning of the Troglodytidae, Myadestes, which ap- pears in the Ptilogonatidae, and Spiza, which now leads off the Icter- idae. The artificial family ‘“Coerebidae”’ we have placed after the Thraupidae, in which family most of the coerebid genera properly be- long. Although we have included the Cyclarhidae and Vireolaniidae in the Vireonidae, and the Zeledoniidae in the Parulidae, this has not af- fected the sequence of species. As mentioned, Dr. Wetmore had completed his studies on the taxa up to the Ptilogonatidae, and this portion of the text we have attempted to leave as intact as possible, although the effort has been made to in- clude information published since the manuscript was originally com- pleted. Mr. Pasquier has assembled the species accounts from the field notes and bibliographic index left by Dr. Wetmore and from the sub- sequent literature. Because so much of the information comes directly from Dr. Wetmore’s field notes, the first person singular has been re- tained throughout, which also conforms with the first part of the vol- ume, written by Dr. Wetmore alone. In places I have interjected my own comments, these being initialled and set off in brackets. Citations of “in ltt.” refer to correspondence received by either Pasquier or Ol- son, unless indicated otherwise. From the Ptilogonatidae onward, all INTRODUCTION 3 descriptions and measurements were made by Mr. Pasquier. Spanish names through the Ptilogonatidae are from Dr. Wetmore’s manuscript, with occasional modification by Eugene Eisenmann; the remaining Spanish names were kindly provided by Drs. Pedro Galindo and Eu- storgio Mendez of the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory in Panama. A\I- though the Canal Zone no longer exists as a political entity, we have continued to use this designation to reflect the localities that appear on specimen labels and to be consistent with the remainder of this series. Several species belonging to families treated in the first three vol- umes have subsequently been found in Panama for the first time. Ac- counts of these species appear in an appendix. As in the earlier volumes, accounts of species whose presence in Panama has not been supported by specimens are bracketed, and literature citations appear within the text. We have resorted so frequently to Ridgely’s indispensible Guide to the Birds of Panama (Princeton University Press, Princeton, N. J., 1976), that this reference is cited simply as “Ridgely, 1976,” with the appropriate page number. Dr. Wetmore originally intended to include a complete bibliography as well as an account of the history of ornithology in Panama, but we have not attempted to provide either and have settled simply for finish- ing the species accounts. A gazetteer is in preparation to be published separately. As we could not hope to emulate the devotion that Dr. Wet- more invested in the production of the first three volumes in this series, we can only trust that the ultimate result will be judged better than nothing at all. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We are especially indebted to the late Eugene Eisenmann and to Robert S. Ridgely, who read over drafts of the manuscript and used their special knowledge of Panamanian birds to suggest many valuable alterations and additions. We have also had the pleasure of consulting frequently with Mrs. Alexander Wetmore concerning various aspects of the production of this volume. Further information and specimens that were of use in the preparation of this volume were provided by John Farrand, Jr., John W. Fitzpatrick, Pedro Galindo, Frank B. Gill, John W. Hardy, C. Lynn Hayward, Ned K. Johnson, Lloyd F. Kiff, Wesley I. Lanyon, Marcy Lawton, Eustorgio Mendez, John P. O’Neill, Ken- meth) ©: Parkes, Allan 'R.) Phillips, Ralph W. Schreiber, Robert W. Storer, and Melvin A. Traylor, to all of whom we remain indebted. Although many of the text drawings for this volume had already 4 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 been executed by the late Walter Weber, certain prominent taxa were lacking. We were fortunate to have Guy Tudor to remedy the defi- ciencies and also to render the color frontispiece. Finally, it should be recognized that were it not for the vigorous support and warm en- couragement of S. Dillon Ripley, this volume would never have been completed. SToRRS L. OLSon Smithsonian Institution Washington, D.C. April 1982 Order PASSERIFORMES Family HIRUNDINIDAE: Swallows, Golondrinas The swallow family, almost worldwide in its distribution, has 11 species found regularly in Panama. All are birds of active flight that feed on insects captured mainly on the wing. Winter migrants from the north include 6 kinds, one of them, the Rough-winged Swallow, also represented by a local race that nests widely through the Isthmus. Two others, less numerous, are recorded as visitors from South America during the months of southern winter, one of them—the Blue-and- white Swallow—also with a resident subspecies in the western high- lands. The Southern Martin of southern South America is definitely known from a single specimen record in eastern San Blas. The Cave Swallow is reported only from a specimen of uncertain history. Migrant flocks of swallows during the months of northern winter may include large numbers of a single kind, but it is usual to see 2 or more species in mixed company, joined where insects are abundant through this common source of food. While most common in the low- lands, swallows may be found in open lands at any elevation. The north- ern migrants, especially the Barn Swallow, most abundant in western Panama, often gather at dusk in large groups to sleep in growths of rushes in marshy areas or in sugarcane. Mixed with others of the family, they range in companies through the day. The Brown-chested Martin, a southern season migrant, late April to October, from Brazil and Argentina, gathers at night to sleep in trees (at least in its breeding range) in large assemblages. It appears that this species, now common, may have extended its winter range to Panama within recent years, as it was not reported by the early naturalists who made collections and observations in its present isthmian range. 10. 1 EZ. FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 5 KEY TO SPECIES OF HIRUNDINIDAE BeESELGONVi MO: trace Of DIME. fan. secu oe coe wenn oe ce ee ee anes 2 DHChesteel Oley Or reel att teehee eo ee ee ee) ke 5 Undersurface entirely sooty brown, except thighs. White-thighed Swallow, Neochelidon tibialis minima. p. 29 Pied USA Gey Pan tiellliy | WiMlbes .pshorae yo eusetahew i orcs trteeas Pret ianeke Were b kek 3 Outer edge of outermost primary serrated; no distinct breast band. Rough-winged Swallow, Stelgidopteryx ruficollis. p. 36 Outer edge of outermost primary entire; distinct dark breast band...... 4 Throat white, total length 125 mm or less. Bank Swallow, Riparia riparia riparia. p. 5 Throat white, total length 155 mm or more. Brown-chested Martin, Progne tapera fusca. p. 27 Back bright metallic green. Violet-green Swallow, Tachycineta thalassina lepida. p. 11 Poe mcubinely Onmipantly steel blues 20. 02h ee wee a es 6 Undersurface cinnamon-rufous. Barn Swallow, Hirundo rustica erythrogaster. p. 13 Piidenstnnace wilike vor Steel) DIG: sc. side c oes shoe ee eee ee eas bee 7 Rump buff to brown. ama MS KeCMMDIIe: OF CWither 20.40 so00 GAR ee be RS BOE et RR 8 Rump white. SS AISEND CIBER AS SRINESE TS SIRs a PF ORE i gen ate ee Ua 9 ET AERCORAE TULUM a Pay GRR ae ee ee he on 10 Mie abestcel bite or wath: brows oes. Shh Dae ee a 11 Larger, total length 130-140 mm. Tree Swallow, Tachycineta bicolor. p. 7 Smaller, total length 110-125 mm. Blue-and-white Swallow, Notiochehdon cyanoleuca. p. 32 Undersurface steel blue. Purple Martin, Progene subis,* male. p. 22 Minderstmrace DROMMrana WiIhten less e leva Close oe ees Be Pas ie Fe 12 Forehead feathers tipped gray or whitish. Purple Martin, Progne subis,* female. p. 22 Forehead steel blue or brown. Gray-breasted Martin, Progne chalybea chalybea. p. 19 RIPARIA RIPARIA RIPARIA (Linnaeus): Bank Swallow, Golondrina Barranquera Hirundo riparia Linnaeus, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, vol. 1, 1758, p. 192. (Sweden.) Small; undersurface white, with a distinct grayish brown band across the lower foreneck and upper breast. *There is also one specimen record of the Southern Martin, Progne elegans, from Panama. For comparison with P. subis see text, p. 25. 6 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Description —Length 115-125 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face of body, including side of head, and tail grayish brown; forehead slightly paler than crown; back also usually somewhat paler; scapulars, tertials, rump, and upper tail coverts with lightly marked paler margins; wings, including coverts, darker (blacker); undersurface, including sides and undertail coverts, white; a broad band of a grayish brown across the foreneck and upper breast, continued laterally on the upper sides. Immature, rump, upper tail coverts, tertials and wing coverts tipped with cinnamon-buff; chest band also with paler tips. Measurements.—Males (10 from New Jersey, Rhode Island, Iowa, Nevada, and Alaska), wing 99.7-105.7 (102.0), tail 47.0-51.7 (49.1) culmen from base 8.0-8.9 (8.3), tarsus 10.0-11.1 (10.4) mm. Females (10 from New Jersey, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Kentucky, Illinois, Idaho, and Ontario), wing 94.4-102.1 (98.0), tail 42.6-49.6 (47.6), culmen from base 7.0-8.7 (7.8), tarsus 9.9-11.7 (10.6) mm. Winter visitor from the north, September to April, found irregu- larly, often with flocks of other swallows. The first fall migrants may appear early, as Ridgely (1 litt.) reported 2 at El Llano, eastern Prov- ince of Panama on August 2, 1974, Arbib and Loetscher recorded 1 at Gatun, Canal Zone, August 26, 1934, and Eisenmann reported some seen with other swallows on the savannas of Coclé, September 1, 1954. There are numerous records through September and October, when they appear still to be in southward passage. Specimens in the British Museum were taken by H. J. Kelsall at sea in the Gulf of Panama on October 4 and 25, 1924. Griscom recorded 3 taken October 2, 6, and 17, 1930, at Puerto Obaldia on the eastern San Blas coast. A few may be seen through the winter period, as Eisenmann recorded several at Playa Coronado, November 25, 1962, and Jewel saw them in the Canal Zone on November 30, 1911, and February 22, 1912. The latter date may mark the beginning of the migration northward, during which lesser numbers are recorded in March and April. Late dates of small numbers, presumably stragglers, are reported for May 11, 15, 22, 27 (Ambrose, Ridgely, N. G. Smith) and June 3, 1961 (Gatun Dam, Ambrose, 10 birds). On March 14, 1944, I noted several over the Gulf of Panama, in crossing from Isla San José to Balboa. Griscom re- corded 10 on March 8, 1927, a mile offshore from Cabo Garachiné. Two males in the Hancock collections of the Los Angeles County Mu- seum were collected April 27, 1939, from the deck of the yacht Velero III in Bahia Caledonia, on the eastern San Blas coast. FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE oh Usually Bank Swallows are noted in company with other migrants of the family, less often alone in groups of up to 100 individuals. Dur- ing the winter of 1975-76, a year of exceptional swallow flights in Panama, Ridgely and J. J. Pujals noted about 25 on January 27 at Tocumen, eastern Province of Panama, with thousands of Barn Swal- lows that were definitely not migrating. P. Donahue saw 2 on January 2, 1980, at Aguadulce, Coclé (Eisenmann in /itt.). TACHYCINETA BICOLOR (Vieillot): Tree Swallow; Golondrina Bicolor Hirundo bicolor Vieillot, Hist. Nat. Ois. Amer. Sept., vol. 1 (1807), 1808, p. 61, pl. 31. (New York.) Medium size; undersurface white; adult, above steel blue; immature, duller, browner above; differs from the Mangrove Swallow in lack of white on upper surface, and larger size. Description.—Length 130-140 mm. Male, upper surface, including lesser wing coverts, greenish steel blue; middle wing coverts black, edged with greenish to steel blue; rest of wings and tail dusky; lores black; undersurface white; axillars and underwing coverts brownish gray; edge of wing white. Female, similar but usually duller colored above; breast in some washed with brownish gray. Immature, upper surface dark mouse gray; usually with breast washed with grayish brown; tertials, and in some individuals, outer upper tail coverts, edged narrowly with white to grayish white. Measurements.—Males (10 from Florida, winter), wing 115.0-125.2 (118.4), tail 52.1-58.0 (54.7), culmen from base 9.0-11.2 (10.2), tarsus 12.0-14.4 (13.1) mm. Females (10 from New York, Florida, winter, spring), wing 108.8- 117.0 (112.2), tail 47.8-53.6 (51.5), culmen from base 8.2-10.9 (9.2), tarsus 11.1-13.2 (12.3) mm. Winter migrant from the north; irregular, recorded chiefly in the Caribbean coastal lowlands of western Bocas del Toro, and in the Canal Zone. The Tree Swallow, an abundant species over a wide range in the north, is common during the winter months south to eastern Honduras. Farther south, along the eastern coast of Central America, it is little known. On January 17, 1958, more than 100 Tree Swallows ranged with other swallows over open lands partly flooded from recent rains near Changuinola, Bocas del Toro. I collected a male there on March 4 8 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 from several flying with Barn and Rough-winged Swallows. In the Canal Zone, Eisenmann on February 1, 1973, found a small flock near Gamboa, and on February 4, a larger group of 200-300 at the Gatun Dam spillway. On February 16, 1969, Ridgely (1976, p. 259) photo- graphed Tree Swallows that were part of a flock of 225 at the Gatun Dam. In the early months of 1975 and of 1976 flocks were seen in vari- ous locations in the Canal Zone; Ridgely (1m litt.) found as many as 600 at La Jagua on January 27, 1976. The latest date for which the species is recorded in Panama is April 5, when in 1975 Eisenmann (in htt.) and others saw 6 (2 adults) at Gatun Lake. Tree Swallows are not found in Panama every year, but the species has recently been seen in northern Colombia (20 at Salamanca Na- tional Park, Magdalena, February 6, 1977, by Ridgely) and in northern Venezuela (at Chichiriviche Lagoon, Falcon, by P. Alden in 1972 and 1976), suggesting that they often travel farther south than was pre- viously known. TACHYCINETA ALBILINEA (Lawrence): Mangrove Swallow, Golondrina Manglera FIGuRE 1 Petrochelidon albilinea Lawrence, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 8, May 1863, p. 2. (Atlantic slope, near the Panama Railroad, Canal Zone, Panama.) Small; undersurface, rump, line above lores, and tips of secondaries white. Description.—Length 105-115 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown, hindneck, back, scapulars, lesser wing coverts, and upper tail coverts steel blue, with a greenish to bluish sheen (greener when in fresh plum- age); a narrow line above lores white; lores and narrow line beneath the eye black; wings and tail dull black; tertials and middle wing coverts edged narrowly with white; lower hindneck with feathers white basally, this reduced in some to an indistinct white line; rump white, with finely marked dusky shaft lines; lower surface, including underwing coverts, white, with the breast and sides faintly washed with pale gray. Immature, lores dull black, bordered above by a narrow white line; rump white; rest of upper surface, with the wings, drab gray; under- surface white, with a faint wash of somewhat brownish gray on breast and sides; outer underwing coverts banded indistinctly with dull gray. A female collected at Canita, on the Rio Bayano above El Llano, February 6, 1962, had the iris wood brown; tarsus and toes fuscous- black; claws black. In another female, at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 9 February 14, 1966, the iris was dark brown, bill black, tarsus and toes fuscous-brown; claws black. A third, from the second locality, March 9, 1966, had the tarsus, toes, and claws black. In this third bird the tongue was flesh color, and the lining inside the mouth was black. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 93.4-101.1 (96.8), tail 39.6-42.2 (40.8), culmen from base 9.9-11.8 (11.2), tarsus 9.5- 15 -C11.2) mm. Females (10 from Panama), wing 92.2-98.2 (94.7), tail 39.8-46.8 (42.0), culmen from base 10.0-11.6 (10.8), tarsus 10.1-11.5 (10.7) mm. FicurE 1.—Mangrove Swallow, Golondrina Manglera, Tachycineta albilinea. Resident. Common throughout the lowlands, mainly along the larger rivers and over open water around the coastal mangrove swamps; seen regularly along the Panama Canal, on Gattin Lake, and in bays on the coasts, usually near the mouths of the rivers. Rare in the highlands. Recorded on Islas Verde and Cébaco in Golfo de Montijo; Isla Coiba. From January to May these small swallows are seen in pairs or little groups; in the second half of the year they sometimes gather in larger groups of 50 or more. They range over open water along the larger streams, often resting on fallen branches or logs stranded in the water. A few may be seen flying along beaches or over pastures and other IO BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 open lands, but they never seem to stray far from water. They seem to wander rarely to the upland country. My only record there is of one seen at a small lake near El Volcan, March 20, 1960. The nesting season appears to extend from January to June. A pair taken over the Rio Chagres at Juan Mina, Canal Zone, December 14, 1955, while ranging attentively together, showed no development of the sexual organs. Others in January at several localities were breeding individuals. Grown young, recently from the nest, are common in June. They nest in holes in snags and stubs, fallen or standing in the water, sometimes in cavities made originally by woodpeckers. The usual lo- cation is low but above flood level. In Gattin Lake they may use the metal cans placed at the tops of channel markers. January 31, 1957, at Mandinga, San Blas, I found a nest placed in a shallow cavity in the end of one of the pilings supporting an ancient wharf in the sheltered bay, when the female swallow flew out as we passed near in a dugout canoe. The bulky mass of grass and other plant stems that filled the lower part of the cavity held a deep cup of finer materials, lined with the white and gray contour feathers of herons. The 4 eggs, about one-third incubated, were oval in form and white in color, without markings. They measure 18.7 x 12.6, 19.0 12.6, 19.2*12.7, and 19.4X12.5 mm. \Aset of 2 in the British iiiseam (Natural History) sent to Salvin and Godman, by F. Blancaneaux from British Honduras, collected May 5, 1888, also are oval, and white without gloss. They are slightly smaller, as they measure 17.7X13.1 and 18.0X13.4 mm. Russell (A. O. U. Mon. no. 1, 1964, p. 132) says that Peck, in British Honduras, in addition to the usual cavities in stumps standing in water, also found nests placed “in abandoned wood- pecker holes in pine trees situated in very open areas of the lowland pine ridges.” Stomachs of a few examined were filled with remains of a variety of small insects, including diptera, hymenoptera, coleoptera, and hemip- tera (see also Ricklefs, Auk, 1971, pp. 635-657). A female collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 6.4 g. At Juan Mina, in January, in evening when Barn and other swallows were moving over the river to communal roosts in marshy areas, I found 20 or so of the present species gathered by themselves to sleep on a many-branched dead snag standing isolated in the river. The species is one of extensive range from southern Sonora and southern Tamaulipas, Mexico, south along the coastal lowlands through Central America to eastern Panama, where it is recorded east to the mouth of the Rio Mandinga on Golfo de San Blas, western San Blas, FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE Let on the Atlantic slope; to Boca de Cupe, above El Real on the Rio Tuira, and above the mouth of the Rio Tuquesa, on the Rio Chucunaque, on the Pacific side. In July 1975, Ridgely (1 litt.) found this species quite common along the lower Chucunaque ( Yaviza area) and Tuira Rivers, but it became relatively scarcer as he proceeded up the latter toward Cerro Quia on the Colombian border. At the base of Cerro Quia, he found only one pair, below the outlet of the Rio Mono. A series of specimens throughout the range from Mexico to Panama shows no geographic variation. A form T. a. rhizophorae described by van Rossem (Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 32, 1939, p. 155) on the basis of supposed greater amount of white in the frontal and loral area, from Tobari Bay, southern Sonora, ranging to Nayarit, proves invalid from the series now available. Hellmayr (Cat. Birds Amer., vol. 9, 1935, p. 70) has listed another swallow, Tachycineta stolgmanm Philippi, known only from Chepén on the coast of northern Peru, also as a race of albilinea, but this re- quires verification. In brief, this Peruvian bird originally was described as Hirundo leucopygia by Taczanowski (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1880, p. 192) from 4 specimens collected by Stolzmann. As this name was preoccupied by an earlier H. leucopygia of 1834, Philippi (Ann. Mus. Nac. Chile, Zool., vol. 15, 1902, p. 23) renamed it Hirundo stolz- manni. The type, in the Warsaw Museum, is lost. Hellmayr, who examined one of the original specimens in the Senckenberg Museum in Frankfurt, noted that, compared to Hirundo albilinea of Central Amer- ica, it differed in much smaller bill, lack of white line above the lores, grayish instead of white bases on the dorsal feathers, gray instead of white underwing coverts, and grayish instead of white undersurface, with other minor differences. In spite of the extensive gap in the range, he listed the Peruvian population as a race of albilinea. In this he was followed by Peters (Check-list Birds World, vol. 9, 1960, p. 82). Hell- mayr’s action was accepted also by Zimmer (Amer. Mus. Nov., no. 1723, 1955, p. 33). Since, in spite of modern studies in the area con- cerned, there is no other report of T. albilinea in northwestern South America, the relationship suggested appears doubtful. 7. albilinea, therefore, is listed as without accepted races. TACHYCINETA THALASSINA LEPIDA Mearns: Violet-green Swallow, Golondrina Verde Tachycineta lepida Mearns, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 15, March 5, 1902, p. 31. (Campbell’s Ranch, Laguna Mountains, Coast Range, 20 miles north of Campo, San Diego County, California.) 12 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Medium size; undersurface white; above, green, glossed with purple, with white patches on either side of rump. Description—Length 120-130 mm. Adult male, crown and hind- neck bronze to purplish green, with a narrow greenish band across lower hindneck; back and scapulars definitely with a purplish tint but greener than crown; rump and upper tail coverts purple mixed with green; wings and tail dull black, with a bluish green sheen; undersur- face, including cheeks, scapulars, and undertail coverts, pure white, this color extending posteriorly over sides of rump; underwing coverts pale gray. Female, duller, greener, less purplish above; crown dull grayish brown, in some with a greenish sheen; side of head and upper hindneck grayish white; undersurface light grayish white on foreneck, upper breast, and scapulars. . Immature, dark grayish brown above; wings and tail dull black; sides of head and undersurface as in female. Measurements —Males (10 from Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, California; April-July), wing 114.2-117.0 (115.9), tail 43.8-49.2 (46.6), culmen from base 7.1-8.9 (7.8), tarsus 11.0-12.7 (11.5) mm. Females (10 from Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, California; April-July, December), wing 108.2-114.8 (111.1), tail 41.7-46.3 (43.3), culmen from base 7.1-8.6 (7.6), tarsus 10.5-13.9 (12.0) mm. Migrant from the north, rare (irregular). Known from numerous sight records in late February 1960, on the lower slopes of Volcan de Chiriqui, Boquete (El Salto), Volcan (El Hato), and Cerro Punta, western Chiriqui. Dr. Kugene Eisenmann, with Mr. and Mrs. James Linford of Oak- land, California, on February 21-22, 1960, found about 50 flying with Chestnut-collared Swifts near El Salto, above Boquete, Chirigui. From February 23 to 27, in late afternoon, from 70 to 100 were recorded daily over open pastures near the village of Cerro Punta. In the after- noon of February 27, near El Hato del Volcan, 1 perched on a wire, where Eisenmann observed it close at hand. The Violet-green Swallow nests from the Yukon Valley and Yukon, Canada, to northern Mexico. In winter it is found regularly to El Salvador and Honduras. Southward, in Costa Rica, specimens have been taken at Punta Piedra and Bebedero, Guanacaste, and Matina on the coast of Limon. In the winter of 1976-77 flocks were again seen in Panama. A. Greensmith reported seeing small numbers daily at Cerro Campana, western Panama Province, from December 27-29, 1976, with up to 40 FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 13 the last day, usually feeding with larger numbers of Blue-and-white Swallows. Then, up to 80 were seen feeding over open hillsides near the Volcan Lakes, western Chiriqui, on January 13-14, 1977. All field marks were noted with care, including the white patches on the sides of the rump, the white vent, and the white on the sides of the head (Tou- can, vol. 4, no. 2, 1977, pp. 6-7). HIRUNDO RUSTICA ERYTHROGASTER Boddaert: Barn Swallow, Golondrina Tijereta _Hirundo erythrogaster Boddaert, Table Planch. Enlum., 1783, p. 45. (French Guiana. ) Size medium; adult, in full plumage, with long, deeply forked tail (the lateral feathers often lost during the winter molt, so that this char- acter is not evident; identified then by the steel blue back and rump). Descripion.—Length 149-186 mm. Adult male, forehead chestnut; rest of upper surface steel blue, including edging on tertials and mid- dle wing coverts; wings and tail dusky; inner webs of rectrices (ex- cept central pair) with a white spot; malar area, chin, throat, and fore- neck to upper margin of chest cinnamon-rufous; steel blue color or lower side of neck extending over the side of the chest, in some the two sides joined; rest of undersurface, including sides, axillars, under- wing coverts and undertail coverts, pale cinnamon-rufous. Adult female, usually similar, but in some the undersurface paler. Immature, much duller colored; forehead dull white to buff; crown and hindneck dull brown to sooty black; undersurface duller, browner; in some, breast, sides, and abdomen white. Measurements —Male (10 from eastern and western United States, British Columbia, and Alaska), wing 114.3-123.6 (119.9), tail 71.2- 92.8 (82.9), culmen from base 9.4-11.5 (10.7), tarsus 11.1-12.0 (11.6) mm. ; Females (10 from eastern and western United States, British Co- lumbia, and Alaska), wing 109.1-119.2 (115.7), tail 69.7-83.3 (76.3), culmen from base 10.0-11.9 (10.9), tarsus 11.2-12.2 (11.6) mm. Migrant from the north, abundant; common winter resident espe- cially on the more open Pacific slope from early September through April, with many in passage to and from wintering grounds in South America. A few remain through the period of northern summer. Most common in the lowlands but ranging also across the higher levels. Migrant flocks en route to and from South America move regularly over the sea along the Caribbean coast, and also are seen crossing the 14 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Gulf of Panama and other waters of the Pacific in the direction of Darién or Colombia. Thus, single birds or small groups of Barn Swal- lows may appear on any of the offshore islands. In stormy weather during periods of migration, hundreds may be encountered. Northward migration is evident by late March and continues into late May, when it becomes difficult to separate northern travelers from summering birds. Birds such as the 2 seen by Eisenmann at Coco Solo, Canal Zone, on July 23, 1956, could be summering or early transients moving south- ward. Migrant and wintering groups gather at night to sleep in low trees or reeds around lowland lagoons and marshes, spreading widely in their feeding activities during the day. The roosts are in the open. In 1966, at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, the Chiriqui Land Company had built a roof over a long pier to allow handling of extensive shipments of bananas regardless of weather. During February and March, Barn Swallows gathered nightly to sleep under this shelter, undisturbed by the electric lights that illuminated the area throughout the night, or the workmen busy beneath them. The annual molt of adults and young comes during the months of northern winter. The full-plumaged birds seen regularly in early May are assumed to be those that will nest in the more northern parts of the breeding range in Alaska and Canada. Ridgely (im litt.) notes that in recent years Barn Swallows have in- creasingly come to be associated with sugarcane fields, especially dur- ing northern winter months; they hawk for insects over and around them, and also roost in them. This seems to be the pattern as far south as eastern Brazil. The considerable increase in Barn Swallows in the past decade may be associated with the great increase in sugar growing in Pacific slope lowlands of Panama. PETROCHELIDON PYRRHONOTA (Vieillot): Cliff Swallow, Golondrina de Paso Medium size. Tail short, slightly notched at tip; forehead white, buff or chestnut-brown; rest of crown black or dusky; rump buff to brown. Description Length 120-151 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown and back shining blue-black; forehead white to chestnut (according to race); rump cinnamon-rufous; upper tail coverts grayish brown, edged with paler gray; wings and tail dusky brown; secondaries edged nar- rowly with white toward the tips; lores blackish; side of head and fore- neck chestnut, in some this color extending narrowly across hindneck; FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 15 an irregular black mark variable in size, on foreneck, most prominent in adult males, in females often much restricted; sides more or less brownish gray; breast and abdomen white. Immature, colors much duller; feathers of the upper surface usually with paler margins, and color patterns as a whole less definite. Cliff Swallows are seen mainly in fall, and in the months of spring, from late February through April, usually in company with other mi- grant species of the family. It is probable that their principal winter quarters are in South America, so that most may be in transit when seen in Panama, but winter records have gradually accrued, suggesting that the species regularly winters in Panama, at least in small numbers. Geographic races in this species, widespread in its distribution in the breeding season, are not always clearly evident. On their northern breeding grounds 2 main groups may be recognized, one—in which the forehead is white—that is mainly northern, and the other—with this area chestnut-brown—found in the southern section. The distinction of subspecies in those of typical markings 1s clearly evident, but in the broad area where the two approach during the nesting season, the colors mentioned merge through intergrades so completely that there is no clear-cut division. As a whole, northern populations are larger, but here again, there is intergradation. From the considerable series of specimens available from Panama, 4 groups may be separated on the basis of color and size. Their records of occurrence are listed under the four headings that follow. (Two others that have been described are not clearly separable. ) While Cliff Swallows as a species may be identified readily in life, the various forms are so similar that the race may not be determined unless the bird is in the hand. Usually they are seen flying in company with other swallows, most frequently with the more abundant Barn Swallows. From available dates, the fall flight southward is recorded in Panama from August 21 through September to October 6. J. Karr and Ridgely (1m litt.) saw 2 at Chiva Chiva, Canal Zone, on July 29, 1968. Winter records known to Ridgely (im litt.) include 1 at Tocumen, with 50 Barn Swallows on January 29, 1973; 6 at Flamenco Island (Fort Amador) on January 30, 1973; 2 at La Jagua on January 27, 1976; and from Chiriqui, 1 at Las Lajas on February 13, 1976. Spring migration evidently begins early. Ridgely and R. McArthur saw 1 Cliff Swallow flying north over Panama Bay on February 12, 1970. In March and April this species can be as abundant as Barn Swallows. On March 6, 1976, for example, Ridgely saw thousands 16 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 along the Pan American Highway from David eastward for 30 km. Cliff Swallows are found in Panama as late as May 17, when in 1973 Ridgely saw 50 near Escobal. PETROCHELIDON PYRRHONOTA PYRRHONOTA (Vieillot) Hirundo pyrrhonota Vieillot, Nouv. Dict. Hist. Nat, vol. 14, September 1817, Dp: D19: (Paraguay) Characters.—Forehead clear white in most individuals, size smaller; wing 107-112.8 mm. Measurements—Males (10 from eastern and western United States and southern Canada), wing 108.4-112.8 (109.8), tail 46.6-50.9 (48.9), culmen from base 8.9-10.6 (9.7), tarsus 11.3-13.2 (12.5) mm. Females (10 from eastern and western United States), wing 107.1- 109.9 (108.4), tail 44.7-49.0 (47.9), culmen from base 9.4-10.2 (9.7), tarsus 12.1-12.8 (12.5) mm. Migrant from the north, common. Specimens examined are as follows: Male, in the British Museum (Natural History), received in the Tweedale Collection, without date of collection, purchased from the dealer G. A. Frank of London. It is assumed to be from the Canal Zone, as it shows the characteristic prepa- ration of McLeannan. One of his small labels attached reads “45 male.” The wing measures 110.5 mm. Immature male, USNM no. 30556, collected at sea ““N. of Panama, Oct. 20, 1863, Capt. J. M. Dow.” The locality is uncertain, but prob- ably means north of Panama City, off the west coast. The wing mea- sures 108.0 mm. Female, no. 2378, collection of Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, from Almirante, Bocas del Toro, October 10, 1960; wing 111.0 mm. Male aduit, USNM no. 461062, Las Lajas, Chiriqui, February 26, 1956; wing 109.5 mm, A. Wetmore. Adult male, AMNH no. 500904, Panama City, April 3, 1897; wing MOS CN s Glarus: As the breeding range of this race extends widely through the central and northern United States, this subspecies may be the one most com- monly represented in the migrant flocks that come to Panama. These are seen commonly through September and October, and again from late I*ebruary through March to early May. Apparently the majority are birds of passage with the main wintering ground in South America. There is considerable variation in size in this nominate race, as indi- cated by wing length. Those that nest in the west, from Oregon north- FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 17 ward, merge gradually into the large population (hypopolia) of Alaska. Intermediates from Oregon have been described as a distinct race, aprophata, with the “lower parts paler, and forehead more buffy (less clearly whitish)” (Petrochelidon albifrons aprophata Oberholser, Sci- entific Publications Cleveland Museum, vol. IV, no. 1, 1932, p. 6). In- dividual variation is such that this proposed additional race may not be distinguished with certainty, especially in winter migrants. PETROCHELIDON PYRRHONOTA HYPOPOLIA Oberholser Petrochelidon albifrons hypopolia Oberholser, Canadian Field-Nat., 1920, vol. 33, ~ no. 5, p. 95. (Fort Norman, Northwest Territories.) Characters.—Forehead white; size larger. Measurements —Males (10 from Alaska and MacKenzie), wing 112.7-116.1 (114.1), tail 45.7-51.7 (49.2), culmen from base 9.0-10.9 (9.8), tarsus 12.4-14.2 (13.3) mm. Females (10 from Alaska and MacKenzie), wing 110.5-115.5 (113.1), tail 47.1-53.9 (50.4), culmen from base 9.1-10.6 (9.7), tarsus 12.4-15.0 (13.6) mm. Migrant from the north, abundance uncertain. At the Ciénaga Santo Domingo, eastern Province of Panama, below La Jagua, on March 30, 1949, when a flock of 100 or more Cliff Swallows circled near, I shot 1 and the others disappeared. The bird taken was extremely fat and also of maximum size, with the wing measuring 116.5 mm. It agrees fully in this with the population of northern Alaska and northwestern Can- ada, and is identified as the race nesting in that area. It is the only definite record of this subspecies from Panama that I have seen. PETROCHELIDON PYRRHONOTA TACHINA Oberholser Petrochelidon lunifrons tachina Oberholser, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 16, February 21, 1903, p. 15. (Langtry, Texas.) Characters.—Forehead light to fairly dark buff (varying from dull buffy white to dull brown). Size small. Measurements—Males (10 from Chihuahua, Guanajuato, and Texas), wing 100.0-105.1 (102.5), tail 42.8-45.7 (44.3) culmen from base 8.4-9.9 (9.3), tarsus 11.8-12.6 (12.0) mm. Females (10 from Texas and New Mexico), wing 101.3-104.7 (103.0), tail 42.6-47.6 (45.2), culmen from base 8.4-9.9 (9.1), tarsus 11.2-12.2 (11.9) mm. Migrant from the north. Abundance uncertain. On February 26, 1956, I collected a female, at Las Lajas, near the 18 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 coast in eastern Chiriqui. The bird was with a mixed flock of the species, the others taken included birds assigned to melanogaster and pyrrhonota. PETROCHELIDON PYRRHONOTA MELANOGASTER (Swainson) Hirundo melanogaster Swainson, Philos. Mag., n.s. vol. 1, 1827, p. 366. (Real del Monte, Hidalgo, Mexico.) Characters—Forehead dark chestnut; size small. Measurements.—Males (10 from San Luis Potosi, Durango, Tepic, and Arizona), wing 101.4-106.2 (103.0), tail 42.4-46.5 (44.9), culmen from base 7.7-9.5) (8.5), tarsus, 105-127 ((113))) am Females (10 from San Luis Potosi, Durango, Sonora, Oaxaca, and Arizona), wing 101.4-109.2 (104.4), tail 40.6-45.6 (43.3), culmen from base 8.0-9.4 (8.7), tarsus 11.0-12.1 (11.5) mm. Migrant from the north. Apparently common. Specimens from Panama are as follows: A male and 2 females, col- lected February 26, 1956, on the Savannah Santa Cruz, near the sea, below Las Lajas, Chiriqui, where we encountered a small flight of Cliff Swallows. On March 20, 1961, at La Jagua, 3 small flocks circled over the savannas. When one group came near I collected a female of this race. There is also a male in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, taken by Wedel on October 6, 1930, at Puerto Obaldia, San Blas, (Gris- com, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, 1932, p. 358). Birds from northwestern Mexico and southwestern United States have been described as another race (Petrochelidon albifrons minima van Rossem and Hachisuka, Trans. San Diego Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 9, no. 2, 1938, p. 5), which, however, from material seen is not separable from melanogaster. [PETROCHELIDON FULVA (Vieillot), Cave Swallow, Golondrina Pueblera A specimen of this species, no. 85.3.24.59, in the British Museum (Natural History), is labeled “Panama. McLeannan,” with no other data. It is in fair condition, except for the feathers of the throat and side of the head, which are considerably stained, perhaps by accident during preparation. It resembles the nominate population of fulva of the Greater Antilles. Salvin and Godman (Biol. Centr. Amer., Aves, vol. 1, 1883, p. 228) listed it as follows: “A single specimen, in bad condition, sent to us by M’Leannan from Panama, must ... be referred to P. fulva...As FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE IQ M’Leannan once had in his possession a few Cuban birds which he obtained in exchange, it is just possible that his specimen of P. fulva may have come from Cuba, and not from Panama; but, on the other hand, one of the island birds may have strayed thus far.” The bird, in immature plumage, has no additional data in the museum catalog. The species differs from the Cliff Swallows in paler rufous of the head markings, darker chestnut of the rump, and lack of black spot on the throat. Sharpe (Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., vol. 10, 1885, addenda, p. 636) lists it under P. fulva as “n. Imm. sk. Panama (McLeannan). Salvin- Godman Coll.” Ridgway (Birds North and Middle Amer., pt. 3, 1904, p. 55) cited it as ““Panama?,” with references to Salvin and Godman, and Sharpe. One Cave Swallow was carefuily observed with other migrant swal- lows at Juan Diaz, eastern Province of Panama, on March 10, 1976, by Ridgely (in litt.). One was seen at Tocumen, eastern Province of Pan- ama, by V. Emanuel on February 9, 1980. The data are too uncertain to warrant inclusion of this species as a valid record. The winter range of the Cave Swallow is still unknown.| PROGNE CHALYBEA CHALYBEA (Gmelin): Gray-breasted Martin; Golondrina Urbana Hirundo chalybea Gmelin, Syst. Nat., vol. 1, pt. 2, 1789, p. 1026. (French Guiana.) Slightly smaller than the migrant Purple Martin; end of outer tail feathers somewhat narrowed and tip of tail notched; male and female alike in color pattern on undersurface. Description—Length 160-180 mm. Adult male, upper surface, in- cluding the lesser wing coverts, dark steel blue, changing on forehead to dull brown; wings and tail black, faintly bluish on outer webs; fore- head, side of head and neck, breast and sides dull brown, paler on upper throat which often is mottled with white; upper breast and sides edged more or less with white rarely with the white extensive; lower breast, abdomen, and undertail coverts white, with slightly marked narrow shaft lines of black on undertail coverts; axillars and underwing coverts dark sooty gray; longer underwing coverts usually tipped with white. Adult female, similar, but duller blue, more brownish above. Immature, distinctly browner above; upper foreneck and throat whitish in varying amount; breast duller, usually with paler tips on the feathers. A female, with ovaries not developed, taken at Olivo, 9 km northeast 20 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 of Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, February 11, 1966, had the iris dark brown, bill black, tarsus and toes fuscous-black, and claws black. An- other female, a fully grown bird of the year, collected on the Rio Potrero, near the town of El Potrero, Coclé, March 7, 1962, had the iris dark brown, bill black, tarsus and toes fuscous-brown, and claws black. é Measurements ——Males (10 from Chiriqui, Veraguas, Herrera, Coclé, and Province of Panama), wing 126.9-134.9 (130.1), tail 60.8- 65.8 (62.8), culmen from base 14.0-15.3 (14.7), tarsus 14.3-15.4 (14.6) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui, Veraguas, Coclé, Province of Panama, and Darién), wing 124.2-132.2 (128.0), tail 58.8-62.7 (60.8), culmen from base 14.5-15.5 (15.0), tarsus 14.0-15.0 (14.3) mm. Resident. Common and widely distributed throughout the main- land of the Republic, from the lowlands to 1500 m. In the Chiriqui highlands it has been recorded at Boquete and the Volcan area. Present regularly on Islas Coiba and Cébaco; less abundant, or casual after the breeding season, on islands in the Gulf of Panama: Isla San José (March 6-8, 1947), Brava. (In March 1904, W. W. Brown recorded a colony nesting on the church at San Miguel, Isla del Rey.) Possibly there is some seasonal movement among them, as in April, following heavy rains, I have seen hundreds resting on wires in the Savanna areas. The species is one of wide range from Mexico to southern South America. In Panama it is present regularly in the towns, especially around churches and other buildings in the plazas. In country districts it frequents open pasturelands and fields, where dead trees offer con- venient perches. It is usual to find a few associated in small groups from February to June during the nesting season. Following this, they gather in flocks that in evening come to communal roosts. Where these are located in trees in plazas, they may be a nuisance, and more so when they enter openings in the eaves and roofs of buildings. Their warbling calls are heard mainly around their nest sites, espe- cially in the period when they are pairing and building. On the whole, they are far less vociferous in the breeding season than the Purple Martin of North America at the same period. Nests are placed in cavi- ties in trees, frequently in holes made by woodpeckers. This original custom is varied when they settle around buildings, commonly nesting under eaves and hollow roof tiles or in holes in walls, building on beams or in recesses where space may be available. Nests are constructed of twigs, dried grasses, and other vegetable material, with string or bits of FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 21 paper added when the site is in or near human habitation. In any lo- cation they seem less gregarious than the Purple Martin, as the nest sites occupied normally are separated, not close together. On Gatun Lake, Canal Zone, pairs build regularly in the top of the metal chan- nel markers. In the nesting period these martins are vigorous in attack- ing hawks and other large predatory birds that attempt to perch on or near their nesting trees. Eisenmann writes that the full extent of the nesting season in Pan- ama still remains to be determined: pairs with eggs or nestlings have been reported from March through early August, and he has seen pairs seemingly on territory near a tree hole or building cranny in February. On the San Blas coast and the nearby island of Mulatupo on Decem- ber 1 and 2, 1962, he saw a few isolated pairs about nest sites, sug- gesting that the nesting season may extend over much of the year, un- less pairs guard nest sites out of the nesting period. fiiieseses are white, with from 2 to 5 recorded in the set. Size ranges from 21.4-26.3 by 15.0-17.1 mm. (Meise in Schonwetter, Penmdoe@ol- part 17,1970, p. 193). A. Hartley (in Beebe, Hartley, and Howes, Tropical Wildlife in British Guiana, vol. 1, 1917, pp. 328- 334), in an account of this species, recorded careful nest sanitation in which the parents removed the excrement of the nestlings. Food, as usual in this family, 1s composed of insects taken on the wing. Like other swallows, they swoop regularly to the surface of open waters to drink. Two collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 92) at Pacora, Province of Panama, weighed 40 and 44 g. At El Real, Darién, on January 7, 1964, I saw a curious aggressive reaction on the part of a Gray-breasted Martin that perched regularly for hours each day in a high dead treetop opposite our house. One after- noon, a skipper butterfly (Family Hesperiidae), in its usual rapid, er- ratic flight, darted about over the trees and houses. Its restless activity seemed to irritate the martin, as whenever the insect rose into the open air, the bird swooped at it and then returned to its perch. This con- tinued until finally the martin hit the insect with its breast, a clearly audible blow that knocked the skipper to the ground. There it lay for a minute or two with spread wings, partly stunned, until presently it rose, darted away, and disappeared. There was no indication that the bird had tried to seize it. Eisenmann believes that some birds of this race from Mexico at least occasionally winter or pass through Panama, as birds of northern Mexico are known to be migratory and flocks of this species are some- times seen when local birds are nesting. The southern race (domestica) 22 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 of southern South America is highly migratory and regularly reaches Suriname, northern Brazil, and Venezuela; at least occasional occur- rence in Panama is not improbable during the austral winter but speci- men examination would be required. As in P. elegans, the molting primaries in July would be a strong clue that domestica was involved (see Eisenmann, Auk, 1959, pp. 528-532). PROGNE SUBIS (Linnaeus): Purple Martin, Golondrina Azul Largest of the swallows found in North and Central America (aver- aging larger than the Brown-chested Martin, Progne tapera). Description.—Length 170-200 mm. Adult male glossy dark steel blue above and below; partly concealed feather tufts on sides of lower back white; primaries dull black, with the basal area of the shafts dull white basally, changing to dull brown for the remainder of the length. Adult female, duller colored above (through partial exposure of the basal area of the feathers); forehead and more or less of forecrown sooty gray to white (varying racially and individually in depth of color); lores and auricular region dusky; sides of neck grayish, many individuals with an indefinite dull grayish band across the hindneck; anterior lower surface sooty gray, tipped narrowly with dull grayish white; lower breast, abdomen, and undertail coverts white, in some streaked indefinitely with sooty gray; sides, underwing coverts, and axillars dark sooty gray. Immature (both sexes), like female but duller above, with glossy area mainly on crown; wing coverts and secondaries tipped narrowly with dull grayish brown; collar across hindneck usually distinct. The Purple Martin is widely distributed in the nesting season from Baja California, and the mountain areas in the central plateau of Mexico; northward irregularly through the United States to Vancouver Island and southern British Columbia, and central eastern Canada. Following the breeding season, adult and immature martins gather at night in tree roosts that may include hundreds (even thousands) of individuals. At the end of August and in early September these groups disappear as the birds move southward to wintering grounds in South America. In spring when they return north they appear individually or in small groups on their nesting grounds. Two geographic races have long been recognized, the nominate form, Progne subis subis, being the breeding bird found widely through the United States north to south-central Canada. The slightly smaller and paler subspecies, Progne subis hesperia, is the nesting form of Baja FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 23 California and a western montane race has been described by Behle (Condor, 1968, p. 166) as Progne subis arboricola, with the type lo- cality at ‘Payson Lakes, 8300 feet elevation, 12 miles southeast Payson, Utah County, Utah.” The assigned nesting range is from the Wasatch and Pavant Mountains of Utah, south to Arizona from the Mogollon Plateau to the Chiricahua Mountains. It is described as larger than subis, with the female like hesperia in paler color. Wing measurements of specimens that I have collected in northwestern Utah are as follows: Males, 152.0-157.0 (154.7); females, 144.0-152.0 (148.0) mm. In fall migration, Paynter (Auk, 1953, p. 347), at the end of August and the beginning of September 1952, recorded Purple Martins in small number in southward migration through the Caribbean islets on the Campeche Bank north of the Yucatan Peninsula. Russell (A. O. U. Orn. Mon., no. 1, 1964, p. 130) noted them as “regular transients” through British Honduras in spring and fall. Monroe (A. O. U. Orn. Mon. no. 7, 1968, p. 278) found them fairly common in spring and fall on the Caribbean side of Honduras. From October 8 to 12, he recorded several males in the Choluteca-Namasigte region of the Pacific Coast. Martins are passage migrants spring and fall through Panama, but as yet in detail are relatively little known. The first two subspecies are recorded in Panama from specimens. The third may be found also among the migrants, since Purple Martins as a species pass the period of northern winter in Brazil. Dr. Eugene Eisenmann has furnished the following summary of occurrence in Panama from his personal observations and those of other observers sent him. The records are based partly on female and immature individuals, which in life differ from the resident Gray- breasted Martin (Progne chalybea chalybea) in larger size, and in pale area on the side of the neck and often on the forehead. In the Caribbean area of the Isthmus, in southward flight this martin has been recorded both in small groups and in flocks of 40 to 5000 birds, from August 3 to September 15, at Almirante, Bocas del Toro (N. G. Smith), near Coco Solo, Coco Solito, and Gatun Lake near Gamboa, August 5 and September 21 (FE. S. Morton), Barro Colorado Island (Willis), Gatun Dam, Canal Zone; Puerto Pilon, Colon (Ambrose). Reports from the Pacific slope are few: Anton and Penomomé, Coclé, September 18 (H. Loftin, E. Tyson), between Tocuman and Plata- nales, eastern Province of Panama, September 10 ( Pujals et al.) , south- western Canal Zone, one September 12 (R. Ryan). The spring migration northward is little known. At Almirante, Bocas del Toro, on February 18, 1958, during a steady rain, between 24 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A 35 and 40 Purple Martins came to perch on dead limbs in the top of a tall tree beside our living quarters. Later, on March 2, during travel by launch along the seaward side of the Valiente Peninsula, I noted others flying northward low over the water. Until March 6, I recorded them daily, resting in dead trees over our house, in flight crossing Almirante Bay, or offshore at Boca del Drago. Between March 19-21, 1962, Charles O. Handley, Jr., at vaniousocalimecwen route from Colon to Isla Escudo de Veraguas, recorded several flying northwest offshore over the Caribbean (Wetmore, Smiths. Misc. Coll, no. 145, 1963, p.2). An “all dark” Progne seen at Gamboa on April 1, 1968, by Ridgely was most probably this species, while 2 such at Bayano Lake on April 24, 1968, with Brown-chested Martins, could be late transients or Southern Martins on their migration. PROGNE SUBIS SUBIS (Linnaeus ) Hirundo subis Linnaeus, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, 1758, p. 192. (Northeastern Manitoba. ) Characters—Size intermediate between P. s. hesperia and P.. s. ar- boricola; female with forehead and forecrown dark gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range), wing 145.2- 150.3 (146.6), tail 71.2-78.4 (74.2) culmen from base 13.1-14.8 (13.8), tarsus 15.0-15.7 (15.3) mm. I*emales (10 from the breeding range), wing 141.0-146.5 (144.5), tail 66.2-73.6 (70.1), culmen from base 14.2-15.4 (14.9), tarsus 15.2- 1.529) (Ol 523))) sacien. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. This is the most widely distributed of the races. It is known in Panama definitely from the fol- lowing specimens: Coco Solito, Canal Zone, male, collected August 5, 1955; female, August 3, 1956 (J. E. Ambrose, specimens in American Museum of Natural History); Almirante, Bocas del Toro, 2 males, 1 female, February 18, 1958 (A. Wetmore, in the Smithsonian collec- tions ). The type locality for the species given by Linnaeus (from Edwards) as “ad sinum Hudsonis,’ Hudson Bay, is so listed in the A. O. U. Checklist (1957, p. 365). L.L. Snyder’ (Can: Field-Nat ave 77 ae am pp. 128-129) reports that “Edwards’ pre-Linnaean descriptions and illustrations were based on specimens collected by James Isham be- tween the years 1732 and 1745. ... When Isham lived in the New World he was stationed mostly at York Factory, but was briefly at Prince of Wales Fort (=Churchill).”’ From this data Snyder cites the type locality as “northeastern Manitoba.” FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 25 PROGNE SUBIS HESPERIA Brewster Progne subis hesperia Brewster, Auk, vol. 6, no. 2, April 1889, p. 92. (Sierra de la Laguna, Baja California, Mexico.) Characters —Adult male, like nominate subis but smaller; female and immature male averaging paler in general coloration; foreneck, breast, and sides more extensive, white to pale grayish white. Measurements.—Males (10 from Baja California) , wing 140.5-145.0 (142.2), tail 65.0-70.3 (67.7), culmen from base 13.4-15.9 (14.8), tarsus 14.9-15.9 (15.2) mm. Females (6 from Baja California), wing 136.1-140.7 (138.2), tail 62.1-68.0 (66.6), culmen from base 13.5-15.6 (14.8), tarsus 14.8-15.5 (15.1) mm. Passage migrant to and from winter quarters in South America. Known definitely in Panama from a male in immature plumage in the American Museum of Natural History, collected by R. R. Benson, at Cocoplum, Bocas del Toro, October 27, 1927. Zimmer (Amer. Mus. Nov., no. 1723, 1955, pp. 4, 5) listed this specimen, but with information available at the time was uncertain as to the characters of hesperia. The bird, on examination, is an immature male in good plumage, with the paler coloration of hesperia, evidently a bird from the preceding summer. With a wing measuring 143.6 mm, it is within the size limits accepted for this race. An early report of this race in migration is that of Richmond (Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 16, 1893, p. 485). He collected a pair of Purple Martins September 13, 1892, in eastern Nicaragua, on a banana plan- tation on the Rio Escondido 50 miles above Bluefields, from ‘“‘a flock of six or eight which had settled in the top of a dead tree during a shower.” These 2 specimens (in the Smithsonian) belong to the sub- species hesperia and mark the first record for migrants of this form. Wing measurement for the male is 144.1 mm, for the female, 133.6 mm. PROGNE ELEGANS Baird: Southern Martin, Golondrina Negra Progne elegans Baird, Rev. Amer. Birds, May 1865, pp. 274 (in Key), 275. (Ver- mejo River, Paraquay = Rio Bermejo, Argentina.) Closely similar in appearance to Progne subis, but on average slightly smaller; in adult male blue sheen faintly duller, less brilliant; female more heavily marked below and lacking pale forehead and sides of neck; tail more deeply forked than in subis. Description.—Length 175-185 mm. Male, with concealed white on sides and flanks like swbis, but with undertail coverts duller, less clearly 26 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 white; breast and lower undersurface much more heavily marked with dusky, lacking pale area on sides of neck and forehead. Immature male like female but with more blue sheen above and often on sides. Measurements.—Males (10 from Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay), wing 137.8-142.5 (139.9), tail 60.5-82.8 (73.7), culmen from base 12.2-15.4 (14.0), tarsus 15.4-17.8 (16.5) mm. Iemales (10 from Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina), wing 132.0- 14.0 (135.2) tail 65.7-77.8 (71.2), culmen from base 12.0-15.4 (13.8), tarsus 15.0-16.7 (16.0) mm. Casual; one definite occurrence in eastern San Blas. Breeds from the highlands of Bolivia and Argentina south to Chubut; in the austral winter regularly north to northern Brazil and Suriname. The single record for Panama is a specimen (in the University of Michigan Museum of Zoology) from Obaldia (Puerto Obaldia), San Blas, collected July 14, 1931, by Wedel, with sex marked “2? ONE” (apparently in error). The bird is immature, with longer wing and tail feathers much worn, in partial molt to adult stage. A few scattered feathers on the left side of the crown above the eye, and others in the tertials and wing coverts, are those of the dark blue male plumage. Though on casual glance the specimen resembles the female sex, on close scrutiny it appears to be a male beginning the change from juve- nile dress to that of the adult. (For the record of this specimen, see Eisenmann, Auk, 1959, pp. 528-532.) It is identified as elegans, as would be expected. While Peters (Checkl. Birds World, vol. 9, 1960, p. 88, following Hellmayr, 1935) includes this bird of eastern South America as con- specific with Progne modesta of the Galapagos, the latter form in series is much smaller, and also lacks the partly concealed white of sides and flanks found in P. subis and P. elegans. Progne elegans here is given separate specific status. The form murphyi, named by Chapman (Amer. Mus. Nov., no. 187, 1925, p. 6), from the coast of Peru, possibly may connect the two, but this needs further checking (the Smithsonian at present has no specimens ). There have been observations in June and July of 1958 and 1970 (Ridgely, 1976, p. 262) and on April 24, 1976 (Ridgely, in litt.) of all dark Progne in central or eastern Panama, dates when the northern migratory P. subis is very unlikely and when the southern migratory P. elegans may well occur (see under P. subis). Although separation of adult males in the field seems impracticable, females and immatures are often distinguishable, and some reports of probable adult males of FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 27 P. elegans include observations of accompanying Progne that had characters of females or immatures of P. elegans. Eisenmann believes P. elegans to be an irregular migrant in small numbers to Panama. PROGNE TAPERA FUSCA (Vieillot): Brown-chested Martin; Golondrina Parda Hirundo fusca Vieillot, Nouv. Dict. Hist. Nat., nouv. ed., vol. 14, September 1817, D210. (Paraguay.) One of the larger swallows; white on throat and abdomen; a dark band across the breast; a few blackish spots in center of breast and abdomen. Description.—Length 155-170 mm. Adult (sexes alike), above dull dark brown, including side of head and wing coverts, the feathers edged indistinctly with lighter brown; wings and tail somewhat blacker; secondaries tipped narrowly with white; throat, lower breast, abdo- men, and undertail coverts white; sides and a broad band across upper breast dark brown; a series of spots on the tips of the lower central breast feathers dark brown to nearly black. A male of this race collected at Kilometer 80, west of Puerto Pinasco, Paraguay, September 18, 1920, had the bill, tarsus, toes, and claws black; iris bone brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil, and Colombia), wing 134.6-143.0 (139.2), tail 64.4-68.0 (65.9), culmen from base 13.9-15.2 (14.6), tarsus 13.4-15.1 (14.6) mm. Females (10 from Argentina and Uruguay), wing 131.0-139.9 (134.9), tail 61.8-66.5 (64.0), culmen from base 13.3-15.6 (14.5), tarsus 14.0-14.9 (14.4) mm. The winter migrants that come to Panama often have the wings and tail worn, or are in renewal after molt, so that their measurements may differ from those listed above. Austral winter migrant from South America, where it nests from eastern Bolivia and central Brazil south to northern Argentina, Para- guay, and southern Uruguay. Recorded from April to October in the Canal Zone and the savanna region of eastern Province of Panama. This southern form of the Brown-chested Martin, long recorded as a winter visitor to northern South America, now regularly extends its migratory flights to Panama. The species was first reported for Pan- ama by Eugene Eisenmann (Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 117, 1952, p. 46) from 3 recorded at the Barro Colorado Island laboratory, Canal Zone, July 4, 1949. In July, 1949 and 1951, he observed many about the city of Panama, and in the Canal Zone. Since then the species has 28 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 been reported regularly, although numbers vary greatly from year to year. The earliest specimens known from the Republic are 2 males collected by R. R. Benson near Tocumen, eastern Province of Panama, August 21, 1931 (received by the Smithsonian in a collection presented in 1954). The main group of migrants appears to arrive in the last week of April or in early May (with one seen by me April 5, 1954, at Pedro Miguel, Canal Zone, as an early date). Sometimes in late April flocks of hundreds can be seen in the Caribbean side of the Canal Zone. The birds are present in numbers through September, with a few remaining later (18 seen October 26, 1955, by J. E. Ambrose). They have been recorded most commonly in open areas of the Canal Zone, and the adjacent Province of Panama and also west to western Chiriqui. At evening they may join Gray-breasted Martins to spend the night in communal roosts. Eisenmann reports seeing them commonly during June, July, and August in some years on the Pacific slope of western Panama, includ- ing Coclé (Penonomeé, Anton), Veraguas (near Santiago), Chiriqui (Remedios, David, and many other lowland localities). On the Carib- bean slope he observed several as far west as Changuinola, Bocas del Toro, on June 30, 1956 (N. G. Smith noted 3 or 4 there on September 3, 1964) and as far east as Rio Piedras, Colon. There seem to be no reports from the Azuero Peninsula, San Blas, or Darién, but this prob- ably indicates absence of observers in open areas during the season of occurrence. In August 1954 Eisenmann found them exceptionally abundant in open areas—greatly exceeding in numbers the aggregate of all other swallows seen; flocks of several hundreds often perched together on wires, and thousands had been noted in one day (August 9 in Coclé). By early September, numbers were much reduced, although Major Chapelle noted as many as 80 on September 18 on the Pacific slope of the Canal Zone, but numbers kept dropping until he saw his last Brown- chested Martin that year on October 16 (a lone bird perched with Gray-breasted Martins). Although Eisenmann has observed this species in Panama (since he first recognized it in 1949) whenever he has visited that country from May through early September, he has never seen numbers approaching those in 1954. In 1972 (August 2-4) Ridgely reports seeing flocks of hundreds around FE! Llano near the Bayano River in eastern Province of Panama. He saw 5 on January 2, 1974, west of Rio Hato, Coclé—evidently birds that had failed to migrate to the breeding grounds. FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 29 The brown upper surface and the band across the breast in this mar- tin present much the same color pattern as that of the much smaller Bank Swallow. In their winter flocks these martins are active in cir- cling in the air over wire lines and other perches. In the main, the migrants are silent. On their nesting grounds in Argentina | have heard them giving low calls, chu chu chup, that have little carrying power. Baird (Rev. Amer. Birds, 1865, pp. 272, 383) separated this species under the generic name Phaeoprogne, distinguished from Progne by slightly forked tail, with the tips of the feathers rounded, and weaker bill and legs, with a line of feathers on the inner margin of the tarsus for two-thirds its length. Sharpe (Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., vol. 10, 1885, p. 172) cited “P. tapera” as the type of Phaeoprogne. Zimmer (Amer. Mus. Nov., no. 1723, 1955, pp. 9-10) recognized the genus as valid, with two forms listed as races under tapera, the older of two names. The characters on which the genus Phaeoprogne was proposed by Baird are slight, so that it was not recognized as distinct from Progne by Mayr in his revision of Peters’s account of the Hirundinidae (Check-list Birds of the World, vol. 9, 1960, p. 85). The nominate race, Progne tapera tapera (Linnaeus), has the throat less extensively white, with the gray of the breast extending on the lower foreneck, and without the dusky black spots down the center of the lower breast and upper abdomen. It appears to be resident from the Caribbean coast and the Magdalena Valley, Colombia, to the Guianas and south to Peru and northern Brazil. NEOCHELIDON TIBIALIS MINIMA Chapman: White-thighed Swallow, Golondrina Muslos Blancos FIGURE 2 Neochelidon tibialis minimus Chapman, Amer. Mus. Nov., no. 138, October 18, 1924, p. 9. (Juntas de Tamana, Choco, Colombia.) Small; upper surface wings and tail dull black; underneath dull brown; feathered area of lower leg white. Description.—Adult (sexes alike), upper surface of body dull, some- what brownish, black; loral area, wings, and tail dull black; undersur- face, including underwing coverts, grayish brown; feathers of lower leg (slightly developed as a tuft) white. Immature, feathers of lower surface faintly edged with dull white. A male, collected at the head of the Rio Guabal, Coclé, July 28, 1962, had the iris dark brown; bill black; tarsus and toes fuscous-black; claws black. A female near the Peluca Hydrographic Station, Coldn, 30 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A February 23, 1961, had the iris dark mouse brown; maxilla and tip of mandible black; base of mandible fuscous-black; tarsus and toes fuscous-brown; claws black. Measurements—Males (10 from northern Coclé, eastern Province of Panama, San Blas, and Darién), wing 80.5-88.5 (84.8), tail 37.5- 45.8 (40.5), culmen from base 7.1-8.4 (7.7), tarsus 9.2-11.0 (10.1) mm. Females (10 from eastern Colon, Darién, and San Blas), wing 80.5- 88.1 (85.1), tail 35.7-46.4 (41.4), culmen from base 7.2-10.3 (8.2), tarsus 9.0-10.5 (9.9) mm. Ficure 2.—White-thighed Swallow, Golondrina Muslos Blancos, Neochelidon tibialis minima. Resident. Found locally in pairs or small flocks in humid forest areas of central and eastern Panama; on the Pacific slope, in the high levels of Cerro Azul, especially around the lake; and in Darien, on the lower Rio Sambu, the Rio Tuira at the mouth of the Paya, at Cana, along the Rio Pucro to the village of Pucro; and around Cerro Tacar- cuna from the base to 1250 m; on the Caribbean side, in northern Cocleé; in the Canal Zone near the lower Rio Chagres; and eastern San Blas near Armila. On February 28, 1962, I collected a male from a small flock near the head of the Rio Guabal, northern Coclé. Ridgely (1976, p. 262) saw 6 at El Valle, Coclé, April 27, 1969. On January 13, 1976, J. J. FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 31 Pujals observed 1 above Santa Fé, Veraguas. In the Canal Zone it may be found daily along the Pipeline Road, in the Fort Sherman-San Lorenzo area, and along the Achiote Road. In 1961, in the region behind Madden Lake, these swallows were fairly common along the Rio Boqueron in February, and on the Rio Pequeni in March. On Cerro Azul, C. O. Handley, Jr., found them numerous in June 1957, and the following year R. S. Crossin collected 1 at the lake on August 12. Near Armila, eastern San Blas, I found them rather common in late February and early March at the edge of forest, back of the Indian farms. In the Tuira Basin, Darién, in March 1959, I saw a flock of 30 near the mouth of the Rio Paya. In late January and February 1964, they were fairly prevalent near the village of Pucro on the Rio Pucro; and on March 2, we caught 3 in a mist net set at 250 m on the north fork of this river, in the higher levels of Cerro Tacarcuna. Others were seen in March, lower down at the old village site near the base of the moun- tain. Distinguished always by tiny size, they ranged in small flocks, cours- ing over clearings or above the broader, open stretches of streams. Their flight often seems flitting and irregular compared to that of larger swallows with which they associate. They sometimes hawk for insects over the canopy with Chaetura swifts. Occasionally, I noticed them bathing by dipping to the surface of open stretches of water as they circled on the wing. At rest they gather separately from larger swallows, on small branches of dead trees above water or at the border of small openings in the forest. In my experience they were silent. Specimens collected from January to April seemed to be in a resting stage after the nesting season, as some were molting slightly over the body. A female taken by E. A. Goldman at Cana had the stomach crammed with fragments of tiny beetles, hemiptera, and hymenoptera.. Two col- lected in the Canal Zone area (Strauch, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 9.1 and 9.2 g. The only note on nesting seen is that of Griscom (Amer. Mus. Nov. no. 282, 1927, p.7). At the end of February 1927, when he was travel- ing by yacht, “two or three pairs were found on the Sambu River nest- ing in holes in the river bank directly under Indian huts. The birds were remarkably tame and confiding.” No account of the nest and eggs is known to me. Eisenmann, however, has seen pairs guarding wood- pecker holes in slender dead trees from at least early April to June, and has never noted nesting in banks. On September 14, 1965, in a wooded 32 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 ridge near Cerro Azul he saw a full grown (flying) juvenal being fed by an adult; by this period many birds were in small flocks. NOTIOCHELIDON CYANOLEUCA (Vieillot): Blue-and-white Swallow, Golondrina Barranquera Azul Small; undersurface from throat to abdomen white; above, dark steel blue. Description —Length 110-125 mm. Adult (sexes alike), tail mod- erately forked; dorsal surface, including the scapulars, iridescent dark steel blue; lores and space immediately behind eye black; wings and tail dull black; undersurface with throat, breast, and abdomen white; up- per sides black; undertail coverts black (nominate race cyanoleuca), or black and white (patagonica). Immature, upper surface dull sooty brown on crown and back; else- where, including wings and tail, dull brown; throat, band across breast, and sides wood brown; throat, breast, and abdomen white; undertail coverts dull brown, or mixed dull brown and white. The dark (or partly dark) undertail coverts distinguish this species in life from the Mangrove Swallow, which also is small, with clear white undersurface, but with this color including also all of the under- tail coverts. In addition, the Mangrove Swallow has a white rump and a short, narrow white supraloral, lacking in cyanoleuca. Two geographic races are found in Panama. The nominate form breeds in Panama, and in South America, from Colombia to southern Brazil, Uruguay, and northern Argentina. The more southern breed- ing form, N. c. patagonica, is recorded as nesting from the mountains in northern Argentina to northern Tierra del Fuego. In the period of southern winter, patagonica moves northward, and with it move the more southern populations of nominate cyanoleuca. It is probable that the flocks recorded irregularly in Panama during the breeding season comprise migrants of both races. NOTIOCHELIDON CYANOLEUCA CYANOLEUCA (Vieillot) Firundo cyanoleuca Vieillot, Nouv. Dict. Hist. Nat., nouv. ed., vol. 14, September 1817, p. 509. (Paraguay. ) Characters.—Adult, with all of the undertail coverts black; under- wing coverts dark to blackish grayish brown. Immature, undertail coverts dark brown, in some individuals tipped lightly with white; underwing coverts dark brown. An adult female, collected at 1350 m along the Rio Chiriqui Viejo, FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 35 beyond El Volcan, Chiriqui, March 21, 1954, had the iris dark brown; tarsus, toes, and claws fuscous. Another adult female, taken at 1900 m on the west base of Volcan de Chiriqui, March 4, 1965, also had the iris dark brown, tarsus and toes dark brown, claws fuscous-black. Measurements.—Males (10 from western Panama and Costa Rica), wing 92.0-99.0 (94.3), tail 45.4-52.6 (49.0), culmen from base 6.7-8.0 (7.2), tarsus 9.1-10.6 (9.8) mm. Females (10 from western Panama and Costa Rica), wing 87.5-97.1 (91.5), tail 41.8-52.6 (48.0), culmen from base 6.0-7.9 (6.8), tarsus 9.2-10.6 (9.9) mm. Resident. Common over open areas in the highlands of Chiriqui above 1000 m elevation, ranging to the higher levels; reported on upper Rio Chiriqui (Fortuna Dam site), central Chiriqui (Ridgely) re- corded on Cerro Flores, eastern Chiriqui, and also in the district of Calovévora, northern Veraguas; casual at Gatun, Canal Zone. It is also common at Cerro Campana, western Province of Panama, where Ridgely first found it in December 1967; it was then already numerous and had probably been there for some time. There is a specimen in the American Museum, taken by Griscom’s party east of the main mountain range in western Chiriqui on Cerro Flores, north of Remedios. A male and 2 females in the British Mu- seum, secured by Arce, are labeled Calovévora, northern Veraguas, 1869. These small swallows, common over open areas, come regularly about houses and farm buildings. In several seasons I found them nest- ing on ledges and under the eaves of the house that we occupied at Palo Santo beyond El Volcan, Chiriqui. Hundreds also nested on rock cliffs on the high mountain slopes to 2800 m on El Bart. Nests were made of dried grasses and other vegetation, filling the crevices that they occu- pied. Some of the structures seemed loosely built, as on several oc- casions | found broken eggs that had fallen beneath the nests. Skutch (Auk, 1952, pp. 393-405, and Pac. Coast Avif. no. 34, 1960, pp. 279-280), in detailed studies in southwestern Costa Rica, found them using any available cavities, from those in rotted dead tree trunks to artificial shelters under the eaves of houses, crevices in walls, or occasionally tunnels dug by animals in banks of earth along trails and highways. The thatched roofs on houses and other buildings in country areas also furnish shelter. He reported sets of 2, 3, and 4 eggs. These were glossy white, without markings. Measurements of 6 eggs were 16.3-16.7 X 11.5-12.2 mm. He recorded that laying begins in March, with both male and female 34 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A incubating and caring for the young. At night, one parent slept on the eggs while the other rested on the rim of the nest. The newly hatched young have a sparse covering of light gray down. A second brood may come in June. When mated, the pair remains together throughout the year following the breeding season. In most of their activities, I have noted that these swallows are mainly silent. The song is described as “a thin, weak, long-continued trill which slides upward at the end.” One egg in the British Museum collection that I examined, taken by Underwood on Volcan Irazu, Costa Rica, April 25, 1901, was white, without markings and measured 16.9X12.6 mm. The maximum sizes (listed by Meise in Schonwetter, Handb. Ool., pt. 17, 1970, p. 193) which range larger, to 20 x 14 mm, in part may include specimens from South American localities where nominate cyanoleuca is not found. Fleas parasitic on birds are little known, so it is of interest to report one captured on a specimen of this northern race of the Blue-and-white Swallow, in March 1962, by Vernon J. Tipton and C. L. Hayward. In a report on the fleas (Siphonaptera) of Panama by Tipton and Eustorgio Mendez (in Wenzel and Tipton, Ectoparasites of Panama, Field Museum of Natural History, 1966, p. 310) this parasite is listed as Dasypsyllus sasius veneguelensis (1. Fox and Anduze), with the comment that it was abundant in swallows’ nests, both in buildings and in earth banks. “In one hole in an earth bank the fleas were very numerous in the sand below the scanty nesting material.” NOTIOCHELIDON CYANOLEUCA PATAGONICA (D’Orbigny and Lafresnaye ) Hirundo patagonica D’Orbigny and Lafresnaye, Syn. Av., in Rev. Zool., ann. 7, 1837, p. 69. ( Patagonia.) Characters.—Adult, with only the lower half of the undertail coverts black, the upper area being white like the rest of the undersurface; underwing coverts paler grayish brown. Immature, with underwing coverts much paler gray; undertail co- verts paler with tips more extensively white. Measurements.—Males (10 from Darién, Argentina, Peru, and Ven- ezuela), wing 101.2-111.9 (104.5), tail 50.1-55.6 (52.6), culmen from base 7.1-8.5 (7.8), tarsus 11.1-12.4 (11.8) mm. Females (10 from Darién, Argentina, and Chile), wing 99.2-105.6 (102.8), tail 44.7-57.1 (48.7), culmen from base 7.5-9.5 (8.2), tarsus 11.4-12.6 (12.0) mm. Migrant from southern South America; of irregular occurrence. FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 35 The first published record for Panama is by Chapman (Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 55, 1926, p. 558) of an adult male in the Prince- ton Museum collected by “J. P. Chapin at Juan Mina, Rio Chagres, Panama, July 17, 1923, while a member of the Charles Rogers Prince- ton Expedition.” In the British Museum there are 4 earlier specimens from Panama—3 immature birds marked as taken by McLeannan and the fourth, an adult, though not labeled, from its style of preparation evidently also from this collector. One of the immature individuals is marked Lion Hill Station, the others are indicated only as from Pan- ama. It is probable that these were sent by the collector to Salvin fol- lowing McLeannan’s visit to Panama in 1873, as they were received in the Salvin and Godman collection, the 3 immature birds having been presented in 1885, the adult in 1888. A male and female in the Academy of Natural Sciences collected by Jewel on July 7 and 16, 1911, from flocks at Gatun, Canal Zone, were attributed to the nominate form, but proved to be undoubtedly of the migratory southern race patagonica when reexamined by James Bond and R. Meyer de Schauensee (Bond to Fisenmann, im litt.). At Cana, on Cerro Pirre, Darién, on May 22, 1912, E. A. Goldman recorded “‘a flock containing hundreds seen perched on wires. Later in the day at least 100 were sitting close together on a spot where the ground was bare, and where I was unable to find anything to attract them.” The 2 specimens that he collected are of the present race. On April 5, 1954, I saw a swallow resting on high wires opposite the fire station at Pedro Miguel, Canal Zone, that appeared definitely to be patagonica. From its elevated position facing me, I had clear view of the undertail coverts, which showed the restriction of the black color to the lower area that marks this subspecies. Guy Tudor saw one over the Bayano River below Chepo on April 2, 1971 (Ridgely, im litt.). Farther north, migrant individuals of patagonica have been collected from groups of other swallows by Howell, July 9, 1954, at El Recreo, Depto. Zelaya, southeastern Nicaragua (Condor, 1955, p. 188), and by Alvarez del Toro, May 24, 1954, at Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas, Mexico (Condor, 1957, p. 268). On June 17, 1971, Eisenmann, with J. J. Pujals, carefully examined a group of swallows on a lowland roadside telegraph wire between Chepo and La Capetana, eastern Province of Panama, that included 1 South American migrant P. tapera fusca, T. albilinea albilinea, and 11 N. c. patagonica. Ridgely reports seeing what he believes were pata- gonica at El Llano, eastern Province of Panama, on August 2, 1972, (6 birds, adults and immatures) and 2 on August 5 at Empire Range 36 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 near Pedro Miguel Locks. N.G. Smith (Willis and Eisenmann, 1979, Smiths. Cont. Zool., no 291, p. 24) saw 4 at Barro Colorado Island, Canal Zone, on August 20, 1972, that were probably of this race. STELGIDOPTERYX RUFICOLLIS (Vieillot): Rough-winged Swallow, Golondrina Ala de Sierra FIGURE 3 Hirundo ruficollis Vieillot, Nouv. Dict. Hist. Nat., nouv. ed., vol. 14, September 1817, p. 523. (Bresil = vicinity of Rio de Janeiro.) Above, grayish to blackish brown, darker on remiges and rectrices than on back; throat light brown to grayish white, abdomen white to yellowish white. Description.—Length 125-132 mm. Adult (sexes alike), above gray- ish to blackish brown; throat variable in the subspecies from cinnamon- buff to grayish white; breast light brown, rest of undersurface white. Rump varying in subspecies from brownish to whitish. Adult male (and female, to less degree) with the tips of the barbs on the outer border of the first primary stiffened and recurved, so that they are roughened to touch. These are the most common and widely distributed of the swallows of Panama, ranging in open areas from the lowlands to the slopes of the mountains. In forested regions they occur along streams and around clearings. The whitish-rumped resident subspecies is seen often in pairs along roads, especially where these are bordered by cut banks in which there are shallow cavities that may shelter nest sites. In the period of north- ern winter the 2 dark-rumped migrant races from the north range in small flocks along the larger streams through the lowlands. The taxonomy of this complex remains in dispute, both as to the number of species and subspecies to be recognized. Here all forms are treated as conspecific. [Stiles (Auk, 1981, p. 282) has studied the systematics of these swallows in Costa Rica, concluding that 2 species are represented. Be- cause he cites Wetmore’s unpublished manuscript for the present vol- ume, we have left Wetmore’s account essentially unaltered. Basically, there are 2 distinct forms of Stelgidopteryx: a northern one that is uni- form brown above and mostly whitish below (serripennis group), and a more colorful southern one with a white rump, rufous throat, and yellowish underparts (ruficollis group). Stiles maintains that the 2 groups behave as distinct species in Costa Rica, with serripennis being FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 37 found in montane regions and ruficollis at lower elevations. There are localities where they evidently form mixed colonies without inter- grading, although it would seem that specimen evidence for lack of intergradation at these sites is scant. The problem remains with what to do with the form decolor, which has a rather circumscribed range, being found along the southern half of the Pacific coast of Costa Rica south and east in Panama to Veraguas. Stiles recognized decolor as a subspecies of Stelgidopteryx ruficollis, but its characters are exactly those one would expect of intergrades between ruficollis uro- pygialis and serripennis; such an interpretation is reinforced by the great variability observed in decolor. Based purely on museum speci- mens, one could argue that serripennis and ruficollis represent former isolates that in coming in contact along the Pacific Coast have formed a hybrid zone (there apparently are no pure parental types in the range of “decolor’’), whereas in their area of contact in the montane regions of the Atlantic slope they perhaps behave differently. More fieldwork and collecting will definitely be needed before this problem can be re- solved satisfactorily. S. L. O.] Ficure 3.—Portion of outer primary feather of the Rough-winged Swallow, Golondrina Ala de Sierra, Stelgidopteryx ruficollis, showing hooklike leading barbs. STELGIDOPTERYX RUFICOLLIS SERRIPENNIS (Audubon) Hirundo serripennis Audubon, Orn. Biogr., vol. 4, 1838, p. 593. (Charleston, South Carolina.) Characters —Throat grayish white; rump and upper tail coverts grayish brown concolor with back; pale edgings on secondaries re- duced in extent, and darker, less definitely white; upper surface some- what darker; wings dull black; tail brownish black. Measurements.—Males (10, taken in the breeding range, March to 38 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 June), wing 105.2-111.4 (108.6), tail 47.0-50.6 (48.6), culmen from base 9.8-10.6 (10.2), tarsus 10.3-11.7 (11.2) mm. Females (10, taken in the breeding range, April to July 2), wing 99.7- 104.3 (102.0), tail 45.3-49.5 (47.0), culmen from base 9.3-10.6 (10.2), tarsus 10.3-11.8 (11.2) mm. Winter migrant from the north, found locally along the lower chan- nels of the larger rivers. This is the breeding form of the eastern United States, southern Ontario, and southwestern Quebec. In Pan- ama, in the season of migration and the northern winter it is found regularly in small flocks along the larger stream channels in the low- lands. Museum specimens examined include 5 males and 12 females, collected from December 14 to March 8, in Bocas del Toro (Almirante, Changuinola), western Colon (Rio Indio), and northern Canal Zone (Juan Mina, above Gamboa, and Gattn). [I entertain doubts about separating the subspecies pulpit and psammochroa from serripennis but A. R. Phillips recognizes all three and has identified specimens of each from Panama. Many of those identified as psammochroa by Wetmore were considered to belong to serripennis by Phillips. We have not located an account or synonymy for the race fulvipennis among Wetmore’s manuscript material and it is not clear whether its omission was an oversight. In his card file is a hand-written entry (dated July 1958) indicating that he considered a specimen from Calovévora, Veraguas, in the British Museum to be re- ferable to fulvipennis, but in the Smithsonian collections the only speci- mens so labeled by Wetmore are a few very old ones from Costa Rica. An adult female specimen taken by Wetmore on June 10, 1953, at Llano del Jardino, 15 miles east of Sona, Veraguas, he originally identi- fied as uropygialis and then as a hybrid between uropygialis and fulvi- pennis. Wetmore was doubtless influenced by the mid-summer date, however. As the specimen shows no trace of any of the characters of uropygialis, it would have to be assigned to serripennis in the broad sense. It may represent a bird that simply failed to migrate north in the springs Ss: 1o @p| STELGIDOPTERYX RUFICOLLIS PSAMMOCHROA Griscom Stelgidopteryx ruficollis psammochrous Griscom, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 11, December 14, 1929, p. 72. (Oposura, Sonora.) Characters.—Like Stelgidopteryx ruficollis serripenms, but averag- ing slightly paler on upper surface. Scapulars, upper wing coverts, and outer web of secondaries and inner primaries edged pale reddish brown. FAMILY HIRUNDINIDAE 39 Measurements.—Males (10 taken in breeding season, March to May in southern Arizona), wing 104.5-111.5 (108.6), tail 45.3-50.0 (47.5), culmen from base 8.5-10.8 (9.7), tarsus 10.2-11.2 (10.6) mm. Iemales (10 taken in breeding season, April to June, in Baja Cali- fornia, southern California, and southern Arizona), wing 100.2-107.4 (104.4), tail 42.9-48.7 (46.3), culmen from base 9.1-10.7 (9.9), tarsus 10.2-11.5 (10.9) mm. Winter migrant from the north, found locally from December to March along the lower channels of the larger rivers. Recorded from specimens in western Colon (Rio Indio, Chilar) and the northern Canal Zone (above Gamboa, near Juan Mina). This is the form that breeds in the western United States and southwestern Canada. The series of 12 specimens taken in Panama from small flocks during January, February, and March in 1952, 1955, and 1961 includes 9 females and 3 males. In 1952, in February and March, I found these swallows abundant along the lower course of the Rio Indio in western Colon, in small flocks that fed over the water and the adjacent shore. In the main they ranged apart from the scattered pairs of the resident race uropygualis, which were more common farther inland along the river. STELGIDOPTERYX RUFICOLLIS UROPYGIALIS (Lawrence) Cotyle uropygialis Lawrence, Ibis, ser. 1, vol. 5, no. XVIII, April 1863, p. 181. (Atlantic slope, Canal Zone, Panama.) Stelgidopteryx ruficollis decolor Griscom, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 11, Dec. 14, 1929, p. 69. (Divala, Chiriqui.) Characters.—In general like the northern migrant races, but throat and upper foreneck rufous; darker above; rump slightly to definitely paler than back, shading from light gray at base of feathers to nearly white at tips; breast, sides, flanks, axillars, and underwing coverts light grayish brown; carpal edge of wing barred rather indistinctly with dull white; center of lower breast yellowish white; abdomen and undertail coverts white, in some tipped with black. Immature, with back, wing coverts, and tertials edged (in part indistinctly) with dull cinnamon; rump, sides, and flanks tinged with cinnamon. In a female, taken at El] Llano, eastern Province of Panama, Febru- ary 3, 1962, the iris was wood brown; bill, tarsus, and toes black. In another of the same sex from Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, February 7, 1966, the iris was dark brown, tarsus and toes fuscous, claws black. Measurements.—Males (10 from Canal Zone, eastern Province of 4O BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Panama, and Darién), wing 103.5-112.1 (108.0), tail 47.6-52.5 (50.3), culmen from base 9.1-11.0 (10.2), tarsus 9.6-10.9 (10.1) mm. Females (10 from Canal Zone, San Blas, eastern Province of Pan- ama, and Darién), wing 100.0-104.1 (101.0), tail 45.0-49.0 (47.3), cul- men from base 9.0-9.9 (9.3), tarsus 9.5-10.7 (10.1) mm. Resident. Ranges throughout, from the lowlands to 1500 m in the mountains of Chiriqui. They are seen commonly, singly, in pairs, or at the proper season, with groups of young, over streams or ponds, and also where earthen banks border roads. One or two may be noted among flocks of winter migrant swallows from the north, but in general these residents tend to feed and range apart. In late January 1957, at Mandinga, San Blas, 100 or more circled in loose company at sunset, feeding, and at intervals resting, in the open branches of a dead tree until early dusk, when suddenly they disappeared to sleeping quarters that I did not discover. At sunrise they came again to the tree to rest in the sun. When I collected 5 at random to check their identity on the morning of January 23, I was interested to find that all were females. Throughout the Isthmus these flocks are recorded through February. Then, in pairs or groups of half a dozen, they begin to examine the steep earthen banks along the rivers where later they nest. In the last week of March, along the Rio Jaqué in eastern Darién, they were start- ing to dig nest holes. Soon many were nesting, and through April their breeding season was fully under way throughout their range. In early June, near Sona, in the lowlands of western Veraguas, fully grown young were on the wing. Males at times were protective of their nesting area against intru- sion by other swallows. In late February 1960, on the Brackney farm at Palo Santo, Chiriqui, a pair was preparing to nest in a low bank on the shore of a small impoundment to water farm animals. The male dove constantly at the small Blue-and-white Swallows that came to drink and bathe. On one occasion he also pursued a single Vaux’s Swift that came down to the water. I was intrigued to observe that in the long, swinging circles of their flight, the swift, in escaping, did not out- distance the swallow. Like related swallows, these birds feed on small insects captured in endless circling in the air. The only call that I have heard from them is a low, harsh chip, a sound without great carrying power. I have noted that among this race of the Rough-winged Swallow some dig their nest holes while others may use old burrows made by the local kingfishers. The holes may be in the face of a perpendicular bank along a stream, or along a cut bank beside a roadway, away from water. FAMILY CORVIDAE Al The nest is a fairly compact mass of leaves, straws, and similar ma- terials, with a depression in the upper side for the eggs. These are white and may be from 4 to 6 in number. Most of the published observations of nesting in this swallow deal with the form or forms found in Guate- mala or in Trinidad. According to Belcher and Smooker (Ibis, 1937, pp. 506-507), the subspecies aequalis of Trinidad, similar in size and color pattern to uropygialis of Panama but with whiter rump, white edgings on the longer secondaries and inner primaries, lighter breast and yellow abdomen, has the eggs “immaculate white, smooth-shelled and slightly glossy.’ A set of 3 measured 18X13, 19X13, and 18.5x 12.5 mm. The measurements cited for the race uropygialis in Schon- wetter, Handbuch der Oologie (Lief. 17, 1970, p. 194), of 18.5-20.3 x 13.0-14.5 mm, average somewhat larger. The colors recorded in the description above are those typical of uropygialis in Panama from Darién and San Blas west on both Carib- bean and Pacific slopes through Veraguas; beyond, through Chiriqui and Bocas del Toro, and continuing in Costa Rica and Nicaragua to southeastern Honduras (Howell, Condor, 1972, p. 326). In addition, there is much individual variation toward the duller colored subspecies fulvipennis, found in typical form farther north in Central America. These individuals, with variable, generally paler coloration, were sepa- rated by Griscom as another race, decolor. They are found regularly through the western sector of the Panama range of the normally colored uropygialis and appear to have no valid racial status. Family CORVIDAE: Crows and Jays, Cuervos y Urracas The Corvidae, a family of more than 100 species, are distributed widely through all continents of the World, except Antarctica. It is interesting that the prominent crow-raven group, of large size and mainly black color, found through much of the Old World, even to Australia, in the Americas does not extend south beyond northwestern Nicaragua. The smaller jays range into South America as far as Bo- livia. The jays are omnivorous and feed adeptly in a variety of fashions, even pursuing aerial insects in the manner of a flycatcher. They are usually found in small flocks that move noisily through the woods, traveling at all heights. Nothing seems to be recorded about the nesting behavior of any species in Panama, although such research would prove most rewarding. Not only are the varying degrees of nesting coopera- 42 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A tion in tropical jays of interest, but even within a single species, such as the Brown Jay, the level of participation by morphologically im- mature birds seems to differ by region. KEY TO SPECIES OF CORVIDAE 1. Smaller, wing less than 130 mm; wings and tail extensively blue......... Z Larger, wing more than 160 mm; wings and tail blacker, with little or no tinge Of “DM eer ie ace de See sae Hea Ane thas net a 3 2. Throat and foreneck dull black; crown and back of head light blue; throat black. Azure-hooded Jay, Cyanolyca cucullata cucullata. p. 50 Lower throat, foreneck, and a transverse band between the eyes, extending back narrowly on the side of the crown, light blue. Silvery-throated Jay, Cyanolyca argentigula argentigula. p. 48 3. Foreneck and upper breast deep black; lower breast and abdomen pale yellow; a line on side of jaw and spots above and below eye light blue. Black-chested Jay, Cyanocorax affinis zeledont. p. 45 Foreneck and upper breast dull brownish black, shading to dull white to light brown on rest of lower surface. Brown Jay, Psilorhinus morio cyanogenys. p. 42 PSILORHINUS MORIO CYANOGEWNYS Sharpe. Brown Jay, Pia-pia Psilorhinus cyanogenys Sharpe, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., vol. 3, 1877, p. 140, pl. 9. (Pearl-Bay Lagoon, Mosquito = Laguna de Perlas, Caribbean coast of Nica- ragua. ) Psilorhinus mexicanus captus Kennard and Peters, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 10, August 25, 1927, p. 2. (Chiriquicito, Bocas del Toro, Panama.) Large; generally dull in color, with long-tipped tail; bill black, or in immatures, yellow; short bristly frontal feathers above base of bill ChECE: Description.—Adult (sexes alike), head, neck, and upper breast dark sooty brown, becoming dark grayish brown on back and scapulars, in some, paler on the upper tail coverts; wings and tail deep olive-gray, the inner rectrices usually darker; tail tipped rather broadly with white; lower breast changing to grayish brown, in some the shift in color gradual, in others abrupt; undertail coverts grayish white, occasionally nearly white; underwing coverts and scapulars light gray to dull white. There is a membranous pouch on the upper breast which, when the bird calls, is inflated so that it is briefly visible. Measurements.