154 PACIFIC COAST AVIFAUNA No. 11 
San Diegan district northwest to Santa Barbara, less common throughout the 
desert regions north, east of the Sierras, to the head of Owens Valley (A. K. 
Fisher, N. Amer. Fauna no. 7, 1893, p. 127), and through the San Joaquin and 
Sacramento valleys to Marysville, Gridley and Chico (Belding, Land Bds. Pae. 
Dist., 1890, p. 226) ; also Salinas and San Benito valleys; casually to Watson- 
ville (Hunter, Condor, vi, 1904, p. 25), Haywards (Emerson, Condor, vu, 1906, 
p. 51), Stanford University (three records), Redwood City (Littlejohn, Zoe, 
ut, 1893, p. 362), and even San Geronimo, Marin County (J. Mailliard, Auk, 
xv, 1898, p. 197). Most of these extreme stations are of autumn occurrences and 
much beyond the known breeding range of the species. Resident also on Santa 
Catalina, San Clemente and Santa Cruz islands; recorded once from Anacapa 
Island (Burt, Condor, xm, 1911, p. 166). (See J. Grinnell, Auk, xxv, 1911, 
pp. 293-300, map.) ; 
476 (704) Dumetella carolinensis (Linnaeus) 
CATBIRD 
Synonyms—Galeoscoptes carolinensis; Mimus carolinensis. 
Status—But one record: Farallon Islands, one specimen, September 4, 1884 
(Townsend, Auk, 1, 1885, p. 215) ; this specimen is now in the U. S. National 
Museum (no. 100202). 
477 (708) Toxostoma bendirei (Coues) 
BENDIRE THRASHER 
Synonym—Harporhynchus bendiret. 
Status—But three records: Agua Caliente [— Palm Springs, Riverside 
County] (A. O. U. Cheeck-List, 2nd ed., 1895, p. 293; according to W. W. Cooke, 
in letter, no verification of this record is now to be obtained) ; Warren’s Wells, 
Mohave Desert, ‘‘fairly common in May, 1896’’ (Heller, Condor, mm, 1901, p. 
100). There is a skin (examined by me) in the Zoological Department of Stan- 
ford University taken by E. Heller at Whitewater, May 22, 1897. This locality 
is in the western arm of the Colorado Desert, towards San Gorgonio Pass, in 
Riverside County. An immature specimen (now no. 23259, Mus. Vert. Zool.) 
taken in a suburb of Los Angeles, September 10, 1912 (L. H. Miller, Condor, xv, 
1913, p. 41). 
478 (710, part) Toxostoma redivivum redivivum (Gambel) 
CALIFORNIA THRASHER 
Synonyms—Harpes rediviva; Harporhynchus redivivus, part; Sickle-billed 
Thrush, part. 
Status—Common resident of the Upper Sonoran zone in the Santa Cruz 
faunal area: San Francisco south through Monterey County; also east around 
the south arm of San Francisco Bay to Berkeley (Mus. Vert. Zool.). 
