1915 BIRDS OF CALIFORNIA 167 
It is true that the darkest examples are from the seacoast side of the hills of San 
Mateo County ; but these are believed to be not properly referred to Ch. f. rufula, 
although distinetly darker-colored than average fasciata. 
522 (742c) Chamaea fasciata rufula Ridgway 
Ruppy WREN-TIT 
Synonyms—Chamaea fasciata, part; Chamaca fasciata intermedia, part. 
Status—Common resident of the humid coast belt immediately north of San 
Francisco Bay, in Marin, Sonoma, and Mendocino counties. Northernmost sta- 
tion for this form: Mendocino City (Mus. Vert. Zool.). 
523 (742b) Chamaea fasciata phaea Osgood 
NorTHERN WREN-TIT 
Synonyms—Chamaea fasciata, part; Coast Wren-tit. 
Status—Fairly common resident locally in the extreme northern humid 
coast belt: Humboldt and Del Norte counties. The belt of intergradation, if 
such exists, between the northern coast forms, phaea and rufula, and the interior 
henshawi is wholly unknown to me; that is, there is no available material from 
series of stations appropriately located. 
524 (748a) Regulus satrapa olivaceus Baird 
WESTERN GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET 
Synonyms—Regulus satrapa; Golden-crested Wren. 
Status—Common as a winter visitant south through the humid coast belt 
(including the whole San Francisco Bay region) to Monterey; more sparingly 
in winter elsewhere west of the Sierras south to mountains of Los Angeles Coun- 
ty (J. Grinnell, Bds. Los Angeles Co., 1898, p. 50; Willett, Pac. Coast Avif. no. 
7, 1912, p. 105). Has occurred in autumn on Santa Cruz Island (Willett, loc. 
cit.). Remains through the summer and breeds, though sparingly, in the north- 
ern humid coast belt, south to Marin County (Sheldon, Condor, x, 1908, p. 123) ; 
also summers in the Trinity Mountains( Mus. Vert. Zool.), on South Yolla Bolly 
Mountain (Mus. Vert. Zool.), and in the Canadian zone all along the high cen- 
tral Sierra Nevada, on Mount Breckenridge, Kern County (Mus. Vert. Zool.), 
and, in southern California, on the San Bernardino Mountains (J. Grinnell, 
Uniy. Calif. Publ. Zool., v, 1908, p. 126) and San Jacinto Mountains (J. Grin- 
nell and Swarth, Univ. Calif. Publ. Zool., x, 1913, p. 313). 
525 (749, part) Regulus calendula cineraceus Grinnell 
WESTERN RUuUBY-CROWNED KINGLET 
Synonyms—Regulus calendula; Ruby-crowned Kinglet; Ruby-crowned 
Wren; Ashy Kinglet. 
Status—Common summer visitant to the Canadian zone from the Warner 
and Siskiyou mountains (Mus. Vert. Zool.) along the Sierra Nevada south to 
Long Meadow, Tulare County (Mus. Vert. Zool.). Also sparingly in southern 
California on San Gabriel Mountains (J. Grinnell, Condor, vi, 1904, p. 
