BIRDS OP THE CAMBRIDGE REGION. 283 



of the pinkish suffusion on its sides. Some time afterwards I identified and 

 recorded ' it as an example of the Oregon Junco {Jimco oregonus). Since then 

 Jimco oregonus has been subdivided into several geographical forms and the 

 names of no less than three of these have been successively used for the Water- 

 town specimen.^ When I next had occasion to mention this bird in print I called 

 it — for reasons quite conclusive at the time — Jmico liycmalis shufcldti? About 

 the same time it was also referred to * under this name in the A. O. U. Check-List. 

 Two years later the A. O. U. Committee decided that/««c^ hyemalis connectetis 

 Coues dxAJiinco hyemalis shnfeldti Coale were one and the same bird and that 

 as the former name had priority it should replace the name shnfeldti!' 



Still more recently Mr. Ridgway has cited connectens as a synonym of 

 shnfeldti,^ and under the name Jniuo moiitanus has described a bird closely 

 similar to Shufeldt's Junco, but lighter and grayer in coloring, and having a 

 somewhat more easterly breeding range." This form has been since accepted as 

 a full species by the A. O. U. Committee. To it Mr. Ridgway refers most of 

 the "supposed records from east of the Missouri River " of J uncos which have 

 been called oregonus or shnfeldti. He thinks, however, that " some" and "pos- 

 sibly all " of these birds (excepting one taken at Laurel, Maryland) " may be 

 referable to /. oreganus shufcldti." At the time of expressing this opinion Mr. 

 Ridgway had not seen my Watertown specimen ; I have recently sent it to him 

 for examination and he writes me (under date of December 10, 1905) that he 

 " would unhesitatingly label " xtjutico montanus. While I accept this determin- 

 ation, I cannot help thinking that the matter has not as yet been fully 

 and finally settled. The Montana Junco is certainly very closely related 

 to Shufeldt's Junco, and I believe that when more specimens have been 

 examined {tnontanus is represented by comparatively few at present) the two 

 forms will prove to intergrade and hence to be, at the most, but subspecifically 

 distinct. The Watertown bird is referred to in the Introduction to the present 

 Memoir under its former name, Shufeldt's Junco. 



' \V. Brewster, Bulletin of the Nuttall Ornithological Club, I, 1876, 19. 



2 Female, no. 930, collection of William Brewster. 



3 W. Brewster, H. D. Minot, Land-birds and Game-birds of New England, ed. 2, 1895, 234, foot- 

 note. 



■■American Ornithologists' Union Committee, Check-List of North American Birds, ed. 2, 1895, 



235- 



^American Ornithologists' Union Committee, Auk, XIV, 1897, 128. 



'^R. Ridgway, Birds of North and Middle America, pt. I. Bulletin of the United States National 

 Museum, no. 50, 1901, 287. 



''Ibid., 289-291. 



