156 PACIFIC COAST AVIFAUNA No, 11 
and northwest of Tulare Lake, between Huron and Arroyo Los Gatos (Goldman, 
Condor, x, 1908, p. 205). Casual near Julian, San Diego County (Willett, Pac. 
Coast Avif. no. 7, 1912, p. 100). An apparent hybrid between 7. redivivum and 
T. lecontei has been reported (J. Grinnell and Swarth, Univ. Calif. Publ. Zool.. 
x, 19138, p. 304). 
482 (712) Toxostoma crissale Henry 
CRrISSAL THRASHER 
Synonyms—Harporhynchus crissalis; Henry Thrush. 
Status—Fairly common resident of the mesquite association in the bed of 
the Colorado Desert, from Palm Springs, Riverside County (Gilman, Condor, 
tv, 1902, p. 15), southeast through the Salton Sea district to the vicinity of Pilot 
Knob (Mus. Vert. Zool.), and thence north along the Colorado River at least as 
far as Needles (Stephens, Condor, v, 1903, p. 105). 
483 (713) Heleodytes brunneicapillus couesi (Sharpe) 
NorTHERN Cactus WrREN 
Synonyms—Oampylorhynchus brunneicapillus; Campylorhynchus couesi; 
Heleodytes brunneicapillus; Heleodytes brunneicapillus anthonyi; California 
Cactus Wren. 
Status—Common resident of the Lower Sonoran zone throughout the des- 
erts of southern California, northwest to the Coso Mountains and extreme south- 
ern end of Owens Valley (A. K. Fisher, N. Amer. Fauna no. 7, 1893, p. 131), 
and through Walker Pass to Weldon (Mus. Vert. Zool.) and vicinity of Kern- 
ville (Henshaw, Rep. Wheeler Surv., 1876, p. 231). Also a common resident 
locally in the San Diegan district from San Diego northwest as far as Santa 
Paula, Ventura County (Evermann, Auk, m, 1886, p. 185; Willett, Pac. Coast 
Avif. no. 7, 1912, p. 100). 
484 (713a) Heleodytes brunneicapillus bryanti Anthony 
Bryant Cactus WREN 
Status—Sparingly and locally resident in the vicinity of San Diego (An- 
thony, Auk, x1, 1894, p. 213; also specimens, recently collected, in Mus. Vert. 
Zool.). The metropolis of this form is to the southward, San Diego apparently 
being the meeting ground of H. b. couesi and H. b. bryanti, for the two are 
known to have nested in the same locality. These two forms thus have no wide 
area of intergradation, if actual blending occurs at all. 
485 (715) Salpinctes obsoletus obsoletus (Say) 
Rock WrREN 
Synonym—Troglodytes obsoletus. 
Status—Fairly common in summer, locally, irrespective of zones, almost 
throughout the state, but chiefly in the more arid eastern and southern portions; 
occurs more widely and numerously in winter in the Upper and Lower Sonoran 
zones. Breeds on the Farallon Islands and on most of the Santa Barbara group 
