EASTERN ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER 95 



northeastern Manitoba (Churchill and York Factory) ; and casually to 

 northwestern Quebec (Richmond Gulf). East to eastern and south- 

 ern Manitoba (York Factory, Winnipeg, and Aweme) ; southwestern 

 Saskatchewan (East End and the Cypress Hills) ; southeastern 

 Alberta (Medicine Hat) ; western Montana (Great Falls, Belt, and 

 Bozeman) ; northwestern and southeastern Wyoming (Yellowstone 

 Park and Laramie) ; central Colorado (Denver, Colorado Springs, 

 Wet Mountains, and Fort Garland) ; central New Mexico (Taos Moun- 

 tains and Willis) ; and southwestern Texas (Guadalupe Mountains). 

 South to southwestern Texas (Guadalupe Mountains) ; south-central 

 New Mexico (Capitan Mountains) ; southeastern and northwestern 

 Arizona (Tucson, Santa Catalina Mountains, and north rim of the 

 Grand Canyon) ; southern Nevada (St. Thomas) ; and southern Cali- 

 fornia (Panamint Mountains, San Bernardino Mountains, San Jacinto 

 Mountains, Coronado Beach, and San Clemente Island). West to 

 the Pacific coast of California (San Clemente and Santa Rosa Islands, 

 Santa Barbara, San Francisco, and Eureka) ; Oregon (Coos Bay and 

 Tillamook) ; Washington (Cape Disappointment, Stevens Prairie, 

 and Neah Bay) ; British Columbia (Nootka Sound and the Queen 

 Charlotte Islands) ; and Alaska (Sitka, Yakutat, Nushegak, Igiak 

 Bay, St. Michael, and the Kobuk River) . 



The orange-crowned warbler has been recorded in migration in 

 southern Quebec as far east as Metamek and may occasionally breed. 

 There is a single breeding record for Minnesota at Cambridge. 



Winter range. — The orange-crowned warbler winters north to 

 northwestern Washington (Seattle) ; central California (Marysville, 

 Bigtrees, Atwater, and Victorville) ; southern Nevada (near Search- 

 light) ; central and southeastern Arizona (Fort Verde, Phoenix, and 

 Tucson) ; southern Texas (El Paso, Fort Clark, and Boerne) ; Louisi- 

 ana (Monroe) ; rarely Tennessee (Memphis) ; central Georgia (Macon 

 and Augusta) ; and southern South Carolina (Charleston) . It has also 

 occurred occasionally in winter as far north as Madison, Wis. ; Ann 

 Arbor, Mich.; Canandaigua, N. Y.; and Boston, Mass. East to 

 South Carolina (Charleston) ; Georgia (Savannah) ; and Florida 

 (Jacksonville, Coconut Grove, and Royal Palm Hammock). South 

 to southern Florida (Royal Palm Hammock) ; the Gulf coast of 

 Florida (Ozona, Wakulla Beach, and Pensacola) ; Mississippi 

 (Biloxi) ; Louisiana (New Orleans) ; Texas (Rockport, Corpus 

 Christi, and Brownsville) ; Tamaulipas (Altamira) ; Veracruz 

 (Orizaba) ; and Guatemala (Chimuy and Tecpan). West to western 

 Guatemala (Tecpan and Nenton) ; Guerrero (Chilpancingo and 

 Coyuca) ; Colima (Manzillo) ; Jalisco (Mazatlan) ; Baja California 

 (Cape San Lucas and Santa Margarita Island) ; the Pacific coast of 

 California (San Clemente and Santa Cruz Islands, Santa Barbara, 



