Appendix I 



Santa Lucia mountains, California and east to the mountains on the west side 

 of Napa Vall<y; in winter east to the Gatailan and Mt. Diablo ranges" (A. O. U.). 



Page 192. Cancel No. 530b, United States specimens of which prove to be 

 merely adults of No. 530. Further west, however, black-backed birds are not 

 found, and this western bird has been described as new. Consequently after No. 

 530, add: 430a. Green-backed Goldfinch (A. p. hesperophilus) . Similar to A. p. 

 psaltria "but ear-coverts, sides of neck, with back, nape, and rump, in fully adult 

 plumage, olive-green instead of black" (Oberholser). Fig. 530 represents this 

 race. 



Range.- — "Southwestern United States. Breeds from southern Oregon and 

 Utah to southern Lower California, Sonora and extreme southwestern New Mexico; 

 winters from central California to Cape San Lucas" (A. O. U.). 



The Range of .1. p. psaltria is therefore restricted to "northern Colorado to 

 central northern Texas and south throughout Mexico, except in northwestern 

 and extreme southern portions; casual in Wyoming." (A. O. XL). 



Page 194. Cancel No. 61Sd, Northern Yellow-throat, which proves to be the 

 same as No. 681, Maryland Yellow-throat. 



Page 196. After No. 652b. add: 652c. California Yellow Warbler (D.a. 



brewsteri) . Differs from D. w. wstiva "in similar size, paler (or less brightly 



yellow) coloration and, in the male, narrower streaking on under surface." 



Differs from D. <r. ruMginosa "in much smaller size and yellower coloration," 



and "from D. w. sonorana in smaller size and darker coloration." £ W. 2.45; 



T. 1.96. 2 W. 2.33; T. 1.93 (Grinnell). 



Range. — Pacific Coast, west of the Cascades, and the Sierra Nevada from 

 Washington to southern California. (The range of D. w. (estiva is correspondingly 

 restricted). 



Page 210. Cancel No. 464.2, Santa Barbara Flycatcher, which proves to be 

 the same as No. 464, Western Flycatcher. 



Page 211. Cancel No. 472a, Ridgway's Flycatcher, which proves to be the 

 same as No. 472, Beardless Flycatcher. 



Page 212. After No. 632c. add: 632a. Frazar's Vireo (T. li. cogiiatus). 



Similar to V. It. stephensi, but wing averaging decidedly shorter, tarsus longer, 



and coloration paler. Wing, 2.48; Tar. .74 (Ridgway). 



Range.— "Cape San Lucas district of Lower California (Sierra de la Laguna; 

 Victoria Mountains); resident" (Ridgway). 



Page 214. After No. 633a. add: 633b. Texas Vireo (7. B. medius). "Similar 

 to V. 1). belli, but coloration paler and tail averaging longer; pileum and hind- 

 neck brownish gray instead of grayish brown; olive of back, etc. grayer; under- 

 pays whiter with olive-yellow of sides and flanks much paler; under tail- 

 coverts and axillars white, yellowish white, or very pale sulphur yellow" 

 (Ridgway). 



Range. — "Southwestern Texas (Presidio, Brewster and Kinney Counties) south 

 to Coahuila and Guanajuato, central Mexico" (A. O. U.). 



299 



