THE NATURAL HISTORY SURVEY. 139 



Genus ZONOTRICHIA Swainson. 1831. 



Zonotrichia qnerula (Nuttall). Harris' Sparrow. 



Fringilla querula NUTTALL, Man., I, ed. 2, 1840, 555. 



Zonotrichia querula GAMBEL, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, eer. 



2, I, 1847, 51. 

 Popular synonyms: HABBIS'S FINCH. MOUBNING FINCH. 



Mr. E. W. Nelson reported (1876) Harris's Sparrow to be 

 a very rare visitant to our vicinity. Mr. James O. Dunn says* 

 that he took a specimen east of Riverdale, Illinois, which he ob- 

 served in a growth of small willows. Mr. Ruthven Deane in- 

 forms me that on May n, 1904, he observed a male of this species 

 feeding with a flock of sparrows in the south end of Lincoln 

 Park. 



The range of this Sparrow extends from the eastern border 

 of the Great Plains eastward to Wisconsin, Illinois and Missouri, 

 and from Manitoba southward to Texas in the winter. It is 

 quite irregular in its appearance on the eastern border of its 

 range. 



Zonotrichia lencophrys (Forster). White-crowned Sparrow. 

 Emberiza leucophrys FOBSTEB, Philos. Trans., LXII, 1772, 426. 

 Fringilla leucophrys BONAPABTE, List, 1828, 32. 



Zonotrichia leucophrys SWAINSON, in Sw. & Rich., Fauna Bor. Amer., 

 II, 1831, 493. 



The White-crowned Sparrow is a common migrant, the larger 

 number passing northward in April and returning, on their fall 

 migration, the latter part of September and the early part of 

 October. 



The range of this Sparrow includes nearly all of North Amer- 

 ica, and it breeds in the mountain ranges of the west and from 

 Wisconsin and Vermont northward. 



Zonotrichia albicollis (Gmelin). White-throated Sparrow. 

 Fringilla albicollis GMELIN, S. N., I, ii, 1788, 92G. 

 Zonotrichia albicollis SWAINSON. Classif. B., II, 1837, 288. 

 Popular synonyms: PEABODY BIBD. YELLOW-BBOWED SPABBOW. 



The White-throated Sparrow is an abundant migrant, and 

 "a rare summer resident" (Nelson), passing northward in April 

 and returning, on the fall migration, the latter part of September 

 and in October. 



The range of this species is chiefly east of the Great Plains. 

 It breeds from the northern portion of the United States north- 



*Auk, Vol. XII, 1895, 395. 