—Males (9 from Bocas del Toro), wing 178.0-200.0 (184.1), tail 175.0-190.0 (187.9, average of 8), culmen from base 39.6- 45.4 (42.8), tarsus 45.3-49.0 (47.5) mm. Females (7 from Bocas del Toro), wing 180.0-193.0 (188.4), tail FAMILY CORVIDAE 43 172.0-198.0 (185.1, average of 6), culmen from base 40.6-42.7 (41.6), tarsus 46.4-52.2 (48.5) mm. Resident. Fairly common locally through the lowlands of Bocas del Toro, from near the Rio Sixaola west to Chiriqui Grande. Brown Jays range usually in small bands, in the borders of open forest and second growth; they are not found in extensive stands of heavy forest. Commonly they move about under cover among leafy branches where they may not be noticed. They often fly out singly, however, or as a group across open areas, calling loudly and making a sharp popping sound through quick inflation and deflation of the curi- ous air sac exposed on the upper breast. Lawton (in Jansen, 1983, Costa Rican Natural History, pp. 573-574) reports that flocks use 8- to 10-ha home ranges, defending a territory within the home range only when breeding. The limited area where the species is known at present in Panama marks the southern extension of the species, which is found on the Caribbean slope of Central America, north to north- eastern Mexico in Nuevo Leon and to extreme south Texas. It crosses to the Pacific slope only in northwestern Costa Rica. Adult individuals have the bill and feet black. In immature birds these areas are yellow to partially black, the pattern varying apparently according to age. Lawton (in Jansen, 1983, Costa Rican Natural History, pp. 573-574) found that in Costa Rica young members of the flock help build the nest and will occasionally sit in it, but their efforts are irregular. The number of females that contribute eggs to the nest or take part in incu- bation varies. In one case where more than one bird was known to have contributed eggs to the nest, only one bird was seen to incubate or brood. The average clutch size of 30 nests examined by Lawton was 4.5, nearly twice that reported by Skutch (Pacific Coast Avif., no. 30, 1960, pp. 231-257), further suggesting wide variability in the breeding habits of this species. In Guatemala, Skutch recorded a single brood each year, beginning in February and March. The nest site was in trees in pastures or in recent second growth, with the nests high and inaccessible near the tips of long, slender branches. Other locations were in high forks in trees, and in the crowns of banana plants. The bulky nest is made of sticks, with a shallow cup lined with long, fibrous roots pulled by the birds from the earth. Construction, by both male and female, is accompanied by much calling. Lawton and Lawton (Auk, 1980, pp. 631-633) have shown that critical factors in nest-site selection are protection from wind and isolation from predators. Thus, the birds seek sites relatively 44 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 sheltered from wind, but also isolated from other trees that would give predators easier access. Lawton and Lawton found that nests in more wind-protected sites were more likely to be successful than nests in more exposed sites. The eggs are bluish gray “thickly covered with fine brown speckles, which on the thicker end nearly obscure the ground color.” Seven eggs measured from 32.5-36.5X23.8-25.4 mm. The incubation period ranged from 18 to 20 days. The young at hatching have a yellow skin, sometimes darker on the upper surface, and are without down. Bill and feet are yellow, and the inside of the mouth is red. Skutch noted that the bills of the immature birds darkened slowly with age. Lawton and Guindon (Condor, 1981, pp. 27-33) found that all mem- bers of the flock bring food to the nest. Over the course of the nesting season inexperienced young birds become more efficient at bringing ap- propriate food items. The curious inflatable breast sac found in all races of this species of jay appears to have been noted first by Samuel Cabot, Jr. (Journ. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 4, 1844, pp. 460-467), in the race P.m. vociferus in Yucatan. He speaks of their calls as loud and disagreeable and in a male and female that he collected, records “‘a most peculiar formation in the trachea, being a membranous bag, coming off between the rings, about halfway down, and intimately connected with the skin of the neck.” There can be no doubt that he noted the peculiar air sac, though his interpretation of it as connected with the trachea was in error. Lee S. Crandall (Zoologica, vol. 1, no. 18, 1914, p. 337) in observa- tions near Guapiles, on the base of Volcan Turrialba, Costa Rica, in early 1914, made careful observations on the air sac in the field, verified later by data from a captive bird at the New York Zoological Society’s Bronx Zoo. He described the popping noise heard in the field, and in the zoo recorded that the bird “never uttered a vocal note, but distended the cervical sac whenever he was excited, making a popping sound which could be heard at a distance of several yards. On examination of this bird after death, the sac was found lying between the branches of the furculum, 1 mm anterior to their point of union. Deflated, it measured 13 mm from base to tip and 19.5 mm along the base, the tip being rounded. ... The sac communicated directly with the praebronchial or interclavicular air-sac (Saccus interclavicularis ), through a large open- ing in the furcular membrane, and doubtless received its air from this source.” A more detailed account is that of Sutton and Gilbert (Condor, 1942, pp. 160-165, figs. 59, 60) based on observations and specimens FAMILY CORVIDAE A5 from northeastern Mexico. Their illustration of a plucked specimen shows clearly the position of the distended sac, which externally pro- jects from the space between the bifurcation of the two arms of the furcula. This verifies the anatomical details given by Crandall, with the appropriate suggestion that to avoid confusion with terms current for the air sac system in birds it be called the furcular sac. During fieldwork in southern Veracruz, Mexico, in early 1939, I found the nominate race, Psilorhinus m. morio, common, and heard their curious explosive sounds regularly. When they flew overhead, a yellowish spot appeared on the breast, though at rest this was not visible. With birds in the hand I found that the furcular sac was bare except for a few scattered filamentous feathers, mainly on the lower portion. The skin of the upper, anterior half was thin and partly transparent. The thicker-walled lower end, measuring approximately 15x20 mm, was dull buff in color. Posteriorly, the sac narrowed immediately to a slender tube as it entered the breast behind the furcula, and continued thus to its connection with the interclavicular air sac. In jays recently dead, I could inflate and deflate the sac by compressing and releasing the posterior part of the body so that air was forced into it and then withdrawn (Wetmore, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 93, 1943, pp. 298- 299). Hardy, in his revision of the New World jays (Condor, 1969, p. 363) lists the Brown Jay in the genus Cyanocorax, subgenus Psilor- hinus, as Cyanocorax morio. As the curious furcular sac has no known approach in any other species of the family, it seems appropriate to place this jay in a distinct genus as Psilorhinus morio. CYANOCORAX AFFINIS ZELEDONI Ridgway: Black-chested Jay, Chocho FIGURE 4 Cyanocorax affinis zeledom Ridgway, Auk, vol. 16, no. 3, July 1889, p. 255. (Tala- manca, Costa Rica.) Fairly large; head, foreneck, and upper breast black; rest of lower surface pale yellow; wings and tail bluish; tail with a broad white tip. Description.—Adult (sexes alike), head, foreneck, and upper chest black; spot on posterior half of superciliary area, another on posterior half of lower eyelid, and a malar streak, bright blue; nape purplish blue; lower hindneck, back, scapulars, and rump dull, somewhat bluish, brown; wings, upper tail coverts, and tail dull blue, the tail tipped broadly with pale yellowish white. 46 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Juvenile, crown and side of head dull blackish brown; throat, fore- neck, upper breast, hindneck, scapulars, and back dull grayish brown. An adult male taken at Las Palmitas, Los Santos, January 24, 1962, had the eye yellow; bill, tarsus, and toes black. In a fully grown im- mature male shot on the same day, the iris was duller yellow, and the external edge of the gape honey yellow. Other markings were as in the adult. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui to Darién), wing 163.0- 175.0 (167.5), tail 157.0-168.0 (162.1), culmen from base 30.3-36.2 (33.1), tarsus 45.0-52.0 (47.8) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui to Darién), wing 159.0-169.0 (164.3), tail 154.0-161.0 (158.3), culmen from base 31.0-35.9 (33.7), tarsus 47.0-51.9 (50.1) mm. Figure 4.—Black-chested Jay, Chocho, Cyanocorax affinis zeledont. Resident. Common in forested areas (including second growth) throughout the Republic, from near the Costa Rican boundary in Chiri- qui (Divala, Santa Clara) and Bocas del Toro (Rio Sixaola, Changui- nola) including the Azuero Peninsula (Pedasi, Tonosi, Las Palmitas) on both slopes to the Colombian boundary, to 1300 m elevation (near El Volcan and 1600 m (above Boquete at Horqueta, Velo); 600 m on Cerro Pirre (Cana) in Darién. As these jays range in forest and brushy cover, when these are cleared in cultivation, the birds disappear. However, if the clearings FAMILY CORVIDAE 47 are later abandoned so that they are covered gradually by second growth (rastrojo), the birds may return. They seem to prefer edges and second growth to mature forest. The species is no longer found in Barro Colorado Island; this may be an indication that it avoids solid forest. Customarily they range in small groups, scattered through the forest, usually under cover. In early morning they may come out into border fields to rest in the sun in dead trees, but as the morning advances, dis- appear again into forest cover. Usually from 3 to 6 or 8 are found in company, though once near Mandinga in western San Blas I encoun- tered a flock of 30 ranging through the border of a mangrove swamp where the trees grew in shallow water. Usually they move quietly, hopping or flying a few feet at a time along the tree limbs. If not alarmed, in crossing rivers or other open areas they begin with quick strokes of the wings and then continue by gliding. They are adept at this, and may sail gracefully for 30 m or more before they lose momentum. The country name of chocho is given in imitation of their usual call. This name was in common use among the Choco Indians, but was varied occasionally to a harsher sound, geo geo, by some of the Cuna. Though the birds are secretive, they come readily to the usual squeaking sounds that naturalists use to attract birds. Eisenmann interprets one com- mon call as kyuck-kyuck, or kyuck alone. Once as the members of a flock called steadily, I approached quietly to find them resting or clinging in close company a meter above the ground, peering down at a small snake partly concealed in the low vegetation. More rarely, I heard low calls of jay jay when the birds were not alarmed. Also, I occasionally saw them mobbing small hawks, once, to my surprise, one of the predatory Collared Forest-Falcons. Ridgely (in litt.) has seen them mob a roosting Spectacled Owl. Some of the stomachs that I examined held parts of small lizards, others the remains of large ants, beetles, and seeds and other partly digested vegetable matter. Three birds taken by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club., 1975, p. 85) weighed 194, 203, and 222 g. In many days afield where these jays were common, the only ob- servation connected with nesting was near Yepe on the Rio Paya, Darién, in mid-March, when one flew across the open river carrying a straw, followed closely by a companion. Goodwin (Crows of the World, 1976, p. 306) describes the nest as being of “sticks and twigs, lined with fine pliable twigs, and probably also at times with tendrils and fibres.”’ A nest found near Rio Parancho, lower Atrato Valley, 48 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Colombia, was in “a small isolated tree covered with creeping spiny palms.” Goodwin gives the clutch as 3 to 5; the eggs are “pale buff or brownish white, spotted and blotched with olive brown and with under- lying lilac or grey markings.” Two eggs collected by T. K. Salmon at Remedios, Antioquia, Colombia (no date) now in the British Museum collection measure 34.6 X 24.6 and 34.0 X 24.65 mm. In the Santa Marta region of Colombia, nests with eggs have been found from early April until mid-May, and Hardy found a pair with dependent but nearly full-grown young in Venezuela in July. The nominate race affinis found in Colombia and western Venezuela differs in being clear white on the lower surface and the tip of the tail. The difference between the two forms is readily seen when series of birds from the two areas are examined. Occasional birds from eastern Darién and San Blas in eastern Panama show some approach to this lighter condition, but the population of northern Choco, Colombia, is like that of Panama and is assigned to zeledoni. CYANOLYCA ARGENTIGULA ARGENTIGULA (Lawrence): Silvery-throated Jay, Urraca Garganta de Plata Ficure 5 Cyanocitta argentigula Lawrence, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 11, nos. 3-4, February 1875, p. 88. (Near Pico Blanco, southern Cordillera de Talamanca, Costa Rica.) Cyanolyca blandita Bangs, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 19, July 30, 1906, p. 109. (Volcan de Chiriqui, above Boquete, 2750 meters.) Description.—Length 255-265 mm. Adult (sexes alike), head, back, chin, sides of neck, breast, and undersurface of wings black; lower back, scapulars, rump, upper and undertail coverts, abdomen, and flanks dusky, with a dull purplish blue tinge; wings and tail dull blue; fore- neck broadly pale bluish white, with lower margin where it joins the upper breast paler, nearly white; a narrow transverse band of bluish white across the center of the crown at level of the eyes, extending laterally as a narrow line along the side above and behind the eyes on either side. A male and female, taken along the Boquete trail at 2100 m above Bajo Grande, beyond Cerro Punta, Chiriqui, March 4, 1955, had the bill black; inside of mouth dusky neutral gray; tongue neutral gray; iris dark brown; tarsus, toes, and claws dull black. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 117.8-129.5 (122.7), tail 118.6-133.1 (126.6), culmen from base 27.4-30.8 (29.0), tarsus 34.5-37.2 (35.8) mm. FAMILY CORVIDAE 49 Females (5 from Chiriqui), wing 118.5-121.1 (119.6), tail 118.7- 128.0 (123.2), culmen from base 28.0-30.4 (29.0), tarsus 32.3-36.8 (o0.1)) mm. Resident. Found locally on the upper slopes of Volcan de Chiriqui, from 1525 to 3000 m elevation, from above Boquete to above Cerro Punta. Ficure 5.—Silvery-throated Jay, Urraca Garganta de Plata, Cyanolyca argenti- gula argentigula, On the forested slopes of the higher levels of Bajo Grande, beyond Cerro Punta, I found this jay ranging through the higher branches of the forest trees in scattered flocks of a dozen to 20 or more. In man- nerism they suggested common species of the north of the genus Cyano- citta. Their low calls, pay pay pay, uttered slowly, also were similar in tone but less vociferous. While they did not seem timid, the fairly thick growths of the abundant epiphytes and subdued coloration of the birds tended to conceal their movements so that they were not conspicuous. When I took one or two for specimens, their companions seemed little alarmed. If their low calls were heard at a distance, the birds usually came near when I made the usual squeaking sounds of our bird calls. But against the dark background of the tree limbs and thick parasitic growths the birds often were so screened that they could not be seen. Their flights were for only short distances among the branches. The stomachs of those examined were filled with insects. The type specimen of the nominate race, argentigula, in the Smith- sonian collections, obtained in April 1874 by Juan Cooper, came from William M. Gabb. It appears to be the only older record known for this form for Costa Rica. Pitelka’s (Journ. Washington Acad. Sci., 50 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A vol. 41, 1951, p. 113) thorough study of records of Gabb’s itinerary concluded that the specimen was collected “near and more or less north of Pico Blanco,” which is near the southern end of the Cordillera de Talamanca. Sipurio, which Pitelka mentions also, is lower down on the Caribbean slope in the area drained by tributaries of the Rio Sixaola. In older collections in the British Museum there are 2 specimens col- lected by Arcé, without other data, except that they are marked “Vera- gua,’ a term applied earlier to the whole of western Panama. Modern records with definite locality for argentigula, mainly those in the Monniche collection (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, pp. 545-546), all lie on the Pacific slope. Bangs (Proc. New Eng- land Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 57) listed a series of 11 taken by W. W. Brown in June 1901 from Volcan de Chiriqui, 3000 m. Bangs Joc. cit., p. 16) says that Brown collected “for a short time in June on the north- ern or Caribbean exposure of the volcano” from which the species has been included by Blake as from the Caribbean drainage. This is not certain, however, as Brown worked mainly near or above Boquete. From there the old trail to the Cerro Punta area was a usual route, which would have taken him into the area where I found this jay com- mon, on the Pacific slope. Eisenmann and others have seen this species frequently above Cerro Punta, western Chiriqui (on the trail to Boquete) between 1920 and 2190 m, in pairs or small flocks, uttering a rather nasal, but not loud, chaak, cheuk, check. The race of the mountains of the Cordillera Central, farther north in Costa Rica, marked by paler, whiter throat and crown markings, was named Cyanolyca argentigula albior by Pitelka (cit. supra, p. 114) from a male in the Smithsonian collections obtained by Ridgway and Zele- don on Volcan Turrialba. CYANOLYCA CUCULLATA CUCULLATA (Ridgway): Azure-hooded Jay, Urraca Corona Azul Cyanocorax cucullatus Ridgway, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 8, May 6, 1885, p. 23. (Navarro, Costa Rica.) Crown light blue; rest of head and breast black, body dull blue. Description.—Forehead, side of head, upper breast, throat, hind- neck, upper back, and undersurface of wings black; crown and occiput light blue; back, wings, rest of lower surface, and tail dull blue. Iris maroon (or bright red, as in a specimen collected by Ridgely in Chiriqui); tarsus black (Kennard and Peters, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 38, 1928, p. 465); bill black (note on specimen label). FAMILY CORVIDAE oe! Measurements.—Males (8 from Panama and Costa Rica), wing 117.0-128.3 (121.6), tail 127.1-145.9 (136.6), culmen from base 24.7- 33.0 (29.3 average of 7), tarsus 35.7-38.2 (37.0) mm. Females (8 from Panama and Costa Rica), wing 115.0-131.0 (120.8), tail 115.5-140.3 (120.8), culmen from base 26.3-31.4 (29.1), tarsus 35.4-38.7 (36.6) mm. Resident. Known definitely in Panama from a male and female col- lected March 20, 1926, by Kennard at 900 m on the Boquete trail, in- land from Laguna de Chiriqui, and from 3 males recorded by Bangs (Proc. New Engl. Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, pp. 57-58) taken on the Caribbean slope at 2100 m by Brown in June 1901. Blake, in his ac- count of the Monniche collection (Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, 1958, pp. 544-545) lists 2, male and female, taken June 26 and July 14 at Camp Holcomb on the Holcomb trail at 1500 m. The species is known in Panama definitely from Chiriqui and Bocas del Toro. The following early reports are of uncertain validity. Sharpe (Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., vol. 3, 1877, p. 127) under the heading Cyano- corax ornatus (an early name for C. cucullata) lists a specimen from “Veragua. M. EF. Arcé.” Apparently this is the basis for the report of “Panama. Veragua (Arcé)” by Salvin and Godman (Biol. Centr. Amer., Aves, vol. 1, 1887, p. 500, see errata and corrigenda, p. xliv). iideway (Bull. U.S: Nat. Mus., vol. 50, pt. 3, 1904, p. 323) in- cluded records of 2 specimens that need further consideration. One is a skin marked “Arcé, Veragua, 1877” (originally identified as Cyano- citta ornata) that came in the Boucard collection with no other informa- tion as to locality. The second is a male purchased from the mission- aries Heyde and Lux labeled “Chitra—Prov. Coclé, Isthmus of Pan- ama, June 18, 1889, irides red-brown, found higher parts of mountain virgin forest.” The detailed travels of these travelers are not clearly known, but it appears certain from available data that in the early part of 1889 they crossed from Nata, Coclé, to the Caribbean slope in the upper area drained by the Rio Coclé del Norte. Two of their principal localities were ‘“Cascajal” and “Chitra.” The region as yet is little known ornithologically. More recently, Ridgely (im litt.) found it fairly common in late February and early March 1976 at the Fortuna Dam site (900-1050 m), east of Boquete, ranging the very humid foothill forest there in small groups and in pairs. The birds were rather noisy, but quite secre- tive and elusive, and only infrequently seen. He collected 1 on March 4, 1976. N. G. Smith (in litt. to Eisenmann) reports seeing this species in 52 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Bocas del Toro in April 1979 when he crossed the divide at 1700 meters from Cerro Colorado, eastern Chiriqui. This race also occurs on the Caribbean slope of Costa Rica; other forms are found north to eastern Mexico. Family CINCLIDAE: Dippers, Mirlos Acuaticos The 5 species of this family, all of small size with heavy bodies and short tails, in general appearance suggest wrens. They are peculiar in the Order Passeriformes for their specialization for aquatic life, espe- cially through their dense, water-repellant plumage. Dippers are found along swift streams in hill country, where they enter the water to range along the bottom in search of food. In this they move by using the wings as in flight, or walk through skillful use of oblique currents and eddies made by stones and similar obstacles. They spend their lives en- tirely along streams, even through colder seasons, unless ice prevents their entering the water. Their bulky, domed nests may be placed at the border of waterfalls, or sheltered by stones along swift-flowing channels. The glossy white eggs, rather large in size, range from 4 to 6 in number. From observa- tions, as yet somewhat limited, it appears that for a period during molt the primary and secondary wing feathers may be renewed in such a manner that the bird may be incapable of aerial flight, but is still capable of its usual aquatic activities. The 5 species known are widely distributed—one in the Andes of South America; another in southern South America; one in Central America and western North America; one in Europe, northwestern Africa, and central and southern Asia; and a fifth in eastern and south- ern Asia. CINCLUS MEXICANUS ARDESIACUS Salvin, American Dipper, Mirlo Acuatico Americano FIGURE 6 Cinclus ardesiacus Salvin, Ibis, vol. 3, no. 1X, January 1867, p. 121, pl. 2. (Cordil- lera de Tolé, inland from Tolé, Chiriqui, Panama.) Medium size; heavy body, short tail; adult gray, immature with undersurface white to grayish white. Description.—Length 165-180 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown and sides of head dull brownish slate, shading on hindneck to the slate gray of the upper surface, this including the scapulars; wings and tail FAMILY CINCLIDAE 53 blackish slate, margined with dull slaty; carpal edge of wing white; underwing coverts slate gray; a small white spot on upper and lower eyelids; chin and throat pale brownish gray; rest of undersurface light gray, slightly darker on flanks and undertail coverts, the latter tipped lightly with white. Immature, above faintly lighter gray; crown grayer; primaries, sec- ondaries, and greater and middle wing coverts tipped lightly with gray- ish white; undersurface white, except undertail coverts, which are gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica) wing 84.7-88.0 (86.3), tail 42.9-46.9 (44.9), culmen from base 20.5-22.2 (21.4, average of 8), tarsus 31.1-32.9 (32.0) mm. Figure 6.—American Dipper, Mirlo Acuatico Americano, Cinclus mexicanus ardesiacus. Females (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 78.8-82.1 (80.7), tail 37.0-44.8 (40.2), culmen from base 20.2-21.4 (20.8, average of 9), tarsus 30.2-31.6 (31.0) mm. Resident. Recorded in small numbers along mountain streams. On the Pacific slope it is found from above Santa Fé, Veraguas (Eisen- mann) and in Chiriqui, from the Cordillera de Tolé west to the Rio 54 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Caldera, near Boquete, and the upper Rio Chiriqui Viejo, beyond El Volcan, from 1200 to 1700 m (reported by Brown, but perhaps un- certainly, to 2200 m). | In July 1965, Dr. C. R. Schneider (a chemist) believes he saw a dip- per on the Cana River near Cana, Darién (over 900 m) (Ridgely 1976, p. 265). If any dipper does occur in Darién it may be either this species or C. leucocephalus of the Andes. The Panama race is better known in Costa Rica, where it is found on the Caribbean slope of the central highlands as well as on the Pacific side of the mountains. In Panama it has not yet been recorded on the Atlantic drainage. It was described originally from 2 females—one adult, the other in immature dress—sent by Arcé to Salvin, from the mountains inland from Tolé. The type locality, a short distance west of the boundary with the Province of Veraguas, is the most easterly con- firmed report for the dipper in Panama. The sex of the 2 specimens which I examined in the British Museum (Natural History) is marked as female on the original labels. Another specimen in the British Museum, dated 1873, received from Boucard with the locality indicated only as “Panama,” may have come from the same source. These were the only specimens known until Brown collected a series of 11, near Boquete, and above on the slopes of the volcano, between February and April, 1901 (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, 1902, p. 51). The Monniche collection in the Field Museum has 3 specimens, 2 from Bajo Mono, and 1 from the Rio Caldera, the localities being at about 1580 and 1650 m. In the Smithsonian collections there is an adult female taken near Cerro Punta, Chiriqui, March 9, 1962, by Dr. C. L. Hayward. I recorded dippers occasionally, singly or in pairs, along the upper Rio Chiriqui Viejo from near the bridge west of EF] Volcan to the upper courses be- low Cerro Punta. They were not observed on the narrower channels above the village. Always they were wary, ranging along swift water in rocky channels. No specimens were collected, since it would not have been possible to retrieve them from the fairly deep, swiftly flowing water. Their habits and low calls were like those of the slightly darker race of the mountain streams of western United States. In March 1955, Glen Lewis told me that a pair came regularly along the river canyon beside his house below Cerro Punta. They had a nest concealed between two stones on the bank opposite his house, where it was inaccessible as there was no crossing. It appeared to be bulky, made of mosslike material. Eisenmann and Ridgely (in htt.) report nesting in the same general locality in 1969, 1972, and 1979. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 55 M.A. Carriker, Jr. (Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. VI, 1910, p. 752), in his account of this species in Costa Rica, says of it that he found a pair on a river “high in the mountains above Ujarras de Terraba, where the stream came tumbling and foaming down through a deep gorge. Their discovery was caused by first finding the nest as I was climbing up a precipitous wall of rock beside a waterfall. It was a rather flat, cup- shaped structure, built almost entirely of moss and placed on a narrow shelf of rock on the brink of the falls. It contained one partially incu- bated egg which was blown, but later misplaced and lost... . In color it was plain dull white, of the usual shape and size of the Water Ouzel of the United States.” Family TROGLODYTIDAE: Wrens, Cucaracheros Wrens are widespread in Panama, where they are found at all eleva- tions. Twenty-two species, all permanent residents, are known from the Republic. They favor thick undergrowth and the lower levels in forests, where they feed on insects and other arthropods. The House Wren is common around human settlements. The family has a wide vocal repertoire; some members are among the finest singers in Panama, and an increasing number are known to sing antiphonally. Song is now being used as a taxonomic character; it has proved useful in determining the relationships of some variable and widely dispersed Neotropical species, such as Microcerculus mar- ginatus. Most wrens build domed nests with an entrance at one side; a few species nest in cavities. When not actually breeding, individuals of cer- tain species roost communally, often in a “dormitory” nest built for this purpose, or in a natural cavity. [Although now usually placed in the Mimidae, new evidence indi- cates that the monotypic genus Donacobiws should be included in the Troglodytidae. The species was at one time referred to as the “Wren- Thrasher” and was considered to be a wrenlike thrasher or a thrasher- like wren (Fuertes, Bird-Lore, vol. 13, 1913, p. 342), but its wrenlike attributes have of late been overlooked. Donacobius is considerably larger than most wrens, but is scarcely, if any, larger than the larger species of Campylorhynchus, and immatures, as well as the Bolivian race, D. a. albovittatus, which have a white superciliary stripe, bear a striking resemblance to Campylorhynchus griseus. The males and fe- males of Donacobius duet, which is a wrenlike trait. Olson and D. W. 56 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Steadman examined skeletons of Donacobius and found a number of wrenlike characters, although in some other respects the osteology ap- peared to be intermediate between wrens and mimids. Mary H. Clench (pers. comm.) has found that Donacobius has the distinctive and unique pteryolosis of the Troglodytidae. It appears that on the basis of its specialized characters, Donacobius 1s clearly referable to the Troglo- dytidae, and it remains to be determined whether its other characters are merely primitive within the 10-primaried oscines or are indeed indic- ative of a derivation of the Troglodytidae from the Mimidae. S. L. O.] 10. Ua 12. KEY TO SPECIES OF TROGLODYTIDAE .. Dhreat: solid: black... saga See Ae 2 Throat brown, white, buffy or streaked............. 2.2 ae 3 . Black extending to breast. Black-throated Wren, Thryothorus atrogularts. p. 94 Black limited to throat; breast chestnut. Sooty-headed Wren, Thryothorus spadix. p. 95 . \Dhroat. white or -bufhy. cos cctools ec ee 4 ‘Throat brown or black and white. ».23)25) 00.2.5.) 922. oe 15 . Head and underparts pure white. White-headed Wren, Campylorhynchus albobrunneus brachypterus. p. 60 Crown “dark Or sy. os Bai BE OO 5 Grown ‘blaeks Mauve. os eid etic SU ee See ae 6 Crown: browaien sos cin) 5 od Seas ek Seki oe 0 ee 7 . Total length more than 200 mm. Black-capped Donacobius, Donacobius atricapillus, p. 57 Total length less than’ 160° mime. 20... 2 nd oo. oe or Z . Crown entirely black or washed with brown, total length 92-105 mm, tail very short. White-breasted Wood-Wren, Henicorhina leucosticta. p. 110 Crown entirely black, total length 126-156 mm; tail longer, of normal pro- portions. Bay Wren, Thryothorus nigricapillus. p. 85 . Back streaked black and white. Sedge Wren, Cistothorus platensis lucidus. p. 66 Back: unstreaked .).. 000 ee CaaS sb A Se 8 . Undersurface partly or entirely barred black and white........:..0..:- 9 Undersurface not barred... 6. 2)k os oasis gos eg ool te 10 Undersurface with band of solid black, abdomen barred black and white. Black-bellied Wren, Thryothorus fasciatoventris. p. 96 Side of head and undersurface entirely barred black and white. Riverside Wren, Thryothorus semibadius. p. 92 Breast definitely gray; tail very short. Whistler Wren, Microcerculus marginatus luscima. p. 121 Breast whitish or washed with light, brown... ..)....-~- +2.) 12 Superciliary prominent, whitew. la... ile. os bee eee se ee 13 FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE ly MCT NIN TTTCIIS Litt GE Ti esha aplasia it) faut ene abit nds UN oleae Sa bs ly dill RS alo 15 13. Smaller, total length 95-100 mm. Timberline Wren, Troglodytes brown browm. p. 108 PeiOra ln eneth UZ Oa tala. taiw de Shin a seve ele bate cea ale esi elele 6 14 14. Uppersurface bright rufous; side of head barred. Rufous-and-white Wren, Thryothorus rufalbus castanonotus. p. 78 Uppersurface, crown especially, grayish brown; side of head, below postocular stripe, white. Plain Wren, Thryothorus modestus. p. 72 15. Superciliary indistinct, total length 108-115 mm. House Wren, Troglodytes aedon. p. 101 Superciliary indistinct, total length 120-135 mm. Buff-breasted Wren, Thryothorus leucotis. p. 68 EMMONS TECO AMI TEONVAA 1 Oe Fo, 588 ail er c4h 3 tig arcdrs heb eal Bh eibita obsue ties cS aud! GRMN Siallet Bataan le « V7 17. Throat and breast rich chestnut; rest of body dark brown. Song Wren, Cyphorhinus aradus. p. 117 Throat pale cinnamon, fading to buff on breast. Mountain Wren, Troglodytes solstitialis. p. 105 18. Back barred black and white. Band-backed Wren, Campylorhynchus zonatus costaricensis. p. 64 IBDSLE SOIGE 1 RON Aa 4 MI nee RRS PEORIA ede TNO AV) ane aU 19 19. Back bright chestnut; breast gray; tail very short. Gray-breasted Wood-Wren, Henicorhina leucophrys. p. 114 Back duller brown, breast not gray; tail of normal proportions........ 20 20. Breast streaked black and white. Stripe-breasted Wren, Thryothorus thoracicus. p. 81 SSF BASE | TST SN EKG OR i CU A TER aE SL A Pn Ee 21 21. Breast tawny-rufous. Rufous-breasted Wren, Thryothorus rutilus hyperythrus. p. 99 Breast gray-brown. Stripe-throated Wren, Thryothorus leucopogon grisescens. p. 83 DONACOBIUS ATRICAPILLUS BRACHYPTERUS Madarasz, Black-capped Donacobius, Paralauta de Agua FIGURE 7 Donacobius brachypterus Madarasz, Om: Monatsb. vol. 21, Feb. 1913, p. 22. (Ara- taca, Magdalena, Colombia.) Medium size; slender body, buff on lower surface, dark above, with crown black; long white-tipped tail. Description.—Length 210-235 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown, side of head and hindneck black; back and greater wing coverts some- what dull brown; rump and upper tail coverts brownish buff; wings dull black, edged with dull brown; a white spot across base of primaries; tail black, tipped broadly with white, except on the central pair; entire 58 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 undersurface pale buff, somewhat whiter on the throat; lower sides and flanks barred narrowly with dull black; axillars and anterior under- wing coverts dusky. A female of the nominate subspecies that I collected on the Rio Paraguay in northern Paraguay, September 30, 1920, had the bill black except for an elongate line of dull bluish gray around the base of the gonys; iris yellow; tarsus and toes fuscous; concealed bare skin on side of neck orange yellow. Measurements.—Males, (6 from Darién), wing 80.0-84.7 (83.0), tail 96.2-100.9 (98.9), culmen from base 24.9-28.5 (26.2), tarsus 32.0- 34.6 (33.4) mm. Figure 7.—Black-capped Donacobius, Paralauta de Agua, Donacobius atri- capillus brachypterus. Females (2 from Darién), wing 79.5-80.3 (79.9), tail 94.5-94.7 (94.6), culmen from base (one only) 23.2, tarsus 30.8-32.0 (31.4) mm. Resident. Recorded in Panama from FE] Real, Darién (specimens in the American Museum of Natural History include 6 males and 1 female collected by Anthony and Richardson, January 1 to 8, 1915; male and female taken December 13, 1928). This species ranges in suitable lowland habitat from eastern Panama, northwestern Colombia, and most of South America, chiefly east of the FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 59 Andes, to northeastern Argentina. The Panama race is recorded from Darien and northern Colombia to the Santa Marta region. On April 1, 1967, Eisenmann and H. Loftin found a small colony of three or more pairs near El Real, Darién, in a dry Montrichardia marsh with scattered bushes. Pairs displayed on leafless bushes, perched a few inches apart. In one pair watched at close range, the upper individual gave a whirrr or chirrr and spread the tail slightly as it moved from side to side; the lower bird sitting on a different twig answered with a louder, more musical, semiwhistled kweéa, kweéa, kweéa, also moving its tail. Eisenmann and Loftin did not notice the bare yellow skin, although they watched this pair perform three times at close range, once using a different perch, but in each case with the louder voiced bird sitting lower. On April 10, 1968, P. Schwartz took Eisenmann to a swampy pond in northern Venezuela, near the coast, where there was a small colony in a region of damp second-growth woodland. The birds perched on bushes in or near the pond. Both members of a pair perched on the same bush and vocalized antiphonally while wagging partly spread tails and sometimes exposing the bare orange-yellow neck skin. The semi- whistled call was noted as wd-ee (or hod-ee), wo-ee, wo-ee and the harsh call as a wheezing or buzzy wiizee, wiizee,wtizee. The differences in syllabification made in the field a year apart may or may not indicate a difference in vocalizations heard from 2 subspecies. Donacobius inhabits dense growths of grasses and rushes grow- ing in open fresh-water swamps. While I have worked at E1 Real sev- eral times, I have not found it. The marshy areas bordering the lower Rio Pirre are suitable habitat. Fuertes (PBird-Lore, vol. 15, 1913, p. 342) described the song of male Donacobius as a loud, whistled note like that of our Cardinal, with the female accompanying him with a low grunting call. He described and figured in both sexes an inflatable sac of bright yellow skin on the side of the throat “which when the bird sings, puffs out to the size of a cherry.” Skutch (Condor, vol. 70, 1968, pp. 74-75) in Venezuela, described the nest as a deep cup built around tall grass stems. The eggs “ap- peared to be uniform light, reddish brown. Closer scrutiny revealed that they were mottled rather than uniformly colored, but so densely as to cover the whole surface with slightly varying shades of reddish brown.” The “three eggs measured 25.5 by 16.5, 24.7 by 16.8, and 24.4 by 16.3 mm.” The young at hatching were without down. Because of its uncertain taxonomy (it differs from the Mimidae, 60 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 among which it was formerly placed, by various morphological char- acters and in long incubation and nestling period), Skutch suggests replacing the inappropriate English name ‘“‘Mockingthrush” by Dona- cobius. CAMPYLORHYNCHUS ALBOBRUNNEWUS (Lawrence), White-headed Wren, Cucarachero Cabeciblanco FIGURE 8 A iarge, long-tailed wren; head and undersurface white; above dark blackish brown. Juvenile birds may have indistinct lines of pale gray in the crown. Description.—Length 180-200 mm. Adult (sexes alike), head, hind- neck, and undersurface (except as noted) plain white; underwing coverts, tibiae and undertail coverts spotted with dusky (in varying amount in the two races recognized here); rest of upper surface sooty brown. Immature (in juvenile plumage), crown and side of head slightly to heavily lined with dull grayish brown; tibia and undertail coverts spotted in varying amount with dusky; tail in some tipped narrowly and irregularly with white; duller, more brownish black above, with the upper back lined and spotted lightly with white; flanks, abdomen, and undertail coverts faintly to definitely washed with pale buffy brown. (This pattern of markings is followed by a plumage closely similar to that of the adult.) In recent reviews these wrens of Panama and northwestern Colom- bia are listed as geographic races of the species turdinus, widely dis- tributed in northern South America. The assignment has come through a peculiar population of wrens found in Narino in far southwestern Colombia, described by Meyer de Schauensee as Campylorhamphus albobrunneus aenigmaticus (Notulae Naturae, no. 209, Acad. Nat. Sci., Philadelphia, April 16, 1948). In the original description it is suggested only that the new form might indicate “a hybrid between C. albobrunneus and C. turdinus, but this possibility seems doubtful as the latter . . . is unknown west of the Andes. .. . neither species has been taken... . in Narino.” J. Hatter (Veroff Zool, ‘staatesamunale Munchen II, 1967, pp. 143-144) suggests that it is more probable that aenigmaticus is the result of hybridization between C. a. harterti and C. zonatus brevirostris of northwestern Ecuador. Meyer de Schauen- see (The Species of Birds of South America, 1966, p. 401) mentions both hybrid possibilities. Until there is clearer understanding it is pref- erable to consider albobrunneus, with its subspecies, harterti, as a sepa- FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 61 rate species from C. turdinus and its races, all of which differ in adult stage in variable patterns of dark markings on the head and undersur- face. A record by Salvin and Godman (Biol. Centr. Amer., Aves, vol. 1, 1880, p. 63) under the name “albibrunneus” from “Veraguas (Arcé)” quoted by other authors, is in error, as the species is not known from that area. yn iN J IN 4 jp “ LPS \* , Y my ah SAN Nt PTY yt SS SS Ss JI IS > i, fe, rg Ny hy “ Ficure 8.—White-headed Wren, Cucarachero Cabeciblanco, Campylorhynchus albobrunneus. This handsome wren is an arboreal forest inhabitant that ranges also in trees and thickets bordering open lands. It is gregarious, so that usually 3 or 4 are found in company, ranging from near the ground to the median level, often 16 or 20 m up, or occasionally higher, in the trees. Usually they move under cover among the leaves, or through masses of creepers, where their presence is made known by their croak- ing, grating calls, though the birds themselves remain hidden. At times the notes are joined in a sequence that may be considered a song. When 62 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 alarmed near the ground they move into higher branches with much fluttering of wings, resorting to flight only for distances of a few feet. When not disturbed the little parties may appear in small open areas on dry ground beneath thickets or low trees, where they dust in loose soil. Often, as one fluttered thus, a companion stood over it, apparently pecking at small parasites that appeared among the feathers of the crown. They may also be seen creeping into small openings among the exposed roots of fallen trees, such activities accounting for the soiled appearance often noted in the white feather areas. Less often, a small flock of as many as half a dozen flies across open trails, or between ex- panses of open pasture, moving quickly with rapidly tilting flight. At rest in branches they sometimes crowd closely against their companions. Where not disturbed, they rest on open perches, uttering their croaking calls, with fluttering wings and rapidly vibrating tails. In February, in the nesting season, I have seen groups of 3 flying openly among the top branches of tall trees in pursuit of one another, often crowding together, apparently in a form of territorial display. The nest and eggs are not known. CAMPYLORHYNCUS ALBOBRUNNEUS ALBOBRUNNEUS (Lawrence) Heleodytes albo-brunneus Lawrence, Ibis, Ser. 1, vol. 4, January 1862, p. 10. (Near the line of the Panama Railroad, near the summit of the Atlantic slope.) Characters.—Tibia paler, varying from white to light grayish brown; undertail coverts white, lightly spotted or barred with dull brown; immature with crown less heavily marked; where streaking is _ present, the lines averaging narrower, less distinct, and more grayish brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from northern Coclé, Canal Zone, east- ern Colon and Darién), wing 80.2-87.2 (83.4), tail 76.0-80.5 (78.3), culmen from base 21.3-25.7 (23.6), tarsus 24.3-26.7 (25.4) mm. Females (10 from northern Coclé, eastern Colon, and Darién), wing 72.2-81.1 (78.0), tail 71.3-78.1 (75.6), culmen from base 21.1-24.3 (23.5), tarsus 24.3-26.3 (25.00) mm. Resident. On the Pacific side, in the central valleys of the Rio Bay- ano, Rio Mamoni, and of the Rio Tuira (El Real, mouth of the Rio Paya, and the old village site at the base of Cerro Tacarcuna); Cana; Jaqué; on the Caribbean slope from northern Coclé, and the Canal Zone to eastern Colon. Although formerly recorded widely from the Chagres Valley of the Canal Zone, in recent years it has been observed FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 63 in the zone only in the very humid forested northwestern area along the Achiote Road. This species is locally fairly common, but comes to attention mainly from its calls, as usually the birds move about under cover of leaves. A female, taken by E. A. Goldman at 850 m near Cana, May 22, 1912, had the stomach filled with insect remains that included chrysomelid and tenebrionid beetles, orthoptera, and ants. Three males collected by piauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club., 1977, p. 64) in the Province of Pan- ama and Canal Zone weighed 32.7, 34.0, and 34.3 g. Eisenmann (im litt.) found a group ot 3 or 4 on the Achiote Road on March 23, 1967, in shady, canopied, damp second growth ranging in the foliated trees from 5 to 20 m and giving harsh notes like churk or kurk. An unseen bird uttered a harsh song ending with semimusical kaw notes. At Altos de Majé above Rio Bayano, eastern Province of Panama, Eisenmann found 3 wrens on the ground, dust bathing in the forest; while dust bathing they were at times in physical contact. CAMPYLORHYNCHUS ALBOBRUNNEUS HARTERTI (Berlepsch) Heleodytes harterti Berlepsch, Ornis., vol. XIV, February 1907, p. 347. (San José, Rio Dagua, Valle, Colombia.) Characters —Feathered area of the lower leg (the tibia) with the markings definitely darker; undertail coverts duller white, heavily spotted and barred with dull grayish brown; immature, with brownish gray lines and feather borders on the crown and side of head more abundant, so that this area is darker. Measurements.—Males (10 from eastern San Blas, and adjacent Colombia, in Choco and Antioquia), wing 81.5-88.2 (85.3), tail 75.2- 62.1! (79.5), culmen from base 22.5-27.4 (24.8), tarsus 25.5-28.1 (26.6) mm. Females (9 from eastern San Blas and adjacent Colombia, in Choco and Antioquia), wing 76.0-82.5 (78.7), tail 72.7-82.5 (77.6), culmen from base 21.9-24.4 (23.3), tarsus 23.7-27.0 (24.7) mm. Resident. On the Caribbean slope, in eastern San Blas (Puerto Obaldia). The first record of this darker form was by Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, 1932, p. 358) of a female collected by von Wedel at Puerto Obaldia (date not listed). In the Museum of the University of Cincinnati there are 2 others, male and female, taken by Wedel at this locality August 28, 1931. It is possible that this race is found along much of the coast of San Blas, though recorded at present only at the eastern end. It is common 64 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 in Choco, in adjacent Colombia, on both Atlantic and Pacific sides. Near the Pacific coast of Panama at Jaqué, along the Rio Jaqué near the Colombian boundary, and to a lesser extent on Cerro Pirre, harterti intergrades with nominate albobrunneus, occasional specimens being closely similar in the markings on the lower leg. A specimen, not de- termined as to race, was taken in February 1971 at Cerro Quia (300m), Darien; it is now the Gorgas Memorial Collection. CAMPYLORHYNCHUS ZONATUS COSTARICENSIS Berlepsch; Band-backed Wren, Cucarachero Listado FIGURE 9 Campylorhynchus zonatus costaricensis Berlepsch, Auk, vol. 5, no. 4, October 1888, p. 449. (Costa Rica.) Heleodytes zonatus panamensis Griscom, Amer. Mus. Nov. no. 280, September 10, 1927, p. 12. (Santa Fé, Veraguas.) Fairly large; with long tail, heavily spotted breast, and upper sur- face black, banded with white. Description.—Length 160-170 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown pale brownish gray, spotted with black; upper surface black; hindneck streaked widely with white; back, wings, and tail banded broadly with white, the lines varied with buff, especially on the rump and tail; chin to upper breast white, becoming tawny-ochraceous on sides, lower breast, abdomen, and undertail coverts; foreneck and breast heavily spotted with black, these spots continued sparingly on sides and under- tail coverts. Juvenile, crown dull, slightly brownish, with a broad white super- ciliary stripe, and a black line behind the eye; upper surface black; wings and tail dull black, spotted and barred strongly with pale brown, the markings paler to nearly white on the primaries; edge of wing white; throat and upper breast, dull white, shaded lightly with buff; lower breast, sides, underwing coverts and undertail coverts cinnamon- brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Bocas del Toro and Veraguas), wing 68.0-72.2 (71.6), tail 67.1-71.4 (68.5), culmen from base 20.9- 2525,( 23:2), tarsus 22.8-2597 (2328) mame Females (10 from Bocas del Toro and Costa Rica), wing 66.2-71.5 (68.1), tail 62.5-67.3 (64.9), culmen from base 19.8-21.9 (20.7), tarsus 20.7-23.6 (22.4) mm. Resident. Found locally in Bocas del Toro (Almirante, Cricamola, upper Rio Changuena, and Veraguas (Santa Fé). FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 65 The bird watcher familiar with the desert areas of southwestern United States and Mexico should easily recognize this species as a “cactus wren” from its colors and plumage pattern, but may be un- certain when he sees the birds ranging in tangles of vines, tropical shrubbery, and low-growing palms in fairly dense, humid jungle. Often they are found in small bands of half a dozen that move about Figure 9.—Band-backed Wren, Cucarachero Listado, Campylorhynchus zonatus costaricensts. with the usual curious jumble of croaking, rattling calls, differing mainly from their northern cousins in the darker pattern of their mark- ings. Skutch (Pacific Coast Avifauna, no. 34, 1960, pp. 186-201) gives a detailed account of their activities in Costa Rica and elsewhere in the 66 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 American tropics. It is common for several, usually a family group, to live in company in forest. They feed actively in company through the day, and at evening take shelter also in company in a covered nest, specially built for such use near the tips of slender branches in forest trees. In the breeding season other nests are constructed, perhaps by the male alone, or by both members of the pair, the structure being generally similar to that used for sleeping. The eggs, three to five in number, vary from plain white to a pattern of faint markings of brown, which may form a wreath about the larger end. Measurements range from 20.6-23.8 by 15.1-16.2 mm. When grown, the family may continue to sleep in company. The companionship continues when the parents prepare a second nesting, as the grown young of the first brood may assist in care and feeding the second family. In Panama this species has been known mainly in the Chiriqui La- goon area, ranging inland, as indicated by a female taken by Galindo, prepared by Hinds, to over 700 m above the upper Rio Changuena in Bocas del Toro. While in Panama mainly a bird of the Caribbean slope, it crosses the Divide in the humid forested area still found above and north of Santa Fé, Veraguas. The species occurs in humid country northward to Mexico, and, with an interrupted range, is credited to northern Colombia and northwestern Ecuador. Griscom described a race based on slightly smaller size in 5 male specimens collected by Benson, March 4 and 6, 1925, at 670 m eleva- tion, near Santa Fé, Veraguas. The measurements are as follows (aver- age in parentheses): wing 65.7-72.2 (69.7), tail 66.9-73 (70.0), cul- men from base 20.9-25.5 (22.6), tarsus 23.1-24.5 (23.6) mm. A slight difference is noted, but so small that it has been considered of doubtful significance and has not been recognized as sufficient basis to warrant a separate race (see Hellmayr, Cat. Birds Amer., pt. 7, 1934, p. 140). CISTOTHORUS PLATENSIS LUCIDUS Ridgway: Sedge Wren, Saltapared de Ciénaga Cistothorus polyglottus lucidus Ridgway, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 16, November 30, 1903, p. 169. (Boquete, Chiriqui.) Very small; streak in front of eye; throat, foreneck, and breast mainly white; back, wings, and tail light brown with dull black barring. Description.—Length 95-105 mm. Adult male, crown and hindneck FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 67 dark hair brown, streaked narrowly, especially on the crown, with whitish, the markings darker laterally, changing to blackish; back dull black, streaked with white; scapulars, lower back and upper tail coverts light brown, barred with black; rump more rufescent; tail dull black, tipped indistinctly with brownish white, barred on outer webs with brown; wings dusky, with outer webs barred with light brown, except at tips; sides of head brownish white, streaked lightly and narrowly with dull black; a narrow superciliary line dull white; throat, upper foreneck, lower breast and upper abdomen white; sides, flanks, tibia, and undertail coverts light brown; underwing coverts white. Adult female, back duller black; light markings of crown and back reduced in extent. Immature, above browner without pale markings on upper surface, or, if present, much reduced. Iris yellow; bill brown to blackish, sometimes yellow or whitish be- low; tarsi yellow to whitish or brown (labels on 7 Chiriqui specimens in the American Museum of Natural History). Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 43.2-50.0 (45.7), tail 36.7-46.7 (45.7, average of 8), culmen from base W2:0-13.0 (12.5), tarsus 16.6-18.7 (17.6) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 43.5-46.0 (44.6), tail 36.4-45.0 (39.5), culmen from base 11.3-13.6 (12.8), tarsus 17.3- 19.4 (17.9) mm. Resident. Recorded in small marshy savannas near Boquete and Bugaba, western Chiriqui, but judging by habitat in Costa Rica, may also inhabit dry grassy fields near montane ponds. The species is known as yet in Panama only through a few specimens. One, in the Smithsonian, received from Salvin, collected by Enrique Arcé, is marked only as from “Veraguas,”’ which at that time may have included Chiriqui. Salvin (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 182) mentions one from Bugaba (a lowland locality), Chiriqui, collected by Arcé. Salvin and Godman (Biol. Centr. Amer. Aves, vol. 1, 1888, pp. 106-107) wrote that of “Chiriqui examples we have now seen several.” In the bird collections in the British Museum there are 4, labeled ‘Chiri- qui’ without other data. A male in the Museum of Comparative Zoology was taken by W. W. Brown 1500 m above Boquete, April 25, 1901. The American Museum of Natural History has 8 specimens from western Chiriqui, almost all collected in 1904 and 1905 by H. J. Watson. Six are labeled Boquete, at 2000, 3500, and 4000 ft., December 6, 21, 68 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 1904, and March 7 and October 5, 15, 1905. Two are labeled “Volcan Chiriqut” 9000 ft. October 14, 16, 1904. This species has not been reported from Panama since the specimens mentioned above were collected. It may well be endangered. In Costa Rica the bird has been collected frequently, but with little information concerning its habits. Carriker (Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. 6, 1919 p. 772) noted that it was “found in only a few places in Costa Rica, but is abundant wherever it occurs. It makes its home in the grassy marshes which are found in the vicinity of La Estrella and Azahar de Cartago at an altitude of about 5000 feet. It has all the habits of the Marsh Wrens of North America.” The eggs of related races of the species platensis are described as white without markings (Meise, W., in Schonwetter, Handb. Ool., pt. 19, 1971, pp. 330-331, plate 4, fig. 8). Slud (Bull. Amer. Museum Nat. Hist., 1964, no. 128, p. 282) de- scribes the call of this race in Costa Rica as a grasshopperlike tgrr and the song as a chyip-chyip-chyip-chyip-chyip, sometimes with a gurgling quality. It may well be that the complex of populations included in the species platensis should be divided into two or more species. Some of the South American forms are, by voice at least, very distinct. Tropical populations of this species are often known as the Grass Wren. THRYOTHORUS LEUCOTIS Lafresnaye: Buff-breasted Wren, Cucarachero Pechi-Amarillejo Thryothorus leucotis Lafresnaye, Rev. Zool., vol. 8, September 1845, p. 338. (“Co- lombia aut Mexico” = Honda, Rio Magdalena, Colombia, designated by Hell- mayr, Cat. Birds Amer., pt. VII, 1934, p. 165.) Rather small; upper surface definitely brown, brighter on rump and upper tail coverts; wings and tail russet, heavily barred with black; below ochraceous-buff to tawny-brown, darker on sides and undertail coverts; throat white. Similar in general to Thryothorous modestus but distinguished by heavy, much more distinct black bars on wings, and usually more contrast between white throat and buffy breast. Description.—Length 120-135 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown dull brown changing to a deeper shade on back and scapulars, and be- coming brighter on rump and upper tail coverts; wings, including co- verts, russet brown, barred narrowly but distinctly with black; tail rus- set, barred heavily with black; a white line over eye from base of bill back along side of crown; a dull brown line back of eye; side of head FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 69 below this, and the upper throat, white, with cheeks in some narrowly streaked or spotted with gray; white of throat changing to ochraceous- buff on foreneck and breast, deepening on sides, flanks, and undertail coverts to tawny brown; edge of wing, scapulars, and underwing co- verts white. Immature, colors somewhat duller, with the bars on wings and tail less distinct. In the Canal Zone and adjacent parts of the Provinces of Panama and Colon the Buff-breasted Wren may be found in the same wood- lands as the paler-colored Plain Wren, Thryothorus modestus, but avoids drier areas, being usually found near streams, or swampy or damp woods. It is present eastward on both slopes through Darién and San Blas to Colombia, with a local race in the Perlas group on Isla del Rey and adjacent islands. Beyond the Isthmus of Panama, in tropical South America, the species ranges widely with several races in the low- lands of Colombia south to Brazil and Peru. THRYOTHORUS LEUCOTIS GALBRAITHII Lawrence Thryothorus Galbraith Lawrence, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 7, June 1861, p. 320. (Atlantic side on line of R.R.= Lion Hill, Panama Railroad, Canal Zone.) Characters.—-Dull brown dorsal surface, with tone more olive than rufescent, as is T. 1. conditus. Male and female, taken at La Jagua, eastern Province of Panama, March 22, 1961, had the iris wood brown; maxilla fuscous-black, ex- cept on the cutting edge, which, with the mandible, was pale dull neutral gray; tarsus and toes dusky neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Canal Zone, eastern Province of Panama, San Blas, and Darién), wing 62.0-65.4 (63.6), tail 41.0-44.3 (42.8), culmen from base 18.5-20.6 (19.7), tarsus 23.2-24.9 (24.0) mm. Females (10 from eastern Province of Panama, San Blas, and Darien), wing 58.0-60.9 (59.6), tail 37.6-41.1 (39.3), culmen from base 17.0-19.6 (18.0), tarsus 22.3-24.3 (23.5) mm. Resident. Locally common from the Canal Zone east on the Pacific side through the eastern Province of Panama to Darién (at mouth of Rio Tuquesa, on the Rio Chucunaque, and at El Real and Marraganti on the Rio Tuira; Cerro Sapo); on the Caribbean slope from the north- ern Canal Zone east through eastern Colon and San Blas (Mandinga, 70 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Permé). Not definitely recorded west of the Canal Zone, although present on the Achiote Road. No longer present on Barro Colorado Island (Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Cont. Zool., no. 291, 1979, p. 24). These wrens range usually in pairs in thickets, masses of vines, and other low growth, commonly near water. The song, heard regularly, is a loud, clear repetition of a phrase that may vary slightly. Occasionally two birds may join, with the calls of one following quickly after the other. Often one may answer another, even at some distance, their notes suggesting those of Thryothorus nigricollis but higher in pitch, in a repetition of three notes that vary in cadence in different indi- viduals. Their songs at times may suggest those of the Bay Wren. Frequently I have heard them scolding with low calls, chit-it, chip wit. Songs noted by Eisenmann in Panama City and in Darién were loud, ringing, and rich, very different from those of T. modestus, syllabized a choreéwee repeated over and over, then varied with phrases like cho- weéoo and choreéchee, wheeooreé tickwheéoo-wichew (the tick soft); also chwee-chweeéo and variations like chwee-chweéeee. Its calls in- clude a rather soft trrrup varied to a sharper whrrrp, and a churr; none of its calls resemble the very loud rattle of T. modestus. When not alarmed they may move actively through low growth, peering about, like titmice swinging over to examine the lower surface of limbs and twigs. Arbib and Loetscher in 1934 (Auk, 1935, p. 327) recorded these wrens as “breeding during July and August” in or near the Canal Zone, but give no other statement as to their nesting. Skutch (Condor, 1968, pp. 70-71) describes nesting of an allied subspecies in Venezuela. He found a dormitory as well as a breeding nest, the latter roughly globular with an entrance on the side. The occupant was a nestling of the para- sitic Shiny Cowbird. In Venezuela this wren often occurs on dry hill- sides far from water. Stomachs that I examined have been filled with fragments of insects, including remains of caterpillars, and with these, bits of spiders and a pseudoscorpion. Males weighed by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) range from 18.0 to 23.0 g, females from 16.0 to 19.5 g. Lawrence named this race for John R. Galbraith, “an intelligent and skillful young taxidermist” from New York, who collected with Mc- Leannan along the line of the Railroad in Panama during the winter of 1860-61, contributing various notes on habits and other items of interest. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 7 ip! THRYOTHORUS LEUCOTIS CONDITUS (Bangs) Thryophilus galbraithi conditus Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 4, March 16, 1903, p. 3. (“San Miguel Island, Gulf of Panama” = Isla del Rey, Archipiélago de Las Perlas, Panama.) Characters.—Similar in general to T./. galbraithu but darker brown on the dorsal surface, sides, lower abdomen, and undertail coverts; slightly larger. Measurements.—Males (10 from Islas del Rey and Cafias), wing 64.1-70.8 (67.0), tail 41.7-46.0 (44.0), culmen from base 19.1-21.2 (20.3), tarsus 23.4-25.3 (24.5) mm. Females (10 from Islas del Rey and Cafias), wing 60.2-66.5 (63.3), tail 39.0-44.2 (41.6), culmen from base 18.2-20.8 (20.1), tarsus 23.4- 25.0 (24.2) mm. Resident. Found on Islas Rey, Viveros, Puercos, and Cafias, Archi- pielago de las Perlas. This subspecies, marked by its definitely darker coloration, especially on the back, was described from 8 specimens collected by W. W. Brown, Jr., near the town of San Miguel, on Isla del Rey in April and May, 1900. On first examination of the collection, Bangs (Auk, vol. XVIII, January, 1901, p. 30) listed them as “Thryophilus galbraithi,” noting only that they were “almost imperceptibly more reddish on the back than mainland birds.’ Later, in more careful comparison, he formally named the race. The distinction was verified through a second series of 10 specimens collected by Brown on another visit in February and March, 1904 (Thayer, J. E., and Bangs, O., Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 46, 1905, p. 154). H. Rendahl (Ark. f. Zool., vol. 13, no. 4, 1920, p. 43), in a report on a collection of birds made in the Pearl Is- lands in 1882 by Carl Bovallius, listed 4 males taken (April 8 to 11) on Isla Viveros, adjacent to Rey on the northwest. From January 21 to 23, 1960, I found these wrens common on Isla Canas, adjacent to Isla del Rey on the east, and collected a series of 3 males and 4 females. As our launch lay at anchor in a sheltered bay on the south side of the island on the evening of January 21, I heard an occasional song that I attributed to this bird. And the following morning we found them common through the rather low open forest, as well as in denser growth adjacent to a mangrove swamp. The clear, ringing song, heard constantly, was a rapid repetition of a single phrase. The birds were common also, but more wary, on the eastern side of Isla del Rey, at 72 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Ensenada below Punta de Pena Tiburon, January 24; at Manzanillo, above Punta Gorda, farther south, June 25; and along the Rio Cacique at the west side of the large bay on the southern side of Rey on Janu- anyc7. Eisenmann heard a wren, evidently of this genus, singing near a stream on Saboga Island in the Perlas on July 9, 1964. He did not see the bird. Though unreported from this island, no other Thryothorus is known from this archipelago. THRYOTHORUS MODESTUS Cabanis; Plain Wren, Cucarachero Sencillo Thryothorus modestus Cabanis, Journ. f. Orn., vol. 8, “Nov. 1860” (published May 30, 1861), p. 409. (San José, Costa Rica.) Rather small; upper surface from crown to back of tail grayish brown. Similar in general to Thryothorus leucotis, but with dark bar- rings on wings much less prominent. In nominate modestus and elutus, distinctly buff on sides, undertail coverts, rump, and wings; one very grayish race (zeledont). Description.—Length 125-135 mm (elutus), 145-150 mm (zeledoni). Adult (sexes alike), crown and hindneck dark, slightly brownish gray, becoming olive-brown on back, scapulars, wing, and rump; upper tail coverts faintly paler; tail russet or grayish brown, barred heavily with dull black; secondaries and outer webs of inner primaries dull rufous or grayish brown, barred with black to dusky; primaries otherwise dull black; a broad white line above eye; lores and space around eye white, with a dull black spot in front of eye, extending in a narrow line be- hind; throat white; breast and upper abdomen white or shaded gray, tinged with cinnamon-buff on sides; flanks and undertail coverts cin- namon or buffy olive; underwing coverts white. Immature, somewhat duller, with markings on side of head less distinct. The Plain Wren occurs from Chiapas, Mexico, through Central America to central Panama. The nominate race, modestus, is found from central Mexico south through much of Costa Rica, replaced in Panama by the subspecies elutus (which ranges north into the extreme southeastern end of Costa Rica). Zeledon’s Wren, zeledoni, described’ beyond, is a Caribbean form with a range on the Caribbean slope from northern Bocas del Toro north in eastern Costa Rica to southeastern Nicaragua; currently regarded as a geographic race of T. modestus, it is included (with reservations) under that species. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 73 THRYOTHORUS MODESTUS ZELEDONI (Ridgway ) Thryophilus zeledoni (Lawrence Ms.) Ridgway, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 1, 1878, p. 252. (Pacuare, Limon, Costa Rica.) Characters.—Similar to Thryothorus modestus elutus (Bangs), but larger and decidedly darker; dorsal surface, sides, flanks, and undertail coverts gray (without definite reddish brown markings); bill and feet larger, stronger. Kennard recorded a female taken at Almirante as having the maxilla black; mandible yellow; iris gray-brown; tarsus dark olive. Measurements.—Males (10 from Bocas del Toro, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua), wing 62.3-65.0 (63.5), tail 49.4-53.9 (51.5), culmen from base 19.5-22.5 (21.1), tarsus 24.8-26.6 (25.8) mm. Females (9 from Bocas del Toro and Costa Rica), wing 60.0-63.3 (61.7), tail 48.5-51.5 (48.6), culmen from base 17.4-21.5 (19.9), tar- sus 24.2-25.8 (25.0, average of 8) mm. Resident. Recorded in the lowlands of western Bocas del Toro, from Almirante, Isla Colon in Almirante Bay, and Zegla on the Rio Changuinola to the Costa Rican boundary on the lower Rio Sixaola; not abundant. This wren was described originally by Ridgway as a distinct species, from its larger size and darker coloration compared to Thryothorus modestus, and was so treated by Salvin and Godman in 1880, Sharpe in 1881, Carriker in 1910, Kennard and Peters in 1931. Hellmayr, how- even, (Cat. Birds Amer., pt. VI, 1937, pp. 170-171), from examina- tion of 4 specimens from Matina, Limon, and La Iberia Farm on the base of Volcan de Turrialba, Costa Rica, placed it as a race of Thryo- thorus modestus with the statement that though “well characterized by much larger feet and bill, much duller and less brownish upper parts with brownish instead of rufescent wings and tail, and much less ful- vous flanks and undertail coverts . . . is clearly conspecific with T. modestus . . . though intergradation, especially in dimensions, is far from being complete.’’ Hellmayr’s action has been followed, mainly uncritically, since. Carriker (Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. 6, no. 4, 1910, p. 755), in writing of Costa Rica, said of geledoni that he first encountered it “along the Sicsola [=Sixaola] River, where they frequented wild-cane brakes and a high tangled grass found only along the river bank, known as ‘gami- lote.’” He never saw it in forest. His locality was along the present northeastern end of the boundary with Panama. 74 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Karly reports in Panama were by Griscom (Amer. Mus., Novy. no. 293, 1928, p. 1) of 1 collected near Almirante by Benson, and by Ken- nard and Peters (Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 38, no. 10, 1928, p. 459) of 1, taken also at Almirante, by Kennard, on March 16, 1926. Peters later (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 71, 1931, p. 330) recorded a female from this locality collected by Hasso von Wedel, August 10, 1927. A male and female in the Havemeyer Collection at the Peabody Museum were taken there by Austin Smith, April 19 and 23, 1927. Eisenmann (Condor, 1957, p. 256), who observed these birds at Changuinola in 1956, with reference to Hellmayr, described the song as loud and ringing and wrote, “. .. those that I heard from zeledom were different from any I have noted from elutus, but they showed some resemblance.” Slud (Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., Bull. 128, 1964, p. 285) who described the notes in detail, concluded that “the songs of modestus and zeledoni sound identical to me except that zeledoni gives ....an uncharacteristic deliberate swir, swirrst, the last note rising, so to speak, in an overhanging curve. Also zeledoni has a harder, heavier call note.” He considered that birds from the Terraba Valley, on the Pacific slope in the southwest, showed approach to zgeledom in bill size and grayness. Dr. Thomas Howell, who has seen the bird in Nicaragua, informs me (i litt.) that to him the song and calls suggested those of T. modestus. My own personal knowledge of zeledomi has come from encounters near Changuinola in western Bocas del Toro, where I collected 1 February 13, 1958, and saw others briefly February 28, but did not hear the calls or song. Museum specimens have increased, so that from the 4 listed by Hellmayr in his discussion on relationship, | have mea- surements of 7 males and 5 females (including Ridgway’s type), and have examined several others in which the sex has not been marked. All have shown the larger size and the darker, distinctly gray coloration on which Ridgway described the bird as a distinct species, with no inte- gration to the smaller size and brighter colors of T. modestus elutus with which it has been supposed to hybridize. From my examination of specimens it has seemed to me that geledoni is a distinct species. However, because of my slight personal knowledge of the bird in life it is listed here as a geographic race, with the suggestion that it be studied further when there is suitable opportunity. The range of geledomi, from the published record in Panama, is restricted to the Caribbean lowlands, inland only to the interior foot- hills. In Costa Rica, it ranges only on the Caribbean coastal plain (being replaced by nominate modestus at about 600 m, fide Slud, FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 75 1964, op. cit.), continuing to southeastern Nicaragua, at Los Sabalos where the river of that name joins the Rio San Juan, at San Juan del Norte (formerly Greytown) at the mouth of this river. The eggs of T. m. geledoni have not as yet been described. A nest collected at Almirante June 4, 1962, by Pedro Galindo is an elliptical ball of long slender plant fibers (apparently aerial rootlets, mixed with fine grass stems and a lesser amount of broad-bladed grass) measuring 120X160 mm. The entrance hole in the end was underneath so that it was sheltered. Another nest, slightly smaller, with dimensions 110 120 mm, found on the same date, was more loosely compacted of shorter, coarser materials, including rootlets and grass. It also had the entrance hole sheltered beneath, at one end. Both nests were empty. THRYOTHORUS MODESTUS ELUTUS (Bangs) Thryophilus modestus elutus Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, Janu- ary 30, 1902, p. 51. (Lion Hill Station, Panama Railroad, Canal Zone.) Characters.—Smaller; rump and upper tail coverts russet, tail dull russet; upper abdomen and tibia white, changing to gray on upper sides; lower sides, flanks, and undertail coverts buffy cinnamon. A male at El Copé, Coclé, February 24, 1962, had the iris reddish brown; maxilla black; nasal operculum mandible, tarsus, toes, and claws dark neutral gray. Posterior area of the inside of the mouth, in- cluding the thickened base of the tongue, black, shading anteriorly to neutral gray on inner surface of bill. The slender tip of the tongue was transparent, without color. In another male, at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, March 10, 1966, the iris was orange-brown; tip of mandible dark neutral gray; cutting edge of maxilla and base of mandible light neutral gray; rest of maxilla black; tarsus, toes, and claws dusky neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui, Veraguas, Los Santos, Herrera, Coclé, and Canal Zone), wing 58.1-60.9 (59.2), tail 45.6- 51.2 (48.2), culmen from base 18.1-18.9 (18.1), tarsus 23.0-24.8 1235-0) mim. Females (10 from Chiriqui, Veraguas, Los Santos, Coclé, and Canal Zone), wing 53.4-56.7 (55.2), tail 42.0-49.5 (44.2), culmen from base 17.1-18.9 (18.1), tarsus 21.6-23.0 (22.6) mm. Resident. Common in the Tropical Zone of the Pacific slope; from western Chiriqui (to over 1500 m above El Volcan including Cerro Punta; above Boquete) and the Burica Peninsula at Puerto Armuelles, east through southern Veraguas, the Azuero Peninsula to Punta Mala, 76 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 the western and eastern sections of the Province of Panama, the lower Bayano Valley (Chepo, San Antonio); in the northern Canal Zone also on the Caribbean slope, including the lower and middle Chagres Valley (Juan Mina, Lion Hill, Gatun, Fort San Lorenzo) and the Rio Boqueron above Madden Lake (Peluca Hydrographic Station) and the Province of Colon east to Portobelo. It follows clearings into the mountains (reaching 1860 m at Cerro Punta) of Chiriqui (Rio Chi- riqui, Fortuna Dam site), Veraguas (Santa Fé, Chitra), Panama (Cerro Campana, Cerro Azul-Cerro Jefe area). From the lowlands of western Chiriqui the subspecies elutus ranges for a short distance into southern Costa Rica through the Golfo Dulce area to the lower valley of the Rio Terraba (specimens in collec- tions of the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology). When found in the same general area as the more secretive Buff-breasted Wren (Thryothorus leucotis galbraithu) the Plain Wren may be identified by its paler colors and less heavily barred wings. These wrens are found in thickets, brushy pastures, and low cover in other open areas, including suburban gardens, hedgerows, and weed- grown fields, outside the heavy forests. Here they forage in pairs, and — at the proper season, in family groups. While usually encountered low down, they also explore the branches of trees above the thickets, espe- cially when these have tangles of vines that provide cover. In such lo- cations they move about with much low chatter, often concealed among the leaves, hiding carefully at any alarm. Neglected orange and grape- fruit groves, where the trees have many epiphytes, are often attractive to them. In Eisenmann’s opinion, elutus is, after the House Wren, the most numerous wren in open, extensively deforested areas of Panama, chiefly in the Pacific lowlands, but also very common in the Boquete district, Chiriqui, and the cleared areas of the Caribbean watershed in the Canal Zone. The highest bird he has found was seen singing in a field at Cerro Punta, Chiriqui, at 1860 m on December 11, 1962. While un- recorded in Darién, where replaced by the essentially South American T. leucotis, both species occur sympatrically in the Canal Zone and in open or cleared areas of eastern Province of Panama. The song, heard constantly, is a series of whistled notes, ending with one or two in harsher tone, from which country residents in Costa Rica call them “chinchirigui” (varied by some to “richichi”’). When heard near at hand this is found to be a combination of three or more whistled sounds followed by a harsher call, the first given by the male, FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE I the second immediately following by the female. They also have the rattling notes common to related wrens. Skutch (Pacific Coast Avif., no. 34, 1960, p. 125) describes a varied series of musical sounds that he attributed to immature birds. Eisenmann considers the songs, although musical and varied, to lack the richness and sweetness, and often the loudness of those given in central Panama by other wrens of the genus Thryothorus. Most songs include the cheénchirigweé phrase that gives the species its vernacular name in Costa Rica. Sometimes the last note slides down at the end, or the phrase may be changed to weereeweé; these phrases are often introduced by other notes, or the phrase may be replaced by a more musical cheechooee or cheeweetweet or variants. A very distinctive call is a loud, rapid tsiptsip-tsrrrrrr, sometimes just tsirrrrrr, suggesting the sound produced by the whirling wooden rattle often used in New Year’s Eve celebrations. At El Valle, Coclé, on August 30, 1951, he observed a pair duetting: one delivered a phrase of usually four notes and the other added two, over and over (see also Worth, Bird-Lore, 1939, p. 282 on antiphonal singing in Chiriqui by birds perched a few inches from each other). Blake (Condor, vol. 58, 1956, p. 387) recorded a nest and eggs, col- fecred by P2 Monniche near. Boquete, May 10, 11932, as the usual rounded ball “loosely woven of dried grass” with a lining of finer ma- terial and chicken feathers. The two partly incubated eggs were “dull white, unmarked, and measure 21.5 14.3 and 22.314.2 mm.” The field journal of G. Ralph Meyer for July 7, 1941, records a nest in the Canal Zone built in a croton hedge along the front of the military quar- ters. This contained three white eggs which seemed very large for the size of the bird. As they were well incubated they were not collected. Six nests in the collection of the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, collected by Andrews Williams and Mrs. Elsie Fiala from March 21 to June 30, 1971, in the Rio Terraba-Golfo Dulce area in Costa Rica, were alike in rounded form, with the entrance at one side. Each held two eggs. One, on April 10, 1971 (parent wren flushed from the nest), with the entrance on the side near the top, held one egg of the wren and one of the parasitic Striped Cuckoo, Tapera naevia excellens. Skutch (Pac. Coast Avif., no. 34, 1960, pp. 123-129) describes be- havior and nesting, chiefly in Costa Rica, pointing out that in addition to the globular breeding nest, this species builds a domed dormitory nest of much looser construction with a larger side entrance, used by the male while the female sleeps in the breeding nest. 78 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 THRYOTHORUS RUFALBUS CASTANONOTUS (Ridgway): Rufous-and-white Wren, Cucarachero Rojizo Thryophilus rufalbus castanonotus Ridgway, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. XXIII, March, 1888, p. 386. (“Nicaragua to the highlands of Columbia” = Angostura, Cartago, Venezuela.) Medium size: above chestnut-brown, a prominent white line above the eye; undersurface white, except for brownish flanks. Description Length 135-155 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face pale to deep chestnut (lighter on crown); wings narrowly, tail more broadly, barred with black; a distinct white superciliary line, margined narrowly above by black; line on side of head from the eye to neck rufous-brown; rest of side of head white, streaked with black, with lower side of head white, bordered below by a narrow black line; undersurface white, changing to grayish brown on sides, browner, be- coming darker on flanks; underwing coverts spotted with black; under- tail coverts white, barred heavily with black, the dark bars edged nar- rowly with rusty brown. Immature, duller, darker brown above, especially on crown and hind- neck; duller white on lower surface, with breast lined distinctly with dusky; undertail coverts pale rusty brown, barred lightly with black. An adult male, collected at Chiva Chiva, Canal Zone, March 19, 1961, had the iris dark brown; cutting edge of maxilla and mandible dull whitish; rest of maxilla fuscous-black; base of gonys and anterior half of mandible (except cutting edge) pale neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws brownish gray. Another male at Las Palmitas, Los Santos, Janu- ary 24, 1962, had the iris dark reddish brown; maxilla and tip of mandi- ble black; rest of mandible light neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws light mouse brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui, Veraguas, Los Santos, Herrera, Coclé, Province of Panama, and Canal Zone), wing 67.2- 72-1 (69. 3), tail 48.2-54.7 (52.1), culmen from base 19.7-23.6 (21.3), tarsus 24.2-25.7 (25.0) mm. Females (10 from the same localities as the males), wing 61.2-67.8 (64.3), tail 46.2-51.5 (48.4), culmen from base 19.5-21.5 (19.7), tarsus 23.8-25.0 (24.5) mm. Resident. Widely distributed on the Pacific slope in the lowlands, where it is locally common in thickets and deciduous woodland, from western Chiriqui to the Rio Bayano Valley, following clearings into the highlands, and on the Caribbean side of the Canal Zone (especially mid- dle Chagres Basin and adjacent Colon Province, but rather rare near FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 79 the Caribbean coast. In Chiriqui, from Quebrada Santo Domingo (west of Concepcion and Alanje) east through David to San [elix; Veraguas, including Remedios, Cerro Flores, Chitra, Santa Ié, Calove- vora, and Santiago as well as the western side of the Azuero Peninsula (Paracoté, Mariato River); Los Santos (to Punta Mala); Herrera; southern Coclé; western Province of Panama (Playa Coronado, Cerro Campana), and the eastern section to La Jagua, Chepo, San Antonio, and the lower Bayano Valley. In the Canal Zone found mainly on the Pacific side near Panama City and Chiva Chiva; Goldman, in 1912 secured 1 at Tavernilla, now submerged in Gattn Lake near Barro Colorado Island. Major General Meyer found it near Summit. In mountain areas it is recorded to 750 m near El Valle, Coclé, and to 1000 m on Cerro Hoya, Los Santos, and to 1500 m at Boquete (Quiel). These birds are found in pairs, usually on or near the ground in thickets of fairly open areas. Often they appear less timid than most other species as they range in brush-filled gullies or low thickets in open areas, or in the denser ground cover in gallery forest. They seem adaptable, and are able to exist in second growth when this follows clearing of the original forest. As they move about under cover of vines and low shrubbery, their presence may be known from the songs of the males. These begin with a rolling repetition of a loud note that changes to a trill, the two mingling with varying cadence in pleasing combina- tion. On the whole, they sound less emphatic in utterance than the songs of others of the genus found in Panama. Songs attributed to the females, heard alternately with those of males, are softer, less emphatic in tone. They often respond to whistled imitations, and also are at- tracted by squeaking sounds. The field notes of Major General G. Ralph Meyer for July 30, 1941, describe a nest, found near the Gamboa Road junction, as bulky, made of grass, hanging in the fork of a “bull thorn” or bullhorn acacia (Aca- cia costaricensis and allies). The tubular entrance was almost at a right angle to the axis of the main nest, which lay along the trunk of the tree. The whole was about 300 mm long by 125 mm wide, with the tubular entrance about 50 mm in diameter. Other nests were present in the same kind of small tree, infested with fierce small ants (Pseudomyrma) that live symbiotically on these plants. Meyer recorded that this wren was host to the parasitic Striped Cuckoo, Tapera naevia excellens. (See Wetmore, Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 150, Part 2, 1968, p. 135). Meyer described the three eggs found in the nest as colored greenish white, with measurements as follows: 21.6 15.7, 22.2 15.2, and 22.3 x bo./ mm. 80 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Two males collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 27.1 and 27.7 g. Although primarily a lowland species, Eisenmann (in litt.) saw it at about 1500 m in the Boquete area at Quiel in a coffee plantation (Febru- ary 27, 1960) and on the Camino a la Estrellon (July 19, 1964, seen singing). Ridgely netted and released 1 on March 3, 1976, at approxi- mately 1350 m in central Chiriqui on the upper Rio Chiriqui (Fortuna Dam site) at the edge of a clearing in humid forest, a surprising location. The song, while variable, is usually very distinctive and unlike that of any other wrens because of the low pitch of many notes, which, to Eisenmann’s ear, gives a “hooting” quality, although Hartshorne states they are pure, musical tones, mostly on the diatonic scale. The most characteristic phrase consists usually of four (more or less) “hooting” notes often followed by an emphatic higher note: hoo-hoo-hoo whit; sometimes the higher last note slides down or is followed, or replaced by, a trill. Sometimes the initial notes (lee, lee, looo) suggest the first three notes of the bugle call “taps.” Mrs. Cora C. Alderton, who lived at Gamboa, Canal Zone, had a nesting pair in her garden in 1957-58 and gave Eisenmann, in musical notation, fifteen major variations and a larger number of minor ones of songs heard, and said she had heard more than fifty variations. Among, the “trilling”’ variations is one somewhat resembling a subdued bugle call, mentioned by Sturgis (Field Book of Birds of the Canal Zone, 1928, p. 358). The song has been highly praised also by Chapman (My Tropical Air Castle, 1929, p. 358) and others. In addition to the songs, Eisenmann has heard a loud, rattling chatter and a dry thrrrrp. Mrs. Alderton showed Eisenmann a nest in her garden in Gamboa that was “saddle bag-shaped,” with a wide entrance tube, on the stem of a frond of a small ornamental palm. It was begun on April 3, 1958, but destroyed by Thraupis tanagers. Another nest was begun in the same palm on April 11; straws for the lining were brought in on April 27. Incubation apparently began in early May. D. E. Harrower (thesis at Cornell University) reports “breeding season from at least April to September’; he found an active nest on July 17 at Pedro Miguel, Canal Zone, in a thorny acacia 2-3 m from the ground. F. O. Chapelle noted a pair building near Ft. Clayton on April 20, 1955; this nest, also in bullhorn acacia, was almost finished on April 23. S. F. Ambrose found a nest being built in a bullhorn acacia on July 4, 1964, at Santa Clara, Coclé, on the Pacific Coast. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE SI A bird banded by H. Loftin at Curundu, Canal Zone, on December 7, 1963, was recaptured there on March 5 and April 30, 1966, and on September 20, 1967. THRYOTHORUS THORACICUS Salvin: Stripe-breasted Wren, Cucarachero Pechirayado Thryothorus thoracicus Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1864, p. 580. (Tucurrique, Costa Rica.) Rather small; dull brown above; foreneck and breast white, heavily streaked with black. Description.—Length 106-122 mm. Adult (sexes alike), above brown, varying from a dull grayish brown hue on forecrown to russet- brown on rump and upper tail coverts; in some individuals, very faintly and indistinctly barred narrowly with black; wings and tail somewhat lighter brown, heavily barred with black; side of head and of upper neck dull brownish black streaked with white; a white superciliary line; foreneck and breast white, lined broadly with black, these markings re- duced in extent on abdomen; sides grayish olive, changing to rusty brown on flanks; undertail coverts brown, barred with black; under- wing coverts white, barred and lined with grayish brown. Immature, undersurface lighter, somewhat duller brown with black lines greatly reduced in extent, less definite. Measurements.—Males (10 from Veraguas and Costa Rica), wing 55.0-62.5 (59.0), tail 37.1-40.4 (38.1), culmen from base 18.1-20.0 (19.0, average of 9), tarsus 20.6-22.3 (21.6) mm. Females (10 from Veraguas, Bocas del Toro, Costa Rica, and Nica- ragua), wing 55.8-62.1 (58.1), tail 34.4-39.8 (36.8), culmen from base 17.3-18.9 (18.2), tarsus 19.3-22.0 (20.7) mm. Resident. Rare; known on the basis of specimens on the Caribbean slope of Panama, from western Bocas del Toro (recorded from Zegla, Rio Changuena ), to the border with Veraguas (Rio Calovévora, Amer- ican Museum of Natural History) and from Cascajal, northern Cocle. There are sight records from the Canal Zone (Gattin Dam, Achiote Road) (Ridgely, 1976, p. 267). The first authentic published record for the Republic is a male labeled “Almirante,” forwarded by Hasso von Wedel, dated May 16, 1927. (Peters, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 71, 1931, p. 330). It is of interest to note that Austin Smith, in the final days of a trip to Panama in 1927, worked briefly in Bocas del Toro. Among his specimens, preserved in the Havemeyer Collection in the Peabody Museum in New Haven, are 82 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 2 males of this wren from Zegla, Rio Teribe, collected May 16, 1927. The locality was a small village located near the mouth of the Rio Teribe, where that stream enters the Rio Changuinola, about 4 km above the bridge on the railroad, north of Almirante. It appears that Wedel, cited above, either accompanied Smith or acquired one of his specimens. Our collections also include 2 skins of T. thoracicus, collected Sep- tember 8 and 14, 1961, by Pedro Galindo at a camp at 750 m elevation on the Rio Changuena, a tributary of the Rio Changuinola farther in- land. There is no other report from the well-known Almirante area. Another record for the Caribbean slope is an adult dated March 3, 1889, marked Cascajal, Coclé, collected by the missionaries H. F. Heyde and Ernesto Lux. The locality is on the Rio Cascajal on the Caribbean slope in northwestern Cocle. In the American Museum of Natural History are 9 ee, labeled from Guaval, Rio Calovévora, Veraguas (266-500 m), taken by R. R. Benson between August 1-September 19, 1926. This river forms the boundary between Bocas del Toro and Veraguas. One specimen from September 4 is a full-grown bird in juvenal plumage. E. O. Willis (Eisenmann, im litt.) reports seeing a pair in September 1963 in the northwestern Canal Zone near the Caribbean coast on the road to Rio Medio, following army ants. He writes that the vocalization consisted mainly of single, similar notes somewhat resembling a Night- ingale Wren but repeated more rapidly and sometimes varied with notes of other pitches of a more Thryothorus quality. Pujals also reports having once seen this species along the Achiote Road of the northwest- ern Canal Zone, and later on February 14, 1947, near Rio Indio village in western Colon. A record by Salvin (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 18673;pyia- anes ports 3 specimens received from Arcé, erroneously as from “San- tiago de Veragua,” far down in the Pacific lowlands of Veraguas. This error was repeated by Salvin and Godman (in Biol. Centr.-Amer., Aves, vol. 1, 1880, p. 86). The bird is known in Panama almost ex- clusively from the Caribbean slope, and so may have been taken in the Calovévora area on the northern Caribbean slope of the mountains, ac- cessible by a well-known trail from Arcé’s permanent location at Santa Fé. On March 18, 1974, Skutch and Eisenmann (in. litt.) heard the distinctive call of this species in the humid forest on Santa Fé, on the Pacific slope. Evidently the bird does « cross the Divide in at least this location. Arcé, in the early days of his work in Panama, seems not to have labeled some of his specimens carefully. Salvin, with the lack of detail FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 83 in geographic data available, then seems also not to have understood clearly his collector’s location. In some instances he seems to have in- terpreted the shipping point, in the present case Santiago, for the col- lector’s location, far distant in the mountains. This wren has been studied in detail by Skutch on the humid tropical Caribbean slope of Costa Rica (Publ. Nuttall Orn. Club, no. 10, 1972, pp. 159-163). The song consists of two types, the first being a distinc- tive series of slowly repeated whistled notes, almost like those of a pygmy-owl, heard usually at dawn and the second is a medley of sounds more usual in the family, highly varied and often antiphonal in utter- ance by paired male and female. The ball-shaped nest has two sections, an outer part with a broad opening downward, with a passage to the in- ner chamber that holds the eggs. These, laid in April—in one case three in number, in another, two—are plain white without markings. The young at hatching are without down. Carriker (Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. VI, 1910, p. 759) found a nest at Jimenez, Costa Rica, May 9, 1905, with three immaculate white eggs, so heavily incubated that only one was preserved. This measured 19.5 x14 mm. My only personal acquaintance with this species came in November 1940 on the Caribbean slope of the Continental Divide on Cerro Santa Maria in northern Costa Rica. Here its clear songs were heard regu- larly, usually about deadfalls in heavy forest. THRYOTHORUS LEUCOPOGON GRISESCENS (Griscom): Stripe-throated Wren, Cucarachero Garganta Rayada Thryophilus leucopogon grisescens Griscom, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, January 1932, p. 359. (Permé, San Blas, Panama.) Rather small; dull brown; side of head black, streaked with white; throat dull white, streaked indistinctly with dusky; rest of undersurface plain, without markings, undertail coverts more rufescent. Description.—Length 115-125 mm. Upper surface, including scapu- lars, dark grayish brown, very faintly and indistinctly banded with black; wings and tail light chestnut-brown banded narrowly with black; middle and lesser wing coverts slightly paler than back, banded nar- rowly with dull black; lores centrally dull black, above white, this color extending back as a line over eye and auricular area, bordered above by a narrow black line that, as a small black spot, breaks the white at the center of the upper eyelid; side of head black lined with white with a black line along lower jaw; throat dull white, with dusky; undersurface dull tawny brown, slightly paler in the center of the abdomen, more 84 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 rufescent on the undertail coverts and duller on the sides; axillars and underwing coverts dull white, mixed indistinctly with dusky. Young birds have the throat buffy with the dark lines very indistinct. A male taken at Armila, San Blas, February 26, 1963, had the iris auburn, narrow cutting edge of maxilla dull white; rest of maxilla black; mandible dark neutral gray on sides, neutral gray on lower sur- face; tarsus and toes fuscous-brown; claws dark neutral gray. An- other male at this locality, March 2, 1963, had the iris orange; tarsus and toes brownish neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from San Blas and Darién) wing 55.4- 58.0 (56.7), tail 34.3-39.7 (37.1), culmen from base 17.5-19.3 (18.5), tarsus 18.0-21.7 (20.4) mm. Females (6 from eastern Province of Panama, San Blas, and Da- rién), wing 51.6-56.2 (53.1), tail 34.4-36.2 (35.3, average of 4), culmen from base 17.3-19.3 (17.9, average of 5), tarsus 18.6-20.2 (19.3) mm. Resident. Found locally in eastern Panama; on the Caribbean slope in eastern San Blas from Permé and Armila to the Colombian boundary at Puerto Obaldia; on the Pacific side, from Cerro Chucanti, at the head of Rio Majé, in extreme eastern Province of Panama, and Darién (re- corded at Tapalisa, Cituro, Pucro, and at the base of Cerro Quia (Rio Mono) in the upper Tuira Valley, and near Cana, on Cerro Pirre; near Jaqué and on the upper Rio Jaqué). Outside of Panama, this species is found in western Colombia and northwestern Eucador. These wrens range more in the open than most of their relatives. While they may be found low down, in dense growth near the ground, they also are regularly seen higher, among vines and branches in forest areas. The only one seen on Cerro Chucanti associated with a group of small ant-wrens in the lower branches of open forest. One near Armila hunted through the higher limbs in a cacao plantation, and another on the Rio Pucro was in open cover near a trail leading through a forest. On the Rio Jaqué, 1 searched through a mass of vines 10 m above the ground, and at Jaqué I found 1 in the undergrowth in heavy forest. At other localities I saw them regularly in fairly open areas at heights of 15 to 18 m. At Armila, on March 2, 1963, a pair was busily building a nest in fairly open forest at the border of a quebrada. The structure was an untidy ball, irregular in form, placed near the end of small branches with no attempt at concealment. Hellmayr (Cat. Birds Amer., pt. 7, 1934, p. 176), with a rather small series, listed the Thryothorus leucopogon group as a geographic race of the widely separated T. thoracicus, a treatment that has been ac- FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 85 cepted by other recent students. With the considerable series now avail- able it is clearly evident that thoracicus is uniformly and _ heavily streaked with black and white over throat and breast. In T. leucopogon the marking is confined wholly to the upper throat, with foreneck and breast immaculate. The two styles of marking are clear cut in their differences, with no intergradation. THRYOTHORUS NIGRICAPILLUS Sclater: Bay Wren, Cucarachero Cabecinegro Ficure 10 Thryothorus nigricapillus P.L. Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, pt. 28, May 1860, p. 84. (Nanegal, 4000 feet elevation, Ecuador.) Medium size; crown and hindneck black, rest of upper surface chestnut-brown, with wings and tail barred black; throat white, rest of undersurface chestnut or barred. Ficure 10—Bay Wren, Cucarachero Cabecinegro, Thryothorus nigricapillus. 86 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Description.—Length 126-156 mm. Crown and hindneck black in sharp contrast to chestnut-brown of back and upper tail coverts; wings and tail somewhat lighter brown, heavily barred with black; throat, line over the eye, lores, auricular region, and side of jaw white; a nar- row black line below along the side of the jaw. The pattern of color on the upper surface in all of the races is as described above. The under- surface differs widely in the subspecies, from plain chestnut-brown in costaricensis and odicus, to white, barred narrowly with black on the undersurface, in the eastern race schottw (in which there are two dark » bars on each feather). The range of this species, as here conceived, extends along the Carib- bean slope of Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama (both slopes from Veraguas eastward), western Colombia, and northwestern FEucador. (See Wetmore, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 139, no. 2, 1959, pp. 14-17 for taxonomic review). The call note in all is a somewhat guttural chur-r-rk. Song utterances are varied, but all agree in their ringing quality and cadence. The usual variants that may be heard from one male in the course of a few minutes I have written as follows: commonly, chit-i-sit chit-1-sit, re- peated rapidly a dozen times, then perhaps varied to sweety-it sweety-it. This may change to sweety-tu sweety-tu, or sweet-whee-hee sweet- whee-hee. The changes form quite a repertoire, but in final analysis all are rather similar. Males sing alone, but antiphonal duetting by a pair is more common. THRYOTHORUS NIGRICAPILLUS COSTARICENSIS (Sharpe) Thryophilus costaricensis Sharpe, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., vol. 6, 1881, p. 217. (Costa Rica = Valley of the Rio San Carlos, Alajuela, Costa Rica.) Characters.