(YELLOW-STRIPED TANAGER.)
Buarremon citrinellus, Cab. Journ. f. Orn. 1883, p. 109; Scl. Cat. B. xi. p. 270.
Description.—Above olive-green, darker on the head; wings and tail blackish brown, edged with olive; a broad superciliary stripe commencing on the front on each side, and another commencing at the gape, bright yellow, leaving in the middle a broad patch of dark olive; beneath yellow, breast and flanks olivaceous; throat yellow, bordered on each side by a dark olive mystacal stripe; bill black; feet brown: whole length 6·5 inches, wing 2·8, tail 2.
Hab. Tucuman.
This is a rather aberrant species of Buarremon, as yet only known from Tucuman, where it was discovered by Schulz.
[43.] ARREMON ORBIGNII, Sclater.
(D’ORBIGNY’S TANAGER.)
Arremon orbignii, Scl. et Salv. Nomencl. p. 25; White, P. Z. S. 1882, p. 597 (Catamarca); Scl. Cat. B. xi. p. 274.
Description.—Above olive-green; wings and tail blackish, edged with olive; head black, superciliaries white, vertical stripe and nape cinereous; beneath white, with a narrow but distinct pectoral band; sides cinereous; bend of wing yellow; bill yellow, with the upper half of the upper mandible black; feet brown: total length 5·7 inches, wing 2·8, tail 2·6.
Hab. Bolivia and Northern Argentina.