- g. Darker, the back, etc., raw-umber brown, the chest mouse gray. (British Honduras)
Formicarius moniliger intermedius (p. 121).
- gg. Paler, the back, etc., light olive-brown (or between broccoli brown and isabella color), the chest drab-gray. (Yucatan.)
Formicarius moniliger pallidus (p. 121).
- ee. No rusty or cinnamomeous collar across foreneck. (Eastern Costa Rica and eastern Nicaragua)
Formicarius moniliger umbrosus (p. 122).
- dd. Under tail-coverts wholly, or for much the greater part, rusty, tawny, or cinnamomeous.
- e. Forehead lighter and more rufescent or cinnamomeous brown than crown.
- f. Larger (wing averaging 93.5 in adult male, 91 in adult female); color of under parts more slaty, the under tail-coverts darker rusty. (South-western Costa Rica and western Panamá.)
- e. Forehead lighter and more rufescent or cinnamomeous brown than crown.
- dd. Under tail-coverts wholly, or for much the greater part, rusty, tawny, or cinnamomeous.
Formicarius moniliger hoffmanni (p. 123).
- ff. Smaller (wing averaging 87 in adult male, 86.9 in adult female); color of under parts more brownish or more strongly suffused with olive or buffy, the under tail-coverts paler, more tawny. (Eastern Panamá.)
Formicarius moniliger panamensis (p. 124).
- ee. Forehead concolor with crown (not more rufescent or cinnamomeous).
- f. White loral spot small, sometimes obsolete; under parts nearly uniform deep brownish gray; under tail-coverts rufous-tawny. (Trinidád, Venezuela, and adjacent coast district of Colombia.)
- ee. Forehead concolor with crown (not more rufescent or cinnamomeous).
Formicarius moniliger saturatus (extralimital).[1]
- ff. White loral spot large, conspicuous; under parts clear brownish gray, fading into nearly white on lower abdomen; under tail-coverts clear tawny. (British Guiana.)
Formicarius moniliger crissalis (extralimital).[2]
- bb. Chest chestnut or rufous-tawny.
- c. Pileum rusty brown or chestnut. (Western Panamá to eastern Costa Rica; northwestern Colombia?)
Formicarius rufipectus (p. 125).
- cc. Pileum black. (Eastern Ecuadór.)
Formicarius thoracicus (extralimital).[3]
FORMICARIUS ANALIS NIGRICAPILLUS (Ridgway).
BLACK-HEADED ANTTHRUSH.
Adult male. — Head, all round, and chest uniform sooty black, this gradually passing through sooty blackish slate on upper breast into brownish slate-gray on abdomen, where (in fresh plumage) the feathers are margined terminally with dull buffy whitish; sides and flanks similar in color to breast, but faintly tinged with olive; hindneck,
sides of neck and general color of upper parts plain dark vandyke
- ↑ Formicarius saturatus Ridgway, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xvi, no. 961, Nov. 28, 1893, 677 (Princestown, Trinidád; coll. Am. Mus. N. H.). — Formicarius analis saturatus Chapman, Bull. Am. Mus. N. H., vi, Feb. 16, 1894, 53 (Trinidad). — Formicarius hoffmanni saturatus Hellmayr, Novit. Zool., xiii, 1906, 33 (Trinidád; crit.).
- ↑ Myrmornis crissalis Cabanis, Journ. fiir Orn., Mar., 1861, 96, in text (Roraima, Brit. Guiana). — Formicarius crissalis Sclater and Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1867, 576 (Pará); Ridgway, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xvi, 1893, 676 (monogr.). — F[ormicarius] a[nalis] crissalis Hellmayr, Novit. Zool., xiv, Nov., 1907, 392 (geog. range).
- ↑ Formicarius thoracicus Taczanowski and Berlepsch, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1885, 101 (Machay, o. Ecuadór; coll. Branicki Mus.); Sclater, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xv, 1890, 301, footnote; Ridgway, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xvi, 1893, 685 (monogr.).