—Ear coverts, side of jaw, throat, and upper foreneck white; rest of undersurface auburn to hazel; some with sides barred indistinctly with black. Measurements.—Males (10 from Bocas del Toro), wing 66.5-71.5 (69.6), tail 51.1-56.8 (54.4), culmen from base 20.4-22.4 (21.3), tarsus 24.6-26.9 (25.7) mm. Females (10 from Bocas del Toro), wing 62.5-67.2 (65.2), tail 46.3- 51.3 (49.2), culmen from base 19.7-21.8 (20.7), tarsus 24.1-27.2 (25.2) mm. Resident. Common in the lowlands of Bocas del Toro, from the Rio Sixaola to the seaward side of the base of the Valiente Peninsula (Cocoplum). FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 87 This common lowland wren, found in thickets in swampy, low-lying areas on the shores of Almirante Bay, is known mainly by its songs and chattering, and scolding notes, since the birds remain hidden in dense cover. They were observed regularly in pairs. Carriker (Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. 6, 1910, p. 761) reports finding many nests in the Caribbean lowlands of Costa Rica, including the Rio Sicsola [= Sixaola], the boundary with Panama in Bocas del Toro. The nest is an elbow-sloped structure usually hung in an upright crotch of some small tree or shrub from 1.6 to 5 m above the ground, generally about 25 cm long and 8 to 13 cm in diameter at the larger end. All Car- riker found were built of weed stems, grass, rootlets, and skeletonized leaves, and lined with soft skeletonized leaves. Two nests, each with three fresh eggs on May 9 and 11, apparently contained the full com- plement. The eggs were “pure white, sparingly speckled over the whole surface (more thickly about the large end) with cinnamon-brown.” One set measured 23X16, 2516.5, and 24X17 mm. The type of this race, named by Sharpe, in the British Museum, is listed in the volume on type specimens (Warren and Harrison, vol. 2, Passerines, 1971, p. 132), as “Costa Rica. Collected by and purchased of A. Boucard.” The collector (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1878, p. 51), who listed the bird under the name “Thryophilus castaneus, Lawr.,” said of it “Several specimens from San Carlos; killed in February.” He described the locality (cit. supra, p. 38) as on Rio San Carlos, a tributary of Rio San Juan on the Caribbean slope. I have, therefore, designated this area as the type locality (Wetmore, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 139, no. 2, 1959, p. 19). THRYOTHORUS NIGRICAPILLUS ODICUS Wetmore Thryothorus nigricapillus odicus Wetmore, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 139, no. 2, July 8, 1959, p. 14. (Isla Escudo de Veraguas, off the base of the Valiente Peninsula, Bocas del Toro, Panama.) Character.—Similar to Thryothorus n. costaricensis, of the adjacent mainland, but definitely larger; bill longer, heavier; brown of back and undersurface definitely paler, ochraceous-tawny. Measurements.—Males (5 specimens), wing 75.2-79.2 (77.0), tail 98.6-62.3 (60.2), culmen from base 21.8-24.2 (23.2), tarsus 28.4-31.8 (29.7) mm. Females (6 specimens), wing 70.2-72.8 (71.6), tail 54.5-58.8 (56.8), culmen from base 21.0-22.3 (21.5), tarsus 26.1-28.7 (27.2) mm. Resident. Found only on Isla Escudo de Veraguas, Bocas del Toro. 88 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 When I visited the island, this wren, most common of the resident land birds, lived in pairs scattered through the undergrowth. In this island home, with no human neighbors, the birds were tame and easily observed. Though most often encountered in low tangles where vines were matted and cover was dense, they ranged also into open areas through the thickets, occasionally even overhead into the higher branches of the forest trees. The song, heard constantly, resembled that of the mainland race, but was slightly higher in tone and somewhat less varied in repertoire. Regularly the birds came fearlessly near at hand, even within a distance of 2 m. A nest nearly ready for occupancy, with both male and female bring- ing material to it, was a rounded ball placed at the end of a slender leafy branch, suspended 2 m above the ground. It was 200 mm or so in diameter, made of palm leaves and other fibers, all slender, that pro- jected as a rough fringe over the surface. The entrance was low down on one side. C. O. Handley, Jr., who recorded the wren as abundant, March 20- 24, 1962, preserved 2 specimens in alcohol. It should be emphasized that this wren is distinctly and obviously larger than its relative on the mainland, as are the Gould’s Manakin and the hummingbird Amazilia handleyi resident on Escudo de Veraguas. THRYOTHORUS NIGRICAPILLUS CASTANEUS Lawrence Thryothorus castaneus Lawrence, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 7, June 1861, p. 321. (Atlantic slope near the Panama Railroad = Lion Hill, Canal Zone. ) Characters.—Similar to T. n. costaricensis, but paler brown above and below; white of the throat usually more extensive, in some reach- ing the upper breast; often more heavily barred with black on sides, with the barring extending across the lower breast and abdomen. A female from the Caribbean slope at the head of Rio Guabal, Cocle, taken February 26, 1962, had the iris light mouse brown; maxilla black (except the cutting edge); base of mandibular rami dull buffy brown; cutting edge of maxilla and rest of mandible greenish neutral gray; tarsus and toes fuscous-black. A fully grown immature male collected at Gamboa, January 13, 1960, had the iris light brown; maxilla and a streak on the side of the mandible near the tip dull black, the latter changing distally to neutral gray, with the base of the mandible and the gape dull honey yellow; tarsus and toes dull neutral gray. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 89 Measurements.—Males (14 from the Caribbean slope of Coclé, western Colon, and northern Canal Zone), wing 66.2-70.7 (68.9), tail 49.4-53.7 (51.7), culmen from base 20.3-22.0 (21.0), tarsus 24.9-27.5 (25.0) tn. Females (17 from Coclé, western Colon, and northern Canal Zone), wing 63.1-67.0 (64.8), tail 46.3-53.4 (49.2), culmen from base 19.3- 21.9 (20.2), tarsus 23.4-25.7 (24.7) mm. Resident. Locally common on the Caribbean slope from the valley of the Rio Calovévora, northwestern Veraguas, through northern Vera- guas and northern Coclé (reaching the Pacific slope in these provinces ) to the northern Canal Zone (including the middle Chagres Valley), and reaching the Pacific slope in the southwestern section. In March 1951, I found this wren on the border of the Pacific slope near El Valle, Coclé, at 750 m elevation on the base of Cerro La India Dormida (male and female collected March 29), and at 600 m at the head of the Rio Mata Ahogada (female March 30, male March 31). Their presence in this area may be explained by more humid local con- ditions in contrast to the drier norm of the rest of the valley, indicated by abundant growth of green grass, herbaceous vegetation and vines, with occasional areas of new second-growth brush. The actual head of the Rio Mata Ahogada, which flows into the Pacific, is immediately adjacent to the headwaters of the Rio Indio of the Atlantic drainage, the two being separated only by a low, rounded ridge of slight elevation. In fieldwork the following year I found this race of the wren common inland along the valley of the Rio Indio. In this locality the bird was known to the country people as “F1 Guerrero.” The species crosses the Continental Divide also in Veraguas at Santa Fé, where it has recently been observed by Ridgely and where in 1925 Benson took a specimen (AMNH). Eisenmann has also observed it in the fairly humid cano- pied second-growth forest on the southwestern section of the Canal Zone east of Chorrera. An early report by Salvin (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1867, p. 134) of a specimen of castaneus labeled “Santiago de Veraguas” on the much drier Pacific section of the Isthmus is an error as the bird does not occur in that area. Salvin and Godman re- peat this locality (Biol. Centr.-Amer. Birds, vol. 1, pt. 4, 1880, p. 88) and later authors have also done so. srone! (Proc, Acad. Nat.) Sei. Philadelphia; vol: 70) 1918,-p. 271), described a nest found by Jewel in the Canal Zone, July 28, 1912, as “a loosely built elbow-shaped affair, made almost entirely of a round- stemmed grass and lined with finer stems of the same, a few coarser stems and reddish-brown vine tendrils on the outside. Loosely placed gO BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 in vines, four feet up, by a stream; contained one fresh egg measuring .90X.59 in.’ (Equivalent to 2.3<1.5 cm.) The color/et teers is not given. The notes of E. A. Goldman describe a nest of this species under construction near Gatun, Canal Zone, on February 2, 1911. It was located about 3.6 m above the ground in dense forest. D. E. Harrower (1936 thesis at Cornell University) indicated that the breeding season in the Canal Zone ran from late April into August. The season may be longer, however, since on November 21, 1957, F. O. Chapelle and G. Goldstein found a pair completing a nest near Gatun; an abandoned nest was nearby (1m litt. to Eisenmann). THRYOTHORUS NIGRICAPILLUS SCHOTTII (Baird) Thryophilus schottiu Baird, Rev. Amer. Birds Mus. Smithsonian Institution, vol. 1, August 1864, p. 123 (in Key), and September 1864, p. 133. (Rio Truando, Choco, Colombia. ) Thryophilus nigricapillus connectens Chapman, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 31, July 23, 1912, p. 157. (Cocal, 5000 ft. elevation, Cauca, Colombia.) Characters —Lower surface white, becoming buff on lower abdo- men, flanks and undertail coverts, heavily barred with black, in typical form this marking extending from the upper foreneck to the undertail coverts, in some also over the throat; buff on undersurface darker, restricted to flanks, lower abdomen, and undertail coverts. A male, taken at Puerto Obaldia, San Blas, March 1, 1963, had the iris mouse brown; maxilla black; tip of mandible dull pale olive-green, blackish on sides, changing at center to light orange-yellow; gape honey yellow; tarsus and toes fuscous-black; claws dark neutral gray. An immature female at Pucro, Darién, February 5, 1964, was similar in color of iris; maxilla, except cutting edge, fuscous-black; tip of mandi- ble dull greenish yellow, changing on side to pale neutral gray; cutting edge of maxilla, gape, and basal two-thirds of mandible honey yellow; tarsus and toes fuscous-black; claws fuscous. Measurements.—Males (10 from Darién), wing 64.0-66.9 (65.7), tail 48.0-52.3 (49.7), culmen from base 19.5-22.1 (20.9), tarsus 24.3- 268) (250, Females (10 from Darién), wing 58.2-64.3 (61.9), tail 43.2-49.5 (46.5), culmen from base 18.6-20.3 (19.6), tarsus 22.3-24.3 (23.4) mm. Resident. Common, widely spread through Darién in the upper valley of the Rio Tuira, from the Rio Cupe, the Rio Paya, and the Rio Pucro to the base of Cerro Tacarcuna; on Cerro Pirre at Cana; on the Rio Sambu; along the Pacific Coast from Bahia Pinas to Jaqué, and the FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE QI Rio Jaqué, inland to the Rio Imamado; on the Caribbean coast of San Blas inland at Armila and Puerto Obaldia. In adjacent Colombia this race ranges widely from Acandi and the Choco southward. Stomachs examined were filled with broken bits of a wide variety of insects, and occasionally of a spider, often a fairly large one. One had swallowed a small grass seed, apparently a chance occurrence. Six collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) ranged in weight from 17.7 to 23.8 g, averaging 20.9 g. THRYOTHORUS NIGRICAPILLUS REDITUS (Griscom) Thryophilus nigricapillus reditus Griscom, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, Janu- ary 1932, p. 358. (Permé, San Blas, Panama.) Characters.—Similar to T. n. castaneus but somewhat lighter colored; white of breast more extensive; sides and abdomen more extensively barred with black. A fully grown immature female at the Peluca Hydrographic Station back of Madden Lake, March 7, 1961, had tarsus and toes black, the inner lining of the mouth honey yellow (including the tongue, except for a spot of black on the base). An adult female collected near the Peluca Hydrographic Station, March 10, 1961, had the tongue black except for the tip and two pointed lateral projections at the base, which were yellow. Measurements.—Males (14 from Cerro Azul, Chiman, Charco del Toro, and Cerro Chucanti, in eastern Province of Panama, and Man- dinga and Permé, San Blas), wing 67.0-70.5 (68.1), tail 47.5-54.3 (51.8), culmen from base 19.3-21.9 (20.9), tarsus 24.0-26.5 (25.5) mm. Females (11 from Cerro Bruja, eastern Colon, Cerro Azul, Chiman, Charco del Toro, Cerro Chucanti in eastern Province of Panama; and Mandinga, San Blas), wing 63.2-67.7 (65.4), tail 45.0-51.4 (48.5), culmen from base 19.0-21.5 (20.1), tarsus 23.1-26.3 (24.7) mm. Resident. On the Caribbean side from eastern Colon (Portobelo, Cerro Bruja), through San Blas, from Mandinga to Permé. A nest seen March 9, 1961, near the Candelaria Hydrographic Station was built at the end of a dead branch projecting a few meters in the open among the leaves of fairly dense undergrowth on the bank of Rio Pequeni. It was an untidy ball of yellowish white fibers as large asa coconut. An adult was flushed from the nest, which held 2 nestlings with the feather growth barely beginning. Q2 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Three collected by Goldman May 25 to 30, 1911, had the stomachs filled with fragments of beetles, other miscellaneous insects including earwigs, egg cases of roaches, and spiders. This population of the wren is definitely an intergrade toward the next form, schotti, of eastern Panama and Colombia. Transition be- tween castaneus of the Caribbean slope of western Panama east through the northern Canal Zone at the western end of its range is fairly abrupt. Specimens from near Colon, and northern Canal Zone, are definitely castaneus. Those from Portobelo, 30 km east, are reditus. At the eastern end the type locality at Permé is barely within the range as birds from Armila and Puerto Obaldia, between 15 and 20 km east, are placed with schottu. THRYOTHORUS SEMIBADIUS Salvin: Riverside Wren, Cucarachero Castano Cabecimoreno Thryothorus semibadius Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, November 1870, p. 181. (Bugaba, Chiriqui, Panama.) Rather small; crown rufous-brown, like back (not black as in nigri- capillus) ; rest of undersurface barred narrowly with black and white (with 3 black bars on each feather). Description.—Length 120-135 mm. Adult (sexes alike) , crown, back, scapulars, and upper tail coverts chestnut-brown; wings somewhat brownish black, spotted and barred narrowly with light brown on the exposed outer webs, the bars extending across both webs on the inner- most feathers; lesser coverts black, spotted with white; tail dull black, barred and dotted with brownish buff; side of head black, edged widely with white, especially on the lores, superciliary line, and cheeks, which are largely white; throat white; rest of undersurface, including the underwing coverts, white, barred narrowly but heavily with black, the white changing to brownish buff on flanks, lower abdomen, and under- tail coverts; bend of wing white. Juvenile, somewhat duller brown above. A male, collected at Corotu, near the coast, northeast of Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, February 9, 1966, had the iris light reddish brown; cutting edge of maxilla and entire mandible neutral gray; rest of maxilla black; basal area of inside of mouth black, with anterior half of inner surface of maxilla and mandible neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws neutral gray, with the inner surface of tarsus somewhat paler. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chirqui), wing 60.1-66.6 (63.3) tail 44.6-50.6 (46.4), culmen from base 19.1-20.6 (19.8), tarsus 22.4- 25.4 (23.5) mm. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 93 Females (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 60.5-64.7 (62.4), tail 41.7-47.5 (44.8), culmen from base 19.2-20.8 (19.8), tarsus 22.4- 24.5 (23.2) mm. Resident. From present information, found locally in the lowlands on the Pacific slope of northwestern Chiriqui from the lower Burica Peninsula near Puerto Armuelles, to the northern base of the moun- tains below and above Concepcion (Bugaba, Divala, Buenavista). Thryothorus semibadius is a bird of limited distribution, found in Pan- ama in southwestern Chiriqui from the lowlands of the Burica Penin- sula near Puerto Armuelles to the base of the mountain area above Concepcion. My first view of this bird in life came in early March 1960, when a few were noted in thickets near the Rio Escarrea, at Buena Vista. In February and early March 1966, they were fairly common near Puerto Armuelles from the upper Rio San Bartolo, to the Rio Corotu near the coast. Like other species of the genus, they ranged in pairs on or near the ground in open thickets and in undergrowth in forest, usually near water. Ridgely (im litt.) found two pairs in mangroves foraging on the roots and in adjacent thickets, at Estero Rico, Chiriqui. Attention is drawn to them by their low, chattering calls, and less commonly by song, similar to that heard from various races of Thryothorus nigri- capillus, but slightly higher pitched in sound. Pairs sing regularly in antiphonal concert in which the leader, that 1 assumed to be the male, is followed immediately by a lesser voice that I supposed is the female. This sequence was clearly demonstrated when I moved quietly along a woodland trail, with members of a pair a few feet away, one on the right, the other on the left. With the onset of the full dry season at the end of February, they sing less often. Because of this silence they are seldom noticed in the dense cover that was their shelter. In southwestern Costa Rica, Skutch (Pac. Coast Avif. no. 34, 1960, pp. 130-137) found it common in the valley of El General, often in family groups of 3 or 4 birds. Throughout the year they slept in spe- cially built nests in trees or bushes, usually near streams, sometimes 2 or 3 birds together, possibly a female with grown young, as he believed that the mated pairs separated after nesting. The nests made in the breeding season were near rapidly flowing streams. They were rounded structures approximately 125x150 mm with an entrance chamber and an inner compartment. The clutch was two, the eggs being “‘white with fine, faint speckles of pale brown that are most numerous in a wreath or cap on the thick end.” Three eggs measured 20.6-22.2 by 15.1- 15.9 mm. The nesting season in Costa Rica extended from late De- 94 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A cember to September. Skutch found that grown young accompanied their parents for several months. On April 20-21, 1968, C. Leck and S. Hilty netted birds near the road to El Volcan at ca. 1140 m (confirmed by color slide). Eisenmann saw a pair engaged in antiphonal singing at Buena Vista (690 m) in a thicket of a boggy area on March 4, 1960. It ranges to the west in southwestern Costa Rica from the lowlands to about 900 m elevation. The close relationship of T. semibadius to the diverse forms of Thry- othorus nigricapillus is clearly evident, but the former differs definitely and completely from them in always having the crown chestnut-brown like the back, and also in the narrow bars on the lower surface which are produced by three black bands on each feather, instead of two bands as in the races of migricapillus that have this marking. (For other brief comment see Wetmore, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 139, no. 2, 1959, p. 17). Hellmayr (Cat. Birds Amer., Field Mus. Nat. Hist., pt. 7, 1934, p. 180) listed semibadius as a subspecies of nigricapillus, a treatment accepted also by Paynter (Check-List Birds World, vol. 9, 1960, p. 407), but one that does not seem justified, as there is no indication whatever of an approach in the markings described above that separate the two. THRYOTHORUS ATROGULARIS Salvin. Black-throated Wren, Cucarachero Gargantinegro Thryothorus atrogularis Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, February 1865, p. 580. (Tucurrique, Costa Rica.) Medium size; deep chestnut-brown; side of head, throat, and upper breast black. Description.—Length 145-160 mm. Adult (sexes alike); upper sur- face, from forehead to upper tail coverts, including scapulars and outer webs of wings, chestnut-brown; concealed webs of wings dusky; upper tail coverts barred lightly with black; tail black, with indefinite, partly concealed brownish bars; side of head to auricular region, chin, fore- neck, and upper breast black; superciliary, auricular, and nasal area spotted and lined lightly with white. Immature, without black on forepart of body, side of head, and un- dertail coverts. Bill dull black; iris brown, tarsus black. In juvenile, mandible ex- cept tip yellowish. Measurements.—Males (10 from Bocas del Toro), wing 65.0-68.6 (66.8), tail 51.4-54.7 (53.2), culmen from base 19.5-22.0 (20.8), tarsus 21.5-25.5 (24.4) mm. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 95 Females (10 from Bocas del Toro, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua), wing 60.0-63.7 (62.2), tail 45.6-50.5 (48.0), culmen from base 19.0- 20.9 (19.8), tarsus 22.9-24.5 (23.6) mm. Resident. Fairly common locally in the lowlands of western Bocas del Toro near Almirante Bay; ranging inland to 730 m on the Rio Changuena. Near Almirante this handsome wren ranges in tangles of low brush bordered with stands of coarse grasses. Galindo recorded it inland on the lower Rio Changuena, where | was taken September 8, 1961. In February and March 1958, they lived locally on the higher ground, beyond the borders of cultivation, inland from the wet coastal swamps. Attention is drawn to them by their clear musical songs. These are a series of modulated notes followed by ringing trills that suggest those of Thryothorus fasciatoventris albigularis. In addition to the song, they have the usual rattling, chattering notes. The birds ranged low, constantly under cover, as 1s usual in the genus. The species, here at the lower end of its range, is found north in Costa Rica and Nicaragua, through the lowlands of the Caribbean slope. The nest and eggs appear to be still unknown. Salvin (in Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr. Amer., Aves, vol. 1, 1880, p. 91, pl. 6, fig. 4) in his final account of this bird changed the spelling of the species name to atrigularis, citing the original spelling, atrogularis, in his heading. THRYOTHORUS SPADIX (Bangs) Sooty-headed Wren, Cucarachero Cabeza Fuliginosa Pheugopedius spadix Bangs, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 23, May 4, 1910, p. 74. (Naranjito, Rio Dagua, Colombia.) Pheugopedius spadix xerampelinus Griscom, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 69, no. 8, April 1929, p. 182. (Cana, Darién.) Medium size; throat and side of head black, the latter area streaked with white; chest and back chestnut-brown. Description.—Length 140-155 mm. Adult (sexes alike), throat and side of head black; a superciliary line and streaks on the cheeks white; crown and upper hindneck blackish brown; rest of upper surface, in- cluding wings, chestnut-brown; tail black, barred widely with chestnut- brown; upper breast dull chestnut-brown; sides, tibia, and undertail coverts dull brown, the latter barred with black like the tail; lower breast and abdomen dull buff spotted indistinctly with black; undersurface of wings buffy white. Immature, head, including cheeks and throat, dull brown. 96 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Measurements.—Males (10 from Darién, Panama; Antioquia and Bolivar, Colombia), wing 64.2-66.9 (65.1), tail 55.1-58.2 (56.9), cul- men from base 19.0-20.4 (19.5), tarsus 22.0-25.1 (23.7) mm. Females (10 from Darién, Panama; Antioquia and Bolivar, Colom- bia), wing 58.2-61.8 (59.0), tail 50.3-54.6 (52.4), culmen from base 17.8-20.4 (18.8), tarsus 20.7-22.8 (21.7) mm. Resident. Found locally in the Subtropical and upper Tropical Zone of Darién on Cerro Pirre, Cerro Tacarcuna, and Cerro Quia (780 m). The population of Panama, named by Griscom, is found to be the same as that of western Colombia. Goldman recorded 1, taken at 1200 m above Cana, as ranging in un- dergrowth along a ridge. The stomachs of 2 that he collected in late May and early June were filled with fragments of beetles, hemiptera, ants, gryllids, a caterpillar, and spiders. Ridgely (2m ltt.) observed a pair foraging in undergrowth at the edge of forest with a mixed flock on the slopes of Cerro Quia, Darién, at 540 m, rather lower than most other Panama records. The birds were silent as they moved through quite open lower undergrowth. In western Colombia, Hilty (Wilson Bull., 1974, pp. 479-481) recorded it quite regularly at swarms of the small army ant Labidus praedator. There is no record at present of the nest and eggs. In a considerable series of specimens examined there is no indica- tion of intergradation between T. spadix and Thryothorus atrogularis, the two groups differing completely in details of the color pattern, nota- bly in the crown and upper breast. Hellmayr (Cat. Birds Amer., part 7, 1934, p. 183) from limited material listed spadix as a geographic race of atrogularis, an arrangement followed also by Paynter (in Check-list Birds World, vol. 9, 1960, pp. 399-400). The series of both groups now available shows no indication of conspecific relationship. Geo- graphically the two groups are widely separated. S. West (in litt. to Eisenmann, October 1973) reports seeing a wren on Cerro Azul, eastern Province of Panama, with a black throat, but he failed to determine to which of these species it belonged. THRYOTHORUS FASCIATOVENTRIS Lafresnaye: Black-bellied Wren, Cucarachero Vientrenegro Medium size; foreneck and throat pure white, rest of undersurface black, partly barred white, upper surface reddish brown. Description.—Length 135-150 mm. Adult (sexes alike), foreneck and upper breast pure white, rest of undersurface black, banded nar- rowly with buff or with white on lower breast, abdomen and undertail FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 97 coverts; central area very faintly lined with the paler markings, or plain black; above reddish brown; side of head dull black; a narrow white line over loral area and eye. Immature, mandible yellow; side of head faintly dusky; light line over eye indistinct; foreneck grayish white to gray; rest of undersur- face grayish brown to brown, with cross bars faintly indicated or absent. These are among the more common wrens of forested regions in low- land areas, found usually in heavy cover in the denser stands of wood- land. Two subspecies are recognized in the Republic. The species ranges from southwestern Costa Rica to Colombia, the nominate race being described from central Colombia. THRYOTHORUS FASCIATOVENTRIS MELANOGASTER Sharpe Thryothorus melanogaster Sharpe, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., vol. 6, “1881” (1882), p. 230, pl. 14, fig. 2. (Bugaba, Chiriqui, Panama.) Characters.—Slightly darker, more chestnut-brown on upper sur- face, and on feathered area of tibia; undersurface with black of breast more extensive; averaging slightly larger. An adult male, taken at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, February 1, 1966, had the iris reddish brown; maxilla black; mandible dark bluish gray; inner side of tarsus and sides of toes and claws dull neutral gray; cuter side and front of tarsus, and tops of the toes dull black. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama and Costa Rica), wing 65.6-69.6 (66.1), tail 53.2-58.3 (56.7), culmen from base 20.5-23.8 (22.2), tarsus 23.1-26.2 (24.5) mm. Females (9 from Panama and Costa Rica), wing 61.5-66.0 (63.9), tail 50.5-55.2 (52.7), culmen from base 19.0-21.9 (20.0, average of 8), tarsus 22.5-24.9 (23.5) mm. Resident. Found locally in forested areas (not abundant) in the lowlands of western Chiriqui; recorded from west of David near Divala, and Bugaba, below Concepcion south to Aguacaton, the upper Rio San Bartolo and Puerto Armuelles; locally lower on the peninsula to Punta Balsa, near Punta Burica. As these wrens are primarily inhabitants of thickets in the denser cover of forests, they must now be reduced considerably in number owing to the extensive clearing in the area from which they are known. This western race was known early through specimens collected by Arcé, mainly in the Bugaba area (recorded by Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, pp. 180-181). In the British Museum (Natural His- 98 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 tory) there are 3 marked with this locality. Several others are labeled Chiriqui or “Veragua” without other locality. Griscom’s listing of “Veraguas’” in the range probably is due to these specimens, as the bird has not been recorded otherwise in that province (Griscom, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 358, where the range for Panama is cited as “Chiriqui and Veraguas”). Ridgway (U.S. Natl. Mus. Bull. 50, pt. 3, 1903, p. 532) did mention one locality, Chitra, included in the modern Province of Veraguas, but provides no literature basis for this locality and there is no specimen in the Smithsonian so labeled. Slud in Costa Rica (Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., no. 128, 1964, p. 289) characterizes this form as a “nonforest-inhabiting wren” of the densest stream-bordering thickets and wild, tangled brushy growth along wooded borders in the humid tropical belt. Its song, “in its slow pace and rich dark quality, mellow as that of an oriole,” differs from that of other wrens. THRYOTHORUS FASCIATOVENTRIS ALBIGULARIS (Sclater) Cyphorhinus albigularis P.L. Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, vol. 23, June 26, 1855, p. 76, pl. 88. (Isthmus of Panama.) Characters.—Slightly lighter brown on upper surface and tibia; black of lower parts somewhat less extensive; averaging smaller. A male, taken February 6, 1962, at Cafiita, near the Rio Bayano (above E] Llano), eastern Province of Panama, had the iris bright reddish brown; maxilla black, mandible neutral gray; inside of mouth neutral gray, except the tongue which had the distal half translucent so that color from beneath appeared through it; inner face of tarsus dark neutral gray; rest of tarsus with toes and claws fuscous-black. An- other male, collected March 12, 1963, at Armila, eastern San Blas, also had the iris reddish brown; maxilla and tip of mandible black; rest of mandible neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws dusky neutral gray. A third of the same sex, collected by R. S. Crossin at Gamboa, August 9, 1969, was similar. Measurements.—Males (10 from Coclé, Canal Zone, and San Blas), wing 63.1-70.1 (66.5), tail 49.2-57.1 (53.0), culmen from base 20.0- 22.2 (20.7), tarsus 23.2-25.9 (24.5) mm. Females (10 from Coclé, Colon, Canal Zone, San Blas, and Darién), wing 59.7-63.6 (61.3), tail 45.0-50.2 (47.2), culmen from base 19.0- 21.0 (19.8), tarsus 20.1-24.7 (23.0) mm. Resident. Locally fairly common in forested areas, from the Rio Indio and its tributaries in western Colon, and the Caribbean slope of FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 99 northern Coclé, east on both Pacific and Caribbean slopes in the Canal Zone (including Barro Colorado Island where, however, it was last re- corded August 22, 1964 [Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Cont. Zool. 291, 1979, p. 24]), through the eastern Province of Panama, including the valley of Rio Bayano (Fl Llano, Caftita, Chiman, the Rio Majeé (Charco del Toro), and the Tuira Valley (El Real, Pucro); and on the Caribbean side through San Blas (Mandinga, Bahia Caledonia, Permé, Armila) to the Colombian boundary of northeastern Choco. These forest inhabitants, found usually in pairs, at the proper season with grown young, range near the ground in low undergrowth, often in masses of creepers, low tangles of vines, and dense growths of Heli- conia in abandoned banana plantations. Occasionally they were with Song Wrens as near companions. The clear, whistled call, wheety-o- whee, repeated constantly, usually is heard from birds so well concealed in creepers or other cover, from the ground to fairly high in the trees, that there may be many minutes without even a glimpse of movement in the dense cover that they frequent. Only occasionally will one approach almost within arm’s reach, where they utter low calls of a different nature and then retreat to more distant cover. The song consists of clear hollow whistles, often including or ending with a characteristic whee-o-wheet. It is quite different in its more varied, constantly changing repertoire, from the rapidly repeated phrases of Thryothorus nigricapillus and T. leucotis that often range near it in the same forests. In stomach examinations the food was found to be the usual variety of small insects and spiders, all finely ground. In a pair collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club., 1975, p. 85) in the Province of Panama the male weighed 28 g and the female 21.4 g. Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) took a female in the same province that weighed 20.7 g. One banded at Curundu, Canal Zone, on December 7, 1963, was re- captured on September 18, 1967 (Loftin in litt. to Eisenmann). THRYOTHORUS RUTILUS HYPERYTHRUS Salvin and Godman: Rufous-breasted Wren, Ruisefor del Monte Thryothorus hyperythrus Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr.-Amer., vol. 1, April 1880, p. 91. (Paraiso station, Panama Railroad, Canal Zone.) Small; throat and side of head black, spotted heavily with white; undersurface rufous-brown; tail black, barred widely with white. Description —Length 115-130 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown 100 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 russet-brown, becoming lighter on hind neck; back, including scapulars and upper tail coverts, olive-brown; wings somewhat brighter brown; tail grayish brown, barred heavily with black, the outer margins of the paler bands often white; side of head, including lores and throat, black, streaked and spotted narrowly with white; undersurface, including sides and legs, tawny-brown, somewhat paler centrally; undertail co- verts black, barred with dull grayish white; underwing coverts, includ- ing edge of wing, white. Adult males, collected at El Copé, Coclé, February 25, 1963, and El Volcan, Chiriqui, March 22, 1965, had the iris light reddish brown; maxilla and tip of mandible black; rest of mandible somewhat bluish neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws dark, bluish neutral gray; inside of mouth black, this color covering the thickened base of the tongue, but not the thin, transparent tip. Measurements—Males (10 from Chiriqui, Veraguas, and Canal Zone), wing 56.9-60.4 (58.0), tail 47.2-52.1 (48.8), culmen from base 17.3-18.6 (17.9), tarsus 20.3-23.7 (21.4) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui, Veraguas, Coclé, Los Santos, and Prov- ince of Panama), wing 50.6-54.7 (53.6), tail 40.4-46.5 (43.7), culmen from base 16.6-18.0 (17.3), tarsus 19.1-20.5 (19.8) mm. Resident. Common locally on the Pacific slope from western Chiri- qui to the lower Rio Bayano in eastern Province of Panama (not found in Darién), including the Azuero Peninsula, and the southern Canal Zone; found through the lowlands; ranging upward in hill country at El Valle, Coclé, and Cerro Campana, Panama to about 1000 m and in Chiriqui to 1600 m (Bajo Mono, Velo) on the Pacific slope of Volcan de Chiriqui; recorded occasionally on the Caribbean slope in the Canal Zone, especially in the middle Chagres Valley, and at Portobelo, Colon. Salvin (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 181) under the name rutilus listed this bird from “‘Calovévora,” and this locality was included also in the original description by Salvin and Godman (p. 91), which would indicate a locality on the Caribbean slope of Veraguas. These are shy birds, widely distributed but not abundant, found in pairs along the borders of forest, ranging near the ground, and also through tangled vines massed in the lower branches of trees. Their tendency to forage higher in low trees makes them somewhat easier to see than most wrens. Their presence is usually first made known by their constant songs as they creep about under dense cover of leaves. Their notes are clear and emphatic, in tone more suggestive of a finch or a wood warbler of the O porornis-Seiurus group than of a wren. On one occasion, with a companion I followed 1 slowly for sometime FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE IOI through its calls, until finally it settled in an area of dense brush. Here after watching for 15 minutes, we finally saw it clearly enough to iden- tify it. At Sona, Veraguas, in 1953 this wren was called “ruisefor del monte.” Stomachs of birds collected for specimens were filled with fragments of small spiders and a variety of insects, among which were beetles, cockroaches, bugs, caterpillars, and ants. One, in addition, held a small seed. Two males collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 15.3 and 15.7 g. imiG@osta Riea, Skutch) (Pac. Coast Avif. no: 34/1960, pp. 116-122) describes the song and habits in detail. Through the song, given at times antiphonally by mated pairs, contact is maintained between in- dividuals. He found them building flimsy, covered nests for sleeping, which they seemed to occupy alone. In nesting season, pairs built globu- lar nests of leaves with an opening in the side. The eggs, two or three, were “white with a heavy wreath of brown spots around the thickest part, and a sprinkling of the same over the remaining surface. Those of one set measured 18.3X13.9, 18.313.9, and 17.9X13.5 millime- ters.’ The young have no down at hatching. The subspecies hyperythrus ranges from southwestern Costa Rica through central Panama, chiefly on the Pacific slope, to the Rio Bayano basin. The species T. rutilus, as here used, includes other subspecies chiefly in hill country and other cleared areas of Colombia, Venezuela, Trini- dad, and Tobago. Some authors include in this species the T. maculi- pectus group of southeastern Mexico to Costa Rica, and the rather similar-looking T. sclatert of Ecuador and Peru (Hellmayr, Cat. Birds Amer., pt. 7, 1934, pp. 201-209). Others combine the sclateri group in T. rutilus but keep T. maculipectus separate (Paynter, 1960, Check- list Birds World, vol. 9, pp. 405-407) or separate T. rutilus but combine the sclateri group with the very distant T. maculipectus (Meyer de Schauensee, 1966, The Species of Birds of South America, pp. 404- 405; Howell, Condor, 1957, p. 98). If the species concept of T. rutilus is enlarged, the name Speckled Wren is applicable (Eisenmann, im /itt. ) TROGLODYTES AEDON Vieillot: House Wren, Cucarachero Comtn Troglodytes aédon Vieillot, 1808?, Hist. Nat. Ois. Amer., Sept., vol. 2, p. 52, pl. 107. (No definite locality mentioned = New York City.) Small; short tailed; dark grayish brown, without striking head mark- ings; whitish underneath. 102 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Description—Length 108-115 mm. Adult (sexes alike), brown above, with crown slightly grayer; an indistinct superciliary line and another back of eye, dull buff; upper tail coverts and rump more ru- fescent, the rump with small, concealed white spots and barred nar- rowly with black; wing coverts, secondaries, outer webs of primaries, and tail dark brown, barred narrowly with dull black; undersurface dull white centrally, with sides and flanks brown; undertail coverts dull white, mixed with reddish brown and barred with black; scapulars and underwing coverts white to pale buff; spotted in some very lightly with eray. Immature, like adult but without superciliary line; breast and sides barred indistinctly and narrowly with dusky. The House Wren in Panama is a common bird not only in rural areas, but in suburbs and city buildings, where open, warm-weather house construction in eaves and corners or holes in brick work often allows it entry so that the bird may seem a part of the human family. As a friendly neighbor, from its cheerful song, it is popularly known as the “ruisenor,” the standard Spanish name for the European Nightingale. The species as here treated ranges from Canada and the United States through the West Indies, Middle America, and South America to Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands. Panama birds belong to the T. musculus complex, found from southern Mexico southward originally described from Brazil, and often treated as a separate species with the name Southern House Wren. TROGLODYTES AEDON INQUIETUS Baird Troglodytes inquetus Baird, Rev. Amer. Birds, vol. 1, September 1864, pp. 138 (in key), 143. (Panama Railroad = Atlantic slope, Panama Railroad, Canal Zone, Panama.) Characters—Undersurface extensively dull white, with grayish brown on sides and flanks. A male at Aguadulce, Coclé, January 19, 1963, had the iris brown; cutting edge of maxilla and base of mandible flesh color; rest of maxilla fuscous-black, rest of mandible dark neutral gray; gape honey yellow; tarsus, toes, and claws grayish brown. Another male at El Volcan, Chiriqui, March 9, 1965, had the iris rather dull reddish brown; base of mandible pale brownish white; rest of bill black; tarsus and toes dark fuscous; claws dusky neutral gray. In a female, on Isla Cébaco, Vera- guas, March 27, 1962, the iris was light, warm brown; maxilla and tip of mandible fuscous-black; base of mandible light brownish white; gape dull honey yellow; tarsus brownish gray; toes and claws fuscous. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 103 Measurements.—Males (10 from Los Santos, Herrera, Coclé, Prov- ince of Panama, Canal Zone, and Colén), wing 51.2-54.2 (52.7), tail 34.4-37.8 (36.2), culmen from base 15.7-17.8 (16.8), tarsus 18.5-19.8 (19.3) mm. Females (10 from Herrera, Canal Zone, and Darién), wing 51.1- 54.4 (52.1), tail 34.0-38.0 (35.4), culmen from base 15.4-17.5 (16.0), tarsus 18.2-19.5 (18.9) mm. Resident. Found locally in the Tropical Zone throughout the Re- public, varying locally in abundance; found on Islas Gobernadora and Cébaco, Veraguas, and in the Archipiélago de las Perlas, where re- ported from Islas Rey, San José, Pedro Gonzalez, Trapiche, Santelmo, and Bayoneta). To 2400 m in Chiriqui (trail between Cerro Punta and Boquete, Eisenmann, July 13, 1970); 600 m on Cerro Pirre, Darién. The House Wren is widely distributed in areas of thickets and fringe shrubbery, found in densely forested regions only where clearings have been made. Normally the birds are in pairs, or for brief periods, in family groups. They come into cities and towns, and about country homes are regular attendants, searching corners, thatched roofs where present, and any other concealing cover for their insect food. As they move about, males sing constantly their rapid, bubbling songs, joined regularly by the wheezy notes of the females. Nests of soft vegetable fibers, often with a feather lining, are hidden in cavities, usually with narrowed entrances so that eggs and young are completely hidden. Construction is by both members of the pair, incubation by the female alone, but she is fed regularly by the male, who also aids in care of the young. In the breeding season from March to July (sometimes later) three broods in rapid succession are usual, with young of the first family frequently aiding in bringing food to those that follow. The eggs are white, marked rather heavily with pale to dark brown; usually there are 3 or 4, rarely 5 toa set. They range in size from 16.7- 19.4 12.7-13.9 mm, with an average of 17.8X13.4 mm. Males sing more or less regularly through the year except when molt- ing, with young males beginning rambling songs when 2 months old or less. Full details on this species in Central America are given by Skutch (Condor, 1953, pp. 124-149; Naturalist in Costa Rica, 1971, pp. 22-24). Adult birds of this subspecies are fairly uniform in color throughout the Isthmus, those from the base of the Burica Peninsula being similar to those of eastern Panama. The only variation noted is in 1 male col- lected in the uplands of northwestern Chiriqui within 15 km of the Costa Rican boundary. This bird is intermediate between T.a. inter- medius and the Panamanian inquietus, the entire upper surface and the 104 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A sides being dark like intermedius but with the central undersurface nearly clear white as in inquietus. The wrens, not common in this area, should be examined from within a kilometer or so of the boundary, as they may prove to be the subspecies intermedius. Griscom ascribed birds from extreme northwestern Panama in Bocas del Toro (Almi- rante, Chiriquito) to intermedius, but they are here included in inquietus. Birds weighed by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) and Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed from 14.0 to LZ Nests with eggs or young have been reported in Panama in every month from January through October, according to Eisenmann, but egg laying may occasionally occur in the other two months. On Feb- ruary 5, 1960, he saw a stub-tailed fledgling accompanying its parent. The bubbling, presumably territorial, song strongly resembles that of T. a. aedon of eastern United States, but there is another musical vocalization commonly given even during the months November to February, when the bubbling song is infrequently heard. Eisenmann has never heard nominate aedon give a call resembling it. The vocaliza- tion is a loud, clear, rapidly repeated chwee-chwee-chwee and so on, all on one pitch, sometimes more like chew-chew-chew. Occasionally, the same bird will shift from this vocalization to the irregular, much more varied bubbling song. Eisenmann has also heard in Panama scolding and chattering like churkat and churr-cheéchee. On Barro Colorado Island this species, when present, comes to pick off window screens or the pavements insects that were killed when at- tracted to lights. Eisenmann has seen House Wrens walking, as well as hopping, on the ground without any clumsiness. Although recorded from Bocas del Toro, it is, or was, apparently rather rare there, for on three trips to the Almirante Bay area (the last in 1965) Eisenmann failed to observe it. TROGLODYTES AEDON CARYCHROUS Wetmore Troglodytes aedon carychrous Wetmore, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 134, no. 9, July 8, 1957, p. 76. (Isla Coiba, Panama.) Characters.—Similar to T. a. inquietus but much brighter brown throughout; upper surface definitely deeper brown; underneath with sides and flanks darker brown, this color in some covering the entire surface. Others are whiter on throat and center of breast. In its definitely brighter coloration this bird of Coiba is distinct from FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE TO5 the race inquietus of Panama, somewhat less so from intermedius found in Costa Rica. Three juveniles taken January 26, 1956, as they were about to leave the nest, differ from those of similar age of inquietus. Measurements.—Males (11 from Isla Coiba), wing 51.4-53.5 (52.2), tail 34.0-37.1 (35.5), culmen from base 16.9-19.1 (17.8), tarsus 18.6- 20.5 (19.4) mm. Females (2 from Isla Coiba), 49.0-50.1 (49.5), tail 31.5-33.2 (32.3), culmen from base 17.3-17.4 (17.3), tarsus 19.4-19.9 (19.6) mm. Resident. Coiba Island, prior to modern development, was heavily forested almost throughout; in 1976 it was still 75 percent forested (Ridgely in litt.) The House Wren perforce was definitely a forest in- habitant, far more so than in other areas of Panama, except in part in the Pearl Islands. In Coiba, it was common in the lower growths near the beaches and the swampy woodlands bordering the mangroves in those areas. But also I found it regularly in undergrowth through the high interior forests. There the birds were seen in the main around fal- len trees or where undergrowth was covered with masses of vines. Only occasionally did they appear to range higher in the trees. In these lo- cations they remained under cover, while around the main buildings of the penal colony they were less timid. In their usual activities their songs, heard daily, were a constant pleasure. Ridgely (im litt.) finds the song of this race richer and more melodic than that of mainland forms. TROGLODYTES SOLSTITIALIS Sclater: Mountain Wren, Cucarachero de Sierra Troglodytes solstitialis P.L. Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, vol. 26, 1858, p. 550. (Matos and Pinipi, near Riobamba, Ecuador.) Small; smaller than Troglodytes aedon, with side of head and su- perciliary line definitely brighter brown. Description.—Length 92-100 mm. Dull reddish brown above, and in the line behind the eye; wings and tail narrowly barred with black; undersurface centrally white; sides and flanks buffy brown; undertail coverts buffy brown, barred narrowly with dusky. Two forms are recognized in the higher mountain areas of Panama, one in Chiriqui, the other in Darién. Few specimens have been col- lected. The Mountain Wrens from Costa Rica and Panama are sometimes given species rank as T. ochraceus, Ochraceus Wren. Here they are treated as subspecies of the South American T. solstitialis group found in the high Santa Marta mountains of Colombia and the Andes to 106 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and northwestern Argentina. Paynter (Check-List of Birds of the World, vol. 9, 1960, pp. 427-429) also includes the T. rufociliatus group of southern Mexico (Chiapas), Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador in T. solstitialis. TROGLODYTES SOLSTITIALIS LIGEA Bangs Troglodytes solstitialis ligea Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 4, March 19, 1908. p. 29. (Volcan de Chiriqui, 1220 m above Boquete, Chiriqui.) Troglodytes ochraceus remotus Griscom, Amer. Mus. Nov. 141, 1924, p. 5. (Cerro Flores, alt. 6000 ft., Chiriqui.) Characters.—Brighter, more reddish brown on dorsal surface, in the superciliary line on side of head, and on the flanks; slightly larger than T. s. festinus. An adult female, taken on Silla de Cerro Pando, beyond El Volcan, Chiriqui, March 13, 1954, had the maxilla dark neutral gray, except the cutting edge which was marguerite yellow for the basal third, shading anteriorly to mouse brown; basal area of cutting edge in mandible also marguerite yellow; mandibular rami light yellowish, with a line of neu- tral gray at tip and along the side; iris brown; tarsus and toes mouse brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 47.1-49.9 (48.6), tail 28.6-36.2 (29.6), culmen from base 14.5-16.2 (15.2, average of 9), tarsus 16.5-18.0 (17.4) mm. Females (8 from Chiriqui), wing 43.6-48.6 (45.1), tail 27.3-33.1 (28.8), culmen from base 14.6-15.5 (15.0), tarsus 16.0-17.9 (16.8) mm. Resident. Upper levels of Volcan de Chiriqui, 900 to 2500 m, west- ern Chiriqui. This small wren, compact and rotund in form, is a forest species, secretive in habit. I found them near and on the ground, in dense tangles, rarely amid fallen tree trunks in small, recently made clearings. Once only, in dense forest, did I see one range 15 m above the ground in a mass of tangled vines near the top of a dead stub. Those seen were silent. In the Monniche collection, Blake (Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 547) recorded a small series taken on the slopes of the volcano above Boquete, between 1580 and 2500 m elevation. Griscom described remotus from a single female taken in the moun- tains back of Remedios, Chiriqui. Some form of this species (ochra- ceus group) definitely occurs in the mountains of eastern Chiriqui (Rio Chiriqui, 600-1140 m, near the Fortuna Dam site, where between Feb- FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 107 ruary 26 and March 5, 1976, Ridgely found it common at all elevations) , Veraguas (above Santa Fé along Cerro Tute ridge, 1050 m, January 5, 1974), and probably even in western Province of Panama (at the very top of Cerro Campana, ca. 1000 m, seen by N. G. Smith on September 7, 1968). Eisenmann has frequently seen it in humid montane forest from the lake near El Volcan, ca. 1200 m, to well above Cerro Punta, close to 2400 m, and also on the Boquete side above Finca Lerida. They gen- erally glean over vines and similar epiphytic vegetation on forest trees, ‘usually in pairs, creeping vertically along hanging lianas, but occas- ionally even up tree trunks. Ridgely (1m litt.) notes that this species is a rather frequent member of mixed flocks including warblers and tanagers. Eisenmann noted a semi-musical trilled tswee-tswee seeerrrr, also a seecerrrrr alone, lasting about one second, sometimes drier as whirrrrr, and a short, nonmusical srr or srrrrr or trrrr, which is perhaps the call. On April 26, 1961, on Martyn’s Finca in the still forested, but logged over area, Kisenmann saw pairs actively singing and displaying. One bird landed on a vertical trunk and sang with shivering wings; another carried nesting material. Still another pair had a nest or were building in a hollow of a fallen trunk or nearby, for they would not leave the vicinity even on close approach. Skutch (Pac. Coast. Avif., 34, 1960, pp. 166-167) describes behavior and nesting in Costa Rica (ochraceus), and states nests are placed in cavities on broken ends of decaying branches or trees and that nesting must begin by April. He found another pair building in late May. Nests of solstitialis in Ecuador were in different sites. TROGLODYTES SOLSTITIALIS FESTINUS Nelson Troglodytes festinus Nelson, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 60, no. 3, September 24 (September 27), 1912>p.22) (Cerro Pirre 1580 m; Darien.) Characters.—Similar to T. s. ligea, but slightly smaller; somewhat darker on upper surface and on sides and flanks. Measurements.—Males (3 from Darién), wing 43.9-44.5 (44.1), tail 27.2-30.4 (29.1), culmen from base 14.9-16.5 (15.7), tarsus 17.1- 7-3 (17.2) mom. Female (1 from Darién), wing 39.4, tail 28.0, culmen from base 12.6, tarsus 16.0 mm. Resident. Recorded from the upper levels of the mountains of east- ern Darien; Cerro Pirre, 1580 m at the head of Rio Limon; and Cerro 108 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Mali, at 1460 m (6 km west of the summit), on the base of Tacarcuna. The birds of the Darién mountains differ only slightly from those of Chiriqui in size, and in darker coloration on the upper surface and sides. The race festinus was described from a single adult male, collected by E. A. Goldman in the forest near the head of Rio Limon. It is still the only specimen known from Cerro Pirre. From June 4 to 9, 1963, Galindo secured 2 males and a female in the forest adjacent to his camp near the summit of Cerro Mali, on the side of Cerro Tacarcuna. The 3 birds from the Tacarcuna massif are slightly darker on the back and crown of the head than the single male from Pirre; with more material they may prove to be subspecifically distinct. From the few now available it is noted that the slight differences seen are, in the main, equivalent to the individual variation noted in an extensive series of the race ligea from Chiriqui. TROGLODYTES BROWNI BROWNI Bangs: Timberline Wren, Cucarachero de Volcan Troglodytes browni Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, January 30, 1902, p. 53. (3000 m elevation, Volcan de Chiriqui.) Small, short-tailed; reddish brown above, paler on flanks and under- tail coverts; with a prominent white superciliary, and a brown line (in color like the crown) through the eye. Description.—Length 95-100 mm. Adult (sexes alike), above some- what dull reddish brown, slightly darker on crown, brighter on rump; a prominent white superciliary line, and a brown line (like crown) through eye; wings and tail dusky, barred with reddish brown; lesser wing coverts flecked with white; outer primaries edged with white; sides of neck dull white edged with dusky brown; undersurface chin to abdomen, dull white edged faintly with dusky; flanks and undertail coverts dull russet-brown, the undercoverts flecked with white; edge of wing and underwing coverts dull white. Immature, superciliary dull white; feathers of undersurface mar- gined with dusky; white markings on primaries more extensive. Measurements.—Males (8 from Chiriqui), wing 48.8-53.1 (51.3), tail 28.9-33.2 (31.5), culmen from base 14.1-16.0 (15.0), tarsus 21.9- 25./ (25/6) aa: Females (8 from Chiriqui), wing 47.6-54.1 (50.3), tail 28.4-32.2 (30.3), culmen from base 14.0-16.1 (14.8, average of 7), tarsus 21.8- 24.0 (22.4) mm. Resident. Common near timberline across the summit of Volcan de FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 109 Chiriqui. It is found also on the highest mountain peaks of Costa Rica. This wren was described by Bangs from a series of 11 specimens col- lected by W. W. Brown, Jr., in May and June, 1901. The collector found this species ‘wholly confined to the cane brakes on top of the Volcan de Chiriqui ... It lived much after the manner of a marsh wren, and its song and notes were wholly unlike those of any wren” known to him. In the American Museum of Natural History there are 2 females collected by H. J. Watson, October 1 and 4, 1904. On the labels the collector noted colors of the soft parts as follows: “Iris violet, feet brown, bill black.” From the Monniche collection Blake recorded 2 females July 8 (year not indicated) from the summit of the volcano above Copete, and 2 males and 2 females July 12, at about 4200 m elevation. Little is recorded of these birds. Worth, in a brief note (Bird-Lore, vol. 41, 1939, p. 282), wrote that they live in bamboo thickets, and that the song “is unlike that of any House Wren I have heard. It is not a finished entity, like a House Wren’s performance, but only a cyclically repeated phrase without musical beginning or end; it could... be as short or prolonged as desired. The scolding note . . . however, bears some resemblance to the House Wren’s complaining, but it lacks the to- and-fro rasping quality of the House Wren, being a single utterance of uniform timbre.” In Costa Rica, Slud (Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 128, 1964, p. 291) found closely allied races inhabiting “the bushy scrub and impen- etrable canelike bamboos that border the high-altitude forests, at breaks and above the limit of trees. Though usually met singly or in twos, a number of individuals may be scattered over an area. This stub-tailed, white-winged little wren is active in the dense low cover; it may be silent but it is not shy. The behavior and the thickety habitat are typi- cal of a wren. Its patterned song is thin, not very clear, rather mea- sured, wrenlike.” C. Hartshorne, regarding the song at Cerro de la Muerte, Costa Rica (3,090 m), says (im litt. to Eisenmann) it is as long or longer than that of the Winter Wren, but not quite as loud or as musical. It “consists of two slightly contrasting phrases, repeated fast over and over, something like “bussell-bissell, bussell-bissell,’ etc. for as many as ten or more seconds. This is a crude description except for the idea of the slight contrast and the numerous quick repetitions.” The nest and eggs are not known. Oberholser (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 27, 1904, p. 198) proposed for it the separate genus Thryorchilus on the basis that it has only 10 rectrices instead of the 12 found in Troglodytes. 110 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 HENICORHINA LEUCOSTICTA (Cabanis): White-breasted Wood-Wren, Cucarachero Pechiblanco FicureE 11 Cyphorhinus leucostictus Cabanis, Arch. Naturg., Jahrg. 13 Bd. 1, Heft 2, 1847, p. 206. (Guiana and Mexico (Papantla) = British Guiana; designated by Berlepsch and Hartert, Nov. Zool., vol. 1X, April 1902, p. 5.) Small; tail short; foreneck and breast white; side of head black, varied with white lines; a white line over eye. Description.—Length 92-105 mm. Back, wings, and tail chestnut- brown; crown dark, varying from grayish brown to black; throat to upper abdomen pure white, without markings; flanks tawny. Ficure 11.—White-breasted Wood-wren, Cucarachero Pechiblanco, Henicorhina leucosticta. Juvenile, throat white; foreneck and breast dull gray; colors and markings otherwise as in adult. A forest inhabitant, widely distributed. This common species of the lowland forests may be recognized by the pure white of the foreneck and breast. The two subspecies accepted here from Panama are closely similar in size, differing in depth of color in the darker markings of the crown. The species ranges from eastern Mexico, Belize, the Caribbean slope of Central America (extending to the Pacific slope in Costa Rica and Panama), through Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, southern Venezuela, the Guianas, and the upper Rio Negro region of northern Brazil. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE EVE HENICORHINA LEUCOSTICTA PITTIERI Cherrie Henicorhina Pittieri Cherrie, Anal. Inst. Fis.-Geogr. Mus. Nac. Costa Rica, vol. IV, 1891 (1893), p. 134. (Boruca, Puntarenas, Costa Rica.) Henicorhina prostheleuca tropaea Bangs and Peters, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. Ixvii, no. 15, January 1927, p. 480. (La Vijagua, Alajuela, Costa Rica.) Characters.—Closely similar to H. |. darienensis, but with crown median area washed with rufescent brown (variable in depth of color). A male collected at the head of the Rio Guabal, on the Caribbean slope of Coclé, February 28, 1961, had the iris dark mouse brown; bill black; tarsus, toes, and claws dusky neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from the Pacific slope, from south- western Costa Rica, and western Chiriqui, eastward through the Canal Zone), wing 52.5-58.6 (55.0), tail 23.0-29.1 (26.5), culmen from base 17.0-18.9 (17.8), tarsus 22.5-24.7 (23.6) mm. Females (10 from western Costa Rica, Chiriqui, and Bocas del Toro to the Canal Zone, and Chepo, eastern Province of Panama), wing eo o2.1), tail 23'022710' (25.5); ‘culmen’ from base 15.6-17.7 (16.6), tarsus 21.6-25.5 (22.6) mm. Resident. Common in forests to 1300 m, less so to 1900 m; on Pacific and Atlantic slopes from the Costa Rican boundary through western Chiriqui and western Bocas del Toro (Almirante, Cricamola, to 750 m above Rio Changuena). Found also on the Caribbean slope of Coclé (upper Rio Coclé del Norte, Rio Calovévora), and western Colon (on the Rio Indio); on the Pacific side, Veraguas (Chitra, Santa Fé), Coclé (El Valle), on Cerro Campana, western Province of Panama and the Cerro Azul-Cerro Jefe area, the hills north of Chepo (Zanja Limon), eastern Province of Panama. In the Canal Zone it is found in woodlands at Fort Clayton, Madden Forest Preserve, Pipeline Road area, and along the Achiote Road. Birds collected by Ridgely and Ga- lindo in the lowlands and hills above the Rio Bayano and its tributaries have not been subspecifically identified. Northward in Central America, this form ranges on the Caribbean slope through forest areas in Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, and Guatemala. With the series of specimens now available the supposed subspecies tropaea named by Bangs and Peters from La Vijagua in the Caribbean drainage of northern Costa Rica, with a range extending east to Bocas del Toro and northward to Guatemala, is not separable from pittveri. On the mountain slopes in western Chiriqui I found these wrens com- mon in pairs in undergrowth through the forest. As they moved about in dense cover, usually near the ground, they were recorded mainly I12 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 from their clear ringing songs, and their chattering calls. In higher elevations they often frequented bracken and other tangled growth on steep slopes in treeless pasturelands. Brown collected it in the Boquete district at about 1800 m, but it is rare at such high elevations. In the lowlands of Panama it favors damp, canopied forest, especially in hilly areas and about ravines. The song is a loud, beautifully rich series of whistles, usually rather short, mostly of three or four phrases, repeated many times and then varied. The most characteristic song is churry-churry-cheeer (inter- preted mnemonically by F. O. Chapelle as “pretty-pretty-bird”), and variations; Eisenmann has also heard whee-tew-tew and choodweeoo- chooweréh chwee-tew-tew. One vocalization suggested a slightly aber- rant song of the Green Shrike-Vireo syllabized as teea-teea-teeoo. Calls include a peculiar bweeer or beeer, which reminded Ridgely of a note of the Swainson’s Thrush. E. S. Morton has made a tape recording (Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology) of a hoarse, throaty, rather frog- like hreer or hreéyee (syllabized by Eisenmann from the recording). Usually the bird sings from a concealed position, very low in a tangle or thicket, but occasionally in the dense vegetation of a tree. This species is not infrequently attracted to army-ant swarms, and may also forage below wandering bands of antbirds. The small tail is often carried cocked up. Skutch (Pac. Coast Avif. no. 34, 1960, pp. 140-143) records that they build a rather flimsy nest for sleeping, a rounded ball of partly weathered leaves, with an opening at one end, placed in forest under- growth elevated 1 or 2 m, sometimes more, above the ground. Adults may be accompanied by a single young bird, but otherwise sleep alone. Nesting structures for eggs and young were more substantial. The eggs, two in number, were clear white, with measurements of 14.3-15.1 x 20.6-23.0. In another account of nest and eggs (identified as those of this race but listed under the synonym tropaea), Huber (Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 84, 1932, p. 238), on May 19, 1922, in forest back of the Eden mine, northeastern Nicaragua, near the headwaters of the Rio Bambana, flushed one of these wrens “from a nest containing two fresh eggs. The nest, about eighteen inches above the ground, was placed in a crevice in a fallen log. This old moss-covered log lay close to a trail in the heavy forest and the jar from my weight . . . flushed the bird. The nest, a carefully made, bulky, globular-shaped affair com- posed of fern stems, plant fibers, and moss, is lined with fine grasses. The entrance is from the side. The outside diameters are 190 X 130 mm. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE LES The eggs are white with a very few light brown specks. They measure 20.0 x 14.5, 20.1 14.1 mm.” The race pittieri was named by Cherrie in honor of Professor Henri Pittier, resident at that time in San José, Costa Rica, and active in natural history studies in that country. A male taken by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) at Cerro Campana weighed 16.1 g. Morton (in Temple, Endangered Birds, 1978, pp. 379-384) describes a reintroduction of this species to Barro Colorado Island, from which it had disappeared before 1960. HENICORHINA LEUCOSTICTA DARIENENSIS Hellmayr Henicorhina leucosticta darienensis Hellmayr, Anz. Ornith. Ges. Bayern, Bd. I, no. 4, March 1921, p. 25. (“Tacarcuna dstliches Panama” = former Tacarcuna Village site, west base of Cerro Mali, 600 m elevation, Cerro Tacarcuna, Darién. ) Characters.—Crown and upper hindneck plain deep black; brown of back, wings, flanks, and undertail coverts somewhat lighter and brighter. Measurements——Males (10 from San Blas, eastern Province of Panama, and Darién), wing 53.4-55.5 (54.4), tail 22.5-25.5 (24.3), culmen from base 16.8-18.6 (17.6), tarsus 21.3-24.7 (22.4) mm. Females (10 from eastern Province of Panama, San Blas, and Darién), wing 50.0-53.4 (51.6), tail 21.2-24.0 (23.0), culmen from base 15.6-16.5 (15.9), tarsus 19.3-22.3 (21.1) mm. Resident. Common in forested areas from western Comarca de San Blas (Mandinga) and Chiman (hill country on Rio Chiman), east- ern Province of Panama, east to the Colombian boundary, on both Caribbean and Pacific slopes; in Darién from near sea level to 1000 m on Cerro Pirre, 1450 m on Cerro Tacarcuna, and 930 (the summit) of Cerro Quia. This race also occurs in adjacent northwestern Colombia, on both slopes, to the Sint Valley and the Baudo Mountains. While widely distributed in forest areas, in general this subspecies is less abundant than the race pittieri of western Panama. A male from the Rio Chiman at the mouth of Rio Corotut is typical of this race in black color of the crown. Found as usual in pairs, they were especially common on the upper Rio Jaqué in Darién, and elsewhere in the in- terior. None were recorded near the coast at Jaqué. Like the other subspecies these are birds of the forest, living in the shelter of dark shadows. II4 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 The food, from examination of stomach contents, includes the usual variety of small insects—ants, small beetles, caterpillars, earwigs, roaches and their eggs, and small spiders. One collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) at Cerro Pirre weighed a2 HENICORHINA LEUCOPHRYS (Tschudi): Gray-breasted Wood-Wren, Cucarachero Pechigris Small, with short tail, similar to Henicorhina leucosticta, but breast gray and tail longer. Description.—Length 103-115 m. Back, wings, and tail chestnut- brown; crown sooty black; side of head black, lined prominently with white, with a long white superciliary line; tail dull brown, barred more or less with black; wings like back, indistinctly barred with black; an- terior undersurface gray, with throat grayish white, plain in the nomi- nate race, lined heavily with gray in subspecies collina; flanks and un- dertail coverts reddish brown. Juvenile, darker above with the crown dull black; a prominent white superciliary; side of head dull black, with the white markings, com- pared to the White-breasted Wood-Wren, somewhat reduced; throat for a limited area dull white; foreneck and upper breast dark gray; rest of undersurface dull brownish black. A forest inhabitant, widely distributed in highland areas. Common on wooded slopes, only in the mountains. Two subspecies are found on the Isthmus, one in the west, the other, less common, from Cerro Azul eastward. The species ranges from the highlands and mountain slopes of east- ern Mexico, through Central America to Colombia, Venezuela, and in the Andes (chiefly at subtropical altitudes) of Ecuador and Peru to Bolivia. HENICORHINA LEUCOPHRYS COLLINA Bangs Henicorhina collina Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, Jan. 30, 1902, p. 55. (Boquete, Chiriqui, 1800 m alt.) Characters.—Throat dull grayish white, heavily streaked with dark gray; otherwise like H. 1. leucophrys. M easurements—Males (10 from Chiriqui and Veraguas), wing 54.6- 59.2 (57.0), tail 30.5-34.3 (32.0), culmen from base 17.1-19.0 (18.1), tarsus 24.2-25.6 (25.0) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui), wing 52.3-55.6 (53.6), tail 27.1-29.0 FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE ; I15 (27.9), culmen from base 16.0-17.5 (16.5), tarsus 22.5-25.0 (23.9) mm. Resident. Common on the Pacific slope of the central mountain range in Chiriqui and Veraguas, from near the Costa Rican boundary to Cerro Campana, western Province of Panama, ranging from 900 to 2900 m. Recorded also from the upper levels of the Caribbean side of the Divide. Found at 900 m elevation on Cerro Campana, western Prov- ince of Panama. Beyond Panama this race occurs only in the highlands of Costa Rica. This species is widely distributed over the mountain slopes, mainly forest, but also where steep open slopes are grown heavily with bracken. The main distribution is on the Pacific drainage, but Blake (Feld: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 547) records specimens from the Holcomb Trail above Boquete on the Caribbean side of the high divide in Bocas del Toro. It ranges eastward along the Pacific slopes to near Santa Fé and Chitra, Veraguas, an area in which it also doubtless crosses the Divide, as it is recorded from Calovévora. Ridgely (im litt.) found it very common in late February and early March 1976 in forest under- growth at the Fortuna Dam site in central Chiriqui (900-1500 m), where no H. leucosticta were present. In one day he netted 13 indi- viduals. It is found in pairs, their presence known by the steady songs of the males, in which the females regularly join. An intruder may be greeted with a harsh scolding note, repeated quickly several times. While these birds remain in areas where they have cover, often they seem more con- fiding than some other forest wrens as they may be seen without too great difficulty. Carriker (Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. 6, 1910, p. 762) described a nest found on Irazu, Costa Rica, April 17, 1902, that held two plain white eggs without markings. These measured 21.5xX15 and 22X15 mm. Skutch, in a detailed account (Pac. Coast Avif., no. 34, 1960, pp. 146- 154), records that the pair sleep together in rounded, covered nests with the entrance underneath. Adults may be accompanied in the nest by their young for a period after these are grown. Skutch describes the two eggs in a set as plain white with measurements of both in one nest as 22.2 X15.5 mm. A male collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) at Cerro Campana weighed 18.7 g. This species is very common in the highlands of western Chiriqui, especially above 1500 m on both the east and west slopes of the volcanic 116 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 massif, and is often seen or heard in this area along roadside thickets and hedgerows separating open fields, at a distance from surviving for- est. In this highland region, Eisenmann found it the commonest wren, having adjusted to clearing and cultivation, and calling attention to itself by persistent singing, even through it skulks in vegetation, generally from a few centimeters to 1 or 1.3 m from the ground. Notably abun- dant in the Cerro Punta area, now largely devoted to vegetable crops, it frequents the shrubbery at field boundaries (as well as forest borders and interiors). In this region it occurs below El Volcan at least down to 1110 m along the highway, and about the Volcan lakes. It occurs also at the summit of the trail to Boquete, and seems to be everywhere in the outskirts of Boquete, even in the rather scantily vegetated El Salto. On Cerro Campana, where sympatric with H. leucosticta, it is much less numerous than that species and is confined to humid forest about the summit. This species less frequently carries its relatively longer tail cocked up than does the White-breasted Wood-Wren, and its rufescent lower underparts are conspicuous in the field. The song, although musical and loud, is not of as rich or mellow a quality as that of its congener, but usually consists of many more syllables, and lasts longer before it 1s repeated. One bird seen by Eisen- mann on September 20, 1958, gave three different songs, all loud, rollicking whistles of similar timbre. He noted the following songs: too- tee-ooweét, weétee, weétoo, also weeloo-weéchee, too-loo-wheew, and cheerooeecheé-cheeweécheerooweéchee, with variants of each, and all repeated over and over. On September 21, he saw a bird give a very different, sweet, soft, almost formless, warbled song—a subsong, per- haps by an immature individual. A rattling chatter tit-tit-t-t-t-treet, sometimes shortened to tit-teerrrt was often heard by Eisenmann (tape recorded by E. S. Morton, Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology). H. Loftin reports that 1 banded at Cerro Punta March 26, 1967, was recaptured March 27, and April 28, 1968, and March 1, 1970. HENICORHINA LEUCOPHRYS LEUCOPHRYS (Tschudi ) Troglodytes leucophrys Tschudi, Arch. Naturg., 10 Jahrgang, bd. 1, 1844, p. 282. ( Peru.) Characters.—Throat dull grayish white, very faintly, or not at all, lined with darker gray; crown slightly more brownish black; under- surface somewhat lighter grayish white. A female, taken on Cerro Mali, Darién, February 24, 1964, had the FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 117 iris reddish brown; basal area of mandible dark neutral gray; rest of bill black; tarsus and toes fuscous-black; claws fuscous-brown. Measurements.——Males (10 from Cerro Azul and the Tacarcuna massif, Panama, and western Antioquia, Colombia), wing 54.4-60.0 (56.6), tail 26.7-30.5 (28.8), culmen from base 15.7-19.6 (17.9), tar- sus 23.7-25.1 (24.8) mm. Females (10 from Darién, and from Antioquia and Cauca, western Colombia), wing 50.8-55.1 (52.5), tail 25.1-27.8 (25.8), culmen from base 15.8-17.4 (16.7), tarsus 22.0-23.8 (22.8) mm. Resident. Found locally on Cerro Azul, eastern Province of Pan- ama; fairly common on Cerro Tacarcuna and on Cerro Pirre, Darién. Elsewhere, it occurs on the slopes of the Andes of Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. The Gray-breasted Wood-Wren, less abundant than the white- breasted species, is found in mountain forests, possibly more commonly than the few records available indicate. On Cerro Azul (March 29, 1955) I found 1 specimen at 850 m elevation, in the more humid forest on the high slopes where the damp winds from the north and east swept across the summit. One had been taken here earlier on March 25, 1911, by E. A. Goldman. The bird may be more common there than these re- ports indicate. Ridgely (1m litt.) notes that he and others have found it on Cerro Azul in recent years. In the extensive forests on Cerro Tacarcuna, Darien, this species was fairly common. In February and March 1964, I collected 1 at the lower level camp, and others higher up, near the summit, at 1400 m. On Cerro Pirre, Goldman, from March to early June, found them more common, as he prepared 8 for specimens, taken at 5000 m near the head of Rio Limon. The population found in the mountains of eastern Panama is identi- fied as the nominate subspecies lJeucophrys, with its type locality in Peru, in accordance with the detailed studies of Hellmayr (Journ. fur Ornith., 1903, p. 531, and Cat. Birds Amer., pt. 7, 1937, pp. 262-264). CYPHORHINUS ARADUS (Hermann); Song Wren, Cucarachero Cantor Myrm|[ornis|] arada Herman, Tab. Aff. Anim, 1783, p. 211 (note r). Medium size; bill strong, compressed from side to side, with slightly raised base above nostrils; throat, upper breast, and side of head chest- nut; upper surface very dark brown; wings and tail heavily barred with black. Description.—Length 115-130 mm. Upper surface deep brown to 118 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A blackish brown; wings and tail heavily barred with black; sides, fore- neck, and upper breast chestnut; rest of undersurface dull grayish brown; undertail coverts in one race chestnut. Rarely, an aberrant in- dividual may have the foreneck and upper breast partly or entirely pure white. These widely distributed wrens average slightly larger in body than other forest wrens, and also have heavier bills. Perhaps on account of this slightly stronger form, they seem somewhat more aggressive than related species, and so are seen more easily. They are also more ter- restrial than any other wren besides Microcerculus. The species ranges chiefly in the humid lowlands, along the Carib- bean slopes of southern Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama, reaching the Pacific slope in humid hill country of northwestern Costa Rica and of western Province of Panama (Cerro Campana) and locally extending over the Pacific slope in the lowlands of eastern Panama. It is also found in Colombia on both slopes and widely in Amazonia. Populations from Panama northward, western Colombia, and the Pa- cific slope of Ecuador are often separated, as C. phaeocephalus, from the C. avadus group found east of the Andes (Hellmayr, Cat. Birds, Aine pt, 7, 1934; p, 292). CYPHORHINUS ARADUS INFUSCATUS Zimmer Cyphorhinus lawrencu infuscatus Zimmer, Amer. Mus. Nov., no. 573, Oct. 11, 1932) p23. (Carnlloy Costa Rica) Characters.—Darker throughout than the race Jawrenciu, found else- where throughout Panama; dorsal surface blackish brown throughout, with the forecrown in some blacker; chestnut-brown on side of head, foreneck and upper breast distinctly darker; rest of undersurface, in- cluding the under surface of the wings, darker. Measurements.—Males (10 from Bocas del Toro and Costa Rica), wing 61.6-65.7 (63.7), tail 29.2-33.2 (30.8), culmen from base 19.4-21.6 (20.2); tarsus 23.3-29.2 (24.5) mm. Females (10 from Bocas del Toro and Costa Rica), wing 56.5-62.2 (60.6), tail 26.0-29.8 (27.8), culmen from base 18.2-22.0 (19.7), tar- sus 22.2-24.2 (23.6) mm. Resident. Fairly common in damp woodland in western Bocas del Toro, from the valley of the Rio Sixaola to near Almirante (mouth of the Western River); and inland above the head of the Rio Changuena to 730 m. This race has been found especially in the forests bordering Bahia FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE I1g Almirante, behind the mangrove swamps, and over the higher slopes of the hills. Elsewhere, this race is reported only from Costa Rica. The birds range in pairs or in small groups generally near or on the ground, and sometimes into the trees. In general habits they resemble the race lawrencu, widely distributed through central and eastern Panama. On the Caribbean slope of Costa Rica, Skutch found the globular nests, with tubular entrances, in woodland in the crotch of a sapling from one to several meters above the forest floor. In February one held two eggs “which were white, with brown speckles forming a wreath about the thick end.” This species also builds dormitory nests in which members of a band sleep; they are of the same shape as breeding nests. The vocalizations of this population are essentially like those of law- rencii, combining guttural phrases and throaty chatter and clucks with musical whistles. A male taken at Almirante by D. Hicks (Gorgas Memorial Labora- tory Collection) October 3, 1964, weighed 24.3 g. CYPHORHINUS ARADUS LAWRENCII Lawrence Cyphorhinus Lawrencu, “sp. nov. Scl. M.S.,” Lawrence, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist., New York, vol. 8, May 1863, p. 5. (Atlantic slope, line of Panama Railroad, Canal Zone, Panama.) Characters.—Paler in color above and on the lower surface; some- what lighter brown on crown and back; lighter underneath in chestnut- brown of foreneck and upper breast, and lighter, more brownish gray on rest of undersurface. In an adult male, collected at Juan Mina, Canal Zone, January 12, 1961, the iris was wood brown; bill wholly black; tarsus, toes, and claws fuscous. In another male, at Armila, San Blas, February 21, 1963, the iris was dark brown; bill black; tarsus, toes, and claws dark olive- brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Colon, Province of Panama, and Canal Zone), wing 61.7-66.8 (64.0), tail 27.4-34.1 (30.2), culmen from base 19.2-22.2 (20.4), tarsus 23.1-24.8 (24.1) mm. Females (10 from Colon, Province of Panama, and Canal Zone), wing 58.8-64.1 (61.2), tail 25.3-29.7 (27.1), culmen from base 18.7- 21.0 (19.8), tarsus 21.0-25.5 (23.4) mm. R. S. Crossin recorded the weight of an adult male taken August 9, 1968, near Gamboa, as 27.4 g. One weighed by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) was 24.6 g. Resident. Fairly common, on the Caribbean side from the valley of 120 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A the Rio Indio in northern Coclé and western Colon, through the north- ern Canal Zone, base of Cerro Bruja, and eastern Colon, eastward on the Caribbean slope to the Colombian boundary, and on the Pacific slope in humid hill country from Cerro Campana, western Province of Panama, and in eastern Province of Panama from Cerro Azul and Chepo, the Rio Bayano Basin to the lower Rio Sambu, Cerro Pirre, and the base of Cerro Tacarcuna, Darién In the Canal Zone, while wide- spread in canopied woodland of the Chagres Basin and the Caribbean coastal area, it is also common nearer the Pacific in the Madden Forest Preserve (Ps) ©) Chapelle i isenmann et alo These attractive wrens range regularly in pairs and also frequently in small groups of half a dozen or more individuals. They are birds of the forest, both original and second growth (rastrojo), ranging mainly over the ground, but also above it in low undergrowth. Their rapid, harsh-toned calls, mixed with whistled notes, as well as their loud songs, draw attention. Usually they may appear briefly on low perches, or in small open spaces. The groups regularly include families of adults and young. This species 1s sometimes seen about army-ant swarms. On Barro Colorado Island in March, Skutch (Auk, 1940, p. 300) found them sleeping in rounded ball-shaped nests in family groups of adults and their grown young. A nest recorded by Jewel, May 7, 1911, near Gatun, Canal Zone, was “found in low wet forest two feet from the ground .. . consisted of a long tube or tunnel with the nest proper at the far end built of sticks, twigs and dead leaves, lined with grasses. Eggs, two ... white, very finely and sparingly speckled with brown, one almost immaculate.” (Stone, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia vol. 70, 1918, p. 272.) The eggs measured 16.5 23.3 and! ite 22 16 mm. Major-General G. R. Meyer found two nests September 1, 1941, in the Forest Reserve, Canal Zone. These were bulky and gourd- shaped, suspended in the fork of low saplings 125 mm above the ground and made of fine grasses lined with the skeletons of dried leaves. One contained two eggs that measured 16.5 X 24.6 and 16.7 24.1 mm. Three eggs in the other nest ranged from 16.2-16.5X23.2-24.6 mm. J. E. Ambrose, on April 6, 1961, found a nest being constructed at Gatun, 2.3 m above the ground in a sapling. The first report of this wren in Panama was by George N. Lawrence (Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 7, 1861; p. 293), who recorded a specimen received in the first collection made by James McLeannan, under the name “Cyphornis cantans (Gm.).” In the reference for the account of this wren Lawrence explained that when he found that the identification as cantans was in error, he sent the specimen to Mr. FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE I21 Sclater, “who decided that it was undescribed, and complimented me by conferring my name upon it.” A common call is a harsh, guttural cutta, cutta, cutta. This vocaliza- tion is often intermixed with clear, sweet whistles in its song, which D. Harrower syllabized as “percutta wheet, per-cutta whoot, per-cutta wheet, per-cutta woot; per-cutta-cuttle wheet whoot; per-cutta whoot whoot” (Eisenmann, Smiths. Misc. Coll. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 47). An- other version heard on Barro Colorado Island is ong cutta cutta, whong cutta glut, WHOO HEE, etc. (Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Cont. Zool. no. 291, 1979, p. 25). Still another common vocalization is a sweet, rhythmic, slow, whistled, repeated tock, tee, sometimes preceded or followed by the nonmusical cutta notes (Eisenmann). F. O. Cha- pelle (in litt. to Eisenmann) reported a three-note song without any cuttas, “which exactly matches the ‘do’ and ‘fa’ of Guido’s scale’; three variations were Do-do-fa; fa-do-Do; and do-Do-do, the capitalized Do being an octave higher than the uncapitalized. During admittedly short stays in northern Venezuela where Eisen- mann saw or heard (vocalizations identified by P. Schwartz) popula- tions belonging to the true C. aradus group, he never heard either the cutta or the tock, tee vocalizations so characteristic in Panama. Morton (in Temple, Endangered Birds, Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1977, pp. 379-384) has reintroduced 7 birds of this species to Barro Colorado, where it had disappeared between 1960 and 1970. Two of these pairs nested successfully within 5 months of their release. MICROCERCULUS MARGINATUS LUSCINIA (Salvin): Whistler Wren, Cucarachero Ruisenor Microcerculus luscima Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1866, p. 69. (Santa Fé, Veragua.) Microcerculus acentetus Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, Jan. 30, 1902, p. 56 (1524 m, Boquete, Chiriqui.) Small, wrenlike in body form, but with long bill and long legs, and unusually short tail on which the tip barely projects beyond the wings. Description.—Length 98-110 mm. Upper surface plain deep brown, somewhat duller on the crown and hindneck where the feathers are edged very narrowly with dusky; wings and tail dull blackish brown, the coverts edged narrowly with deep brown, with a small spot of dull buff on the tip; side of head brownish gray, becoming grayish white on chin and upper throat; upper sides and breast brownish gray; feathers of lower breast and abdomen paler brownish gray, with centrally black- ish, more or less V-shaped markings, and edged rather widely with dull I22 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 grayish white, producing the effect of dark lower underparts with pale and variable indistinct scalloped pattern. Immature, with pattern of markings of undersurface less distinct. Iris varying from dull mouse brown to reddish brown; bill, with maxilla and distal third of mandible dull black; gape and lower half of mandibular rami dull marguerite yellow in some; in others, bill dark neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws dull neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 55.8-59.1 (57.7), tail 17.9-20.7 (19.5), culmen from base 19.1-21.7 (20.1), tarsus 20.4- ZS). 44055.) iaotone Females (9 from Panama, with 1 from Costa Rica), wing 51.2-57.0 (54.1), tail 17.4-21.9 (19.5), culmen 18.0-21.7 (19.8, average of 9), tarsus 21.2-23.8 (22.2) mm. Resident. Recorded in forested areas throughout the Republic from Chiriqui to San Blas and Darieén. I. G. Stiles (Wilson Bull. 1983, vol. 95, p. 169) argues persuasively that M. philomela, ranging from southern Mexico to central Costa Rica, is a species distinct from Juscinia of southern Costa Rica and Panama (and the South American populations treated as races of M. margina- tus), readily separable by color in adults as well as by voice, as charac- terized by Slud. Adults of /uscimia can be distinguished from philomela by grayish white throat and more mottled underparts. Stiles suggests that until more is known of the relationship of Juscinia to the South American populations, and especially to the white-breasted I. margi- natus (type from “Bogota,” Colombia, presumably western Amazonia ) the population of southern Costa Rica and Panama be tentatively treated as a species, M. luscinia, to be called Pale-throated Wren. Eisenmann points out that the thin, whistled vocalization of /uscinia is also given by populations in western Colombia, northern Venezuela, Ecuador, and, including white-breasted populations, in parts of Amazonian Peru, but that in southeastern Peru (Madre de Di0s) and adjacent Bolivia, a musical song differing from those of both philomela and luscimia is uttered (fide B. Coffey, Ridgely, J. Fitzpatrick) by white-breasted birds, currently considered to belong to the same subspecies (margina- tus), that sing like /uscima farther north. As the luscimia song does not remotely suggest that of a nightingale (nor does the bird look like that Palearctic bird) Eisenmann thinks Whistler Wren might be a more useful name for the southern popu- lations, reserving Nightingale Wren for M. philomela. These curious wrens are true forest inhabitants found from sea level to high in the mountains, where there is suitable cover and reasonable FAMILY TROGLODYTIDAE 123 freedom from disturbance. Blake recorded 1 from 3000 m on the vol- cano in Chiriqui. My own few records there were from 1500 m. I found them also in the higher forests on Cerro Campana, and on Cerro Azul, and to 1300 m on Cerro Tacarcuna. This small and secretive species is encountered on the ground in heavy forest, moving about under dense cover. On first sight, their rather heavy bodies, long bills, and very short tails briefly suggest tiny rails rather than wrens. Rarely, in some heavily shaded area, one may ap- pear briefly from a tangle of roots, with body bobbing excitedly, utter- ing low, high-pitched chattering calls. To Slud and Ridgely its gait suggests a Spotted Sandpiper’s. Although very infrequently seen, on the basis of its distinctive vocali- zation, it proves not uncommon in forest and canopied second-growth woods in humid regions, while somewhat local. Between the years 1965 and 1976 it has been recorded on the basis of voice in the western Chiri- qui highlands (between FE] Volcan and Sereno, Pujals, 1976), Veraguas (above Santa Fé near and below the Continental Divide (Eisenmann, Pujals, N. G. Smith, Ridgely, 1973-75; in 1926 R. Benson collected 1 at Santa Fé as low as 480 m [specimen in American Museum of Natural History|); Province of Panama (Cerro Campana, Cerro Azul-Cerro Jefe hill forest, Rio Bayano Basin forest in lowlands along FE] Llano- Carti road, Rio Majé, and “Cuipo” (Cavanillesia) forest on ride along road to Jesus Maria (same observers and years); Canal Zone (Chagres Basin, near Summit, and Caribbean coastal area); extreme eastern Darien (in Tuira basin near Rio Mono to Cerro Quia up to 750 m, Ridgely 1975; specimen in Gorgas Memorial Laboratory collection from Cerro Quia). Tape recordings have been taken by E. S. Morton (Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology) in Panama Province and the Canal Zone, and in most areas birds have been mist-netted frequently. Specimens have been preserved from Cerro Campana and the Pipeline area near Gamboa. The distinctive vocalization consists of a series of ten or so long, drawn, very thin, high whistles each on one tone, and separated by in- creasing intervals of silence, usually from ca. 2-10 seconds, but when the song is long perhaps to 15; the last may be separated by as much as 30 seconds (fide R. Smart). Each note of this series is about a second long, and successive whistles seem on the same or very slightly lower pitch. Before the thin whistled series starts, there is an introductory phrase of about 4 to 7 short notes, usually given so fast that they may seem jumbled, moving up and down scale. At Rancho Grande, Vene- zuela, Ikisenmann recognized the same thin, whistled song (race squa- 124 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 mulatus), but the introductory phrase heard was of only three notes. P. Schwartz said that when introducing the first of a cycle of songs the Opening phrase was more elaborate. The nest and eggs appear to be unknown. Slud observed a bird in southwestern Costa Rica carrying food on February 17. A female col- lected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) in the Canal Zone area in November was in breeding condition and weighed 22.2 g. Family MIMIDAE: Thrashers, Mockingbirds A family of about 35 species found in the Americas, ranging from southern Canada south through the United States, Central America, and the West Indies to southern Argentina and Chile. Two species are found in Panama, one of them, the Tropical Mockingbird, was intro- duced from Colombia. The other, the Gray Catbird, is a winter season visitor from the north. KEY, fO SPECIES OF MIMIDAE 1. Undersurface of body white; crown gray like back. Tropical Mockingbird, Mimus gilvus tolimensis. p. 124 Undersurface of body gray; crown black; back gray. Gray Catbird, Dumetella carolinensis. p. 127 MIMUS GILVUS TOLIMENSIS Ridgway: Tropical Mockingbird, Sinsonte del Caribe Mimus gilvus tolimensis Ridgway, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 47, August 6, 1904, p. 113. (Plains of Tolima, Boyaca, Colombia.) Rather large, with long, white-tipped tail; gray above, white under- neath. Description—Length 240-275 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face of head and body somewhat brownish light gray; crown narrowly streaked with dusky; wings and tail blackish slate, with indistinct nar- row pale gray edgings, becoming white on tips of greater coverts where they form two somewhat indefinite bands; tertials and secondaries edged narrowly with white at distal end; tail tipped broadly with white, with this continued as a narrow border on the outermost rectrix to the base; a dusky streak from the lores to back of the eye, covering the free margins of the eyelids; a somewhat indistinct band of white above the eye, becoming broader behind; undersurface white, tinged more or FAMILY MIMIDAE I25 less faintly with gray across breast; axillars and underwing coverts white, marked indistinctly with dusky. Immatures are more brownish above. Iris yellow; bill black; tarsus and toes fuscous. Measurements.—Males (10 from the range of the race in Colombia), wing 116.2-129.5 (121.7), tail 119.7-128.7 (125.4), culmen from base 25-251, (23.1, average of 9); tarsus 31.9-35.9 (34.7) mm. Females (10 from the range of the race in Colombia), wing 112.1- mero Ci7.6), tail 110.2-128.5 (116.1), culmen from base 20:2-25.7 (23.2), tarsus 31.7-35.8 (33.2) mm. Introduced. Common in the Canal Zone and adjacent Colon and Province of Panama, on both slopes, in cleared, especially residential, areas, east at least to Portobello, Colon, and, on the Pacific slope, to Canita, near the Bayano Dam site, where Ridgely (1 litt.) found a pair on December 29, 1974. Introduced from its range in western and central Colombia, its pres- ence is due apparently to birds released through customs control, and probably in part also by escape from cages. The first definite report of this mockingbird in Panama that has come to attention is that of Herbert G. Deignan (Auk, 1933, p. 125) who wrote that “On July 13, 1932, while standing in front of the Balboa station of the Panama Railroad, I heard the song of a mocking bird and discovered the bird perched at the top of a flagpole nearby.”” Arbib and Loetscher (Auk, 1935, p. 326) listed the mockingbird from the Canal Zone in summer, 1934, but were told (in error) that it had been introduced from California. Chapman (Auk, 1941, pp. 98-99), in January 1938, recorded a pair at the Gorgas Memorial Institute in Panama City, and at Balboa, and mentioned that it was reported at Pedro Miguel “breeding” near Ancon. In 1938 and 1939, he secured specimens, which he found were Mimus giluus of South America, and not M. polyglottos of North America, as some had supposed, referring them to the Venezuelan melano pterus. Barlier, Tollef Monniche had collected a male, August 23, 1937, at the Finca Lérida above Boquete, Chiriqui. This, Blake (Fieldiana, Zool. vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 548) in his account of the Monniche collec- tion, considered to be a locally-escaped cage bird, and not an extension of range from the far distant Canal Zone. The spread had begun, how- ever, and in Iebruary 1952, I recorded several and collected a male near the mouth of the Rio Indio in western Province of Colon. Here also they may have become established through release of cage birds. 