1913] Grinnell-Swartk: Birds and Mammals of San Jacinto 263 



a damp meadow near the summit of Toro Peak two were seen 

 June 30, and a single bird July 1, the only ones noted in the 

 Santa Rosa Mountains. A solitary straggler taken on the sage- 

 brush flat at Kenworthy, June 8, was the only individual noted 

 below high Transition. 



Four specimens were secured: Kenworthy, one (no. 2256), 

 Round Valley, one (no. 2073), Tahquitz Valley, one (no. 2S4IL. 

 and Toro Peak, one (no. 2468). All are adults in rather worn 

 plumage. 



Cyanocephalus cyanocephalus (Wied) 



Pin on Jay 



Seen only in Ileinet Valley, where they were at times abund- 

 ant. At Kenworthy. during the last week in May and the first 

 half of . I one. large flocks appeared almost every day, feeding 

 on the ground in the sagebrush covered valley. Plucks were 

 encountered between Kenworthy and Hemet Lake. June 6, and 

 at Ilemet Lake, August '••. 



Eleven specimens were preserved, all taken at Kenworthy 

 (nos. 2239-2249). Three are adults, eight full grown juvenals. 



Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus (Bonaparte) 



Yellow Jieaded Blackbird 



Observed as a migrant at Cabezon, during May. Four speci- 

 mens were taken (nos. 1646-1649), an adult male and three 

 females. Not encountered elsewhere. 



Agelaius phoeniceus neutralis Ridgway 



San Diego Red-wing 



Seen only in the vicinity of Ilemet Lake. As some were 

 observed in June they were probably breeding on the marshy 

 ground at the head of the lake. In August small flocks were 

 noted here on several occasions. 



Sturnella neglecta Audubon 



Western Mead< >wla rk 



Breeds abundantly in the lower parts of the mountains. In 

 San Jacinto Valley, to the westward, and in San Gorgonio Pass, 



