Adapted from Jim Conrad's online book
A Birding Trip through Mexico
For this day of slowly walking along the highway, dropping in elevation from around 1,600 meters (5,250 feet) to around 1,400 meters (4,600 feet), here's my list:
November 16: latitude 18º04'N, longitude 96º47'W

MEXICO: Oaxaca;  5 to 10 kms east of San Juan, ±16 kms east of Huautla de Jiménez, on road between Teotitlán and Tuxtepec, some 20 air-kms east of Teotitlán; elev. 1400-1600 meters (4600-5200 feet) in the Sierra Mazateca; borderline cloudforest, with Sweetgums and weedy cornfields

RESIDENCY STATUS:
permanent resident

winter resident
not found in the USA
GULF COAST SPECIAL
  1. Turkey Vulture
  2. Red-tailed Hawk
  3. RUFOUS-TAILED HUMMINGBIRD
  4. White-eared Hummingbird
  5. Common Raven
  6. Blue Mockingbird
  7. BLACK ROBIN (GLOSSY-BLACK THRUSH)
  8. Brown-backed Solitaire
  9. Rufous-capped Warbler
  10. Townsend's Warbler
  11. Wilson's Warbler
  12. Ovenbird
  13. YELLOW-WINGED TANAGER
  14. Common Bush-tanager

The hot, humid lowland between the Eastern Sierra Madres and the Gulf of Mexico, including northern Chiapas, harbors the greatest diversity of bird species among all of Mexico's biological regions. Until now we've not seen a single species that in Mexico is restricted to the Gulf lowlands.

But in this list we have three "Gulf-Coast specialist" species -- the Rufous-tailed Hummingbird, Black Robin and Yellow-winged Tanager -- which amounts to 21% of the list. As we drop lower the percentage should increase. Often species restricted to Mexico's Gulf coast extend on southward through the Caribbean lowlands of Central America into northern South America. Now we're getting into country that's famous not only for its quantity of birds but also its exotic variety, and the more we descend the better it'll get.