BIRDS OF THE PACIFIC DISTRICT. 



209 



Willamette Valley. 0. B. Johnson. A very com- 

 mon summer resident. 



Walla Walla, W. T. Dr. Williams. First arrival 

 May 1, 1885; common May 20. 



Cooper, 1860. Abundant in this Territory. 



British Columbia. John Fannin. Common summer 

 resident. 



Henshaw, 1879. Numerous as a summer resident; 

 in the shrubbery of the streams. It penetrates beyond 

 the Columbia and into Washington Territory. 



Camp Harney. Bendire. A very common summer 

 resident. It commences nesting about June 1. 



Ridgway. Was met with everywhere in all wooded 

 localities, with the exception of the higher forests. The 

 most abundant and generally distributed member of the 

 family. 



Hoffman. A summer resident in most favorable lo- 

 calities. None were observed south of Belmont after 

 July 5. 



235. Dendroica caerulescens (Gmel.) BLACK-THROATED 

 BLUE WARBLER. 



Farallon Islands. Emerson. Proc. Cal. Acad., ser. 

 2, i, 48. 



236. Dendroica coronata (Linn.) MYRTLE WARBLER. 

 British Columbia. John Fannin. Summer resident; 



not common. 



Cooper, 1860. I saw on Whidby's Island in April two 

 of the yellow-crowned warbler. I shot one. As these 

 are the only ones I met with, it must be rare in the 

 Territory. 



Willamette Valley. 0. B. Johnson. I have obtained 

 several birds in spring that I have referred to this 

 species. 

 14 



