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RAMPHASTOS SWAINSONII.
Swainson’s Toucan.
S p e c if ic C h a r a c t e r .
Bamph. mandíbula; superioris basi inferne inferiorisque bast tota rufis; hujus apice lineaque
obliqua a rictu adfrontem extensa nigris; superioris culmine parteque antica Jlavis: ater,
vertice nucliaque rufo parum tinctis; gutture lutescenti-favo, abdomen versus linea alba
alteraque coccínea cincto ; tectricibus cauda superioribus albis, ivferioribus coccineis.
Bostrum pro tempestóte bicolor tantum; mandíbula irferiore superioreque oblique et iiferne
basin versus nigris ; hac ad apicem supernequefava.
The base of tbe lower part of tbe upper mandible, as well as the entire base of the under, is of
a rich salmon colour, bounded by a narrow line of black on the former, the point of the
lower being entirely black; the remainder of the upper mandible, from the forehead to the
point, of a rich orange yellow; throat lemon yellow bounded on the breast by a narrow
band of white, which is succeeded by a broader one of scarlet; the head, the back of the
neck, the whole of the upper and under surface, deep black; under tail-coverts scarlet,
upper ones white; legs and feet lead colour.
In a different season the salmon colour towards the base of the mandibles is entirely wanting,
its place being occupied by a dull black, only less intense than that of the oblique line
which borders it.
■ Total length, 18 inches; tail, 6*; wings, 9 ; tarsi, l i ; length of the bill, 5* to 6 .
Tocardl Le Vaill., Ois. de Parad., vol. 2. pi. 9.
Bamphastos ambiguus ? Swains., Zool. Illus., pi. 168.
Bamphastos Swainsonii. Gould, Proceedings of the Zool. Soc., part 1 . p. 69.
T h e changes which the colours of the bill undergo in this race of birds during the living state are at le n ° - th
beginning to be understood; and the present species is well adapted to illustrate the extent of variation
which occurs, probably at different seasons. Were it not for a knowledge of these changes, the birds in the
Plate before us might be regarded as two species ; but their identity is fully proved by a series of specimens
in my possession, which exhibit a gradual transition from one colour to the other.
From the Ramphastos ambiguus of Mr. Swainson, a species which I have referred to with doubt as synonymous
with the present, the distinction rests on the less extension forwards of the black of the upper
mandible. In the figure published by that gentleman, the black of the lower margin of the bill reaches to
the tip, and gives off near its anterior part small subtransverse bars of the same colour. In the present
species, on the contrary, the black stops short of the tip fully one third of the length of the bill; and the
bars are absent. Mr. Swainson’s figure also represents an oblique dash of green on the side of the bill; but
this is probably of no importance, and depends on incipient change after death in the brilliant yellow of
that p a rt: in one of my specimens there are on one side irregular blotches of green which are entirely wanting
on the other. In all other respects the closest resemblance obtains between the two birds.
I am not aware that any specimen of Mr. Swainson’s bird is in existence. His authority for it was a drawing
(stated to have been taken from the bird just dead,) by an unknown artist, for whose general accuracy,
however, he was enabled to vouch. It is barely possible that a slip of the pencil may have produced the
difference of colouring which has just been pointed out; but this would be an assumption on which I am not
disposed to rely. I therefore regard the present bird as distinct. In dedicating it to Mr. Swainson, I trust
that he will receive it as a testimony of the high estimation I entertain for his scientific attainments in the
studies of nature and his researches in this particular group.
The Tocard of Le Vaillant represents a state of plumage I have never seen. It agrees with the present
bird in every respect except in the colour of the throat and chest, which is represented as white. It is most
probable that this is owing to the fading of the delicate lemon yellow of that part in an individual of the
present species, perhaps from exposure to air or to a strong light.
The R . Swainsonii was received by me from Mr. Christie of Popayan, in Columbia: I have also received a
specimen from South Mexico. Its habitat appears extended along the Andes and the diverging chains intervening
between those places.