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I 



82 



REVIEW OF AMERICAN RIRDS. 



[part I. 



Locality. 



Ciipn May Co., N J. 

 WaxhlugtuD, U. C. 



Fort Cobb, Ark. 



When 

 Collected. 



F.'l), 22, '42. 

 April n, '42 

 May 1, '39. 



May '20, '60. 



Received from 



.T K. Tdwnseud. 

 W. M. Baird. 



C. Drexler. 



D W. PrentlHH. 



J. H. Clark. 



Collected by 



C. 8. M'Carthy. 



(007.) 4.2S; 6.S0. (706.) 4.60; 7.00. (11,971.) 4.80; 7.32. 



Pariia niontanus. 



Parns montanus, Gambel, Pr. A. N. So. April, 184!^, 259 (Santa F6).— 

 In. Jour. A. N. Sc. new ser. I, 1847, .^5, pi. viii, fig. 1. — Baird, 

 Birds N. Am. 1858, 394.— Sclater, Catal. 18G1, 14, uo. 84. 



Hab. Mountain regions of Middle and Western United States. 



Several variations in coloration and other characters will be foniul 

 mentioned in tlie Birds N. Am., as quoted above, but nothing appa- 

 rently of specific value. 



(22,041.) Iris brown. 



P.4 



Parus liudsoiiicus. 



Parus hudsonicus, Forster, Philos. Trans. LXII, 1772, 383, 430.— Acd. 

 Orn. Biog. II, 1834, 543, pi. 194.— lu. Birds Am. II, 1841, 155, pi. 

 128 —Baird, Birds N. Am. 1858, 395. 



Ilab. Northeastern portions of North America. 



Specimens from the most northern localities appear larger than 

 those from Maine and Nova Scotia, with proportionally longer tails 

 (3.00 inches, instead of 2.40). I can, however, detect no otluT 

 difference, although I have access to but a few skins from soutliern 

 points. This difference is much the same as between P. atricapillus 

 and septentrionalis ; to which variety the original F. hudsonicns 