126 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 The male from Lérida, while listed by Blake as M. g. melanopterus, on examination proves to be the somewhat larger race tolimensis. With regard to introduction, an account received through the ento- mologist James Zetek, long resident in Panama, relates that during World War Ia shipment of mockingbirds that originated in Medellin, Colombia, came to the Canal Zone en route to the United States. Since all birds were temporarily prohibited entry into that country as a pre- caution against the disease psittacosis (then little understood), the car- rier released the entire shipment. I was told of a similar occurrence in 1956 by Mr. E. J. Husted, re- tired employee under the Canal Zone government and a resident of the Canal Zone since boyhood. Mr. Husted related that in late 1935, about 100 live mockingbirds in cages were brought from Colombia on a ship that docked at Pier 18 in Balboa. They were loaded on a truck in Mr. Husted’s charge, the birds being intended for sale in the market. When the authorities demanded a dollar import duty per bird, the importer, who had expected to sell them at $1.50 each, became disgusted and re- leased the entire shipment. Colombia has 2 populations of this mockingbird that differ slightly in size. The somewhat larger form, the subspecies Mimus gilvus toli- mensis, found in western and southern Colombia, measures, as follows: Male, wing 116.2-129.5, tail 114.7-128.7 mm. Female, wing 108.9- 122.3, tail 102.4-120.4 mm. The other, Mimus gilvus melanopterus, slightly smaller, has the following dimensions: Male, wing 109.1-119.8, tail 102.4-120.4 mm. Female, wing 93.4-101.2, tail 100.1-108.3 mm. It is found in northeastern and eastern Colombia to Venezuela and Guyana southward to adjacent northern Brazil. The two are closely similar in pattern of markings and in color. While it is possible that both may have been represented in imported captives, the few that have been available for examination as museum specimens have the size of the larger tolimensis. In Ancon, where I have seen them regularly, they carry nesting ma- terial into the tops of the royal palms in late December and early Janu- ary. Young with short tails, recently from the nest, have been observed from mid-December to mid-September. In song and mannerisms this mockingbird is closely similar to our common species Mimus polyglottos of the United States, although it is not known to imitate other birds. On the ground, males frequently stand or move with partly spread, waving wings (which are plain, with- out white), exactly like our northern species. The mannerism is one FAMILY MIMIDAE 127 that I have found especially interesting in view of the arguments as to why our northern bird with the prominent white patch on the wing has this habit. It is evident that the display is in the wing action, with no basis in color pattern. DUMETELLA CAROLINENSIS (Linnaeus): Gray Catbird, Pajaro Gato Muscicapa carolinensis Linnaeus, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, vol. 7, 1766, p. 328. ( Virginia.) Medium size, slender, with long tail; dark gray. Description.—Length 185-215 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown, wings, and tail black; wings, and to a lesser degree, tail, margined with gray; body slate gray, darker above, paler below; undertail coverts chestnut. Bill black; tarsus and toes blackish brown; iris dark brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range), wing 86.0- 96.0 (91.2), tail 89.0-103.0 (95.9), culmen from base 20.0-20.2 (20.1), tarsus 27.0-29.0 (27.9) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range), wing 84.0-91.0 (88.1), tail 82.0-97.0 (91.7), culmen from base 19.2-20.4 (19.8), tarsus 27.0-28.5 (27.9') mam. Migrant from temperate North America; common in Bocas del Toro, September 1-March 31 (May 29, once), (Almirante, Changuinola, Cocoplum). Occurs casually and irregularly elsewhere in western Pan- ama, in Chiriqui ( Boquete), and Veraguas ( Paracoté); winters in very small numbers and irregularly to the Canal Zone chiefly on the Carib- bean slope (Curundu, Corozal, Coco Solo, Barro Colorado Island, Juan Mina, Frijoles, Ft. Davis, Gamboa Pipeline Road, Gatun, Lion Hill); casual in San Blas (Mandinga, Armila, Puerto Obaldia); recorded on Islas Escudo de Veraguas and Bastimentos, and on Taboga Island in the Gulf of Panama (Sturgis). On the Pacific slope the farthest east appears to be one seen by Ridgely at Cerro Azul on March 11, 1979. The catbird is common in thickets and low forest around Bahia Almi- rante, ranging usually under cover, calling only occasionally. Though not especially timid, they usually remain under leafy cover so that rela- tively few are seen. Rarely, one may sing. Their true number becomes evident when mist nets are set, as many are captured. Dr. Pedro Galindo, who has netted catbirds regularly in his studies at Almirante, has furnished the following interesting information. One that he banded October 18, 1963, was reported from Oxford, Nova Scotia, in July 1964; and another, caught December 19, 1963, was 128 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 captured near Springfield, also in Nova Scotia, July 4, 1964. Four others given bands near Almirante were recaptured subsequently at that banding locality as follows: one November 6, 1963, was retaken there October 13, 1967; one on October 13, 1964, was retaken October 4, 1967; one April 8, 1965, was recaptured April 13, 1967; and one on January 16, 1964, was recaptured July 11, 1967. The returns from Nova Scotia mark the far northeastern border of the breeding range of the species, while Panama and Colombia are the southern limit of the wintering range. In another netting study, Rogers and Odum (Wilson Bul., 1966, p. 418) found that in Panama newly-arrived southbound migrant catbirds that had just flown across the Gulf of Mexico weighed 26.5-37.4 (31.2) g and had exhausted their fat reserves; some had also experi- enced weight loss in the breast muscles, which seemed reduced so that the keels of the sternums protruded noticeably. Reports of netting around Almirante indicate that many birds winter in the area and a number return the following or subsequent seasons. The migration generally begins in early October and the peak is reached the fourth week of that month, with a few birds remaining into May (Galindo and Méndez, Bird-Banding, 1965, pp. 233-234; Loftin, Carib. Journ. Sci., 1963, p. 66; Loftin and Olson, Carib. Journ. Sci., 1964, p. 194). Family TURDIDAE: Thrushes, Zorzales The thrushes are a worldwide family of approximately 300 species that include some of the most familiar birds of temperate regions, known for their confiding presence around human habitation and for their fine vocal abilities. Fourteen species are found in Panama, in- cluding 4 migrants from the north. The native species fall into two groups, robins of the genus Turdus, and nightingale-thrushes, genus Catharus. The robins have habits similar to the North American Tur- dus migratorius, but those inhabiting dense forest are sometimes hard to see—although they will often approach a squeaking sound. The Clay-colored Robin is widespread in the lowlands and at home in yards and gardens; the other species of Turdus are found from the foothills to above timberline. Robins usually place their cup-shaped nest in a tree or bush. The Clay-colored Robin, like its northern relative, has so accustomed itself to human habitation that it sometimes builds its nest in the angle of a roof. FAMILY TURDIDAE I29 The clear flutelike phrases of some of Panama’s nightingale-thrushes are among the most beautiful songs produced by any bird. The night- ingale-thrushes are highland birds, found mainly in the west. They nest on or near the ground. Like the robins, their diet usually is mostly fruit or animal matter. The solitaires, M/yadestes, have long been considered part of the thrush family (Ripley, Check-list Birds World, 1964, p. 89), but recent evidence assembled by Sibley (Auk, 1973, p. 408) and Ames (Bonn. Zool. Beitr., vol. 26, 1975, p. 127) suggests that they are more closely ‘related to the silky flycatchers, Ptilogonatidae. I have followed their recommendations in including Myadestes in the Ptilogonatidae and placing that family next to the Turdidae. KEY TO SPECIES OF TURDIDAE SoS Me LESS) UleAT AL OC) ata Liao idee Glace a eee ee ate itke ci Somes ewe Payons 2 Penccmenione «liaiay lOO’ mag oy 3. Aton ios ae oe Res Sheba een es 10 PMO IP OGatT@aACETS POLLO eth iA oc eos oldu alee WME are eun engl tale 5 3 AU MOE SUIGhACE UIMSDOLLEU ke semi 4). crs le ccs take Abe as Guedes ened Gh clwecne 6 3. Spotting extensive, from throat to abdomen. Wood Thrush, Hylocichla mustelina. p. 143 Spocme restricted to’ throat and upper chest... 2.02. Sere oe. ene 4 4. Eye-ring distinct. Swainson’s Thrush, Catharus ustulatus. p. 144 Fieve gl MMMM ISGIIl CLYOT tANSEMt eyes ost ses cies aca cue ae ac ee et okle : 5 5. Spotted area of upper chest washed with cinnamon-buff. Veery, Catharus fuscescens. p. 149 Spotted area of upper chest whitish. Gray-cheeked Thrush, Catharus minimus minimus. p. 148 6. Back blackish-gray. Slaty-backed Nightingale-Thrush, Catharus fuscater. p. 154 IEXSAGUS IDNRONR TDS gael Wk 8 es in la Aa uta aS i a a a cole Te be I ed 7 Sera mmebrowilor DiaCkK. sa hia eee eo le Pees ee bee ee. 8 CAROTID» GIP 53 hoe sini Nin LIBi so ZC Ue lies 8 a sr eC US ee ae 9 8. Crown brown. Ruddy-capped Nightingale-Thrush, Catharus frantzi wetmoret. p. 158 Crown black. Black-headed Nightingale-Thrush, Catharus mexicanus fumosus. p. 152 9. Chest with greenish-brown band. Black-billed Nightingale-Thrush, Catharus gracilirostris. p. 163 Chest gray. Orange-billed Nightingale-Thrush. Catharus auranturostris. p. 160 10. Throat boldly striped dusky and white, upper chest white. White-throated Robin, Turdus albicollis. p. 130 Mineat striped indistinctly or Mok at alls. eee Geese ee woe ee heck ce 11 130 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A 1. Undersuriace: brownie uhh Eee Ce 12 Undersurface exay on blackish i ea 13 12. Upper surface dark brown. Pale-vented Robin, Turdus fumigatus obsoletus. p. 135 Upper surface light brown. Clay-colored Robin, Turdus grayi casius. p. 137 13. Undersurface gray. Mountain Robin, Turdus plebejus plebejus. p. 140 Undersurface blackish. Sooty Robin, Turdus nigrescens. p. 142 TURDUS ALBICOLLIS Vieillot: White-throated Robin, Casca Gargantiblanco Turdus albicollis Vieillot, 1818, Nouv. Dict. Hist. Nat., nouv. ed. 20, p. 227. (Brazil = Rio de Janiero.) Rather large; robinlike; upper throat boldly streaked dusky and white, upper chest pure white. Description.—Length 190-226 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face from crown to rump brownish olive; scapulars, wing coverts, and secondaries brownish olive; primaries and rectrices darker brown; side of face brownish olive; throat boldly streaked dusky and white, with white continuing on to upper chest; rest of undersurface tawny-olive, to abdomen and undertail coverts, which are white or pale buff; under- wing coverts tawny-olive. Juvenile, scapulars and feathers on upper back veined and tipped russet; undersurface from throat to breast, and sometimes to abdo- men, spotted dusky. The White-throated Robin is a wide-ranging species, found from northern Mexico through Central America and into South America as far as southernmost Brazil, Paraguay, and northern Argentina in Mis- iones Province. In Panama it occurs mainly on the Pacific slope, in Chiriqui, Veraguas, the western side of Azuero Peninsula, in Coclé at El Valle, and eastern Province of Panama at Cerro Campana, and in eastern Darién. There are several recent sightings from Barro Colo- rado Island after the nesting season (Ridgely, 1976, p. 274) and else- where in the Canal Zone (Toucan, May 1977, pp. 3-4). This species 1s common in forest and forest borders in the foothills and lower high- lands. Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Pub. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, pp. 25, 26) found it common in rain forest and cloud forest (900 m and above) on the western slope of the Azuero Peninsula, and Worth (Auk, 1939, pp. 307-308) called it common at 168 m in forests and clearing near Rio Gariché, Chiriqui. The population on Coiba Is- FAMILY TURDIDAE P31 land, subspecifically distinct from the mainland forms, lives at sea level. All observers have commented on the similarity of the usual song of this species and T. migratorius. The call, however, is entirely different —a rather froglike guttural, harsh wmk or yuck. It also gives a screechy kyeé-ee-yoo somewhat suggestive of the whining call of T. gray. It also, more rarely, gives a rich, repetitive song more suggestive of a mimid or wren than a robin. Sometimes seen singly or in pairs, I have also found White-throated Robins feeding in fruiting trees in groups of a dozen or more. Its diet is mainly vegetable. Some of E. A. Goldman’s notes of stomach con- tents of specimens of T. a. daguae collected at Cana, Darién, are typi- cal: one with the stomach two-thirds full had bits of a spider 3%, 5 drupes of Ficus sp. 85%, wild fruit skin 12%; one a fourth full had the heads of two carabid larvae 5%, 2 seeds of an unidentified plant and other fragments 65%, 1 drupe of Oleaceae sp. 30%; and one with the stomach nearly empty had bits of a locustid 15% and bits of skin of a wild fruit 85%. Willis (Living Bird, 1966, p. 202) has found single individuals following army-ant swarms on Barro Colorado Is- land September through January. TURDUS ALBICOLLIS CNEPHOSUS (Bangs) Merula leucauchen cnephosa Bangs, 1902, Proc. New England Zool. Club, 3, p. 92. (Boquete, Volcan de Chiriqui, Panama.) Characters.—Upper surface brownish olive; bill yellowish. A female taken March 5, 1951, at Cerro Campana, Panama had the iris light brown; prominent thickened eye-ring honey yellow; base of maxilla and tip of culmen dull dark brown; rest of bill light greenish olive; tarsus dull greenish olive; toes light brownish white. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui and Coclé), wing 114.6- ae V9.5), tail 85.2-96.2 (90.3); culmen from base 21.3-23.7 (22.7), tarsus 28.6-31.1 (30.0) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui, Coclé, and Province of Panama), wing 114.7-124.8 (119.1), tail 82.4-93.2 (88.7), culmen from base 22.0- 24.0 (22.9, average of 9), tarsus 29.8-32.0 (30.7) mm. Resident. Fairly common in Chiriqui, Veraguas, Coclé to western Province of Panama on the Pacific slope in forest and forest edges of middle elevations, at least occasionally wandering to lowlands. It is also found in southwestern Costa Rica. Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 114), on the western slope cf the Azuero Peninsula, said “this species was first encountered at Mariato River camp at 250 feet elevation, but became more abundant 132 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 as we ascended in the mountains. It reached its peak of abundance at our highest camp, Cavulla, near the top of Cerro Viejo at 3000 feet elevation,” in subtropical forest. I have encountered this thrush in many localities in Chiriqui: on February 26, 1954, I shot 2 males at El Volcan in open forest at the edge of the llano when the woods were completely dry; on March 8, 1954, I noted several in forest at Palo Santo; on March 27, 1954, I took 1 at Laguna Grande; the next day I found others singing and calling in the tops of tall trees at 1490 m in Silla de Cerro Pando; several were in heavy woodland on the Quebrada Candela at Sereno on February 23, 1955; at San Félix I shot 1 on February 19, 1956; and at Boquete I found several in forest at 1100 m. In Coclé I have collected specimens at El Valle from Rio Anton, from Cerro La India Dormida at 750 m, and from the open forest along the head of Rio Mata Ahogada (480 m), where it was common. Arcé collected it in Veraguas at Santa Fé (not dated). In the Province of Panama I found a dozen or so on Cerro Campana in a tract of heavy forest where a purple berry was common. They re- mained under heavy cover and responded readily to a squeak. A male collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit, Orn. Club; 1977, p: 64)ar Geum Campana weighed 66.2 g, a female 77.2 g. The song of the White-throated Robin is usually described as robin- like and very fine, consisting of rich, powerful phrases mixed with shorter phrases that are high and weak. In Costa Rica, Skutch (Pac. Coast Avif., no. 34, 1960, p. 84-85) has heard them singing from early February until August 20, with a peak of song in early April. There is also another non-robinlike song less commonly heard. Its calls include a peculiar note like the high-pitched croak of a frog, which does not at all suggest a Turdus. In Panama, nests and eggs are known from April through July. Blake (Condor, 1956, p. 387) describes a nest collected April 28, 1932, by Monniche at approximately 1620 m on the slopes of Volcan de Chiriqui that was located half a meter above the ground in a large rot- ten stump. The nest was a shallow cup 76.2 mm wide and 38.1 mm deep, loosely constructed of coarse twigs. It contained 3 partly incu- bated eggs “‘so heavily speckled and blotched with dull reddish-brown as largely to obscure the pale greenish-white ground cover.” The eggs measured 31.3 20.6, 30.4 20.6, 31X21 mm. Worth (Auk, 1939, p. 307) found a nest along the Rio Gariché, Chiriqui (1200 m) that on June 26, 1937, contained 2 eggs with a ground color “almost white, tinged with a very pale and diluted green. FAMILY TURDIDAE 133 They were heavily spotted with small dots of russet, so thickly clus- tered at the blunt end as to become confluent.” Their measurements were 29X21 and 28X22 mm. The nest was nearly 2 m from the ground in the crotch of a small coffee tree, with a foundation of coarse dead grass and a superstructure of living green moss. The cup-shaped cavity was lined with fine rootlets. The eggs from this nest hatched on July 3. At hatching the young had a few tufts of long buffy down, and by July 17 one of the fledglings had already flown from the nest. E. S. Morton (im htt. to Eisenmann) reports the White-throated ~Robin a common breeder on Cerro Campana, western Province of Pan- ama, in April-July in 1970 and 1971. Some nests were in niches formed by epiphytes or on depressions on the trunk of a tree, and were com- posed mainly of moss with a little mud. During most of the dry season the species almost completely disappeared, probably descending to the humid lowlands or dispersing widely in search of fruit. TURDUS ALBICOLLIS COIBENSIS Eisenmann Turdus assimilis coibensis Eisenmann, 1950, Auk, 67, p. 366. (Coiba Island, Veraguas, Panama.) Characters.—Above and below ruddier than cnephosus; undertail coverts with broad fuscous margins; bill largely dark. A male taken March 23, 1962, on Isla Brincanco, Islas Contreras, had the iris orange-brown; eye-ring honey yellow; base of bill dull fuscous-black; tip dull greenish yellow shading to honey yellow on distal half of cutting edge; tarsus and toes light buffy brown; claws dull brownish white. Measurements.—Males (8 from Isla Coiba and 2 from Isla Brin- canco), wing 109.5-117.5 (112.8), tail 74.8-89.1 (83.1), culmen from base 20.5-22.9 (21.7), tarsus 27.6-31.8 (30.1) mm. Females (5 from Isla Coiba and 1 from Isla Rancheria), wing 108.0- 113.4 (112.1), tail 79.5-86.8 (82.6), culmen from base 21.0-23.3 (22.2), tarsus 29.0-31.0 (30.2) mm. Resident. This is the only thrush on Coiba Island and adjacent Isla Rancheria. In January and February 1956 it was the most abundant bird on Coiba in high forest, although unlike the mainland forms, here it also descends to sea level, where I found it in the edge of a mangrove swamp at the Rio Catival. In the Punta Damas section of the island I saw them feeding on berries in trees and searching among the dry leaves on the trail. By squeaking I often drew ina dozen. Their call is a complaining chur-r-r or pru-rr-r, and their song, which I heard on 134 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 January 22 and 31, suggested T. grayi casius but with a slower delivery and notes much higher on the scale. In early April 1976 Ridgely found it common in forest, singing all day, a song of excellent quality; it ut- tered a guttural call like birds of the western highlands. On March 23, 1962, I collected 2 male White-throated Thrushes on Isla Brincanco, Islas Contreras. Both birds were in full breeding con- dition and several times I heard their sweet robin song. I have tenta- tively assigned them to the race coibensis, although with a larger series subspecific differences may become clear. Eisenmann notes that bill colors of these birds suggest intermediacy between the dark-billed birds of Coiba and the yellow-billed western mainland birds. The Coiba race of the Streaked Saltator, Saltator albicollis scotinus, is also known to extend to Isla Brincanco. TURDUS ALBICOLLIS DAGUAE Berlepsch Turdus daguae Berlepsch, 1897, Orn. Monatsb. 5, p. 176. (San José, Rio Dagua, Colombia. ) Characters.—Undersur face sepia; upper surface ruddier than other Panama races. A male taken January 31, 1961, on Cerro Pirre, Darien, had then. bright brown; thickened eyelid dull lemon yellow; maxilla and tip of mandible black; base of mandible light olive-green; tarsus and toes brownish gray. A male taken March 9, 1964, at Tacarcuna Village, Darién, had the iris warm brown; thickened edge of eyelid bright, somewhat greenish yellow; maxilla fuscous-black; cutting edge of mandible and gape dull yellow; end of mandible and extreme base of rami fuscous, middle section dull yellowish green; tarsus and toes dull, somewhat grayish brown; claws somewhat darker. Measurements.—Males (10 from Darién, Panama, and Choco, Co- lombia), wing 102.4-110.9 (108.2), tail 73.3-81.6 (77.3, average of 9), culmen from base 19.0-21.6 (20.1, average of 9), tarsus 26.8-30.1 (28.1) mm. Females (7 from Darién, Panama, and Choco, Colombia), wing 103.1-107.4 (105.6), tail 73.0-77.9 (75.4), culmen from base 20.4-21.8 (21.2), tarsus 27.1-29.6 (27.9) mm. Resident. Fairly common in eastern Darién on the Pacific slope. Found also in western Colombia and Ecuador. The Smithsonian has several specimens taken by E. A. Goldman between February and June 1912 at Cana, at elevations from 540 to 600 m, and I have collected FAMILY TURDIDAE 135 others at Tacarcuna Village (570 m) and on Cerro Pirre at the head of the Rio Seteganti (450 m). The 3 birds I took at Cerro Pirre all had the tail feathers damaged or cut, as though they had been feeding in “cana brava” (Bactris minor), a small palm heavily armed with long slender spines. The male | collected at Tacarcuna Village on March 9, 1962, was in breeding condition; its song was clear and sweet with robin tones, but with many notes that suggested an oriole. The only other indications of the breeding season of this race in Panama comes from Bangs and Barbour (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 65, 1922, p. 221), who reported 3 adults and 2 “spotted young” taken at the headwaters of the Rio San Antonio on Mt. Sapo in April 1922. A heavily spotted immature in the Smithsonian collection (USNM no. 427026) was collected by Carriker in Colombia at Villa Arteaga, Antio- quia, on May 6, 1950. TURDUS FUMIGATUS OBSOLETUS Lawrence: Pale-vented Robin, Casca Barriga Blanca Turdus obsoletus Lawrence, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist.. New York, vol. 7, February 1862, p. 470. (Panama. ) Bill black; plain dull brown above; breast and sides somewhat paler. Description.—Length 215-225 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face, wings, and tail warm sepia-brown; breast and sides wood-brown; throat brownish white streaked with dull brown; abdomen and under- tail coverts white; underwing coverts ochraceous-buff. Immature, upper surface somewhat duller; more olive above, with pale narrow shaft lines; wing coverts spotted with ochraceous-buff; throat somewhat buff-gray, spotted and lined with olive-brown; breast and sides dull buff, spotted heavily with blackish brown; abdomen and undertail coverts white; underwing coverts as in adult. An adult male, taken February 25, 1964, at 1280 m on Cerro Mali, Darién, had the iris dark mouse brown; bill black, except for the fuscous-colored base of the mandibular rami; tarsus and toes olive- brown; claws fuscous. Measurements.—Males (10 from Cerro Campana, and Darién), wing 119.2-124.5 (121.6), tail 84.3-92.3 (89.3), culmen from base 23.0-25.3 (24.4), tarsus 28.7-31.0 (30.0) mm. Females (10 from Bocas del Toro, eastern Province of Panama, San Blas, and Darien), wing 110.4-122.0 (115.9), tail 79.5-90.2 (84.2), culmen from base 21.0-25.1 (23.6), tarsus 27.9-31.5 (29.9) mm. Resident. Found in forested mountain areas in Bocas del Toro (upper Rio Changuena), Chiriqui (reported from the Caribbean slope 136 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 of Volcan de Chiriqui, which might be the Bocas del Toro side of the Continental Divide), Veraguas (Santa Fé), Province of Panama (Cer- ro Campana and Cerro Azul), Darién, and San Blas. The race obsoletus 1s found also on the Caribbean slopes of Costa Rica and in northwestern Colombia (Jiménez). Eisenmann writes: “I don’t think the T. obsoletus complex (from Costa Rica to western Ecuador) is conspecific with the T. fumigatus of eastern Amazonia and northwestern South America—which was Hellmayr’s (Cat. Birds, Am., vol. 7, 1934, p. 389) very broad treatment. Gyldenstolpe (Kungl. Sv. Vet. Akad. Handlingar, 22, no. 3, 1945, p. 279) concluded that the T. hauxwelli complex must be removed from the species T. fumigatus, as they proved to be sympatric in Brazilian Amazonia. Ripley (Check- list Birds World, vol. 10, 1964, p. 219) followed Gyldenstolpe in the specific separation of the T. hauxwelli complex from T. fumigatus. Probably through an oversight, he left the T. obsoletus complex in IT’. fumigatus when its morphological affinities and geography are with the more western T. hauxwelli. Meyer de Schauensee (Birds of South America, 1966, pp. 416-417) accordingly merges the T. obsoletus and T. hauxwelli complexes in one species, using, because of priority, T. ob- soletus as the species name.” In limited encounters I have seen these thrushes singly, for brief periods only, in trees or occasionally on the ground, usually near or under cover. Most of the specimens that I have handled were captured 1n mist nets. This species is a bird of the forest interior, and almost entirely arboreal. Ridgely (1976, p. 275) describes the song as similar to the Clay- colored Robin’s, but faster and less rich. The type specimen, without definite locality, has been attributed al- most surely erroneously to Lion Hill or the Panama Railroad in the Canal Zone (where there is no other record of this species). Stomachs that I have examined have been filled with fragments of drupes and small seeds, with an ant in one (perhaps swallowed with a berry). The statement by Ridgway (U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 50, pt. 4, 1907, p. 92) that fumigatus (sensu stricto) of northern South America has “much greater adhesion of the anterior toes” than other thrushes does not hold in the series examined. There has been no report of the nest or eggs of the Panama race. Belcher and Smooker (Ibis, 1937, pp. 511-512) described the nest and eggs from Trinidad as “a bulky cup with exterior of green moss and lining of rootlets. In cacao plantations it is placed about 15 feet up as a rule; in forest the site may be in the crown of a tree-fern or near the FAMILY TURDIDAE L377, top of a slender sapling, or, more rarely, in a recess in the stem of some great tree. On roadsides they may be built in a niche or on a projection of a steep face, and here they are often higher off the road surface than is the nest of T. albicols. The eggs are usually three, less often two; they are similar to, but rather larger than, the eggs of T. albicollis; the deep blue type with pronounced markings does not, however, occur in this species. Typical eggs may be described as regular ovals, smooth- shelled, and slightly glossy. The ground is pale greenish-blue, and the markings are profuse marblings and blotches of pale reddish-brown, converging toward the larger end and there forming a cap. Average measurements are 28.2 20.4 mm.: a large set of two measure 32.2X 20.8 and 3221.4 mm.” TURDUS GRAYI CASIUS (Bonaparte): Clay-colored Robin, Casca Pardo Planesticus casius Bonaparte, Compt. Rend. Acad. Sci., vol. 41, no. 17, 1855 (not earlier than October 22), p. 657. (Panama.) Rather dull brown in color throughout; a typical “robin” (in the American sense) in appearance and action. Description.—Length 205-235 mm. Adult (sexes alike), dull clay brown to buffy brown on undersurface, with the throat paler and streaked with dark brown; darker brown above. Juvenile, brighter buffy brown on undersurface, with broken bars of dull grayish brown; back and sides of head streaked, and wing coverts tipped with cinnamon-buff. Iris verona to orange-brown; anterior half of bill, and the cutting edge of the mandible, dull honey yellow; basal half dull greenish gray; tarsus, toes, and claws dull neutral gray, the claws sometimes buff at tip. The bill color is brighter in breeding season. Measurements—Males (14 from Panama), wing 114.1-129.3 (120.3), tail 89.1-106.8 (95.5) culmen from base 22.3-24.4 (23.1), tarsus 30.0-33.0 (31.2) mm. Females (12 from Panama), wing 110.2-119.2 (115.2), tail 85.9- Yeo (922). culmen: from; base 21.1-25.0.(22.9); tarsus 27.9-32.2 (30.3) mm. Resident. Common, chiefly in the Tropical Zone. On the Pacific slope from Costa Rica east, including the Azuero Peninsula through the Province of Panama (where recorded east to the lower course of the Rio Majé). On the Caribbean side, from Bocas del Toro through northern Veraguas, Colon, and the Comarca de San Blas to Colombia (Acandi, Choco). In Chiriqui it ascends to the Subtropical Zone above 138 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 KE] Volcan and Cerro Punta, and in Boquete (Lérida, Quiel); recorded also near Santa Fé in Veraguas, (elevation not stated), Isla Canal de Afuera (sight record); Isla Cébaco. Not recorded from Perlas Is- lands nor observed on Isla Coiba by any recent students (a specimen in the American Museum of Natural History collected by Batty is prob- ably mislabeled, as are many of his “island” specimens). The Clay-colored Robin is the best known of its group in Panama because of its wide distribution. Under primitive conditions it is com- mon in open forest growth, and in brushy areas; in denser stands found mainly along streams or other borders. As the land 1s cleared for culti- vation this is one of the birds that is able to adapt to the changed con- ditions, perhaps even to profit by them, as it shifts to the borders of fields, to rastrojo, where quick-growing shrubs offer cover, and also settles among coconut groves, mangos, and other trees and shrubbery about houses; it even follows clearings well up into the mountains. In the older, settled regions, when lawns are developed, in due course the Casca Pardo becomes bolder, so that in Balboa and Panama City it runs about freely on open lawns, like the American Robin so wide- spread in the settled areas of North America. Its usual mannerisms are closely similar to the northern bird, much more so than is the case with most others of its genus found in Panama. Though this thrush is seen constantly, its true abundance is evident only when trees that bear edible berries are in fruit. Then the birds come in numbers, often boldly, to feed with other birds. Like the American Robin (Turdus migratorius) they eat many earthworms where these are abundant, and like related thrushes they decoy readily when I have used calls to attract small birds. Their alarm note is a rapid repetition of a single syllable, pup, pup, higher in pitch than that of the northern robin. A common note, rather low, is a curious drawn- out whine that suggests vaguely some of the calls of the Smooth-billed Ani. When the first brief rains come in the latter half of the dry season, perhaps in February, the Casca Pardo begins to sing, at first in low tone and hesitantly, but by early March males in full song present a chorus at the first hint of dawn that has awakened me pleasantly on many tropical mornings. Eisenmann writes that the song resembles that of the North American Robin, but tends to be softer and sweeter. It sometimes includes twee-oo or chwee-oo phrases, which occasionally are uttered alone and suggest a Streaked Saltator. Clucking and cack- ing calls also suggest vocalizations of its northern congener, although often sounding rather less vigorous. Distinctive is a long-drawn, whin- FAMILY TURDIDAE 139 ing call with a nasal quality syllabized by Eisenmann as kee-weé-vah or wee-eé-gua. The nest, fairly sturdy, rests on a base of leaves and other dried ma- terials that often is loose and untidy. The main cup is of grass and fibrous materials, with a hardened inner wall of mud, molded by the breast of the female. The bottom is padded lightly with fine rootlets and grass, and the outside may be covered with green moss. A usual site is ina fork in a tree or shrub, anywhere from 1.5 to 10 m above the ground (though, rarely, they may be placed much higher). Many lo- cations are chosen, from fronds of a palm or a banana, an epiphyte, or even the broad leaves of an herbaceous plant, sometimes where support is insufficient so that the nest may fall. It is common to find one located in some roof angle on a house. For years there were nests on the tops of the pillars at the entrance of the old Tivoli Guest House in Ancon. The eggs, usually two or three, occasionally four, in form are oval, and in color are white with a tinge of green, deeper in some, liberally dotted over the entire surface with cinnamon and rufous-brown mark- ings, which may appear purple or lilac where thinly covered by chalky shell. Some strongly marked examples have a heavy overlay of color forming an irregular cap over the larger end. In three sets collected in the Canal Zone by Major General G. Ralph Meyer, external measure- ments are as follows: GZ260)< 202; 28. x 2110) 29'0'x 21.2) and) 29:6 20.5 mma. C2 area) Wl9.5 25) 19'5)\and 29/0 x 19,9 1mm. (9) 20.9<71.0)and 281x211 mm: The principal nesting season is from March to July, with occasional records in February and August. In the breeding season of 1970 Morton (Science, vol. 171, 1971, p. 920) observed 56 nests in Summit Gardens, Canal Zone, and found that increased nest predation during the rainy season, which began in late April, reduced nesting success from the 42 percent of the dry season to 15 percent. He suggested that the robins begin breeding in the dry season when food for nestlings is scarcer because the increased predation of the rainy season outweighed any increase in productivity that might result from greater food avail- ability. Fully grown immature birds, to be recognized from adults by the prominent clay-colored tips on the feathers of the greater and middle coverts, are common by the first week in September. Adults are in molt at the end of August. After the breeding season, the birds may gather at sunset in small companies to roost in groves of trees, often near houses. I40 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A While known widely as one of the species called casca, locally this familiar bird has other names, as platanera in Herrera, capasucia in southern Veraguas, and si quiere near Almirante, the last perhaps in imitation of its curious whining call. The species is widely distributed through Central America north to southern and eastern Mexico, (even casually reaching Texas) and south to northern Colombia. Northward, the race casius extends from Panama through Costa Rica on both slopes. On the Caribbean side it crosses the Colombian border in eastern San Blas to Acandi on the western shore of the Gulf of Uraba. H. Loftin (Eisenmann in litt.) reports one banded at Ancon, Canal Zone, on September 6, 1964, recaptured dying on April 13, 1974, at Balboa, less than 1 km from the banding site. Another, banded at Gamboa on October 23, 1964, was found dead in June 1968 within 3 km of the banding site. TURDUS PLEBEJUS PLEBEJUS Cabanis: Mountain Robin, Casca Serrana Turdus plebejus Cabanis, Journ. fur Orn., vol. 8, September 1860 (January 1861), p.323:; (Costa JRicas) Adults brownish gray, darker above, lighter below; with black or blackish brown bill. Description.—Length 235-250 mm. Adult (sexes alike), above dark olive-brown to brownish gray with the crown faintly darker; lighter, grayer below, with the abdomen more or less grayish white; throat faintly streaked with brownish black; undertail coverts with wedge- shaped dusky markings; underwing coverts dull brown, margined with tawny. Immature, like adult, but with small tips of buff on the outer greater primary wing coverts and breast. (These are soon lost, so that the juvenile individual rapidly becomes like the adult). Kennard (Proc: Boston Soc. Nat: Hist., vol. 38, 1928s) 460) ane! male taken March 13, 1926, on the Boquete Trail, noted that the bill was “blackish brown; iris raw umber, tarsus brown.” Measurements.—Males (11 from Chiriqui), wing 127.7-140.6 (136.7), tail 92.3-99.9 (94.8), culmen from base 22.7-25.0 (23.7), tarsus 31.5-34.5 (33.4) mm. Iemales (11 from Chiriqui), wing 122.9-134.8 (130.0), tail 88.0- 94.5 (92.6, average of 10), culmen from base 22.7-24.4 (23.7), tarsus 32.1-35.0 (33.5) mm. FAMILY TURDIDAE IAI Resident. Found in the Subtropical Zone in the mountains of Chir1- qui, where it is recorded from Cerro Picacho, on the main volcano from near Cerro Punta on the western side, and from above Boquete on the east; reported by Griscom from Cerro Flores in eastern Chiriqui. Ridgely reports it down to 1000 m in central Chiriqui (Fortuna Dam site). Found also on the Caribbean slope, where it was taken by Ken- nard at about 1400 m on the Boquete Trail. The species occurs from southern Mexico to western Panama; the nominate race in the moun- tains of Costa Rica and Panama. Griscom’s report of this species from the mountains of Veraguas (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 361) appears to be in error, as the bird is not known to range eastward beyond the limits given above. This is a species of the mountain forests, common where found, but of restricted range in Panama. | have seen individuals frequently about feeding trees, where they often descend to the ground to pick up fallen berries in addition to those taken among the branches. They decoy readily at a faint squeak, and come near to remain completely motion- less, sometimes on open limbs, and sometimes under cover of leaves. Occasionally, I have noted them on high perches in dead trees in clear- ings. They are usually in small flocks of as many as 15 or 20. The cacking or clucking call note is much like that of the North American Robin (Turdus migratorius). Kennard and Peters (Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 38, 1928, p. 460) record the song as more musical than that of the northern bird, but Ridgely (1976, p. 275) calls the song “inferior to that of its allies, being faster, more repititious and monotonous, with few pitch changes.” In addition to the cacking and kicking calls, they give a whining call resembling that of the Clay- colored Robin, but more musical and more mournful, like od0000reee, lasting about 1% seconds, then repeated after an interval of 4-5 seconds. Skutch (Publ. Nuttall Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, p. 112) found a cup- shaped nest hidden among dead leaves and other debris in the crotch of a tree, elevated 3 m above the ground. In it were 2 young with feathers sprouting. Later, when grown, “the plumage closely resem- bled that of [the] parents, except for some rather inconspicuous buffy spots or bars on its breast and wing coverts.’”’ No description of the eggs has been seen. For the date of Cabanis’s description of this thrush, see statement at the end of the account of Turdus nigrescens. 142 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A TURDUS NIGRESCENS Cabanis: Sooty Robin, Casca Tiznada Turdus nigrescens Cabanis, Journ. fur Ornith., vol. 8, no. 47, “September, 1860,” published January 1861, p. 234. (Volcan Irazu, Costa Rica.) Large; adult blackish brown; bill and feet yellow. Description.—Length 235-270 mm. Adult male, dull grayish brown to blackish brown; wings and underwing coverts dull black; lores and area around eye black; throat indistinctly lined with black. Adult female, similar to male in general, but duller; throat faintly paler, with black lines more distinct. Immature, averaging lighter on dorsal surface; crown, back, and scapulars streaked with dull buff; greater and middle wing coverts tipped narrowly with dull buff to form somewhat indistinct bars; under- surface basally dull ochraceous-buff, with the individual feathers tipped and barred with dull black; dull buff of throat only lightly marked; undertail coverts blacker, narrowly lined with buff; underwing coverts dull blackish brown, barred and edged with dull cinnamon-buff. In an adult female, taken March 1, 1965, at 2300 m on the west face of Volcan de Chiriqui, the iris was ivory-white; bill bright yellow, with a faint clouding of dull brown on the nasal operculum, and on the side of the culmen adjacent; tarsus and toes bright yellow; claws black; bare, thickened outer rim of eyelid honey yellow. Some specimens of either sex have the entire bill plain yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from 1900 to 3100 m on Volcan de Chiriqui), wing 137.5-144.9 (140.9), tail 107.3-119.4 (114.2), culmen from base 23.6-26.1 (24.9), tarsus 37.0-39.3 (37.8) mm. Females (10 from 1920 to 3100 m on Volcan de Chiriqui), wing 134.8-138.9 (137.6), tail 107.2-114.2 (110.4), culmen from base 23.5- 25.0 (24.4), tail 35.1-38.4 (36.5) mm. A series from Costa Rica agrees in size with the measurements above. Resident on the higher levels of Volcan de Chiriqui, Chiriqui, at 1800 to 3000 m, also occurs lower on the Volcan de Chiriqui massif, and in the high mountains of Costa Rica. The little that is known of these mountain thrushes indicates them usually to be tame, ranging among trees and also on the ground, alone or in scattered company of a few individuals, frequently in pastures and clearings. The species, described from Volcan Irazt in Costa Rica, was first recorded from Panama by Salvin and Godman (Biol. Centr. Amer., Aves, vol. 1, 1879, plate 1, p. 25) from several specimens sent to them by Enrique Arcé marked “Volcan de Chiriqui.” Bangs (Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 49) recorded a series FAMILY TURDIDAE 143 taken by W. W. Brown in May and June 1901 from the high slopes of the volcano. Blake (Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, pp. 549-550) listed 8 in the Monniche collection from elevations of 1980 to 3078 m. The specimens examined from Chiriqui appear identical in size and coloration with those from the mountains of Costa Rica. Eisenmann writes that in western Chiriqui it is known from above timberline on Volcan de Chiriqui, but is also frequently seen on the ground in the cleared area about the top of the trail between Cerro Punta and Boquete, at about 2400 m. On July 21, 1964, at least a hundred were in groups of as many as 20 in one small tree at about 1860 m. It is likely that some downward wandering occurs after the breeding season; some of the birds seen were in juvenal plumage. Ridgely (1976, p. 276) describes the song as “poor but still some- what robinlike” and renders the calls as “trrrr and a harsh tchweerp, tchweerp.” We adds (1m litt.) that the Sooty Robin does not seem to sing very often. A nest found in Costa Rica at Villa Mills, Cartago Province, April 21, 1974, by Maxine Kiff held two eggs containing feathered embryos. The eggs were “robin’s egg blue’ and unspotted. One, now in the collection of the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, measured 33.00 X 22.42 mm. The nest was located 4 m high in a 7-m tree at the edge of cutover montane rain forest and pasture, about 1 m from the trunk in the crotch of a limb. The nest was composed of mosses and sticks, lined with fine grasses. A nest found by Carriker (Ann. Car- negie Mus., vol. 6, 1910, p. 738-739) at Volcan Irazi was made of grass and mud. The original description of this thrush, in the Journal fur Ornithol- ogie, was published in the final issue for the year, which was dated September 1860. The copy of this number in the library of the Smith- sonian’s Division of Birds when received had a notice printed on the bottom of the front cover stating that it had been published “im Januar, 1861.” This data is carried in C. W. Richmond’s card catalogue for nigrescens, and was so listed by Ridgway (Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 50, Part IV, 1907, p. 124). HYLOCICHLA MUSTELINA (Gmelin): Wood Thrush, Zorzal Pechimanchado T.(urdus) mustelinus Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1 (2), p. 817, ex Latham “Tawny Thrush” (“in Noveboraco” = New York). Medium size; upper surface rufescent brown; undersurface white, heavily spotted with black. 144 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Description.—Length 163-192 mm. Sexes alike; undersurface white, heavily spotted with black on breast and sides; top of head and hind- neck tawny brown to russet, changing to cinnamon-brown and russet on back and wings; rump and tail light olive; a distinct white ring around eye; side of head dull black, lined narrowly with white; bill black, with base of lower part yellowish buff; tarsus and toes flesh color. Measurements.—Males (10 from North Carolina to Pennsylvania), wing 102.4-109.6 (106.2), tail 62.5-72.4 (68.3), culmen from base 18.9-21.5 (20.2), tarsus 29.7-32.4 (30.9) mm. Females (10 from North Carolina to Pennsylvania), wing 102.0- 106.2 (105.0), tail 65.3-70.0 (67.5), culmen from base) 1992214 (19.8), tarsus 28.4-32.0 (30.0) mm. | Winter resident, found locally October to April, mainly from the Canal Zone westward. Panama is at the southern end of this species’ winter range, which begins in Texas. There is one record for Co- lombia, a male collected west of the Rio Atrato in extreme northwest- ern Choco on December 6, 1975; the specimen is in the collection of Inderena, Bogota (J. V. Rodriguez, Lozania, no. 31, April 30, 1980, p. 8). In their winter home Wood Thrushes live in the undergrowth on and above the forest floor in wooded areas where their presence may be indicated by their sharp call notes, though the birds usually re- main hidden. One banded October 8, 1963, at Magnolia Gardens, Charleston, South Carolina, by T. A. Beckett was captured alive and released by Galindo at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, October 26, 1963. Willis (Liv- ing Bird, 1966, pp. 198-200) on Barro Colorado Island found them in small numbers from October to April associated in feeding on and near the ground with ant swarms. Galindo, in netting and banding opera- tions at Almirante, in 1962 recorded them as arriving October 16. They have been found with some regularity east to the Canal Zone, but only casually beyond. I caught 1 in a mist net at the old Tacarcuna Village site in Darién on March 10, 1964, and recorded 2 calling at Mandinga in western San Blas, February 7, 1957. Ridgely has only once heard the Wood Thrush singing in Panama, on March 20, 1979, at Nueva Suiza, Chiriqui. CATHARUS USTULATUS (Nuttall): Swainson’s Thrush, Zorzal de Swainson Medium size; upper surface olive-brown, undersurface white, with olive-brown streaks on side of throat and spots on upper breast. FAMILY TURDIDAE I45 Description.—Length 148-185 mm. Sexes alike; upper surface from crown to lower back uniform olive to sepia, upper tail coverts slightly brighter; wings and tail olive to sepia, with basal third of all but outer- most primary and innermost secondary lighter (more distinctly on un- dersurface of wing); distinct buffy white streak at lores and eye-ring; side of face like back; throat buffy white, streaked with dark brown on sides; upper breast washed with pale buff and spotted with dark brown; rest of undersurface white with sides color of back; underwing coverts buffy. The Swainson’s Thrush is the commonest of the North American thrushes that migrate through or winter in Panama. It breeds across much of northern North America and winters from the southern United States to Brazil and Argentina. In extensive netting opera- tions at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, Galindo and Méndez ( Bird-Band- ing, 1965, p. 234) found during the fall of 1963 that this species formed 76 percent of all migrant thrushes netted. They captured 3120 Swain- son’s, compared with 743 Gray-cheeked Thrushes, 145 Veeries, and 95 Wood Thrushes. Galindo and Méndez, and Willis (Living Bird, 1966, p. 201), who spent the fall of 1960 on Barro Colorado Island, found Swainson’s Thrushes commonest in October, ‘‘scattered” or “rare” in winter, and uncommon in spring. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 361) calls it “casual” in summer, based on a specimen taken on July 4 at Permé, San Blas. The earliest fall specimen in the Smithsonian collection is from October 10, 1960, taken at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, and the latest spring specimen was collected on the Rio Jaqué, Darién on April 11, 1947. Ripley (Checklist Birds World, vol. 10, 1964, pp. 171-173) lists 4 races of the Swainson’s Thrush. They are analyzed in detail by Bond (Proc. U. S. N. M., vol. 114, 1963, pp. 373-387). Specimens of all 4 have been collected in Panama. C. u. swainsoni is the form that regu- larly occurs here; it may be found in wooded and shrubby areas throughout the Republic from lowlands and foothills, up to at least 1800 m in the Chiriqui highlands, and on the Pearl Islands. CATHARUS USTULATUS ALMAE (Oberholser) Hylocichla ustulata almae Oberholser, 1898, Auk, 15, p. 304. (East Humboldt Mts., opposite Franklin Lake, Nevada.) Characters —Upper surface distinctly grayer than in other forms. Measurements.—Males (10 from Alaska, Mackenzie, and Alberta), wing 96.1-102.1 (99.8), tail 66.1-70.6 (68.8), culmen from base 14.2- 17.7 (16.4), tarsus 27.0-28.7 (27.9) mm. 146 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Females (10 from Alaska, Mackenzie, and Alberta), wing 93.2- 100.0 (97.1), tail 60.2-68.2 (62.3), culmen from base 13.5-16.7 (15.7), tarsus 26.1-29.3 (27.4) mm. This race breeds in southern and eastern Alaska east to western Mackenzie and south through the mountains to Colorado and northwest Utah. The winter range is unclear, in large part, perhaps owing to the difficulty of identifying specimens out of the breeding season. Russell (A. O. U. Ornith. Mon. no. 1, 1964, p. 142) does not list this form for British Honduras, and Monroe (A. O. U. Ornith. Mon. no. 7, 1968, p. 307) considers it “too weakly differentiated to recognize taxonomic- ally,” so gives no information for Honduras. Dickey and van Rossem (Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Zool. Ser., vol. 23, pub. 406, 1938, p. 457), however, call it a “locally common spring migrant” in El Salvador. C. u. almae is not mentioned by Slud (Bull. Amer. Mus. Hist., vol. 128, 1964, p. 299) as occurring in Costa Rica, although Bond (Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 114, no. 3471, 1963, p. 380) lists 1 collected at Bonilla, Costa Rica, April 13, 1908. Miller (Univ. Calif. Pub. in Zool., vol. 66, no. 1, 1962, p. 42) collected 1 he believed was C. wu. almae in the western Andes of Colombia at latitude 3.5°N on December 26, 1958. Nine specimens from Panama in the Smithsonian collection have been identified as C. u. almae. One of these was collected in winter, on January 20, 1965, at Isla Cébaco, Veraguas; others were taken be- tween March 7 and April 6: in Darién at Tacarcuna Village (March 7, 1964) and Jaqué (April 6, 1946), at Cerro Chame, Province of Pan- ama (March 27, 1955), El Barrero, Herrera (March 22, 1948), and Isla Brincanco (March 23, 1962) and El Volcan (March 27, 1954), Chiriqui. | CATHARUS USTULATUS USTULATUS (Nuttall) Turdus ustulatus Nuttall, 1840, Man. Orn. U.S. and Canada, ed. 2, pp. vi, 400, 830. (forests of the Oregon = Fort Vancouver, Washington.) Characters.—Upper surface sepia brown, brightest on rump; more rufescent in autumn. Measurements.—Males (10 from British Columbia and Washing- ton), wing 95.6-102.0 (99.4), tail 66.1-74.6 (71.3), culmen from base 15.8-17.8 (17.2), tarsus 27.9-31.6 (29.0) mm. Females (10 from British Columbia and Washington), wing 92.7- 98.6 (95.4), tail 65.1-70.8 (67.7), culmen from base 16.5-18.3 (17.1), tarsus 27.7-31.4 (29.1) mm. This race breeds in southeastern coastal Alaska from Juneau south, coastal British Columbia, and west of the Cascade Mountains in Wash- FAMILY TURDIDAE WAT, ington and Oregon. It migrates through California to winter primarily in western Mexico. There are 2 specimens of nominate ustulatus from Panama in the Smithsonian collection, from Fl Volcan, Chiriqui, col- lected March 17, 1965, and February 26, 1960. CATHARUS USTULATUS OEDICUS (Oberholser) Hylochichla ustulata oedica Oberholser, 1899, Auk, 16, p. 23. (Santa Barbara, California. ) Characters.—Upper surface grayer and paler than that of nominate ustulatus and buffer, less olivaceous, than swainsoni. Measurements.—Males (10 from California, Oregon, and Wash- ington), wing 92.0-100.8 (95.2), tail 66.1-74.5 (71.9), culmen from base 112.9213.9 (13:5), tarsus 25.3-29.1 (27.7) mm. Females (8 from California and Washington), wing 89.0-96.5 (93.1), tail 64.8-74.7 (69.9), culmen from base 12.7-14.9 (13.5), tar- sus 26.7-29.9 (28.1) mm. This race breeds in California, southwest Oregon, and along the east slopes of the Cascade range to northern Washington. It winters from Arizona south to southern Mexico. I have not found any refer- ences in the literature to its occurence farther south, but 1 specimen in the Smithsonian collection, USNM no. 457921, seems best assigned to this race. It is a male collected by Frank A. Hartman at El Volcan, Chiriqui, on March 2, 1953. CATHARUS USTULATUS SWAINSONI (Tschudi ) Turdus Swaimsoni Tschudi, 1845, Faun. Peru., Aves, p. 28; new name for Merula zwitlsont Swainson, nec Turdus wilsonti Bonaparte (Carlton House, Saskatche- wan.) Characters.—Upper surface olive-brown, distinctly less gray than C. u. almae. Measurements.—Males (10 from Labrador, Nova Scotia, and Maine), wing 98.1-102.6 (100.7), tail 66.2-72.2 (68.3), culmen from base 15.6-17.6 (17.0), tarsus 26.5-92.3 (27.9) mm. Females (10 from Labrador, Quebec, Manitoba, Alberta, Maine, and Montana), wing 93.2-103.0 (97.9), tail 64.5-70.0 (67.2), culmen from base 15.9-17.5 (16.7), tarsus 27.0-28.8 (27.8) mm. This race breeds from eastern Alberta to the Atlantic Coast, through Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, and southern Labrador south to northern New England and in the Appalachians from New 148 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 York to West Virginia, and farther west from northern Michigan to northern Minnesota. It winters from Mexico to northern Argentina. As on its northern breeding grounds, in Panama this is the most arboreal of the spotted woodland thrushes. It is a regular visitor to fruiting trees and bushes, and also sallies after insects. Willis (Liv- ing Bird, 1966, p. 201-203) on Barro Colorado Island found that it descends to the ground to follow swarms of army ants, pecking at the insects flushed by the ants, and usually driving away Gray-cheeked Thrushes and Veeries, but foraging only in niches not occupied by resident species. Willis noted that when following army ants in No- vember, Swainson’s Thrushes would occasionally deliver fragments of song, in addition to call notes. Skutch (A Naturalist in Costa Rica, 1971, p. 103) found them singing in Costa Rica from March to early May. In Panama, Ridgely (1 litt.) has heard in March and April “a full whisper song similar to what one hears on migration in eastern WISss An interesting example of how rapidly these birds can put on weight to increase the fat supply needed for migration is recorded by Leck (Bird-Banding, 1975, p. 201), who netted a Swainson’s Thrush at the Volcan de Chiriqui Field Station of the Florida Audubon Society on April 28, 1968, when it weighed 25 g, and retrapped it there 6 days later, on May 4, when its weight was 31.6 g. CATHARUS MINIMUS MINIMUS (Lafresnaye): Gray-cheeked Thrush; Zorzal Carigris Turdus minimus Lafresnaye, Rev. Zool., vol. II, no. 1, January, 1848, p. 5. (Bogota, Colombia. ) Medium size; upper surface dull olive; upper breast streaked irreg- ularly with dusky, rest of undersurface white. Description—Length 157-187 mm. Sexes alike; upper surface from crown to back, olive to grayish olive; tail somewhat browner; side of head grayish olive; no distinct eye-ring; ear region streaked narrowly with dull white; side of jaw buffy white; undersurfaces of body white, with upper breast washed with pale buff; sides of throat to upper breast pale buff streaked irregularly with dusky; rest of undersurface white, with the sides dull gray; underwing coverts dull gray, edged lightly with white. In a male collected at Independence, Kansas, May 6, 1905, the iris was brown, maxilla and tip of mandible black, rest of the bill dull yel- low; tarsus dull brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Alaska to Newfoundland), wing FAMILY TURDIDAE I49 100.0-106.4 (103.2), tail 68.1-75.2 (70.2), culmen from base 15.5-17.9 GIG) tarsus) 27.1-30.2 (29.5)! mm. Females (10 from Alaska to Newfoundland), wing 95.4-99.2 (97.8), tail 65.2-68.6 (66.4), culmen from base 16.0-17.9 (17.0), tarsus 27.4-32.2 (29.9) mm. Migrant. Gray-cheeked Thrushes are noted especially in the period of fall migration; most of those seen are probably the nominate sub- species, although bicknelli and aliciae (if it can be distinguished) may also occur. Specimens of the nominate race definitely identified are 2 recorded by Chapman (Auk, 1931, p. 121) taken by R. R. Benson at Cocoplum, Bocas del Toro, October 31 and November 1, 1927. Others that I have examined are as follows: a male in the British Museum taken by Arcé on the Volcan de Chiriqui in 1870 (date not specified) ; a male taken by B. Feinstein at the old Tacarcuna Village in Darién February 11, 1959; another male from the same locality that I col- lected March 5, 1964; 2 (from the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory) taken at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, a female on October 12, 1962, and another with sex not marked on October 6, 1962. This race winters from Nicaragua to northern Peru and northwestern Brazil. In extensive netting operations, Dr. Pedro Galindo, assisted by E. Méndez and Abdiel Adames ( Bird-Banding, vol. 34, 1963, pp. 202-209) banded 264 of these thrushes at Almirante from October 15 to the end of November, 1962. None were taken in the following spring period. In 1963 the first record for fall was October 2. In 1964, on January 29, 1 was netted followed by others on April 22 and 24. In fall, the first appeared September 25 and the last on November 25. Willis (Living Bird, 1966, p. 203) found them fairly common on Barro Colorado Is- land in 1960 from October 5 to December 3. He recorded 15 on No- vember 1. The following year he noted migrants commonly from October 12 to November 24, and single birds seen subsequently on January 25, February 4, and April 15, 1961. They were noted regu- larly around moving ant swarms, apparently in search of other insects, not the ants. Loftin (Carib. Journ. Sci., vol. 3, no. 1, 1963, p. 6) reported banding 65 of this species near Almirante October 19-21, 1962, with 2 on No- vember 10-11, 1962, and a few in the Canal Zone near Corozal and Curundu in November 1962. CATHARUS FUSCESCENS (Stephens): Veery, Zorzal Lomo Oscuro Size medium; upper surface dull rufous-brown; sides grayish white, without markings. 150 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Description—Length, 151-175 mm. Sexes alike; above dull grayish brown to somewhat tawny brown; center of throat, lower breast, and abdomen white (changing on lower foreneck and upper breast to pale butf), streaked and spotted rather lightly with tawny-brown; sides grayish white. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Fairly common, found from September to early May. The Veery, like the Swainson’s Thrush, ranges in forest areas; it has been encountered mainly through individuals captured in mist nets. Usually they are taken in company with the much more abundant Swainson’s Thrush. Of the 4 geographic races currently recognized on their northern breeding grounds, 3 are represented in collections now at hand from Panama, as indicated under the names that follow. As the remaining group, Catharus fuscescens subpallidus Burleigh and Duvall (Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 72, 1959, p. 33), is m1- grant from its breeding grounds like the others, it seems probable that it will be identified in the Republic as further data accumulate. It is similar in general to C. f. salicicola, differing in duller, more grayish, less rufescent coloration on the dorsal surface. Sightings cannot be identified as to subspecies and even in the hand racial identification can be difficult. Most Panama observations are of mist-netted birds on the Caribbean coastal area. G. V. N. Powell and S. G. Martin netted many at Ft. Sherman, Canal Zone, between Sep- tember 28 and October 22, 1966; the numbers caught were highest be- tween October 3 (16) and October 15 (8). None were caught during banding done on Cerro Campana. At Almirante, Bocas del Toro, this species was taken rather infrequently, although in 1963 and 1964 some were taken from the last week in September (earliest Sept. 23, 1963) through the third week in November (1 bird), and none in December, January, or February. In spring, far fewer birds are netted at Al- mirante. On the Pacific slope, one was banded by V. Kleen at Nueva Suiza, Chiriqui, on October 12, 1967, and Ridgely observed 1 at Ft. Clayton, Canal Zone, on September 28, 1968. CATHARUS FUSCESCENS FUSCESCENS (Stephens) Turdus fuscescens Stephens, in Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. X, pt. 1, September 1817, p. 182. (Pennsylvania. ) Characters.—Brighter, more reddish brown, on the entire dorsal surface from crown to rump. FAMILY TURDIDAE P52 M easurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in June), wing 98.1-105.1 (101.7), tail 70.0-77.5 (73.7), culmen from base 15.6- Passe.) tarsus 29:0-31,0) (29.9) nam. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May and June), wing 92.2-100.4 (96.9), tail 64.2-73.4 (67.6), culmen from base 16.2-18.4 (17.1), tarsus 27.7-30.0 (28.6) mm. Migrant from the north, recorded definitely in Panama from 2 male specimens: one, in the National Museum, received from the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, collected at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, October 25, 1963; and a male, in the museum at the University of Cincinnati, collected October 10, 1931, at Puerto Obaldia, San Blas, by Hasso von Wedel. The northern nesting grounds extend from southwestern Quebec and southern Ontario south to northeastern Ohio, eastern Pennsyl- vania, central New Jersey, and the District of Columbia (Rock Creek Park) and the mountains of eastern Tennessee and northwestern Geor- gia. In its winter home it has been recorded from Colombia and Ven- ezuela to south-central Brazil. The few reports from Panama indicate that it is a passage migrant. CATHARUS FUSCESCENS FULIGINOSUS (Howe) Hylocichla fuscescens fuliginosa Howe, Auk, vol. 18, No. 3, July 1900, p. 271. (Codroy, Newfoundland. ) Characters —Rather bright reddish brown above; in general, like C. f. fuscescens, but decidedly darker. Measurements.—Males (10 from Newfoundland and New Jersey), wing 94.0-104.6 (100.3), tail 71.4-76.1 (73.3), culmen from base 15.0- 18.6 (16.2), tarsus 27.8-31.6 (29.3) mm. Females (6 from Newfoundland, Rhode Island, and Mississippi), wing 94.2-100.2 (96.4), tail 64.2-71.2 (69.0), culmen from base 14.8- 17.3 (16.4), tarsus 27.9-29.9 (28.9) mm. This is the breeding form of Newfoundland, the Magdalen Islands, and south-central Quebec. In the north it is recorded as a migrant near the Atlantic Coast from Massachusetts to Virginia, and is believed to winter in northern South America. There are 2 specimens at present known from Panama, both taken during Galindo’s banding studies at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, a male on October 25, 1962, and a female in October 1963 (without more def- inite date). 152 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 CATHARUS FUSCESCENS SALICICOLA (Ridgway) Hylocichla fuscescens salicicola Ridgway, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 4, no. 240, April 13, 1882, p. 374. (Fort Garland, Colorado.) Duller, less reddish brown, averaging darker above as compared to fuscescens or fuliginosa. Measurements.—Males (10 from Manitoba, Montana, Colorado, and Wisconsin), wing 95.4-102.0 (99.4), tail 66.3-79.3 (72.5, average of 9), culmen from base 14.5-18.5 (16.7), tarsus 27.7-31.5 (30.3) mm. Females (9 from Minnesota, North Dakota, lowa, Montana, and Colorado), wing 90.0-101.3 (94.8), tail 65.0-73.4 (70.0), culmen from base 14.6-17.4 (15.9, average of 8), tarsus 27.0-32.3 (29.1) mm. Breeds from southern British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Nevada, Colorado, South Dakota, and Minnesota to southern Wisconsin, Indi- ana, and southwestern Ohio; recorded in winter in South America from Colombia, Venezuela, and Mato Grosso, Brazil. Two specimens have been taken at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, dur- ing banding studies: a female October 12, 1962, and a male marked October, without more certain date, 1963. CATHARUS MEXICANUS FUMOSUS Ridgway: Black-headed Nightingale-Thrush, Zorzal Cabecinegro Catharus fumosus Ridgway, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 10, August 6, 1888, p. 505. (Costa Rica.) Size medium; crown in male dull black, in female brownish black. Description.—Length 146-164 mm. Male, crown black; upper sur- face, including tail brownish olive; band across upper breast and lower foreneck, sides, underwing coverts and feathered area on upper legs somewhat brownish olive; throat, upper foreneck, breast, and undertail coverts white; wings like tail, but with outer webs of primaries red- dish brown. Female, similar but crown brownish black. Juvenile (male, Rio Changuena, September 8, 1961), crown, back, and wing coverts blackish brown, with feathers lined centrally with dark buff; upper breast buff centrally, feathers edged and tipped with dusky black; lower breast and abdomen dull buff. Measurements.—Males (10 from Veraguas and Costa Rica), wing 81.3-88.5 (84.5), tail 54.8-64.5 (60.3), culmen from base 14.1-17.5 (15.8), tarsus 28.4-32.7 (30.8) mm. Iemales (10 from Panama, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua), wing 78.5- FAMILY TURDIDAE 153 87.0) (82.8), tail 52.1-61.6 (57.5), culmen from base 13.5-17.5 (15.5, average 01/9) tarsus 28:2-31.8 (30.1) mm. Resident. Found locally in the higher elevations on the Caribbean slope of the mountains in western Panama. Recorded to date from the Boquete trail, and the upper Rio Changuena, 1060 m, both in the high- lands of western Bocas del Toro; Calovévora, and the Cordillera del Chuct, Veraguas (around Santa Fé, high on both slopes). Beyond Panama this race is recorded north to Nicaragua; other races are found north into Mexico. In the original description, Ridgway listed his type as “Adult male (No. 101765, Costa Rica, October 20, 1881; José C. Zeledon).” Zele- don, in his Catalogo de las Aves de Costa Rica (Anal. Mus. Nac., 1887, published 1888), cited under each species the localities and number of specimens in the collection of the Museo Nacional. On page 104, family Turdidae, he wrote “Catharus fumosus Ridgway, Jiménez 1,’ this being a specimen in the local collection (not Ridgway’s type, which is in the Smithsonian collections). Deignan (Bull. U.S. National Mu- seum, 1961, vol. 221, pp. 429-430), with reference to Zeledon, above, listed Ridgway’s type as “ “Costa Rica’ = Jiménez, Province of Limon, Costa Rica,” but no such specific locality can be ascribed to the actual type. Slud (Birds of Costa Rica, 1964, pp. 300-301) speaks of fumosus as a species of the Caribbean slope in the humid foothills of that country, found frequently in the same habitat as its relative Catharus fuscater hellmayri, low down in undergrowth, often on a log or on the ground, remaining rather constantly undercover, moving with quick hops, then coming to a sudden halt. In November 1940, on the watershed leading to the Caribbean slope on Cerro Santa Maria, Costa Rica, I found these thrushes fairly com- mon, ranging near the ground in the dense shadows of the humid forest. When detected they disappeared immediately in the heavy cover. At this season they were quiet, and were not singing. Slud (op. cit.) says the song is variable, with one or two short phrases, with an extra note or two added at the start or end. In some phrases there is a slurred, sharp “‘sreek.”’ The quality is fuzzy, slurred, or skewy flutelike; some notes are wavering warbles. Calls are a quick dry trill, a rattle like stones knocked together, a very soft unclear pseer, and an antbirdlike grrr and meww. C. Hartshorne character- izes the song as “barely mediocre,” weaker and inferior to that of C. frantzu. 154 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Carriker (1910; Ann. Carn. Mus. vol. 6, p. 749) reports 2 nests on the lower foothills north of the Volcan de Turrialba, Costa Rica, at about 600 m, that on April 20 each held 2 eggs. The eggs were pinkish white, very thickly and finely speckled with reddish brown over the entire surface; average measurements were 24X18 mm. The nests were almost entirely of green moss with a lining of skeletonized leaves. Each nest was placed about 1.6 m from the ground in a small palm in heavy forest cover. CATHARUS FUSCATER (Lafresnaye): Slaty-backed Nightingale-Thrush, Zorzal Pizarreno FicureE 12 Upper surface dark slate color; side of head and chin deep black; upper foreneck and throat white. Description—Length 160-180 mm. Adult (sexes alike), above, dark slate, the head somewhat blacker, wings and wing coverts slightly grayer; breast, foreneck, and sides gray; center of breast and abdomen white. FicureE 12.—Slaty-backed Nightingale-thrush, Zorzal Pizarrefio, Catharus fuscater. This wide-ranging species is found in mountain areas from Costa Rica and Panama to the Andes of northwestern South America, where it ranges from Colombia and northwestern Venezuela to northern Bo- livia. Three subspecies are recognized in Panama. FAMILY TURDIDAE 155 CATHARUS FUSCATER HELLMAYRI Berlepsch Catharus fuscater hellmayri Berlepsch, Orn. Monatsber., vol. 10, no. 5, May 1902, p. 69. (Chiriqui.) Characters.—Gray of undersurface, including sides and flanks, defi- nitely darker; throat grayer. A juvenile in the Museum of Comparative Zoology from Coliblanco de Sarapiqui, on Irazu, Costa Rica, taken August 23, 1899, has the entire crown fuscous-black; hindneck natal brown; back, rump, scapu- lars, and wing coverts between natal brown and bone brown, wings and tail fuscous; throat and upper foreneck buffy brown, with the bases of the feathers grayish white; sides of neck, breast, and area adjacent olive-brown, with indistinct spots of dull chamois, and basal shaft streaks of grayish white; flanks and undertail coverts olive-brown. The culmen (in the dried skin) is fuscous; rest of the bill, tarsi, and feet light brownish yellow, indicating that these areas were light- colored in life, as they are in the adult bird. An adult male in the Museum of Comparative Zoology collected above Boquete, Chiriqui, March 1, 1901, has the following color notes on the label, made by W. W. Brown, Jr., “Iris white; orbital ring and tarsus orange-vermilion; upper mandible vermilion, region of nostrils, and tip of culmen dusky; under mandible vermilion.”’ Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 88.0-94.4 (89.7), tail 64.6-73.6 (68.5), culmen from base 17.5-19.0 (18.2), tarsus 34.1- 36.8 (35.4) mm. Females (4 from Chiriqui), wing 78.6-81.9 (89.7), tail 54.0-60.4 (see), culmen trom base 15.3-17.8 (16.5); tarsus 31.3-35.0 (33.4) mm. Resident. Found in the mountains of Chiriqui, recorded on the eastern face of the volcano above Boquete at 1200-3000 m, and in eastern Chiriqui at Chame, and above Tole, including the upper valley of the Rio Caldera (Bajo Mono). This race was known early in Panama, mainly from a series collected in 1901 by W. W. Brown, Jr., on the mountain slopes above Boquete (sans Iroc) New nel Zool) Club, vol! 3; 1902) p. 50). It may be restricted in distribution, as I did not find it during several seasons on the western and northern slopes of Volcan de Chiriqui, from above I] Hato and Cerro Punta to near Sereno on the Costa Rican boundary, nor on the headwaters of the Rio Chiriqui Viejo. From eastern Chiri- qui, Salvin (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1867, p. 132) received an early specimen taken by Arcé in the Cordillera de Tolé, above Tole. Ridgely (in litt.) suggests that the restricted range may be based on 150 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 the fact that this species occurs only in humid areas, while most of Volcan de Chiriqui, especially the west side, is relatively dry. The bird is common in wetter areas to the east, such as the Fortuna Dam site, where Ridgely found up to 5 birds at ant swarms in February-March 1976: Older statements of range for hellmayri, in addition to Chiriqui, have included Veraguas, based apparently on the report by Salvin (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 180) of specimens collected by Arcé from Calovévora, and Cordillera del Chucu, in the mountains north of Santa Fé. The report requires confirmation 1f the skins, which may be 1n the British Museum, can be located. Slud (Birds of Costa Rica, 1964, p. 301), describes the song of hellmayri as clear and flutelike in tone, with a definite pattern in its syllables. Ridgely described the songs of birds at Fortuna as “tooo teee, tee-too-too-tee, with some variation, beautiful clear whistles.” M. A. Carriker (Ann. Carnegie Mus. vol. 2, 1910, p. 748) found a nest in Costa Rica at Juan Vinas, May 20, 1907, with two fresh eggs. “The nest is not so pretty a structure as that of mexicanus, being con- structed of leaves, moss, and weedstems, and lined with fine weed-fibres and grass. It was placed in a low bush in the heavy forest. The eggs are pale blue, thickly speckled and dotted and blotched over the entire surface with light chestnut-rufous. Measurements: 25X18 mm.” CATHARUS FUSCATER MIRABILIS Nelson Catharus fuscater mirabilis Nelson, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 60, no. 3, September 24 (September 27), 1912, p. 24. (Head of Rio Limon, 1585 m elevation, Cerro Pirre, Darién.) Characters.—Similar to Catharus f. fuscater, but gray of foreneck and upper breast duller; throat grayish white; white of lower breast and abdomen duller; dorsal surface slightly paler. Measurements.—Males (6 specimens), wing 83.3-88.4 (86.6), tail 68.0-70.9 (69.5), culmen from base 17.5-18.7 (18.3), tarsus 33.2-37.5 (34.6) mm. Females (4 specimens), wing 78.8-82.9 (80.7), tail 57.2-64.0 (60.9), culmen from base 17.6-19.5 (18.4), tarsus 32.7-34.7 (33.5) mm. Resident. Found in the Subtropical Zone on Cerro Pirre, Darién, at 1500-1600 m; specimens in the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory were taken at Cerro Cana (August 1965) and Alturas de Nique (April 1972). E. A. Goldman, who collected the series from which this race was FAMILY TURDIDAE 157 described, found it fairly common in undergrowth. He described the song as three short syllables given in sequence, with the middle one slightly higher in tone than the others. In late April they were in pairs and were breeding. A set of two eggs that he collected on April 30, 1912, are very pale greenish white, spotted lightly with dots of cin- namon-brown, which are grouped to form a faintly-indicated cap on the summit of the blunt end. They measure as follows: 24.7 17.7, and 25.0 18.3 mm. In both Darién populations the distinct yellow wash on the under- ' parts of fresh birds disappears in a relatively short time (fide P. Ga- lindo; also noted by Eisenmann). CATHARUS FUSCATER FUSCATER (Lafresnaye) Myioturdus fuscater Lafresnaye, Rev. Zool., vol. 8, September 1845, p. 341. (Bo- gota, Colombia.) Characters.—Upper foreneck and throat white; side of head and chin deep black. An adult male, taken February 24, 1964, on Cerro Mali, Darién, had the iris pale brownish white; thickened border of eyelid yellow; space above nostril, and distal end of culmen dull black; rest of bill, tongue, and inside of mouth bright orange; gape orange-yellow; tarsus and toes orange-yellow; claws yellowish brown. A female, collected 2 days later, was similar to the male. Measurements.—Males (10 from Cerro Tacarcuna and Cerro Mali, Darién), wing 85.4-90.7 (87.9), tail 69.4-76.0 (72.6), culmen from base 17.1-19.5 (18.4), tarsus 33.8-35.3 (34.4) mm. Females (9 from Cerro Tacarcuna and Cerro Mali, Darién), wing 81.7-86.8 (83.3), tail 61.4-70.5 (66.8), culmen from base 17.6-19.6 (18.4, average of eight), tarsus 32.3-35.0 (33.6) mm. Resident. Subtropical Zone on Cerro Tacarcuna and Cerro Mali, Darién, 600 to 1500 m; fairly common. Found locally, low in open undergrowth on the slopes of the moun- tains, in part in cloud forest. In late February (1964), gonads were in resting stage. In life, with the birds perched quietly near at hand, the bright colors of eye, bill, and feet are prominent. This race appears to range through the mountains to Ecuador and the eastern Andes of Colombia, and to the Sierra de Perija in north- western Venezuela. In Panama, it extends across the higher slopes of Tacarcuna. Nothing is recorded of its nesting. Specimens in the Amer- ican Museum of Natural History collected by Anthony on the eastern 158 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 base of Tacarcuna in Colombia are similar to those seen from Panama. Some form of C. fuscater occurs in the mountainous Cerro Azul- Cerro Jefe area of eastern Province of Panama, not far east of the Canal Zone. E. S. Morton writes of its song there, heard on May 29, 1966, “‘a clear series of whistles like a solitaire in quality but slightly similar to a Wood Thrush in phrasing. A minor tone—each series of three whistles followed by two whistles, each whistle a single pure tone: tu tee tu (last note a half tone lower than first) followed by tu tee; then a longer pause (3 seconds), and it starts all over again. It was an ex- ceedingly beautiful sound coming out of the mist on Cerro Azul.” E. O. Willis, present at the time, considered the song pleasing, but rather simple, in fact, much simpler than that of C. frantzi. Ridgely, on Cerro Jefe on July 24, 1975, heard one singing with the same rhythm, but he syllabized it as to-to-tee, tee-too. Willis believes that similarity in song suggests that C. fuscater may be a representative of the spotted C. dryas, which is absent from south- ern Middle America, but reappears in South America. Eisenmann feels the evanescent yellowish tones and vague grayish to olive mottling below also suggest the relationship. CATHARUS FRANTZII WETMOREI Phillips: Ruddy-capped Nightingale- Thrush, Zorzal Cabecirrojizo Catharus frantzu wetmorei Phillips, Auk, vol. 86, no. 4, October 30, 1969, p. 615. (Boquete, Chiriqui.) Rather small; upper surface brown; throat and abdomen white, rest of undersurface gray. Description.—Length 145-170 mm. Adult. Male, crown russet- brown; back, rump, and wing coverts somewhat duller; outer webs of wings grayer; side of head grayish olive, with area in front of eye in- definitely black; throat dull white, becoming gray streaked with white centrally on upper foreneck; lower foreneck and upper breast dull gray, changing to lighter gray on breast and sides, and to white on lower breast, abdomen and undertail coverts; undersurface of wings dull dark gray; tibia dull dark gray. Female, somewhat paler russet-brown above. A male, taken at 2300 m on the north slope of Volcan de Chiriqui, Chiriqui, February 24, 1965, had the iris dark brown; maxilla black; mandible yellowish orange, becoming brighter orange along the com- missure, yellower elsewhere; inside of mouth, including the tongue, FAMILY TURDIDAE 159 orange; tarsus and toes grayish brown, becoming paler brownish white along the narrow thin knifelike posterior margin; claws of two lateral anterior toes dull brownish white; others grayish brown. An adult, taken on the same date, was like the male except that the tarsus and toes were somewhat duller colored. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 84.7-90.5 (87.3), tail 66.0-73.1 (70.2), culmen from base 17.6-19.5 (18.4), tarsus 33.3- 36.7 (34.5) mm. Females (10 from Volcan de Chiriqui and Cerro Punta, Chiriqut), ~ wing 78.3-84.2 (81.2), tail 62.0-68.1 (64.0), culmen from base 17.6- 18.8 (18.0), tarsus 32.1-34.4 (33.2) mm. Resident on the high slopes of the volcano in western Chiriqui, mainly above 2000 m, but fairly common down to 1600 m at Cerro Punta, found also in southern Costa Rica; other races range from northern Costa Rica through Mexico. Phillips (Auk, 1969, pp. 605- 623) reviews the characters separating this species from C. occidentalis. These birds range over the mountain slopes in undergrowth and usually remain concealed. They move about quietly and are difficult to observe unless one appears in the bushes bordering a trail, on the ground at the edge of a pasture, or on the banks of a stream. In late February and early March, they occurred in pairs, and were not espe- cially shy. Occasionally one came beneath the window of our quarters, where it hopped quickly over the ground or rested quietly, with head erect. The call was a low kree-ee-eet, rather harsh in sound. They responded quickly to an imitation of it. There has been no account to date of the nest and eggs of this bird in Panama. Carriker (Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. 6, 1910, p. 747) in an account of the closely allied race, Catharus frantzu frantziu, on Vol- can Irazu in Costa Rica, found 2 nests, April 13 and 14, 1902, one of which he described as “made entirely of green moss, but lined with fine grass and rootlets. It is very large and bulky for the size of the bird, but the cavity of the nest is small... [the nest was] placed on sprays of bamboo hanging over the side of a deep ravine, and about seven feet from the ground. The eggs are pale blue, thickly speckled and blotched with cinnamon-rufous and lilac, thickest about the larger end, in one ege forming a cap of rufous and lilac. Measurements: 24.5 to 25.5x NSto 19mm.” In the Bambito-Cerro Punta area of western Chiriqui, this species, although shy and hard to see, is common, usually on or near the ground, 160 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 in and bordering forest from about 1500 to 2250 m. The song is liquid and long-continued, far-ranging, but not nearly so loud as those of the local solitaire. One of the frequent phrases can be syllabized as dleédle- edleéyee. The song is reminiscent of that of the northern Hermit Thrush, the effect melancholy, the quality liquid, but rather throaty; the phrases are deliberate with pauses of 2 to 3 seconds between them, and the song so long continued that over a hundred phrases may be given before there is a rest of more than a very few seconds. Dr. C. Hart- shorne, im litt. to Eisenmann, characterized the song very well as hav- ing phrase structure close to that of the northern Wood Thrush, but tone quality closer to that of the Hermit Thrush. CATHARUS AURANTIIROSTRIS (Hartlaub): Orange-billed Nightingale- Thrush, Zorzal Pico Anaranjado Turdus auranturostris Hartlaub, Rev. Mag. Zool., March 1850, p. 158. (Caracas, Venezuela. ) Rather small; crown gray; rest of dorsal surface rufescent brown, breast gray, rest of undersurface white. Description.—Length 132-158 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown gray; rest of dorsal surface, including wings and tail, rufescent brown; upper breast and sides gray; throat white, streaked with gray; lower breast, abdomen, and undertail coverts white. Immature, back and, to a lesser degree, the crown dull dark brown with the feathers tipped irregularly with black; breast and sides dull, faintly buffy white, with the feathers tipped and edged with dull black; undertail coverts buffy brown; bill black. Widely distributed as a species from northern Mexico through Central America and northern South America, in Colombia, Venezuela, and the island of Trinidad. Several forms are recognized, two of them found in Panama. (For notes on this species see Zimmer, Auk, 1944, pp. 404-408.) The gray-crowned populations of southwestern Costa Rica, Panama, and western Colombia were formerly regarded as a separate species, C. griseice ps. Ridgely (1976, p. 278) describes the song as “poor and unmusical with varied phrases, some twangy, others squeaky; a short tsip, wee-ee, tsirrip-tsip is one of several.” This species tends to range lower in the highlands of Panama than the other species of Catharus and is the most widely distributed, favor- ing clearings and second growth. FAMILY TURDIDAE 161 CATHARUS AURANTIIROSTRIS RUSSATUS Griscom Catharus griseiceps russatus Griscom, Amer. Mus. Nov., no. 141, October 31, 1924, p. 6. (Boruca, Costa Rica.) Characters——Upper surface darker. Crown darker gray; back, wings, and tail duller, darker reddish brown; gray of undersurface darker. In a male taken on Volcan de Chiriqui, February 2, 1954, the bill, including a ring around the nostril and the base of the culmen, was light brick red; line of culmen otherwise dark neutral gray; eyelids light brick red; iris dark brown; tarsus and toes dark honey yellow; claws buffy brown. A female, on March 13, had the ring around the nostril, the sides of maxilla and mandible, and a ring around the eye bright orange; rest of maxilla dark neutral gray; iris dark brown; tarsus and toes yellowish orange, with a line down the front of the tarsus, the central portion of the toe scutes, and the toes fuscous. In another female, March 19, 1965, the iris was light brown; thickened eyelid orange; culmen and sides of mandible fuscous-brown; rest of bill, gape, and entire inside of mouth, including the tongue, reddish orange; tarsus and toes deep yellow, with one or two toes on each foot tinged with brown. Measurements.—Males (9 from Chiriqui), wing 76.7-82.9 (79.4), tail 51.3-61.4 (57.4), culmen from base 15.5-18.4 (17.1), tarsus 29.4- a7 (30.8) mm. Females (7 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica) wing 72.3-78.3 (75.4), tail 54.3-58.1 (56.6), culmen from base 15.3-18.4 (17.3), tarsus 28.9- es (0:3 mm. Resident in the mountainous area of western Chiriqui from the Costa Rican boundary eastward, mainly from 1000 to 1650 m on the slopes of Volcan de Chiriqui. Ridgely found this species in north-central Chiriqui on the upper Rio Chiriqui (Fortuna Dam site) in a clearing at 1000 m on March 3, 1976, but, without specimens, it cannot be determined to what race the birds belong. Eisenmann regards auranturostris as a poor, unmusical singer. The song is variable and often rapid. He has syllabized it at Bambito, on the western slope of the volcanic massif, as ts-teyt, teweet, tisteet; witsteeyt, steeweea, tiststeet; and tsipeeareet, tseea; elsewhere he has heard tsip, wee-ee, tsirrip-tsip. Usually only the second phrase can be called musical. Sometimes there are twanging wang or snip notes in- terposed. Songs heard about Boquete were generally of similar quality. 162 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Found in low, dense thickets in high forest on Silla de Cerro Pando, they were always secretive and difficult to see. Occasionally, I heard them give low, mewing, sometimes trilling calls. One (prepared as a specimen) was captured lower down in a mist net set near the Rio Chiriqui Viejo. Two birds in juvenile dress, fully grown, were taken by S. L. Olson and K. Blum at Bambito, at about 1600 m, July 3, 1966. Blake (Condor, 1956, p. 388) described a nest in the Monniche col- lection from Lérida, Chiriqui, as located 2.5 m above the ground in a small tree, a compact structure of moss, much like that of the Black- faced Solitaire, but with a few bits of dried leaves and plant stalks woven into its base and sides. The cup, neatly lined with black hairlike rootlets, had outside dimensions of 544x414 x3 inches, with the cup 22X13 inches. The single egg preserved, pale greenish white, thickly and almost uniformly speckled with light reddish brown, measured 23.4X17.3 mm. The collector’s field notes state that the second egg, similar in color, measured 23 X18 mm. CATHARUS AURANTIIROSTRIS GRISEICEPS Salvin Catharus griseiceps Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, May 1866, p. 68. ( Veraguas. ) Characters.—Upper surface paler; crown grayer; back lighter brown; breast and sides lighter gray. A female collected at El Copé, on the Pacific slope of the Province of Coclé had the iris dark brown; edges of eyelids and bill orange, with the culmen dark neutral gray; tarsus and toes light orange; claws light brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui and Veraguas), wing 72.5-82.5 (78.3), tail 55.5-62.0 (55.8, average of 9), culmen from base 15.1-17.8 (1615); tarsus 28/5-31.3 (30.2) mama: Females (9 from Chiriqui, Veraguas, and Coclé), wing 73.5-82.5, tail 54.6-62.5 (59.5), culmen from base 13.1-18.6 (16.1), tarsus 29.5- 3730/6) mam: Resident. Found locally in Chiriqui (Chame, Barriles, San Félix), Veraguas (Sona, Sante Fé) and Coclé (El Copé). Near San Félix I found them in a small tract of forest near the Rio San Félix, and near the coast in the area called Macano, also in forest. At El Copé, on February 25, 1962, in the hills on the Pacific side, the one taken was in heavy undergrowth in a small tract of forest. Eisenmann (in litt.) saw the species singing above Santa Fé, Vera- guas, at approximately 750 m, near the Agricultural School, on March 28, 1974. FAMILY TURDIDAE 163 CATHARUS GRACILIROSTRIS Salvin: Black-billed Nightingale-Thrush, Zorzal Piquinegro Catharus gracilirostris Salvin, 1865, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, (1864), p. 580. (Volcan de Cartago, Costa Rica.) Rather small; bill black. Description.—Length 140-155 mm. Adult (sexes alike), head and neck slate-gray, becoming paler, whiter, on the throat; crown dark brownish gray, lighter, grayer on the forecrown; back of head, hind- neck, back, and rump somewhat reddish brown; wings and tail duller but with brighter edgings; undersurface plain gray changing to white on the abdomen; a broad band of pale dull brown across the upper breast; throat lined narrowly and indistinctly with white; underwing coverts dark gray. Immature, upper surface as adult; throat gray; breast, sides, and flanks reddish brown; increasingly buffy on center of belly; abdomen white. Found in Chiriqui on the high slopes of the volcano above Boquete, and on the west face; recorded also in eastern Chiriqui on “Cerro Flores” (Cerro Santiago), and in the western end of the Serrania de Tabasara (near boundary between Chiriqui and Bocas del Toro). The nominate race 1s found in the mountains of Costa Rica. Little is available as yet on the habits of this interesting bird. In the original description of the race accentor, Bangs included the observa- tion by Brown that, like its relatives in the genus, it “is a fine song- ster.” Brown’s series, 8 adults of both sexes, was collected on the higher slopes of the volcano from about 1500 to 3000 m elevation. Griscom found it in eastern Chiriqui near the western end of the Ser- rania de Tabasara at about 1800 m, where he collected 2 (male and female), in March 1924. With limited comparative material he de- scribed these as a separate race bensoni, which later he found not valid. However, a specimen collected by R. H. Pine on the Chiriqui-Bocas del Toro border 23 km north-northeast of San Félix on June 16, 1980, matches Griscom’s original description of bensoni and is easily dis- tinguishable from the series of specimens from western Chiriqui in the Smithsonian collections. Eisenmann writes that on the Volcan de Chiriqui massif in the area above Cerro Punta it is the highest ranging nightingale-thrush, usually the commonest above 2100 m on the trail to Boquete. It seems less shy than its allies, often feeding on the ground in cleared patches. On a recently plowed field at about 2250 m, Eisenmann saw one member of a feeding pair chase away one of a pair of the larger C. frantzii, but the 164 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 bird returned. Generally, this species is seen on or a few feet above the ground. The song suggests in pattern that of C. frantzi, but in Eisen- mann’s opinion, much inferior, being weaker, with a squeaky quality. The nest and eggs are little known. Carriker (Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. 6, 1910, p. 745) described the egg of C. g. gracilirostris, the closely similar subspecies of Costa Rica found on Volcan Irazu, as “blue, more or less thickly speckled and dotted with reddish brown or deep chest- nut, usually with a heavier wreath or cap of this color at the larger end, though rarely speckled evenly over the entire surface. Measurements: 20.5 to 23X15 to 16 mm.” CATHARUS GRACILIROSTRIS ACCENTOR Bangs Catharus gracilirostris accentor Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, January 30, 1902, p. 50. (Volcan de Chiriqui, 10,200 ft. (3140 m), Chiriqut, Panama. ) Characters.—Forehead gray, rest of upper surface light reddish brown; band across breast paler than in bensoni. An adult male, caught at Volcan de Chiriqui, March 4, 1965, had the iris dark reddish brown; thickened edge of eyelid fuscous-black; bill black, with the tip of maxilla and of mandible on the inner side dark slate; rest of inside of mouth, including tongue and gape, orange; tarsus dull brown, paler on back on the plantar edge; claws fuscous- black. Measurements.—Males (8 from Chiriqui), wing 71.2-78.4 (75.4), tail 56.7-66.7 (61.9), culmen from base 15.1-17.0 (15.8, average of 7), tarsus 30.9-33.4 (32.0) mm. Females (6 from Chiriqui), wing 70.8-74.8 (73.1), tail 54.6-62.2 (59.3), culmen from base 14.3-18.3 (15.8), tarsus 30.0-31.1 (30.5) mm. Hp Resident. Known from the highlands of western Chiriqui. In the Smithsonian collections there are 2 males taken March 4 and 9, 1965, to 2650 and 2700 m on the west face of Volcan de Chiriqui. A male and female were collected also near Cerro Punta, March 12, 1962, by C. L. Hayward. Blake (Fieldiana Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 552) listed 4 males and 4 females in the Monniche collection from western Chiriqui from Casita Alta, Pefia Blanca, and Volcan de Chiriqui from 2040 to 3130 m, without other comment than the localities with date and eleva- tion. (For this series he used the name Catharus gracilirostris gracili- rostris. ) FAMILY PTILOGONATIDAE I 65 CATHARUS GRACILIROSTRIS BENSONI Griscom Catharus gracilirostris bensoni Griscom, Amer. Mus. Nov., no. 141, October 31, 1924 p. 7. (Cerro Flores, 6000 ft, eastern Chiriqui, Panama.) Characters.—Forehead blackish brown; rest of upper surface dark reddish brown; band across breast dark reddish brown. Measurements.—Male (1 from Cerro Flores, Chiriqui, the type specimen), wing 68.9, tail 62.8, culmen from base 15.3, tarsus 30.5 mm. Females (2 from eastern Chiriqui), wing 68.0-69.0 (68.5), tail 59.7- 62.7 (61.2), culmen from base 14.2-15.0 (14.6), tarsus 29.7-31.8 (30.8) mm. Resident. Known from the highlands of eastern Chiriqui, where in 1927 Benson collected a male and female for Griscom at 2000 m in Cerro Flores and where R. H. Pine collected two at 1800 m on Cerro Bollo, 23 km north-northeast of San Félix. [This race was described by Griscom from a small series taken on Cerro Flores in easternmost Chiriqui. Most authors have not recog- nized it and it was considered to be a synonym of accentor in the origi- nal draft of this manuscript. Subsequently, however, R. H. Pine collected 2 specimens on the Chiriqui-Bocas del Toro border 23 km north-northeast of San Félix, Chiriqui, on June 16, 1980, that necessi- tate a reappraisal of this form. These specimens are from very near the type locality of bensomi and were preserved in alcohol, from which one was prepared as a skin. This specimen is much darker and more rufous dorsally than accentor and has a much darker, fuscous crown. The colors do not appear to have been affected by alcohol, which if anything usually causes fading and lightening in color. The fresh specimen matches Griscom’s original description of bensoni exactly, whereas the type series of bensont, although still distinguishable from accentor, shows somewhat less pronounced differences, suggesting that they may have been affected by aging. In any case, from the evidence available now it would appear that the race bensoni is quite distinct and should pe maintamed. S/O] Family PTILOGONATIDAE: Solitaires and Silky-flycatchers, Solitarios y Dorales Sedosos These attractive birds form an assemblage that may or may not be related. The solitaires usually are placed in the Turdidae, but Sibley (Auk, 1973, p. 394-410), after a review of past analyses and an exami- 166 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 nation of egg-white proteins, concludes that they are more closely re- lated to the silky-flycatchers and should be placed in that family, in a position next to the Turdidae. The silky-flycatchers, sometimes given subfamilial rank in the Bombycillidae, were found by Sibley to be less similar to the waxwings than to the solitaires. Ames (Bonn. Zool. Beitr., vol. 26, 1975, pp. 125-127), in an examination of ¢syameeal morphology in the Muscicapidae, concludes that the generalized oscine syrinx in Myadestes places it outside the Turdidae, but not necessarily in the Ptilogonatidae. The 2 solitaires and 2 silky-flycatchers found in Panama are all high- land birds living in forest and forest edges where they feed on fruit and insects. All but the Varied Solitaire are restricted to Costa Rica and western Panama; this last has an equally narrow distribution in the highlands of eastern Panama and extreme northwestern Colombia. The solitaires are shy and their drab plumage makes them difficult to see in the thick foliage, but their song makes up for their inconspicu- ousness. The Black-faced Solitaire’s loud, liquid, seemingly studied whistles are among the most beautiful of bird songs. The song of the Varied Solitaire, from what little is known, is harsher. Although es- sentially arboreal except when they follow foraging bands of ants, solitaires build their cup-shaped nest on or close to the ground. The silky-flycatchers, in contrast, are strikingly colored in patterns of yellow and gray or black. The tapered, elongated tail of Ptilogonys caudatus, black with white spots, is flashed dramatically in aerial acro- batics when the birds are pursuing insects. Also, unlike the solitaires, their voices are undistinguished and their nests are placed in bushes and trees. KEY TO SPECIES OF PTILOGONATIDAE I. Yellow present on. undersurface... 62a). ..05 ose teen) see Z No yellow on tinderstirface! 2.5. hoe cin. pole oie ae he ee 5) 2. Tail long, graduated, with white spots. Long-tailed Silky-flycatcher, Ptilogonys caudatus. p. 171 Tail not graduated, all black. Black-and-yellow Phainoptila, Phainoptila melanoxantha, p. 175 3. Back dark blue-gray. Black-faced Solitaire, Myadestes melanops. p. 167 Back bright reddish brown. Varied Solitaire, Myadestes coloratus. p. 169 FAMILY PTILOGONATIDAE 167 MYADESTES MELANOPS Salvin: Black-faced Solitaire, Solitario Carinegro FIGURE 13 Myiadestes melanops Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, for 1864, February 1865, p. 580, pl. 35. (Tucurrique, Costa Rica.) Medium size; body color rather dark gray, with face, wings, and tail black. Description.