160 



NEBRASKA STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



seen in June and September" (.Taylor); "The whole of wooded temperate 

 North America " (Goss); Sioux county, Feb. •2'\ ^(i, 1896 (L. Skow). 



729. Sitta pusilla Lath. — Browx-headed Nuthatch. 



Sioux couuty, Feb. 26. 1896, "a single specimen of a nuthatch with brown 

 head seen but not obtained " (L. Skow). 



p^m 



Fig. 51.— AVhite-bellipd Nuthatch. 



730. Sitta pygmaea F^;^.— Pygmy Nuthatch. 



Niobrara river in northern Nebraska lAughey); Child's Point, Douglas 

 county (L. Skow); Omaha, "a rare resident, breeds" (I. S. Trostler). 



731. Parus bicolor imn.— Tufted Titmouse. 



West Point, Omaha, Lincoln, Rulo, etc. (L. Bruner,); "Abundant in eastern 

 Nebraska" (Aughey); " Common in May and June, probably a constant resi- 

 dent" (Taylor); "north to New Jersey and southern Nebraska" (Goss); Peru, 

 rare — may breed (G. A. Coleman); Omaha, "a rare resident, seen only in 

 wilder parts" (L S. Trostler); Kulo, April 18 (D. A. Haggard). 



735. Parus atricapillus Xi/m.— Black-capped Titmouse. 



Omaha, Lincoln (L. Bruner); Lincoln (W. D. Hunter); "Resident, com- 

 mon " (Taylor); "west to the edge of the Great Plains" (Goss); De Witt (A. 

 S. Pearse); Ft. Robinson, Sioux county, Dec. 13, 1895 (L. Bruner); Omaha- 

 breeds (L Skow); Cherry county— breeds (J. M. Bates); Gage county— breeds 

 (F. A. Colby); " an abundant resident, breeds April 22 to May 25" (L S. Trost- 

 ler). 



735a. Parus atricapillus septentrionalis (iTrtrris).— Loxg- 

 T ailed Chickadee. 



West Point, Tekamah, Sioux county, Lincoln— breeds (L. Bruner); "Very 

 abundant in eastern Nebraska" (Augbey); "Resident, common" (Taylor); 



