100 BULLETIN 19 7, ITNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



Nebraska (Falls City, London, and Fort Calhoun) ; eastern and north- 

 ern South Dakota (Yankton, Sioux Falls, Aberdeen, and Harding 

 County) ; Montana (Terry and Billings) ; northern Utah (Ogden and 

 Lehi) ; and northern California (Eureka). It has bred occasionally 

 in Colorado (nest found near Fairplay and spotted young found in the 

 Denver region) . West to northwestern California (Eureka) ; western 

 Oregon (Fort Klamath, Corvallis, and Portland) ; western Washing- 

 ton (Cape Disappointment, Shelton, Seattle, and Bellingham) ; west- 

 ern British Columbia (Vancouver Island, Francois Lake, and Hazel- 

 ton) ; and southeastern Alaska (Ketchikan). Within this area the 

 cedar waxwing is irregular in occurrence, sometimes present one year 

 and absent in other years. Because of its late time of breeding, the 

 species sometimes migrates so late that it is reported to breed farther 

 south than it does. 



Winter range. — Roving flocks of cedar waxwings have been found 

 in winter to southern Canada (Toronto and Ottawa) and well toward 

 the northern boundary of the United States. The area in which they 

 are found in winter with some regularity is north to northwestern 

 Washington (Lake Ozette and Seattle) ; northeastern Oregon 

 (Weston) ; central California (Grass Valley, Fresno, and Death 

 Valley) ; southern Arizona casually (Phoenix and Tucson) ; central 

 northern New Mexico (Arroyo Seco) ; northeastern Colorado (Denver 

 and Fort Morgan) ; southern Nebraska (Red Cloud) ; central Missouri 

 (Warrensburg) ; southern Illinois (Odin and Mount Carmel) ; south- 

 ern Michigan (Grand Rapids, casually, and Ann Arbor) ; northern 

 Ohio (Toledo, Cleveland, and Youngstown) ; and through central 

 Maryland to Delaware (Smyrna). East to Delaware (Smyrna); 

 Maryland (Cambridge and Crisfield) ; and the Atlantic coast south to 

 central Florida (Titusville) ; rarely southern Florida (Royal Palm 

 Hammock and Upper Matecumbe Key) ; western Cuba, occasional in 

 winter or migration (Matanzas and Habana) ; Quintana Roo 

 (Cozumel Island) ; central Honduras (La Ceiba and Siquatepeque) ; 

 Costa Rica (Volcan de Irazu and Guayabo) ; and western Panama 

 ("Chiriqui") , the southernmost record. West to Costa Rica (valley 

 of the Rio General) ; western Nicaragua (San Rafael del Norte) ; 

 El Salvador (Volcan de Conchaqua) ; western Guatemala (Duenas, 

 Tecpam, and Finca Moca on the Pacific slope) ; Oaxaca (Puerto 

 Angel) ; Guerrero (Acapulco) ; Jalisco (Ameca) ; Nayarit (Tepic) ; 

 Lower California (Cape San Lucas, Comondu, and La Grulla) ; west- 

 em California (San Diego, Buena Park, Catalina Island, San Fran- 

 cisco, and Eureka) ; western Oregon (Medford and Portland) ; and 

 northwestern Washington (Lake Ozette). 



The cedar waxwing occasionally visits the West Indies, where it 

 has been reported from Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, and the Domini- 

 can Republic; also in the Bahamas and Bermuda. 



