no. 1840. REVISION OF HAIRY WOODPECKERS— OBERIIOLSER. 601 



New Hampshire. — Shelburne; Epsom; Franconia; Hampton; 

 Ossipee. 



New Jersey. — Cape May County; Egg Harbor; Tuckerton; Hobo- 

 ken; Haddonfield. 



New York. — Steuricke; Canandaigua; Stamford; Highland Falls; 

 Lake Grove; Plateau Mountain, Catskill Mountains; Chataugay 

 Lake; Ithaca; Syracuse; Long Island; Saint Regis Lake; Ley den; 

 Hilton (Monroe County) ; Kiskatom; Suspension Bridge. 



North Carolina. — Mitchell County ; Raleigh. 1 



Pennsylvania. — Shade Gap (Huntington County) ; Mapleton ; 

 Belsano; Greenwood Furnace; Ohio Pyle; Crumb; Kimbleville 

 (Chester County); Westtown; Wilkinsburg; Riddlesburg; Carlisle; 

 West Goshen; Erie; Coudersport; Leasuresville ; Bear Lake (Warren 

 County); Laughlinstown ; Conneaut Lake; Spruce Creek; Cherry 

 Spring (Potter County) . 



South Dakota. — Fort Randall. 



Tennessee. — Lexington; Cross Mountain; Briceville; High Cliff; 

 Rockwood ; Roan Mountain. 



Texas. — Lipscomb; Cisco; Carbon; Eastland County. 



Vermont. — Clarendon. 



Virginia. — Prince William County; Gainesville; Falls Church; 

 Washington County. 



Wisconsin. — Kenosha; Sayner; Solon Springs; Camp Douglas; 

 De Pere; Beloit; Woodruff (Vilas County). 



DRYOBATES VILLOSUS AUDUBONII (Swainson). 



Picus audubonii Swainson, Fauna Bor.-Amer., vol. 2, 1831 (1832), p. 306. 

 Picus villosus, var. minor Baikd, Rep. Explor. and Surv. R. R. Pac, vol. 9, 1858, 

 p. 85 (Southern States [of United States]). 



Chars, subsp. — Similar to Dryobates villosus villosus, but smaller; 

 wlute spots on upper wing-coverts smaller and less numerous. 



Measurements. — Male: 2 Wing, 110.5-117.5 (average, 113.9) mm.; 

 tail, 58-69 (65.1); exposed culmen, 26.5-30.5 (28.3); tarsus, 19.5-21.5 

 (20.6); middle toe, 13-14.5 (13.7). 



Female: 3 Wing, 108.5-115.5 (112.6); tail, 59-70 (64.8); exposed 

 culmen, 25-27.5 (26.2); tarsus, 19-20 (19.5); middle toe, 12.5-14 

 (13.2). 



Type-locality. — Georgia, U. S. A. 



Geographical distribution. — Lower Austral Zone of the southeastern 

 United States: east to the Atlantic seaboard; south to the Gulf of 

 Mexico, and in Florida to Bassinger and Fort Meyer; north to Lake 

 Drummond, southeastern Virginia; Raleigh, central North Carolina; 

 Caesar's Head, northwestern South Carolina; central Georgia; cen- 



i Not breeding at this locality. 3 Ten specimens, from Florida and southern Georgia. 



* Ten specimens, from Florida. 



