EASTERN RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET 411 



Idaho Springs, and Fort Garland) ; central northern and southwestern 

 New Mexico (Lost Trail Creek, Pecos Baldy, and Black Range) ; 

 southeastern to central northern Arizona (Tombstone, Santa Catalina 

 Mountains, Mogollon Mountains, San Francisco Mountain, and the 

 north rim of Grand Canyon) ; southwestern Utah (Cedar Breaks) ; 

 southern Nevada (Charleston Mountains) ; and the mountains of 

 southern California (San Jacinto Mountains, San Bernardino Moun- 

 tains, and Mount Wilson) . West to southern California and the Sierra 

 Nevada (Mount Wilson, Yosemite Valley, Pyramid Peak, and Mount 

 Shasta) ; western Oregon (Fort Klamath, Coos Bay, Corvallis, and 

 Newport) ; the Cascades of Washington (Mount Rainier and Bumping 

 Lake); western British Columbia (Cape Scott, Vancouver Island; 

 Bella Coola, and Grahaoi Island, Queen Charlotte Islands); and 

 western Alaska (Sitka, Yakutat Bay, Kenai, Nushagak, Nulato, 

 and Kobuk River). 



Winter range. — The ruby-crowned kinglet is found in winter 

 north to southwestern British Columbia (Comox and Victoria, 

 Vancouver Island, and occasionally at Okanagan Lake); western 

 Washington (Bellingham, Everett, and Mount Rainier National 

 Park); western Oregon (Portland, Salem, and Corvallis); eastern 

 California (Susanville, Yosemite Valley, and Death Valley) ; southern 

 Nevada (Colorado River opposite Fort Mojave); occasionally to the 

 Ogden Valley of Utah; central Arizona (Prescott, Camp Verde, and 

 the Salt River Wildlife Refuge) ; southern New Mexico (Silver City, 

 San Antonio, Tularosa, and Carlsbad) ; central to northeastern Texas 

 (San Angelo, Gainesville, and Texarkana); central Arkansas (Hot 

 Springs and Little Rock) ; southern Missouri (Ozark Region and oc- 

 casionally St. Louis) ; southern Illinois (Odin and Mount Carmel, oc- 

 casionally to Chicago) ; southern Indiana (Bicknell and Richmond) ; 

 and southern Virginia (Blacksburg and Lynchburg) ; rare or occasional 

 north to North Platte, Nebr.; Washington, D. C; Easton, Pa.; 

 Demarest, N. J.; Hartford, Conn., and Falmouth, Maine. East to 

 southern Maine (Falmouth) ; Connecticut (Hartford and New Haven) ; 

 Long Island (Orient) ; eastern Pennsylvania (Easton) ; District of 

 Columbia (Washington); the Atlantic coast from North Carolina 

 (Cape Hatteras) to southern Florida (Royal Palm State Park). 

 South to southern Florida (Royal Palm Hammock) and the Gulf 

 coast of Alabama (Mobile); Mississippi (Biloxi and Gulfport); 

 Louisiana (New Orleans, New Iberia, and Chenier au Tigre); and 

 Texas (Houston and Brownsville) ; through Tamaulipas (Camargo and 

 Victoria); Puebla (Tziutlan and Puebla); to Oaxaca (Parada); oc- 

 casionally to Guatemala, since specimens are in existence from that 

 country taken, probably, in the Department of Vera Paz previous 

 to 1859. South to Oaxaca and occasionally to Guatemala. West 



