68 



REVIEW OP AMERICAN HIRDS. 



[part I. 



emlth- 



BOuiuU 



No. 



10,237 

 82S 

 32 224 

 11,801 

 7,176 

 16,151 



Colloc- 



till '8 



No. 



200 

 130 

 244 



Sex 

 Hud 

 Ak6. 



Juv. 



Localltj. 



Sherburn, Ma88. 

 CarliHit), i'a. 

 Liberty Co., Oa. 

 Simlahinoo, W. T. 

 Steilacoora. 

 Fort Crook, Cal. 



When 

 Collected. 



Oct. 22, '42. 

 Nov.' 23. 



Received from 



O. 8 Babcock. 

 8. F. Balrd. 

 Prof. Lecotlte. 

 A. Campbell. 

 Dr Huckley. 

 Capt. J. Fellner. 



Collected by 



Dr. Kennerly. 



I ' ' 



Regulus cuTieri. 



Reguhis cuvieri, Add. Ora. Biog. I, 1832, 288, pi. 55, etc. — Bairo, Birds 

 N. Am. 1859, 228. 

 Hab. "Banks of Schuylkill River, Penn. June, 1812." Aud. 



This species continues to be unknown, except from the description 

 of Mr. Audubon, as quoted above.- 



II "' 



■f 



iCijl . 





Regulus calendula. 



Motacilla calendula, Linn. Syst. Nat. I, 1766, 337. — Regulus calendula, 



Light. Verz. 1823, no. 408.— Baird, Birds N. Amer. 185S, 226 



ficLATER, P. Z. S. 1857, 202.— Ib. 1858, 300 (mountains of Oaxaoa). 

 — Ib. 1859, 362 (Xalapa). — Ib. Has, I, 1859, 8 (Guatemala).— 

 Cooper & Scckley, P. R. R. XII, ii, 1859, 174. — Reinhaedt, Ibis, 

 1861, 5 (Greenland). 



Regulus rubineus, Vieill. Ois. Am. Sept. II, 1807, 49, pi. civ, ov. 



•Other figures ; Wils. Am. Orn. 1, 1808, pi. v, fig. 3.— Dopohty, Cab. II, 

 pi. vi.— Aud. Orn. Biog. II, pi. 195.— Ib. Birds Am. II, pi. 133. 



Hab. Greenland ; whole of North America, and south to Guatemala. 



This species of Regulus appears to lack the small feather which, 

 in satrapa, overlies and conceals the nostrils,, which was probably 

 the reason with Cabanis & Blyth for placing it in a different genus. 

 There is no other very apparent difference of form, however, although 

 this furnishes a good character for distinguishing between young 

 gpeciraeiis of the two species. 



