Zoological Illustrations Series II
William Swainson
Ser. 2. Vol II. Pl. 82. Trogon Mexicanus.
1560605Zoological Illustrations Series II — Ser. 2. Vol II. Pl. 82. Trogon Mexicanus.William Swainson

TROGON MEXICANUS.
Mexican Trogon

The Trogons are found only in the dark primeval forests of the Tropics; shunning the haunts of man, and living in solitude and silence. It is not, therefore, to be wondered at, that their peculiar economy should be shrouded in mystery, or that the naturalists of Europe should be much perplexed in finding them a place in their artificial or their natural systems. Our researches in Tropical America, will enable us to communicate, in the forthcoming volume of Northern Zoology, some very singular information on these birds, which we shall not now anticipate.

Plate 82.
Plate 82.


TROGON Mexicanus.

Mexican Trogon. Male.

Tribe Fissirostres. Family Trogonidæ.

Sub-family Trogoninæ. (G. Trogon. Auct.)

Generic Character. See Lesson Man. 2 p. 139.




Specific Character.

Above golden green, beneath crimson; tail black; the three outer feathers banded with white on their outer web only; inner webs with an oblique white stripe along their shafts; the inner edge spotted with white. Male.

Trogon Mexicanus, female. See Swains. in Phil. Mag. June 1827.

Mus. Dom. Taylor.

The species are much more numerous then is imagined, but they are, perhaps, less understood than those of any one group of Ornithology. Males of different species are classed as the same, while their females are considered as distinct. The number enumerated in the last edition of the Synopsis of Birds as inhabiting all South America, is six; but we possess eight species from Brazil alone; besides several others, which it is impossible to identify from books.

The Mexican Trogon was first described by us, from a bird, which we felt assured was a female; and this belief was soon after confirmed, by the arrival of a fine specimen of the male, to Mr. Taylor, from Real del Monte; in whose possession it now is. We shall defer a detailed account of its plumage, until we illustrate the other sex.

Total length 11 in. bill nine-tenths, wings 5¾, tail 7¾, the outermost feather 3½ in. shorter.