ORDER PASSERES. 223 
Rance.— Pacific coast from Cook Inlet, Alaska, south into Oregon (includ- 
ing Vancouver and other coastal islands except Prince of Wales Island and 
the Queen Charlotte Islands). 
b. Cyanocitta stelleri frontélis(Ripcway). Blue-fronted Jay. [478a.] 
Cyanura stellert var. frontalis Ripaway, Amer. Journ. Sci., ser. 3, V, Jan., 
1873, 41. (Carson City, Nevada.) 
RanGE.— Canadian and Transition zones of both slopes of the Sierra Ne- 
vada from Mt. Shasta south to the San Jacinto and San Pedro Martir 
mountains, Lower California, and also the inner coast ranges of northern 
California (west of Sacramento Valley) from the Bully Choop Mountains 
south to Mt. St. Helena and Mt. George (east of Napa Valley). 
c. Cyanocitta stelleri diademata (BoNAPARTE). Long-crested Jay. [478b.] 
Cyanogarrulus diadematus BoNaparTE, Consp. Avium, I, 1850, 377. 
(Zacatecas, Mexico.) 
RancGeE.— Transition and Boreal zones of the southern Rocky Mountains 
from the Wasatch Mountains, Utah, and southern Wyoming to Chihuahua, 
Sonora, Zacatecas, and Jalisco. 
d. Cyanocitta stelleri annéctens (Barrp). Black-headed Jay. [478c.] 
Cyanura stelleri var. annectens Bairp, in Hist. N. A. Birds, II, 1874, 281. 
(Hell Gate, east of Missoula, Montana.) 
RancGE.— Boreal Zone of the northern Rocky Mountains in British Columbia 
to northeastern Oregon, Idaho, and Wyoming; casual in Utah in winter. 
e. Cyanocitta stelleri carl6ttz Oscoop. Queen Charlotte Jay. [478d.] 
Cyanocitta stelleri carlotte Osaoop, N. Amer. Fauna, No. 21, 1901, 46. 
(Cumshewa Inlet, Moresby Island, Queen Charlotte Islands, B. C.) 
RancE.— Queen Charlotte and Prince of Wales Islands, British Columbia. 
jf. Cyanocitta stelleri carbondcea GRINNELL. Coast Jay. [478e.] 
Cyanocitta stellert carbonacea GRINNELL, Condor, II, 1900, 127. (Stevens 
Creek Cafion, Santa Clara Co., California.) 
RanGeE.— Breeds in the humid Pacific coast strip from southern Oregon 
to the Santa Lucia Mountains, California, and east to the mountains on the 
west side of Napa Valley; in winter east to the Gabilan and Mt. Diablo ranges. 
