128 BULLETIN 196, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



Peak, Alaska Peninsula, and Lake Aleknagik). There is an isolated 

 colony in the Sierra de la Laguna in the Cape district of Lower 

 California. 



Winter range. — The hermit thrush is found in winter north to Van- 

 couver Island, British Columbia (Comox and Victoria) ; western Wash- 

 ington (Bellingham and Seattle) ; western Oregon (Portland, Corvallis, 

 and Fort Klamath) ; eastern California (Grass Valley, Placerville, and 

 Providence Mountains); extreme southern Nevada (opposite Fort 

 Mojave) ; occasionally to extreme southern Utah (Zion National Park) ; 

 central Arizona (Fort Verde and Salt River National Wildlife Refuge) ; 

 southern New Mexico (near Salinas Peak) ; western Texas (Guadalupe 

 Mountains) and southern and eastern Texas (San Antonio, Corsicana, 

 and Gainesville) ; southeastern Oklahoma (Caddo) ; central Arkansas 

 (Maumelle); southeastern Missouri (Cardwell and Tecumseh, oc- 

 casionally) ; southern Kentucky (Bowling Green) ; southern West 

 Virginia (Bluefield) ; Virginia (Lexington and Beulahville) ; eastern 

 Maryland (Catonsville) ; southeastern Pennsylvania (Philadelphia); 

 and central New Jersey (Princeton) ; occasionally north to Columbus, 

 Ohio; Easton, Pa.; Orient, Long Island; Providence, R. I.; and the 

 vicinity of Boston, Mass. East to central New Jersey (Princeton) 

 and the Atlantic Coast States to southern Florida (Daytona Beach, 

 Titusville, and Royal Palm Park). South to southern Florida (Royal 

 Palm Park); the Gulf coast of the United States; Tamaulipas (Vic- 

 toria); Mexico (Amecameca); Puebla (Mount Popocatapetl) ; and 

 Guatemala (Coban, Tecpam, and Volcan de Fuego). South to 

 Guatemala. West to Guatemala (Volcan de Fuego and Momo- 

 stenaogo) ; Jalisco (Jonila); Sonora (Alamos) ; Lower California (Triunfo, 

 San Ram6n, and Todos Snntos Island); California (San Diego, San 

 Clemente Island, Santa Barbara, San Francisco, Eureka, and Crescent 

 City); Oregon (Corvallis); Washington (Port Angeles); and south- 

 western British Columbia (Vancouver Island: Victoria and Comax). 



The above ranges apply to the species as a whole, of which seven 

 subspecies or geographic races are recognized. The Alaska hermit 

 thrush (H. g. guttata) breeds in Alaska south to Cross Sound; the dwarf 

 hermit thrush (H. g. nanus) breeds in the coastal region from Cross 

 Sound, Alaska, south to southern British Columbia; the Monterey 

 hermit thrush (H: g. slevini) breeds in the coastal belt of California 

 from northern Trinity County to southern Monterey County; the 

 Sierra hermit thrush (II. g. sequoiensis) breeds in the higher mountains 

 from southern British Columbia to southern California; the Mono 

 hermit thrush (H. g. polionota) breeds in the White Mountains, Mono 

 and Inyo Counties, Calif., and the Charleston Mountains, Nev.; 

 Audubon's hermit thrush (H. g. auduboni) breeds from southeastern 

 British Columbia south through eastern^Nevada to the mountains of 