—Length 157-186 mm. Adult (sexes alike), body slate color throughout, slightly paler on lower surface; side of head, includ- ing space around eye, cheeks, forehead, and chin, deep black; wings black except for the base of the tertials, outer webs of the secondaries, and inner webs of inner primaries, which are edged with gray; tail black, except the outer web and distal end of the outer rectrix, which are brownish gray; some of the longer rectrices with a small terminal spot of white. Juvenile, in first plumage, dark sooty black, the feathers with a term1- nal spot of light tawny brown; undersurface with the light markings more extensive. Adult male, iris dark brown, varying individually in depth of color; external edge of eyelids narrowly dark brown; bill, tongue, and inside of mouth orange; tarsus and toes honey yellow; tips of claws dull neu- tral gray. M easurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 84.5-91.1 (87.9), tail 76.1-80.5 (77.5), culmen from base 14.2-16.5 (15.1), tarsus 20.5- 23.2 (21.4) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui and Bocas del Toro), wing 85.8-91.2 (89.0), tail 74.1-80.7 (77.3), culmen from base 13.1-16.1 (15.0), tarsus ee 25).5) 021.1) mm. Resident. Found locally in the higher mountain forests in Chiriqui and Bocas del Toro (Rio Changuena, 1975 m, Almirante); on the up- per slopes of the Chiriqui volcano from 1200 to 2900 m (fairly com- mon above Boquete and the Bambito-Cerro Punta area); in the moun- tains on the upper Rio Changuena, northwestern Bocas del Toro, in heavy forest, down to 750 m; recorded eastward in the mountains of eastern Veraguas (on the Pacific slope at Santa Fé, 830 m, Chitra, 1170-1500 m; on the upper Caribbean slope near Calovévora and Cordillera del Chuct). There are a few specimens labeled as from lowland localities near sea level. Three collected by Batty from the Pacific Coast islands Brava (January 28, 1902) and Cébaco (February 6, 1902) in the American 168 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Museum of Natural History are probably mislabeled. One taken in a mist net at Almirante, Bocas del Toro (October 28, 1963; Gorgas Me- morial Laboratory) could have been either a stray or a cage-bird escape. The solitario is a forest inhabitant, living mainly on tree-grown slopes or in thickets in ravines and gullies. Though shy and retiring, they may be seen moving under cover in low vegetation, along shaded cut banks near roads and streams, or, casually, flying across open trails. Their songs may be heard regularly, but country-dwellers assure the traveler that it is impossible to see the bird at freedom! In my observa- tions, they are not gregarious, as I encountered them singly. They were captured rather regularly in mist nets. ZZ; MW), WG, y a bY” ££ AG Mae? Zz pl, f “"h' Zig 4 py? CIE, 0 y yy Yes At, 7, YY NS “Y Ls 2% Z Uy Y Ficure 13.—Black-faced Solitaire, Solitario Carinegro, Myadestes melanops. In Costa Rica, where they are better known, they are prized as cage birds for their songs. Skutch, in his detailed study of the solitaire in that country (Publ. Nuttall Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, p. 117), says that it “sings with a calm deliberation that seems the product of a studied art.” FAMILY PTILOGONATIDAE 169 C. B. Worth (Bird-Lore, vol. 41, 1939, p. 283) in late July and early August noted that it was not then in song, as he heard it utter only a “loud rasping shoo-wee-ee.” Eisenmann writes that their songs in Chiriqui are loud, clear, and deliberate, with a liquid quality suggestive of the better Catharus singers, but louder, and often with a sharpness that reduces the pleasing quality. The phrases are usually separated by pauses of about three-fourths of a second. Songs transliterated as leedideedleé, tleéah, lee-dah, lee-dee may alternate with songs consist- ing of three, two, or one phrase, usually with components like tleedlee, - leeee, leydee, lee-dah, leedo, leedoo, leeoo-lee or the like. They sing most abundantly in the late afternoon, after 4 p.m. Blake (Condor, 1956, pp. 387-388) described a nest in the Monniche collection, found March 30, 1932, near the Finca Lérida above Boquete “located in the crevice of a rock about three feet above a road. It is made almost wholly of soft moss and has a smooth lining of black hair- like rootlets. Dimensions: 6X5xX2¥4 inches, the cup 34ZX2Y%UxKY% inches. The two eggs, partly incubated, measured 2416.7 and 22.8X 16.9mm. They are pinkish white, minutely speckled with dull chestnut except toward the larger end where they are increasingly spotted and blotched with the same.” The solitaire is reported to feed on berries, including those of palms, other trees and shrubs, and also on insects. In Costa Rica, Slud and Skutch have found it ranging near foraging bands of ants, presumably attracted by the insects that are disturbed. Two males collected at Cerro Punta by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 60.0.and 32.6 ¢. MYADESTES COLORATUS Nelson: Varied Solitaire, Solitario Variado Myadestes coloratus Nelson, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 60, no. 3, September 27, 1912, p. 23. (Cerro Pirre, 1524 m elevation, Darién.) Similar to Myadestes melanops, but with back and wing coverts rufous-brown. Description.—Length 162-181 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown, up- per hindneck, and entire lower surface gray; back, wing coverts, and tertials rusty brown; forehead, throat, space around eye, and anterior area of side of head black; tail with three outer rectrices tipped with white. Juvenile, compared to that of melanops, distinctly brown above, with pale markings more extensive, crown more heavily spotted; abdomen marked indistinctly with white. LO BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Two adult males, collected on Cerro Mali, Darién, February 21, 1964, had the iris dark brown; edge of eyelid orange-brown; bill, in- side of mouth, and tongue orange; tarsus and toes somewhat paler orange; claws orange-yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from Cerro Mali and Cerro Pirre), wing 86.5-93.2 (88.8), tail 74.2-81.2 (77.5), culmen from base 13.6- 15.4 (14.6), tarsus 20.5-23.1 (21.9) mm. Females (10 from the same areas), wing 84.4-88.7 (86.8), tail 71.2- 78.8 (75.2), culmen from base 13.2-15.3 (14.2), tarsus 20.8-22.8 (21.8) mm. Resident. Found locally on Cerro Pirre (1500 to 1600 m), Cerro Mali (1400 to 1460 m), Cerro Quia (900 m), Aturas de Nique, Darien. In the latter part of February 1964, these solitaires were fairly com- mon in forest on the slopes of Cerro Tacarcuna, ranging mainly low, concealed in the leaves in the tops of low undergrowth. Generally they remained hidden in this fairly dense cover, so that most of those taken for specimens were captured in mist nets. Rarely, one was seen in the forest. Also rarely, we heard a single note of the song, harsher in sound than that of melanops of the mountains in Chiriqut. No nests have been recorded. Young recently from the nest and fully grown birds in juvenile dress were noted in the latter part of May and in June. A female (AMNH) from “Mt. Tacarcuna, 4600 ft.” is labeled “ovary large” on April 16. A full grown molting juvenile (Gorgas Mem. Lab) was taken at Cerro Cana on August 9. The species of the genus Myadestes in Panama, obviously of related ancestry, form a highly attractive group. Hellmayr (Cat. Birds Amer., pt. 7, 1934, pp. 440-443) treated them with those of the Andes as geo- graphic races under the name ralloides (described by d’Orbigny from Bolivia). All are residents of the intermediate and higher elevations in mountain areas, where it may be presumed that their obvious differ- ences may have been established during Pleistocene time. In the pres- ent Recent period those of Panama divide in two isolated groups, sepa- rated in range by considerable spaces of lowland, and here regarded as species. The western form melanops of the mountains of Costa Rica and western Panama, with wholly gray body color, black facial mask and yellow bill, is isolated by the broad lowlands of the central isthmus from the eastern coloratus group of the mountains of eastern Darién. These agree with melanops in black mask and yellow bill, but differ completely in wholly brown back. Though this second group is like the forms of the Andes in brown back, it is separated geographically from them by FAMILY PTILOGONATIDAE yt the broad break of the lowlands across northern Choco 1n northwestern Colombia. The Andean birds, which lack the facial mask and have smaller, dull-colored bills, form the distinct species ralloides, with three or more closely similar subspecies ranging south to Peru and Bolivia. PTILOGONYS CAUDATUS Cabanis: Long-tailed Silky-flycatcher, Capulinero Colilargo Ficure 14 Ptilogonys caudatus Cabanis, 1861, Journ. f. Orn., 8 (1860), p. 402. (Irazu, Costa Rica.) Medium size; sleek, crested, tail more than half total length of bird; blackish wings and tail; body gray and yellowish green (male) or all yellowish olive (female). Description.—Length 200-244 mm. Male, crown pale gray; bushy crest olive-yellow; rest of upper surface slate gray, slightly lighter on rump; wing coverts slate gray; primaries and secondaries black, with outer webs edged slate gray; tail black, tapered, with central pair of feathers elongated, round white spots on outer four pairs; eye-ring (sometimes incomplete) lemon yellow; throat pale olive-yellow, be- coming more intense on breast; band across chest slate gray; flanks yellowish green; abdomen pale yellow; undertail coverts lemon yellow. Female, like male but back and wing coverts olive-green, tinged gray on rump; undersurface olive-green becoming grayish olive on abdo- men. Immature, body gray-green; undertail coverts whitish; wings and tail as adult. One (sex not recorded) taken on Volcan de Chiriqui, Chiriqui, Feb- ruary 24, 1965, had the iris reddish brown, bill black, tarsus, toes, claws black. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 91.0-101.0 (95.9), tail 120.0-143.3 (130.2), culmen from base 12.3-15.4 (14.1), tarsus 18.6-22.4 (20.3) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui), wing 84.8-96.0 (90.4), tail 106.7-119.3 Giits.); culmen from base 12'5-14.9 (13.6), tarsus 17.5-21.7 (19.7) mm. Resident. Common in the Temperate Zone in highlands of western Chiriqui above 1500 m (Ridgely, 1976, p. 281) in forest edges and in pastures and clearings with tall trees. Blake (Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 552), who says the bird “has seldom been reported below an altitude of 8000 feet [= 2400 m],” lists specimens collected by Mon- niche at Alto de Chiquero, Casita Alta, Copete (summit), Lérida, Pena 172 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Blanca, and Volcan, at elevations between 1800-3090 m. A male col- lected by Hartman at Cerro Copete (2100 m), near Boquete is now in the Smithsonian collections, and another male from FE] Salto (1740 m), also near Boquete 1s now in the California Academy of Sciences col- lection. Bangs (Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 58) wrote that in May and June 1901, W. W. Brown “found this species only at high altitudes [3000-3300 m] on Volcan de Chiriqui. The birds were in small flocks, composed of adults and full-grown young still in nestling plumage. Sometimes he saw one of these flocks leave the high peak of the mountain and fly across the valleys in the direction of the lofty Costa Rican mountains, which could be seen in the distance.” Ridgely (in htt.) found small numbers at the Fortuna Dam site in central Chiriqui, including several down to 1200 m, the lowest elevation from which it has been recorded; Fortuna is also the easternmost lo- cation from which it is known. Besides westernmost Panama, this species is found only in Costa Rica, at similar elevations. I have encountered this bird several times on Volcan de Chiriqui and at Cerro Punta. On February 25, 1955, I took a male in near breeding condition at 2010 m in Bajo Grande, Cerro Punta. It was feeding on the drupes of a small tree in partly open forest. The tongue was dis- tinctly bifid at the tip like that of a titmouse. I saw these birds also on Cerro Picacho above 1800 m, but found them so wild that they flew before I could shoot. Their flight is swift and direct, but somewhat undulating. Skutch (Auk, 1965, pp. 375-426) is the only one to have studied the breeding biology of this species. From February to July 1963 he ob- served several pairs in the trees around a large dairy farm on the western end of the massif of Volcan Barba, in the Cordillera Central of Costa Rica. Their diet was composed of large quantities of insects caught in the air in long sallies and of berries, including those of Fuchsia arborescens, Eurya theoides, Citharexylum moccinnu, and a mistletoe, all picked while the bird was perched. Long-tailed Silky-flycatchers are highly vocal but practically song- less. The call most frequently heard is a dry che chip, che chip, given both while perched and in flight. Another call given when taking off and in flight is a long-drawn, dry che-e-e-e-e. The song, which Skutch heard rarely, is composed of “low, lisping notes that were scarcely audi- ble at a distance of 25 yards”; it was delivered by the male from a high, exposed perch while his mate incubated. These birds are loosely social, often traveling in flocks of more than FAMILY PTILOGONATIDAE 173 a dozen that may casually split apart or regroup in flight or at a feeding tree. Similarly, nests are often situated within 25 to 100 m of one an- other in “colonies” of up to five pairs, or may be entirely by themselves. Figure 14.—Long-tailed Silky-flycatcher, Capulinero Colilargo, Ptilogonys caudatus, male. The birds defend an area around the nest of no more than 30 m, some- times less, and often disregard intruders entirely. The nesting season, in Costa Rica at least, begins in April, with the 174. BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 peak of nest building and egg laying in late April and early May. Nests are situated from 2 to 20 m off the ground in trees or, rarely, large shaded shrubs; the average height of the 19 nests Skutch found was about 7 m. The bulky, cup-shaped nest, made almost exclusively of beard-lichen (Usnea), with a small amount of cobweb or caterpillar silk to bind the lichens together, is placed in the fork of an erect branch or in a stout horizontal limb, where upright twigs provide support. Males seem to choose the site and begin construction, although they are soon joined by their mates, and together are intensely active in bringing material to the nest—Skutch watched one pair that made 42 visits in an hour. The finished nest has dimensions of 114-127 mm in overall di- ameter, 50-64 mm height, 57-64 mm diameter of the cavity, and 41 m cavity depth. 3 Egg laying begins 2 to 4 days after construction is finished; the two eggs that form a complete clutch are laid a day apart. Skutch describes them as “‘long-ovate and rather pointed, and the shells are without much gloss. The ground color is pale gray, of a shade that almost matches the bed of lichens on which the eggs lie. On this gray background, blotches and spots of shades of dark brown and pale lilac are variously distributed. Often there is a distinct belt of heavy brown pigment around the thickest part of the egg.’ The measurements of 10 eggs averaged 25.8 X 17.2 mm. Incubation is done exclusively by the female and lasts 16 or 17 days, during which time she is frequently fed by her mate, although she also leaves the nest often to feed herself. At hatching the nestlings have a distinctive plumage of short, compact tufts of whitish down arranged in narrow rows surrounded by large bald areas. By the age of 9 days their eyes are open and contour feathers are beginning to expand on most parts of the body; in addition, secondary down now covers much of the upper surface that was bare at hatching. The young are fed several times an hour by each parent. In their first few days of life they receive an almost exclusively insect diet; later more fruit is brought to them, although they continue to be fed insects as long as they are in the nest. At 16 or 17 days of age they begin climbing about beyond the edge of the nest, but not until 23-25 days do they fly more than a few feet and leave the nest altogether, after which they are still attended for several days. By early June they can catch insects by themselves. Skutch found that of the 15 nests for which he knew the outcome, 4 successfully produced fledglings. From the others the eggs or nestlings vanished, possibly taken by Blue-throated Toucanets (Aulocorhynchus caeruleogularis) or Brown Jays (Psilorhinus morio). FAMILY PTILOGONATIDAE 175 PHAINOPTILA MELANOXANTHA Salvin: Black-and-yellow Phainoptila, Capulinero Orinegro Phainoptila melanoxantha Salvin, 1877, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p. 367. (Costa Rica = San Francisco, fide Hellmayr, 1935.) Phainoptila melanoxantha minor Griscom, 1924, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 141, p. 8. (Cerro Flores, eastern Chiriqui, Panama.) Medium size; male mostly shining black with bright yellow on flanks; female mostly olive-green with bright yellow on flanks. Description.—Length 180-217 mm. Male, entire upper surface ex- cept rump shining black; rump lemon yellow; face, throat, and upper breast shining black; band across lower breast yellowish green; sides and undertail coverts lemon yellow; rest of undersurface gray; under- wing coverts yellowish green. Female, crown shining black; hindneck bluish gray; back and wing coverts yellowish green, with flecks of bluish gray and slightly brighter green On rump; primaries, secondaries, and tail feathers brown, edged yellowish green; throat gray; band across upper breast olive-yellow; sides and undertail coverts lemon yellow; rest of undersurface gray; underwing coverts pale yellow. Immature male, like female, with a few black feathers on throat. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui, Panama and Irazu, Costa Rica), wing 95.4-103.8 (99.5), tail 82.2-90.0 (85.5), culmen from base 16.0-19.2 (18.0), tarsus 25.6-28.9 (27.2) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui, Panama, and Irazu, Costa Rica), wing 92.3-99.0 (96.4), tail 77.4-85.4 (81.0), culmen from base 15.2-17.6 (16.8), tarsus 25.4-28.8 (26.2) mm. Resident. Uncommon in Temperate Zone highlands of western Chiriqui and Bocas del Toro (one record, Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 553) and from eastern Chiriqui and Veraguas. The Monniche specimens described by Blake came from elevations of 1560- 3300 m. Ridgway (U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull., vol. 50, part 3, 1904, p. 124) gives the range of elevation as 1200 to 3300 m. Ridgely (in litt.) col- lected a female above the Fortuna Dam site, central Chiriqui, at 1150 m, on February 27, 1976; the specimen is in the collection of the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory. Apparently commoner in Costa Rica, this bird was first listed for Panama by Salvadori and Festa (Bol. Mus. Zool. Anat. Comp. R. Univ. Torino, vol. 14, no. 339, 1899, p. 3) on the basis of a specimen collected by Arcé labeled only Chiriqui. Bangs (Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 58) discusses specimens collected by W. W. Brown, Jr., during January-May 1901 from Volcan de Chiriqui and 176 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Boquete. Blake, cited above, gives several western Chiriqui localities as well as the single record from Bocas del Toro on the Caribbean slope. In 1924 Griscom reported 4 specimens in extreme eastern Chiri- qui, at Cerro Flores (1800 m), nearer the mountains of Veraguas than to the Volcan de Chiriqui. He described these as a new race, minor (Am. Mus. Nov., no. 141, 1924, p. 8), “similar to the typical form from Costa Rica, but averaging smaller; male not differing in color; female with hind-neck more extensively gray of a slightly darker shade; rump, upper tail-coverts, and edgings to tail feathers slightly greener, less yellow.” In 1926 Benson collected at Chitra from 1290 to 1500 m on the Pacific slope in Veraguas, the farthest east from which this bird is known; Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 363) as- signed these to minor. The race minor has generally not been admitted (e.g., Greenway, in Peters, Check-list Birds World, vol. 9, 1960, p. 373), and its invalidity was confirmed by Pasquier and Olson on exami- nation of specimens from both of the series attributed to minor. I have never encountered this bird myself, and most of what is known of its biology comes from Skutch’s work in Costa Rica (Auk, 1965, p. 420-422), where in 1963 he observed them near the western end of the massif of the extinct Volcan Barba, in the Cordillera Central. Here he found them from 2040 to 2250 m, usually within the edge of the forest, where the canopy was broken by the removal of a few trees, and in adjoining shady pasture. They moved about mainly in the mid- dle levels of the tall oaks, flying out from exposed branches to catch insects and then continuing on to another branch, unlike many flycatch- ing birds which return to their initial perch. Fruit is also an important part of their diet; Skutch found them eating the berries of Drimys winteri, Boccoma frutescens, Monnina, and Ardisia. They pick the fruit either while perched on the plant or while fluttering in front of it. Black-and-yellow Silky-flycatchers are far less social than Long- tailed Silky-flycatchers, which in fact they hardly resemble. They are usually found singly or in pairs, and are less active, never catching fly- ing insects with the acrobatic manoeuvers of Ptilogonys. The only calls that Skutch heard were “‘a weak chip rather like a wood warbler’s note” given by a male and “low, soft notes” from a foraging pair. The nest and eggs of Phainoptila were unknown until 1972, when they were discovered in Costa Rica by Lloyd Kiff. With F. G. Stiles and B. K. MacKay, he found a nest on May 2 at 2400 m on Volcan Boas, Alajuela Province; it was 1.5 m from the ground in the central crotch of a 2-m sapling, in a thicket so dense as to make the nest in- FAMILY SYLVIIDAE EF visible from above or the sides. Kiff (in litt.) describes it as “a large compact open cup composed mostly of green moss interspersed with a few slender stems and fern fronds. It was lined with fine rootlets and plant stems. The outer diameter of the nest was 22 X16 cm, and it was about 12 cm in depth. The inner cup was 3 cm in diameter and 2 cm deep.” Two other nests of Phainoptila from Costa Rica were dis- covered in similar situations at the same time of year. The 2 eggs from Kiff’s nest were “‘subelliptical in shape and slightly glossy. They had a grayish-white ground color with a dense sprinkling of fine light gray, purplish brown and dark brown spots over their en- tire surfaces. Each egg contained a slightly developed embryo.” They measured 27.84X20.30 and 27.19X19.20 mm, with empty dry shell weights of 0.274 and 0.260 g, respectively. Kiff concludes that, “aside from their somewhat blunter shape,” the eggs of Phainoptila melano- xantha “are simply larger versions of those of Phainopepla nitens or Ptilogonys cinereus.” Family SYLVIIDAE: Gnatwrens and Gnatcatchers, Cazajejenes The gnatwrens and gnatcatchers are both usually placed in the family Sylviidae, the Old World warblers. Some put the gnatcatchers in a sub- family (Polioptilinae) of a broadened Muscicapidae, which also in- cludes the subfamily Sylviinae, or in an entirely separate family, the Polioptilidae, or reduce them to a tribe (Polioptilini) of the Sylviinae. The gnatwrens have in the past been considered to be wrens or even antbirds; Rand and Traylor (Auk, 1953, p. 334-337) and Parkes (Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., vol. 93, 1980, pp. 61-67) review the history of their classification. Although gnatwrens superficially resemble ant- birds, they have an oscine syrinx. Rand and Traylor concluded that Ramphocaenus and Microbates are most closely allied to certain Old World warblers, especially the African genus Macrosphenus, than to Polhoptila. Beecher (Auk, 1953, pp. 279, 328) considers resemblances to Old World genera to be convergent. Of the 9 species of gnatcatchers, 2 are found in Panama. They share the typical gnatcatcher characters of a slim build, gray and white plum- age, and a long tail continually wagged or cocked as the bird flits through the foliage searching for insects. The gnatwrens are also in- sect eaters and, like the gnatcatchers, build cup-shaped nests that often are decorated with mosses, leaves, or lichens. 178 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 KEY TO SPECIES OF SYLVIIDAE 1.’ Upper surtace brown; billvery lone... 00.2.2. le ee 2 Upper ‘surface gray, ‘bill relatively‘short.//-... .. oe. 0) es ee 3 2. Undersurface below throat buffy, tail long. Long-billed Gnatwren, Ramphocaenus melanurus rufiventris. p. 183 Undersurface below throat gray, tail short. Tawny-faced Gnatwren, Microbates cinereiventris, p. 186 3. General coloration light bluish gray. Tropical Gnatcatcher, Polioptila plumbea. p. 178 General coloration dark slaty gray. Slate-throated Gnatcatcher, Polioptila schistaceigula. p. 182 POLIOPTILA PLUMBEA (Gmelin): Tropical Gnatcatcher, Cazajején Tropical Ficure 15 Todus plumbeus Gmelin, 1788, Syst. Nat., 1, pt. 1, p. 444. (Surinam.) Small, slender, with long tail; upper surface gray and black; under- surface light gray and white. Description.—Length 92-103 mm. Adult male, crown, hindneck, and upper parts of sides of neck black, with a tiny white feather or two behind the nostril; back, scapulars, rump, and wing coverts bluish gray; primaries and secondaries dusky neutral gray, with outer webs edged with slate gray, except for the two outer primaries; tertials edged broadly with white on outer webs, the edging becoming pale neutral gray toward the tip; tail black centrally, the two outermost rectrices white, the next two black at base, the fourth black, tipped white; lores and a broad superciliary white; eye-ring white; a conspicous black line extending from the eye to the back of the nape; rest of side of head, throat, ventral area of sides of neck, abdomen, and undertail coverts white; rest of undersurface pale bluish gray; underwing coverts, and inner webs of primaries and secondaries, toward the base, white. Adult female, like male, but upper surface entirely dark bluish gray, without black on the head. Juvenile male, like adult female but crown slate-gray and white su- perciliary not fully developed behind eye. The Tropical Gnatcatcher is a widespread species, occurring from southeastern Mexico to central Peru and central Brazil, with habits similar to the Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (P. caerulea) of temperate North America. In Panama it is found up to about 1200 m almost every- where that there are trees, from forest canopy and borders to scrubby areas to brushy savannas (Aldrich and Bole, Scient. Pub. Cleveland FAMILY SYLVIIDAE 179 Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 23). Ridgely notes that it occurs in the elfin cloud forest on the wind-swept summit of Cerro Jefe (900- 1000 m), eastern Province of Panama, where few other lowland birds occur. This species is an active searcher of foliage and twigs, moving rapidly from branch to branch, constantly wagging or raising its tail to dif- ferent angles. Usually encountered singly or in pairs, it often joins mixed foraging flocks. The diet seems to be purely animal matter: Po. Goldman collected 2 at Cana, Darien, on May 26, 1912; the ‘stomach of one contained 2 pentatonid nymphs 37%, a large fulgorid 35%, an ant 8%, bit of caterpillar skin 10%, spider remains 10%; the other contained a small caterpillar 25%, 2 small scarabaeids 20%, 3 curculionids (Cryptorhynchini) 15%, a small chrysomelid 5%, a small pentatonid 20%, homopteran remains 15%, bits of a spider with 2 or more eggs 5%. One taken by Burton near Pacora, Province of Pan- ama, weighed 5.9 g (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85); 2 weighed by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) were 6.2 and 6.4 g. Figure 15.—Tropical Gnatcatcher, Cazajején Tropical, Polioptila plumbea, male (below), female (above). The vocal repertoire includes “a rather thin but musical song con- sisting of a series of simple notes with decreasing intensity, sweet, weet, weet, weet, weet, sometimes faster and sibilant; the usual call is a tzeet- 180 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 tzeet” (Ridgely, 1976, p. 279). Eisenmann (in litt.) has heard nasal twanging or mewing notes, sounding like twee, twee, twee and peéoo, peéoo, peéoo. POLIOPTILA PLUMBEA SUPERCILIARIS Lawrence Pohoptila superciliaris Lawrence, 1861, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, 7, p. 304. (New Grenada, Isthmus of Panama = Atlantic slope, near Panama Railroad; fide Lawrence loc. cit. p. 322.) Characters.—Dorsal surface bluish gray; lower foreneck and breast whitish. A male collected at Las Palmitas, Los Santos, on January 25, 1962, had the iris dark reddish brown; base of mandible neutral gray; rest of bill black; tarsus and toes dusky neutral gray; claws black. | Measurements.—Males (10 from Los Santos, Herrera, Coclé, and Province of Panama), wing 43.5-48.6 (45.8), tail 36.2-46.3 (42.1), culmen from base 10.1-13.3 (12.2, average of 9), tarsus 14.7-17.3 (QUE) Seated. Females (10 from Los Santos, Herrera, Veraguas, Province of Pan- ama, Darién), wing 41.0-46.5 (44.1), tail 35.3-43.8 (39.9), culmen from base 11.7-13.3 (12.2, average of 9), tarsus 15.3-16.7 (15.9) mm. Resident. Widespread and fairly common in a variety of mainland habitats including forest (although usually at breaks and edges), second-growth woodland, and scrub in semi-arid as well as humid areas. The Tropical Gnatcatcher is usually seen from sea level to about 1200 m, the highest elevational record being a female collected on March 10, 1951, by Frank Hartman at 1230 m on Cerro Pando, Chiriqui. Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Pub. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 23) found it one of the commoner birds in brushy scrub and forest mar- gins of the Tropical Zone, arid division (sea level to 300 m) on the western side of the Azuero Peninsula. Eisenmann (Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 48) calls it “not commen’ ‘oni Sarce Colorado Island in the Canal Zone. He has found it in many localities in the Canal Zone and in adjacent parts of the Province of Panama. The Smithsonian has specimens from nearly every section of the Republic, from Almirante, Bocas del Toro, and Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, in the west, to Jaqué in eastern Darién. P. p. superciliaris has been collected in Veraguas at Puerto Vidal, at the mouth of the Rio Vira, in the extreme southwest, and at Sona; in Herrera at Parita, Portobelillo, Santa Maria, and La Cabuya; in Los Santos at Las Palmitas and Pedasi; in Coclé at El Roble; in the Province of Panama from Bejuco in the west to Chiman in the east; and in Darien from FAMILY SYLVIIDAE ISI the mouth of the Rio Tuquesa on the Rio Chucunaque, as well as from Cana and Jaqué. There is a recent sight report of a pair on Rey in the Pearl Islands on February 11, 1970 (Ridgely, 1976, p. 279). Beyond Panama this race ranges north to Guatemala and probably south to adjacent northwestern Colombia. I found a fully grown young bird at Jaqué on April 13, 1946, so the nesting season in Panama may begin in Iebruary as it does in Costa Rica (Skutch, Pac. Coast Avif., no. 34, 1960, p. 34). On March 13, 1948, I collected a pair in near breeding condition at La Cabuya, Her- ‘rera. Along the Chepo Road in the Province of Panama, Major Gen- eral G. Ralph Meyer found a pair building a nest on March 18, 1944; the nest contained 1 egg on March 26, and 1 from the full clutch of 3 eggs was collected on April 9. Bond and de Schauensee reported a male with testes enlarged that was collected at Garachiné, Darién, on April 24,1941. On May 26, 1912, E. A. Goldman collected a female at Cana, Darien, with an egg almost ready to lay. Most of what is known of this race’s breeding biology comes from Skutch (op. cit. pp. 43-56). He found 6 nests, which ranged in height from 2 to 8 m off the ground. The nest is built by both male and female and closely resembles the lichen covered cup-shaped nest of the North American Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (P. caerulea). The clutch was either 2 or 3, and the eggs white, finely speckled all over with brown. An egg obtained by Major General Meyer measured 14.4X11.7 mm. The males assisted in incubation, a habit shared with P. caerulea and P. melanura, and also with Ramphocaenus, but rare in tropical passerines as a whole. After a 13-day incubation period the young hatch entirely devoid of down. They are brooded regularly for at least the first 5 days and are fed entirely on insects. The length of the nestling period and the extent to which young are cared for thereafter are not known. POLIOPTILA PLUMBEA CINERICIA Wetmore Polioptila plumbea cinericia Wetmore, 1957, Smiths. Misc. Coll., 134(9), p. 80. (Isla Coiba, Panama.) Characters.—Similar to P. b. superciliaris, but dorsal surface, in- cluding the wings, decidely darker gray; lower foreneck and breast grayer (instead of white as in superciliaris); sides darker gray; bill averaging broader. Measurements.—Males (9 from Isla Coiba), wing 46.2-49.7 (48.5), tail 41.8-46.3 (44.1), culmen from base 13.0-14.9 (14.0), tarsus 16.6- yee (17.2) mm. Females (6 from Isla Coiba), wing 45.1-47.4 (46.6), tail 41.9-45.3 182 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A (44.0), culmen from base 13.8-14.8 (14.4), tarsus 16.2-17.5 (17.0) mm. Resident. This race is endemic to Isla Coiba, where I found it to be common in January and February 1956, ranging in leafy cover from low second-growth thickets near the shore to the summits of the tallest forest trees in the interior of the island. Invariably they moved about among the twigs and leaves in unceasing activity in pursuit of tiny 1n- sects, often so high above the ground that I could barely detect their _ tiny forms. The slender body, with long, narrow tail held at an angle above the back, and their quick, nervous movements, mark them even when the gray and white plumage is not clearly seen. I found them in pairs, and near breeding at this season. On January 21 one male was much excited by my squeaking, and came to perch within 4 m of me while it sang repeatedly a series of high-pitched notes of the usual genatcatcher quality mingled with beautifully clear, warbling phrases of much louder sound that would have graced the gifted song of a mock- ingbird. Fisenmann (with E. S. Morton) on October 8-11, 1965, found this species more numerous on Isla Coiba than anywhere else in Panama. They also found it on nearby Isla Coibita. The vocalizations heard on Isla Coiba in October were neither musical nor noticeably nasal. Birds heard singing on Isla Coiba by Ridgely in early April 1976 seemed to him to vocalize like mainland birds. POLIOPTILA SCHISTACEIGULA Hartert: Slate-throated Gnatcatcher, Cazajején Gargantigris Polioptila schistaceigula Hartert, 1898, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 7, p. 30. (Cachabi [=Cachavi], 500 ft, Esmeraldas, Ecuador.) Small, slender; dark slaty gray, except lower belly to undertail co- verts, which are white. Description.—Length 97-102 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown, back, and undersurface from throat to chest dark slaty gray; base of lores faintly white; upper throat lightly spotted white; broken eye-ring white; upper tail coverts slightly lighter gray; wings and tail black, outer two pairs of rectrices slightly tipped white; lower belly to under- tail coverts, underwing coverts, and inner web of underside of all but outer three primaries edged white. A male collected at the Peluca Hydrographic Station in Colon on February 27, 1961, had the iris reddish brown; maxilla and extreme tip of mandible black; rest of mandible neutral gray; tarsus and toes dark neutral gray; claws black. The tongue spots were tiny and incon- FAMILY SYLVIIDAE 183 spicuous, being confined to the centers of the two posterior projections. Measurements.—Males (2 from Colén and Colombia), wing 45.0- 45.8 (45.4), tail 40.7-41.5 (41.4), culmen from base 11.7, tarsus 15.2- 17.5 (16.4) mm. Female (1 from Colombia), wing 45.5, tail 41.3, culmen from base 10.5, tarsus 14.7 mm. Resident. Rare and little known. Hartert described this bird in 1898 from a specimen collected in Ecuador. Wytsman (Gen. Av., Part 17, 1911, p. 17) gives the range as northwest Ecuador (the type lo- cality, Cachabi) and Isthmus of Darién, possibly based on an unsexed adult in the Paris Museum collected by C. Viguier, as later reported by itelimeyvi (Cat. Birds Am. Field Mus. Nat. History, vols xiu, 1934, peo Griscom (Bull. Mus: Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 362) mentions only the Viguier specimen, and Eisenmann (Trans. Linn. BaemNman ol 7, 1955) p83) says (. Panama (Darien), Chapman (Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 55, 1926, p. 560), giving the range as northwestern Ecuador to northwestern Colombia, puts it in the Tropi- cal Zone. I encountered this bird once, at the Peluca Hydrographic Station on the Rio Boqueron in Colon, in March 1961. The bird worked in typical enatcatcher fashion through the tops of bushes on the bank of an open quebrada, moving with the usual vibrations of the tail and quick move- ments. Henry van Horn, who accompanied me on this trip, told me that he had seen 2 in similar situations traveling with groups of other small birds. The specimen I collected here anda male collected by Pedro Galindo at Cerro Quia (800 m) in southeastern Darién (Ridgely, 1976, p. 279) are the only recent specimen records for Panama. Ridgely (im litt.) has seen this bird on two occasions in eastern Wesien 1) onl the/ slopes of Cerro Ouia (500)m) on’ July 17,1975; 1 above Cana (670 m) on March 2, 1981. In both instances the birds were traveling with mixed flocks dominated by varions tanagers (Tan- gara, Heterospingus, Hemithraupis, etc.) in forest canopy, and were observed to forage mostly on terminal branches and in leafy areas, much as any other gnatcatcher. Neither bird vocalized. RAMPHOCAENUS MELANURUS RUFIVENTRIS (Bonaparte ): Long-billed Gnatwren, Cazajején Piquilargo Scolopacinus rufiventris Bonaparte, 1838, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 5 (1837), p. 119. (Guatemala. ) Small; bill long; upper surface brown; tail black, tipped white; throat white with dark gray streaks; rest of undersurface buffy. 184 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Description.—Length 105-118 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown and hindneck dark olive-brown; back and wings grayish olive; sec- ondaries and inner primaries edged cinnamon; tail graduated, blackish with all but central pair of feathers tipped white; facial area and sides of breast bright cinnamon; throat white with some dusky markings, varying in prominence; rest of undersurface buffy. Juvenile, like adult, but upper surface browner, undersurface pale grayish brown. . A male taken March 25, 1961, at Pacora, Province of Panama, had the iris light wood brown; maxilla and line on side of mandible fuscous- brown; rest of mandible pale brownish white; tarsus and toes dark neutral gray. Another bird taken at Canita, Province of Panama, had the iris dull brownish gray; maxilla fuscous, except base of culmen which is fuscous-black; rami brownish white; rest of mandible fuscous-brown; tarsus, toes, and claws neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Herrera, Province of Panama, Los Santos, San Blas, and Darién), wing 47.5-54.0 (50.0), tail 37.4- 48.2 (41.7), culmen from base 22.7-25.7 (23.9), tarsus 19.3-21.1 (20.1) mm. Females (10 from Herrera, Los Santos, Province of Panama, and Darién), wing 46.6-51.5 (48.5), tail 33.5-39.0 (37.3), culmen from base 21.6-24.8 (23.5), tarsus 19.7-21.8 (20.7) mm. Resident. Widespread and fairly common in the lower growth of forest edges, second-growth woodlands, and damp thickets of fairly humid lowlands through most of Panama. The range of rufiventris extends from southeastern Mexico to Colombia; other forms are found south through Brazil and Peru. In Panama, Ramphocaenus is usually found up to 1050 m (Ridgely, 1976, p. 280), but Frank Hartman col- lected a male at 1200 m on Cerro Pando, Chiriqui, on March 11, 1951 (now in collection of Ohio State University). On the western slope of the Azuero Peninsula, Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. History, vol. 7, 1937, p. 25) found it uncommon in humid forest of the Tropical Zone (300-900 m). In the Canal Zone, Eisenmann (Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 48) found it “fairly com- mon in thickets in the lighter woods.” The Smithsonian has specimens from Bocas del Toro at Almirante; Chiriqui at Puerto Armuelles; Veraguas at Sona and Santa Fé; on the eastern side of the Azuero Peninsula at Punta Mala and Pedasi in Los Santos, and Pesé and El Barrero in Herrera; El Uracillo in Coclé; in the Province of Panama and Canal Zone at several localities from FAMILY SYLVIIDAE 185 Bejuco in the west to Cerro Chucanti in the Serrania de Majé in the east; in Colon at Punta Pilon on the Rio Indio; San Blas at Mandinga, and Darién at Pucro and Jaqué. Ramphocaenus dwells in viny tangles of undergrowth and in lower trees where it moves wrenlike, cocking its tail, and flicking it constantly from side to side, rarely coming to the ground or foraging more than 10 m above it. The diet, as evidenced by the stomach contents of a fe- male collected by Hallinan (Auk, 1924, p. 319) at Farfan, Canal Zone, is small insects and small seeds. Two collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. ‘Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) weighed 9.0 and 11.0 g. This bird is usually found singly or in pairs. Its song is a distinctive musical trill on a single pitch, sometimes rising and then lowering in volume at the end. A sharp wrenlike ticking and a low, dry churr are some of its other calls. In Panama the nesting season runs from at least late April to July. Willis, on Barro Colorado Island in 1961, saw a bird on its nest on April 23 and another building a nest on July 6 ( Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Cont. Zool., 1979, p. 25). Ridgely (in litt.) observed a pair feeding a very recently fledged young bird in the wind-swept elfin cloud forest on Cerro Jefe (1000 m), eastern Province of Panama, on July 24, 1975. Bond and de Schauensee (Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, Mon. no. 6, 1944, p. 40) mention a female collected at Garachiné that had enlarged ovaries on May 8, 1941. A male I took at Sona, Veraguas, on May 25, 1953, was in full breeding condition. The only published description from Panama of the nest is of one found by Eisenmann (Auk, 1953, p. 369) in the Juan Franco suburb of the city of Panama on July 15, 1950, when it contained 2 almost naked young. The nest, an open cup, was in a damp thicket, near a stream, about 15 cm off the ground, ina small shrub shaded by trees. It was built among the shrub’s vertical shoots and was composed “chiefly of grass-stems, with a few twigs and dried leaves and to the exterior were attached several large dried leaves that hung loosely along the sides and extended below the nest proper, forming a sort of ornamental skirt.” The measurements were exterior diameter approximately 10 cm; interior diameter 8 cm; exterior depth 12.5 cm; interior depth 8 cm. Skutch (1960, Pac. Coast Avif., no. 34, pp. 54-61) found a nest of Ram phocaenus in Costa Rica on April 6, 1939, the first egg being laid on April 14 and the second the following day. These were “white, lightly sprinkled with fine, pale cinnamon spots over the whole surface, with these markings heaviest at the thick end.’’ Measurements were 19.8X 14.3 and 19.1X13.5 mm. The incubation period at this nest was 186 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 17 days and the young hatched without any natal down. Pinfeathers pushed through the skin when the nestlings were 2 days old, and at 7 or 8 days they were all feathered. The young were fed small insects and spiders; they left the nest when 12 days old and able to fly only a few yards. I. O. Chapelle (1m litt. to Eisenmann) reports that in the Canal Zone he regularly found it with wandering bird bands (consisting chiefly of Iormicariidae) conspicuous because of its musical trill, which is ac- companied by tail vibration and sometimes by bill fluttering. The trill is usually preceded and sometimes terminated by a low chip. When foraging, the bird gives a drier, less musical version of the trill. Although Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Pub. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., 1937, vol. 7, 1937, p. 116) considered-the birds they collected in the western Azuero Peninsula to be almost identical to R. m. sanctae- marthae of Colombia, this race is actually paler and browner than are any Panamanian birds, all of which are referable to rufiventris. Speci- mens in the Smithsonian show the range of rufiventris to extend into Colombia in the departments of Choco, Antioquia, and Cordoba (So- corré, Rio Sint, and Quebrada Salvajin, Rio Esmeralda), whereas birds from farther north in Cordoba (Pueblo Nuevo, 14.4 km north of Planeta Rica; Nazaret, 19.2 km northwest of Tierra Alta) and east- ward through Bolivar, Magdalena, and Norte de Santander (Guama- lito, 7 km west of El Carmen) are referable to sanctaemarthae, the range of which is thus rather far removed from Panama, particularly the Azuero Peninsula. Some birds from the more westerly portions of Panama tend to have less rufous on the head than, for example, those from Darién, but these are darker and grayer on the dorsum than sanctaemarthae and should be referred to rufiventris. Van Tyne and Trautman (Occ. Papers Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, no. 439, 1941, p. 9) comment on the frequently remarked color variation in Middle American populations of this species. MICROBATES CINEREIVENTRIS (Sclater): Tawny-faced Gnatwren, Cazajején Carileonado Small, with long bill and short tail; upper surface brown; undersur- face gray with throat white. Description.—Length 94-102 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown dark brown, back slightly lighter; wing coverts, primaries, and secondaries dark brown, edged rufous; tail dark brown, tipped blackish; side of face tawny; throat white, bordered by narrow black stripe on each side; upper breast striped black and white; rest of undersurface gray with FAMILY SYLVIIDAE 187 central whitish streak more or less present; flank feathers olive-brown, fluffy, decomposed; undertail coverts whitish. This species, sometimes called the Half-collared Gnatwren, is found from Nicaragua to southern Peru. In Panama, where two subspecies occur, it is an uncommon and little seen denizen of thick undergrowth in humid forest in lowlands and hill country to perhaps 1000 m. Usually found in pairs or small family groups, its behavior is wrenlike. It hops actively from log to vine to twig, often clinging sideways, holding the tail almost at a right angle and habitually jerking or flicking it. Ordi- narily, it keeps low, not far above the undergrowth, but Ridgely re- ports seeing pairs foraging 5 to 7 m above the ground. The gnatwren’s diet is almost purely animal matter gleaned from plant stems and foliage or picked from the ground; sometimes it tem- porarily joins a mixed band of small birds following army ants. E. A. Goldman noted the stomach contents of 2 collected at Portobelo, Colon, in May 1911: both had full stomachs, one containing arachnid remains 20%, bits of a bug 10%, ant remains 60%, moth remains 10%, the other with a spider 30%, 9 ants and 5 ant eggs 59%, another hy- menopteran 2%, bits of a bug 5%, elytra of a nitidulid 3%, embryo of emseediliZ/;. The gnatwren has a variety of calls suggesting a wren or an antbird, but nothing that resembles a territorial advertisement song. Ridgely (1976, p. 280) says the usual call is “a fast chattering chrichrichrich- richrv’ and Slud (Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 128, 1964, p. 306) lists “a ‘woink, woink, woink,’ usually followed by a chatter,” “an antbird-like whining nasal ‘yeah,’ ” “an even ‘peep’ with the timbre of an antbird or flycatcher,” and several other sounds. Eisenmann re- ports that birds mist-netted deep within humid forest at 1000 m on Cerro Campana, aiter being caged gave a hissing ssssss. Olson (Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., vol. 93, no. 1, 1980, pp. 68-74) has recently revised the taxonomy of this species. His review did not af- fect the nomenclature of any Panamanian populations. MICROBATES CINEREIVENTRIS SEMITORQUATUS (Lawrence) Ramphocaenus semitorquatus Lawrence, 1862, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, 7, p. 469. (Line of Panama Railroad.) Characters.—Belly darker gray with little if any whitish suffusion in the middle; no postocular stripe. A male collected at the Peluca Hydrographic Station, Colon, on February 24, 1961, had the iris dark wood brown; mandible pale 188 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 neutral gray; line of commisure on maxilla narrowly edged with neutral gray; rest of maxilla black; tarsus, toes, and claws dusky neutral gray. A male caught in a mist net at the head of the Rio Guabal, Coclé on February 26, 1962, had the iris dark brown; mandible light neutral gray; maxilla black; tarsus, toes, and claws dusky neutral gray. The tongue of one taken March 21, 1951, at Cerro Campana, Province of Panama, had dark spots on either side of the base like those of Ramphocaenus and Polio ptila but relatively smaller than in the latter. Measurements.—Males (10 from Province of Panama, Coclé, and Colon), wing 51.0-55.0 (53.0), tail 25.3-30.3 (28.4), culmen from base 17.4-19.4 (18.2), tarsus 21.1-25.8 (23.3) mm. Females (10 from Province of Panama and Colon), wing 48.8-55.7 (51.8), tail 22.8-31.9 (26.7), culmen from base 16.9-19.9 (18.1), tarsus 21.8-24.6 (22.9) mm. Resident. Uncommon in humid forest lowlands, occasionally up to 900 m, on the Caribbean slope from Bocas del Toro to San Blas, and on the Pacific slope at Cerro Campana and Cerro Azul. The Smith- sonian has specimens from Bocas del Toro: Changuena River (720 m); Coclé: head of the Rio Guabal at Tigre (475 m), and El Uracillo on the Rio Indio; Colon: Chilar, Boca del Rio Indio, Cerro Bruja (north side, 600 m), and the Peluca Hydrographic Station on the Rio Boqueron; Province of Panama: Cerro Campana (south face, 900 m) and Cerro Azul; Canal Zone: Alajela; San Blas: Mandinga and Armila. Cory and Hellmayr (Cat. of Birds of the Americas, 1924, p. 211) give the range of this subspecies in Panama as “western Panama (Vol- can de Chiriqui, Santiago de Veraguas, Lion Hill Station).” Paynter (Check-list Birds World, vol. 10, 1964, p. 444) also says “western Panama,” without assigning birds of central Panama to any race. Ol- son (Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. vol. 93, 1980, pp. 68-74) has found that this race extends along the entire Caribbean slope of Panama to north- western Colombia at Acandi on the Gulf of Uraba (USNM no. 427204), and that Griscom’s (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, no. 9, 1932, p. 366) identification of specimens from San Blas as the Colom- bian race magdalenae was erroneous. FE. A. Goldman found the nest and eggs of this bird on June 7, 1911, in Colon at Cerro Bruja, where it was “a rather common species at elevations up at least to 2000 feet.’’ His previously unpublished notes say “the nest was in the center of a loose mass of leaves and trashy material spread over an area one foot across on the flat, horizontal up- per side of a large palm leaf four feet from the ground. The nest was FAMILY SYLVIIDAE 189 lined with plant fibers. Overhanging leaves above sheltered it from rain.” The nest contained 2 speckled eggs. The only other description of the nest and eggs is by Kiff (Condor, 1977, p. 261-262), who found a pair carrying nesting material near mercer Viejo, I:leredia Province, Costa Ricaom April 3, 1971. Placed one-half meter off the ground in a broad-leafed shrub, the nest, when completed, was “an open cup with an exterior diameter of 10 cm. and exterior depth of 15 cm., the inner cup being 5 cm. in diameter and 4 cm. deep. The outer walls were composed of green moss, papery bark _ fragments, leaf petioles, and bits of dead brown dicot leaves, all held together by plant fibers. The inner cup was lined with a soft layer of dead leaf skeletons, plant fibers, and a few strands of fine grass. The nest was attached by slender plant fibers to the trunk of the shrub along one entire vertical surface, and another side was built around a small limb which grew off the trunk at a sharp angle. The overall ap- pearance of the nest was that of a semi-suspended, bulky cup of green moss, partially concealed by the leaves of the shrub.” The eggs from this nest measured 18.8X13.8 and 18.5x14.2 mm. They were white “with a liberal sprinkling of fine reddish-brown and dark brown spots over their entire surface, but slightly denser on the larger ends.” Kiff considered the nest similar to that of Ramphocaenus and the eggs identical in coloration and shape. MICROBATES CINEREIVENTRIS CINEREIVENTRIS (Sclater) Ramphocaenus cinereiventris, Sclater, 1855, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 23, p. 76, pl. 87. (“Pasto,” Colombia; Buenaventura substituted by Cory and Hellmayr, 1924, p. 212.) Characters.—A distinct dark postocular stripe; underparts lighter; dorsum somewhat lighter, more olivaceous, contrasting with the darker crown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Darién and Colombia), wing 50.0- 57.0 (53.0), tail 24.9-30.7 (27.8), culmen from base 17.5-18.8 (18.0), tarsus 19.5-24.4 (22.2) mm. Females (10 from Darién and Colombia), wing 49.5-54.5 (51.6), tail 26.7-30.4 (28.1), culmen from base 14.7-18.6 (17.2), tarsus 20.4- 22:9 (21'6) mm. Resident. Uncommon in Pacific slope lowlands of Darién. De- spite the fact that Cory and Hellmayr (Cat. Birds Americas, 1924, p. 212) give the range of this race as extending “from eastern Panama (Tacarcuna) along the Pacific coast of Colombia south to Chimbo, 190 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Prov. Guayas, western Ecuador,” and Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, no. 9, 1932, p. 366) noted that nominate cinereiventris is “known to range northward to the Pacific slope of Darien,’ Paynter (1964, Check-list Birds World, 1964, p. 445) does not include Pan- ama in the range of this race. The Smithsonian has a series of 13 speci- mens from Jaqué and Rio Jaqué, at the mouth of the Rio Imamado, 2 from Tacarcuna, and 2 from La Laguna that have the brown post- ocular stripe characteristic of nominate cinereiventris, the form resident on the Pacific slope of Colombia and Ecuador. Two specimens (Gorgas Memorial Laboratory Collection) were taken at Alturas de Nique, eastern Darién at “2000 ft.” Ridgely re- ports 2 seen in Cerro Quia cloud forest, 900 m, “with a very large mixed tanager flock . .. foraging 10-20 feet off the ground.” | Family MOTACILLIDAE: Pipits and Wagtails, Bisbitas y Lavanderas The pipits and wagtails are a worldwide family of 54 species, found primarily in the Old World. Two pipits inhabit temperate North America and two wagtails breed in Alaska but return to Asia each year — for the winter. Seven species of pipit including the Yellowish Pipit, represented by a race in Panama, occur in South America. Pipits are streaked, rather like larks, to match the grassy environment that most inhabit. The tail often is edged with white, making the birds suddenly conspicuous when flushed. Pipits walk rather than hop; the tail wag- ging habit is less pronounced in the Yellowish Pipit than in many others. Pipits feed mainly on insects, although some vegetable matter may be taken at times. Their song characteristically 1s given while in the air, often several hundred feet from the ground. Many species of temperate regions are migratory, and in Panama the Yellowish Pipit seems to some extent nomadic, since I have suddenly found groups of them in savannas that I had thoroughly searched for several days previously without success. ANTHUS LUTESCENS PARVUS Lawrence: Yellowish Pipit, Bisbita Amarillenta FIGurReE 16 Anthus (Notiocorys) parvus Lawrence, 1865, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 17, p. 106. (savanna near Panama.) . Rather small, upper surface brown streaked with buff; undersurface mostly yellowish white; outer tail feathers white. FAMILY MOTACILLIDAE IQI DescriptionLength 106-118 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown, back, and wings blackish brown, with feathers edged yellowish or pale cinnamon-buff; rump and upper tail coverts tawny-olive; tail blackish brown, with outer two rectrices dirty brownish white, inner of these with brown edge to inner web, and next rectrix sometimes with whitish edge to outer web; lores and eye-ring pale buff; side of face speckled pale cinnamon and brown; throat yellowish white; breast streaked with dark brown and tawny-olive, sometimes extending on flanks; rest of undersurface yellowish white to buffy; underwing coverts buffy cin- ~ namon and white. Juvenile similar, but upper parts spotted with pale brown; undersur- face brownish white, streaked on breast, narrowly on sides. A female taken January 22, 1963, at Penonomé, Coclé, had the iris brown; maxilla and tip of mandible fuscous-black; base of mandible brownish flesh color; tarsus and toes light buffy brown; claws dark mouse brown. Figure 16.—Yellowish Pipit, Bisbita Amarillenta, Anthus lutescens parvus. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui, Herrera, and Province of Panama), wing 58.0-61.1 (59.7), tail 41.3-45.6 (43.6), culmen from base 10.3-12.5 (11.6), tarsus 18.3-20.4 (19.3) mm. Females (8 from Chiriqui, Coclé, Herrera, and Province of Pan- ama), wing 56.7-60.5 (58.1), tail 40.8-44.3 (42.8), culmen from base 10.2-11.9 (11.3), tarsus 19.2-20.8 (19.7) mm. Resident. This is a rather common though locally distributed bird in short grass savannas and fields in lowlands on the Pacific slope of western and central Panama. I have collected the bird at Las Lajas in 192 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Chiriqui, Santa Maria in Herrera, Penonomé and Anton in Coclé, and Chico, Pacora, and Chepo in the Province of Panama, the last-named locality being the easternmost at which this bird has been found. I have also seen it in Los Santos, at Pedasi. The westernmost record is of 2 males collected by W. W. Brown, Jr., on December 3, 1900, at Divala, Chiriqui. The race parvus is restricted to Panama. Other races of Anthus lutescens are found on the coast of Peru and Chile and in Savanna country east of the Andes from Colombia east and south locally to northern Argentina. The Yellowish Pipit is often the first bird visitors to Panama see, since it inhabits the landing fields of Tocumen Airport and Albrook Air Force Base; once when I landed at Albrook 2 of these pipits rose and flew along just beyond the wings of the plane, so close that I could see all their markings. Elsewhere, however, I have sometimes found them hard to detect—when strong winds blow across the short grass fields where they live, they prefer to crouch near the ground rather than fly. On the ground they walk and run rather than hop, and some- times wag their tail; their usual flight is deeply bounding, but I have also seen them rise 125 m in the air, circling in 300 m circles, occa- sionally setting the wings wide and sailing, after which they often closed the wings and dropped for several meters. When ready to come down they dropped directly to the earth or broke the distance in two or three sections. When in flight, they occasionally utter a low, double call like that of the temperate North American A. spinoletta, but somewhat harsher. The song, also given in flight is “initially a series of dzee’s on a rising pitch, usually given as the bird ascends in a looping manner into the sky, then a long slurred dzeeeeececeeee given as it slowly glides back to earth, often with a dzip at end.”’ (Ridgely, 1976, p. 280). Oc- casionally Eisenmann saw them also singing from the ground a shorter tsitsirrit and tsitzeeeeee. Yellowish Pipits nest in small colonies; in one at Santa Maria, Her- rera, I counted 15 or 20 birds. A pair with developing gonads collected at Penonomé, Coclé, on January 23, 1963, is the earliest indication I have of the onset of breeding. Others collected during February, March, and as late as April 20 were nearly in breeding condition, but on March 26, 1949, near Chico, Province of Panama I found a young bird just from the nest and on the same day collected adults that had not yet bred. On June 20, 1953, I took a female at Ancon, Canal Zone, that had recently laid, and on June 27 of that year I flushed a female from a nest at the La Jagua Hunting Club at Chico, Province of Pan- ama. The nest was on the ground, sheltered partly under a low grass FAMILY BOMBYCILLIDAE 193 tuft, the top being covered. It was made of grasses and other soft vegetation, and contained 3 eggs. The female tried to decoy me with fluttering wings. The eggs were vinaceous-buff marked with wood brown; one had fine streaks all over the surface, slightly denser at the blunt end; the second had very fine spots and a ring of blotches at the blunt end; the third had fine speckles scattered at the pointed end, be- coming denser toward the blunt end. This last egg, the only one now unbroken, measured 17.3 x 14.0 mm. | J. R. Karr (Eisenmann im litt.) during a study in La Jagua grass- ~ land (July 1968-July 1969), found three nests; September 12, 1968— 2 eggs; January 4, 1969—2 young; January 15, 1969—3 eggs. Ridgely notes (im litt.) that this species appears to be quite par- ticular in its habitat requirements, and leaves areas that no longer suit it, only to return once again if they revert back. During the last 15 years this cycle has taken place several times along the dike over the Tocumen marsh, which, when heavily grazed, provides good habitat, but otherwise does not and the birds are not present, even at the same times of the year. Two birds collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) at the military instruction center near Pacora weighed 13.0 and 13.5 g. Family BOMBYCILLIDAE: Waxwings, Chinitos The 3 species of waxwings breed in temperate Eurasia and North America. All are primarily fruit and berry eaters, also taking some insects on the wing; when not nesting they wander irregularly in flocks searching for food. The Cedar Waxwing is an irregular visitor to Pan- ama, not seen every year; it has been recorded as far south as Colombia and Venezuela. BOMBYCILLA CEDRORUM Vieillot: Cedar Waxwing, Chinito Cedroso FIGuRE 17 Bombycilla cedrorum Vieillot, 1808, Ois. Amer., September (1807), 1, p. 88, pl. 57. (Amerique depuis le Canada jusqu’ au Mexique = eastern North America.) Medium size; slim, crested; mostly brown, with gray wings and tail; tail tipped bright yellow. Description.—Length 153-172 mm. Adult (sexes alike); lores black; black stripe through and below eye extending to rear of crown but not meeting; narrow white line surrounding black, including lower rear edge of eye; crown dark cinnamon, crested; upper back olive- brown; lower back, rump, and upper tail coverts gray; tail blackish 194 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A gray, tipped lemon yellow; wing coverts olive-brown; primaries and secondaries blackish, with edge of outer web of all but outermost pri- mary edged gray and secondaries sometimes with waxy scarlet tips; upper throat black, fading to olive-brown, which continues to belly; belly pale greenish yellow; thighs gray; undertail coverts whitish; un- derwing coverts white. Immature, like adult but black only from maxilla to front of eye; crest and scarlet tips on secondaries usually lacking; undersurface broadly streaked olive-brown and creamy white. Measurements.—Males (10 from eastern North America, taken in May), wing 90.0-96.2 (92.7), tail 50.6-58.3 (54.5), culmen from base 9.3-11.7 (10.4), tarsus 15.9-18.5 (17.1) mm Females (10 from eastern North America, taken in May), wing 89.5-94.5 (92.6), tail 48.9-57.7 (54.3), culmen from base 9.5-10.7 (10.1), tarsus 15.2-18.7 (17.0) mm. Migrant. A rare and irregular visitant, recorded some years from January to March from the western border east to the Canal Zone and the Pearl Islands. This species breeds in Canada and northern United States and winters irregularly south to the West Indies, and Middle America, casually to Colombia and Venezuela. Salvin and Godman (Biol. Centr.-Am., vol. 1, 1904, p. 216) said that at that time the south- ernmost occurrence of the species was in British Honduras, but Salva- dori and Festa (Bol. Mus. Zool. Anat. Comp. R. Univ. Torino, vol. 14, no. 339, 1899, p. 3) cite a specimen from Chiriqui collected by mirce: More recent Chiriqui records are those of Monniche (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool, vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 552), who collected 5 at Quiel and Lérida (1560-1590 m) March 19-21, 1933, and of Frank Hartman, who col- lected a female February 13, 1953, at 1260 m on Volcan ‘de Chirigur: In the Canal Zone, Scholes and Scholes (Condor, 1954, p. 167) ob- served Cedar Waxwings five times at localities on the Pacific slope of central Panama in or near the Canal Zone from January 14 to March 4, 1951, 1 near Farfan Beach, several near Chorrera, an unspecified number in Ancon, and a flock of about 15 near Camp Empire. My Own encounters with waxwings have been in the lowlands—on the Caribbean side at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, where on February 24, 1958, I found a flock of 40 or 50 gathered in two tall trees, and on the Pacific side at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, where on February 21 and 26, 1966, I saw a dozen perched in a tall tree at the edge of a mangrove swamp. On San José Island in the Pearl Islands I saw a flock of 25 flying north over the large open area near East Bay on February 29, 1944. FAMILY BOMBYCILLIDAE I95 More recently in the Canal Zone, Eisenmann (1m litt.) reports seeing two flocks, each with over 15 birds, on the Pipeline Road on March 7, 1974, (with E. S. Morton) and several flocks aggregating at least 17 birds, at Summit Gardens on February 6, 1973 (with Ridgely). J. J. Pujals reports it on Escobal Road on March 20, 1971. N. G. Smith reports seeing a group of 4 on the road above Santa Fé, Veraguas, 930 m, on April 7, 1975, a late date. There seem to be no reports from the Azuero Peninsula or on the mainland east of the Canal Zone. “ SSH = SS 4 4 TAL 1 MP, WW) if! Y, G y ag y (PA) y t Figure 17.—Cedar Waxwing, Chinito Cedroso, Bombycilla cedrorum. F. G. Stiles and S. M. Smith (Brenezia, vol. 17, 1980, p. 149) be- lieve that occurrences in Costa Rica indicate it is irruptive at the south- ern end of its range, possibly with 3-4 year cycles—a major irruption occurred there in 1973-74, when birds were seen from December 1973 to mid-May 1974 at various localities. 196 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Family PLOCEIDAE: Weaver Finches, Pinzones Tejedores [PASSER DOMESTICUS (Linnaeus): House Sparrow, Gorrion Inglés Fringilla domestica Linnaeus, 1758, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, p. 183. (Sweden.) Up to about 20 House Sparrows were seen in downtown David, Chiriqui, in February and March of 1976 by C. Myers and Ridgely (in litt.); these appear to be established. Since at least March 1979 small numbers have also been found breeding in Panama City, but as of 1982 the population had declined (Ridgely, pers. comm.). On April 29, 1980, Ridgely saw 3 at Changuinola, Boas del Toro. It is not cer- tain whether these birds are the result of local introductions or a spread from Costa Rica, where the population is slowly increasing. | Family STURNIDAE: Starlings, Estorninos [STURNUS VULGARIS Linnaeus: Common Starling, Estornino Sturnus vulgaris Linnaeus, 1758, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, vol. 1, p. 167. (Sweden.) A single individual was seen at Albrook Air Force Base, Canal Zone, on February 10-12, 1979, by J. and R. A. Rowlett (Ridgely, in litt.). This individual was probably released. | Family VIREONIDAE: Vireos, Peppershrikes, Shrike-Vireos, Vireos y Follajeros The Vireonidae is a strictly New World family that reaches its greatest diversity in the tropics but includes migratory forms from temperate regions of both North and South America. Although the peppershrikes (Cychlaris) and shrike-vireos (Vireolanius and Smarag- dolanius) were once placed in separate families (Cyclarhidae and Vireolaniidae), recent evidence from behavior and ecology (Barlow and James, Wilson Bull., 1975, p. 332) and anatomy (Raikow, Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. 1978, no. 7; Clark, Wilson’ Bullyigsiage: 74) supports the opinion of Zimmer (Amer. Mus. Novit., no 1160, 1942, p. 15) that these genera belong in the Vireonidae. Vireos are primarily insectivores that glean from foliage, branches, and trunks; some take fruit as well. Except for the small greenlets, Hylophilus, which often forage in an active, warblerlike manner, vireos move slowly and deliberately through the foliage, where their greenish plum- age makes them difficult to locate; their loud and persistent songs, FAMILY VIREONIDAE 197 usually a monotonous warble or whistle, are given throughout the day and make these birds easy to find. All vireos, so far as known, build cup-shaped nests suspended in a forked branch in trees or shrubs. Six- teen species, including 1 peppershrike and 2 shrike-vireos, have been found in Panama. Six species in the genus Vireo occur in Panama as migrants or winterers from the north. The Yellow-green Vireo (Vireo flavoviridis) on the other hand is the only songbird that nests in Pan- ama and “winters” elsewhere. The other Panamanian species of vireos are permanent residents. KEY TO SPECIES OF VIREONIDAE 1. Rufous stripe above eye. Rufous-browed Peppershrike, Cyclarhis gujanensis. p. 198 INE EUIROCISESETIDECMOVEG EVE) 65% cha oc a cis cciuy celal tae eee eee eet ne cane Soave 7} ee UTUMOIMIE Ola CHOWAI ioe ein le hs ied aly ler aa Re Me ae en 3 PSem MCAINERMeROMICEOwans | ELSA. 8s bin eo ca cen eet ane oh hee ales hate alae 4 3. Yellow superciliary. Yellow-browed Shrike-Vireo, Smaragdolanius eximuus. p. 208 No superciliary. Green Shrike-Vireo, Smaragdolanius pulchellus. p. 204 4. Wing bars present NAT RI@? [ORES SDS evaltts Baten» MRR AR RANMA nee ee Pm CG dn ania es pee 7 5. Throat bright yellow. Yellow-throated Vireo, Vireo flavifrons. p. 213 AUTROAbaNAKbISite Of PAle wyiCllOW en ac NA se ee pees 5c bee slic aealua cosa ea #6 6 6. Wing bars vellowish, partial eye-ring yellowish to white. Yellow-winged Vireo, Vireo carmioli. p. 211 Wing bars white, supra-loral stripe white. White-eyed Vireo, Vireo griseus noveboracensis. p. 210 PEESTIPETC MATA ESEME ea Skee Wold lc sl cba wie ukae A ae a oaks Uc hg 8 SHO ME RCs yard SCI Da ue hot sare re cbs heute 4 gin een enca yee EIEN LSA LS or evlate a 12 8. ‘Dusky moustachial stripe. Black-whiskered Vireo, Vireo altiloquus. p. 221 RATA OUStaAGiNTal wb IDE ease vehi a. POS gM te cea MR ace ERS as i 9 Ploincensuniace entirely, or partially ivellow....:c92eceus ele bah 6 ats cee 10 Undersurface entirely white (sometimes pale yellowish wash on flanks). Red-eyed Vireo, Vireo olivaceus. p. 215 10. Center of undersurface white, sides greenish yellow. Yellow-green Vireo, Vireo flavoviridis flavoviridis, p. 217 Mo strotundersumiaceipal exvellowag ih use nein air Pee iain | 11 11. Crown definitely brown, contrasting with more greenish back. Warbling Vireo, Vireo gilvus. p. 225 Crown grayish olive, same color as back. Philadelphia Vireo, Vireo philadelphicus. p. 223 12. Undersurface mostly white. Lesser Greenlet, Hylophilus decurtatus. p. 228 198 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Undersuriace mostly:yellow or greenish. 1246). eee 13 13. Forecrown definitely brown. Tawny-crowned Greenlet, Hylophilus ochraceiceps. p. 234 Crown! greenish 00. 8 iso. se 6 paed on one ean ae a 14 14. Lores yellow, crown mainly light olive-brown. Golden-fronted Greenlet, Hylophilus aurantifrons aurantitfrons. p. 231 Lores and crown entirely olive-green. Scrub Greenlet, Hylophilus flavipes. p. 237 CYCLARHIS GUJANENSIS (Gmelin): Rufous-browed Peppershrike, Pajaro Perico Ficure 18 Tanagra gujanensis Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1(2), p. 893. (French Guiana.) Large for a vireo; bill stout; head gray with rufous brow; rest of upper surface green; undersurface yellow and white. Description.—Length 134-148 mm. Adult (sexes alike), broad ru- fous stripe from forehead, above eye to rear of crown, thin line under eye rufous; crown and nape brownish gray, usually tinged with rusty, rest of upper surface olive-green; sides of head and hind neck gray; undersurface variable, with upper throat white or light neutral gray, rest of undersurface bright yellow becoming white below; underwing coverts and edge of wing yellow; inner webs of primaries edged with yellow. Immature similar, but superciliary stripe paler. The peppershrike is a variable species that ranges from eastern Mexico to central Argentina; 21 races are currently recognized (Blake, Checklist Birds World, 1968, pp. 103-107), of which 4 occur in the Republic. This is evidently an adaptable bird, since it dwells in quite different habitats in various parts of Panama, from forest borders in foothills and highlands of Chiriqui, at 840 to 2460 m, to light and scrub- by woodlands in lowlands on the Pacific slope in Veraguas and the eastern side of the Azuero Peninsula, and in mangroves on Isla Coiba. Although fairly common where it occurs, the peppershrike is always a hard bird to see, even when singing, as it perches among or moves slowly through the dense foliage, searching for its insect prey by eye rather than by the frequent hops of the smaller insectivores with which it sometimes travels. Were it not for its loud song, the peppershrike might be impossible to find altogether, as is evidenced by the vast pre- ponderance of males in museum series. The song is usually given re- peatedly, although I have also searched for individuals that paused for more than a half hour between songs. The song is a series of short, FAMILY VIREONIDAE I99 musical, whistled phrases, each repeated for many minutes, until a new phrase is taken up and repeated, the entire performance lasting for hours. There is great variety in the total series of songs. Where it occurs in tall forest, the peppershrike often forages up high. In Costa Rica, Skutch (Publ. Nuttall Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, p. 124) several times observed peppershrikes feeding on fat caterpillars, which were held beneath one foot while pieces were torn off and swal- lowed, a habit shared with shrike-vireos and true vireos. The nest is likewise similar to that of the true vireos; the highest one Skutch found -was 9 m from the ground—although the birds foraged much higher in the surrounding trees—a cup hung by its rim from a forked branch, in typical vireo fashion. Figure 18.—Rufous-browed Peppershrike, Pajaro Perico, Cyclarhis gujanensis. The characters of each race found in Panama are given below, but it should be added that some forms intergrade; 2 birds from Aguadulce and FE] Potrero, Coclé, are intermediate between C. g. flavens and perry- got in the extent of yellow on the undersurface. On May 29-31, 1971, Eisenmann (im litt.) saw 2 or 3 individuals singing at Playa Coronado, western Province of Panama, in tall, planted trees, and a pair on visits on January 31, 1973, and March 27, 1974. On earlier visits during the 1940’s to 1960’s when the natural vegetation was scrubby and planted trees were much younger and lower, he did not notice this species. The song resembled those heard in the western Chiriqui highlands. N. G. Smith told Eisenmann that he had 200 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 observed the species in 1971 at Nueva Gorgona Beach, a few miles to the east of Playa Coronado. Another locality where the species has been found recently by Eisenmann and others 1s the hill country above Santa Fé, Veraguas. CYCLARHIS GUJANENSIS SUBFLAVESCENS Cabanis Cyclorhis subflavescens Cabanis, 1861, Journ. f. Ornith., 8 (1860), p. 405. (High- lands of Costa Rica.) Characters.—Gray of side of face continues behind crown to form band on upper back; chin and upper throat white; lower throat, upper breast, and flanks strontian yellow; lower breast to undertail coverts white. 7 A male collected March 18, 1965, at El Volcan, Chiriqui had the iris light orange; maxilla light grayish brown, with distal end of culmen changing to dull black; mandibular rami dark neutral gray; anterior half of mandible ivory-white; tarsus and toes pale brown; claws light brownish neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 71.8-76.8 (73.5), tail 54.4-60.1 (56.7), culmen from base 16.8- 19.8 (17.7), tarsus 20.9- A@ele( 2225) emai Females (5 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 72.4-77.5 (75.3), tail 56.7-60.1 (57.7), culmen from base 16.7-19.0 (17.8), tarsus 20.7- 26.1 (22.4) mm. Resident. Fairly common in foothills and highlands of Chiriqui, 840-2460 m. Known from the Volcan de Chiriqui ever since Arcé collected it there (Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 184), it has also been collected at Boquete by W. W. Brown, Jr. (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 59) and Davidson (Proc. Calif. Acad: Sei.; ser. 4, vol. 23, no. 17, 1938, p. 260) aigiayewee countered peppershrikes at these localities and also at Cerro Pando. It is always highly vocal, but difficult to observe. In Costa: Rica, Skutch (Publ. Nuttall Orn: Club, nos ie7ae 126-128) found nests between March 27 and early June. He describes the eggs as white, sparsely speckled on the thick end with small dots of bright brown. The only nest recorded from Panama was discovered by Worth (Auk, 1938, p. 539-540) on July 3, 1937, at El Volean (1230 m). The nest was in a coffee grove in a large clearing in the jungle, and was built largely of a moss abundant on neighboring branches. It was attached to two forking twigs near the trunk, hung in typical vireo fashion, but woven more heavily and coarsely. The nest contained 2 FAMILY VIREONIDAE 201 fledglings about 5 days old, with pin feathers just beginning to sprout; evidently the young were born without down. They were fed entirely on insects, primarily soft caterpillars, and in the following week de- veloped rapidly, assuming the same plumage as their parents. Blake (Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 555) reported an immature bird with “the appearance of a recent nestling” collected by Monniche on the Volcan de Chiriqui on May 16. CYCLARHIS GUJANENSIS PERRYGOI Wetmore Cyclarhi. gujanensis perrygoi Wetmore, 1950, Proc. Biol Soc. Washington, 63, p. 61. (Ciénaga Macana, near El Rincon, Herrera, Panama.) Characters.—Lores light neutral gray; chin, extreme upper throat, and center of abdomen white; undertail coverts citron yellow; rest of undersurface strontian yellow, becoming lemon yellow on the lower breast and flanks. A male collected at Las Palmitas, Los Santos, on January 22, 1962, had the iris light orange; maxilla mouse brown; mandible neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws very light dull brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Herrera and Los Santos), wing Vis 75,00 72.4),, tail 51.8-56.7 (54.2), culmen from base 16.6-18.9 (17.5, average of 9), tarsus 20.2-23.3 (22.0) mm. Females (6 from Herrera and Los Santos), wing 65.8-76.2 (70.2), tail 51.6-56.6 (54.2), culmen from base 16.7-18.2 (17.1), tarsus 21.0- Za4 (21.9) mm. Resident. In light and scrubby woodlands in lowlands on the Pa- cific slope of western Panama from central and southern Coclé (Peno- nomé, Aguadulce) south through Herrera (El Rincon, Parita), and west in the drainage of the Rio Santa Maria into extreme east central Veraguas (F1 Villano, 24 km southeast of Santiago). Sight records assumed to be this race come from Santa Maria, Quebrada Tejel, and Quebrada Chitrabé to the south and west of Pesé, and FE] Barrero, ilertera, In the lowland, dry area of the eastern side of the Azuero Peninsula these birds are local in distribution, though not uncommon within the range outlined above. It is probable that they extend through tracts of scattered forest in hilly areas south through Los Santos, though there are no specimen records at present to substantiate this. On July 24, 1964, Eisenmann and N. G. Smith saw 2 in Los Santos on a wooded stream border between Llano de Piedra and Tonosi; Smith saw 1 carrying food. The brilliant coloration of this form is strikingly dif- 202 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 ferent from that of C. g. subflavescens, found in Veraguas and Chiriqui to the west. The transition between these two forms in the lowlands east of Santiago, Veraguas, is apparently along the low watershed be- tween the Rio Santa Maria of Coclé, Herrera, and extreme eastern Veraguas, which flows into the Gulf of Panama, and the Rio Martin Grande, with its tributaries, which empties into the Gulf of Montijo. A specimen from E] Villano, in the drainage of the Santa Maria, is easily recognized as perrygoi, while another from La Colorada on a tributary of the Martin Grande, while somewhat intermediate, is to be placed with subflavescens. I have named this form for Watson M. Perrygo of the U. S. National Museum, my friend and companion on many days afield in Panama and elsewhere, who shot the first of our specimens of it. CYCLARHIS GUJANENSIS FLAVENS Wetmore Cyclarhis gujanensis flavens Wetmore, 1950, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 63, p. 174. (Chiman, Punta Madrofio, Panama, Panama.) Characters.—Gray of side of face continues behind crown to form band on upper back; chin and small area in center of abdomen white, rest of undersurface between lemon chrome and lemon yellow. Measurements.—Males (3 from Province of Panama), wing 69.2- 73.8 (70.0), tail 49.0-52.3 (50.9), culmen from base 17.7-18:5) (18:1), tarsus) 20/5225:2) (2107) aaa Female (1 from Province of Panama), wing 66.0, tail 53.2, culmen from base 18.5, tarsus 21.6 mm. Resident. Known from coastal area of eastern Province of Pan- ama, with specimens from Chiman and Maje. In the course of fieldwork in eastern Panama in the dry season of 1950 I was fortunate in securing specimens of the peppershrike, which on examination proved to represent an unrecognized form. The birds were found in small numbers in thickets back of the beach at the mouth of Rio Majeé, and at the mouth of the Rio Chiman, near Punta Madrono opposite Chiman; these localities are on the coast a short distance from the Darien border. It is probable that the birds I recorded in 1949 at Chepo on the lower Rio Mamoni are this race, and it is practically cer- tain that this is the form obtained in 1941 at Garachine by the Fifth George Vanderbilt Expedition (Bond and de Schauensee, Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, Mon. no. 6, 1944, p. 40). Likewise, a bird I found singing on Barro Colorado Island in the Canal Zone on March 9-10, 1950—the only record to date for the Zone—and a pair Ridgely (1976, FAMILY VIREONIDAE 203 p. 282) noted in mangroves near Tocumen, eastern Province of Pan- ama, on July 10, 1975, were probably representative of this race. More recently others have been seen at Juan Diaz; these are almost certainly flavens, spreading from farther east in the Province of Panama. CYCLARHIS GUJANENSIS COIBAE Hartert Cyclorhis coibae Hartert, 1901, Bull. Brit. Ornith. Club 12, p. 33. (Coiba Island, off Panama.) Characters.—Darker above than either subflavescens or perrygot; chin light neutral gray; upper throat to abdomen pale lemon yellow, brightest just above abdomen, then fading to white on abdomen and undertail coverts. A male collected on February 1, 1956, had the iris wax yellow; maxilla mouse brown; mandible neutral gray; tarsus and toes avil- laneous. Measurements.—Males (4 from Isla Coiba), wing 69.0-71.2 (70.6), tail 50.5-53.5 (52.6), culmen from base 16.4-17.6 (17.1), tarsus 21.0- 22.4 (21.6) mm. I have found no female specimens in collections. Resident. During my stay on Coiba in January and February 1956 the peppershrike was fairly common, but this was the beginning of the dry season and their songs had become infrequent; without these notes as a guide they are difficult to find. While they are robust in body, they move about behind leafy cover in such a leisurely manner, resting for minutes with only slight movements of the head, that it is only casually that one is seen. They are birds of the high forest crown, but come also about clearings, even into the low second growth called rastrojo, or to the borders of mangrove swamps. At the Maria work camp | found 1 feeding in mango trees and coconut palms standing isolated in the ex- tensive clearing. The song is loud with strongly accented notes, and ends abruptly, when there is a pause of varying length, often of several minutes, be- fore it 1s repeated. The first two or three syllables are uttered rather slowly, followed by a rapidly given louder phrase. The notes carry for several hundred yards, and, if the song is continued, eventually the bird may be located, though the process of finding one may require half an hour. The 3 males that I collected represent many hours of search, since, as already stated, during January the birds were not singing steadily. 204. BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART ZA In the original description, written 80 years ago, when relatively few specimens were available, Hartert compared the Coiba bird with the race of Cozumel Island, off the coast of Quintana Roo, Mexico, which was suggested by the duller colors of cotbae. Actually, the subspecies of Coiba Island is more closely similar to the forms of the Panamanian mainland, from which it differs in very decidedly darker, duller colors, the breast and sides being distinctly greenish instead of bright yellow, the dorsal surface duller green, and the crown browner. The type speci- men (American Museum of Natural History), taken by Batty April 20, 1901, an immature bird as is shown by the dark, almost black, bill, is browner on the crown than adult specimens. SMARAGDOLANIUS PULCHELLUS (Sclater and Salvin): Green Shrike-Vireo, Follajero Verde Ficure 19 Vireolanius pulchellus P.L. Sclater and Salvin, 1859, Ibis, p. 12. (Guatemala. ) Large for a vireo; heavy-headed with stout, hooked bill; bright green with blue on hindneck and sometimes on head, and yellow throat. Description.—Length 126-144 mm. Adult (sexes alike), sides of head, face, and all of upper surface, brilliant parrot green, except blue hindneck and (depending on race) sometimes crown or forehead; abdomen and undertail coverts pale lemon yellow; edge of wing and underwing coverts, pale lemon yellow. The Green Shrike-Vireo is a common bird wherever it occurs in lowlands and foothills mainly on the Pacific slope, but it rarely descends from the tops of tall trees in forest and second-growth woodland, so it is usually not noticed by those who do not know its three- or four-note whistled song, which it delivers constantly. Occasionally it joins a mixed flock of insectivorous birds and descends to lower levels. Pan- ama is the southern limit of its range, which extends north to south- eastern Mexico. Lawrence (Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 7, 1862, p. 468) received a specimen from McLeannan in 1862 and was the first to record this species from Panama, but not until 1905, when Ridgway described the race viridiceps from McLeannan’s specimen (Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 16, 1903, p. 108), was it recognized that two forms exist in the Republic: one in the west with a blue forehead (verticalis), the other in the central and eastern region (viridiceps), with a green forehead matching the crown. The difficulty of collecting FAMILY VIREONIDAE 205 or even seeing these birds at the many localities where they are com- mon makes it impossible even today to delimit the range of either race with any certainty. Figure 19—Green Shrike-Vereo, Follajero Verde, Smaragdolanius pulchellus. SMARAGDOLANIUS PULCHELLUS VERTICALIS (Ridgway) Vireolanius pulchellus verticalis Ridgway, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 8, 1885, p. 24. (Angostura, Costa Rica.) Characters.—lorehead, hindneck, and sometimes area surrounding eye, light blue; upper surface parrot green. Measurements.—Males (6 from Veraguas, Costa Rica, and Nica- ragua), wing 68.0-76.5 (73.0), tail 44.4-52.4 (47.9), culmen from base 17.4-21.2 (19.0), tarsus 21.6-22.1 (21.8) mm. Females (4 from Veraguas, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua), wing 64.5- 73.8 (69.5), tail 43.2-47.8 (46.1), culmen from base 17.0-19.5 (18.4), tansus 20.9-21.8 (21.3) mm. Resident. This race, which elsewhere occurs in Nicaragua and Caribbean Costa Rica, is known in Panama from 5 specimens. One is mentioned by Bangs (Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 19, 1906, p. 206 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 110), who says “I have one adult bird from Boquete, Chiriqui, that is absolutely typical.” This is probably MCZ no. 115194, sex ?, “Bo- queti,” Chiriqui, no date, from the Bangs collection. The catalogue gives no further detail, except an indication that the skin may have been entered about 1901. This bird has the forehead and band across the hindneck blue, and fully agrees with verticalis. Two others were collected at Calovévora, Veraguas, on the Carib- bean slope. A male collected by Arcé, now BMNH no. 85.3.10.208, has the blue between the lores typical of verticalis, as well as the nuchal stripe. AMNH no. 246930, collected by R. R. Benson, at Calovévora (marked Veraguas, but possibly extreme eastern Bocas del Toro) has the blue on the forehead present, but restricted in extent. AMNH no. 187705-06, from Santa Fé, Veraguas, also collected by Benson, are typical of verticalis in the amount of blue on the forehead. These speci- mens are the basis for Griscom’s listing of the race in Veraguas (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 363). A specimen (USNM no. 61990), collected by Arcé at Calobre, Vera- guas, has the feathers on the forehead partly missing, but the few that remain have a bluish cast in contrast to the bright green of the crown, thus showing an approach to verticalis. It appears that intergradation between verticalis and viridiceps takes place through the low divide of eastern Veraguas and probably western Cocle. The specimen cited in Salvin and Godman (Biol. Centr.-Amer., Aves, vol. 1, 1883, p. 210) collected by McLeannan at “line of railway” is probably the 1862 specimen Ridgway used as the type of S. /. viridice ps. N. G. Smith reports (in litt. to Eisenmann) hearing this species, presumably verticalis, in Bocas del Toro in forest near the Changuinola- Almirante Canal, during late March 1967. Slud (Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 128, 1964, p. 309) mentions various vocalizations and distinguishes between the songs of the two races, Saying verticalis has a musical usually three-note cheéur-cheéur- cheéur on the same level, while viridiceps has a three- or four- syllable chatter, chyuh-chyuh-chyuh-chyuh or an almost “spinking” pu-pu-pi. My own notes show that the song varies within Panama, but this con- stant singer is almost impossible to locate in the tall trees it inhabits and I have never been able to collect a singing bird. It is seen most often when foraging with a mixed flock. At Santa Clara, near Cerro Picacho, in Chiriqui I heard several giving a four-note song on March 16 and 19, 1954. Near Puerto Armuelles, on the hillslope above the terminus FAMILY VIREONIDAE 207 of the logging road at Corott the song I heard on February 12, 1966, was a three-note whistle. To the east, in the Canal Zone I have heard a three-syllabled whu-whu-whu at Juan Mina on January 10, 1955, and at Chiva Chiva on December 29, 1963. SMARAGDOLANIUS PULCHELLUS VIRIDICEPS (Ridgway) Vireolanius pulchellus viridiceps Ridgway, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 16, 1903, p. 108. ( Panama.) Characters.—Blue only on hindneck; rest of upper surface parrot green, less yellowish green than in verticalis. A male collected at Charco del Toro, Rio Majé, eastern Province of Panama on March 27, 1950, had the iris brown; maxilla black; mandi- ble light neutral gray, darker toward base; tarsus, toes, and claws neutral gray; inside of mandible like exterior; tip of tongue horn color; rest of inside of mouth including basal part of tongue black; tongue deeply bifid. A female collected March 31, 1951, on Cerro Agua at El Valle, Coclé, had the dorsal pteryla broad in the center of the back and inter- rupted posteriorly so that the lower end presents a broad “V.” Measurements—Males (5 from Colon, Province of Panama, and Canal Zone), wing 67.8-71.2 (69.5), tail 43.0-48.1 (45.2), culmen from base 17.9-20.0 (18.7, average of 4), tarsus 21.1-23.6 (21.9) mm. Females (5 from Coclé; Province of Panama, and Canal Zone), wing 65.0-71.0 (69.8), tail 39.8-46.9 (43.7), culmen from base 16.8- 20.5 (18.1), tarsus 20.4-22.2 (21.5) mm. Resident. Common in forest and tall second-growth woodland in the more humid areas on the Pacific slope from western Chiriqui to eastern Province of Panama; in the Canal Zone it has been commonly recorded from both slopes. It also occurs in southwestern (Pacific slope) Costa Rica. Specimen records are few, since this bird is ex- tremely difficult to collect as, when singing, it perches motionless in the tops of tall trees; fortunately it gives a distinctive three- or four-note whistle with what Chapman (My Tropical Air Castle, 1929, p. 240) calls “a tireless persistence.” The few specimens in the Smithsonian collections include 1 collected by Arcé at Calobre in Veraguas and re- cent ones from FE] Valle in Coclé, Charco del Toro, and Cerro Chucanti (at 510 m on the northwest slope of Serrania de Majé) in the Province of Panama; Cerro Galera, Albrook Air Force Base, and Barro Colo- rado Island in the Canal Zone; and the Peluca Hydrographic Station in 208 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Colon. A male collected at Puerto San Antonio, Rio Chepo (Griscom, Auk, 1933, p. 305) is in the Havemeyer Collection now at the Peabody Museum in New Haven. The American Museum has specimens from Santa Fé, Veraguas, and Cerro Azul, Province of Panama. I have encountered this shrike-vireo in Chiriqui at Puerto Armuelles, Buena Vista (750 m on the Rio Escarrea), and at Santa Clara, 1080 m, near Cerro Picacho; in Coclé at the head of the Rio Guabal (on the Caribbean slope) and at Fl Valle; in the Province of Panama at Canita, on Cerro Campana, and in Panama Viejo; in Colon on the Rio Bo- queron at 240 m and at the Peluca Hydrographic Station; and in many places in the Canal Zone including Chiva Chiva, Gamboa, Juan Mina, and Barro Colorado Island. Shrike-vireos stay in the densest leaves of the treetops, where their movements are so slow they are rarely noticed. It was not until March 1950, when I was in the Serrania de Majé, where they were common, that I finally succeeded in collecting 1 and was able to associate with a particular species the song I had heard so often. Once, at Chiva Chiva, I watched a shrike-vireo foraging. Its green color matched the leaves exactly, with an occasional flash of blue from the neck. It searched the branches like a vireo, but moved far more deliberately, sometimes hang- ing underneath a branch while it examined the bark. Presently it seized a good-sized caterpillar, held it under its toes against the branch, and pulled it apart in sections, shaking its head to dislodge fluid from its bill. Although shrike-vireos sang constantly whenever I encountered them from late December through March, I found no evidence of breed- ing. Willis found a female building a mossy vireolike cup 14 m up as a male sang and watched, on May 15, 1966, in the Madden Forest Re- serve, Canal Zone ( Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Cont. Zool. no. 291, 1979, p.25). This may be the first published information of the nesting of this species. SMARAGDOLANIUS EXIMIUS (Baird): Yellow-browed Shrike-Vireo, Follajero-Cejiamarillo Vireolanius eximius Baird, 1866, Rev. Amer. Birds, 1, p. 398. (“Bogota,” Co- lombia. ) Vireolanius eximius mutabilis Nelson, 1912, Smiths. Misc. Coll., 60, no. 3, p. 20. (Gana S000 tt easter) le amamiany) Large for a vireo; above bright green with light blue crown; super- ciliary and throat yellow; rest of undersurface light yellowish green. FAMILY VIREONIDAE 209 Description.—Adult (sexes presumably alike), superciliary, spot at lower front of eye, and throat pale lemon yellow; lores blackish; crown light blue; rest of upper surface parrot green, slightly lighter on upper tail coverts; side of face and wing coverts green; primaries and secondaries black, with outer web edged green; tail green; under- tail coverts greenish yellow; rest of undersurface dull green-yellow; edge of wing, underwing coverts, and edge of inner web of primaries and secondaries pale lemon yellow. Measurements.—Type (female from Cana, Darién), wing 70.0, tail 44.6, culmen from base 18.1, tarsus 22.1 mm. Resident. The only specimen known from Panama is a female collected at Cana (900 m), Darién, by E. A. Goldman on June 11, 1912. Nelson described this as the type of a new subspecies, mutabilis, that was said to differ from eximuius in having the supraloral part of the superciliary stripe broader, the forecrown greener, auriculars bordered with blue, yellow of throat changing abruptly into and contrasting with yellowish green of breast (however, there is a large patch of feathers missing from this area in the type), green of underparts paler, and undertail coverts brighter yellow. Blake (Check-list Birds World, vol. 14, 1968, p. 109) referred birds from Cordoba and Antioquia, Colombia, to mutabilis, but the series in the Smithsonian from this area is not separable from birds taken elsewhere in Colombia within the range of eximius. These specimens show that none of the characters of mutabilis are constant, the only possible distinguishing feature being the brighter undertail coverts of the type. Without additional speci- mens from Panama, it would be rash to conclude that mutabilis is a valid subspecies. It certainly does not constitute a “connecting link” with V. pulchellus viridiceps as postulated by Hellmayr (Cat. Bds. Americas, pt. 8, 1935, p. 189), and for this reason it seems prudent to maintain eximius as a distinct, monotypic species. Ridgely (im. litt.) has seen this species on two occasions in eastern Darién; 2 seen separately on slopes of Cerro Quia (530, 600 m) on July 17, 1975, and 1 seen above Cana (670 m) on March 2, 1981. All 3 birds were foraging with mixed flocks in and just below the canopy. Ridgely never saw a bird sing, but believes that a shrike-vireolike song heard repeatedly must have been this species. It was distinctly more single-noted than is typical for pulchellus, e.g., pete-pete-pete. Of in- terest was his failure on either trip to even hear shrike-vireos at low- land locales; they were not present at Cana itself, only above. At Santa Fé, western Darién, on March 23 and 31, 1967, Eisenmann 210 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 heard, coming from high forest trees, a song that he believed was ut- tered by Smaragdolanius. It was usually a three-noted pee-pee-pee, but occasionally two-noted. So far as he knows, no shrike-vireo has been collected or reported seen in this section of Darién. VIREO GRISEUS NOVEBORACENSIS (Gmelin): White-eyed Vireo, Vireo Ojiblanco Muscicapa noveboracensis Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1(2), p. 947. (In Noveboraco [ = New York]; based on “Green Fly-catcher”’ of Pennant, 1785, Arctic Zool., 2, p. 389.) Small; upper surface olive-green; yellow stripe from lores around eye; whitish wing-bars; undersurface white with yellow wash on sides. Description.—Length 112-124 mm. Adult (sexes alike), stripe from above lores and eye-ring yellow; upper surface plain greenish olive or olive-green; wings dusky, with middle and greater coverts tipped yel- lowish white, forming two wing bars; primaries and secondaries nar- rowly edged with greenish, and tertials broadly edged yellowish white; tail dusky with outer web of feathers edged greenish; throat and breast white lightly suffused with gray; sides and flanks pale lemon yellow, rest of undersurface white; underwing coverts and inner web of under- side of primaries and secondaries white. Measurements.—Males (10 from New Jersey, Delaware, and Mary- land, collected in May), wing 59.2-62.2 (61.2), tail 46.9-50.8 (48.5), culmen from base 9.9-11.9 (10.9), tarsus 17.5-19.7 (18.3) mm. Females (10 from New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia, collected in May), wing 59.0-63.0 (60.6), tail 46.4-52.5 (48.5), culmen from base 10.7-12.8 (11.5), tarsus 15.9-19.8 (18.4) mm. Accidental. Known definitely in Panama from 2 specimens collected in Bocas del Toro. One, USNM no. 483154, a female, was caught on February 7, 1963, in a mist net in a fruit grove at Punta Vieja on Isla Bastimentos by C. O. Handley and F. M. Greenwell. They noted that the skull was ossified, the ovary measured 5X3 mm, and the iris was white. The second specimen, USNM no. 486555, unsexed, also came from a mist net, at Almirante, on October 16, 1964 (Hicks, Condor, 1967, p. 90). This northern race of the White-eyed Vireo (breeding in eastern United States) normally winters south to Guatemala, north- ern Honduras, and western Cuba (A. O. U. Check-list of North Amer- ican Birds, 1957, p. 467); Bocas del Toro is more than 640 km south of its usual southern limit. FAMILY VIREONIDAE 211 VIREO CARMIOLI Baird: Yellow-winged Vireo, Vireo Aliamarillo FicurReE 20 Vireo carmiolt Baird, 1866, Rev. Amer. Birds, 1, p. 356. (Dota [ = Santa Maria de Dota], San José, Costa Rica.) Small; upper surface olive-green, with short yellowish eye stripe and broad yellowish wing bars; throat whitish, rest of undersurface yellowish. Description.