ORDER PASSERIFORMES. 267 



Range. — ^B reeds in Boreal zones from northwestern Alaska, northwestern 

 Mackenzie, northern Manitoba, and west-central Quebec to southern Arizona, 

 central New Mexico, northern Ontario, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia 

 (casually Michigan and Maine). Winters from southern British Columbia, 

 Iowa, and Virginia (casually farther north) south over the United States and 

 the Mexican tableland to Guatemala, and in Lower California. Accidental in 

 Greenland. 



Corthylio calendula cineraceus (Grinnell) . Western Ruby-crowned King- 

 let. [749c.] 



Reguhis calendula cineraceus Grinnell, Condor, VI, No. 1, January 15, 

 1904, 25. (Strain's Camp, Mt. Wilson, Los Angeles County, California.) 



Range. — Breeds in the Canadian Zone of the Siskiyou Mountains and Sierra 

 Nevada south to Tulare County, California, and less commonly in the San 

 Gabriel, San Bernardino, and San Jacinto mountains; also in northern Idaho. 

 Winters in the San Diegan district and in the interior valleys west of the Sierra 

 Nevada, and throughout Lower California. 



Corthylio calendula griimelli (Palmer). Sitka Kinglet. [749rt.] 



Reguliis calendula grinnelli W. Palmer, Auk, XIV, No. 4, Oct., 1897, 399. 

 (Sitka, Alaska.) 



Range. — Pacific coast. Breeds from Prince William Sound and Skagway, 

 Alaska, to British Columbia. Winters south to middle California. 



Corthylio calendula obscurus (Ridgway). Dusky Kinglet. [7496.] 



Regulus calendula obscurus Ridgway, Bull. Geol. and Geog. Surv. Terr., II, 

 No. 2, April, 1876, 184. (Guadeloupe [= Guadalupe] Island, Lower 

 California.) 



Range. — Guadalupe Island, Lower California. 



Family PRUNELLIDAE. Accentors. 



Genus PRUNELLA Vieillot. 



Prunella Vieillot, Analyse, 1816, 43. Type, by monotypy, Fauvette 

 de haie Buffon = Motacilla modularis Linnaeus. 



• Prunella montanella (Pallas) . Mountain Accentor. [749.1.] 



Motacilla montanella Pallas, Reise Russ. Reichs, III, 1776, 695. (in 

 Dauuriam = Dauria.) 



Range. — Siberia, from the Ural Morntains to Bering Sea, south to Trans- 

 baikalia, the Tian Shan Mountains, and Mongolia. Winters in north China 



