ORDER PASSERIFORMES. 241 



Range. — Humid Transition Zone of Pacific coast of Oregon from the 

 Columbia River to near the California line. 



Chamaea fasciata rufula Ridgway. Ruddy Wren-Tit. [742c.] 



Chamaea fasciata rufula Ridgway, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, No. 28, 

 Sept. 30, 1903, 109. (Nicasio, Marin Co., California.) 



Range. — Humid Transition coast strip of California from Del Norte County 

 south to Santa Cruz County. 



Chamaea fasciata fasciata (Gambel). Gambel's Wren-Tit. [742.] 



Parus fasciatus Gambel, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., II, No. 10, July- 

 Aug., 1845 [Dec. 5], 265. (California = San Francisco Bay region.) 



Range. — Upper Austral Zone on the eastern and southern shores of San 

 Francisco Bay and adjacent Santa Clara Valley, south along the coast to San 

 Luis Obispo County. 



Chamaea fasciata henshawi Ridgway. Pallid Wren-Tit. [742a.] 



Chamsea fasciata henshawi Ridgway, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., V, 1882, 13 

 [July 21]. (Interior of California including western slope of Sierra 

 Nevada = Walker Basin, between Kernville and Caliente, California.) 



Range. — Upper Austral Zone of the foothills and valleys of interior and 

 southern California from Shasta County south, and along the coast from Santa 

 Barbara County to the Mexican boundary. 



Chamaea fasciata canicauda Grinnell and Swarth. San Pedro Wren- 

 Tit. [742d.] 



Chamaea fasciata canicauda Grinnell and Swarth, Univ. Calif. Publ. 

 Zool., XXX, No. 5, Sept. 16, 1926, 169. (La Grulla, Sierra San Pedro 

 Mdrtir, Lower California, Mexico.) 



Range. — Mainly in the Upper Austral Zone of northwestern Lower Cali- 

 fornia, from the United States boundary south to lat. 30°. 



Family CINCLIDAE. Dippers. 



Genus CINCLUS Borkhausen. 



Cinclus Borkhausen, Deutsche Fauna, 1797, 300. Type, by monotypy, 

 Cinclus hydrophilus Borkhausen = Sturnus cinclus Linnaeus. 



Cinclus mexicanus imicolor Bonaparte. Dipper. [701.] 



Cinclus unicolor Bonaparte, Zool. Journ., Ill, No. 9, Jan., 1827, 52, 53. 



(Near the Rocky mountains, on the Athapescow Lake = near the 



source of the Athabaska River.) 

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