—Length 109-116 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face plain greenish olive; short, pale yellowish stripe from upper part of base of maxilla past eye, and yellowish border of lower rim of eye, forming a partial eye-ring; spot between lower part of base of maxilla and front of eye dark gray; sides of head yellowish olive; wing dusky with tips of middle and greater coverts tipped yellowish, forming two wing bars, outer web of primaries and secondaries edged yellowish Olive, and outer web of tertials edged yellowish white; tail black, feathers edged yellowish olive; throat whitish, tinged with olive yellow- ish; rest of undersurface light yellow tinged with olive on breast and sides; underwing coverts light yellow; inner edge of underside of pri- maries and secondaries white. Immature, like adult but head and nape dark cinnamon. A male taken February 24, 1965, at Volcan de Chiriqui, Chiriqui, had the iris reddish brown; maxilla and tip of mandible dull black; base of mandible dark neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws bluish neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 64.0-67.5 (65.3), tail 44.7-49.6 (47.1), culmen from base 9.2-11.2 (10.4), tarsus 16.9-18.6 (18.1) mm. Females (5 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 59.5-64.0 (62.0), tail 45.1-47.8 (46.6), culmen from base 9.9-10.5 (10.3, average of 4), tarsus 16.7-17.8 (17.3) mm. Resident. Fairly common in western Chiriqui in very humid forest, chiefly between 2000-2670 m, although recorded from 900 to 3170 m. Resident also in Costa Rica. W. W. Brown, Jr., collected a male at Boquete (1350 m) on March 17, 1901 (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 59), but most of the localities from which this bird is known are higher—Blake (Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 553), for example, reported them collected by Mo6nniche at six localities around Volcan de Chiriqui on the Boquete side between 1590 and 2850 m. Two birds collected by Frank A. Hartman at Cerro 212 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Copete (2100 m), above Boquete, are now at Ohio State University, and Davidson (Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci., ser. 4, vol. 23, 1938, p. 260) collected a male at Quiel (2340 m) above Boquete. I have collected Vireo carmioli on the west face of Volcan de Chiriqui at 2250 m, on Cerro Punta at 2100 m, and on’ Cerro Picacholat 2280 a: Ficure 20.—Yellow-winged Vireo, Vireo Aliamarillo, Vireo carmioli. Vireo carmioli is a bird of the high tree crowns, where I have some- times watched one move slowly in typical vireo fashion and then be- come more active, almost like a warbler; the large broad head and small bill give this bird a curious appearance. Eisenmann (Condor, 1962, p. 505) reported only once seeing it as low as 13 m from the ground, but whether it normally nests that far from the ground is not yet known. On October 1, 1965, he saw 1 not 7 m up ina small roadside tree above Cerro Punta. The only nests that have been discovered are 2 found by Skutch (Publ. Nutt. Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, p.\ 131) 1m@ostagisaes. both were in trees in pastures, 3 and 8 m from the ground. The diet seems to be insects and spiders gleaned from leaves and bark and, oc- casionally, picked from a leaf while the bird hovers before it. Some- times it joins mixed species flocks of other insectivores. These vireos seem to sing during much of the year; Skutch (of. cit.) has heard it in Costa Rica from early March to November. Ridgely (in litt.) has heard it in Panama in January. In Panama, Eisenmann (op. cit.) characterizes the song as a husky “cheéyah ...cheéyou... chipcheeweé, repeated a few times, with a long pause between repeti- tions.” Another song phrase or call is peeacheewit. FAMILY VIREONIDAE 213 As mentioned above, the only information on this species’ nesting comes from Skutch’s observations in Costa Rica. The 2 nests he found were of typical vireo construction, a cup hung between two slender hori- zontal twigs, built of lichen, moss, bark, and leaf fragments, and silk from insect cocoons and spider webs. The first nest was begun on May 21 (in Panama specimens collected by Monniche had enlarged gonads May 1-19 [Blake, op. cit.]) and the first egg was laid May 29. A second egg, which completed the clutch, was laid the next day. They were “white, with small, scattered dark spots on the broader end.” Both ‘parents incubated, but the nest was destroyed before the eggs hatched. The other nest Skutch found contained young in late June; they were brooded frequently by both parents and were fed larvae. VIREO FLAVIFRONS Vieillot: Yellow-throated Vireo, Vireo Gargantiamarillo Vireo flavifrons Vieillot, 1808, Hist. Nat. Ois. Amer. Sept., 1(1807), p. 85, pl. 54. (United States [ = eastern United States].) Rather small; throat and breast bright yellow, rest of undersurface white; upper surface olive; yellow eye-ring; wings blackish with prominent white wing bars. Description.—Length 117-131 mm. Adult (sexes alike), supra-loral stripe, eye-ring, throat, and breast bright lemon yellow; side of head, and most of upper surface yellowish olive; wings blackish, with middle and greater coverts tipped white, forming two bars, undersurface below breast white. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 70.3-78.5 (75.2), tail 44.2-50.4 (48.0), culmen from base 11.7-12.5 (12.2), tarsus 17.6- 19.2 (18.6) mm. Females (10 from Panama), wing 72.0-77.2 (74.8), tail 46.0-50.1 (48.3), culmen from base 11.1-13.2 (12.7, average of 9), tarsus 16.1- 18.8 (17.6) mm. Winter visitor from temperate North America, known to winter south to Colombia. Widespread and fairly common, in every province of the Republic. I have also found them on several islands off the Pacific Coast, including San José in the Pearl Islands, Taboga, Parida, and Cébaco; | first thought these vireos were simply passage migrants on the islands, but on January 18, 1965, I found 1 ina berry tree on Isla Cébaco, which suggests by the date and source of food that they may winter there. As evidenced from the collecting localities, the Yellow- throated Vireo is found primarily in the lowlands, but in Chiriqui I have also collected it near El Volcan on the Silla de Cerro Pando at 214 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 1500 m, and Blake (Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 553) men- tions a male collected April 4, 1933, at Lérida (1650 m). Griscom’s comments—“decidely uncommon winter visitant” (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 364) and “few records south of western Pan- ama” (Amer. Mus. Nov. no. 282, 1927, p. 7)—do not seem accurate on the basis of more recent collecting and observation. Ridgely (1976, p. 284) gives dates of occurrence from late October to early April. F. S. Blanton collected 2 males at Albrook Field in the Canal Zone on Oc- tober 22, 1953, and the latest spring occurrence of which I know is the April 4 bird from Chiriqui mentioned above. As a migrant and winter visitant in Panama the Yellow-throated Vireo’s habits are essentially the same as in their breeding areas to the north. They are slow moving even for a vireo, although they sometimes join groups of warblers moving through the trees. Willis (Living Bird, 1966, p. 205-206) observed 1 foraging near the ground on Barro Colorado Island on December 17, 1960, that ignored a nearby active swarm of army ants; he remarked that on Barro Colorado this vireo is usually found in the treetops. I have found them in mangrove swamps on San José, Pearl Islands, in open woodland along a quebrada in Ja- qué, Darién, and in shade trees over coffee at Santa Clara (1260 m), Chiriqui. At this season they take fruit as well as insects; 1 I shot on Isla Parida, Chiriqui, had the stomach filled with two good-sized drupes. Molt begins by January. A female I collected January 25, 1962, at Las Palmitas, Los Santos, was molting around the head; the incoming new feathers on the throat appeared very orange. A bird collected at the head of the Rio Guabal, in Coclé, on February 28 that year was in molt and had not developed body fat; another bird collected February 28, 1965, at El Volcan, Chiriqui, also had no fat forming. Two birds that had just completed a molt and had no fat were collected at Santa Clara, Chiriqui, on March 17, 1954. I have collected specimens with heavy body fat on March 6, at El Potrero, Coclé, and March 17, at El Volcan. Ridgely (op. cit.) says its song is “Quite often heard, espe- cially in spring.” Eisenmann (in litt.) notes that this species gives a nasal snarl and a fast chittittittity, vocalizations also heard on the breed- ing grounds. [VIREO SOLITARIUS (Wilson): Solitary Vireo, Vireo Solitario Muscicapa solitaria Wilson, 1810, Amer. Ornith., 2, p. 143, pl. 17, fig. 6. (Bartram’s Woods, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ) Vagrant. This species is included on the basis of three recent sight reports. At El Volcan in western Chiriqui, 1 was seen on March 17, FAMILY VIREONIDAE 215 1972, by C. Leahy and R. Forster, another on January 16, 1974, by Leahy and Ridgely (Ridgely, 1976, p. 284). As the sightings were in exactly the same place they may have been of the same bird. Another bird was seen on January 24, 1977, near Fort San Lorenzo, Canal Zone, by R. Rodriguez (reported in Toucan, February 1977, p. 6, sup- plemented by a letter to Eisenmann). There are also recent sightings from Costa Rica. The race that normally occurs closest to Panama is nominate solitarius, which breeds in eastern North America and winters south in Central America in Nicaragua.| VIREO OLIVACEUS (Linnaeus): Red-eyed Vireo, Vireo Ojirrojo Rather small; upper surface olive- green with gray crown and white eye-stripe; lower surface white. Description.—Length 124-144 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown gray bordered by narrow line of blackish; sides of face, rest of upper sur- face, including scapulars, and tail, grayish olive; green wing coverts, primaries, and secondaries dusky, with outer web of feathers edged yellowish olive; superciliary white, a narrow dusky gray stripe from bill through and behind eye; loral region below superciliary blackish; undersurface white; undertail coverts, sides, and flanks often tinged with yellowish olive; edge of wing white; underwing coverts very light yellow; edge of inner web of primaries and secondaries white on under- side. The Red-eyed Vireo of North America is a common migrant through- out Panama on its way to and from the Amazon Basin, where it spends the winter. It frequents clearings, second-growth woodland, and wood- land borders. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, 1932, p. 366) wrote “I have yet to see any evidence to show that the Red-eyed Vireo winters with any regularity in any part of Central America,” and Eisen- miami ( onaiths: Misc. Coll, vol. 117, no.'5, 1952, p. 49)),"called it “a common migrant and occasional winter visitant in Panama, August 14- May 1, but chiefly seen in September and October, March and April.” Migration continues well into November. To date, there are no winter specimens. I. S. Morton (Eisenmann im litt.) saw a few on the Pacific slope of the Canal Zone in the final week of December 1970. Ridgely reports 1 seen well on January 9, 1974, in forest on Barro Colorado Island. During both spring and fall the Red-eyed Vireo is “very abundant” at the banding station at Almirante (Loftin, Rogers, and Hicks, Bird- Banding, 1966, p. 41), often occurring in waves. In the spring of 1963, for example, Loftin and Olson (Carib. Journ. Sci., vol. 3, no. 4, 1963, 216 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 p. 194) banded Red-eyed Vireos at Almirante between April 8 and May 13. On most days no more than 6 were found in the nets, but on April 18-19, 10 birds were taken each day and on April 28-30 from 10 to 18 each day; after April 30 no more than 2 were netted each day. The large number of birds netted at Almirante has provided oppor- tunities to study the amount of energy expended by migrants. It is not known whether vireos reaching Panama in fall have flown nonstop from the United States or have come from farther north in Central America. Rogers and Odum (Wilson Bull., 1966, p. 421) found that newly-arrived Red-eyed Vireos had depleted their fat reserves and some were believed to have lost some of their fat-free weight as well. In an earlier study, however, Rogers (Bird-Banding, 1965, p. 116) collected a vireo killed in an October rainstorm at Almirante and esti- mated that on the basis of its remaining available fat it could still have flown another 658 km. A male I collected at La Jagua, Province of Panama, on March 20, 1961, was packed with fat. While in Panama, Red-eyed Vireos include fruit in their diet; from September to November 1968 Leck (Living Bird, 1971, p. 92) ob- served them repeatedly visiting a tree with mistletoe berries. In spring I have seen them moving through the trees with other migrant insecti- vores. VIREO OLIVACEUS OLIVACEUS (Linnaeus) Muscicapa olivacea Linnaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, 1, p. 327; based mainly on “The red-Ey’d Fly-catcher, Muscicapa oculis rubris” of Catesby, 1731, Nat. Hist. Carolina, 1, p. 54, pl. 54, lower fig. (North America [| = (South) Carolina].) Characters.—Olive-green of upper surface darker than caniviridis, without grayish wash; pileum darker, mouse gray rather than olive- gray; undersurface with yellowish wash in sides and flanks. Measurements.—Males (10 from northwest Canada and United States, collected in May and June), wing 77.2-83.0 (80.6), tail 45.2- 57.2 (54.4), culmen from base 12.3-14.7 (13.4), tarsus 17.1-19.1 (17.8) mm. Females (10 from northwest Canada and United States, collected in May and June), wing 75.0-79.8 (77.1), tail 48.0-53.6 (51.1), culmen from base 13.0-14.5 (13.6), tarsus 16.4-18.8 (17.7) mm. Migrant and possibly winter visitant from the north. As a transient, Griscom (Bull., Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 364) called the Red-eyed Vireo common throughout. It has been recorded at sea level, on islands including Saboga, in the Pearl Islands (Thayer and Bangs, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 46, 1905, p. 154), and on Taboga (speci- FAMILY VIREONIDAE 217 men in BMNH no. 1925.12.22.321), and at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, where it is one of the commonest migrants caught in the mist nets oper- ated by the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory. The highest elevation at which it has been collected is 1590 m, at Lérida, Chiriqui (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 553). The Smithsonian has specimens from Jaqué, Darién; Chico, and La Jagua in the Province of Panama; from Alajuela and Fort Clayton in the Canal Zone; and from Almirante, Bocas del Toro. VIREO OLIVACEUS CANIVIRIDIS Burleigh Vireo olivaceus caniviridis Burleigh, 1960, Auk, vol. 77, p. 214. (Moscow, Latah County, Idaho.) Characters.—Olive-green of upper surface paler and with a gray wash; undersurface clearer white, with little or no yellowish olive on sides and flanks. Measurements.—Males (10 from Idaho, taken in May and June), wing 80.5-83.2 (81.8), tail 56.1-60.2 (58.0), culmen from base 14.1- 16.4 (15.5), tarsus 17.1-20.0 (18.5) mm. Females (3 from Idaho, taken in July), wing 76.0-80.5 (78.3), tail 56.2-58.0 (57.2), culmen from base 14.7-14.8 (14.7), tarsus 18.5-19.4 (18.9) mm. Migrant from the north. Burleigh’s recognition of a separate race for Red-eyed Vireos from the arid northwestern United States, in Idaho, Washington, and Oregon, is not usually admitted (Blake, Check- list Birds World, 14, 1968, p. 122). Alan R. Phillips, however, con- siders this subspecies to be valid and has identified a male from the La Jagua Hunt Club, Chico, Province of Panama, taken March 30, 1955, a female from the mouth of the Rio Imamado, Rio Jaqué, Darién, taken March 30, 1947, anda female from Pacora, Province of Panama, taken October 14, 1958 as caniviridis. VIREO FLAVOVIRIDIS FLAVOVIRIDIS (Cassin): Yellow-green Vireo Vireo Verdiamarillo o Julian Chivi Vireosylvia flavoviridis Cassin, 1851, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 5, p. 152. (Panama and San Juan de Nicaragua; restricted to San Juan de Nicaragua by Zimmer, 1941, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 1127, p. 2.) Vireo insulanus Bangs, 1902, Proc. New England Zool. Club, 3, p. 73. (Isla del Rey, Bay of Panama.) Rather small; crown medium gray; light gray superciliary; rest of upper surface bright olive-green; undersurface white, with flanks and undertail coverts yellow. 218 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Description.—Adult (sexes alike), crown medium gray, sometimes with indistinct dusky margin; light gray superciliary; lores dull gray; rest of upper surface bright olive-green; sides of breast and flanks olive- yellow; undertail coverts bright sulphur or light lemon yellow; rest of undersurface white; edge of wing and underwing coverts bright sul- phur yellow. Juvenile, crown cinnamon-buff; whitish superciliary; rest of upper surface mainly olive-green; throat white; rest of undersurface very pale yellow. A breeding male collected March 22, 1961, at La Jagua, Province of Panama, had the iris light reddish brown; maxilla fuscous-brown; mandible dull ivory flesh color; tarsus and toes neutral gray. A female taken May 21, 1953, at Sona, Veraguas, had the iris light brownish orange; maxilla horn color; mandible light neutral gray; tarsus and toes dull neutral gray. The lighter iris seems definitely to be a sexual characteristic. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 73.6-78.8 (76.7), tail 53.9-59.9 (56.7), culmen from base 14.2-16.3 (15.4), tarsus 16.9- NS C176) mina Females (10 from Panama), wing 69.0-75.9 (71.7), tail 46.5-53.1 (49.5), culmen from base 13.0-15.2 (14.5), tarsus 17.1-18.6 (17.8) mm. Resident. Common to abundant in woodland borders, clearings, cut- over areas, coastal scrub and mangroves, gardens, open woods, and second growth on the Pacific slope and on islands off the coast and in extensively cleared areas of the Canal Zone to the Caribbean slope. The Yellow-green Vireo is a widespread breeder on the entire Pacific slope of the Republic, except in Darién, where its status is uncertain (pos- sibly only a transient). At higher elevations and humid lowlands it occurs only in cleared areas: W. W. Brown, Jr. (Bangs, Proc. New Iengland Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 58) collected 4 at Boquete (1440 m), and Blake (Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 553) records it from three localities around the Volcan de Chiriqui at 1560 to 1620 m. In the western Azuero Peninsula, Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 117) found it as high as 900 m. Off the coast, the Yellow-green Vireo is very common on Isla Coiba and the Pearl Islands. On the Caribbean slope this species rarely appears away from cleared areas in the Canal Zone. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, 1932, p. 366) notes a female taken by von Wedel on September 3, 1929, at Permé, San Blas, and Peters (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 71, 1931, p. 333) records another Wedel speci- FAMILY VIREONIDAE 219 men taken September 27, 1927, at Changuinola in the Chiriqui Lagoon region of Bocas del Toro. Loftin (in litt.) reports that in 1962 Yellow- green Vireos were taken rather regularly between September 7 and October 30 in the mist nets operated by the Gorgas Memorial Labora- tory at Almirante, Bocas del Toro; presumably, these were migrants from farther north. The Yellow-green Vireo is the only oscine that breeds in Central America and is definitely known to migrate to South America, where it spends a few months in the upper Amazon Basin. Its breeding range extends north to Mexico and southern Texas; undoubtedly the birds mentioned above from the Caribbean slope and also some from higher elevations on the Pacific slope are transients. Yellow-green Vireos usually have passed through or withdrawn from Panama by late Oc- tober, although in 1963 Loftin netted 1 at Ancon, in the Canal Zone, as late as November 17. Although there is some variation from year to year, usually by late December (December 20, 1970, at Fort Kobbe, Canal Zone [Morton, Auk. 1977, p. 99]) the first birds return to the Pa- cific Coast; in mid-January birds returning there are at their peak. Farther inland the peak is slightly later, and on the Caribbean slope it does not occur until mid-March. (In 1962 I observed a considerable flight at El Potrero, Coclé, as late as March 8, when I saw as many as a dozen birds gathered in one berry-bearing tree at the same time). Mor- ton (op. cit) suggests that the breeding season is timed to coincide with an abundance of fruit, which is available sooner on the dry Pacific Coast than it is farther inland or on the Caribbean slope. The withdrawal to South America is at a time when fruit is more abundant there than during the late rainy season in Panama. H. Loftin’s banding data indicate that, despite migration, adults re- turn to the area where banded: 2 banded at Curundu, Pacific slope in the Canal Zone on March 6 and 9, 1963, were recaptured on February 9 and 11, 1964, and the former again on April 2, 1966; 1 banded at San Francisco, Veraguas, on April 26, 1965, was recaptured May 5, 1969. The taxonomy of the Yellow-green Vireo is disputed. Blake (Check- list Birds World, vol. 14, 1968, p. 123) treats flavoviridis as a race of Vireo olivaceus, as well as the South American lV. chivi complex, al- though they differ in wing-formula and in color and there is no evidence of intergradation. Peters (Auk, 1931, p. 575-587) considered V. flavo- viridis as a full species, with the races insulanus breeding in Panama, nominate flavoviridis on the mainland north of Panama, and forreri breeding in the Tres Marias Islands off the west coast of Mexico, whereas Blake identifies some of the breeding birds of Panama as 220 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 flavoviridis and included part of the Mexican mainland in the breeding range of forrert. When I was in the Pearl Islands in 1944 the bird was common and I secured a series of 21 skins to check on the question of the supposed form insulanus, described by Bangs (Proc. New Eng- land Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 73) from El Rey Island and later con- sidered to be the bird of the Panama mainland also. There is variation in depth of color among these, some being decidedly darker, but this seems to be entirely individual, for which reason insulanus was synony- mized with flavoviridis (Wetmore, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 106, no. 1, 1946, p. 54). Migrant individuals of forreri may be recognized by their much larger size, as for example a specimen from Socorré, Rio Sinu, Cordoba, Colombia, taken by Carriker on April 25, 1949 (USNM no. 412462). No specimens of this race have yet been iden- tified from Panama, however. Morton (op. cit., p. 101) examined the stomach contents of 98 Yellow-green Vireos taken in Panama and found that 89 percent of the birds specialized in either fruit or insects, with their stomachs contain- ing 90 percent of one or the other; about half specialized in each, while the remaining 11 percent had stomachs containing equal portions of fruit and insects. Those specializing in insects had a far lower volume of food matter in their stomachs. The birds that filled up on fruit may be ones that learned the location of fruiting trees and visited them re- peatedly, even when the trees were outside of their breeding territory. The plants from which Morton found the vireos taking fruit included, in order of decreasing occurrence in stomachs: Miconia sp., Pitheco- lobium rufescens, Didymopanax morototom, Pittoniotus tricantha, Guazuma ulnufolia, Lasiacis sorghoidea. Two collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 16.6 and 17.7 g. The arrival of the Yellow-green Vireo after its absence in South America is easy to detect, since it is a persistent singer, even through the hottest parts of the day. In tone and method of utterance the notes are like those of the Red-eyed Vireo, but somewhat more leisurely and slightly harsher in sound. Sometimes the phrases are shorter and the pauses in between longer than a Red-eyed Vireo’s, and I have also heard the song so harsh that it sounded almost like a House Sparrow’s. Morton (op. cit., p. 98) found that after pairing, males sang less per- sistently but gave rapid, songlike phrases when moving toward fe- males, who responded with a harsh chatter. In June and July singing increases somewhat, although often males were in molt and not associ- ating with females. They also give a harsh, nasal nywey (Eisenmann, in litt.). FAMILY VIREONIDAE 221 During the courtship season I have several times observed males posed with head and neck erect, crest raised, and tail stiffly spread. Chasing is also frequent among males. Skutch (Pacific Coast Avif., no. 34, vol. 2, 1960, p. 22) describes a female Yellow-green Vireo tend- ing her nest while courted by an immature male that perched at the edge of the nest, swayed back and forth, and sang. In 1970 Morton found pairs on the Pacific slope of the Canal Zone beginning to nest in mid- January; they fledged young before any birds had even returned to the Caribbean coast, only 54 km away. On the Pacific Coast the last _ adults with dependent fledged young were seen on July 14. The nest is a typical vireo construction. I found one at La Palma, Los Santos, on March 27, 1948, that was hung in a little fork 5 m from the ground. The outside was covered with lichen and spider webs. Skutch (op. cit., p. 15) lists “small papery leaves of bamboo or grass, fibrous roots of epiphytes plucked from slender branches, and much cobweb” as the ingredients. The nest is built entirely by the female. The clutch is usually three eggs. Major General G. Ralph Meyer found a nest on May 15, 1941, on the Gamboa Road near the Naval Station in the Canal Zone; the measurements of all eggs were 21 X15 mm. Peters (op. cit., p. 579) describes eggs of this species from Costa Rica as “white, speckled chiefly at the larger end with spots varying in color from a dark chestnut to an orange rufous, the chestnut pre- dominating.” Skutch (op. cit.) observed that incubation is performed entirely by the female and requires 13 or 14 days. At hatching the nestlings have a few scattered tufts of very short down and their eyes are tightly closed. They are fed a diet of insects by both parents. By their fourth day pinfeathers have begun to push through, but the birds’ eyes are still shut. On their eighth day of life the nestlings are feathered ex- cept on the head, and their eyes—brown rather than red—are fully open. At 11 days the young are well feathered and move restlessly in the nest, which they will leave within the next 3 days. VIREO ALTILOQUUS (Vieillot): Black-whiskered Vireo, Vireo Barbinegro Rather small; crown dull gray; rest of upper surface dull olive- green; superciliary whitish; dusky moustachial stripe; undersurface white; undertail coverts pale yellow. Description—Length 126-145 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown brownish, usually without any dusky border; rest of upper surface dull olive-green; wing coverts, primaries, and secondaries dusky, with 222, BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART Al outer webs edged light yellowish olive; tail olive, usually with outer webs edged light yellowish olive; superciliary whitish to pale grayish buff; sides of face grayish buff; thin line above superciliary, line through eye, and moustachial stripe dusky; sides and flanks pale yel- lowish olive to grayish olive-green; undertail coverts pale yellow; rest of undersurface white; edge of wing very pale yellow; underwing co- verts yellowish white, edge of inner web of primaries and secondaries white on underside. The Black-whiskered Vireo breeds in southern Florida, the Bahamas, and the islands of the Caribbean. Two races are migratory, wintering in the Amazon Basin of South America. In Panama this vireo is known from 3 specimens and some recent sight reports. Ridgely (1976, p. 285) refers to “several recent sightings in Canal Zone: One at Achiote Road on September 29, 1968 (Ridgely); and one at Gatun Dam on January 29, 1970 (E. S. Morton).” The specimen records are dis- cussed below. VIREO ALTILOQUUS BARBATULUS (Cabanis) Phyllomanes barbatulus Cabanis, 1855, Journ. f. Ornith., 3, p. 467. (Cuba.) Characters.—Superciliary stripe pale and less buffy than in /. a. altiloquus; throat and chest purer white. Measurements.—Males (10 from Florida and Cuba), wing 77.2- 80.1 (78.5), tail 51.1-57.7 (55.8), culmen from base 14.7-17.1 (15.9), tarsus 15.1-19.5 (17.6) mm. Females (9 from Cuba), wing 72.0-78.2 (74.5), tail 49.2-55.3 (52.4), culmen from base 13.1-16.3 (15.2), tarsus 16.1-18.7 (17.5) mm. Accidental. This race breeds from the coast of southern Florida through the Florida Keys and Dry Tortugas to the Bahamas and Cuba, and winters in the Amazon Basin from northeastern Peru to north- central Brazil. Hasso von Wedel collected 1 (unsexed) at Puerto Obaldia, San Blas, on September 12, 1930, that Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, 1932, p. 366) considered “unquestionably this subspecies.” The specimen is now at the Museum of Comparative Zoology. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 364) lists this form from the Canal Zone as well, on the basis of a specimen sent to Salvin from there by McLeannan; at the time of Griscom’s writing that specimen had not been checked by him as to subspecies, but when I examined it at the British Museum in 1958 I found that, although in decidedly worn plumage, it agreed well with nominate altiloquus. FAMILY VIREONIDAE 223 VIREO ALTILOQUUS ALTILOQUUS (Vieillot) Muscicapa altiloqua Vieillot, 1808, Hist. Nat. Ois. Amer., September, 1 (1807), p. 67, pl. 38. (Jamaica, Santo Domingo, etc.; types from St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, fide Stenhouse, 1930, Novit. Zool. 35, p. 271.) Characters —Back brighter olive-green than in V. a. barbatulus; superciliary less pale, more grayish buff; throat duller, chest tinged with pale grayish olive-green. Measurements.—Males (10 from Haiti), wing 73.2-87.5 (80.6), _ tail 48.7-57.5 (54.9), culmen from base 15.5-19.2 (17.0), tarsus 17.4- 1967182) mm. Females (10 from Haiti), wing 74.2-81.0 (77.0), tail 44.5-55.5 (51.2), culmen from base 14.9-18.9 (16.6), tarsus 17.0-19.8 (18.3) mm. Accidental. This race replaces V. a. barbatulus in most of the Greater Antilles and in the Virgin Islands; it winters mainly in northern South America, east to Guyana and south in Amazonia to lower Rio Madeira. Two specimens of this race have been collected in Panama. A male was sent by McLeannan to Salvin from the “Isthmus of Panama” (Sclater and Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1864, p. 348); it is now BMNH no. 85.3.10.1. Another male was collected by Benson on August 31, 1926, at Guaval on the Rio Calovevora, on the Caribbean slope of Vera- guas and is now in the American Museum of Natural History (no. 246926). VIREO PHILADELPHICUS (Cassin): Philadelphia Vireo, Vireo de Filadélfia Vireosyluvia philadelphica Cassin, 1851, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Philadelphia, 5, p. 153, pl. 10, fig. 2. (Bingham’s woods, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.) Small; gray crown, dull olive back; white superciliary; undersur- face mostly dull light yellow. Description.—Length 107-122 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown plain mouse gray; rest of upper surface grayish olive-green, slightly lighter on rump; superciliary white; loral area below superciliary and spot be- hind eye dusky grayish; side of face pale olive; upper throat and lower abdomen whitish; rest of undersurface pale yellow, slightly deeper on breast; underwing coverts whitish. A female taken March 1, 1962, at the head of the Rio Guabal, Coclé, had the iris dark brown; maxilla and tip of mandible dark grayish brown; tip of mandible light neutral gray; base dull white; tarsus, toes, and claws dark neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 62.4-68.0 (66.3), 224 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 tail 42.1-48.1 (45.9), culmen from base 10.1-11.9 (10.9), tarsus 12.8- 16:7( 15:6); mami Females (10 from Panama), wing 61.0-69.2 (64.6), tail 38.1-45.5 (43.2), culmen from base 9.9-11.7 (10.6), tarsus 13.3-16.9 (15.4) mm. Migrant from the north, and winter resident. Common in foothills and highlands of Chiriqui and Veraguas, rarer in lowlands of western and central Panama. The farthest east in Panama from which this species has been reported is in the Bayano River basin, on January 10, 1976 (J. J. Pujals, to Eisenmann). The Philadelphia Vireo is found in Panama from October to mid or late April; usually it inhabits wood- lands, where it often travels with mixed flocks of North American migrants especially warblers, but I have also found it in mangrove swamps on islands off the Pacific Coast. The highest elevation at which it has been collected is 1620 m, at Lérida, Chiriqui, by Monniche (Blake, Iieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 554) and at Quiel, near Bo- quete, by Benson, and there are numerous records from elsewhere in the highlands of Chiriqui and Veraguas. I have collected Philadelphia Vireos in Chiriqui at elevations from 1260 m at El Volcan and Santa Clara, to Concepcion, 240 m, down to Las Lajas, Puerto Armuelles, and Punta Balsa, at or near sea level, and Isla Parida offshore. In the Veragus highlands, Arcé collected the Philadelphia Vireo at Chitra (Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr.-Amer., Aves, vol. 1 (pt. 14), 1881, p. 191) and Ridgely (in litt.) with F. Gary Stiles reports a “flocl< of at least 30 in woods along river below Santa Fé [1200 m.] in part as- sembled by Stiles’ pygmy-owl hooting” on January 6, 1974. My only encounters with the Philadelphia Vireo in Veraguas have, in contrast, been on islands off the Pacific Coast—-Cébaco, Gobernadora, Afuerita, and Coiba. On the western side of the Azuero Peninsula, Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 118) found the Philadelphia Vireo “rather common in mixed flocks of arboreal North American migrants.’ Specimens at the Smithsonian from other provinces include birds from Almirante, Bocas del Toro; Santa Maria, Herrera; Pedasi, Los Santos; and Tigre, at the head of the Rio Guabal, Coclé. Ridgely (1976, p. 285-286) mentions some recent reports by Eugene S. Morton of the Philadelphia Vireo in the Canal Zone: “one collected at Albrook Air Force Base on February 19, 1971; one seen at Madden Lake Scout Camp on February 26, 1971; one collected at Gatun Dam on April 4, 1971.” Like many insectivorous migrants from North America, the Phila- delphia Vireo becomes more sociable out of the nesting season and more FAMILY VIREONIDAE 225 flexible in its choice of habitat and food. It feeds extensively on in- sects, but at Isla Parida, Chiriqui, I took 2 on February 5, 1963, that had eaten small drupes. The specimen collected by Morton at Gatun Dam had in its stomach “red arils, green Micoma fruit; no insects,” while that taken at Albrook had “small beetles of several species and one small buprestid” (data on labels in American Museum of Natural History). On March 20, 1975, Morton and Eisenmann noted 2 in a Bursera tree with a variety of northern wood warblers in the light woodland of Farfan Road, southwestern Canal Zone. Buskirk et al. (Auk, 1972, p. 619), when studying mixed species flocks near Cerro Punta, Chiriqui found that Philadelphia Vireos were present in at least 26 percent of the flocks they observed; the vireos were “joiners,” but did not follow the flock from place to place. At the same locality Leck (Bird-Banding, 1975, p. 202) banded and weighed Philadelphia Vireos in 1968; he found that the average weight of 12 taken in March was 11.4 g and the next month 5 averaged 12 g. A bird that I took at Pedasi, Los Santos, on March 17, 1957, was not at all fat. Ridgely (1 litt.) observed a Philadelphia Vireo on Barro Colorado Island (March 13, 1979) with an antwren flock. He notes that in many areas this species seems to prefer coffee groves above all other habitats, especially where there are trees shading the coffee and where rank vegetation has grown up around the coffee bushes. VIREO GILVUS (Vieillot): Warbling Vireo, Vireo de Capucha Chocolate Muscicapa gilva Vieillot, 1808, Hist. Nat. Ois. Amer.; September 1, (1807), p. 65, pl. 34. (New York State.) Small; crown brown; rest of upper surface olive-green; superciliary white; throat and breast white; rest of undersurface pale yellow. Description—Length 107-121 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown olive-brown; rest of upper surface grayish olive to brownish olive- green, superciliary white; dusky brown postocular streak and loral spot; facial area, throat, upper chest grayish, and white; rest of under- surface, edge of wing, and underwing coverts pale yellow or whitish. Vireo gilvus, the Warbling Vireo of North America and Mexico, in- cludes other forms through Central America and as far south as Bo- livia and southeastern Peru. Blake (Checklist Birds World, 1968, p. 127-129) distinguishes 17 forms, all of which he puts in V. gilvus. Some consider the races south of Oaxaca, Mexico, distinct enough from northern gilvus to merit specific status under the name leuco phrys, while others believe the races breeding from southern Mexico to Nica- 226 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 ragua are more closely allied to northern gilvus than to the forms from Costa Rica south. Little is known of the biology of any of the southern races. Slud (Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 1964, vol. 128, p. 312), writing of V. gilvus chiriquensis, the bird of Costa Rica and western Panama, says it generally occurs in small groups, in two’s, or singly, high in trees or lower in second growth and thickets. Like other vireos it 1s a persistent singer. Eisenmann (Condor, 1962, p. 505-506) found the song like that of a northern Warbling Vireo, but shorter and less varied, with song phrases lasting 3 to 3.5 seconds and pauses in between of 3 to 5 seconds. Other vocalizations include a high thin tsip, sometimes dzheep; a tsip, tit-tit-tit-tit, given when moving about; and a sharp zweeyoo, zweeyoo, sweéyoo, given when gleaning, often hanging up- side down. Eisenmann (op. cit.) believes that V. gilvus has increased in Pan- ama with the clearing of forest. VIREO GILVUS CHIRIQUENSIS (Bangs) Vireosylva josephae chiriquensis Bangs, 1903, Proc. New England Zool. Club., 4, p. 9. (Boquete, 4000 ft, Volcan de Chiriqui, Panama.) Characters.—Back light grayish olive, contrasting with olive-brown crown; undersurface decidedly yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 59.5-67.5 (64.0), tail 43.3-49.6 (45.9), culmen from base 10.4-12.6 (11.6), tarsus 15.3- 1773) (165) mam: Females (10 from Chiriqui), wing 59.0-66.0 (62.0), tail 40.7-47.5 (45.0), culmen from base 10.9-12.5 (11.9, average of 9), tarsus 15.4- 1761720) roatan’ Resident. Common in forest borders, open woodland, and shrubby clearings in the highlands of western Panama, and in Costa Rica. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 364) gives its range in Panama as “mountains of Chiriqui and Veraguas.”’ Ridgely (1976, p. 286) includes western Bocas del Toro as well. W. W. Brown, Jr. (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 58) collected this species at Boquete and on the Caribbean slope of Volcan de Chiri- qui between 1200 and 2100 m. Monniche (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 554) found it on Volcan de Chiriqui between 1560 and 1860 m. Ridgely found it at 1150-1200 m at Fortuna, Chiriqui, in 1976. Two specimens from Isla Cébaco and 1 from Isla Sevilla (both localities listed by Zimmer, Amer. Mus. Nat. Novit., 1127, 1941, p. 19), were collected by J. H. Batty, whose locality data has been shown to FAMILY VIREONIDAE 227 be unreliable (Wetmore, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 134, no. 9, 1957, p. 7). The specimens almost certainly come from Boquete, as did the re- mainder of Batty’s series in the American Museum. The Smithsonian specimens all come from Chiriqui—at Quiel (1560 m) near Boquete, Santa Clara (1260 m), Cerro Punta, and El Volcan (1350 m). My own experiences with this vireo have been limited. On March 7, 1954, I shot 1 from a little group of migrant warblers in high branches at the border of forest near El Volcan. At other times I have found it in forest undergrowth. Eisenmann (Condor, 1962, p. 505) noted that at Cerro Punta it “favors borders of streams, edges of clear- ings, and cut-over open woods, rather than heavy forest.” In 1961 he found many singing in early April. My own observations were all in February and March of 1954 and 1955, when the notes I took made no mention of singing activity; I did remark, however, that a male collected March 22, 1954, was not breeding. The nest and eggs of the tropical forms of species have not been described. So far as known, the Warbling Vireo is insectivorous. Sometimes while foraging they hang upside down while among the terminal twigs. They participate regularly in interspecific foraging flocks. In addition to my own and Ejisenmann’s observations of this species in mixed flocks, Buskirk et al. (Auk, 1972, p. 619) found that at Cerro Punta Warbling Vireos were part of 25 percent of all flocks observed, al- though they never followed the wandering birds for any distance. Leck (Bird-Banding, 1975, p. 202), who weighed 8 birds that were caught in mist nets at Cerro Punta during September and October of 1967 and another 8 the following March and April, found their average weight in “fall,” i.e., after the breeding season (12.8 ¢), higher than in “spring” during the breeding season (11.7 ¢). VIREO GILVUS DISSORS Zimmer Vireo gilvus dissors Zimmer, 1941, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 1127, p. 18. (Cerro Munchique, 7000 ft, west of Popayan, Colombia. ) Characters.—Crown grayer, not warm brown of chiriquensis; upper surface greener, less brown; undersurface paler, less yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from Colombia), wing 64.2-69.0 (65.9), tail 46.5-51.5 (48.6), culmen from base 10.9-13.9 (12.5), tarsus 16.2- 17.3 (16.8) mm. Females (10 from Darién and Colombia), wing 62.0-67.9 (65.5), tail 45.6-51.3 (47.7), culmen from base 11.8-12.9 (12.3), tarsus 15.2- 17.3 (16.4) mm. Resident. Known in Panama from a single specimen, a female col- 228 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A lected on June 4, 1963, by Dr. Pedro Galindo at 1440 m, 6.4 km west of the summit of Cerro Mali, Darién. In Colombia this race—includ- ing Zimmer’s form disjunctus (Olson, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash, vol. 94, 1981, p. 363)—inhabits the entire extent of the western and central Andes. The specimen from Panama has the pale undersurface typical of Colombian birds and the upper surface most like that of dissors, to which it was tentatively assigned (Olson, ibid). HYLOPHILUS DECURTATUS (Bonaparte): Lesser Greenlet, Verdecillo Menor Very small; crown gray or yellowish olive; rest of upper surface yellowish olive-green; undersurface white, greenish yellow on flanks. Description.—Length 89-100 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown either medium gray (slightly mixed with yellowish olive) or all yellowish olive; rest of upper surface yellowish green; wing coverts green; remiges dusky, with primaries edged narrowly and secondaries broadly green; tail green; narrow supraloral stripe and eye-ring whitish; side of face light gray; sides of breast and flanks olive-yellow; rest of under- surface white; edge of wing and underwing coverts pale yellow; under- side of inner web of primaries and secondaries edged yellow. Immature, undersurface tinged with buffy. The Lesser Greenlet is one of the commonest birds throughout the Republic, occasionally up to about 1800 m but is absent from drier scrubby or open areas on the Pacific lowlands of the eastern Azuero Peninsula, Coclé, and western Province of Panama. It frequents forest and second-growth woodland, where it gleans insects and spiders from middle and upper level foliage in the active manner of a warbler. It is a gregarious bird, often traveling in small groups, and a regular member of interspecific flocks of insectivores. At Jaqué, Darién, I once saw 1 with a little flock of the antwren Myrmotherula axillaris. Eisenmann (Condor, 1962, p. 507) considers it an ecological replace- ment of Vireo flavoviridis in the lowland canopied forest. He adds, however, that both occur together in lighter woodland and forest borders. The green-crowned populations of eastern Panama, Colombia, and western Ecuador, sometimes considered a distinct species, H. minor, intergrade in central Panama with gray-crowned H. decurtatus, of southern Mexico to western Panama. In the extensive series at the Smithsonian, most gray-crowned H. d. decurtatus show at least some green edging to the crown feathers. In the Province of Panama an ex- ample from Cerro Chame shows almost none, but series from Cerro FAMILY VIREONIDAE 229 Campana and Rio Indio show slightly more than average. In an old series from Gatun, Canal Zone, all but one are gray-crowned with variable green edging to the feathers; the exception is all green and has been identified as H. d. darienensis. Two specimens from Juan Mina, Canal Zone, are nearly intermediate, but tending more toward gray. In 2 from Cerro Azul, to the east, 1 is an intermediate and the other darienensis. A specimen from Pacora still shows a trace of gray, while those from Chepo eastward are all darienensts. Ridgely (1976, p. 286) describes the call of this species as “a rapid musical phrase suggestive of a single phrase of the Yellow-green Vireo but even more monotonous, constantly repeated, typically deedereét or itsacheét.” Eisenmann (Smiths. Misc. Coll. vol. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 49) says the call is given at intervals of about 5 seconds. E. S. Morton (in litt. to Eisenmann) could find no constant difference between vo- calization in the Canal Zone of birds with predominantly gray crowns and those on Cerro Azul with completely olive-green or mixed crowns. A series he collected shows every variation between green and gray crown; moreover, seeming pairs included differently colored indi- viduals. HYLOPHILUS DECURTATUS DECURTATUS (Bonaparte) Sylvicola decurtata Bonaparte, 1838, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 5(1837), p. 118. (Guatemala. ) Hylophilus pusillus Lawrence, 1862, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, 7, p. 323. (Atlantic side of Isthmus of Panama.) Characters.—Crown gray. A male taken February 18, 1966, at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui had the iris brown; maxilla except cutting edge fuscous-black; cutting edge and mandible pale neutral gray; gape dull honey yellow; tarsus, toes, and claws neutral gray; lower surface of toe pads dull honey yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from western Panama), wing 50.8- 94.4 (52.7), tail 32.6-38.9 (35.3), culmen from base 11.8-13.6 (12.7), tarsus 14.6-17.2 (16.3) mm. Females (8 from western Panama), wing 45.3-50.8 (47.7), tail 28.7- 36.6 (32.5), culmen from base 11.7-13.8 (12.4), tarsus 15.2-16.8 (16.1) mm. Resident. Common in lowland forest, second-growth woodland, and coastal mangrove forest recorded on Volcan de Chiriqui as high esi S00) im) (Blake, Mieldiana:) Zool.) vol) 36))no. 5,’ 1958) pp. 554- 955). Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 24) found it common in semi-deciduous coastal forest, be- 230 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 low 300 m, near Montijo Bay, Veraguas. On Barro Colorado Island in the Canal Zone, where the population is intermediate between nominate decurtatus and darienensis, Willis and Eisenmann (Smiths. Cont. Zool. no. 291, 1979, p. 26) found it “very common in the treetops, often the center of mixed flocks there or in groups of its own kind.” The Smith- sonian has specimens from several locations in Chiriqui, including Puerto Armuelles on the coast and El Volcan at 1320 m; from Bocas del Toro at Almirante and Isla Bastimentos; Sona and Puerto Vidal in Veraguas; Pedasi in Los Santos; El Valle and El Copé in Coclé; and Rio Indio in Colon. There is little information on the breeding of this bird in Panama. E. A. Goldman’s notes include the mention of a female “in breeding condition” taken at Gattin, Canal Zone, on April 26, 1911. Stone (Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 70, 1918, p. 273) lists)” malewane young” collected at Gatun on June 25 and July 4, 1911. Fortunately, Skutch (Pacific Coast Avif., no. 34, 1960, pp. 29-34) has studied this race in Costa Rica. After living 20 years where Lesser Greenlets were abundant he found its nest in April of 1955. The nest was a deep cup attached by its rim to two diverging branchlets of a large muneco (Cordia) tree, 4.5 m above the ground. The structure was mainly leaves, in strips or fragments, or whole if small, all held together and attached to the branches by fibers and cobweb, and lined with a sparse layer of vegetable fibers. Outside dimensions were 8.9 cm in height by 6.4 cm in diameter at the top; the interior was 4.5 cm in both diameter and depth. The eggs were not laid until a week after the nest was com- pleted. The two eggs, laid a day apart, were “white, scarcely glossy, spotted and blotched with pale brown, heavily on the large end and sparingly elsewhere. They measured 17.5 by 13.5 and 18.3 by 13.5 millimeters.” Incubation took 16 days and when the young hatched they were de- void of down; the interior of their mouths was yellow. The young were periodically brooded by the female, but fed by both parents, who brought them insects and spiders. At 6 days of age the young had prominent pinfeathers, although still no down, and their eyes were partially open. Three days later feathers covered most of their bodies; at 12 days they left the nest, with 1 flying about 8 m in its first flight. HYLOPHILUS DECURTATUS DARIENENSIS (Griscom) Pachysylvia minor darienensis Griscom, 1927, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 282, p. 7. (Cape Garachiné, eastern Panama.) Characters.—Crown yellowish olive. FAMILY VIREONIDAE 231 A male collected March 9, 1963, at Armila, San Blas, had the iris mouse brown; maxilla fuscous-black; mandible neutral gray; tarsus, toes, and claws bluish neutral gray. M easurements.—Males (10 from Province of Panama), wing 50.1- fenn(a1/7)\, tail 3.2-33.7 (33.2), culmen from base 11-4-13.8 (12:8), tarsus 15.1-16.9 (15.6) mm. Females (10 from Province of Panama and Darién), wing 47.0-52.8 (48.7), tail 26.1-35.4 (32.0), culmen from base 11.6-13.7 (12.6), tarsus 15.1-16.9 (16.0) mm. Resident. Common and widespread in forest and second growth of eastern Panama, found in Darién as high as 1000 m on Mount Sapo and 1200 m on Cerro Pirre. This race is also found in Colombia south on the Pacific Coast to Dagua Valley, and the upper Sint and middle Magdalena Valleys. The Smithsonian collection includes specimens of “pure” darienensis from as far west as Utivé, on the Rio Colobre, in the Province of Panama, and also from Chepo, Chiman, and Cerro Chucanti farther east in that Province. The collection also includes birds from Armila, San Blas, and Jaqué, Cana, and Tacarcuna Village in Darien. Griscom (Amer. Mus. Novit. no. 282, 1927, pp. 7-8), when describ- ing this race wrote that in habits and song it is like decurtatus. Two stomachs from Cana examined by EF. A. Goldman held only insects: one had 3 ants 10%, caterpillar skin 10%, a large pale colored blattid 80%; the other had bits of a hymenopteran 2%, a small moth with 4 eggs 8%, a caterpillar 10%, bits of a small elaterid 5%, a small curcu- lionid 5%, a beetle 5%, other coleopteran remains 5%, 3 pale colored blattids (with 1 egg case) 60%. On February 22, 1950, I shot 3 Lesser Greenlets from a flock of 8 or 9 at Chiman; of these, 2 were barely grown. Nothing, however, is known of the breeding biology of this race. HYLOPHILUS AURANTIIFRONS AURANTIIFRONS Lawrence: Golden-fronted Greenlet, Verdecillo Frontidorado Hylophilus aurantufrons Lawrence, 1862, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, 7 (1861), p. 324. (Atlantic slope near Panama Railroad, hereby restricted to Frijoles, Canal Zone.) Very small; forehead brownish yellow fusing into brown crown; rest of upper surface yellowish olive-green; throat whitish; rest of undersurface light yellow. Description.—Length 98-107 mm. Adult (sexes alike), forehead yellow and olive-ocher, fusing into light olive-brown of crown; rest 232 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A of upper surface, including wing coverts and tail yellowish olive-green; remiges dusky, with all but outermost primary edged yellowish olive- green, narrowly on primaries, broadly on secondaries; eye-ring white; sides of face light buffy brown; throat buffy whitish, faintly streaked with very pale yellow; faint tinge of light brownish buff across chest fused with pale yellow of rest of undersurface; sides and flanks pale olive greenish; underwing coverts and inner web of underside of remiges edged pale yellow. A. female collected January 12, 1963, at Chiva Chiva, Canal Zone, had the iris mouse brown; base of maxilla light fuscous-brown; tip of culmen dull black; cutting edge of maxilla and mandible flesh color; tarsus and toes neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Province of Panama and Canal Zone), wing 51.7-55.6 (54.1), tail 39.5-43.8 (42.0), culmen from base 12.7-15.2 (13.8), tarsus 154-164) (15.8) mm: Females (7 from Province of Panama and Canal Zone), wing 48.6- 53.5 (50.9), tail 34.5-42.6 (39.1), culmen from base 12.3-13.7 (13.1), tarsus 14.3-16.3 (15.4) mm. : Resident. Common on the Pacific slope, in Coclé (Aguadulce Salinas, Parita Bay), Herrera (southeast of Rincon) the Province of Panama (Playa Coronado, Nueva Gorgona, Cerro Campana, Panama City, Tocumen, Cerro Chame, Chico, Chepo) and in the Canal Zone (Rio Velasquez, Pedro Miguel, Corozal, Fort Clayton) east to south- western Darién (Garachiné), extending into the Caribbean drainage of the Rio Chagres to Culebra and Frijoles. It is also found on the Caribbean slope of northern Colombia; other races are found in eastern Colombia, Venezuela, and Trinidad. The single specimen from which this bird was named was sent to Lawrence by John R. Galbraith and James McLeannan during the “winter” of 1860-1861. Lawrence states that “the greater part of this collection was made on the Atlantic side of Isthmus, as the investigation of this section occupied their time until the season was too far advanced to enable them to procure many species on the western slope, and in the vicinity of Panama.” He then lists 6 species that were taken on the Pacific side. Since McLeannan is known to have collected in the vi- cinity of Frijoles, and since the bird is known to occur at that point through a specimen taken by Goldman, it seems appropriate to desig- nate this place as the type locality. From present knowledge this is the farthest point to which the bird penetrates in the Atlantic drainage. This small tropical vireo is found in open, thickety tree growth and scrubby vegetation, sometimes low down in the branches and sometimes FAMILY VIREONIDAE 232 in the tops of the smaller trees, ranging from tree growth back of a mangrove swamp to the fringe of woodland bordering the course of streams, or the bases of hills rising in open savanna lands. I saw this species in shade trees in the clearings adjacent to the river, and Gold- man in 1911 recorded one in partly cleared jungle near Frijoles. The birds move about rather actively, suggesting small warblers in their movements, but usually remain behind the cover of leaves. Once I found one in company with a little group of the Lesser Greenlet. The song is not loud, but is interesting, usually a repetition of two notes, the second being stressed. Eisenmann (Condor, 1962, p. 507) describes the song as “distinctly vireonine, resembling that of H. decurtatus, but it is even less varied, most often with a four-syllabled whistled phrase, sliding down at the end—cheetsacheéyou or itsacheéyou—and with two-to-five second pauses between each repetition.” He reports also having heard a shorter witsachéw, and a more elaborate itsocheét cheet- sacheéyou, less musical than the vocalizations of H. decurtatus or of Vireo flavoviridis. This species also has a nasal scold, much like that of H. ochraceiceps, nyaah,nyaah,nyaah,nyaah, given in excitement. Eisenmann found the Golden-fronted Greenlet ecologically sym- patric with Vireo flavoviridis, although much more restricted in range and habitat, but tending to keep lower and avoiding the more humid second-growth areas. He adds that, as to other greenlets, in localities and habitats where he has found this species in Panama he has also found H. flavipes viridiflavus, and in localities with greater rainfall or better soil and taller tree growth or extensive woodland nearby (as in the Canal Zone and eastern Province of Panama) he has also found H. decurtatus, which avoids the drier areas and favors forest, just as H. aurantufrons avoids the more humid regions and favors scrub. E. S. Morton writes that in his experience, where the Golden-fronted Green- let and the Lesser Greenlet occur together, they often are found in the same group, and, although their songs, while of similar style, are readily separable, they have very similar or identical alarm and ago- nistic notes. On March 24, 1966, I watched 2 of these birds feeding on small berries at Chiva Chiva, Canal Zone. E. A. Goldman collected 1 at Corozal on June 15, 1911, whose stomach contained 2 or more ants 60%, arachnid remains 30%, jassoid fragments 10%. Two collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 9.6 and 10.1 g. Eisenmann found a bird building a nest in a small tree on a grassy slope with bushy vegetation while another sang nearby on June 17, 1953, in the Juan Franco suburb of Panama City. 234 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 HYLOPHILUS OCHRACEICEPS Sclater: Tawny-crowned Greenlet, Verdecillo Coronileonado Hylopilus ochraceiceps P.L. Sclater, 1859, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 27, p. 375. (Playa Vicente, Oaxaca.) Very small; tawny brown; rest of upper surface brownish to olive; wings and tail russet; undersurface greenish yellow to olive-green. Description.—Length 95-112 mm. Adult (sexes alike), tawny brown sometimes with a bit of yellow at base of lores; rest of upper surface from dark russet-brown to olive-green; wing coverts as back; remiges dusky, with outer webs edged tawny brown; tail tawny brown; upper throat grayish white; rest of undersurface olive yellowish (bulunensis) or breast yellowish brown fading to light greenish yellow on remainder of undersurface; edge of wing, underwing coverts, and underside of inner webs of remiges yellow. The Tawny-crowned Greenlet is found from southeastern Mexico to northern Bolivia and Amazonian Brazil. Nine races are recognized, of which 3 occur in Panama; the Panamanian forms differ from one another mainly in the color of the back, which ranges from distinctly brown to olive-green. This greenlet is an uncommon resident of forest and second-growth woodland in lowlands and foothills; it has been recorded as high as 1500 m in Chiriqui (Ridgely, 1976, p. 287). Eisen- mann (Condor, 1962, p. 507) considers it more common in foothills than in the humid wooded lowlands. It inhabits dense undergrowth, rather than the higher levels in which the Lesser Greenlet moves; like other species of the genus, H. ochraceiceps is an active searcher for the small invertebrates that make up its diet. It often travels in pairs or family groups; it has been observed with various species of antwren and, in Belize, with Red-crowned Ant-Tanagers (Habia rubica) (Willis, Wilson Bull. 1960, pp. 104-105). Its voice is different from that of the other greenlets: Eisenmann (op. cit.) noted “a constantly uttered nya-nya, and a more vireonine weng,’ and Ridgely (op. cit.) mentions also “a rather long, slightly descending whistle.” HYLOPHILUS OCHRACEICEPS PALLIDPECTUS (Ridgway) Pachysylvia ochraceiceps pallidipectus Ridgway, 1903, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washing- ton, 16, p. 108. (Angostura, Cartago, Costa Rica.) Characters.—Upper surface definitely brown, breast with consider- able buffy tinge. A female taken March 15, 1965, at El Volcan, Chiriqui, had the iris light grayish brown; maxilla fuscous-brown; mandible dull neutral gray becoming browner on the distal end of the gonys. FAMILY VIREONIDAE 235 Measurements.—Males (7 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 52.0-59.0 (55.5), tail 40.8-44.8 (42.1), culmen from base 12.7-14.8 (13.7), tarsus 15.2-17.4 (16.7, average of 6) mm. Females (6 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 50.3-57.0 (54.6), tail 39.9-46.0 (42.4), culmen from base 12.4-14.1 (13.4), tarsus 15.9- 17.9 (16.9) mm. Resident. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 364), referring to this bird as nominate ochraceiceps, lists it for “Western Chiriqui (Pacific Slope).” Bangs (Proc. New England Zool. Club., vol. 3, 1902, p. 59) mentions a male collected by W. W. Brown, Jr., on the Caribbean slope of Volcan de Chiriqui, at 1200 m, on June 11, 1901. The only place I have encountered this race is at FE] Volcan, where on March 15, 1965, a pair flew into a mist net set at 1200 m at Palo Santo. Ridgely netted 2 (1 collected) on the upper Rio Chiriqui (Fortuna Dam site) at 1200 m on March 4, 1976. The only Bocas del Toro re- port is of 1 mist-netted by Loftin’s banders at Almirante on October 19, 1965; the bird was examined in the hand by Eisenmann and released. Beyond Panama this race ranges to Honduras. Skutch (Pacific Coast Avif. no. 34, 1960, pp. 35-38) has watched 1. o. pallidipectus at its nest in Costa Rica, where the breeding season starts at least as early as March. The 2 nests Skutch found were 2 and 6.5 m off the ground; each was a typical vireo cup attached by cobwebs to a fork in a sapling. The nest he took apart for examination had an outer covering of moss, a layer of fine, light-colored bast fibers, a thick layer of long soft seed plumes, and a thin lining of more bast fibers. The 2 young in one nest observed by Skutch were brooded by the fe- male and were fed insects by both parents. The parents seemed to feed the young less frequently than do Lesser Greenlets, and the young left the nest at 13 or 14 days of age, slightly later than do young Lesser Greenlets. The only nest described from Panama was found by Eisenmann (Condor, 1962, p. 507) near El Hato, western Chiriqui on July 13, 1949, but eggs had apparently not yet been laid; it was 1 m from the ground and covered on the outside by green moss. HYLOPHILUS OCHRACEICEPS NELSONI (Todd) Pachysylvia ochraceiceps nelsoni Todd, 1929, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 42, p. 195. (Lion Hill, Panama). New name for P. o. brevipennis Nelson, 1911, pre- occupied by Helinat brevipennis Giraud, 1852 = Hylophilus decurtatus (Bona- parte, 1838.) Characters.—Upper surface brownish olive; less buffy below than 236 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4A pallidipectus; more or less intermediate between that form and bulunensis. A male taken February 22, 1963, at Armila, San Blas, had the iris grayish white; maxilla black; mandible neutral gray; tarsus and toes bluish dark neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (7 from Veraguas, Province of Panama, Canal Zone, and San Blas), wing 54.5-57.0 (56.1), tail 37.9-45.8 (40.5), culmen from base 13.5-14.5 (13.9), tarsus 15.1-16.5 (15.9) mm. Females (6 from Veraguas, Province of Panama, Canal Zone, and San Blas), wing 53.0-58.3 (55.6), tail 39.4-42.3 (40.7), culmen from base 12.2-15.2 (13.5), tarsus 15.1-17.0 (16.4) mm. Resident. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 365) lists nelsoni from the “Pacific slope, coastal forests of Veraguas to Rio Chepo, Darién [= Province of Panama]; rare.” I have collected this race beyond Griscom’s limits, at Cerro Chucanti (300 m), in the Serrania de Majé, eastern Province of Panama, and at Armila, San Blas. The Smithsonian also has specimens from Lion Hill and from between Summit Gardens and Gamboa in the Canal Zone, and from Chepo, Province of Panama. The Havemeyer collection, now in the Peabody Museum at New Haven, contains a male collected at Puerto San Antonio, on the Rio Chepo. EK. A. Goldman’s notes for May 1, 1911, when he was at Lion Hill, include the following: “A pair of these was seen and shot among low limbs of trees and rather thick jungle in fairly heavy forest. They were about 10 feet from the ground and were killed only about 15 feet apart. ... They showed no breeding signs. Apparently a rare forest species.” The pair I found at Armila was caught in a mist net set in heavy forest, and 2 that I took at Cerro Chucanti were in tall tree tops. The American Museum collection contains a female (783985) col- lected January 23, 1964, by F. L. Chapman and E. Tyson in the Canal Zone 9.7 km north of Gamboa (Pipeline Road, Limbo Hunt Club) that contained an egg in the oviduct. HYLOPHILUS OCHRACEICEPS BULUNENSIS Hartert Hylophilus bulunensis Hartert, 1902, Novit. Zool., 9, p. 617. (Bulun, Esmeraldas, Ecuador. ) Characters.—Upper surface olive-green, undersurface olive yellow- ish, not yellow, with buff wash reduced. A male taken February 1961 at Cerro Pirre, Darién, had the iris brownish gray; maxilla and tip of mandible dusky neutral gray; rest of bill, tarsus, and toes neutral gray. FAMILY VIREONIDAE 237 Measurements.—Males (7 from Darién, and Colombia), wing 53.0- 61.8 (58.2), tail 38.0-46.3 (42.6), culmen from base 13.2-16.8 (14.5, average of 6), tarsus 15.5-16.7 (16.4) mm. Females (5 from Darién and Colombia), wing 50.5-55.9 (54.2), tail 40.2-43.4 (41.5), culmen from base 12.7-13.9 (13.2), tarsus 15.1-16.3 (i529). Resident. This race is known in Panama from extreme eastern Darién and San Blas. The Smithsonian has specimens from Darién taken at Jaqué, Cerro Pirre, Cana, and Tacarcuna Village. Bangs and Seagpeur Bull. Mus. Comp, Zool:, vol. 65, 1922, p. 223) mention '3 collected at Mt. Sapo. Hasso von Wedel collected 2 females in San Blas at Obaldia and Ranchon that Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 72, 1932, p. 366) says “agree with three specimens from Mt. Sapo on the Pacific slope of Darién, but are perhaps a trifle less yellow below.” These locations are very close to Armila, where I collected a pair that are definitely referable to nelsoni, but as the Smithsonian also has speci- mens of bulunensis from the nearby Gulf of Uruba on the Caribbean coast of Colombia, it is possible that extreme eastern San Blas is an area where the two forms meet. In the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory collection are specimens taken on Cerro Quia, southeastern Darien, March 17, 1971, at 500 and 700 m. KE. A. Goldman examined the stomachs of 2 collected at Cana on June 6, 1912: 1 contained a locustid 25%, caterpillar remains (4 at least) 25%, 7 fragmentary ants 20%, 2 or more spiders including a ball of web 30%; the other contained a moth 8%, a lepidopterous co- coon 20%, ant remains 20%, arachnid remains 20%, a roach 32%. HYLOPHILUS FLAVIPES Lafresnaye: Scrub Greenlet, Verdecillo Rastrojero FIGURE 21 Hylophilus flavipes Lafresnaye, 1845, Rev. Zool. [Paris], 8, p. 342. (““Bogota,” Colombia.) Small; entire upper surface yellowish olive; throat grayish; breast greenish yellow; rest of undersurface yellow. Description.—Length 105-117 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face from crown to tail yellowish olive; wing coverts and secondaries yellowish olive; primaries blackish with outer webs edged yellowish olive; side of head light gray; chin dull white; throat and upper breast light yellowish olive, fading to light yellow on rest of undersurface. This species is found in the Tropical Zone from southwestern Costa Rica to the lower Rio Bayano, Province of Panama; it appears again 238 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A in northern Colombia and ranges across Venezuela from the Orinoco Valley to the north coast, including Margarita Island, and the island of Tobago. The subspecies found in Panama are separated widely from those of Colombia and Venezuela by the forest of Darién and the Atrato Basin. The bird of Panama is much brighter colored above and below than its more eastern (South American) relatives and in fact is so different that the decision to place it as a geographic race instead of a distinct species is more or less an arbitrary one, based on general similarity and its allopatric range. YE; B = LZ ZZE GEE 7 Z WN z= TY = eG Ficure 21.—Scrub Greenlet, Verdecillo Rastrojero, Hylophilus flavipes. HYLOPHILUS FLAVIPES VIRIDIFLAVUS Lawrence Hylophilus viridiflavus Lawrence, 1862, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist., New York, 7 (1861), p. 324. (Atlantic slope near Panama Railroad, Canal Zone, Panama, hereby restricted to Frijoles, Canal Zone.) Hylophilus viridiflavus pallescens Davidson, 1932, Proc. Washington Biol. Soc., vol. 45, p. 168. (Concepcion (1500 ft), Chiriqui, Panama.) Characters.—Undersur face light yellow. A male collected January 15, 1955, at Juan Mina, Canal Zone, had the iris cadmium yellow, bill light hair brown; line of culmen fuscous; tarsus, toes, and claws light yellowish brown. A male collected March 24, 1961, at Chico, Panama, had the iris pale yellowish white; maxilla except cutting edge mouse brown; mandible and cutting edge of maxilla FAMILY VIREONIDAE 239 pale brownish white (‘flesh color”); tarsus, toes, and claws light mouse brown. Another male, taken March 7, 1962, at Il Potrero, Coclé, had the iris light buffy gray; line of culmen and side of mandible to rami dull brownish white; gonys and underside of mandible light brownish white; gape dull honey yellow; tarsus, toes, and claws pale brown. Measurements—Males (15 from Panama), wing 54.5-58.3 (56.0), tail 44.8-49.8 (47.9), culmen from base 13.1-14.2 (13.6), tarsus 17.6- 19.6 (18.7) mm. - Females (11 from Panama), wing 52.0-54.4 (53.7), tail 44.3-48.0 (45.8), culmen from base 13.0-14.1 (13.5), tarsus 18.2-18.7 (18.5) mm. Resident. The Scrub Greenlet is found through the Tropical Zone lowlands of the Pacific slope of Panama up to 450 m elevation, but mainly lower, from the Costa Rican boundary through Chiriqui (D1- vala, Bugaba, Concepcion, David, base of Cerro Flores, San Félix), Veraguas (Sona, Rio de Jésus, Santa Fé), Herrera (El Rincon), Los Santos (Monagre), Coclé (Nata), Panama (Nueva Gorgona, Panama, Chico, Puerto San Antonio on lower Rio Bayano) through the Canal Zone to the Caribbean side (Corozal, Miraflores, Mount Hope, Juan Mina, Empire, Gatun), and adjacent eastern Colon (Colon, Porto- belo). Ridgely (in litt.) saw 1 in a garden adjacent to the Panamonte Hotel in Boquete, Chiriqui (ca. 1000 m) on January 17, 1974; the bird was a full adult with a pale eye and pinkish bill. This race is also found in southwestern Costa Rica. In fresh plumage these greenlets are bright yellow-green above and even brighter yellow below, but these vivid colors fade quickly, espe- cially on the upper surface where they become decidedly grayish. The breast and abdomen also become paler. The general appearance then is surprisingly different. It is this that has led to an attempt to separate another race in western Chiriqui under the name pallescens (M. E. McClellan Davidson, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 45, 1932, p. 168). At first it appeared that this was valid, but as more specimens were assembled it became evident that the birds are uniform in char- acter throughout the mainland of Panama. Those of Los Santos and of Colon are similar in every way to a long series of others. This greenlet is most frequent as an inhabitant of growths of low scrub, but finds second growth and more open forest also to its liking. The thorny thickets and other fairly open stands of low trees and bushes of the savanna areas are especially suited to its needs and here if is fairly common. On the eastern side of the Azuero Peninsula I 240 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 recorded it only near the sea in northeastern Los Santos but it is prob- able that it ranges near the coast down to Punta Mala since the entire region contains suitable habitat. Without much doubt it has increased in abundance on the Atlantic slope of the Canal Zone and in adjacent Colon through the clearing of heavy forest and the appearance of low second growth that covers neglected or abandoned fields. In the early period it was a rare bird in this section. McLeannan seems to have taken few (possibly only 3 in addition to the type) as in his day the Caribbean slope where he worked was mainly heavily forested. It thus seems reasonable to establish the restricted type locality as Frijoles. Galbraith, who assisted in the collecting when the type was secured, noted that it was rare. These greenlets are found in the higher thickets and in low trees, more rarely in higher tree tops. Their movements usually are slow and deliberate, with birds pausing quietly to look about. The head often appears large in proportion to the size of the body, so that in profile they sometimes suggest a miniature peppershrike. Occasionally they are more active, somewhat like little warblers, flying up to examine the underside of leaves, and then may be more difficult to follow. The pale- colored eye is the outstanding character that identifies them when they are near at hand. Eisenmann (Condor, 1962, p. 507) describes a distinct whistle, “usually of two notes, repeated interminably, which varies somewhat individually or seasonally. Usually to my ear the call is towheé, towheé, towheé, towheé, repeated unchangingly from five to twenty or more times, without pause.” It is usual to find this greenlet in pairs, less frequently in groups of 3 or 4 individuals that I have supposed might be family parties. Breed- ing pairs were collected in southern Veraguas. On August 16, 1974, Eisenmann saw a fully grown fledgling being fed in a residential sub- urb of Panama city. I have no other information regarding their nest- ing. Eisenmann (op. cit.) says that in the Pacific Coast of Panama “this species is ecologically and geographically sympatric with both Hylophilus aurantufrons and Vireo flavoviridis. It seems more tolerant of humid conditions than aurantiufrons and less so than flavoviridis, as it occurs in scrubby cleared areas of the rainy Caribbean slope, but in my experience on the mainland, it avoids forest borders. Generally does not forage as high as flavoviridis.” The stomach of a bird collected by E. A. Goldman on May 24, 1911, at Portobelo, Colén, contained remains of more than 4 spiders 75%, a small hymenopteran fragment 3%, jaw and abdomen of a small black earwig 4%, a blatted ootheca 3%, bits of elytra of a metallic appearing FAMILY VIREONIDAE 241 buprestid 3%, 25 seeds of Melastomaceae 5%. Another collected Ieb- ruary 14, 1912, at Empire contained one hairy and one smooth cater- pillar skin, both small 20%, 10 seeds of Panicum sp. and other vegeta- ble fragments 80%. Of several taken by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64), 5 males ranged in weight from 11.3 to 13.0 g, and 6 females from 11.4 to 13.7 g. HYLOPHILUS FLAVIPES XUTHUS Wetmore Hylophilus flavipes xuthus Wetmore, 1957, Smiths. Misc. Coll., 1943 (9), p. 85. (Isla Coiba, Panama.) Characters.—Undersurface much darker, more buffy (instead of yellow), sides darker; darker green above than H. f. viridiflavus; bill heavier. Immature darker above and below, with wash of ochraceous- orange on abdomen. Measurements.—Males (7 from Isla Coiba), wing 55.8-58.3 (57.5), tail 47.0-50.9 (48.4), culmen from base 14.3-15.0 (14.7), tarsus 17.9- 10 186) mam. Females (6 from Isla Coiba), wing 54.4-56.7 (55.9), tail 45.2-49.3 (47.8), culmen from base 14.6-16.1 (15.1), tarsus 18.2-19.4 (18.6) mm. Resident. On Isla Coiba these were among the more common of the small birds, though seen infrequently because they ranged among screening leaves and creepers. During my visit from January 6 to February 6, 1956, they were found in the scrub growths back of the beaches and at the borders of mangroves, and came also into the brushy rastrojo of old fields, habitats similar to those inhabited by other forms of the species in mainland localities. On Coiba, I found that they also lived in the high crown of the inland forest, though it was near the end of my stay before I verified this, owing to the difficulty to detecting small birds in such situations. They move actively among the leaves and twigs, almost as quickly as wood warblers, and when seen often appear very close at hand. Occasionally I found them feeding on small drupes of fruiting trees. The yellowish-white iris of the adult birds is often apparent as they climb and hop among the smaller branches. The darker colored immature birds have dark eyes. The song, given in low tones, usually has three similar notes, swee, swee, swee, which are easily imitated by whistling. The birds of Coiba are much darker than the nearby mainland race and the bill is heavier at the base than in viridiflavus in addition to being slightly longer. 242 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Eisenmann and E. S. Morton in October 1965 and Ridgely in early April 1976 found them also within tall forest areas of Coiba, but only in lower growth. The notes heard were essentially as on the mainland. Family PARULIDAE: Wood Warblers, Reinitas Forty-eight species of wood warblers have been found in Panama. This total includes 34 North American migrants, mostly from the east- ern half of the continent, that winter in Panama or pass through on their way north or south. Some are extremely common, especially in the periods from September to early November and again in March and April, while others are known from only a single or very few rec- ords and are still accorded hypothetical status. One species, the Yellow Warbler (Dendroica petechia) has both migrant and resident popula- tions. Many of the migrant and wintering species join mixed flocks of endemic birds, but some others become relatively sedentary while in Panama and have been shown to maintain a territory. There is a strong correlation between winter territoriality and retention of the “spring” plumage; the warblers that have a less boldly marked basic plumage are the ones that usually join mixed-species flocks. Many of the North American species that are primarily insectivorous in the breeding sea- son consume considerable amounts of fruit in Panama. Most of the resident wood warblers of Panama are found in the high- lands: the three species of Geothlypis resemble G. trichas of North America in behavior; a Vermivora and a Parula are highly arboreal, usually foraging high in trees; the redstarts of the genus Myioborus usually range in the lower levels of the forest; and the 5 species of Basileuterus are found in forest undergrowth. Two wood warblers in- habit the borders of streams and rivers rather like the waterthrushes (Seirus) of North America: Basileuterus fulvicauda is widespread in the lowlands and foothills, and the Zeledonia, Zeledonia coronata, is rare and local in forest streams in the highlands of Chiriqui and Ver- aguas. Although Zeledonia has in the past been placed in its own family, Sibley (Postilla, no. 125, 1968, pp. 1-12) and Raikow (Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. no. 7, 1978, p. 28) have shown that it is an aberrant parulid. KEY TO SPECIES OF PARULIDAE 1. Throat or most of undersurface bright orange or yellow.............. 2 Undersurface without bright orange or yellow... .: 2). 401.5925 22 see ol Z. throat black, \eray,,or dusky... Sack diese Mia es ee 3 10. le WZ US) 14. Sy 16. 7. 18. FAMILY PARULIDAE guiconkenoulblack vonay NOt CiISIyin, .& o.5) sca nist Mele Melee nels: Pter sll Wes Maunoihen Throat color similar to that of side of face Side of face bright yellow. Cy male Hooded Warbler, Wilsonia citrina. p. PMIMUen eA ENeI S's Ot CCMISML. (ori! di sale Wrclinerces Mabe ta mest nie sc islsxeulsseurwtale ore Central tail feathers black, outer ones white. Slate-throated Redstart, Myioborus miniatus. p. PNM MeVe- mines 11 COmpleter OL /a Senta ji enenisraciieetsic enin ec = cae siete Complete white eye-ring. Connecticut Warbler, Oporornis agillts. p. Wing length minus tail length equal 10-18 (13) mm. Mourning Warbler, Oporornis philadelphia. p. Wing length minus tail length equals 2-10 (6.5) mm. MacGillivray’s Warbler, Oporormts tolmiet tolmiei. p. Whidersiitkace streaked with brownior blacker sianse cs sce. cl tate cel te Wiicrsiinbace | WitOUt iSsineakine 0. Sos). cecghin sume a tie acme aie sha eusrdie een Se Rao AChy Ore GIS ae. Asa sie nee Be ee MOI al tao 6 elas Streaking bright reddish brown. Yellow Warbler, Dendroica petechia. p. eres RAE MAVVIENIHE MOU UIT ce4 he, otras eiste teal iced a res eane a Alle Ves ke a ae, LENE). SUNN SIRO Be SE Wee RBG RSERRN er ahr CME tee ai ep ny a Ge UG vest te HO ilete rateMICOMLEM LGR VUINLCS Med cite eo srk lt ovata tue egal eco aia Sool eeleie sas Undertail coverts yellow. Palm Warbler, Dendroica palmarum palmarum. p. Upper surface blue-gray. Yellow-throated Warbler, Dendroica dominica. p. Upper surface black or grayish brown. Blackburnian Warbler, Dendroica fusca. p. LESLEURAT SEIN GY Sa ci eRe a ROE TTI ec eh ean ahh I Entire upper surface gray. Canada Warbler, Wilsonia canadensis. p. Side of face gray or black, large white patch on nearly all tail feathers. Magnolia Warbler, Dendroica magnolia. p. Side of face bright brown, small amount of white on outer tail feathers. male Cape May Warbler, Dendroica tigrina, in alternate plumage. p. WipemcuneacesbltevOreslate Chay. s iaucis cs 2 eke nein oe wc couege tities ev alhce Glace lipper suniaceroreenSiOrvyellowislt). 2402 40 selene es ome oe ca ws NFO SHOnAMnGERSmacenVeMOw eins ce Ware ee nee oe Lil's Gikcac a Ue Throat and breast bright orange, rest of undersurface gray. Flame-throated Warbler, ’ermivora gutturalts. p. Blackish band across breast. Collared Redstart, Myioborus torquatus. p. Undersurface without band. Tropical Parula, Parula pitiayumi. p. RNAI Ce COMETS TUM Malta ce Clete Pusey cain Catal Senter (eho feet tye a) ena fe) oe ph Atay RS LG Middle and greater wing coverts tipped white. Blue-winged Warbler, Vermivora pinus. p. mitine ELOmilye LOWISh NDEOW NOs Sthealeqassy miele. scree site. rieren le = CrowmwwAthout streaking yellowish. On bROwale yale a see eae Clee 18 Rle es 244 19. 20. 7. Ih Ge. 23: 24. Za: 26. 27. 28. “a. 30. ar 32. JD: 34. BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Crown brown or streaked. ise isi Mee es Crown bright yellowish, contrasting with rest of upper surface. Prothonotary Warbler, Protonotaria citrea. p. Crown brown. Rufuous-capped Warbler, Basileuterus rufifrons. p. Crown with two wide black stripes. Golden-crowned Warbler, Basileuterus culicivorous godmani. p. Forecrown yellow, contrasting with rest of crown.................0-+-- Forecrown green, gray, or black. 2....6 040.4... eee ee Outer tail feathers with large white patches. female Hooded Warbler, Wilsonia citrina. p. No white on tail feathers. Wilson’s Warbler, Wilsonia pusilla. p. Large, 150 mm or more. Yellow-breasted Chat, Icter1a virens virens. p- Smaller, 135 mmvuor less: f.) 2.00: 020002000030. se eeeee Superciliarly indistinct\or absent: io.) 5.2 Prominent yellow superciliary. Kentucky Warbler, Oporornis formosus. Pp. Black lorésuor maski) iis cdn ee EO eee Side of face yellowish; gray, or light brown. ...2.2): 2): 22: s0eeeeeeeee Black extensive on side of faces...) 060 Black confined to lores and area beneath eye. Gray-crowned Yellowthroat, Geothlypis poliocephala ridgwayt. p. Most of crown gray. male Masked Yellowthroat, Geothlypis aequinoctialis chiriquensts. p. Grown not (extensively. gray. 6. sis ce Ue ok eke on os Forecrown black, bordered by grayish white band. male Common Yellowthroat, Geothlypis trichas. p. Most of crown black, becoming green on hind crown. male Olive-crowned Yellowthroat, Geothlypis semiflava bairdi. p. Entire undersurface ‘yellow... 5:0)..024 snd. eee ces oss se Belly buff. female Common Yellowthroat, Geothlypis trichas. p. Much of crown and side of head gray. female Masked Yellowthroat, Geothlypis aequinoctials chiriquensis. p. Crown and side of head yellowish green. female Olive-crowned Yellowthroat, Geothlypis semiflava bairdi. p. Basal half of tail. feathers light orange, yellow, or buff... . 42-3 aoe eeeeee Tail feathers entirely dark or with white patches extending to distal end. . Basal half of all innermost tail feathers orange or yellow. American Redstart, Setophaga ruticilla. p. Basal half of all tail feathers buff. Buff-rumped Warbler, Basileuterus fulvicauda. p. Throat entirely black, brown), OF QUAY si. cyanide tes laisse ae Throat light coloredor strealed:;.\..) 48) s\sencs dies setsow an toe ee ee Throat and upper breast contrasting with rest of undersurface.......... Entire undersurface dark gray. Zeledonia, Zeledoma coronata. p. 299 296 28 294 298 30 294 296 298 306 330 35. 36. 7. 38. 31), 40. Al. 42. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. FAMILY PARULIDAE 245 Bact DLG ley Or wie mpayicaiacsiacts Pa creal Aree RAMA AEN aia Michi it hoi ye 36 Throat brown. male Bay-breasted Warbler, Dendroica castanea in alternate plumage. p. 280 cnn ORECTIMOIVELLOWT Sayer, \s lent ian) CRON NEM MN (nous CE 93 37 Upper surface blue. male Black-throated Blue Warbler, Dendroica caerulescens. p. 271 Wing coverts tipped bright yellow. Golden-winged Warbler, Vermivora chrysoptera. p. 250 Wing coverts tipped white. adult male Black-throated Green Warbler, Dendroica virens. p. 275 Grove bolaily. Strealcedy ics yy ik hee Me RENCE Call Oy al 39 Crowmeavariciine styeales, on unstreaked jc. Yuu an nD gi 43 Giown streaks black with brown, butt, .Or eneem.. sees. ul lees le eee ee. 40 Crown streaks black and white. Blalk-and-white Warbler, Mmotilta varia. p. 246 Mdemstimiace | UNSiEAKeM ees ic Lys ein oe ee) RPG MEME EEC) eG 41 Undersurface white with dark streaks on breast and flanks. Ovenbird, Seiurus aurocapillus. p. 284 Canmaienow ia stripe DU VOL CeEMISIHA vs skies yall s ulalslahere cists uiei eis ele 42 Central crown stripe reddish brown. Black-cheeked Warbler, Basileuterus melanogenys. p. 318 Undersurface buff and white. Worm-eating Warbler, Helmitheros vermivorus. p. 249 Undersurface greenish and yellow. Three-striped Warbler, Basileuterus tristriatus. p. 313 PEO MpemNcticnaGce: WNnSteaked |) ii 4).2). baie ue ee eatin eek Wet as 44 Wippenrsstinmace with imme streaks. 05,0) sl si GaN ACO 51 Yellow or yellow-green rump contrasting with rest of upper surface...... 45 INIGi COLMUESIS SV ALSA TABI OY OLN MAL argo SEU a es eT Ct Ee 46 Rest of upper surface brownish, throat white. female or immature Yellow-rumped Warbler, Dendroica coronata coronata. p. 271 Rest of upper surface greenish, throat finely streaked. - female or basic plumage male Cape May Warbler, Dendroica tigrina. p. 271 Whidenstirtace heavily: streaked Nasi ius amuses Meaah ML ba 47 Wider supraceiwithy little on iO) stealer jie vee en eyacen ie ies Mien Nh Bik 48 Superciliary pure white, undersurface whitish, culmen of male 14.4-16.9 (15.5), of female 14.2-16.4 (15.5) mm. Louisiana Waterthrush, Seiurus motacilla. p. 288 Superciliary buffy or dull white, undersurface usually tinged pale yellow, culmen of male 12.0-14.1 (13.2), of female 12.0-13.9 (13.1) mm. Northern Waterthrush, Seturus noveboracensis. p. 286 NVincRcoverts promimently tipped white: usa ats c:. ute ia cade ole meet 49 Nimo COVERS ENOL TIPPECs WiIItee ya Mune ic telson mere ARAL UM LN ous Uk 50 Upper surface yellowish green. female or immature Black-throated Green Warbler, Dendroica virens. p. 275 Base of primaries white. female Black-throated Blue Warbler, Dendroica caerulescens. p. 271 Base of primaries unmarked. Tennessee Warbler, Vermivora peregrina. p. 252 246 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 51. Crown bright green ‘or with patch of yellow...) 299-0 eee eee 52 Crown: dull green, blue,sor) blacks. 245) jl) eee 53 52. Rump yellow. adult male Yellow-rumped Warbler, Dendroica coronata coronata. p, 271 Rump streaked green and black. Chestnut-sided Warbler, Dendroica pensylvanica, p. 278 53. Crown blueor: black). 2.5.5. aes LS ee eee 54 Crowit) greens pices neh So ee 55 54. Crown blue. adult male Cerulean Warbler, Dendroica cerulea. p. 275 Crown black. male Blackpoll Warbler, Dendroica striata in alternate plumage. p. 282 55. Undertail coverts white. female or male in basic plumage Blackpoll Warbler, Dendroica striata. p. 282 Undertail coverts buffy. female or male in basic plumage Bay-breasted Warbler, Dendroica castanea. p. 280 MNIOTILTA VARIA (Linnaeus), Black-and-white Warbler, Reinita Trepedora Ficure 22 Motacilla varia Linnaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, vol. 1, p. 333. (Hispaniola.) Small; striped black and white. Description.—Length 108-125 mm. Adult male, crown black with white stripe down center; back and scapulars black, streaked white; rump and upper tail coverts black; middle and greater wing coverts black, tipped white, forming two wing bars; remiges dusky black, ter- tials edged with white; tail black with white patch on inner web of outer three pairs of rectrices; superciliary white; side of face black; moustachial stripe white; throat black; sides of breast, flanks, and un- dertail coverts striped black, rest of undersurface white. Adult female, like male but with throat, side of face and most of un- dersurface white. Measurements.—Males (10 from eastern North America, taken in April), wing 67.0-72.0 (69.4), tail 45.9-49.7 (47.4), culmen from base 11.1-13.7 (12.5), tarsus 15.2-17.2 (16.4) mm. Females (10 from eastern North America, taken in May), wing 62.0-68.0 (65.1), tail 45.6-48.6 (46.8), culmen from base 11.8-13.3 (12.6), tarsus 16.3-17.7 (16.9) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. The winter range is from the southern United States through the West Indies, Middle America, and northwestern South America to Venezuela and Ecuador. FAMILY PARULIDAE 247 Fairly common, arrives in Panama as early as August 24 (Arbib and Loetscher, Auk, 1935, p. 327), with some remaining until early April (April 4, 1911, Lion Hill, Canal Zone, specimen; April 5, 1976, Pipe- line Road, Canal Zone, Ridgely); commonest as a migrant in September through mid-October and March. The Black-and-white Warbler is found throughout the Republic in winter, although less numerous east of the Canal Zone; it is commonest in the lowlands, but I have seen it as high as 1560 m at Cerro Punta, Chiriqui. It has also been found on Taboga and Urava Islands and on San José on the Pearl Islands; the British Museum of Natural History has a specimen collected October 25, 1924, at sea in the Gulf of Panama. Ficure 22.—Black-and-white Warbler, Reinita Trepedora, Mniotilta varia, male. As a migrant and winter visitor the Black-and-white Warbler be- haves just as it does in the north, climbing the trunks and main branches of trees in search of insects. Buskirk et al. (Auk, 1972, p. 619) found that at Cerro Punta Black-and-white Warblers will join the local inter- specific flocks of insectivorous birds, but will not travel with them for any distance. I have also seen them with other migrant warblers. Skutch (A Naturalist in Costa Rica, 1971, p. 104) found that in Costa 248 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Rica Black-and-white Warblers maintain territories during the win- ter and may sing while driving away intruders. In Panama an in- dividual banded by H. Loftin September 7, 1963, at Almirante, Bocas del Toro was recaptured there on October 7, 1963, and January 8, 1964. One collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed HOsSi PROTONOTARIA CITREA (Boddaert): Prothonotary Warbler, Reinita Protonotaria Motacilla citrea Boddaert, Tabl. Planch. enlum., 1783, p. 44. (Louisiana.) Small; bright orange-yellow with gray wings and tail. Description.—Length 111-125 mm. Adult male, head, nape, and en- tire undersurface except undertail coverts bright orange-yellow; back yellowish olive-green, changing to bluish gray on rump and upper tail coverts; scapulars yellowish olive-green; wing coverts bluish gray; alula black with outer web broadly edged white; remiges black with outer web edged bluish gray and inner web edged white; rectrices gray with white patch on inner web of all but central pair; undertail coverts white; edge of wing yellow; underwing coverts white. Adult female, like male, but crown and hindneck as well as upper back yellowish olive-green; yellow on undersurface less orange. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 67.1-73.8 (70.8), tail 39.6-50.8 (45.9), culmen from base 13.1-14.7 (13.8), tarsus 15.6- S26) (793) eaoaaaae Females (10 from Panama), wing 64.0-70.1 (67.0), tail 42.3-51.1 (45.0), culmen from base 12.9-15.3 (13.8), tarsus 14.6-18.7 (17.5) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. It winters from southern Mexico to northern Colombia and Venezuela, and casually to Ecuador, the Guianas, and West Indies. Found throughout the Tropical Zone in wet localities, common in the lowlands in mangrove swamps and in thickets along streams, mainly those of larger size, but when in mi- gration these warblers may appear along the smaller tributaries in the mountain foothills to at least 300 m (Quebrada Cauchero, Serrania de Majé, Province of Panama, March 6, 1950). Most arrive from the north in September—the earliest report is August 1 (Eisenmann, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 50)—and are present until the middle of March, a few remaining later. Ridgely has found it as late as March 20, in 1979 at El Volcan, Chiriqui. The Prothonotary Warbler has been found on Isla Coiba, Taboga, Taboguilla, and Urava, and on San José, Rey, and Pacheca Islands in the Perlas group. FAMILY PARULIDAE 249 The main migration periods are September to mid-October and early February to mid-March; during the spring migration period nearly all the birds I collected were heavy with fat. For the most part, this species leaves Panama relatively early. In areas where they are common in mid-winter, such as Juan Diaz, Province of Panama, they have already decreased markedly by the beginning of March: in 1976 Ridgely found more than 40 there on January 24, but only 2 on March 10. They may remain more numerous later westward; Ridgely found more than 30 in mangroves at Estero Rico, western Chiriqui, on March 6, 1976. During migration, Prothonotary Warblers range from mangrove thickets to at least 30 m up in trees in swampy woods. On March 3, 1948, I saw dozens feeding in flowering trees at E] Rincon, Herrera. They feed commonly in Erythrina trees around Tocumen and else- where in the Canal Zone during January and February; often they are with Tennessee Warblers, orioles, and other species. On February 5, 1955, at Isla Taboga, at dusk over 100 descended on a group of trees; they were noisy and easy to approach, but were gone the next morning (F. O. Chapelle in litt. to Eisenmann). The weights of 3 collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) range from 12.4 to 13.5 g. HELMITHEROS VERMIVORUS (Gmelin): Worm-eating Warbler, Reinita Gusanera Motacilla vermivora Gmelin, Syst. Nat., vol. 1, pt. 2, 1789, p. 951. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ) Small; crown striped buff and black; rest of upper surface olive- green; undersurface cream buff. Description.—Length 112-131 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown striped light olive-buff and black; rest of upper surface, tail, and wing coverts olive-green; black line through eye; superciliary pale buff; side of head and upper breast olive-buff; flanks grayish olive; throat and rest of undersurface buffy white; underwing coverts buffy white. Measurements.—Males (10 from eastern North America, taken in April), wing 67.0-73.0 (69.6), tail 43.7-55.4 (49.4), culmen from base 13.9-15.6 (15.2), tarsus 17.0-19.3 (18.0) mm. Females (10 from eastern North America, taken in April and May), wing 64.1-70.5 (66.9), tail 43.2-53.7 (48.0), culmen from base 13.2- 15.8 (14.4), tarsus 16.8-18.6 (17.6) mm. Winter visitor from the north. Uncommon but regular in west, rarer eastward; recorded east to the Canal Zone (Barro Colorado Island) and eastern Province of Panama (Puerto San Antonio, on the Rio Bayano), the southern limit of its winter range. Several of the records 250 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 are from the Subtropical Zone forests of Chiriqui, at Santa Clara, Bar- riles, and Pena Blanca, above Boquete. Arcé obtained it in Veraguas at Santa Fé and Chitra. I have 1 from El Uracillo, on the Caribbean slope of Coclé, and there is 1 in the British Museum collected by McLeannan along the Panama Railroad. Specimens have been taken from October 12 (1938, Pena Blanca, Chiriqui) to March 16 (1954, Santa Clara, Chiriqui; 1927, Puerto San Antonio, Panama) and April 8 (1963, Almirante, by Olson). Netting at Almirante extends early and late dates from September 24, 1964, to April 17, 1965 (D. Hicks), and an extreme date of April 23,1963 (lorttin, Carib. Journ senya asa 154). A Worm-eating Warbler banded October 21, 1963, at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, was recaptured there on January 8, 1964 (Loftin et al., Bird-Banding, 1966, p. 41). Another individual caught in a mist net on the Chiva Chiva Road in the Canal Zone on December 15, 1968, weighed 12.9 g. VERMIVORA CHRYSOPTERA (Linnaeus): Golden-winged Warbler, Reinita Alidorada Motacilla chrysoptera Linnaeus, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, vol. 1, 1766, p. 333. (Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania. ) Small; crown yellow; yellow patch on wings; rest of upper surface gray; face and throat black or gray; undersurface white. Description.—Length 107-120 mm. Adult male, superciliary and cheek patch white; crown bright yellow; a large black patch covering orbital area and ear coverts; stripe on side of face white; most of mid- dle and greater wing coverts, forming a large yellow patch; tail gray with extensive white patch on inner web of outer three pairs of rec- trices; throat black; sides of breast and flanks light gray, rest of under- surface white; underwing coverts white. Adult female, like male, but crown sometimes tinged with olive- green; rest of upper surface varying from entirely gray to heavily suf- fused with olive-green; areas of face and throat that are black in male are gray in female. