tail, 152-154 (153.2); culmen, 19-20.5 (19.8); tarsus, 15.5-16 (15.7); inner anterior toe, 15.5-16 (15.8).[1]
Costa Rica (Guápiles; Angostura; Carrillo; Bonilla; La Vijágua) and Panamá (Santa Fé de Verágua; Santiago de Verágua; Minerál de Verágua; Calovévora; Cordillera de Tolé; Cascajál, Coclé; Panamá).
- Trogon clathratus Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1866, 75 (Santa Fé de Verágua, Panamá; coll. Salvin and Godman); 1867, 151 (Santa Fé, Santiago, and Cordillera de Tolé, Verágua; descr. adult female); 1870, 202, (Calovévora,
Verágua); Ibis, 1874, 329 (Mineral de Verágua, Panamá). — (?)Frantzius, Journ. für Orn., 1869, 313 (Costa Rica). — Gould, Mon. Trog., ed. 2, 1875, pl. 28 and text. — Zeledón, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., viii, 1885, 109 (Costa Rica); Anal. Mus. Nac. Costa Rica, i, 1887, 120 (Costa Rica). — Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xvii, 1892, 476 (Angostura, Costa Rica; Calovévora, Cordillera de Tolé, and Santa Fé de Verágua, Panamá). — Salvin and Godman, Biol. Centr.-Am., Aves, ii, 1896, 504. — Carriker, Ann. Carnegie Mus., vi, 1910, 562 (Costa Rica; crit.).
- [Trogon] clathratus Sclater and Salvin, Nom. Av. Neotr., 1873, 104. — Sharpe, Hand-list, ii, 1900, 149.
- T[rogon] clathratus Ridgway, Condor, vii, 1905, 156, in text (Bonilla, e. Costa Rica).
- [Trogon] calthratus Gray, Hand-list, i, 1869, 81, no. 952.
Genus TROGON Brisson.
Rather large Trogons, most like Curucujus in structure but differing in smaller size, more strongly graduated tail, with rectrices more truncated at tip, much white on lateral rectrices, and under parts yellow or (in one species only) reddish orange.
- ↑ Three specimens.
Locality. Wing. Tall. Culmen. Tarsus. Middle
toe.males. Three adult males from Costa Rica 158.2 153.8 20.8 15.3 16.3 Six adult males from Panamá 159.4 153.4 20.8 15 15.1 - ↑ "Type remains the same," i. e., as given in the American Ornithologists' Union's "Check List of North American Birds," second and revised edition (1895).
- ↑ "Von ? (freundlich, angenehm)." (Cabanis and Heine.)
- ↑ Not Aganus braccatus Cabanis and Heine, as given in Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. (xvii, 440), since the authors expressly say that the most typical species ("deren typischter Arten") is T. viridis.
To what group the generic name Harpaleus Cabanis and Heine (Mus. Hein., iv, 1863, 185, footnote) was intended to apply can not be determined, no species being mentioned nor character given. In other words, the name is a nomen nudum.