Wyominec Birps. 79 
TURDIDAE (Thrushes, Robins, Bluebirds, etc.). 
Many of the Thrushes live in deep woods, but the Bluebirds 
and Robins nest in the more open country near human habitations. 
The Bluebirds and Robins feed upon cutworms and other cater- 
pillars, butterflies, moths, grasshoppers, crickets, bugs, beetles, ete. 
The Robin is fond of cultivated fruit. Both birds eat wild fruit to 
some extent. The young birds are fed almost entirely upon insects 
and their larvae, principally caterpillars and grasshoppers. The 
Thrushes’ food does not differ materially from that of the Robin 
and Bluebird, except that the fruit taken is wild fruit. 
This entire family of birds is beneficial, not excepting the Robin, 
about which some doubt has been expressed. 
REFERENCES : : 
1. “Useful Birds and Their Protection,’ Forebush, pp. 155-160, 
282-292. 
2. Year Book of the Department of Agriculture, 1897, p. 670. 
3. Farmers’ Bulletin No. 54, pp. 44-46. 
4. Year Book of the Department of Agriculture, 1907, pp. 168- 
169. ; 
754. Myadestes townsendi: Townsend’s Solitaire. 
Common summer resident from the plains almost to timber 
line. 
756a. Hylocichla fuscescens salicicola: Willow Thrush. 
Rather common in the pine forests of the mountain region. 
757. WHylocichla aliciae aliciae: Gray-cheeked Thrush. 
Two or three specimens taken by Lockwood near Laramie 
during spring migrations. 
758a. Hylocichla ustulata swainsoni: Olive-backed Thrush. 
Lockwood has taken them in Albany County. Peabody and 
Clearwaters both record them. Walker has observed it 
also. (Peabody reported Almas Thrush, but that is now a 
synonym of the Olive-backed. ) 
759. Hylocichla guttata guttata: Alaska Hermit Thrush. 
“There is but a single record for Wyoming. I took this 
specimen at Laramie, September 9, 1898. Mr. Ridgway iden- 
tified the bird.” ( Knight.) 
