TYPE SPECIMENS OF BIRDS 651 



Junco hyemalis sliufeldti Coale 



Auk 4 (4) : 330, October 1887. 

 =Junco oreganus shufeldti Coale. See Miller, Univ. California Publ. Zool. 



44: 393-395, 1941. 

 106035. Adult male. Fort Wingate, McKinley County, New Mexico. 



Oct. 13, 1885. Collected by Robert W. Shufeldt. 

 Junco oreganus pontilis Oberholser 



Condor 21 (3) : 119, June 6, 1919. 

 196964. Adult male. "El Rayo" (a "ranch on western flank of Sierra 



Juarez, altitude 4700 feet, a little south of lat. 32°, 7 miles west of 



Laguna Hanson," fide Grinnell, Univ. California Publ. Zool. 32:23, 



1928), State of Baja California, Mexico. June 4, 1905. Collected by 



Edward W. Nelson and Edward A. Goldman. Original number 11276. 



Received from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 

 Junco insularis Ridgway 



Bull. U.S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr. 2 (2) : 188, 1876. 



70015. Adult male. Guadalupe Island (lat. 29°00' N., long. 118°15' W.) , 

 eastern Pacific Ocean off the State of Baja California, Mexico. Feb. 

 12, 1875. Collected by Edward Palmer. Original number 10. 



70016. Adult male. Feb. 12-20, 1875. Other data same as for No. 

 70015. 



70017. Adult male. Same data as No. 70016. 



70018. Adult male. Same data as No. 70016. 



70020. Adult female. Guadalupe Island. Feb. 12-20, 1875. Collected 

 by Edward Palmer. Original number 9. 



70021. Adult female. Same data as No. 70020. 



70023. Adult female. Same data as No. 70020. 



70024. Adult female. Same data as No. 70020. 



70026. Immature (sex not indicated). Guadalupe Island. Feb. 12-20, 

 1875. Collected by Edward Palmer. Original number 49. 



70027. Immature (sex not indicated). Same data as No. 70026. 

 Thirteen specimens came from Palmer to the museum, but only twelve 



were listed by Ridgway in the original description, since No. 70019 had 

 apparently already disappeared prior to report on the collection. The miss- 

 ing No. 70019, should it ever be found, has accordingly no claim to cotype- 

 ship. 



Two other specimens are not listed above; of these, No. 70021, a female, 

 was sent on April 12, 1883, to Osbert Salvin and is now in the British 

 Museum (Natural History), London, while No. 70025, an unsexed immature 

 (with original number "35") was sent in 1877 to George N. Lawrence, 

 from whom it may have passed to the American Museum of Natural History, 

 New York. 