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 55.5-65.8 (61.3), tail 44.4-51.7 (48.4), culmen from base 12.2-13.8 (12.9), tarsus 15.6- 17.9 (16.7) mm: Females (10 from Panama, Costa Rica, and Colombia), wing 57.0- 61.2 (58.4), tail 42.7-51.9 (46.6), culmen from base 11.8-13.9 (12.4), tarsus 15.5-18.6 (17.1) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. It winters from Guate- FAMILY PARULIDAE 251 mala to central Colombia and northern Venezuela. Fairly common in the Tropical and Subtropical Zones, primarily recorded from the moun- tains of Chiriqui, where it has been collected as high as 2310 m ( Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 63), and in the Canal Zone (Barro Colorado Island, Lion Hill, Juan Mina). In Bocas del Toro the Golden-winged Warbler has been collected at Cocoplum (Chapman, Auk, 1931, p. 121) and at Almirante (Loftin and Olson, Carib. Journ. Sci., vol. 3, no. 4, 1963, pp. 194-195). On March 10, 1961, I took a male with no fat at Tacarcuna Village, Darién. Ridgely (in htt.) found as many as 12 above Santa Fé, Veraguas, on January 4, 1974. In Panama this species is most often noted while on migration, from mid-September to early November and late March to mid-April. The extreme dates are September 19 (Eisenmann, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. iMiArnes, 1952) p) 5b) and) April 18 (Lottinand Olson} op./cit.).. Buskirk et al. (Auk, 1972, p. 619), studying mixed species flocks at Cerro Punta, Chiriqui, found that Golden-winged Warblers were long- term followers in these flocks, although rarely were more than 1 or 2 individuals part of a flock. Ridgely notes that it usually occurs in forest canopy or at its edge and almost always with mixed flocks. This species often feeds by probing in clusters of dead leaves hanging from branches. There seem to be no reports from the drier parts of the Pacific slope lowlands from western Province of Panama, southern Coclé, and the Azuero Peninsula, and few east of the Canal Zone. Eisenmann and others have observed it occasionally on Cerro Campana and Cerro Azul, and he and Morton saw 1 on Isla Coiba on October 9, 1964. VERMIVORA PINUS (Linnaeus): Blue-winged Warbler, Reinita Aliazul Certhia pinus Linnaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, 1, p. 187. (Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. ) Small; crown and undersurface bright yellow; most of upper sur- face bright olive-green; wings and tail gray. Description.—Length 103-115 mm. Adult male, crown lemon yel- low; black line through eye; rest of upper surface bright olive-green; wings gray with middle and greater coverts tipped white, forming two wing bars; tail gray with large white patches on inner web of outer three pairs of rectrices; undertail coverts white; rest of undersurface lemon yellow; underwing coverts white. Adult female, like male, but crown duller, often greenish; line through eye paler; undersurface sometimes tinged with green. 252 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Measurements.—Males (10 from New Jersey, taken in May), wing 58.3-62.5 (60.1), tail 43.3-47.9 (46.5), culmen from base 11.3-12.5 (11.9), tarsus 16.0-18.0 (17.1) mm. Females (10 from New Jersey, taken in May), wing 55.0-59.0 (56.6), tail 42.2-46.6 (44.3), culmen from base 10.6-12.7 (11.7), tar- sus 15.9-17.8 (16.8) mm. Winter visitor from the north. This species normally winters from southern Mexico south to Nicaragua; in Panama it is a rare visitant infrequently recorded in the western Caribbean lowlands, both slopes of the Canal Zone, where it was first recorded on December 30, 1942, at Cano Saddle on the northwestern shore of Gatun Lake (Imhof, Auk, 1950, p. 256), and in the Province of Panama as far east as Chepo, where it has been collected once, March 7, 1927 (Griscom, Auk, 1933, p. 306). The Smithsonian has a specimen collected at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, on January 17, 1961. The Blue-winged Warbler has been found in Panama between mid-October and late March. An individual of the hybrid form known as “Brewster’s Warbler” was seen at Vol- can Lakes, Chiriqui, on January 13, 1977, by A. Greensmith (Toucan, vol. 4, no. 2, 1977, p.6). N. G. Smith (im litt. to Eisenmann) noted a bird with “no mask, whitish below with yellow breast patch” on the Siri Grande, Bocas del Toro, on January 8, 1964. VERMIVORA PEREGRINA (Wilson): Tennessee Warbler, Reinita Peregrina Syliva peregrina Wilson, Amer. Orn., vol. 3, 1811, p. 83, pl. 25, fig. 2. (Banks of the Cumberland River, Tennessee. ) Small; upper surface mostly bright olive-green; undersurface mostly white. Description.—Length 103-113 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown and hindneck bright olive-green, sometimes partially replaced by gray in birds from February or later; rest of upper surface bright olive-green, more yellowish on rump and upper tail coverts; tail blackish, edged bright olive-green; superciliary white or yellowish white; undersurface white or suffused to greater or lesser degree with greenish yellow; un- dertail coverts white; underwing coverts white. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 60.5-65.2 (62.8), tail 40.3-45.3 (42.8), culmen from base 10.3-11.9 (11.2), tarsus 15.4- 18.1 (16.7) mm. Females (10 from Panama), wing 57.2-64.1 (62.0), tail 37.8-46.9 (41.2), culmen from base 10.6-12.3 (11.4), tarsus 14.1-17.2 (16.3) mm. FAMILY PARULIDAE Ze Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Winters from southern Mexico to Colombia and Venezuela. Very common in the Tropical and Subtropical Zones on both Atlantic and Pacific slopes of Panama east through Chiriqui (especially in the mountains), Veraguas, and Bocas del Toro; fairly common farther east. The species has been recorded on Isla Coiba, Taboga and Taboguilla islands, and San José, Saboga, and FE] Rey (San Miguel) islands in the Perlas Archipelago. Aldrich pndnBole (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 123) found the Tennessee Warbler to be the most abundant of all the North American migrants on the western slope of the Azuero Penin- sula. This species is more tolerant of conspecifics than are most winter- ing warblers. Early on the morning of March 19, 1957, on the Rio Oria, in southern Los Santos, I flushed a migrant flock of more than 100 from the edge of a stream where they had come down to drink. They flew in a fairly close formation, like goldfinches, and swarmed through the trees. In addition to insects, nectar is an important food of Tennessee War- blers in winter. Tramer and Kemp (Auk, 1979, pp. 186-187) describe how in Costa Rica individual birds defend from conspecifics as large a section as they can of a flowering Erythrina tree. Morton (pers. comm.) has observed similar behavior in Panama. Skutch (pers. comm. to Ridgely) has found the Tennessee Warbler the only parulid to come to his bird feeder. When foraging for insects, the birds are found from open lawns to forest canopy, usually in groups. Tennessee Warblers are present in Panama from mid-September until late April. Ridgely and J. Pujals saw 1 at Ft. Sherman, Canal Zone, on May 1, 1976. Six were banded at the Gorgas Memorial Lab- oratory Station at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, between April 18-24, 1963 (Loftin and Olson, Carib. Journ. Sci., vol. 3, no. 4, 1963, p. 195). Recaptures of birds at Almirante show that some spend several weeks or possibly the entire winter there; an individual banded on October 21, 1963, was recaptured there on February 25, 1964 (Loftin et al., Bird- Banding, 1966, p. 41). Another banded at Almirante on October 21, 1964, was recaptured there the following year on October 20, 1965 (Loftin et al., Bird-Banding, 1967, p. 151). One collected by Burton Chul Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p..85), at Jaqué, Darien; weighed) 7.5 ¢g: The record by Murphy (Fish and Wildlife Service Spec. Sci. Rep Fisheries, no. 279 [mimeo], 1958, p. 110) of the Nashville Warbler, Vermivora ruficapilla, near Coiba and off the Gulf of Panama in No- vember 1956 refers to the Tennessee Warbler, the notes having been placed inadvertantly under the wrong heading. 254 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A [VERMIVORA RUFICAPILLA (Wilson): Nashville Warbler, Reinita Cabecigris Sylvia ruficapilla Wilson, 1811, Amer. Ornith., 3, p. 120, pl. 27, fig. 3. (Near Nashville, Tennessee.) An individual of this species was reported seen at Santa Clara, Chiri- qui, on January 2, 1980, by P. E. Donohue and J. Van Os (Ridgely, in hitt.). The normal winter range is from southern Texas and Mexico to Guatemala.] VERMIVORA GUTTURALIS (Cabanis): Flame-throated Warbler, Reinita Gargantirroja Compsothlypis gutturalis Cabanis, 1860, Journ. f. Ornith., 8, p. 329. (Irazu, Costa Rica.) Small; throat and breast bright orange; upper surface gray with black triangular patch on back. Description.—Length 106-116 mm. Adult (sexes alike), entire up- per surface slate gray except for black triangular patch on upper back; primaries blackish with outer web narrowly edged slate gray; secon- daries blackish on inner web, slate gray on outer web; rectrices blackish with outer web edged slate gray; lores and side of face blackish; throat and breast rich orange to cadmium orange (sometimes almost flame scarlet) flanks light gray; rest of undersurface white. Juvenile, upper surface olive-gray with blackish triangular patch on back; wings and tail dusky, with narrow buffy tips to upper wing co- verts; lores and face dusky; narrow, buff postocular stripe; chin and throat orange-yellow, fading to buff on abdomen. A female taken March 2, 1965, at Volcan de Chiriqui, Chiriqui, had the iris dark brown; base of gonys and lower margin of mandibular rami dull orange-yellow; rest of bill black; tarsus and toes dull mouse brown; claws somewhat darker brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 61.4-65.1 (63.2), tail 43.6-52.0 (47.6), culmen from base 12.3-13.8 (13.0), tarsus 16.2-18.1 (17.3) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 57.0-65.0 (60.4), tail 42.8-50.7 (46.2), culmen from base 10.6-13.1 (12.4), tarsus 16.0- 17.6 (16.8) mm. Resident. Fairly common in forest and forest borders of western Chiriqui (Volcan de Chiriqui, Cerro Punta, and Boquete), where it has been collected between 1560 and 3090 m (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, pp. 557-558). Of the specimens collected by Mon- niche at the elevations given by Blake, “well over half’? were taken be- FAMILY PARULIDAE 255 low 1800 m. This species is also found in the mountains of Costa Rica. Four specimens from January and February 1902 labeled by Batty, Brava Island, Chiriqui, and Cébaco Island, Veraguas, are certainly er- roneously marked (Eisenmann, Auk, 1950, p. 364). The Flame-throated Warbler feeds in typical warbler fashion, moy- ing quickly through the branches of shrubs and trees in search of in- sects; it ranges from treetops to lower levels at woodland edges and shrubby clearings. It often hangs down from pendant leaves that it examines carefully. Buskirk et al. (Auk, 1972, p. 619), studying inter- specific foraging flocks at Cerro Punta, considered this species a long- term follower in such flocks, although rarely were more than 2 indi- viduals part of any flock. Ridgely (1976, p. 292) describes the song as “a weak dry buzz, zeeeeoo.” Mr. and Mrs. Rodman Ward (in litt. to Eisenmann) reported seeing this species on April 3, 1959, at 2300 m on Cerro Punta and watched 1 as it uttered a buzz zeeeeee-u (slightly inflected at the end), and heard (without seeing the singer) a very high- pitched buzzy tsip-i-tsip-i-tsip-i-tee. Eisenmann has heard only call notes such as tsip; tick, tick; or dick dick. Nothing is recorded about the nesting habits of this bird in Panama, but Skutch (Nutt. Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, pp. 137-143) has studied it in detail in Costa Rica, where he found them nesting from mid-March through June. Half the nests Skutch found were well up in trees, be- tween 6 and 25 m from the ground, and half were in niches on grassy banks. All the nests, whether terrestrial or arboreal, though not roofed, were well covered by growing vegetation, either by dense grass or moss or by epiphytes or broad-leafed bromeliads on trees. The nest, built entirely by the female, is made primarily of green moss and liverworts; some fine plant fibers and horsehair may be used in the lining, but even here green moss predominates. One nest measured by Skutch was 8 cm in height by 10 or 12 cm in diameter; the cavity was 5 cm in diameter by 3 cm deep. In every case that Skutch could determine, the clutch was 2 eggs, these vary in pattern from unspotted white to faintly and finely sprinkled with brown over the entire surface. Measurements of 4 eggs were from 16.2 12.9 to 19.0 13.1 mm. Incubation is done exclusively by the female and takes approximately 16 days. The young hatch with orange-pink skin and long but sparse gray down. Their mouth lining is yellow on the marginal regions and pink or pale red in the more central and deeper regions, unlike the mouth linings of most passerine nestlings, which are uniform yellow or yellow-orange. The young are fed small green caterpillars by both parents and leave the nest at approximately 13 days. 256 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 [PARULA AMERICANA (Linnaeus ): Northern Parula, Reinita Nortena Parus americanus Linnaeus, 1758, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, 1, p. 190. (South Carolina.) There are two recent sightings of this species, both from Galeta Island, Canal Zone: one was found there by J. Pujals and others on January 21, 1976, the other was seen on March 4, 1977, by Pujals and S. Stokes (Ridgely, im litt.). Both appeared to be adult males. Puyjals reports that on March 4, 1977, when he saw the Northern Parula, he also saw a Palm Warbler (Dendroica palmarum), a species whose tropical winter range is also mainly in the West Indies. The Northern Parula normally winters in Florida, the West Indies, Mexico, and Central America south to Nicaragua.| PARULA PITIAYUMI (Vieillot): Tropical Parula, Reinita Mariquita Sylvia pitiayumi Vieillot, 1817, Nouv. Dict. Hist. Nat., ed., 11, p. 276. (Paraguay. ) Very small; upper surface dull, dark blue; most of undersurface rich yellow with throat and breast brownish orange. Description.—Length 88-110 mm. Adult (sexes alike), lores, sides of head dull indigo blue to bluish slate gray, except for triangular olive- green patch in center of back; extent, if any, of white tipping on mid- dle and greater wing coverts varying geographically; rectrices black with outer webs edged blue and broad subterminal patch of white on the inner web of two outermost pairs; throat and breast deep orange- ochraceous; sides and flanks blue; rest of undersurface to undertail coverts rich lemon yellow; undertail coverts white; underwing coverts white. Parula pitiayumi is one of the most widely distributed of the tropical warblers, although its range is discontinuous and the bird is often ab- sent from humid lowland forest areas; it breeds from southern Texas south through Mexico, Central America, Panama, and in South Amer- ica from Colombia to the Guianas, Peru, Bolivia, Uruguay, and north- ern Argentina. Fourteen races are recognized, of which 3 occur in Panama—-speciosa in lower highlands and foothills of western Panama, cirrha on Isla Coiba off Veraguas, and nana in the lowlands and lower foothills of eastern Province of Panama and Darién. In Panama, the Tropical Parula is a bird of tall forest, but elsewhere, in southern Texas and eastern Venezuela and the chaco of southern South America, for example, it inhabits low, dry woodlands, and in the Cauca Valley of Colombia it lives in semi-arid cultivated valleys with scattered trees. It is a very active feeder, reminiscent of the Northern Parula. It often feeds in flowering trees. 1 have sometimes seen them with flocks of FAMILY PARULIDAE 257 migrant warblers. The song, in Chiriqui “a buzzy trill, typically tsip- tsip-tsip-tsip-tsip-tsrrrrrrrrrrip, with variations” (Ridgely, 1976, p. 292), is delivered throughout the day, and through many months of the nonbreeding season, when most other birds are silent. PARULA PITIAYUMI SPECIOSA (Ridgway) Compsothlypis pitiayumi speciosa Ridgway, 1902, Auk, 19, p. 69. (Boquete, Chiri- qui, Panama.) Characters.—Sides of face blackish; lower throat and breast orange- ochraceous; abdomen yellow; one short white wing bar or spot formed by tipping on the greater wing coverts. A male collected March 22, 1965, at El Volcan, Chiriqui, had the iris dark brown, cutting edge of maxilla and mandible light yellow; rest of maxilla black; tarsus dull brown; toes dull honey yellow; claws dull grayish brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 49.0-55.0 (52.0), tail 36.7-41.0 (38.5), culmen from base 9.6-11.5 (10.5), tarsus 15.0-16.9 (15.9) mm. Females (9 from Chiriqui), wing 48.0-49.9 (49.0), tail 34.9-38.8 (36.9), culmen from base 9.6-11.1 (10.3, average of 8), tarsus 14.6- 16.4 (15.4) mm. Resident. Fairly common in forests in the lower highlands of Chiriqui and in the foothills of Veraguas and Herrera. W. W. Brown, Jr. (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 63) col- lected it at Boquete, Chiriqui between 1000 and 1350 m, and Monniche (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 558) found it at vari- ous localities on the Volcan de Chiriqui between 1560 and 1920 m. An unusual record is the specimen taken by J. W. Batty on Brava Island, off the coast of Chiriqui on January 28, 1902, but like many Batty speci- mens this is probably erroneously labeled (Eisenmann, Auk, 1950, p. 364). In Veraguas and Herrera it has been recorded from 450 to 600 m; Arcé collected it in Veraguas at Colobre (Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr.-Amer., Aves, vol. 1, (pt. 6), 1880, p. 120). Nothing has been published on this species’ nesting behavior in Pan- ama, but Skutch (Nutt. Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, pp. 143-146) has found a nest of P. p. speciosa in Costa Rica. On May 6, 1964, he observed a female carrying material to a cushion of green moss about 10 m up ona nearly vertical branch of a tree in a grove near heavy forest; the nest was within the cushion of moss, with a round entrance on the side. Skutch never saw the eggs from this nest, but mentions that in Trini- dad they have “an almost glossless white ground .. . [and are] spotted 258 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 and blotched with deep or pale chestnut, forming a more or less distinct cap on the broader end.”’ Three weeks after discovery, the nest con- tained 3 well-feathered nestlings in the entrance; both parents were bringing them green caterpillars, a small, green, grasshopper-like in- sect, and tiny white protein corpuscles from a Cecro pia tree. Ridgely (im litt.) reports that on June 7, 1969, he found a nest near FE] Volcan. It was on the underside of a moss-covered limb, “burrowed into the moss,” about 10 m up in a roadside tree, in a patch of humid woodland, 5.1 km below E1 Volcan, on the highway. Some grass and twigs projected from the nest. PARULA PITIAYUMI CIRRHA Wetmore Parula pitiayumi cirrha Wetmore, 1957, Smiths. Misc. Coll., 134 (9), p. 88. (isla Coiba, Panama.) Characters.—More deeply colored above and below than P. p. spe- ciosa; green patch on back very small; sides of face blackish-blue; throat lemon chrome; lower breast and abdomen orange, continuous with chest color; conspicuous white spot on greater wing coverts. Mcasurements.—Males (4 from Isla Coiba), wing 52.4-58.5 (55.8), tail 39.2-41.7 (40.8), culmen from base 12.1-12.8 (12.5), tarsus 15.7- 17.8 (16.8) mm. Females (2 from Isla Coiba), wing 53.5-54.7 (54.1), tail 39.2-39.8 (39.5), culmen from base 11.7-12.6 (12.2), tarsus 16.7-16.8 (16.8) mm. Resident on Isla Coiba. On three occasions during my visit to Isla Coiba in 1966 I saw pairs of these birds moving quickly among leafly twigs in the high branches of tall forest trees, so high above the ground that they were barely within gunshot. Except for their restless move- ments they would never have been detected in the shaded light of these forest haunts. Only occasionally did they appear briefly in silhouette against some tiny opening that led to the open sky. Probably they were fairly common, as the forest cover of the entire great island was suited to their needs. During a short stay (October 8-10, 1965) Eisenmann and E. S. Morton found the Coiba birds common in all woodland, usually in pairs between 1 and 8 m up in trees, on the border of woods or partly cut- over forest. None were singing. On Ridgely’s visit (April 9-14, 1976) he found the birds singing very persistently and saw them at all levels in the forest. FAMILY PARULIDAE 259 PARULA PITIAYUMI NANA (Griscom) Compsothlypis pitiayumi nana Griscom, 1927, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 282, p. 8. (Cape Garachiné, eastern Panama [ = Darién].) Characters.—Smaller than P. p. speciosa; sides of face same color as crown, lighter than in P. p. speciosa.; two white wing bars formed by tipping on middle and greater wing coverts. Measurements.—Male (1 from Darién), wing 49.0, tail 36.8, cul- men from base 10.6, tarsus 15.0 mm. Female (1 from Darien, the type), wing 47.2, tail 31.7, culmen from base 10.4, tarsus 14.2 mm. Resident. Local, but in some areas common in the lowlands and lower foothills of eastern Province of Panama (“hills just east of Chepo, on road from Platanares to Jésus Maria, eastward; common in Bayano River valley” (Ridgely, 1976, p. 292) and in Darién, where it is known from Garachiné, the type locality, and from Cana, where R. R. Benson collected a “breeding”’ female in the spring or summer of 1923 (Griscom, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 69, 1929, p. 183). Gris- com (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 367) assigned this race to the “Arid Tropical Zone,” although Cana is in fact humid. Nothing is recorded of its breeding in Panama or in northwest Colombia, where it also occurs. In mid-January 1975 Ridgely twice observed pairs feed- ing fledged young on middle slopes of Cerro Quia (500-670 m). Ridgely also found this species at Cana, where they were uncommon, but has not seen it in the lowlands of Darién. The birds from the Bayano River basin have been assumed to be nana, although specimens have not been collected. DENDROICA PETECHIA (Linnaeus): Yellow Warbler, Reinita Mangletera FIGURE 23 Motacilla petechia Linnaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, 1, p. 334. (Barbados.) Small; mostly bright yellow, more greenish on upper surface; male of resident races with entire head and upper breast reddish brown, chest, and sides streaked reddish brown; males of migrant races have reddish brown only as streaks on breast, chest, and sides. Description.—Length 110-117 mm. Adult male of resident races, entire head, throat, and breast reddish brown (in jubaris mixed with yellow); rest of upper surface yellowish green, slightly lighter on rump; wing feathers dusky blackish, edged lemon yellow; on remiges 260 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 edge of inner web also lemon yellow; rectrices dusky blackish, edged yellow on outer web with much of inner web also yellow; rest of under- surface and underwing coverts yellow, with fine reddish brown streaks on chest and flanks. Adult male of migrant races, similar, but brown of head and throat replaced with yellow, bright on crown; reddish brown streaking begins at breast. fj wiki Sd ] Mee VYWUVEZ zw ~ 7p lie Ficure 23.—Yellow Warbler, Reinita Mangletera, Dendroica petechia, a male of the erithachorides (Mangrove Warbler) group. FAMILY PARULIDAE 261 Adult female, like male, but paler, duller yellow throughout, and reddish brown areas absent or fainter and reduced. Immature, like female, but paler. The Yellow Warbler is the only member of its family represented in Panama by both migrant and resident races. Dendroica petechia com- prises three groups of subspecies that were once considered separate species: the yellow-headed aestiva group (Yellow Warbler), which is mainland North American in distribution and chiefly migratory, the chestnut-capped petechia group (Golden Warbler) of the West Indies, most of coastal Venezuela and Cozumel Island, and the chestnut- hooded erithachorides group (Mangrove Warbler) of both coasts of Central and South America to Peru on the Pacific side and to the Para- guana Peninsula of Venezuela on the Atlantic side. Except when they occur on relatively small islands, birds of the petechia and erithacho- rides groups are usually confined to coastal mangrove swamps. Mi- grants are widely distributed in the lowlands in semi-open areas and gardens, as well as in mangroves. Recent works (e.g., Lowery and Monroe, in Peters, Check-list Birds World, vol. 14, 1968, pp. 14-20) include the erithachorides and aestiva groups in the species petechia. Large series of specimens from Pan- ama and Colombia recently studied by Olson (Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., vol. 93, no. 2, 1980, pp. 473-480) corroborate this treatment. The Yellow Warblers on the Pacific Coast from Panama to Peru exhibit a gradation in plumage characters from birds of the chestnut-hooded erithachorides group to those resembling the chestnut-capped petechia group. The subspecies on the Galapagos and Cocos Island is presum- ably derived from the erithachorides group, but is convergently similar to the West Indian birds. The song, behavior, and diet of the resident races of the Yellow War- bler are similar to those of North American forms, except that, as noted, the former are usually confined to mangroves. The stomach of a resident individual collected in the Canal Zone by E. A. Goldman on May 30, 1911, contained 2 blunt caterpillar jaws 5%, 3 entire spider eggs parasitized by a hymenopteran, and fragments of others 35%, a tipulid 12%, head of a hymenopteran 1%, moth remains 1%, 14 heads and other remains of ants 30%, a small chrysomelid 1%, weevil re- mains 1%, 4 beetles ( Nitidulidae, Colastus?) 5%, other coleoptera 9%. Apparently these birds breed somewhat irregularly: of 2 adult males I collected at La Honda, Los Santos, in March 1948, 1 was singing and in full breeding condition, while the other, like it in plumage, had the testes small. 262 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 The migrant races of the Yellow Warbler are very common in the lowlands of both slopes and on the islands off the Pacific Coast, as well as inland. They are found in a variety of habitats from forest border to mangrove to gardens and grassy areas at the edge of taller vegetation. They often deliver chip or tsip notes, but I have never heard a migrant or wintering Yellow Warbler sing in Panama; Skutch (A Naturalist in Costa Rica, 1971, p. 104), however, has found individuals maintain- ing a winter territory from which they may sing while driving away in- truders. A male of one of the migrant races collected by E. A. Gold- man at Cana, Darién on March 19, 1912, contained 1 Leptostylus sp. 25%, 2 small cerambycids 2%, 1 elatrid 2%, 3 minute calandrids 4%, another beetle 2%, bits of a membracid 2%, caterpillar remains 25%, an arachnid and 1 egg 3%, 12 ants 30%, 2 other Hymenoptera 5%. In the Canal Zone, Eisenmann considers the migratory Yellow War- bler, during the months of the northern winter, the fourth most com- mon parulid, exceeded in numbers only by the Bay-breasted, Chestnut- sided, and Tennessee Warblers. H. von Wedel (Peters, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 71, 1931, p. 333) collected a migrant female at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, on August 13, 1928, and L. L. Jewel (Auk, 1913, p. 428) recorded it at Gatun, Canal Zone, on May 12, 1912. Most migrants do not arrive before late Au- gust, and depart by late April. A Yellow Warbler banded at Almirante on November 11, 1962, was recaptured there 9 weeks later, on January 9, 1963 (Loftin, Bird-Banding, 1963, p. 220). Mr. M. Ralph Browning has very kindly identified the migrant Yel- low Warblers from Panama now in the Smithsonian collections. DENDROICA PETECHIA AMNICOLA Batchelder Dendroica aestiva amnicola Batchelder, 1918, Proc. New England Zool. Club, 6, p. 82. (Curslet, Newfoundland. ) Characters.—“Similar to D. a. aestiva, but stated to differ in the male sex by darker green, less yellowish—between warbler green and sul- phine yellow—back; more restricted and duller yellow of the forehead; narrower as well as duller, citron yellow rather than strontian yellow, edges to the remiges; and on average less richly colored underparts with darker chestnut streaks; female duskier, less yellowish above. .. . distinguished [from rubiginosa] by the yellow forehead contrasting with the green of the back.” (Hellmayr, Field Mus. Nat. Hist. Zool. Ser.) vol, 13, pt,/81935).p) 563)) The race amnicola breeds from north-central Alaska to central Labra- FAMILY PARULIDAE 263 dor and south to central Alaska, northeastern British Columbia and across Canada to south-central Quebec, Newfoundland, and the Magda- len Islands; it winters from southern Baja California and central Mexico south to Peru, Colombia, and French Guiana. The 17 specimens of this race in the Smithsonian Institution collected in Panama were taken on the Pacific slope from San Félix, Chiriqui, to La Jagua in eastern Province of Panama, and on the Caribbean slope from Almirante, Bocas del Toro, to Juan Mina, Rio Chagres, Canal Zone. I also have specimens from Isla Cébaco and Isla Coiba, off the Pacific Coast of Veraguas. M. EF. Davidson collected a female at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, on November 27, 1929 (California Academy of Science no. 32798). DENDROICA PETECHIA RUBIGINOSA (Pallas) Motacilla rubiginosa Pallas, 1811, Zoogr. Rosso-Asiat., 1, p. 496. (Kodiak Island, Alaska.) Characters.—Similar to aestiva, but slightly smaller and much duller in color. Adult male darker and dull olive-green above, the pileum con- color with the back or else becoming slightly more yellowish on fore- head (very rarely distinctly yellowish on forehead and forepart of crown); wing edgings less conspicuous, mostly yellowish olive-green, sometimes inclining to yellow on greater coverts. Adult female darker and duller olive greenish above, duller yellow below. (Ridgway, U.S. Nat. Mus., Bull. 50, pt. 2, 1902, p. 514) This race breeds on the west coast of North America from southern Alaska to western British Columbia. It winters from Mexico to Pan- ama. Five specimens from Panama were taken at Pedasi, Los Santos, and La Jagua and Chiman, Province of Panama, on the Pacific slope, and at Juan Mina, Rio Chagres, Canal Zone, and Puerto Obaldia, San Blas, on the Caribbean slope. All were females or immature males. M. E. Davidson took a female at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, on No- vember 27, 1929 (California Academy of Science no. 32799) and Gris- com identified specimens from Almirante, Bocas del Toro, as belonging EO this race ( Peters, Bull. Mus. Comp, Zool., vol. 71, 1931, p. 333). DENDROICA PETECHIA AESTIVA (Gmelin) Motacilla aestiva Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1 (2), p. 996. (City of Quebec, Canada.) Characters —Upper surface more decidedly olive-green, the upper tail coverts with less yellow; streaks on chest and sides much broader than in other races. 264 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 The race aestiva breeds from southeastern Alberta across Canada to Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia and south to central southern Montana, central Oklahoma, northern Arkansas, central Alabama, central Georgia, and central South Carolina. It winters from central Mexico to Peru and northern Brazil. Nineteen specimens of aestiva in the Smithsonian collection from Panama were all from the Pacific slope, from Puerto Armuelles, Chiri- qui, through Los Santos and Herrera to El Llano on the Rio Bayano, Province of Panama, and El Real, Darién. Four were taken on Isla Coiba, Veraguas, and 1 on Isla de Canfas, in the Pearl Islands Archi- pelago. One at Buena Vista, Chiriqui, was at 690 m. A male in the British Museum (no. 85.3.8.387) was taken by Arcé in 1868 at Calove- vora, Veraguas, on the Caribbean slope. Of the several taken in March, only 1 male showed extensive streaking. Ralph Browning has found that 2 Yellow Warblers from Panama in the Smithsonian collection are from a distinctive population from Nebraska that is characterized by more heavy streaking than in aestiva, morcoml, or sonorana, more intense yellow on the undersurface, and, on the upper surface, it is usually paler than all other races except sonorana. This population may merit description as a new subspecies. The 2 Panama specimens are USNM no. 386476, a male taken at Jaqué, Darién, on April 8, 1946, and USNM no. 457705, a female from Ft. Clayton, Canal Zone, taken September 22, 1953. DENDROICA PETECHIA MORCOMI Coale Dendroica aestiva morcom Coale, 1887, Bull. Ridgway Ornith. Club, no. 2, p. 82. (Fort Bridger, Utah [ = Wyoming].) Dendroica aestiva brewsteri Grinnell, 1903, Condor, 5, p. 72. (Palo Alto, Cali- fornia.) Dendroica aestiva ineditus Phillips, 1911, Auk, 28, p. 85. (Matamoros, Tamauli- pas, Mexico.) Characters.—Slightly larger than aestiva, duller (less yellow) green coloration; breast streaking heavy. This race breeds from western Washington, central British Colum- bia, and eastern Montana south to southern California and northwest- ern Baja California across to northwestern Texas. It winters from Baja California to Ecuador, northern Colombia, Venezuela, and French Guiana. Three specimens from Panama are all males: USNM no. 461264 from San Félix, Chiriqui, February 21, 1956; no. 533282 from Punta Balsa, Chiriqui, February 25, 1966; and no. 462376, from Pedasi, Los Santos, March 9, 1957. FAMILY PARULIDAE 265 Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 367) recorded the subspecies sonorana from Veraguas and the Canal Zone but there are no specimens from Panama identified as sonorana in either the Mu- seum of Comparative Zoology (fide R. A. Paynter, Jr.) or the Ameri- can Museum of Natural History (fide W. E. Lanyon). Nor are there any specimens of this subspecies in the extensive Smithsonian holdings of migrant D. petechia from Panama. D. a. sonorana breeds in the southwestern United States and northern Mexico and reputedly win- ters as far south as Colombia and Ecuador, so it might be expected to -occur in Panama. This remains to be confirmed, however. DENDROICA PETECHIA AEQUATORIALIS Sundevall Dendroica petechia aequatorialis Sundevall, 1870, Ofv. K. Sv. Vet.-Akad. Forh., 26 (1869), p. 609. (Panama City.) Characters.—Male with crown, cheeks, and throat uniform brown, but of a lighter shade than in aithocorys, upper breast streaked with yellow. A male collected at Chico, Province of Panama, on March 24, 1961, had the iris wood brown; maxilla fuscous; base of mandibular rami across base of gonys dull buffy brown, rest of mandible dull neutral gray; tarsus and toes dull honey yellow; claws mouse brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Province of Panama), wing 59.8- 63.5 (62.5), tail 43.6-48.8 (47.1), culmen from base 11.1-13.0 (12.0), tarsus 17.3-18.8 (18.2) mm. Females (10 from Province of Panama), wing 58.5-62.5 (59.6), tail 39.3-49.3 (45.6), culmen from base 11.5-13.3 (12.2), tarsus 17.1- 18.7 (17.9) mm. Resident. Common but somewhat local on the Pacific Coast of the Province of Panama and on the Pearl Islands. On the mainland it is usually found in mangroves, but occasionally in other vegetation ad- jacent to salt water. They are, for example, widespread on the forti- fied islands of Ft. Amador, in scrub and low dry woods. In 1944, how- ever, on San José and Pedro Gonzalez islands in the Pearl Archipelago, I found that Yellow Warblers were distributed widely through the higher forest growths. This is probably due to the absence of compet- ing small insectivores such as are found on the mainland. On San José I recorded them away from the shore, mainly in the taller trees near or over water, but on Pedro Gonzalez they were common over the forested hills far from any such habitat. Because of the heavy vegetation they were more evident along the shores, as elsewhere they remained con- 266 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 cealed in the leaves 20 to 25 m from the ground. In various places small trees with thin, light green leaves grew along the shore, often projecting out from rocky ledges or sandy banks over the tide line. These were favorite haunts, as were open-branched trees growing at the tops of higher, steeper bluffs. A male I collected on San José on February 19 was in breeding condition. As Thayer and Bangs (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 46, 1905, pp. 155-156) noted, males from the Pearl Islands sometimes have the yel- low portions of the plumage replaced with orange; there are 2 such males from San José in the Smithsonian collection. Some of the adult males from Majé, on the mainland, show traces of yellow in the cheeks, perhaps an indication of intergradation with the race jubaris. The songs of aequatorialis in Panama City (heard at a mangrove islet near Old Panama on July 16, 1950) reminded Eisenmann of that of aestiva in New York, and were of two types, both rather sweet: chee, chee, chee, wichoo-eécha, with variants, and a more ringing swee, swee, swee, chéw, chichoo cheéoo. Calls were chip (or chit) and a fast chit- chitchitchitchit. DENDROICA PETECHIA AITHOCORYS Olson Dendroica petechia atthocorys Olson, 1980, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 93(2), pp. 474-475. (5 miles east of La Honda, near Los Santos, Los Santos Province, Panama. ) Characters.—Compared to aequatorialis, male with brown portions darker, upper breast not streaked with yellow; females of both races variable, but aithocorys generally with more streaking below than aequatorialis. A male collected at Puerto Aguadulce, Coclé, on March 11, 1962, had the iris light dull reddish brown; maxilla and tip of mandible fuscous- black; base of mandible dull neutral gray; tarsus and toes light buffy brown; claws neutral gray. A female taken the same day had the cutting edge of maxilla and mandible dull light neutral gray; rest of maxilla fuscous-black; tarsus and toes and claws dull brown. Another male collected at Aguadulce on January 18, 1963, had the iris dark brown; maxilla fuscous-black; basal half of gonys dull flesh color; rest dull gray; tarsus and toes dull verona brown; claws dark mouse brown; underside of toes dull honey yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from western Panama), wing 59.3-66.0 (63.6), tail 45.6-51.1 (48.6), culmen from base 12.2-13.9 (12.9), tar- sus 17.7-19.3 (18.5) mm. FAMILY PARULIDAE 267 Females (10 from western Panama), wing 58.5-65.5 (61.1), tail 43.3-48.4 (46.7), culmen from base 11.8-13.6 (12.7), tarsus 16.2-19.6 (18.1) mm. Resident. Common in mangroves on the Pacific Coast of western Panama from at least as far west as Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, east as far as Puerto Aguadulce, Coclé, and on Isla Coiba off the coast of Veraguas. On Coiba this species is confined to the coastal mangroves; in this it differs from populations on other islands in Panama that are often found in tall forest far from salt water. In the Aguadulce area of Coclé there is some intergradation with aequatorialis. At Puerto Aguadulce on July 4, 1952, Eisenmann saw at least 5 in the coastal mangroves. A male, accompanied by a female, sang a very fast tit-tit-tit-tit-teé. The population on Isla Bolanos and possibly Isla Parida, Chiriqui, about 45 km southeast of David, may merit recognition. A male and 2 females collected on Isla Bolanos are like aithocorys in plumage, but are evidently larger (Olson, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., vol. 93, no. 1, 1980, p. 475). Yellow Warblers are also found on nearby Isla Parida, but none have been collected there. DENDROICA PETECHIA IGUANAE Olson Dendroica petechia iguanae Olson, 1980, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 93(2), pp. 475- 476. (Isla Iguana, Los Santos Province, Panama.) Characters.—Male nearest aithocorys, but brown of head much darker, less rufescent; green of dorsum darker, less yellowish, breast and particularly the lower belly more densely streaked with chestnut; yellow of underparts and tail darker, appearing dingy and greenish. Female like aithocorys, but tending to be more heavily streaked, yellow of underparts dingier, as in the male. Measurements.—Males (7 from Isla Iguana), wing 61.6-67.4 (65.0), tail 47.2-52.9 (50.1), culmen from base 12.4-14.4 (13.4), tar- sus 17.1-19.8 (19.1) mm. Females (4 from Isla Iguana), wing 61.5-62.6 (62.0), tail 47.4-49.2 (47.8), culmen from base 12.2-12.9 (12.5), tarsus 17.8-20.0 (19.0) mm. Resident. Found only on Isla Iguana, Los Santos, a small island probably less than 1 km? in area, lying approximately 6 km from the mainland, about 7 km east-northeast of Pedasi and 18 km north of Punta Mala, on the eastern coast of the Azuero Peninsula (7°38/N, 80°W ). Iguana is the only offshore island along the eastern and south- 268 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 ern coasts of the Azuero Peninsula. Considering that, with the possible exception of birds from Isla Bolafos, mentioned earlier, none of the island populations of Yellow Warblers in Panama have differentiated from those of the mainland, it is rather surprising to find that those of Isla Iguana are so distinct. Even in the field their more greenish colora- tion is noticeable. The fauna of Isla Iguana is dominated by a great nesting colony of Magnificent Frigatebrids (Fregata magnificens) interspersed with Brown Pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis). During my visit in February 1957, the Yellow Warbler was the only abundant small bird on the is- land, where it ranged everywhere, from the tall bunch grass above the rocky shore to the scrub forest inland. I saw them hopping about on bare rocks above the high-tide mark in early morning, and 15 or 20 ranged about the outdoor kitchen near the house, where they came out familiarly on low perches, as well as higher among the leaves of the trees. In the forest I found them often examining tufts of leaves almost among the frigatebirds perched in the branches. Many were in pairs, and males sang occasionally, though they were not breeding. DENDROICA PETECHIA ERITHACHORIDES Baird Dendroica erthtachorides [sic] Baird, 1858, in Baird, Cassin, and Lawrence, Rept. Expl. Surv. R.R. Pacific, 9, p. 283. (Cartagena, Colombia.) Characters.—Males with rufous rather than hazel on head and throat, where it is less extensive than in other races; streaks on chest wider. Measurements.—Males (8 from Bocas del Toro), wing 63.0-69.5 (66.5), tail 48.7-56.1 (51.5), culmen from base 11.5-14.7 (13.2), tar- sus 19.2-20.7 (19.3) mm. Females (6 from Bocas del Toro and Province of Panama), wing 60.0-65.7 (63.6), tail 44.3-52.9 (49.1), culmen from base 12.0-13.7 (12.6), tarsus 18.6-21.4 (19.8) mm. Resident. Common on the entire Caribbean coast of Panama from Almirante, Bocas del Toro, west beyond the border to Magdalena, Co- lombia. On Isla Escudo de Veraguas, | found Yellow Warblers scat- tered through the taller trees, where they were fairly common, though each of the 4 I took on a visit in March 1958 appeared to be alone. On Escudo this species was not restricted to the limited growths of man- groves found near the sea, as is the case on the mainland, but ranged throughout the forest growth, as appears to be its regular habit when found on small islands. This series from Escudo and Almirante Bay agree fully with type FAMILY PARULIDAE 269 material of this race, which is interesting since specimens from Limon, Costa Rica, about 100 km to the north belong to the race D. p. bryanti. DENDROICA PETECHIA JUBARIS Olson Dendroica petechia jubaris Olson, 1980, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 93(2), p. 478. (Nuqui, Dept. Chocd, Colombia, 5°40’N.) Characters.—Compared with aequatorialis, male with brown portions of plumage lighter, more tawny; throat and chin either suffused with, or distinctly streaked with yellow; cheeks and lores suffused with yel- lowish, contrasting with the darker crown, so that birds appear dis- tinctly capped, as opposed to aequatorialis, in which the entire head is brown; belly less streaked with brown, appearing more brightly yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from Darién and Colombia), wing 60.6- 67.5 (65.0), tail 45.6-50.8 (48.5), culmen from base 11.4-14.0 (12.9), tarsus 17.9-19.8 (19.2) mm. Females (10 from Darién and Colombia), wing 56.9-64.7 (61.0), tail 42.9-50.0 (46.1), culmen from base 11.7-13.6 (12.3), tarsus 17.2- ZOMG S!3))) nam, Resident. Found in mangroves on the coast of Darien and south along the Pacific Coast of Colombia, at least to Buenaventura, Valle del Cauca. In March and April of 1946 I found them common at Jaque, Darién. Males were singing and in breeding condition. In ascending the Rio Jaqué I noted that the Yellow Warblers were found only where there were mangroves. Eisenmann noted 2 chestnut-headed birds on March 29, 1967, at Isla Boca Grande in the upper Gulf of San Miguel, Darién, but most of the Yellow Warblers seen there appeared to be of the migratory aestiva group. DENDROICA MAGNOLIA (Wilson): Magnolia Warbler, Reinita Pechirrayada Sylvia magnoha Wilson, Amer. Orn., vol. 3, 1811, p. 63, pl. 23, fig. 2. (Fort Adams, Mississippi. ) Small; crown gray; back olive-green; tail black with large white patches; undersurface yellow, sometimes with black streaks. Description.—Length 104-117 mm. Adult male, crown and nape gray, back light yellowish olive, increasingly marked with black in March and April; rump pale lemon yellow; upper tail coverts black; primary coverts black; middle and greater secondary coverts tipped white, forming a broad white patch; remiges blackish with outer web edged light gray, inner web edged white; rectrices black, all but central 270 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A pair with large white patch on basal half of inner web; side of face gray, with lores, forehead, and malar region becoming black by March, and lower and upper rims of eye and stripe behind eye beginning to appear in February, prominent by March; undertail coverts white, rest of undersurface bright yellow with black streaks beginning at breast, becoming increasingly prominent after February; underwing coverts white. Adult female, as male but duller, with black on back fainter or ab- sent, black on face absent, and streaks on undersurface fewer or absent. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in June and July), wing 57.5-61.8 (59.8), tail 45.2-51.1 (48.4), culmen from base 8.4-11.3 (10.0), tarsus 16.1-17.8 (17.1) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May, June, and July), wing 55.1-58.7 (56.8), tail 43.1-48.5 (46.1), culmen from base 8.7-11.3 (10.3), tarsus 16.1-18.1 (17.5) mm. Winter visitor from the north. Uncommon, but regular in very small numbers at least on the Caribbean slope. The Magnolia Warbler has been recorded on migration in Bocas del Toro at Almirante, where 2 were banded on October 21, 1962 (Loftin, Carib. Journ. Sci., vol. 3, no. 1, 1963, p. 67) and 1 was taken at Cocoplum on November 5, 1927 (Chapman, Auk, 1931, p. 121). One of the birds banded at the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory station at Almirante on October 21, 1972, was re- captured there 5 weeks later on December 7 (Loftin, Bird-Banding, 1963, p. 220). McLeannan forwarded 2 specimens from what became the Canal Zone to Salvin (Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr.-Amer., Aves, vol. 1 (pt. 9), 1881, pp. 129-130); these are now in the British Museum. Lawrence (Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 7, 1861, p. 322) records it as taken in the same area by McLeannan and Galbraith, and I secured 2 females at Juan Mina in the Canal Zone, on January 12 and 17,1955. There are several recent sightings from eastern Province of Panama as far east as the Bayano River valley (Ridgely, 1976, p. 293), and I saw 1 at Jaqué, Darién, on March 29, 1946. This species is usually found at low levels in second-growth woodland, where it often forages with mixed flocks. Ridgely (1m litt.) has found them in man- groves. In 1977 Magnolia Warblers were recorded on the exceptionally late dates of May 27 (Achiote Road, Canal Zone, N. G. Smith) and May 28 (Majé Island, Bayano River, C. Lowe) (Toucan, vol. 4, no. 7, 1977, p. 2). Smith observed that other northern migrants, including Seiwrus noveboracensis, Icterus galbula, 3 species of swallow, Coccyzus ameri- canus, and C. erythrophthalmus, remained very much later than usual. FAMILY PARULIDAE 271 He attributed this to an exceptionally extended dry season, with “no rains until late May.” [DENDROICA TIGRINA (Gmelin): Cape May Warbler, Reinita Altigrada Motacilla tigrina Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1 (2), p. 985. (Canada.) Winter visitant from the north. Very rare, known only from recent sight records in Chiriqui, Bocas del Toro, and the Canal Zone. Ridgely (1976, p. 294) lists 5 sight records: “one at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, - on February 2 and 10, 1958 (Wetmore); one at Changuinola, Bocas del Toro, on December 7, 1962 (Eisenmann); one below Volcan, west- ern Chiriqui, on January 20, 1970 (P. Alden); one bright male at Sum- mit Gardens, Canal Zone, on February 2, 1973 (Ridgely, Eisenmann, C. Leahy, J. Gwynne); and one male at Volcan, Chiriqui, on January 15, 1974 (C. Leahy and Ridgely). More recent sightings include March 6, 1976, a female at Estero Rico, in western Chiriqui below Divala (Ridgely); December 5, 1976, Bayano River Research Station, eastern Province of Panama (A. Greensmith, Toucan, vol. 4, no. 2, 1977, p. 6). Mason (Auk, 1976, p. 168), reviewing the status of this species in Middle America, where it is generally considered a vagrant, concludes that “the Cape May Warbler is an infrequent winter visitor or winter resident in much of Middle America and that its status may have changed in the past two decades.’’| [DENDROICA CAERULESCENS (Gmelin): Black-throated Blue Warbler, Reinita Azulosa Motacilla caerulescens Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1(2), p. 960. (Santo Domingo.) Vagrant. This species is included on the basis of 1 sight record of a male near Gattin Locks (besides the French Canal), Canal Zone, on January 14, 1973, by D. Engelman, James Smith, N. Gale, and A. Ramirez (Ridgely, 1976, p. 294). The normal winter range of D. caerulescens is the Bahamas, Greater Antilles, islands of the western Caribbean, and, less commonly, northern Central America, and north- ern Colombia and northern Venezuela. | DENDROICA CORONATA CORONATA (Linnaeus): Yellow-rumped Warbler, Reinita Coroniamarilla Motacilla coronata Linnaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, 1, p. 333. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ) Small; upper surface gray or light brown, with rump and crown yellow; undersurface white with yellow on flanks. 272 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Description Length 113-131 mm. Adult male, crown and back dark gray, with central crown feathers yellow near base, more or less exposed, and black streaks on back; rump pale lemon yellow; upper tail coverts black, edged gray; lesser wing coverts black tipped gray; middle and greater coverts black tipped white, forming two bars; remiges dusky blackish with outer webs thinly edged gray; rectrices blackish with white spots on inner webs of outer three pairs; lores and ring around eye white, sometimes obscured; side of face gray; under- surface white, with fine black streaks on breast and flanks, and pale lemon yellow patch on upper flank; underwing linings white. Adult female, like male, but gray of head and back replaced by gray- ish brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama and Mexico), wing 69.8- 751 (72.2), tail 52.1-60.5 (56.0), culmen from base 94712735 tia tarsus 17.0-18.6 (18.0) mm. Females (10 from Panama), wing 66.0-71.8 (68.6), tail 48.1-56.5 (53.4), culmen from base 9.2-11.7 (10.4), tarsus 17.3-18.3 (17.9) mm. Winter visitor from the north. Fairly common, at times locally abundant in the western half of the Republic in the Tropical and lower Subtropical Zones; much less common eastward. In Panama the Yel- low-rumped Warbler, while found in more open woodlands and in shrubbery about houses, also feeds regularly on the ground in pastures, cultivated fields, and along the borders of lagoons. In the Chiriqui high- lands and about Almirante and Changuinola in Bocas del Toro, I have found them spread over lawns, attracted by swarms of leaf-hoppers, and elsewhere have noted them in flooded areas or about other bodies of water where gnats were abundant. Charles Handley relates that he has seen these birds hawking insects 1n the surf at the shore of Isla Basti- mentos, Bocas del Toro; the warblers were catching something at the edge of the water; then darting up just out of reach of the surf, not alighting at any time except on branches of nearby bushes. This species has been recorded from November 7, in 1927, at Coco- plum, Bocas del Toro (Chapman, Auk, 1931, p. 121) to March 20, when in 1958 I saw 1 at the La Jagua Gun Club, east of Pacora in the Province of Panama. I have collected many at Santa Clara and El Volcan, Chiriqui, Almirante and Changuinola, Bocas del Toro, and Cerro Campana, Panama. Loftin and Olson (Carib. Journ. Sci., vol. 3, no. 4, 1963, p. 195) mention 1 seen at Tonosi, Los Santos, on March 8, 1963, and W.W. Brown, Jr., collected a female on San Miguel in the Pearl Islands on February 23, 1904 (Thayer and Bangs, Bull. Mus. FAMILY PARULIDAE 273 Comp. Zool., vol. 46, 1905, p. 156). A further eastern record on the Caribbean slope is one I saw at Mandinga, in the Comarca de San Blas, on January 27, 1957. Ridgely (im litt.) saw a Yellow-rumped War- bler in flowering Erythrinas and on the ground in clearings at the Cana, Darién, gold mine on February 28 and March 3, 1981. From January 13 to February 15, 1958, this was one of the most abundant birds in the Almirante-Changuinola region. Following the latter date, there was a definite decrease, though the species remained common until the end of February. A week later there were few about, and the last one was noted on March 10. This abundance seems to have been related to severe cold that year in the north, since friends at Al- mirante reported to me that none of these warblers were about in the winter months of 1958-59. As Ficken and Ficken (Bird-Banding, 1966, pp. 273-279) noted, the Yellow-rumped Warbler is one of the few members of its family to form flocks of conspecifics in the nonbreeding season. At 840 m on Cerro Campana I have seen groups of a dozen or more move across the slopes, many of them coming up the ravines from the lowlands and ad- vancing to the higher levels. The only sighting of the race D. c. auduboni in Panama was made by R. Forster and Ridgely (1m litt.), who found 1 bird near Volcan, Chiri- qui, on February 5-6, 1976. The bird was with a typical nominate coronata, so direct comparisons were possible; among other things, the prominent pale yellow throat was obvious, as was its distinctive call, a fast whit rather than the sharper tchek of nominate coronata. [DENDROICA TOWNSENDI (Townsend ): Townsend’s Warbler, Reinita de Townsend Sylvia townsendi J. K. Townsend (ex. Nuttall MS), 1837, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 7, p. 191. (Forests of Columbia River.) Vagrant from the north. This species is included on the basis of 3 sight reports. A male seen repeatedly at Nueva Suiza in the highlands of western Chiriqui on November 19-30, 1967, by T. V. Heatley and V.M. Kleen (Ridgely, 1976, p. 295). On March 21, 1979, J. Baird and Ridgely (1m litt.) photographed a bright female near Volcan, Chiriqui. The bird was in a small grove of exotic cypresses, and was seen there again the next day. On March 21 Baird and Ridgely also saw an adult male Townsend’s Warbler on the Boquete Trail above Cerro Punta, at 2100 m. The normal winter range is from California south to Nica- ragua. There are also a number of sight reports from Costa Rica.] 274 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 DENDROICA VIRENS (Gmelin): Black-throated Green Warbler, Reinita Verdosa Motacilla virens Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1(2), p. 985. (Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. ) Small; upper surface green; sides of head yellow; throat black; rest of undersurface white. Description—Length 104-117 mm. Adult male, crown, back, and rump yellowish olive-green, slightly more yellowish on rump; upper tail coverts black, broadly edged gray; wings black, with middle and greater coverts tipped white, forming two bars, and remiges edged gray on outer web and white on inner web; outer two pairs of rectrices white with narrow blackish stripe on inner side of outer web, next pair blackish with white spot on outer web, remaining pairs blackish or black with outer web edged gray; lores, superciliary, and sides of head and neck bright yellow; throat, breast, and flanks black, with feathers often tipped white until February; rest of undersurface white, with abdomen tinged yellow; underwing coverts white. Female and immatures, like adult male but green of upper surface slightly duller and black on undersurface less extensive. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May, June, and July), wing 60.0-65.8 (62.4), tail 45.0-51.3 (48.2), culmen from base 9.3-11.6 (10.8), tarsus 12.8-18.8 (16.5) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May, June, and July), wing 57.0-61.7 (59.6), tail 44.6-51.4 (47.5), culmen from base 9.8-11.3 (10.6), tarsus 14.5-17.7 (16.6) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Common in the foothills and highlands of Chiriqui and Veraguas, less regular but at times still common in the hill country of central Panama; in the lowlands it oc- curs only asa transient. Monniche (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool, vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 558) collected this species on the Volcan de Chiriqui between 1500 and 2700 m; I have found it in this area at the same elevations, and at Santa Clara at 1260 m. Farther east, I have found Black- throated Green Warblers at El Cope in Coclé, at La Campana (60 m) in the Province of Panama, and at Cerro Mali, Darién, where on March 1, 1964, I shot one at 1260 m on the south fork of the Rio Pucro. In the Canal Zone this species is “rather rare” (Ridgely, 1976, p. 295): Lawrence (Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 7, 1861, p. 293) re- ported that McLeannan collected it on the Atlantic side near the Pan- ama Railroad, but Willis and Eisenmann (Smiths. Contrib. Zool. no. 29, 1979) do not record it from Barro Colorado Island. Black-throated Green Warblers have been reported in Panama from FAMILY PARULIDAE 275 mid-September until mid-April; most are found between late Septem- ber and late March. Buskirk et al. (Auk, 1972, p. 619), in studying mixed-species flocks at Cerro Punta, Chiriqui, considered D. virens a “joiner” but not a follower of the flocks led by permanent residents. I have often seen them in the flocks of migrant warblers. They are usually found in second-growth woodland, borders, and clearings. [DENDROICA OCCIDENTALIS (Townsend): Hermit Warbler, Reinita Coronada : Sylvia occidentalis |.K. Townsend, 1837, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 7, p. 190. (Forests of Columbia River.) This species is included on the basis of several recent sight reports. An adult male was seen at Nueva Suiza in the highlands of western Chiriqui on December 22, 1973, by Dana Gardner and again in the exact same locality on January 15, 1974, by Ridgely and C. Leahy (Ridgely, 1976, p. 296). In 1976 an adult male was seen again at this locality on January 15-16 (J. J. Pujals) and March 6 (J. Greenberg) (Eisen- mann, Ridgely in litt.). The normal winter range is from Mexico to Nicaragua. | DENDROICA CERULEA (Wilson): Cerulean Warbler, Reinita Cerulea Sylvia cerulea Wilson, 1810, Amer. Ornith., 2, p. 141, pl. 17, fig. 5. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ) Small; upper surface light blue (male) or bluish green (female) ; undersurface white or tinged yellow. Description.—Length 101-112 mm. Adult male, upper surface gray- ish blue, brighter on crown; a few fine black streaks on hindneck and back; rump light gray; upper tail coverts black, tipped light gray; les- ser wing coverts black, tipped blue; middle and greater wing coverts black, tipped white, forming two bars; remiges black, with outer web edged gray; rectrices black, with white on inner web extensive on outer pair, decreasing to a thin edge on innermost pair, and outer webs edged blue; black line from lores through eye; side of face light gray; under- surface white with narrow black band across upper breast and fine black streaks on sides. Adult female, crown bluish green; side of face and rest of upper surface light bluish olive-green, slightly lighter on rump; lesser wing coverts light green; middle and greater wing coverts black, tipped whitish, forming two bars; remiges black with outer web edged bluish olive-green and inner web edged white; rectrices as in male but blue 276 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 on outer web replaced by light bluish olive-green; lores, superciliary, and entire undersurface white, extensively tinged pale dull yellow; underwing coverts white. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May), wing 62.5-69.5 (66.2), tail 40.5-45.5 (43.3), culmen from base 10.3-12.4 (11.3), tarsus 14.8-16.7 (15.9) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May), wing 61.0- 65.0 (62.6), tail 39.9-44.1 (41.7), culmen from base 10.2-11.9 (11.2), tarsus 14.5-16.6 (15.8) mm. Migrant from the north. Uncommon. While this species winters in South America from Colombia and Venezuela south to Bolivia, and undoubtedly passes in part through Panama, I have seen only 7 speci- mens. The species is, however, hard to collect and passes through Pan- ama very quickly. The British Museum has 2 skins from Calovévora, Veraguas, taken by Arcé, and 3 others attributed to McLeannan, and therefore taken in the Canal Zone. One in the American Museum of Natural History is also from McLeannan. There is 1 in the Museum of Comparative Zoology collected on Isla del Rey (San Miguel), March 15, 1904, and 1 in the Smithsonian that Perrygo and I collected on Taboga Island, March 23, 1952. Ridgely (1976, p. 296) considers the Cerulean Warbler an “uncom- mon fall and rare spring transient (late August-early October; mid-to late March; one report from November 4) ... Only winter report is a sighting of a male on Cerro Campana on January 1, 1969 (Ridgely). ... Usually arrives in small ‘waves’ in September when small groups may be encountered.” In early April 1976 Ridgely (1 litt.) recorded 1 to 3 individuals per day at three different localities in the Canal Zone, with the maximum being 3 (2 males and a female) on the Pipeline Road on April 3. Extreme dates known to Eisenmann are August 20, 27, and April 3, 14. DENDROICA FUSCA (Miller): Blackburnian Warbler, Reinita Gargantianaranjada Motacilla fusca P.L.S. Miller, 1776, Natursyst., suppl., p. 175. (French Guiana.) Small; upper surface mainly black (grayish olive in female); throat and breast bright orange. Description.—Length 106-120 mm. Adult male, upper surface black, with small light orange patch in center of crown and two yellowish white stripes on back; wings black, with middle coverts broadly and greater coverts narrowly tipped white, forming a patch; primaries and FAMILY PARULIDAE Lag NG outer secondaries with yellowish white on edge of outer web, and in- nermost secondaries with white on edge of outer web; three outer pairs of rectrices white, tipped black, next pair black with white patch on in- ner web, remaining pairs black; lores, superciliary, side of neck, throat, and upper breast light orange, becoming bright orange in February; side of face and line through eye black; lower breast and rest of under- surface fading to pale orange-yellow; black stripes on side of breast and on sides. Adult female, upper surface grayish olive, streaked black, with small yellowish white patch in center of crown, often obscured; wings black, with middle and greater coverts tipped white, forming two bars; re- miges with outer web edged grayish olive; rectrices black with white patch on inner web of outer three pairs; lores and superciliary buff- yellow; side of face grayish olive; throat and upper breast from buff- yellow to light orange; rest of undersurface white, tinged buff, with a few black streaks on sides of breast and sides; underwing coverts white. Immature, like female, but paler. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May), wing 64.0-69.0 (67.4), tail 44.6-48.2 (46.4), culmen from base 10.2-11.6 (11.1), tarsus 15.9-18.3 (17.4) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May), wing 62.0- 65.2 (63.8), tail 43.5-47.6 (45.7), culmen from base 10.7-12.2 (11.3), tarsus 16.4-18.3 (17.2) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Fairly common transient throughout on migration; a few winter in the highland forest of Chiri- qui. In some years it is more common as a winter resident in Chiriqut, equaling Black-throated Green Warblers in numbers. Asa migrant the Blackburnian Warbler has been recorded in fall from early September until November 17 (Eisenmann, Smiths. Misc. Coil., vol. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 51 and in spring from March 5, at Garachiné, Darién, in 1927 (Griscom, Amer. Mus. Nov. no. 282, 1927, p. 10) to April 28, at Mt. Sapo, Darién, in 1941 (Bond and de Schauensee, Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila- delphia, Mon. no. 6, 1944, p. 42). I have also found this species at El Volcan and Santa Clara in Chiriqui during February. It has been re- corded as well from San José, Saboga, and Viveros in the Perlas Archipelago and at sea 96 km south of the Pearl Islands (specimen in the British Museum, taken October 24, 1924, by H. J. Kelsall). Some individuals may winter in the Darién highlands. D. fusca is usually seen in middle and high tree levels where it is often a part of mixed flocks of migrant warblers. 278 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 A Blackburnian Warbler killed in a heavy rainstorm at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, on October 13, 1963, weighed 9.41 g and had an esti- mated 1.37 g of fat reserves, which might have enabled the bird to fly another 900 km (Rogers, Bird-Banding, 1965, pp. 115-116). [DENDROICA DOMINICA (Linnaeus): Yellow-throated Warbler, Reinita Gargantiamarilla Motacilla dominica Linnaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, 1, p. 334. (Hispaniola.) Vagrant. This species is included on the basis of 3 sight reports: a well-marked male that I observed for several minutes on February 3, 1958, at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, where it was feeding in a flowering tree with other warblers and orioles; a bird seen by C. Leahy, J. Gwynne, Ridgely, and Eisenmann on February 2, 1973, at Summit Gardens, Canal Zone (Ridgely, 1976, p. 296) (This bird was photo- graphed, but the subspecies was not determinable); and a bird seen by J. Baird and R. Forster on Cerro Azul, Province of Panama, on Janu- ary 28, 1978 (Ridgely, im litt.). The white lores and short bill character- istic of D. d. albilora were observed on the last-mentioned bird. D. a. albilora winters rarely south to Costa Rica.] DENDROICA PENSYLVANICA (Linnaeus): Chestnut-sided Warbler, Reinita de Lados Castanos Motacilla pensylvanica Linnaeus, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, vol. 1, 1766, p. 333. (Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. ) Small; upper surface bright yellowish green; undersurface white, with, on male, chestnut stripe on side of breast and sides. Description.—Length 106-118 mm. Adult male, crown and back olive-yellow, with some black streaking on back, becoming more ex- tensive in March, when crown becomes bright yellow; rump black with feathers edged olive-yellow; upper tail coverts black, edged gray; wing coverts blackish, with lesser coverts tipped olive-yellow, middle and greater ones tipped white, tinged yellow, forming two bars; remiges blackish, edge of outer web of primaries gray, edge of outer web of secondaries olive-yellow; rectrices blackish with large white patch on inner web of outer two pairs; lores and side of head and neck gray un- til March, when lores, superciliary, and side of face in front of eye be- come black and rest of side of face becomes white; orbital ring white; undersurface white, with chestnut on sides becoming more extensive by FAMILY PARULIDAE 279 March, when it is found on sides of breast also; underwing coverts white. Female and immatures, as male, but crown and back usually remain- ing olive-yellow; side of face remaining gray, and chestnut only on sides, often absent entirely. Mceasurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 61.2-66.5 (64.2), tail 45.7-50.6 (48.3), culmen from base 10.7-11.9 (11.2), tarsus 16.0- 18.6 (17.3) mm. Females (10 from Panama), wing 56.1-61.0 (59.2), tail 43.6-48.8 (46.0), culmen from base 10.5-11.3 (10.9), tarsus 15.8-18.0 (17.0) mm. Winter visitor from the north. Very common in the lowlands and less common in the highlands of Chiriqui; reported as common east through the mountains of Veraguas (Santa Fé, Chitra), ranging east through the Canal Zone to western San Blas (Mandinga) and eastern Province of Panama (Chico, Chepo). In the lowlands it is found widely, from Puerto Armuelles and Divala, Chiriqui; Paracoté, south- ern Veraguas; Almirante, Bocas del Toro; and Fl Uracillo, on the Caribbean slope of Coclé; to the Canal Zone. It is not reported to date from the eastern side of the Azuero Peninsula. I noted 2 on Isla Coiba January 12 and 29, 1956, and Ridgely (in litt.) saw 1 there on April 13, 1976. E. A. Goldman wrote in his notes that in 1911 this was the ‘‘most abundant North American warbler in the northern half of the Canal Zone from January 12 until April 18 when the last specimen obtained was taken at Gatun.’ It decreases considerably after March. In Darién there are “few” records (Griscom, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 73,1935, p. 368). The earliest record for Panama is September 7 (Willis and Eisen- mann, Smiths. Contrib. Zool., no. 291, 1979, p. 26); Ridgely (in litt.) has found individuals as late as April 25 (1980, Changuinola, Bocas del Toro) and May 1 (1976, Ft. Sherman, Canal Zone). Evidently many individuals remain in the same locality for several months—of those banded by Loftin et al. (Bird-Banding, 1966, p. 41) at Curundu, in the Canal Zone, 1 banded December 8, 1963, was taken at the same locality February 9, 1964. Another banded at Curundu December 3, 1963, was recaptured there April 2, 1966 (Loftin et al., Bird-Banding, MGA pebot):, The Chestnut-sided Warbler is found most often in second-growth woodland, clearings, and edges, often in groups with other migrant warblers. 280 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 In a banding study at Almirante, Rogers and Odum (Auk, 1966, p. 418) found that Chestnut-sided Warblers arriving there in fall had exhausted their migratory fat reserves and had lost some weight from the breast muscles. The fat-free weight of 20 was 6.8-9.1 (8.0) grams. One collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 102 Chestnut-sided Warblers (fide E. S. Morton) molt much ahead of Bay-breasted Warblers, with which they often associate in Panama, and by mid- or late March are already in full breeding plumage. They are often seen with other passerines feeding on the fruit of the abun- dant Miconia argentea. Usually a mixed feeding aggregation of paru- lids will include only 1 Chestnut-sided Warbler. Eisenmann reports that birds seen in Panama usually carry the tail diagonally cocked above the back, and sometimes jerk it nervously. The wings are often carried drooped below the body. DENDROICA CASTANEA (Wilson): Bay-breasted Warbler, Reinita Pechicastana Sylvia castanea Wilson, Amer. Orn., vol. 2, 1810, p. 97, pl. 14, fig. 4. (Pennsyl- vania. ) Small; upper surface green (grayish with brown crown in males after February); undersurface buff, sometimes with brown on throat and sides. Description —Length 111-130 mm. Male, September through Feb- ruary, crown and upper back light yellowish olive, finely streaked with black; lower back, rump, and upper tail coverts gray; wings black, with lesser coverts tipped gray, middle and greater coverts tipped white, forming two bars, remiges with inner web edged white, outer web of primaries 9-4 edged gray, outer web of rest of remiges light yellowish olive; rectrices black with large white spot on inner web of outer two pairs; lores and orbital ring white; side of head light yellowish olive; undersurface white, tinged buff, most heavily on abdomen and under- tail coverts; flanks sometimes russet; underwing coverts white. Male, March and April, forecrown, side of head, including area all around eye, and chin, black; hindcrown and nape russet; upper back streaked black and warm buff; side of neck warm buff; throat, breast, sides, and flanks russet; rest of undersurface buffy white; lower back, rump, wings, and tail as above. Iemale, like September-February male; in March and April some- times with russet on crown, throat, and breast. Mcasurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 69.9-77.0 (73.7), FAMILY PARULIDAE 281 tail 48.0-55.1 (52.2), culmen from base 11.1-12.1 (11.6), tarsus 17.7- LORElS:Z) mm. Females (10 from Panama), wing 65.0-75.1 (69.7), tail 47.0-53.8 (50.0), culmen from base 10.3-12.8 (11.6), tarsus 16.0-18.7 (17.1) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Common. Found on the Pacific slope from eastern Veraguas, the mountain area of Cocle (El Valle), and western Province of Panama (Cerro Campana) eastward, being especially common in the Bayano River Valley of eastern Pan- ama Province and in Darién; it has not been recorded from Chiriquti. On the Caribbean side it ranges throughout the Republic from western Bocas del Toro to eastern San Blas. Mainly found in the Tropical Zone, it is recorded in the lower edge of the Subtropical Zone at El Valle, and on Cerro Campana. In the Perlas group it has been recorded from the islands of San José, Isla del Rey, and Saboga. The first Bay-breasted Warblers arrive in Panama in mid-September (Ridgely, 1976, p. 297), although few are seen before October. Molt of adults takes place in March; immature birds seem to molt slightly later. By April, numbers of Bay-breasted Warblers have decreased in Panama. The latest date for which the species is recorded in Panama is May 1, when in 1969 G. Tudor saw 1 at Cerro Azul, Province of Panama. On March 18 and 19, 1957, I found a considerable migration through the forest along the lower Rio Oria west of the southeastern tip of the Azuero Peninsula. While D. Hicks netted this species almost daily at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, during October 15-26, 1964, he caught none there on the following spring migration (March through April 1965), suggesting different routes on the southward and north- ward flights (Eisenmann im litt.). N.G. Smith reports seeing one at Almirante during the “last week of March” 1965. The Bay-breasted Warbler is the commonest wintering warbler in the forests of central Panama, especially on the Caribbean slope. Its numbers are often underestimated, as the birds are usually in forest canopy or high in woodland and easily overlooked. Central and eastern Panama are the centers of its notably small wintering range. Its popu- lation may have increased in the 1970’s in response to spruce bud-worm outbreaks in its breeding area. In Panama it feeds largely on the fruit of Micomia argentea and of Bursera, two common small trees. Ridgely (in litt.) estimated 60 Bay-breasted Warblers on the Achiote Road, Canal Zone, March 18, 1980, and 50 at Ft. Sherman the next day. A male collected by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) in Province of Panama (location not given) weighed 11.4 g. 282 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 DENDROICA STRIATA (Forster): Blackpoll Warbler, Reinita Coroninegra Muscicapa striata J.R. Forster, 1772, Phil. Trans. vol. 62, art. 29, read June 18 and 25), pp. 406, 428. (Fort Severn, Ontario.) Small; both sexes in basic plumage, dull yellowish green streaked with black on upper surface; undersurface white, tinged yellow, some- times slightly streaked with black. Adult male in alternate plumage, streaked black and white. Description —Length 115-126 mm. Adult male in basic plumage, side of head and upper surface olive-green, becoming gray on rump and upper tail coverts, and finely streaked with black, especially on crown and upper back; wing coverts blackish, with middle and greater ones tipped white, forming two wing-bars; remiges blackish, with outer webs edged olive-green; tertials edged whitish; rectrices blackish with white patches on webs of outer two pairs; undersurface white, tinged yellow on sides of throat, across breast, and on sides and flanks, and finely streaked with black on sides and flanks; underwing coverts white. Adult male in alternate plumage, crown black; nuchal band streaked black and white, rest of upper surface light gray, becoming brownish on rump and upper tail coverts; upper back streaked with black; wings and tail as in basic plumage; side of head and undersurface white, with a broad black streak running from chin, along side of throat, to side of breast; sides and flanks streaked with black. Adult female in basic plumage, like male in basic plumage, but with less streaking on back, often absent from crown, and yellow tinge more extensive on undersurface. Adult female in alternate plumage, like male in basic plumage. Measurements.—Males (10 from North America, taken in May), wing 69.5-75.5 (72.5), tail 48.5-52.7 (50.1), culmen from base 11.1- 12.6 (12.1), tarsus 17.1-19.6 (18.8) mm. Females (10 from North America, taken in May), wing 68.0-73.0 (69.5), tail 47.3-50.7 (48.1), culmen from base 11.5-12.4 (12.0), tar- sus 18.2-19.6 (18.9) mm. Accidental. There is an adult male specimen in full spring plumage in the British Museum marked as taken in Panama by McLeannan that was received in the Tweedale Collection with no further data. The form of the skin, in the arrangement of wings and feet and the manner in which the bill is closed, is typical of the method employed by Mc- Leannan, so that there is no reason to doubt the locality. This collector’s activities centered along the line of the Panama Railroad, mainly on the Atlantic slope near the former station of Lion Hill (now covered FAMILY PARULIDAE 283 by Gattin Lake). The record, therefore, is to be attributed to the Canal Zone (see Wetmore, Auk, 1958, pp. 467-468). This species migrates through the West Indies and is only of accidental or, at most, casual occurrence in Middle America. Eisenmann (Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 51) de- scribes 2 sight reports for this species on Barro Colorado Island: “Dr. A. A. Allen writes that November 6, 1944, he observed one ‘close enough so that I had no trouble seeing the light-colored legs and white under tail coverts.. Mrs. G. G. Fry writes that on February 8 and 9, _ 1950 she heard a song which she recognized as that of this species, and that one of the members of her party, Mrs. L. J. Francke, saw the bird and said it was a male in spring plumage.” Ridgely comments, how- ever, that some autumn Bay-breasted Warblers have the characters Allen noted and that in February Blackpoll Warblers are not in “spring plumage”’ or likely to be singing. On October 19 and 29, 1964, indi- viduals identified as this species by D. L. Hicks were banded and re- leased at Almirante, Bocas del Toro (Ridgely, 1976, p. 297). There are 2 recent sightings from Costa Rica, in December 1977 and January 1975 (Stiles and Smith, Brenezia, vol. 17, 1980, p. 151), and a speci- men was collected there by F. G. Stiles in “fall” of 1980 (in litt. to Eisenmann). DENDROICA PALMARUM PALMARUM (Gmelin): Palm Warbler, Reinita del Palmar Motacilla palmarum Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1(2), p. 951. (Santo Domingo.) Small; upper surface brown; undersurface buffy with fine brown streaks, yellow on undertail coverts and sometimes on throat. Description.—Length 109-126 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown and back olive-brown, finely streaked with darker brown; forecrown be- coming russet by March; rump and upper tail coverts yellow; wing coverts blackish brown, tipped buffy brown; remiges blackish brown, with outer web of primaries narrowly edged yellow, and outer edges of secondaries broadly edged buffy brown; rectrices blackish brown with large white patch on inner web of outermost pair and small white patch on next pair; superciliary whitish, becoming yellow by March; orbital ring whitish; undersurface whitish or olive-buff, finely streaked with brown on breast and sides of throat; undertail coverts lemon yellow; throat becomes lemon yellow by March, rest of undersurface sometimes tinged yellow as well. Measurements—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May 284 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 and July), wing 61.0-67.1 (64.4), tail 46.2-53.2 (49.9), culmen from base 10.3-11.9 (11.3), tarsus 18.3-19.6 (19.1) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May and July), wing 59.4-62.1 (61.0), tail 46.1-49.3 (47.6), culmen from base 10.8-11.8 (11.2)¢ tarsus 18.3219.7 \ (1911 ),mmt Winter visitor from the north. Rare. This species was not known from Panama before 1965. The normal winter range is south to Hon- duras and northeastern Nicaragua. It is found more rarely to Costa Rica. On March 15, 1965, a male was collected by Dr. A. Diaz near Tocumen, on the Pacific slope about 32 km east of Panama City, Proy- ince of Panama. The specimen is now in the Smithsonian. Hicks et ai. (Condor, 1967, p. 319) erroneously list the date as October 14. Other sight records led Ridgely (1976, p. 297) to describe the Palm Warbler as “a rare but probably regular winter visitor in small numbers on Caribbean slope of Canal Zone and savannas of eastern Panama Proy- ince . . . mid-November-mid-March . . . usually on or very near the ground. In Canal Zone, prefers lawns in residential areas.” [DENDROICA DISCOLOR (Vieillot ): Prairie Warbler, Reinita de la Pradera Sylvia discolor Vieillot, 1808 or 1809, Hist. Nat. Ois. Amer. Sept., 2 (1807), p. 37, pl. 98. (United States and Greater Antilles.) This species is included on the basis of a sight report of 1 at Volcan, Chiriqui on January 23, 1973, found by Richard Brownstein and Wal- ter George. Brownstein (in litt. to Wetmore, June 25, 1974) informs me that they observed the bird for 10 minutes as close as 7 m; they did not, however, supply any details of plumage. The Prairie Warbler normally winters in Florida, the West Indies, and, in very small num- bers, from Yucatan to Nicaragua, mainly on islands off the Caribbean coast, and on islands off the north coast of South America. There are also some recent sight reports from Costa Rica (Stiles and Smith, Brenezia, vol. 17, 1980, p. 15).] SEIURUS AUROCAPILLUS (Linnaeus): Ovenbird, Reinita Suelera Medium size; upper surface mostly light yellowish olive with orange- brown central crown stripe; undersurface white, streaked with black. Description.—Length 130-138 mm. Adult (sexes alike), side of head and entire upper surface, including wing coverts, light yellowish olive, with broad central crown stripe of orange-brown, bordered by narrow FAMILY PARULIDAE 285 blackish stripes; remiges dusky, edged light yellowish olive; rectrices light yellowish olive; eye-ring white; undersurface white with narrow blackish streak on side of throat and blackish streaks across breast and down sides and flanks; underwing coverts white, tinged yellow. The North American Ovenbird is a fairly common migrant and winter resident in western Panama, becoming uncommon to rare to the east. In Darién it has been recorded only twice (Griscom, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 368). I have always found it in dry for- est, but it has been collected from sea level to 2900 m, on Volcan de Chiriqui (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 62). The Ovenbird has been found in Panama from late September until April 25 (Loftin and Olson, Carib. Journ. Sci., vol. 3, no. 4, 1963, p. 195). There are numerous recapture records from the Gorgas Memo- rial Laboratory banding station at Almirante, Bocas del Toro. A par- ticularly notable one is of a bird banded there October 13, 1963, and re- captured April 23,1965; and again on October 17, 27, and 28, 1965 (Loftin et al., Bird-Banding, 1967, p. 151). Another study done at Almirante found the weight of 87 fall migrant Ovenbirds to range from 12.9-19.0 (15.74) g and that the birds had exhausted their migratory fat reserves (Rogers and Odum, Wilson Bull., 1966, p. 418). Willis (Living Bird, 1966, p. 206) noted that on Barro Colorado Island, Canal Zone, where the Ovenbird is rare, it normally ignores army ants. There it has been recorded from October 18 to March 31 (Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Contrib. Zool. no. 291, 1979, p. 26). Two subspecies have been identified as occuring in Panama, auro- capillus and furvior. SEIURUS AUROCAPILLUS AUROCAPILLUS (Linnaeus) Motacilla aurocapilla Linneaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 2, 1, p. 334. (Pennsylvania.) Seiurus aurocapillus canivirens Burleigh and Duvall, 1952, Wilson Bull., 64, p. 39. (Margaret, Fannin County, Georgia.) Characters.—Upper surface more greenish; central crown stripe more yellowish. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May), wing 73.3-80.6 (78.0), tail 52.7-58.5 (56.7), culmen from base 13.2- 15.0 (13.8), tarsus 19.3-23.7 (20.9) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May), wing 69.5- 77.2 (73.4), tail 51.3-57.6 (53.9), culmen from base 12.7-14.7 (13.5), tarsus 19.3-22.1 (20.9) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. The Smithsonian has 7 286 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Panamanian specimens of this race: 4 were collected in the Chiriqui highlands, 1 at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, and 1 each from Isla Cébaco and Isla Gobernadora in the Golfo de Montijo off the Pacific Coast of Veraguas. SEIURUS AUROCAPILLUS FURVIOR Batchelder Seiurus aurocapillus furvior Batchelder, 1918, Proc. New England Zool. Club, 6, p. 81. (Near Deer Pond, Newfoundland.) Characters.—Upper surface browner than in nominate race; streak- ing on undersurface heavier and blacker; flanks darker. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May, June, and July), wing 76.5-82.0 (79.0), tail 54.6-58.1 (56.7), culmen from base 12.5-15.5 (14.0), tarsus 20.9-23.2 (21.8) mm. No specimens of females were available for measurement. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. This very weakly dif- ferentiated race breeds exclusively in Newfoundland, Canada. Pan- ama appears to be the southern limit of its winter range. At least 2 specimens in the collections of the Smithsonian from Panama have been identified as furvior: 1 taken October 18, 1962, at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, and the other taken March 10, 1952, at Chilar, Colon. SEIURUS NOVEBORACENSIS (Gmelin): Northern Waterthrush, Reinita Arrollera del Norte Motacilla noveboracensis Gmelin, 1789, Syst. Nat., 1(2), p. 958. (Louisiana and New York.) Small; upper surface olive; undersurface yellowish, streaked with olive. Description.—Length 121-138 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face, including wings and tail, olive; superciliary, broken eye-ring, and sometimes stripe on forehead, buffy white; side of face and stripe through eye olive; throat white, rest of undersurface buffy yellow, streaked olive except on center of abdomen; underwing coverts light olive-brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 68.8-77.9 (74.8), tail 46.8-54.7 (51.3), culmen from base 12.0-14.1 (13.2), tarsus 19.4- Awe Alli \raacnay, Females (10 from Panama), wing 69.5-75.0 (71.6), tail 45.1-53.1 (49.4), culmen from base 12.0-13.9 (13.1), tarsus 19.8-22.1 (20.7) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Very common through- FAMILY PARULIDAE 287 out in the lowlands of both slopes, particularly in mangroves and near water, both running and still. I have also seen them among the jumbled rocks along the beach on San José in the Pearl Islands, where they are common throughout the group, and on the ocean beach at Isla Goberna- dora, Veraguas. In migration they are encountered away from water as well, on the paths in dry woods, and in the highlands. On Volcan de Chiriqui, Monniche (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 559) collected Northern Waterthrushes as high as 1590 m during October, and W. W. Brown, Jr. (Bangs, Proc. England Zool., Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 62) collected a male at Boquete (1200 m) on March 27, 1901. Eisenmann saw 1 above Cerro Punta, Chiriqui at approximately 2100 m on September 19, 1958. Northern Waterthrushes arrive in Panama in late September and most depart by late April. Extreme dates known to Fisenmann (im litt.) are September 11 to May 13 (both Ft. San Lorenzo, Canal Zone). In the exceptionally long dry season of 1977, however, N. G. Smith saw 2 together at Summit Gardens on May 26 and June 2; several other northern migrants also remained late. At Almirante, Bocas del Toro, in the southward migration of 1964, 15 were netted on September 29 and 16 on October 10; the following spring numbers netted were much fewer, not exceeding 2 or 3 in any one day between March 21 and April 23 (D. L. Hicks in htt. to Eisenmann). Banding results suggest that many of the individuals that do not con- tinue on to South America are highly sedentary while in Panama; Loftin et al. (Bird-Banding, 1966, p. 42) banded a Northern Water- thrush in the Canal Zone October 5, 1963, that was recaptured there on Iebruary 9, 1964. One banded at Almirante, November 10, 1962 was retaken there January 7, 1963, and again on October 14, 1963, indicat- ing that some individuals return to the same wintering area in subse- quent years, as they have been shown to do in Venezuela (Schwartz, Living Bird, 1964, pp. 169-184). Of the 65 birds banded by Loftin and his associates in the Canal Zone and the 338 banded at Almirante in 1963 and 1964, there were 5 repeats in the Canal Zone and 15 at Almirante. In another banding study at Almirante, Rogers and Odum (Wils. Bull., 1966, p. 418) weighed 165 Northern Waterthrushes, which ranged between 10.5-19.2 (14.69) g, and found that, unlike sev- eral other migrant species, including the Ovenbird, the waterthrushes had not exhausted their fat reserves. Willis (Living Bird, 1966, p. 207) observed individuals picking at insects flushed by swarms of army ants on Barro Colorado Island; however, the birds were never persistent swarm followers. The weights of 7 collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) ranged 288 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 from 13.2 to 16.0 g. A female taken at Fort Sherman, Canal Zone, by G. V. N. Powell (in litt. to Eisenmann) weighed 18 g. SEIURUS MOTACILLA (Vieillot): Louisiana Waterthrush, Reinita Arrollera de Louisiana Turdus motacilla Vieillot, 1808, Hist. Nat. Ois. Amer. Sept., 2 (1807), p. 9, p. 65. (Kentucky. ) Small; upper surface olive-brown; undersurface white, streaked olive-brown across breast and sides. Description.—Length 129-141 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face, including wings and tail, line through eye, and side of face, olive- brown; superciliary white, extending to nape; line around lower por- tion of eye, moustachial stripe, and undersurface white, becoming buffy on abdomen and undertail coverts, and with olive-brown streaks on breast and sides; underwing coverts buffy brown. Measurements.—Males (9 from Panama, Costa Rica, and Colom- bia), wing 80.1-83.4 (82.2), tail 44.6-54.4 (50.4), culmen from base 14.4-16.9 (15.5), tarsus 21.5-22.7 (22.2) mm. Females (9 from Panama), wing 72.5-82.2 (77.5), tail 46.7-54.7 (50.0), culmen from base 14.2-16.4 (15.5, average of 8), tarsus 21.3- 23.1 (22.4) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Uncommon as a migrant, chiefly in mid-August to September and in March, when it may be found throughout the Republic, and rather rare as a winter resident, mostly in highlands of Chiriqui. The Louisiana Waterthrush prefers running water. The first to arrive in Panama appear by early August—long be- fore any Northern Waterthrushes—and some linger into early April (Ridgely, 1976, p. 298). Most have left Panama by mid-March; later sight reports may be misidentified Northern Waterthrushes. The lat- est known report from Panama is a specimen netted at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, April’ 3, 1965)() Li) Hicks) Unity” Georetaicollae Monniche (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 559) col- lected a female at 1650 m on the Volcan de Chiriqui. On the Pearl Islands W. W. Brown, Jr., (Thayer and Bangs, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 46, 1905, p. 156) collected 1 on San Miguel on March 18, 1904, and I saw 1 on San José on March 7, 1946. If the absence of fat can be taken as an indication that a bird is not yet migrating, then individuals I collected at the Peluca Hydrographic Station in the Province of Panama on February 21, 1961, and on the south fork of the Rio Pucro on Cerro Mali, Darién, on March 2, 1964, were winter residents. On Barro Colorado Island, Willis (Living Bird, FAMILY PARULIDAE 289 1966, pp. 206-207) found this species an “uncommon winter resident” that ignored swarms of army ants when they passed by. OPORORNIS FORMOSUS (Wilson): Kentucky Warbler, Reinita Hermosa Sylvia formosa Wilson, 1811, Amer. Ornith., 3, p. 85, pl. 25, fig. 3. (Kentucky.) Small; upper surface yellowish olive, with black markings on head; undersurface bright yellow. Description—Length 114-126 mm. Adult male, forecrown black, with feathers often tipped gray; line from bill to eyebrow and continu- ing around rear of eye to lower rim, yellow; lores, side of face, and side of throat black; rest of upper surface, including tail, yellowish olive; primaries dusky, with outer webs edged yellowish olive; rest of wing yellowish olive; undersurface yellow, with yellowish olive some- times extending from sides to flanks; bend of wing and underwing coverts yellow. Adult female, as male, but black areas of head less extensive, often replaced by dusky brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 66.0-71.5 (68.7), tail 45.3-53.3 (48.7), culmen from base 10.4-13.3 (12.0), tarsus 19.4- 227 (214) mm. Females (9 from Panama, Costa Rica, and Colombia), wing 64.0- 69.6 (65.9), tail 43.3-48.7 (47.2), culmen from base 11.6-13.2 (12.3), tarsus 19.9-22.9 (21.8) mm. | Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Fairly common, but in- conspicuous, throughout in forest and second-growth woodland, where it inhabits thickets of shrubbery, similar to its northern breeding habi- tat. Although during migration it occurs in the highlands, where it has been collected by W. W. Brown, Jr., as high as 2310 m, near Boquete, Chiriqui, on February 22, 1901 (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 62), most wintering individuals are found in the low- lands (Ridgely, 1976, p. 299). The Kentucky Warbler has been re- corded in Panama from September 4 (Willis, Living Bird, 1966, p. 207) to April 28, (Loftin and Olson, Carib. Journ. Sci., vol. 3, no. 4, 1968, p: 195... Banding results indicate that individuals wintering in Panama are highly sedentary and faithful to a site, returning in subsequent years. One banded at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, on October 14, 1963, was retaken there February 25, 1964, and another banded there October 12, 1963, was taken again October 29, 1964 (Loftin et al., Bird-Banding, 1966, p. 42). In the Canal Zone, a Kentucky Warbler banded near the 290 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Gamboa horse stables October 22, 1964, was retaken there March 5, 1965, and 1 banded on the Pipeline Road near Gamboa November 7, 1964, was recaptured there October 21, 1965. One banded by Karr (Bird-Banding, 1971, p. 299) on the Chiva Chiva Road, Canal Zone, on December 14, 1968, was recaptured 100 m from the same spot on January 27 and 28, 1971. Willis (Living Bird, 1966, pp. 207-208) found that Kentucky War- blers were regular followers of army ant swarms on Barro Colorado Island. They usually stay ahead or to the side of the ants, but often as- sociate with them for more than 5 minutes at a stretch. If 2 individuals are near a single group of ants they usually stay at different ends of the swarm. When not searching for insects flushed by ants, Kentucky Warblers often associate with or follow Spotted Antbirds (Hylophylax naevioides) or with wandering mixed flocks. On March 15, 1955, at FE] Volcan, Chiriqui I saw 1 with a moving flock of warblers; prob- ably all were migrants. One collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 85) weighed 13.5 g. Ridgely (1976, p. 299) points out that this species and the Ovenbird are the only 2 North American migrant warblers that regularly inhabit the interior of mature forests in winter; they are, therefore, more sensitive to habitat destruction than most other wintering species, which usually inhabit more or less disturbed areas when in Panama. Raikow’s (Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. no. 7, 1978, p. 35) myo- logical studies have confirmed the traditional separation of the genus Oporornis from Geothly pis, into which the former had been placed by Lowery and Monroe (Check-list Birds World, vol. 14, 1968, p. 38). OPORORNIS AGILIS (Wilson ): Connecticut Warbler, Reinita de Connecticut Sylvia agilis Wilson, 1812, Amer. Ornith., 5, p. 64, pl. 39, fig. 4. (Connecticut. ) Small; upper surface yellowish olive; head and breast gray; under- surface yellow. Description.—Length 118-131 mm. Adult male, crown gray, with feathers often tipped yellowish olive; rest of upper surface, including tail, yellowish olive, slightly lighter on rump and upper tail coverts; primaries dusky, with outer web edged yellowish olive; rest of wing yellowish olive; complete orbital ring white; throat, upper breast, and sides of head gray, slightly lighter on throat; sides and flanks light yel- lowish olive; rest of undersurface yellow; bend of wing yellow; under- wing coverts light yellowish olive. FAMILY PARULIDAE 291 Female and immatures, as adult male, but gray replaced by drab grayish brown, slightly lighter on throat; orbital ring whitish to yel- lowish. Measurements.—Males (10 from North America, taken in May), wing 69.5-74.0 (71.8), tail 45.8-50.9 (48.1), culmen from base 10.6- 12.9 (11.9), tarsus 19.6-21.4 (20.9) mm. Females (8 from North America, taken in May and June), wing 67.0-71.0 (68.5), tail 46.2-49.4 (48.2), culmen from base 11.3-12.3 (11.6), tarsus 18.7-21.5 (20.1) mm. Migrant from the north. Very rare, apparently only a transient; recorded only from the lowlands of western Bocas del Toro, between late September-late October and late March-early April. The occur- rence of this species in Panama has only been confirmed recently, when 3 specimens taken in mist nets were collected at Almirante. A female was taken on October 15, 1963, and an unsexed individual on Septem- ber 30, 1964 (Hicks, Méndez, and Loftin, Condor, 1967, p. 319). The third, a female with the skull ossified, was collected by T. V. Heatley on October 23, 1967; (AMNH no. 801541). The spring reports are based only on sightings (Ridgely, 1976, p. 299). The Connecticut Warbler winters in Venezuela, eastern Colombia, and northern Brazil; the bulk of the population travels to and from North America via the West Indies or across the Caribbean. D. L. Hicks wrote Eisenmann that, in addition to the bird he preserved at Almirante in September 1964, he banded and released other individuals identified as this species on September 28 and 29 and October 3, and in the following spring on March 21, 22, 28, and 29, and April 4, 5, and 9, 1965. OPORORNIS PHILADELPHIA (Wilson): Mourning Warbler, Reinita Encopetada Sylvia Philadelphia Wilson, 1810, Amer. Ornith., 2, p. 101, pl. 14, fig. 6. (Within a few miles of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ) Small; head gray, male with black on breast; rest of upper surface yellowish olive; undersurface yellow. Description.—Length 111-120 mm. Adult male, entire head slate gray; rest of upper surface, including tail, yellowish olive; primaries dusky with outer webs edged yellowish olive; rest of wing yellowish olive; center of throat and breast black, with feathers edged gray; sides of throat and breast gray; sides and flanks light yellowish olive; rest of undersurface, edges of wing, and underwing coverts yellow. Adult female, like male, but head deep grayish olive and throat and upper breast drab. 292 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Immatures, upper surface buffy olive; undersurface yellow, tinged brown on throat and upper breast. