496 Field Museum of Natural History — Zoology, Vol. XIII. 



Picus albolarvatus Baird, Brewer and Ridgway, Hist. N. Am. Bds., II, 1874, 



p. 526. pi. 50, figs. 7-8. 

 Xenopicus albolarvatus Malherbe, Mon. Picidae, II, 1862, p. 221; IV, 1862, 



pi. loi, figs. 3-4; Hargitt, Cat. Bds. Brit. Mus., XVIII, 1890, p. 284. 

 Xenopicus albolarvatus albolarvatus Grinnell, Pacific Coast Avifauna, No. 



8, 1912, p. 14; Ridgway, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 50, VI, 1914, p. 265. 



Range: Sierra Nevada and Cascade Mountains, from routhem 

 British Columbia, southward through Washington, Oregon and the 

 greater part of California (Tejon Mountains, Kern Co., northward). 



3: Washington (Dayton i); "Cahfornia" 2. 



*Xenopicus albolarvatus gravirostris {Grinnell). Grinnell's Wood- 

 pecker. 



Xenopicus gravirostris Grinnell (J.), Condor, IV, 1902, p. 89 (Camp Chiles, 

 Sierra San Gabriel, Los Angeles Co., California). 



Xenopicus albolarvatus gravirostris Grinnell (J.) Auk, 1905, p. 383 (Mt. Pi- 

 nos); Ridgway, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 50, VI, 1914, p. 267. 



Range: San Gabriel, San Jacinto, San Bernardino and Cuyamaca 

 mountains in Los Angeles, southern San Bernardino, Riverside and 

 San Diego counties, southern California. 



i: California (San Bernardino Mt.). 



Genus PHRENOPICUS Bonaparte. 



Phrenopicus Bonaparte, Ateneo Italiano, II, 1854, p. 123 (Type, as fixed by 

 Gray, 1855, Picus borealis Vieillot). 



*Phrenopicus borealis ( Vieillot). Red-cockaded Woodpecker. 



Picus borealis /ieillot, Ois. Am. Sept., II, 1807, p. 66, pi. 122 ("Dans le nord 

 des Etato-Unio" southern United States); Baird, Brewer and Ridgway, 

 Hist. N. Am. Bd s., II, 1874, P- 524, pi- 49. fig- 8. 



Dendrocopus borealis Hargitt, Cat. Bds. Brit. Mus., XVIII, 1890, pp. 251, 571. 



Picus querulus Wilson, Am. Om., II, 1810, p. 103, pi. 15, fig. i (North Car- 

 olina). 



Picus vieillotii Wagler, Syst. Av., 1827, Picus, sp. 20 (new name for P. bor- 

 ealis Vieillot). 



Picus leucotis Illiger, Lichtenstein, Verz. Doubl., 1823, p. 12 (new name 

 for P. querulus Wilson). 



Dryobates borealis Am. Om. Check List, 3rd ed., 1910, p. 188. 



Phrenopicus borealis Ridgway, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 50, VI, 1914, p. 269. 



Range: Pine woods, districts of South Atlantic and Gulf states of 

 eastern North America, from Florida to Virginia, Tennessee, western 

 Kentucky and southeastern Missouri; casually to New Jersey and east- 

 em Pennsylvania. 



t22: Florida (West Jupiter 7, New River 2, Lake Worth 2, Tarpon 



