150 PACIFIC COAST AVIFAUNA No. 11 
460 (672) Dendroica palmarum palmarum (Gmelin) 
PaumM WARBLER 
Status—But one record, that of an immature male taken at Pacifie Grove, 
October 9, 1896 (Emerson, Osprey, 0, 1898, p. 92). I have examined this speci- 
men, now in the Emerson collection (no. 1089). . 
461 (674) Seiurus aurocapillus (Linnaeus) 
OVEN-BIRD 
Status—Casual visitant; one definite record: two observed on Farallon 
Islands, May 29, 1911 (Dawson, Condor, xm, 1911, p. 167); the one specimen 
taken, an adult male, is now no. 18078 in the California Academy of Sciences. 
There is also an old record from ‘‘California’’ (Bonaparte, Compte Rendu, 1854, 
Dp: oop). 
462 (675a) Seiurus noveboracensis notabilis Ridgway 
ALASKA WATER-THRUSH 
Synonym—Grinnell Water-thrush. 
Status—Rare fall migrant: Santa Cruz, September 25, 1885, two examples 
secured by A. M. Ingersoll (Belding, Land Bds. Pac. Dist., 1890, p. 216) ; San 
Diego, September 11, 1887, one specimen (Keeler, Zoe, 1, 1891, p. 371) ; Cactus 
Flat, San Bernardino Mountains, August 16, 1905, one specimen (J. Grinnell, 
Univ. Calif. Publ. Zool., v, 1908, p. 115); National City, near San Diego, Sep- 
tember 29, 1906, one specimen (Iinton, Condor, rx, 1907, p. 60). 
463 (676) Seiurus motacilla (Vieillot) 
LouIsIAaNA WATER-THRUSH 
Status—But one record: male secured at Mecea, Colorado Desert, Riverside 
County, August 17, 1908 (L. H. Miller, Condor, x, 1908, p. 236). This specimen 
is now no. 1105, Mus. Vert. Zool. 
464 (680) Oporornis tolmiei (Townsend) 
TOLMIE WARBLER 
Synonyms—Geothlypis macgillivrayi; Trichas tolmiei; Geothlypis philadel- 
phia var. macgillivrayi; Geothlypis tolmiei; Macgillivray Warbler. 
Status—Common summer visitant to the Transiticn zone of the northern 
third of the state; breeds south along the Sierra Nevada at least to Yosemite 
Valley, and along the desert ranges to the Grapevine Mountains (A. K. Fisher, 
N. Amer. Fauna no. 7, 1893, p. 122) ; also south through the coast belt and inner 
coast ranges to the San Francisco Bay region, sparingly to Los Gatos, Santa 
Clara County (Van Denburgh, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., xxxvit, 1899, p. 176). 
Apparently rare in the extreme northern humid coast belt. Occurs widely and 
commonly as a migrant, particularly in southern California, though not reported 
from the Santa Barbara Islands. One winter occurrence, possibly due to acci- 
dent: Los Angeles, December 17, 1914 (Wyman, Condor, xvi, 1915, p. 102). 
