AVES. 217 



PASSERES. OSCINES. 



TURDIDAE. 



1, p. 182. "to the north of Pensylvania." Seebohm and 

 Sharpe, Monogr. Turdidae, 1898, pt. 4, pi. 44. Egg, Capen, 1886, 



pi. 1, % 7. 



Swamps and undergrowth along streams; nests on or near the 



ground, rarely in trees. 



Me. Common summer resident. (? April 17, 26) May 1- 

 Sept. 20 (Oet. 1). Eggs, June 1-18 (July 1). 



N. H. Common summer resident below 1500 ft. May 10- 

 Sept. Eggs, June 9. 



Vt. Common summer resident. May 11-Sept. Eggs, May 

 30-June 28 (July 26). 



Mass. Common summer resident. (April 30) May 1-Sept. 

 27 (Oct. 14, 1871, Fresh Pond, Cambridge). Eggs, May 20-June 



30. 



R. I. Common summer resident. (April 29)-Sept. 25. Eggs, 



May 26-31. 



Conn. Common summer resident. May 1-Sept. 1. 



395. Hylocichla fuscescens salicicola Ridgway. 

 Willow thrush; Newfoundland thrush. 



Ridgw., Proc. U. S. nat. mus., 1882, vol. 4, p. 374. "Rocky 

 Mountain region. . . .Fort Garland, Colo.," etc. 



Swamps and undergrowth bordering streams; nests on or near 

 the ground. 



Mass. Rare migrant: Lanesboro, Sept. 27, 1900; Lowell 

 (these are the race "fuliginosa" Howe, considered by the A. O. U. 

 committee inseparable from salicicola and by Ridgway as synony- 

 mous with H. fuscescens). 



R. I. Rare migrant: Bristol, Sept. 24, 1899; Newport, Sept. 

 25, 1885. 



Conn. Rare migrant. May 5, 6, 14, 16; Sept. 23 ( = salici- 

 cola, Bishop). 