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 58.9-65.0 (61.5), tail 45.9-50.7 (48.6), culmen from base 10.2-12.7 (11.4), tarsus 17.8- Ze 2 CLO 38) saan Females (8 from Panama), wing 55.4-60.1 (57.5), tail 45.5-51.7 (46.7), culmen from base 10.7-12.2 (11.4), tarsus 19.3-21.1 (20.4) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Fairly common through- out as a transient, less common as a winter resident. The Mourning Warbler is found in Panama from mid-September to mid-May: F. S. Blanton collected a male at Gamboa in the Canal Zone on September 16, 1953, and Monniche (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p- 559) collected a male at 1590 m on the Volcan de Chiriqui on May 16. E. A. Goldman’s notes remark that this species was “rather com- mon in the northern half of the Zone between January 11 and April 24 [1911] when the last one seen was shot at Gatun. The disappearance of the migrating warblers and some other North American birds seemed to be closely coincident with the opening of the rainy season about April 24, as indicated by a thunder shower and change in the pre- vailing direction of the wind. The wind about this time began to come from southward or southwestward and the northerly trade ceased to blow.” Eisenmann saw 3 at Ft. Davis, Canal Zone, as late as May 11, 1960. I have encountered this species throughout the Republic, at El Vol- can, Santa Clara, Concepcion, Buena Vista, and Alanje in Chiriqui; Almirante, Bocas del Toro; El Valle and El Uracillo, Coclé; Chilar in Colon; several localities in the Canal Zone and eastern Province of Panama; on the Rio Jaqué in Darién; and Mandinga and Puerto Obaldia in San Blas. Ridgely (1m litt.) finds that during the northern winter it is numerous in the highlands of Chiriqui and Darién. It is always in dense shrubbery or in an area of weeds bordering taller growth. Banding studies indicate that Mourning Warblers wintering in Pan- ama are faithful to a site through the winter and in succeeding years. Loftin et al. (Bird-Banding, 1966, p. 42) had the following returns at Almirante: April 19, 1963, retaken February 25, 1964; October 9, 1963, retaken September 27, 1964; and November 1, 1963, retaken April 21, 1964. One banded at Gamboa January 27, 1964, was retaken there November 11, 1964. Five collected by Burton (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1975, p. 86) at El Real, Darién weighed from 9.5 to 10.0 g. G. V.N. FAMILY PARULIDAE 293 Powell (1m litt. to Eisenmann) took a female immature (skull unossi- fied) on October 19, 1966, at It. Sherman that weighed 11 g. OPORORNIS TOLMIEI TOLMIEI (Townsend): MacGillivray’s Warbler, Reinita de Tupidero Sylvia Tolmiei J.K. Townsend, 1839 (Apr.), Narr. Journey Rocky Mountains, etc. p. 343. (Fort Vancouver, Clarke County, Washington.) Small; head, throat, and chest slate gray; upper surface yellowish olive; undersurface yellow. Description—Length 114-127 mm. Adult male, crown and nape slate gray; rest of upper surface, including tail, yellowish olive; pri- maries dusky, with outer web edged yellowish olive; rest of wing yel- lowish olive; lores black; broken eye-ring white; sides of throat and upper breast light gray; center of throat and chest black, with most feathers tipped white; sides and flanks light yellowish olive; rest of undersurface, bend of wing and underwing coverts yellow. Adult female, like male, but crown grayish olive; throat whitish, tinged gray; upper breast light grayish olive. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May and June), wing 57.0-61.9 (59.4), tail 50.0-53.5 (51.9), culmen from bases t@(5-11.2 (10:8), tarsus. 18:2-21.2 (20.1). mm: Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in June and July), wing 55.0-61.0 (56.4), tail 46.5-52.4 (49.5), culmen from base 10.6- Ori 2) tarsus 18.8-21 1 (19.9)) mm. Winter visitor from the north. Uncommon, recorded only from Chiriqui and the Canal Zone. In Chiriqui, the MacGillivray’s Warbler is known mainly from the highlands, where Monniche collected it at the Volcan de Chiriqui between 1590 and 1800 m (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, pp. 559-560) (Phillips [Birds of Arizona, 1964, p. 159] believes some of Monniche’s specimens assigned to tolmiei are referable to O. philadelphia). W. W. Brown, Jr., found it at Boquete at 1200 m (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 61). The British Museum has a male and female collected by mance) labeled | Chiriqut’’ and “Volcan de Chirigqut.”, Whe California Academy of Sciences has 2 specimens identified as tolmiei collected at Barriles (1350 m, near Fl Volcan), Chiriqui on January 21 and Feb- ruary 4, 1931, and a male from the lowlands at Puerto Armuelles, taken November 7, 1929. My only encounter with this species was at El Volcan, where on February 12, 1955, J collected a male in low growth along a small quebrada running through a pasture still thick with felled tree trunks. 294 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 All the records from the Canal Zone are quite old and were identified before mensural differences between this species and O. philadelphia were known. Stone (Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 70, 1918, p. 274) listed O. tolmiei from the Canal Zone. The Field Museum in Chicago has 2 females collected at Colon by J. F. Ferry on March 14 and 16, 1908. The Smithsonian has a female collected by E. A. Gold- man at Gatun March 2, 1911, that fits the mensural characters of tolmiei (examined by W. Lanyon). Specimens collected by Monniche (Blake, op. cit.) on October 15 and May 16 (to the extent correctly identified as tolmiei) would repre- sent the extreme dates for which this species is known in Panama. The specimens from Panama agree with those of the nominate race from California and Oregon in being brighter green above and brighter yellow below than monticola of Colorado and New Mexico. Cox (Auk, 1973, pp. 190-191) describes occasional hybridization between this species and O. philadelphia in southwestern Alberta. In non-breeding plumage O. tolmie: cannot be safely separated in the field from O. philadelphia and must be identified by measurements, especially the relatively longer tail compared to wing; thus many identifications, even of specimens, made without determining wing and tail relationship (as described in Lanyon and Bull, Bird-Banding, 1967, pp. 187-194) are likely to be erroneous. GEOTHLYPIS TRICHAS (Linnaeus): Common Yellowthroat, Reinita Gargantiamarilla Comun Turdus Trichas Linnaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, 1, p. 293. (Maryland.) Small, upper surface mostly buffy olive; throat (and on male much of undersurface) yellow; belly buff; male with black mask across fore- crown and face. Description.—Length 108-129 mm. Adult male, forecrown and side of head black, bordered by white except on sides of throat; crown buffy olive, becoming more greenish on back; wings dull green, with remiges edged yellowish green; tail yellowish green; throat and breast bright yellow fading to light buffy brown on belly; undertail coverts pale lemon yellow; bend of wing bright yellow; underwing coverts white. Adult female, forecrown light brown, fading to buffy olive on rest of upper surface; wings and tail as male; side of face dull tawny-olive; throat pale yellow, tinged with buff on breast and fading to light buffy brown on rest of undersurface; undertail coverts more yellowish. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Rare in Bocas del Toro FAMILY PARULIDAE 295 and Chiriqui and perhaps not found annually any farther east. The most easterly locations in Panama from which it has been reported is the EF] Real, Darién airstrip, where Ridgely saw 2 females on March 5, 1981, and at Mandinga, San Blas, where | saw at least 2 in January and February of 1957. It usually forages near the ground, sometimes oc- curring with native yellowthroats. This species has been taken in Panama from October 15, when in 1967 a female was collected by the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, to April 24, when in 1963 R. Hinds collected a male at Almirante. Ridgely ob- served a male and a female at Tocumen marsh, eastern Province of Panama on April 29, 1976. Most Common Yellowthroats winter far- ther north, from Central America to the southern United States and in the West Indies. Geothly pis trichas has an extremely broad range across Mexico and North America and numerous races of varying degrees of distinction have been described. Dr. John W. Aldrich, who has studied this species extensively, very kindly examined the Panamanian specimens in the Smithsonian collection, and his identifications are followed here. GEOTHLYPIS TRICHAS BRACHIDACTYLUS (Swainson) Trichas brachidactylus Swainson, 1838 (1837?), Anim. Menag., p. 295. (Northern provinces of United States.) Characters —Large, extremely yellowish green above with pale flanks. Breeds in southern New England, eastern New York, and northern New Jersey. There are 3 specimens in the Smithsonian collection: USNM no. 459116 and no. 474689 from Juan Mina, Canal Zone, on January 9, 1955, and January 13, 1961, and USNM no. 469132 from Changuinola, Bocas del Toro, March 4, 1958. Another male specimen in the British Museum, no. 85.3.8.496, which agrees with the characters of this race, was collected by Arcé in 1870 at Volcan de Chiriqui, Chiriqui. GEOTHLYPIS TRICHAS PELAGITIS Braund and McCullagh Geothlypis trichas pelagitis Braund and McCullagh, 1940, Wilson Bull., 52, p. 118. (Eel Falls, 250 ft., Fox Bay, Anticosti Island.) Characters.—As large as brachidactyla, but darker greenish above and darker on flanks. Dr. Aldrich includes in this race the populations breeding from On- tario and northern Michigan through northern New England and mari- 296 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 time Canada. A male, USNM no. 486554, taken at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, October 21, 1964, is of this race. GEOTHLYPIS TRICHAS MINNESOTICOLA Oberholser Geothlypis trichas minnesoticola Oberholser, 1948, Descr. New Races Geothlypis trichas (Linnaeus), p. 2. (St. Paul, Minnesota.) Characters ——Grayish green above, more rufescent on flanks and more orange-yellow on throat. Breeds in the northern Mississippi Valley from Iowa to Wisconsin and north to western Ontario and Manitoba. Specimens in the Smith- sonian are as follows: USNM no. 459115, a female from El Volcan, Chiriqui, March 14, 1955; USNM no. 462397, a male from Mandinga, San Blas, February 3, 1957; and USNM no. 469133, a male from Changuinola, Bocas del Toro, February 13, 1958. GEOTHLYPIS TRICHAS ROSCOE (Audubon) Sylvia roscoe Audubon, 1831, Orn. Bio. 1, p. 124. (not far from the River Mis- sissippi, Mississippi. ) Characters.—Small, paler, more yellowish green above; more rufes- cent on the flanks; more orange-yellow on throat. Breeds in the lower Mississippi Valley. E. A. Goldman collected a male, USNM no. 207165, at the Rio Indio, Canal Zone, on February 13, 1911, that has been identified as this race. GEOTHLYPIS TRICHAS TYPHICOLA Burleigh Geothlypis trichas typhicola Burleigh, 1934, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 47, p. 21. (Athens, Georgia.) Characters.—Brownish above and below, lighter colored, smaller. Breeds on the southeastern coastal plain from eastern Mississippi north to Virginia, exclusive of Florida. Dr. Aldrich has identified 3 specimens from Almirante, Bocas del Toro, as belonging to this race: USNM no. 486553, a male collected April 24, 1963; AMNH no. 785926, an immature male taken October 17, 1965; and a female from the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory collected October 15, 1967. GEOTHLYPIS AEQUINOCTIALIS CHIRIQUENSIS (Salvin): Masked Yellowthroat, Reinita Gargantiamarilla Chiricana Geothlypis chiriquensis Salvin, 1872, Ibis, p. 148. (Slopes of Volcan de Chiriqui, Panama. ) Small; upper surface bright yellowish green; undersurface yellow; male with black facial mask. FAMILY PARULIDAE 297 Description.—Length 120-133 mm. Adult male, lores, forecrown, orbital ring, and side of face black; top of crown and line from rear of eye to nape, bordering black area, gray; hind crown and all of upper surface, including tail and wing feathers except for primaries, bright yellowish green; primaries dusky, with outer web edged bright yel- lowish green; sides and flanks greenish yellow; rest of undersurface, bend of wing, and underwing coverts bright yellow. Adult female, like male, but black replaced by gray, less extensive on side of face. Immature, like female, but with gray areas replaced by warbler green. Measurements.—Males (3 from Chiriqui), wing 58.1-61.5 (59.7), tail 46.7-51.2 (49.5), culmen from base 13.2-13.8 (13.6), tarsus 21.8- 22.6 (22.1) mm. Females (2 from Chiriqui), wing 57.1-57.2 (57.2), tail 47.6-49.6, (48.6), culmen from base 13.7, tarsus 22.0-22.2 (22.1) mm. Resident. Found only in western Chiriqui in a few places around Volcan at 1050 to 1350 m, and in immediately adjacent southwestern Costa Rica, where it was first recorded by Skutch in 1964 ( Publ. Nutt. Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, pp. 146-149). The Masked Yellowthroat in- habits lush meadows and marshy areas near streams; at La Lagunita, near El Volcan, I found a female perched in a spiny bush surrounded by heavy grass near a stream—habitat that Geothlypis trichas might choose. Although Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 78, 1935, p. 369) called this species “very rare” it is actually very local but not un- common, usually found in loose colonies. Its voice is “a sweet twichee- teeweeo tweécheo, repeated four or five times, then a pause before starting again” (Ridgely, 1976, p. 301). In Costa Rica, Skutch (op. cit.) found them most vocal during May and June. Ridgely (i litt.) has heard them singing regularly in March in Chiriqui. On May 21, 1964, Skutch found a female working on a half-finished nest near Canas Gordas, Costa Rica. When completed, 4 days later, the nest was a bulky open cup composed of blades of lemon grass lined with long, smooth, brown fibers of unknown origin, situated about 45 cm from the ground in a dense clump of lemon grass. The external dimensions were 10.1 by 14 cm in diameter by 8.9 cm high. The in- terior was 6.4 by 7.6 cm in diameter by 3.8 cm deep. The two eggs in this nest were laid May 26 and 27; they were “white, spotted with deep brown, pale brown, and pale lilac. The spots were largest and most crowded on the thick end of the egg and diminished toward the opposite pole, where they were few, small, and faint. The eggs mea- 298 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 sured 20.0 by 13.9 and 19.6 by 14.1 mm. The shells had little gloss.” The eggs hatched after 15 days of incubation, and the nestlings were flesh colored, with a tinge of orange. Their natal down was a pale gray and by their third day the young had sprouted pinfeathers, but on that afternoon there was a heavy rainstorm that evidently killed the nest- lings. Skutch never found another nest. G. a. chiriquensis differs from other forms of G. aequinoctialts in its somewhat larger bill, duller dorsal coloration, and the greater extent of black on the forecrown. Despite the wide separation in range, the Chi- riqui bird is clearly a representative of aequinoctialis and Hellmayr’s (Field Mus. Nat. Hist., publ. 347, vol. 13, part 8, 1935, p. 440) listing of chiriquensis as a subspecies of aequinoctialis is probably justified, although most authors have kept them as separate species. It may also be noted that there is a similar, though less extreme, gap in the distri- bution of the races of Geothly pis semiflava, and geographical isolation is, therefore, not necessarily a compelling argument for specific dis- tinctness. GEOTHLYPIS SEMIFLAVA BAIRDI Ridgway: Olive-crowned Yellowthroat, Reinita Gargantiamarilla Coronioliva Geothlypis bairdi Ridgway (ex Nutting MS), 1884, in Nutting, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., 6 (1883), p. 398. (Los Sabalos, Nicaragua.) Small; upper surface yellowish olive-green; undersurface yellow; male has forecrown and facial area black. Description.—Length 111-125 mm. Adult male, forecrown, lores, and side of face to lower edge of throat black; rest of upper surface, including tail and all of wings except primaries, yellowish olive-green; primaries dusky with outer web edged olive-green; sides and flanks olive-green; rest of undersurface, bend of wing, and underwing co- verts bright lemon yellow. Adult female, like male, but black replaced by olive- green, more yel- lowish on forehead and superciliary; olive wash on undersurface more extensive. Immature, like female, but buffier below. Measurements.—Males (10 from Bocas del Toro and Costa Rica), wing 57.2-62.0 (59.2), tail 42.7-52.4 (47.6), culmen from base 13.8- 16.1 (14.9), tarsus 20.1-22.9 (21.7) mm. Females (7 from Bocas del Toro, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua), wing 54.2-57.0 (55.7), tail 42.6-47.3 (45.1), culmen from base 13.9-15.2 (14.7), tarsus 20.1-21.8 (21.2) mm. FAMILY PARULIDAE 299 Resident. Common in the lowlands of western Bocas del Toro, and north on the Caribbean slope to southern Honduras. In Panama this species inhabits rank grass, bamboo thickets, shrubbery, and the bor- ders of reedy swamps. I have collected it at Almirante and Changui- nola; H. von Wedel collected it also at Isla Grande, in the Sixaola River near Victoria, about 32 km northwest of Almirante (Peters, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 71, 1931, p. 337). G. semiflava was not recorded from Panama prior to 1926, when on February 14 Kennard collected a male and female at Almirante (Kennard and Peters, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. - Hist., vol. 38, 1928, p. 460). Its behavior is like other yellowthroats, and I have found it hard to distinguish from migrant G. trichas until I have had the specimen in hand. The song is a loud, sweet warble, some- what suggestive of the Gray-crowned Yellowthroat and Orchard Oriole (Ridgely, 1976, p. 301). Three nests collected in early April of 1970 and 1971 in Costa Rica, now at the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, were each found in pasture. They were open cups made of wide dead strips of grass and lined with finer grass. Lloyd Kiff (pers. comm.) describes the eggs as ‘“‘white with sparse springling of fine black and dark brown dots, mostly at the large ends. Similar to G. trichas eggs, but lacking the scrawls that are present on many ex- amples of the latter.” Measurements of 5 eggs average 19.47 14.05 mm. Two eggs form a clutch. Eisenmann points out that the yellowish (rather than whitish or brownish) abdominal area separates it from G. trichas in all plumages, and males can be distinguished from all members of the genus known from Panama by the more extensive black on the crown and lack of gray or white on the head. GEOTHLYPIS POLIOCEPHALA RIDGWAYI (Griscom): Gray- crowned Yellowthroat, Reinita Gargantiamarilla Carbonera Chamaethlypis poliocephala ridgwayi Griscom, 1930, Proc. New England Zool. Club, 12, p. 7. (Boruca, southwestern Costa Rica.) Small; crown gray; rest of upper surface grayish olive-green; un- dersurface yellow. Description.—Length 115-131 mm. Adult male, lores and area just below eye black; crown gray; side of face and rest of upper surface, grayish olive-green, brighter, more yellowish on rump, upper tail co- verts, and wings; undersurface, bend of wing, and underwing coverts yellow, fading into buffy whitish on abdomen and to light buffy olive on sides and flanks. 300 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Adult female, like male, but gray on crown less extensive, rest of up- per surface slightly browner than male; black area less intense, and yellow undersurface paler. Measurements.—Males (8 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 53.5-57.0 (54.8), tail 51.7-61.1 (56.3), culmen from base 11.8-13.2 (12:5)); tarsus 20.4-23:20(2107\) arama, Females (5 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 50.0-57.7 (53.3), tail 54.9-62.1 (57.7), culmen from base 11.7-13.2 (12.5), tarsus 21.0- 2Z,81(20S i coma: Resident. Uncommon and local in the foothills and highlands of western Chiriqui from 690 to 2250 m (Ridgely, 1976, p. 301), and west to the Térraba Valley in southwestern Costa Rica. Other races are found from extreme southern Texas through Middle America. This yellowthroat inhabits overgrown and abandoned pastures and brushy fields. Monniche collected specimens at Lérida and Quiel on the Volcan de Chiriqui (Blake, Fieldiana: ‘Zool., vol 36;me}aeoae p. 560) and W. W. Brown, Jr., collected it also at Boquete (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 61). The only place I found this species was at El Salto (1200 m), near Boquete, where on March 17 and 18, 1960, I collected a male and female in a field of bracken and grass. The song, which is sometimes delivered from an exposed perch as high as a tree branch or a wire, is “somewhat similar to semiflava and has a number of undistinctive vireo-like phrases strung together. It 1s not so long as that of semiflava, does not ramble up and down so markedly, and lacks a slur at the end although one may be thrown in elsewhere” (Slud, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 128, 1964, p. 330). This species also has at least a half dozen calls. Rowley (Condor, 1962, p. 262) found the nest of the nominate race near Cuernavaca, Mexico. It was in dry grass bordering a cleared field and was made entirely of dried grasses; it contained 3 eggs. Eisenmann (Auk, 1962, pp. 265-267) reviews all characters of this species, formerly placed in the monotypic genus Chaemethlypis, and concludes that it is not allied to cteria but is properly placed in the genus Geothly pis, the only distinction between it and other members of the genus being the larger bill. It is “simply a yellowthroat of the drier, more sterile uplands, as distinct from the marshes or borders of wet places preferred by other yellowthroats. The drier niche, with the con- sequent difference in diet, doubtless accounts for the heavier bill, which is presumably useful in feeding on harder-bodied or larger insects (and possibly on seeds) than are normally taken by yellowthroats of water FAMILY PARULIDAE 301 edges, which have more soft-bodied larval forms available. The re- duction of the black mask also seems correlated with a drier environ- ment.” ICTERIA VIRENS VIRENS (Linnaeus): Yellow-breasted Chat, Reinita Arriera Turdus virens Linnaeus, 1758, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, 1, p. 171. (South Carolina.) - Medium size; upper surface yellowish olive; abdomen and undertail coverts white; rest of undersurface yellow. Description.—Length 151-174 mm. Adult (sexes alike), forehead gray; superciliary and lower rim of eye white; lores black; upper sur- face and wing coverts yellowish olive; remiges and rectrices dusky with outer webs edged light yellowish olive; auricular region gray; thin white stripe on side of throat; throat to belly bright yellow; flanks gray; rest of undersurface white; bend of wing and underwing coverts yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May), wing 71.0-78.0 (75.5), tail 69.6-77.5 (74.4), culmen from base 14.2- 17.0 (15.3), tarsus 24.3-27.0 (25.7) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in June), wing 71.8- 80.0 (76.5), tail 66.5-83.4 (76.2), culmen from base 14.9-16.1 (15.4), tarsus 24.7-27.8 (26.0) mm. Winter visitor from the north. Uncommon in the lowlands of west- ern Bocas del Toro, where it has been recorded at Almirante and at the mouth of the Rio Teribe on the Rio Changuinola. The first specimen known from Panama was collected at Almirante by H. von Wedel on January 16, 1929, but banding results suggest that it is not rare there: in 1963, 16 were netted October 1-31 and 3 were netted April 17-21 WEettinvand Olson) Carib. Journ: Sci.) vol.\3; no. 4, 1963, p, 195,). Banding also indicates that Yellow-breasted Chats return to the same site in succeeding years. One banded at Almirante April 17, 1963, was recaptured there October 17 and 18, 1963, and again October 22 and Movember 11965, (Loftim et al.. Bird-Bandimeg, 1967, \p. 152). The only report of this species elsewhere in Panama, and the most southern, is a sighting of 1 on Cerro Campana (far to the east of any other record and the only one from the Pacific slope) on September 14, 1961, by Richard Ryan and Ned Boyajian (Ridgely, 1976, p. 301). In Panama, as in its breeding range, the chat usually stays well hidden in dense undergrowth of brushy areas and woodland borders. 302 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A WILSONIA CITRINA (Boddaert): Hooded Warbler, Reinita Encapuchada Muscicapa citrina Boddaert, 1783, Tabl. Planches Enlum., p. 41. (Louisiana. ) Small; face yellow; hindcrown, sides of neck, and throat black; rest of upper surface olive-green; rest of lower surface yellow. Description.—Length 118-132 mm. Adult male, forehead, fore- crown, and side of face to auriculars bright yellow; loral spot, re- mainder of crown, nape, sides of neck, throat, and upper breast black; rest of upper surface olive-green; remiges dusky, with outer web edged olive-green; two outer pairs of rectrices nearly all white on inner web, dusky on outer web; next pair with white spot on inner web; remaining rectrices dusky, with outer web edged olive-green; rest of undersurface yellow, fading to very pale yellow on under- tail coverts; bend of wing yellow; underwing coverts white. Adult female, upper surface olive-green; wings and tail as male, but duller; lores, superciliary, side of face bright yellow, with auricular region tinged greenish yellow; undersurface bright yellow, becoming paler on undertail coverts. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May and June), wing 62.1-70.0 (66.6), tail 53.2-58.1 (55.3), culmen from base 10.7-12.8 (11.6), tarsus 17.9-20.5 (19.3) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in April, May, and June), wing 60.5-65.0 (62.5), tail 50.8-56.5 (54.5), culmen from base 10.5-12.0 (11.2), tarsus 18.6-19.8 (19.1) mm. Winter visitor from the north. Breeds in eastern United States; winters through Middle America to central Panama. Rare in the low- lands of western Bocas del Toro (Almirante) and the Canal Zone area. An adult male was reported seen by N. G. Smith in “late September” 1964 and another in Panama City in his garden on May 2, 1968 (in litt. to Eisenmann). McLeannan evidently encountered this species at least twice in what became the Canal Zone, since specimens collected by him are now in the British Museum (Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr.- Amer., Aves, vol. 1 (pt. 12), 1881, p. 167) and the American Museum of Natural History (Lawrence, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 8, 1863, p. 6). More recently in the Canal Zone, Gale and West (im litt.) banded, photographed, and released a male at Corozal on October 27,1973, and T. A. Imhof (in litt.) found 1 at Caflo Saddle on Decem- ber 29, 1942. A male was seen on Barro Colorado Island on September 24, 1951, and another on January 5, 1977 (Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Contrib. Zool. 291, 1979, p. 27). In Bocas del Toro only 3 or 4 were banded in two seasons (October 12-30) at Almirante (Loftin, FAMILY PARULIDAE 303 in litt. to Eisenmann). Extreme dates from Panama (fide Eisenmann) are September 24-May 2. Willis (Living Bird, 1966, p. 209) considers the Hooded Warbler to be an ecological competitor of the Spotted Ant- bird (Hylophylax naevioides) and suggests that this is why the warbler is locally rare or absent as a winter resident wherever the antbird occurs. A male collected at Almirante by D. L. Hicks on October 25, 1964, weighed 8 g. WILSONIA PUSILLA (Wilson): Wilson’s Warbler, Reinita de Wilson Small; mid-crown black; upper surface bright olive-green; forehead and undersurface yellow. Description.—Length 103-115 mm. Adult male, forehead, super- ciliary, and orbital ring bright yellow; center and rear of crown shin- ing black; auriculars and rest of upper surface bright olive-green; wings and tail dusky, with wing coverts tipped and rectrices and remiges edged olive-green; undersurface, bend of wing, and underwing coverts bright yellow. Adult female, like male, but black on crown less extensive or absent. Wilson’s Warbler is an abundant winter resident in the highlands of Chiriqui, where, at Fl Volcan, I saw as many as a dozen together, on March 13, 1954. In the highlands and foothills farther east it becomes progressively less common. It is seen regularly in small numbers above Santa Fé, Veraguas, but in central Panama there are only 3 sight rec- ords, all of males: 1 on Cerro Campana on September 14, 1961 (R. Ryan), and single individuals on Cerro Azul on December 30, 1967, and December 28, 1973 (Ridgely, 1976, p. 302). Panama is the south- ern limit of this species’ range in winter. Panama records (fide Eisen- mann) run from September 10 to May 16 (both specimen records). Leck ( Bird-Banding, 1975, p. 202) found that 15 Wilson’s Warblers mist netted at Cerro Punta, Chiriqui, during September and October 1967 had an average weight of 7.6 g and 12 netted there in March 1968 averaged 8.0 g. I have seen Wilson’s Warblers feeding in herbaceous growth near the ground and as high as 10 m up in second growth. They are often common in coffee plantations. This is the most numerous and con- spicuous wintering wood warbler in the Chiriqui highlands. Ridgely (in litt.) has seen up to 30-35 in a day in Chiriqui and in the Costa Rica highlands as well. Itisenmann (im litt.) noted that in the Chiriqui highlands Wilson’s Warblers favor semi-open or lightly wooded areas. He found them usually moving about in the mixed bands of wandering warblers and 304 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A tanagers. Ordinarily, only 1 Wilson’s Warbler was in each band, but occasionally there were 2 or 3. They were noisy, constantly giving a chip-chip-chip-chip or tsip-tsip-tsip. WILSONIA PUSILLA PILEOLATA (Pallas) Motacilla pileolata Pallas, 1811, Zoogr. Rosso-Asiat., 1, p. 497. (Kodiak Island, Alaska.) Characters.—Forehead light cadmium; upper surface paler green. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 55.0-61.0 (57.1), tail 47.8-52.0 (50.0), culmen from base 9.7-11.3 (10.7), tarsus 17.2- BOLO USS) i montde Females (10 from Chiriqui), wing 55.0-59.4 (56.0), tail 45.8-48.6 (47.5), culmen from base 9.2-11.4 (10.2), tarsus 16.8-18.8 (18.0) mm. Winter visitor from the north, breeding in the Rockies and most of western Canada and northwestern United States. Abundant in the highlands of western Chiriqui, less numerous farther east. Monniche (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 560) collected this race on the Volcan de Chiriqui between 1560 and 2700 m. W. W. Brown, Jr., found it at Boquete as low as 1200 m (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 61); I have seen the species there from 1260 to 2610 m. Monniche collected specimens of this race from September 17 to May 16. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 78, 1935, p. 369) considered this race fairly common in Veraguas and listed it from the Canal Zone. WILSONIA PUSILLA CHRYSEOLA Ridgway Wilsonia pusilla chryseola Ridgway, 1902, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., 50, pt. 2, pp. 705, 714, (Red Bluff, California.) Characters.—Upper surface suffused with yellow, lighter than any other race. Measurements.—Males (10 from North America, taken in April and May), wing 52.0-58.5 (55.0), tail 44.1-49.9 (48.2), culmen from base 96-1 1.9) (10:5))) tarsus l5:9219.9 (1722) amae Females (10 from North America, taken in May), wing 50.8-55.5 (52.8), tail 44.5-49.9 (47.1), culmen from base 9.7-11.3 (10.8), tarsus 17.3-19.0 (18.2) mm. Winter visitor from the north, breeding in the Pacific coast region of the United States and Canada. Rare in the highlands of western Chiri- qui. I know of only 4 specimens of this well-marked race that have been taken in Panama. Arcé collected a male on the southern slope of FAMILY PARULIDAE 305 the Volcan de Chiriqui in 1870. The specimen is now in the British Museum and is presumably the one to which Griscom was referring when he listed “fone record” for Panama (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., 78, 1935, p. 369). C. Lynn Hayward collected 3, a male and 2 females, on Cerro Punta between March 6 and 14, 1962; they are now in the Monte L. Bean Life Sciences Museum at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. WILSONIA PUSILLA PUSILLA (Wilson) Muscicapa pusilla Wilson, 1811, Amer. Ornith., 3, p. 103, pl. 26, fig. 4. (Southern New Jersey.) Characters.__Forehead lemon chrome; upper surface darker green. Measurements.—Males (10 from North America, taken in May), wing 53.3-56.0 (54.5), tail 44.3-49.3 (47.1), culmen from base 9.6- 11.4 (10.3), tarsus 17.2-18.4 (17.8) mm. Females (10 from North America, taken in May), wing 50.8-55.1 (54.0), tail 44.0-49.4 (46.7), culmen from base 10.1-11.4 (10.8), tarsus 16.1-19.5 (18.1) mm. Winter visitor from the north, breeding in northwestern United States and eastern Canada. Fairly common in the highlands of western Chiriqui. I have collected individuals of this race at El Volcan from 1320 to 1560 m, at Santa Clara (1080 m), and on Cerro Punta (2010 m). WILSONIA CANADENSIS (Linnaeus): Canada Warbler, Reinita de Canada Muscicapa canadensis Linnaeus, 1766, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, 1, p. 327. (Canada.) Small; upper surface gray; undersurface yellow, with necklace of black streaks on breast of male. DescriptionLength 113-127 mm. Adult male, forehead to top of crown black, with feathers tipped gray; rest of upper surface, includ- ing wings and tail, gray; superciliary to eye and orbital ring yellow; lores, auriculars, side of throat, and spots on breast black; undersur- face yellow, to undertail coverts, which are white; underwing coverts white. In winter upper surface tinged with olive. Adult female, like male, but black areas reduced, paler, or absent; yellow on undersurface slightly paler. Measurements——Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May and June), wing 64.0-69.5 (65.5), tail 51.2-54.6 (53.0), culmen from base 10.5-12.5 (11.5), tarsus 17.4-20.0 (18.6) mm. 306 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May and June), wing 59.2-63.3 (61.5), tail 49.3-52.5 (51.4), culmen from base 10.4-12.0 (11.6), tarsus 17.2-18.8 (18.1) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Fairly common through- out on migration, in small numbers up to the highlands of western Chiriqui as high as 1620 m (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 560), and on the Pearl Islands (Rendahl, Ark. Zool, vol. 13, no. 4, 1920, p. 48). The Canada Warbler has been recorded in Panama from September 3 to May 19 (Eisenmann, Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 52; Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Contrib. Zool. 291, 1979, p. 27); it is most numerous from late September to early October and in late April and early May. On May 1, 1980, Ridgely counted at least 18 (75% of them males) at Galeta Island, Canal Zone. In 1963, 94 were banded at Almirante, Bocas del Toro, between September 18 and October 28 (Loftin, im litt.). Willis (Living Bird, 1966, p. 209) saw 12 on Barro Colorado Island on October 3, 1960; he found that the Canada Warbler regularly followed swarms of army ants there with as many as 5 individuals in attendance at one swarm. In Panama it usually occurs in the understory of forest and woodland, often at edge, but only infrequently out in clearings, and then only when they are heavily overgrown. This species is recorded in winter from British Honduras south to central Peru and northern Brazil, but is scarce at that season north of South America, its primary wintering area. In winter it has been re- corded from Cerro Campana, Province of Panama, and from the Canal Zone (Ridgely, op. cit). One banded at Curundu in the Canal Zone on February 13, 1964, and retaken there 6 weeks later on March 29 (Loftin et al., Bird-Banding, 1966, pp. 42-43) was probably a winter resident. I also have a sight record for Chilar, western Colon, on Feb- ruary 19, 1952. Two sightings that probably represent wintering indi- viduals in Chiriqui were an immature female at Fortuna on March 3, 1976, and a male near Volcan (Dos Rios Hotel) on March 20, 1979, both observed by Ridgely. SETOPHAGA RUTICILLA (Linnaeus): American Redstart, Candelita Americana Motacilla ruticilla Linnaeus, 1758, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, 1, p. 186. ( Virginia.) Small; male black with orange on remiges, rectrices, and sides; fe- male with gray crown, rest of upper surface green, undersurface white with yellow on sides. FAMILY PARULIDAE 307 Description.—Length 113-126 mm. Adult male, entire upper sur- face, throat, and breast shining black; wings black with basal half of remiges pinkish orange; central pair of rectrices black, all others pink- ish orange on basal half, black on distal half; sides and flanks orange; rest of undersurface white; underwing coverts pinkish orange. Adult female, crown gray; rest of upper surface to upper tail co- verts buffy olive; upper tail coverts blackish; remiges blackish brown with yellow, base and outer webs edged buffy olive; central pair of rectrices blackish brown, all others with basal half wholly or partially light yellow and remainder blackish brown; orbital ring white; side of head gray; sides and flanks yellow; rest of undersurface white; under- wing coverts pale yellow. Immature male, like female, but sides of breast tinged pinkish orange. Measurements.—Males (10 from the breeding range, taken in May) wing 61.8-66.0 (64.1), tail 52.3-57.4 (54.7), culmen from base 10.0- 11.6 (10.8), tarsus 15.0-17.2 (16.2) mm. Females (10 from the breeding range, taken in May and June), wing 58.0-63.8 (60.4), tail 51.4-56.2 (53.4), culmen from base 10.5- 120 (11), tarsus 15.2-18.3 (16:3) mm. Migrant and winter visitor from the north. Fairly common through- out on migration, less common in winter. The American Redstart has been recorded as high as 1650 m on the Volcan de Chiriqui (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1968, p. 561); I have also seen it in coastal mangroves, at Tonosi, Los Santos, and Almirante, Bocas del Toro, for example. Aldrich (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 125) saw it on several occasions in forests on the west side of the Azuero Peninsula, Veraguas, where it was part of mixed flocks of migrant North American warblers. I have found redstarts in high forest on Isla Coiba, and W. W. Brown, Jr. (Thayer and Bangs, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 46, 1905, p. 156) collected a female on San Miguel in the Pearl Islands on March 2, 1904. The British Museum has specimens collected by H. J. Kelsall at sea 160 to 190 km south of Panama, taken between August 28 and October 2, 1924. The American Redstart has been found in Panama as early as Au- eosel/ (kisenmann, Smiths. Misc. Coll, volull7, no. 5; 1952) sp) 52) and as late as May 11 (Ridgely, 1976, p. 302); most depart by late April. In Eisenmann’s experience their numbers vary greatly from year to year; in some seasons few are noted even in fall migration. One banded near Curundu, Canal Zone, on December 8, 1963, was re- captured there September 27, 1965 (Loftin et al., Bird-Banding, 1967, p. 152). In Panama this species is found in woodlands and borders. It 208 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 is less numerous in the highlands than at lower elevations. Ridgely (in litt.) has found it more common in mangroves than any other habitat in winter. Eisenmann has seen it on migration in the semi-arid, rather scrubby western part of the Province of Panama near the coast at Playa Coronado, on August 19-26, 1947, (2-4 birds daily) and at Santa Clara Beach. MYIOBORUS MINIATUS (Swainson): Slate-throated Redstart, Candelita Gargantigris Setophaga mimata Swainson, 1827, Philos. Mag., new ser., 1, fasc. 5, p. 368. (Morelia, Michoacan. ) Small; upper surface and throat dark gray, with chestnut patch in center of crown; undersurface yellow. Description.—Length 118-128 mm. Adult (sexes alike), upper sur- face, wings, head and throat slate color (throat dark, sometimes black) ; center of crown chestnut; tail black, with outer pair of rectrices nearly all white, second pair with distal half white, third pair white only at tip; undertail coverts white; rest of undersurface yellow; underwing coverts white. Juvenile, head, back, rump, and foreneck sooty slate; upper breast and sides washed with dull rufous; lower breast, abdomen, and under- tail coverts cinnamon; wings and tail like adults. The Slate-throated Redstart is very common in woodlands, forests, and even borders and gardens adjacent to clearings in the highlands of Chiriqui and Veraguas and in eastern Darién. It moves about like Seto phaga ruticilla, opening and shutting its tail both while perched and in flight, so that the white on the outer feathers is conspicuous. I have found these birds high in the tree crowns, in the undergrowth, and on the ground, where they occasionally drop when pursuing prey. Leck (Living Bird, 1971, p. 91) found that at Cerro Punta, Chinqnw aiey spent 45 percent of their time in the upper middle section of trees and another 40 percent in the lower middle. Their food is almost exclu- sively insect material, but Skutch (Pac. Coast Avif. no. 31, 1954, p. 358) has observed them eating the little white protein bodies that are found at the base of the petioles of leaves on Cecropia trees. The Slate- throated Redstart sings throughout the year, although less often between October and January; it has “several usually squeaky or sibilant songs, sometimes suggestive of American Redstart, tseeweech, sweeswee, sweech-sweechee, or tseeoo-tseeoo, cheewee-cheewee-tsee”’ (Ridgely, 1976, p. 303). This species is found from northern Mexico through Middle Amer- FAMILY PARULIDAE 309 ica to Guyana, northern Brazil, and Bolivia. In Panama the birds of the western highlands belong to the race aurantiacus and those of Darién are of the race ballux. MYIOBORUS MINIATUS AURANTIACUS (Baird) Setophaga aurantiaca Baird, 1865, Rev. Amer. Birds, 1, p. 261. (Dota Mountains, San José and Barranca, Costa Rica.) Myioborus miniatus acceptus Bangs, 1908, Proc. New England Zool. Club, 4, p. 30. (Boquete, 4000 ft., Volcan de Chiriqui, Panama.) Characters.—Chestnut crown patch bordered by black stripes; un- dersurface slightly darker yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 61.0-68.8 (63.2), tail 57.1-63.7 (61.3), culmen from base 10.6-13.0 (11.9), tarsus 16.3- 19.6 (17.8) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui), wing 58.0-67.5 (60.9), tail 54.2-62.8 (S62) culmen from base 10:6-12.2 (11.3), tarsus 16.7-18.6 (17.7) mm. Resident. Very common in the highlands of Chiriqui and Veraguas. Found also in the Cordillera de Talamanca of eastern Costa Rica; Monniche collected it on the Volcan de Chiriqui between 1590 and 1890 m (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 561) and W. W. Brown, Jr., found it from 1200 to 1350 m at Boquete, Chiriqui, during January and February of 1901 (Bangs. Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 61). It is common in the regenerating woodland around the Volcan lakes (1200 m). Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol, 78, 1935, p. 369) said it occurred above 1050 m. At Cerro Punta, Chiriqui, I found it rather uncommon at 2100 m during March 1955; I believe this must be about the upper limit of its range. The only locality in Veraguas from which I know of a specimen is Calovévora, where Arcé collected a male, now in the British Museum, on 1867. In early January 1974, Ridgely (1 litt.) found it fairly common along the road north of Santa Fé (900-1160 m). On March 3, 1954, I saw that males were in pursuit of females at EI Volcan, Chiriqui, and in 1960 I found that they were always in pairs there on February 24. In 1965 I collected a male in breeding condition at El Volcan on February 27. Further details of breeding behavior come from Costa Rica, where Skutch (Pac. Coast Avif. no. 31, 1954, pp. 357-365) has found several nests, always on the ground. Most that Skutch found were in a cranny in a bank, but others were placed on a fallen log amid dense vegetation and on a steep slope, also well sheltered by vegetation. The nest is a roofed structure composed of straws, dried 310 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 grass, and fibrous rootlets, and requires 3 to 5 days of construction. Skutch found nests between March 30 and mid-May. A week usually elapsed between completion of the nest and laying of the first egg. Eleven nests that Skutch found contained 3 eggs or nestlings, 2 contained 2 eggs each. “The eggs were white or dull white, speckled and blotched with some shade of brown, ranging from bright brown to chocolate. The pigment was heaviest in a wreath about the point of greatest transverse diameter, or in a cap covering the large end... The measurements of 20 eggs averaged 17.5 by 13.4 milli- meters” (Skutch, of. cit., p. 362). The incubation period varied from 13 to 15 days, and at hatching the nestlings were pink-skinned and blind. By 9 or 10 days of age they were well feathered, and left the nest at 12 to 14 days. By mid-July the young nearly resemble their parents and in October they appear to be mated. While observing the nests of this species, Skutch found that parents would sometimes feign in- jury, fluttering on an open piece of ground near their nest. On April 23, 1961, Eisenmann at Nueva Suiza, Chiriqui, ca. 1800 m, saw a pair carrying food to a domed nest on the ground. During this month he heard birds singing tsireé-tsireé-tsireé, tsee-tsee-tsee (lasting about 2 seconds); in late February he noted a different, rather fast tseéoo-tseéoo, cheéwe p-cheéwee-tsee, somewhat suggestive of a song of the American Redstart, but weaker and rather less sweet. In Sep- tember Eisenmann heard the song quoted by Ridgely. It also gives a call, tit-tit-tit-tit, as it flicks open the tail, snappier and louder than a similar call of the Collared Redstart. MYIOBORUS MINIATUS BALLUX Wetmore and Phelps Myioborus miniatus ballux Wetmore and Phelps, 1944, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- ington, 57, p. 11. (1,600 m., near Queniquea, Tachira, Venezuela.) Characters.—White on outer rectrices more extensive than in M. m. aurantiacus; chestnut crown patch not bordered with black; lighter yellow below. A male collected February 22, 1964, at Cerro Mali, Darién, had the iris slightly reddish brown (very dark); bill black; tarsus, toes, and claws fuscous-black. Measurements.—Males (10 from Darién and Colombia), wing 55.0- 66.1 (62.0), tail 51.3-62.2 (56.8), culmen from base 10.4-12.9 (11.5), tarsus 14.9-18.4 (16.9) mm. | Females (10 from Darién and Colombia), wing 57.0-64.0 (60.5), FAMILY PARULIDAE QLe tail 49.9-59.1 (56.0), culmen from base 10.6-11.8 (11.4), tarsus 16.3- 18.2 (17.4) mm. Resident. Very common in forest in eastern Darién between 1050 and 2100 m. It has been collected at Cerro Mali, Cerro Cana, Cerro Tacarcuna, Cerro Pirre, and Alturas de Nique. A male that I collected on Cerro Mali on February 26, 1964, was in breeding condition and had somewhat worn plumage. E. A. Goldman’s notes from Cerro Pirre in 1912 mention a female collected April 18 “with egg ready to lay.” On April 27 he says “‘this species is nesting.” An individual seen in cloud forest on Cerro Jefe, eastern Province of Panama in July 1973 by D. Hill (Ridgely, 1976, p. 303) may have been of this race, which ranges south through the Andes of Colombia and western Venezuela at least as far as northwestern Ecuador. AY H. Miller (Univ. Calif. Publ. Zool., vol no. 1, 66, 1963, p. 45) has described habitat, behavior, nesting, and weights (8 males, 9-10 g; female, 9.3 g) of M. m. ballux in the western Andes of Colombia at San Antonio. MYIOBORUS TORQUATUS (Baird): Collared Redstart, Candelita Collareja FIGURE 24 Setophaga torquata Baird, 1865, Rev. Amer. Birds, 1, p. 261. (San José, Costa Rica.) Small; upper surface dark gray with reddish brown crown; sides of face and undersurface yellow, with black band across upper breast. Description.—Length 121-133 mm. Adult (sexes alike), forecrown, sides of crown, and nape black; center of crown rufous; upper surface slate color; wings and tail blackish, with white extensive on outer two pairs of rectrices; forehead, lores, superciliary, side of head, and under- surface yellow, with black band across chest; underwing coverts a mix- ture of light yellow and gray. Immature, upper surface gray; forehead, lores, lower cheeks, and throat pale yellow flecked with gray; broad gray band across breast; lower breast and belly yellow; brightest on flanks, fading to whitish on center of abdomen. A male taken March 5, 1965, at Volcan de Chiriqui, Chiriqui, had the iris mouse brown; bill black; tarsus and toes fuscous-brown; claws black. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 63.9-70.1 (66.7), 312 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A tail 56.8-63.8 (60.1), culmen from base 10.3-12.4 (11.4), tarsus 17.9- 20.3 (19.4, average of 9) mm. Females (10 from Chiriqui), wing 61.1-64.5 (62.0), tail 54.7-59.3 (57.8), culmen from base 9.6-11.8 (10.4, average of 9), tarsus 18.4- 199" (C1910) samt Ficure 24.—Collared Redstart, Candelita Collareja, Myioborus torquatus. Resident. Common in highlands of Chiriqui, adjacent Bocas del Toro, and in Veraguas, in forests and woodland edges. It is also found in the mountains of Costa Rica. Monniche found it up to 2700 m on the Volcan de Chiriqui, higher than M. miniatus occurs (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 561). In Chiriqui it is usually found above 1800 m, sometimes down to 1050 (at the Fortuna Dam site); in Vera- guas (Chitra, Santa Fé, Cerro Tute) it regularly comes down to 1050- 1200 m (Ridgely, 1976, p. 303). M. torquatus has been collected com- monly in Chiriqui on the Volcan de Chiriqui, above Boquete, and about Cerro Punta. In eastern Chiriqui it has been collected at Cerro Flores, by Griscom, and on the Cordillera de Tolé (Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr.-Amer., Aves, vol. 1 (pt. 13), 1881, p. 183). In Veraguas it was collected by Arcé at Calvovévora. The Collared Redstart behaves much like its congener, the Slate- throated Redstart, flying after insects and moving acrobatically through FAMILY PARULIDAE 21 the trees or undergrowth. I have seen individuals of this species swing- ing on the side of a branch for an instant with wings and tail spread, so that they resemble a huge butterfly; many observers have remarked on their amazing tameness. At the elevations where both species of Myioborus occur they may both be found in the same mixed flock. On Cerro Punta, however, I have found torquatus at 1990 m in a humid cloud forest area where the trees were laden with moss and epiphytes, while miniatus occurred at the same elevation in a drier area. M. torquatus sings throughout the year, although not so frequently between July and February as does V/. miniatus. One song is an elabo- rate series of varied, mellow phrases, another is “a rather soft, slightly musical tszt-tsit-tsee, repeated” (Ridgely, 1976, p. 303). On February 26, 1955, I noted that all the Collared Redstarts on Cerro Punta were paired, but I have no information on the breeding of this species in Panama. Skutch, however, has observed several nesting pemsim Costa Rica (Pac..Coast. Avit., no. 31, 1954, pp. 371-376). The first nest he found was on April 3, when it was nearly completed. It and the other nests were placed on the ground, at the edge of a bank, in a hollow on a grassy hillside near woods, or beneath a decaying log. The nests were made of fine vegetable fibers, fibrous roots, bamboo leaves, and scales from tree ferns. Two or three eggs form the clutch; the eggs are white, sprinkled all over with light brown spots, most concentrated on the large end, and measure between 18.313.5 and 19.1X13.5 mm. The incubation period is 15 days. In the few days just before and just after her eggs hatched, a female that Skutch watched would flutter helplessly on the ground in front of the nest. At hatching the young have pink skin and sparse natal down. By 10 days of age they are well feathered and at 13 days they leave the nest. Young hatched in April leave their parents by mid-June, when they are difficult to distinguish from adults. In August they seem to be paired. BASILEUTERUS TRISTRIATUS (Tschudi): Three-striped Warbler, Cerrojillo Myiodioctes tristriatus Tschudi, 1844, Archiv. f. Naturg., 10 (1), p. 283. (Valley of Vitoc, Junin, Peru.) Small; crown striped black and buff; upper surface yellowish olive; undersurface light greenish yellow. Description.—Length 113-123 mm. Adult (sexes alike), forehead and superciliary, extending to nape, buff; sides of crown black; central crown stripe olive-ocher, becoming buff on nape; rest of upper surface, 314 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 including wing coverts, yellowish olive; remiges and rectrices dusky with outer webs edged yellowish olive; line through eye and auriculars largely black (except in tacarcunae); patches below eye and on side of neck buff; throat whitish; sides of breast, sides, and flanks light yellowish olive; rest of undersurface light yellow; underwing coverts white, tinged yellow. The Three-striped Warbler is a montane bird found from Costa Rica to northern Venezuela and northern Bolivia. Three races have been recognized in Panama, melanotis, chitrensis, and tacarcunae. Exami- nation of specimens of chitrensis, including the 14 taken by R. R. Ben- son at Chitra, Veraguas, from which the race was described by Gris- com (Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 280, 1927, p. 13) shows that it differs slightly in a series, but single individuals are not separable in some cases. Some specimens from Chitra show a somewhat darker chest, but lighter ones cannot be separated from melanotis. As there is no natural barrier between the birds of the Veraguas highlands and those of Chiriqui belonging to melanotis, the Veraguas population seems too poorly differentiated to merit subspecific status. This species is found in highland forest and woodland, where it moves through the lower level of trees, in thickets, and undergrowth, usually traveling in mixed species flocks. Its vocalizations include “a rushing series of chipping or ‘tsitting’ twitters composed of weakly clipping dry notes sprinkled at times with squeaky and harsh ones,” as well as single notes (Slud, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 128, 1964, p. 334). - The breeding behavior of this species has been investigated by Wil- liam H. Buskirk in Costa Rica. He found that the female constructs the nest and performs all the incubation herself. The male, however, participates in feeding the nestlings, and when the young are fledged each parent takes full responsibility for a single offspring. Ridgely (in litt.) transcribed the song of a bird at Cerro Jefe as “a very fast, high, jumbled tidedeteeadedecheeaweea’; he also heard the bird give single notes as a contact call. BASILEUTERUS TRISTRIATUS MELANOTIS Lawrence Basileuterus melanotis Lawrence, 1868, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. New York, vol. 9, April, p. 95. (Cervantes, Costa Rica.) Basileuterus tristriatus chitrensis Griscom, 1927, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 280, p. 13. (Chitra, 4,000 ft. Pacific slope of Veraguas, Panama.) Characters.—Auriculars black; central crown stripe grayish buffy; broad superciliary stripe pale buffy gray. FAMILY PARULIDAE 315 Measurements.—Males (9 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 60.0-65.0 (62.6), tail 52.7-57.7 (55.1), culmen from base 10.3-12.1 (16) tarsus 20.1-21:7-(20.9) mm. Females (7 from Chiriqui and Costa Rica), wing 56.0-59.0 (58.4), tail 48.5-54.2 (50.9), culmen from base 10.2-12.2 (11.7, average of 6), featens 20,2-22°2 (21.2) nim, Resident. Rare and local in the subtropical forests of Volcan de Chiriqui and adjacent Bocas del Toro, from 1080 to 2250 m, and in the mountains of Veraguas. Recorded in Chiriqui from above Palo Santo, west of El Volcan, above Boquete on Alto de Chiquero, and Bajo Mono, Chiriqui, and in Bocas del Toro from Camp Cylindro, at 1590 m on the Holcomb Trail (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, pp. 561-562). In Veraguas it is found lower, from 600 to 1200 m (Ridgely, 1976, p. 303); here it has been recorded from Chitra and Santa Fe, where Rex R. Benson collected 16 in 1925, and from the Cordillera del Chuct, where Arcé collected 2 in 1869. In February-March 1976 Ridgely (in litt.) found it to be common in forests above the Fortuna Dam site in central Chiriqui; there it was a conspicuous nuclear species of the flocks of the forest understory. The birds were found from 1050 m up. BASILEUTERUS TRISTRIATUS TACARCUNAE Chapman Basileuterus tacarcunae Chapman, 1924, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 143, p. 6. (East slope, Mt. Tacarcuna, 4,600 ft., below Colombia-Panama line, Darién, Panama.) Characters.—Black absent from auriculars, replaced by light yel- lowish olive; central crown stipe more buffy yellow and orange in the center, with some feathers tipped yellowish olive. A male taken February 20, 1964, at Cerro Mali, Darién, had the iris dark brown, maxilla and tip of mandible fuscous; base of mandible dull brownish white; tarsus and toes verona brown; claws fuscous- black. Measurements.—Males (7 from Darién), wing 59.0-62.0 (61.3), tail 48.3-53.7 (52.2), culmen from base 11.0-12.3 (11.9), tarsus 19.7- 2S (20.8), mim. Females (6 from Darién), wing 57.6-58.9 (58.2), tail 47.5-51.6 (49:5), culmen from base 10.5-12.3 (11.4), tarsus 19.5-21.6 (20.1) mm. Resident. Rare and local in forest in the highlands of eastern Darién, where it has been collected on Cerro Tacarcuna and Cerro Mali. It has also been collected in Colombia, around the headwaters of the Rio Cuti, Choco Province. There are sight reports of what may be 316 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 this race or an intermediate form from Cerro Jefe, eastern Province of Panama, where D. Hill and Ridgely found it several times between 900 and 990 m (Ridgely, 1976, p. 303). In my few encounters with this species in Darién it has been in flocks moving through the undergrowth or the lower tree crown. This form has been given specific rank by some authors. It does not occur on the Cerro Pirre range, where its place may perhaps be taken by B. melanogenys ignotus. BASILEUTERUS CULICIVORUS GODMANI Berlepsch: Golden- crowned Warbler, Reinita Coronidorada Basileuterus godmani Berlepsch, 1888, Auk, 5, p. 450. (Chiriqui, Panama.) Small; crown striped with central stripe yellow-orange; upper sur- face grayish green; undersurface yellow. Description.—Length 115-123 mm. Adult (sexes alike), sides of crown to nane striped black; central area yellow-orange; superciliary and rest of central crown stripe light yellowish olive, extending to nape; dusky spot in front and behind eye; ear coverts olive-green, finely streaked with whitish; rest of upper surface dark greenish olive; wings grayish dusky with middle and greater coverts tipped light yellowish olive and outer web of remiges edged light gray; tail grayish dusky; sides of breast, sides, and flanks light yellowish olive; rest of undersur- face and bend of wing yellow; underwing coverts yellow and white. A male taken March 17, 1965, at El Volcan, Chiriqui, had the iris dark chestnut; lower half of rami and distal half of gonys pale brown- ish white; rest of bill fuscous-brown; tarsus and toes brownish yel- low; claws light brown; underside of toes yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 57.4-63.0 (60.8), tail 48.7-55.5 (51.9), culmen from base 10.6-12.9 (11.9), tarsus 17.8- ZAM {OSB sasteale Females (10 from Chiriqui), wing 57.5-63.7 (59.9), tail 47.3-54.7 (50.6), culmen from base 10.9-12.6 (11.8), tarsus 17.9-20.6+ (19m) mm. Resident. Fairly common in the lower highlands of Chiriqui and also known from the foothills of Veraguas and Herrera (Cerro Mon- tosa, 700-870 m) (Ridgely, 1976, p. 304). It is also found in Costa Rica. Other races are found in Mexico, through Middle America, and in South America east of the western Andes of Colombia to southern Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, and northern Argentina. Monniche col- lected this race on the Volcan de Chiriqui between 1710 and 1800 m (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 562) and W. W. Brown, FAMILY PARULIDAE 327 Jr., collected it there and at Boquete between 1200 and 2310 m (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 60). Elsewhere in Chiriqui, it has been taken by Frank Hartman at Santa Clara (1230 m), by M. E. Davidson at Barriles (1350 m), and by Griscom at Cerro Flores (1200 m). Ridgely (im litt.) found it fairly common at I‘ortuna between 1000 and 1050 m in February-March 1976; it was replaced by B. tristriatus at higher elevations, but was not as common as that species. On the western slope of the Azuero Peninsula, Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, pp. 25-26) found this species uncommon in rain forest from 300 to 900 m and in cloud forest above 900 m. Arcé collected it in Veraguas at Calovévora (ealyin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 18/0, p. 183). The Golden-crowned Warbler inhabits forest and woodland, where it usually forages from the shrubbery up to about 7 m. It is often in pairs or little flocks, and regularly accompanies the small mixed flocks of the understory. At El Volcan, Chiriqui, on February 7, 1955, I saw a small scattered flock on a heavily wooded ridge of Cerro Picacho at 1740 m. The birds moved with twitching tails through the smaller branches of the higher levels; in silhouette they were like the migrant warblers from the north. The call was a low chipping note. Slud (Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. vol. 128, 1964, p. 334) describes the song as “three “wee’s on the same level, followed by three consecutively rising ‘wee’s, with the last one accentuated. Usually, however, only the last three or so notes are given as an accelerating little crescendo or an un- musical “chip-chip-chirk’ lacking the ‘wee’ quality.” Buskirk et al. (Auk, 1972, p. 620) found that at Cerro Punta, Chiriqui, Golden- crowned Warblers regularly joined mixed flocks but showed only mod- erate tendencies to follow them. Nothing is known of this species’ breeding behavior in Panama, but Skutch (Publ. Nutt. Orn. Club., no. 7, 1967, pp. 150-154) has found a nest in Costa Rica, where this race also occurs. The nest was a globu- lar structure about 14 cm in diameter with a round opening on the side; it was set on the ground, hidden amid fallen leaves and twigs, in a fairly open forest. The outer surface of the nest was made of black rootlets, with additions of green moss, strips from the leaves of palms and branching stems of foliose liverworts; the thick inner cup was of very fine, brownish fibers. When Skutch found the nest on April 15, 1964, it contained three eggs; they were white with a heavy wreath of dark brown blotches around the broadest part and a scattering of paler brown spots on the rest of the surface. Their measurements were 17.9 x 14.1, 17.8X13.8, and 18.7 14.9 mm. 318 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 On April 19 the young hatched; they had pink skin with sparse gray down. The young were fed mature and larval insects, and by their seventh day pin feathers had sprouted. These were open at 9 days, and the following day the young “exploded” from the nest when Skutch approached. At this time their feathers were still short, but the birds could fly a few feet and were led off by their parents. BASILEUTERUS MELANOGENYS Baird: Black-cheeked Warbler, Reinita Carisucia Small; crown striped chestnut and white; rest of upper surface gray- ish green; undersurface buffy white. Description.—Length 123-132 mm. Adult (sexes alike), forehead and very thin stripe on side of crown black; central crown area chest- nut, blackish at nape; rest of upper surface olive, becoming more greenish on rump; wings and tail dusky, with coverts tipped and remi- ges and rectrices edged yellowish olive; superciliary extending to nape white or pale yellowish; lores, orbital and auricular region black; sides of chin black, flecked white, central chin more white; throat whitish; broad breast band gray; sides, flanks, and abdomen olive; rest of under- surface buffy white; underwing coverts gray. This species is found only in the highlands of Costa Rica and Pan- ama, where in western Chiriqui it is common in forest, woodlands, and in brushy areas at the edge of pasture, while in Veraguas and in eastern Darién it is very local and only poorly known. | have found the Black- cheeked Warbler only in Chiriqui, where I have seen it in heavy forest and in brush along a small stream running through rough pastureland; it feeds in low undergrowth, often barely above the ground, up to mid- dle tree branches, usually moving in pairs. Skutch (Publ. Nutt. Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, pp. 154-159) has studied this species in Costa Rica, and notes that it sings much less frequently than other species of Basil- euterus; he describes the song as slight and lisping. The bird also has weak chip call. Buskirk et al. (Auk, 1972, p.620) found that at Cerro Punta, Chiri- qui, the Black-cheeked Warbler was a short-term follower of the mixed species flocks that passed through its territory. Eisenmann (im litt.) only very occasionally saw this species with mixed species bands, and with these it usually foraged low; once only did he observe 1 well up in a tie: Three subspecies are currently recognized (all 3 found in Panama), nominate melanogenys, bensom, and ignotus. The last two were treated as full species by Todd (Proc. U. S.,Nat.;Mus)) vol:74, art; 19220noe FAMILY PARULIDAE 319 79-80), although this treatment was not generally followed. The Check-list Committee of the American Ornithologists’ Union (Check- list of North American Birds, 6th ed., 1983, p. 627) has recently re- elevated ignotus to the rank of species, but there is no justification for this. BASILEUTERUS MELANOGENYS MELANOGENYS Baird Basileuterus melanogenys Baird, 1865, Rev. Amer. Birds, 1, p. 248. (Costa Rica.) Basileuterus melanogenys eximius Nelson, 1912. Smiths. Misc. Coll., 60(3), p. 22. (Boquete, 5,000 ft., Chiriqui, Panama.) Characters.—Superciliary white; side of head black. A male taken February 24, 1965, at Volcan de Chiriqui, Chiriqui, had the iris dark brown; cutting edge of maxilla and all of mandible flesh color; rest of maxilla fuscous-brown; tarsus and toes pale brown- ish white; claws dull neutral gray. Measurements.—Males (10 from Chiriqui), wing 56.5-66.5 (61.1), tail 58.1-62.3 (60.4), culmen from base 10.3-12.7 (11.7), tarsus 20.0- ZOO 2107))) ram. Females (10 from Chiriqui), wing 58.8-62.1 (60.3), tail 54.7-61.0 (58.6), culmen from base 11.3-12.7 (11.9), tarsus 20.7-23.5 (21.9) mm. Resident. Common in forests, woodlands, and borders in the high- lands of western Chiriqui, and in adjacent Costa Rica. In Panama B. m. melanogenys has been collected at Cerro Punta, the Volcan de Chiriqui, and Boquete. Ridgely (1m litt.) has found it more numerous near Boquete, on the wetter side of the mountain, than above Cerro Punta. From February to May of 1901 W. W. Brown, Jr., collected 11 specimens at Boquete and Volcan de Chiriqui between 1350 and 3060 m (Bangs, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 3, 1902, p. 60); Mon- niche found it at Volcan de Chiriqui between 1560 and 2750 m (Blake, imteldiana: Zool), vol. 36; no. 5; 1958, p: 562). The population of the Chiriqui highlands was originally described under the name eximius by E. W. Nelson (Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 60, no. 3, 1912, p. 22), but, in examination of a large series from Chiriqui, this population was found to be inseparable from nominate melano- Genny son Costa ixica,)\Mhere are, ditterences that appear to be due to specimen age—older specimens from Chiriqui are buffier below and less grayish on the back than fresher specimens and they thus resemble the Costa Rican birds in the Smithsonian series, all of which are older. Comparison of fresh material from both localities is desirable. 320 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART A Skutch (Publ. Nutt. Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, pp. 154-159) has studied the nesting behavior of this species in Costa Rica, where on March 21, 1963, he found a female building a domed nest on the ground in a steep ravine. The next day darkness and falling ash from an eruption of Volcan [raz 32 km away seemed to have caused the desertion of the nest. Skutch found another nest that year on June 3; this one was set in a nearly vertical mossy bank in a rather open forest with dense un- dergrowth of bamboo. The nest was oven shaped with a foundation of leaves and bamboo blades, sides and roof of bamboo leaves and pieces of fern fronds and roots, and lined with shredded vegetable fibers and brown scales from the fronds of large ferns. The nest was about 18 cm in height, 14 cm from side to side, and 12 cm from front to back. The interior measured about 6 by 5 cm in diameter by 7 cm in height. When Skutch found this nest it already contained two eggs. They were white, speckled with cinnamon-rufous, deeper and more heavily concentrated on the broader end. Both eggs measured 19.0 15.0 mm. The eggs hatched on June 10. The young had pink skin and long but sparse gray down. One of the young disappeared a few days after hatching, the other was beginning to develop feathers at 7 days, but had disappeared 4 days later when Skutch next visited the nest. Both before and after hatching of the eggs, the female had performed injury- feigning displays when Skutch approached the nest. On July 10, 1979, Eisenmann (im litt.) found individuals of this species at 1900 and 2030 m at Cerro Punta evidently carrying food to young; 1 with an insect in its bill persistently remained in the area where approached, chirping nervously. On September 20, 1959, he Saw pairs at several places in densely grown hillsides or in ravines near Cerro Punta, keeping very low near the ground. On February 24 and 26, 1960, on the trail to Boquete, between 2330 and 2430 m several pairs were seen perched low in shrubbery at the forest edge. One pair was building a nest at the base of a tree on a slope beside the trail; 1 bird carried material while the other accompanied, calling a sweet tseep. BASILEUTERUS MELANOGENYS BENSONI Griscom Basileuterus bensoni Griscom, 1927, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 280, p. 12. (Chitra, 4,700 feet, Pacific slope of Veraguas, Panama.) Characters.—Upper surface iron gray instead of greenish; under- surface white instead of yellow; with distinct gray pectoral band darker. Measurements.—Males (3 from Chitra, Veraguas), wing 57.5-63.0 (60.2), tail 53.5-55.5 (54.6), culmen from base 11.4-11.8 (11.6), tar- sus 21.5-21.8 (21.6) mm. FAMILY PARULIDAE 321 Females (3 from Chitra, Veraguas), wing 54.0-56.5 (55.3), tail 51.5-52.2 (51.8), culmen from base 11.4-11.7 (11.6), tarsus 20.6-22.5 ino!) tm. Resident. This race is known only from mountains about Chitra, eastern Veraguas, where it was first collected by Rex R. Benson in February 1926. He encountered it between 1200 and 1500 m, the latter altitude representing the tops of the highest peaks in that area. Eisenmann observes that in the Veraguas highlands several species develop forms with more black pigment in the plumage, while in Darien the tendency is to reduced melanin and more carotenoid yellow. BASILEUTERUS MELANOGENYS IGNOTUS Nelson Basileuterus melanogenys ignotus Nelson, 1912, Smiths. Misc. Coll., 60(3), p. 21. (Mount Pirri, 5,200 ft., near head of Rid Limon, Darién, Panama.) Characters.—Superciliary pale greenish yellow; undersurface with strong yellowish suffusion, black on head reduced. Measurements.—Male (1 from Cerro Tacarcuna, Darién), wing 59.0, tail 57.0, culmen from base 12.8, tarsus 21.0 mm. emele (lirom Cerro Pirre, Darien, the type), wing 57-0, tail 55.4, culmen from base 11.5, tarsus 20.5 mm. Resident. Known only from eastern Darién, where the type, an adult female, was collected at Cerro Pirre (as 1560 m) near the head of the Rio Limon, on April 18, 1912, by FE. A. Goldman, and 3 males and 2 females were collected by C. Myers and R. Hinds at 1650 m on Cerro Tacarcuna on February 9-12, 1975. Eisenmann, who examined all the Tacarcuna specimens in comparison with the type, noted that they showed much more black on sides of the head, forehead and throat than the lone Pirre specimen and a narrower superciliary. The Tacar- cuna birds thus seem nearer to the western Panama birds in this re- spect than to the type of ignotus. BASILEUTERUS RUFIFRONS (Swainson): Rufous-capped Warbler, Reinita Cabecicastana Setophaga rufifrons Swainson, 1838 (1837?), Anim. Menag., p. 294. (Real de Arriba, Mexico, Mexico.) Small; crown reddish brown; nape gray; rest of upper surface olive-green; undersurface yellow, greenish on sides. Description—Length 111-121 mm. Adult (sexes alike), super- ciliary white; lores, orbital ring, and line through eye black; crown and auriculars reddish brown; nape gray; rest of upper surface, in- cluding tail, olive-green; wings dusky with coverts tipped and remiges 322 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 edged olive-green; chin, sides of throat, and side of face to auriculars white; sides of breast, sides, and flanks olive-yellow; rest of under- surface yellow. The Rufous-capped Warbler is found from northern Mexico through Central America to northern Colombia and western Venezuela. In Panama the race mesochrysus is common in lowlands of the Pacific slope and on the Caribbean slope in the vicinity of the Canal Zone. Another race, actuosus, inhabits Isla Coiba off the Pacific Coast of Veraguas. The forms ranging from southeastern Guatemala south- ward through Middle America to Colombia and Venezuela (including all Panama populations) are often separated as a distinct species, B. de- latri (see Todd, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. 74, art. 7, 1929, pp. 85-87; Hell- mayr, Field Mus. Nat. Hist! Zool., vel. 13, pt. 8; 1935) "pp. 508-912) The habitat of this species is scrubby clearings, weedy fields, and second growth. It usually forages near the ground, where its secretive behavior makes it hard to see, but once at Pesé, Herrera, I watched 1 come up to feed actively in leafless branches 10 m above a stream. Skutch, who has observed this species in Costa Rica (Publ. Nutt. Orn. Club, no. 7, 1967, pp. 159-164) noted that it usually travels in pairs. Males sing from February to August and may deliver their song from elevated perches at dawn, but sing from within thick shrubbery during the rest of the day. Eisenmann (Smiths. Misc. Coll., vol. 117, no. 5, 1952, p. 53) describes the song as heard at Playa Coronado in June, as “a rather rapid, dry, chittering chit-cha-chup-cha-chuweép, with vari- ations. ... calls include a simple chit, a zeep-zeep or dzit-dzit.”” Some- times the song ends witha chee-weécha. In central Panama, Eisenmann has noted singing from early March through late June. E. A. Goldman collected 2 specimens with full stomachs at Corozal in the Canal Zone on June 15, 1911: one contained a chrysomelid 3%, a small curculionid 2%, elaterid fragments 3%, bug remains 3%, many fulgorid remains finely ground 44%, more than four large ants 35%, 2 smaller species 8%, other coleoptera 2%; the other contained 5 ants 44%, a reduviid 15%, Achalles sp. 10%, 2 cerambycids 15%, a riti- dulid near Colastus 8%, other coleoptera fragments (Chrysomelidae) Sia BASILEUTERUS RUFIFRONS MESOCHRYSUS Sclater Basileuterus mesochrysus P.L. Sclater, 1861, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 28 (1860), p. 251. (“Bogota,” Colombia.) Characters.—Undersurface brighter yellow than in B. r. actuosus; gray of nape lighter. FAMILY PARULIDAE 323 A female collected February 21, 1962, at El Copé, Coclé, had the iris dark mouse brown; bill black; tarsus, toes, and claws light brown with a line on back of tarsus buffy brown; pads honey yellow. Measurements.—Males (10 from Panama), wing 50.3-56.9 (54.3), tail 47.1-55.0 (50.0), culmen from base 11.2-13.5 (12.2), tarsus 19.3- 20.6 (20.0) mm. Females (10 from Panama), wing 50.2-57.8 (53.8), tail 46.5-53.7 (49.5), culmen from base 11.5-13.8 (12.4), tarsus 18.8-20.6 (19.6) mm. Resident. Fairly common throughout the mainland Pacific slope lowlands from Chiriqui to the Canal Zone area and on the Caribbean slope in the vicinity of the Canal Zone. In Chiriqui it has been col- lected as high as 1560 m (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 562), and in central Panama it has been recorded to 950 m on Cerro Azul. Aldrich and Bole (Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1937, p. 23) found it uncommon in brushy savannas and forest margins near Montijo Bay, Veraguas. In 1911, E. A. Goldman re- corded it as “‘a rather common bird in the partly open country through- out the Zone.” This race also occurs in southwestern Costa Rica and in northern Colombia and western Venezuela. Griscom (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool, vol. 78, 1935, p. 370) states it ranges to Darién, but I am not aware of any specimens or sight reports from that province. According to Eisenmann, this bird favors thickets or lightly-wooded semi-arid areas, but in more humid habitats follows clearings into second growth and woodland borders up into the lower highlands and to the Caribbean coast in the Canal Zone and adjacent parts of Colon Province. If forest grows up again in humid areas it tends to disap- pear, as on Barro Colorado Island (Willis and Eisenmann, Smiths. Contrib. Zool. 291, 1979, p. 27). A bird banded by H. Loftin (im litt. to Eisenmann) at Curundu, Canal Zone, on January 8, 1963, was recaptured there on March 31, 1966. Peas Goldman shota pair at Gatun, Canal Zone, on’ May 3, 1911; that were in breeding condition; the female contained two large eggs, the larger of which was nearly ready to lay. A pair that I collected March 7, 1960, at Buena Vista, Chiriqui, was also in breeding con- dition. Kisenmann noted a fledgling being fed in the Canal Zone on June 25. Skutch (Publ. Nutt. Orn. Club. no. 7, 1967, pp. 159-164) has found the nest of this species in Costa Rica. Like other members of the genus, B. rufifrons places the nest on the ground where it is hidden amid litter 324 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 or set between rocks or against a fallen log. The nest is oven shaped and constructed of fine herbaceous stems, grass blades, fragments of dead leaves, rootlets, and other fine plant material. The bottom is a thick pad of finely shredded bast fibers. One nest measured 12 cm high, 12 cm from back to front, and 14 cm from side to side. The inside measurements were 6 cm high, 11 cm from front to back, and 7 cm from side to side. All the nests in which Skutch found eggs contained a clutch of three. Those from one set were white, marked with fine specks of cinnamon crowded over the thicker end and more sparingly scattered over the rest of the surface. They measured 17.9 14.3, 17.5x14.3, and 17.5x14.3 mm. Incubation is performed only by the female; Skutch could not determine the length of the incubation period. The young are born with yellow mouth cavities and sparse gray down on pink skin. They are fed by both parents, who bring them insects including long green caterpillars. In one nest the feathers of the young were expanding rapidly at 8 days of age and at 12 days, when their upper surface was a uniform dark gray without head markings and their undersurface yel- lowish olive, the young left the nest. Two females collected in Panama by Strauch (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1977, p. 64) weighed 10.1 and 11.8 g. BASILEUTERUS RUFIFRONS ACTUOSUS Wetmore Basileuterus delatru actuosus Wetmore, 1957, Smiths. Misc. Coll., 134 (9), p. 92. (Isla Coiba, Panama.) Characters.—Bill larger and coloration darker than that of B. 1. mesochrysus. | M casurements.—Males (11 from Isla Coiba), wing 57.6-62.5 (60.1), tail 51.1-55.8 (53.3), culmen from base 13.3-14.4 (13.8), tarsus 20.5- Pate (As) \) agua, Females (5 from Isla Coiba), wing 56.1-60.2 (57.5), tail 50.0-53.5 (51.8), culmen from base 13.5-13.9 (13.6), tarsus 20.0-21.6 (21.0) mm. Resident. Common on Isla Coiba, off the Pacific coast of Veraguas. In January 1956 I encountered birds near the shoreline and back through high forest in the interior of the island. They also came into thickets in abandoned fields near the work camps. They were common, but of secretive habit, keeping behind cover. As they frequently carry their tail at an angle over the back, they often suggest wrens as they move about behind the screening twigs and leaves. At this season they were silent except for an occasional chipping call. Usually they are FAMILY PARULIDAE 325 found in pairs, and during January most of the specimens I obtained were nearly ready to breed. Although the total length of the bill in the Coiba Island birds is only slightly more than in mainland individuals, the breadth and general bulk are appreciably greater. The darker color of this race is a general tendency in the races endemic to Coiba. On April 13, 1976, Ridgely (in litt.) saw a pair on Coiba with two fledged but still dependent young. He was interested to note that the birds were common in forest undergrowth, a habitat in which they would never be found in on the mainland. BASILEUTERUS FULVICAUDA (Spix): Buff-rumped Warbler, Reinita de Rabadilla Anteada FIGuRE 25 Muscicapa fulvicauda Spix, 1825, Av. Spec. Nov. Brasil, 2, p. 20, pl. 28, fig. 2. (Sao Paulo de Olivenga, Rio SolimGes, Brazil.) Small; upper surface dark olive; upper tail coverts and basal half of rectrices buffy; outer half dark brown; undersurface buffy, marked with dark olive. Description.—Length 118-128 mm. Adult (sexes alike), crown blackish olive, becoming dark olive on rest of upper surface to upper tail coverts, which are warm buff; wing coverts and remiges blackish, edged dark olive; basal half of tail ochraceus-buff, outer half dark brown; fine superciliary warm buff; undersurface white mottled with varying degrees of warm buff and dark olive. Immature, like adult, but throat and breast heavily marked with dark olive. There is little justification for separating this species and its ally B. rivularis in the genus Phaeothlypis as was done by Lowery and Monroe (in Peters, Check-list Birds World, vol. 14, 1968, p. 75). Todd (Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., no. 2752, 1929, p. 8) erected the genus Phaeothly pis only for the forms here included in the species fulvicauda. The char- acters he used to distinguish the genus were “bill relatively wider, . . tail relatively shorter, much less than the distance from the bend of the wing to the end of the longest secondaries, . . . style of coloration very different, the tail being always bicolor...’ Hellmayr (Field Mus. Nat. Hist. Zool., Cat. Birds. Amer. part 8, 1935, p. 522) did not recognize Phaeothlypis for fulvicauda on account of the recognizably close re- lationship of that species with rivularis, a species that Todd included in Basileuterus. None of Todd’s characters for Phaecothly pis apply to B. rivularis, in which the tail is longer and not bicolored, and in some 326 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 forms of which, such as bolivianus, the bill is actually narrower than in a number of more distantly related species of Basileuterus (e.g., coronatus). Lowery and Monroe, by including rivularis in Phaeo- thly pis, left the genus with no distinguishing characters. The best way to resolve this inconsistency is by refusing to recognize the validity of Phaeothly pis. Froure 25.—Buff-rumped Warbler, Reinita de Rabadilla Anteada, Basileuterus fulvicauda. In Panama there are two very distinct forms of B. fulvicauda that Todd (op. cit., p. 9) considered to be separate species. One form, semicervina, is found in the eastern half of Panama and in the Western and Central Andes from Colombia to northwestern Peru. Two sub- species have traditionally been recognized within the western half of Panama, leucopygia and veraguensis (with their respective synonyms gaffneyi and toddi). The stated range of leucopygia is from Honduras through Costa Rica and along the Caribbean slope of Panama to Ver- aguas; that of veraguensis is from southwestern Costa Rica along the Pacific slope of Panama to the Canal Zone. According to Todd (p. 12), the only distinguishing feature of veraguensis is the supposedly buffier, less whitish, underparts. A series of 36 specimens from Nica- ragua to the Canal Zone shows individual variation to be too great to permit any subdivision of this population. Three birds (USNM no. FAMILY PARULIDAE 327 469102-4) taken in 1958 on the Western River, Almirante, Bocas del Toro, show this variability admirably. One is light underneath, as at- tributed to typical leucopygia, another is much buffier, while the third is extremely dark, the underparts except the throat and midline of belly being entirely suffused with dusky. Certain individuals from Chiriqui are as light as any from farther north, while others from Nicaragua and Costa Rica are as buffy as some from Coclé or Chiriqui. Therefore, these populations are listed under the name leucopygia, with veraguensis as a junior Synonym. There is a narrow zone of intergradation between leucopygia (sensu lato) and semicervina in the Canal Zone and slightly eastward. Two birds collected by E. A. Goldman labeled “Rio Indio, Canal Zone” (a tributary of the Chagres, not the following Rio Indio in western Colon Province) and another taken from Chilar, on the Rio Indio, Colon, are typical of leucopygia, as are all those from farther west. Birds from Cerro Chucanti, Serrania de Majé, eastern Panama Province, and from there east through San Blas and Darién and most of Colombia are typical of semicervina. Except for the 2 Goldman specimens above, all birds from the Canal Zone proper (Gamboa, Gatun, Cocoli River), Cerro Azul, Utivé, and the upper end of Madden Lake in eastern Province of Panama (Candelaria and Peluca Hydrographic Stations) are clearly intergrades. An exception is an individual from the Peluca Station (1 of 4 taken there) that appears perfectly typical of semicer- vina, suggesting that the zone of intergradation probably does not ex- tend much farther east than this locality. Some authors merge the B. fulvicauda complex in B. rivularis (Riverside Warbler) of eastern, Amazonian, and southern South America south to northern Argentina (Meyer de Schauensee, Species Birds S. Amer., 1966, p. 453). The Buff-rumped Warbler dwells along the shores of streams or, more rarely, boggy areas and mangrove swamps. Eisenmann has gen- erally seen this species only at rapid-flowing, narrow, clear streams over rocky beds, but in coastal Bocas del Toro east of Almirante, on the slow-moving, dark, muddy, rather wide Western River, on October 19, 1965, he saw two pairs at different places in waters navigable by motor launch. In many aspects of behavior this species resembles a water- thrush, but it hops rather than walks, fanning and wagging its tail from side to side, exposing the conspicuous light patch on the upper tail coverts and base of the tail feathers. I have always found this a rather shy species, continually flying ahead and rarely affording one a good look. 328 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 The song is varied and clear, with final phrases like the loud trilling of a domestic canary. Skutch (Pac. Coast Avif., no. 31, 1954, p. 348) found that the female sings a rich warble in response to the song of the male. This species sings more or less throughout the year, but most during the nesting season; the song is usually delivered from the ground or a rock or log in a stream. Eisenmann describes the song as explo- sive, emphatic, and loud (usually increasing toward the end), with notes in rapid succession often given from a perch, 5-3 m above the ground, above or near a stream. On April 12 and 16, 1959, he wrote songs as chewy, chewy, chee-chee-chee-chee-chee-chee-, choo, choo, choo, choo-choo-choo-choo, tyoo, tyoo. The song lasted 4-6 seconds; the numbers of chee and other notes varied, and the tyoo notes might be omitted. The call is a loud, sharp note or a series of such notes. The stomach of | collected by E. A. Goldman at Cana, Darien, con- tained bits of two dragonflies 20%, fragments of an ant 10%, an ichneumon 5%, dipteran remains finely ground 54%, fragments of a cerambycid 5%, bits of two other beetles 6%. BASILEUTERUS FULVICAUDA LEUCOPYGIUS Sclater and Salvin Basileuterus leucopygius P.L. Sclater and Salvin, 1873, Nomen. Av. Neotrop., pp, 10) 156) (Costa Ricaz) Basileuterus [leucopygius subsp. a] veraguensis Sharpe, 1885, Cat. Birds. Brit. Mus., 10, p. 403. (Paraiso Station, Panama.) Basileuterus fulvicauda gaffneyi Griscom, 1927, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 280, p. 14. (Guaval, Rio Calovévora, ... Veraguas, Caribbean slope, western Panama.) Basileuterus fulvicauda toddi Griscom, 1927, Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 280, p. 14. (Boqueron, Chiriqui, western Panama.) Characters.—Undersurface mottled and smudged with dark olive; upper surface and cheeks darker; superciliary obscure; dark areas of tail, particularly the outer rectrix, more extensive. A male collected at Puerto Armuelles, Chiriqui, March 8, 1966, had the iris dark brown; base of mandible very dull dark brown; rest of bill black; inside of mouth pale bluish gray; tarsus and toes brown; claws dull slate. Measurements.—Males (10 from western Panama), wing 61.0-66.9 (64.4), tail 50.0-55.7 (52.4), culmen from base 12.7-14.9 (14.1), tarsus Z13-22.9. (22:2) ama: Females (10 from western Panama and Costa Rica), wing 60.4-65.5 (62.7), tail 47.1-54.6 (51.2), culmen from base 12.8-14.5 (13.8), tar- sus 19.0-22.6 (21.3) mm. Resident. Uncommon to fairly common along streams and rivers FAMILY PARULIDAE 329 in forest and second-growth woodland of both slopes from the Costa Rican border to central Panama, where it is less frequent and inter- grades with the race semicervinus, as described above. It has been found as high as 1620 m, where Monniche collected it at Horqueta, Chiriqui (Blake, Fieldiana: Zool., vol. 36, no. 5, 1958, p. 563). Ridgely (in litt.) finds that during the dry season it seems to disappear from areas of the Canal Zone where streams mostly dry up, e. g., around Summit and in Madden Forest. Skutch (Pac. Coast Avif., no. 31, 1954, pp. 346-356) found that in Costa Rica the nesting season runs from March to August. Both sexes build the nest, which is oven shaped and usually placed in a niche on a steep slope, often close to a stream or river. The nest takes up to 13 days to construct. It is made of coarse rootlets, dry grass blades, leaf fragments, and weed stems; the lining is of fine shredded fibers and leaf skeletons. Two eggs form a clutch; they are glossy white, marked around the blunt end with a heavy wreath of brown blotches or spots and thinly spotted with the same shades over the remaining surface. The average measurements of twenty eggs are 20.7X14.9 mm. In- cubation is performed entirely by the female and requires 16 to 19 days. When the young hatch they have pink skin and scanty gray down. The interior of the mouth is yellow. They are fed by both par- ents and usually remain in the nest until 13 or 14 days old, when they are well feathered. Only a single brood is reared each year. BASILEUTERUS FULVICAUDA SEMICERVINUS Sclater Basileuterus semicervinus P.L. Sclater, 1861, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 28 (1860), p. 84. (Nanegal, Ecuador.) Characters.—Breast unmarked; cheeks buffy; buffy superciliary more prominent; upper surface lighter; light area of tail more ex- tensive. A female collected at Armila, San Blas, on February 23, 1963, had the iris dark brown, base of gonys and lower half of mandibular rami dull brownish white; rest of bill black; tarsus and toes brownish honey yellow; claws light mouse brown. Measurements.—Males (10 from eastern Panama), wing 61.5-66.0 (63.6), tail 49.0-54.8 (51.7), culmen from base 12.7-15.3 (13.8), tar- sus 19.9-22.3 (21.4) mm. Females (10 from eastern Panama), wing 58.9-64.0 (60.6), tail 45.8- 92.5 (49.7), culmen from base 12.3-14.8 (13.5), tarsus 19.3-22.6 (211.2) mar. 330 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 Resident. Uncommon to fairly common in the lowlands and foot- hills of both slopes from east of the Canal Zone to the Colombian border. I have found it as high as 1260 m, on the south fork of the Rio Pucro) Cerro MahDanicn: ZELEDONIA CORONATA Ridgway: Zeledonia, Zeledonia FIGURE 26 Zeledonia coronata Ridgway, 1889, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., 11 (1888), p. 538. (Laguna del Volcan de Poas, Costa Rica.) Small; center of crown orangey brown, margined by black; rest of upper surface brownish olive; forehead, sides of head, and undersur- face slaty. | Description.—Length 100-110 mm. Adult (sexes alike), center of crown orangey brown, bordered by narrow black stripe; forehead and side of head dark slate gray; rest of upper surface brownish olive; undersurface slaty gray; flanks and undertail coverts dull olive; remiges and rectrices dark brown, edged brownish olive. Juvenile, like adult, but lacks crown patch; underparts olive. Measurements.—Males (10 from Veraguas, Chiriqui, and Costa Rica), wing 61.5-69.5 (65.8), tail 36.3-42.3 (38.8), culmen from base 11.7-13.5 (12.8, average of 9), tarsus 26.1-30.9 (28.7) mm. Females (10 from Veraguas and Costa Rica), wing 61.0-68.0 (62.9), tail 33.3-38.8 (35.8), culmen from base 11.8-13.9 (12.7), tarsus 26.2- 29.50 (2727) mama Resident. Rare and local in the highlands of Chiriqui and Veraguas, where it inhabits very humid forests with thick ground cover. It has been recorded in Chiriqui between 1740 and 3090 m and in Veraguas at Chitra from 1050 to 1200 m (Ridgely, 1976, p. 305). In Chiriqui it has been collected on the Volcan de Chiriqui and at Boquete. Ridgely heard and briefly saw one in cloud forest well above Fortuna (1800 m) in central Chiriqui on February 27, 1976, and N. G. Smith reports (1 itt. to Eisenmann) seeing one on Cerro Colorado, eastern Chiriqui, in April, 1979. The Zeledonia is also found in Costa Rica. The systematic position of Zeledonia coronata was formerly the sub- ject of considerable uncertainty. It was thought, on quite inadequate grounds, to be related to thrushes, although equivocation resulted in its being placed in a monotypic family Zeledoniidae. Sibley (Postilla, no. 125, 1968, pp. 1-12), after a review of its taxonomic history and an analysis of the electrophoretic pattern of its egg-white proteins, con- cluded that this species is not a thrush, but probably a parulid, on the FAMILY PARULIDAE Gia basis of egg-white data and morphology. The parulid affinities of Zele- donia were confirmed by Raikow’s (Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist., 7, 1978, p. 28) dissections of the musculature, which also suggest that Zeledonia may be more nearly related to Basileuterus. As the name “Wrenthrush,” formerly applied to this bird, is now seen to be inap- propriate, the name “Zeledonia” has been used in its place. x. TF FicurE 26.—Zeledonia, Zeledonia, Zeledonia coronata. Until James Hunt studied it in Costa Rica during 1968 (Auk, 1971, pp. 1-20), little was known of the biology of Zeledonia except its whistled call and that it was a very secretive inhabitant of dense under- growth in the humid herb layer of high mountains and in tangles and vines on trunks and lower limbs directly above it, where it hops and flicks its wings, but very rarely flies. The Zeledonia’s commonest call is a “thin, high-pitched whistle, usually with a slight rising inflection,” transcribed by Ridgely as a very piercing, sibilant pseee. The song, which Hunt first heard on March 19, is a sequence of phrases like sseee-del-deet with emphasis on the last syllables. Hunt found a nest under construction on March 25. It was situated in a cavity in a vertical mossy bank of a small stream. The nest, finished on March 31, was a domed structure with an entrance on the side, made of mosses with a few small leaves and twigs and lined with fine dead plant material, including grass, mosses, and decaying leaves. The first egg was laid on April 8. It and a second, laid 2 days later, were 2e0 BIRDS OF THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA—PART 4 white or buffy white marked with brown spots. They measured 21.9X 17.3 and 21.2X16.9 mm. This nest was abandoned, but another found May 21 was identical in appearance and situation. It contained 2 young birds probably not more than 3 days old. They were sparsely covered with down and their eyes were still shut. Their mouth linings were orange. The young of this nest died a few days later, but a third nest found June 26 had 2 nestlings about 10 days old. By 15 days these young were fully feathered; 2 days later, when Hunt had to leave the area, the nestling he had not collected was still in the nest, indicating a longer pre-fledging period than that of any other wood warbler. Family ICTERIDAE: Blackbirds and Orioles, Turpiales y Chacareros The Icteridae are an exclusively American family that has its great- est diversity in the tropics. Twenty-two species have been found in Panama, including 5 migrants from temperate North America. The icterids are medium- to large-sized birds, mostly boldly patterned in black with yellow, red, or orange, or entirely black. The oropendolas are the largest passerines in the tropics; along with the caciques and the Giant Cowbird, they have the ability to produce loud noises with their wings when in flight that are sometimes part of courtship displays. An- other peculiarity of many of the larger icterids is a strong musky odor. The icterids are particularly interesting for the diversity of their breeding behavior. The oropendolas and some of the caciques live in colonies in isolated or exposed trees, where females outnumber males and weave long, pendulous nests. Other caciques and the orioles nest in solitary pairs, while the Red-breasted Blackbird and Eastern Mea- dowlark sometimes form loose colonies in large fields and savannas. The Panama cowbirds are parasites with varying degrees of special- izations, from the Shiny and Bronzed Cowbirds, which put their eggs in the nest of a variety of small birds, to the Giant Cowbird, which parasitizes only the colonial oropendolas and caciques. All the icterids have powerful voices, some of which are loud and raucous, while others produce very fine songs. Their diet is varied, in- cluding insects, fruit, seeds, and nectar. The Great-tailed Grackle regu- larly scavenges and takes small vertebrate prey including nestling birds; there are records of oropendolas snatching birds as well. Although the Dickcissel, Spiza americana, is usually included with one or another of the finchlike groups, Raikow’s (Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, 1978, pp. 1-43) examination of the limb myol- FAMILY ICTERIDAE 333 ogy corroborates the observations of Beecher (Auk, 1951, pp. 411- 440) based on jaw muscles and shows S‘piza to be a primitive member of the Icteridae, close to the Emberizinae. This conclusion is followed here, aS no evidence in support of a contrary position has been presented. KEY TO SPECIES OF ICTERIDAE _ PEPRALISIG7 DIZ YOKE ACES INE DES OL a ee ane IAAT Artin) cis RE MR a eo je ‘hsih Bimal hig Td eye) cca ae eaten alacali Me Aa RG Mae Uae SET te nnt A A a a 6 SP Nea UCR Le Se yh a Na Lc ay tart. ca le A My CMU ARE a MU OAV SALE a 3 ILE ERIT-GUZM AURATS A aie A Fe Rn Ou NUT cCIC TY 7. TR a See a 4 3. Tail not graduated. 10. lid 12. £3. Giant Cowbird, Scaphidura oryztvora. p. 355 Tail graduated. male Great-tailed Grackle, Quiscalus mexicanus peruvianus. p. 362 . Strong purple sheen. male Shiny Cowbird, Molothrus bonariensis cabanisu. p. 361 ipleronine iiiaescent Sheen: oc Uik 1. cee UIE RN eel 5 . Long light-colored bill. Yellow-billed Cacique, Cacicus holosericeus holosericeus. p. 353 Short dark bill. Bronzed Cowbird, Molothrus aeneus aeneus. p. 358 nO sa edit y KOT NG INOW hte eh elle eps ie oe ot ak ved We Misiaw le she dle Ola dlalace-eve « 7 Rea KeduomMmoldhy Patctermed ic ai.cketeiese ices omeerneees