BROOKS: BIRDS FROM EAST SIBERIA AND ARCTIC ALASKA. 403 
“MOoTACILLA BOARULA MELANOPE Pallas. 
A male taken at Copper Island, May 20, —, was purchased. 
BuDYTES FLAVUS SIMILLIMUS Hartert. 
KAMCHATKAN YELLOW WAGTAIL. 
A single Yellow Wagtail was seen at Cape Shipunski, May 21, 1913. 
On June 14 and 19, 1913, three males and two females were taken 
at Providence Bay. ‘Two of the males are typical s¢millimus, but 
the rest show intermediate characters with B. f. alascensis, but are 
still of a sufficiently bright yellow on the underparts to refer them to 
simallimus. 
Clark in his paper on The birds collected and observed during 
the cruise of the United States fisheries steamer ALBATROSS in the 
North Pacific Ocean, and in the Bering, Okhotsk, Japan, and East- 
ern Seas, from April to December, 1906, (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 
1910, 38, p. 71), states that two examples from Plover Bay, which is 
a small bay near the mouth of Providence Bay, appeared to be inter- 
mediate; one being nearer alascensis, the other nearer svmillimus. 
ANTHUS CERVINUS (Pallas). 
RED-THROATED PIPIT. 
A few Red-throated Pipits were observed and taken at Providence 
Bay, June 20 and 21, 1913, and at Indian Point, June 4 and 7, 1913. 
ANTHUS RUBESCENS (Tunstall). 
PIPIT. 
Mr. Dixon took three males at Herschel Island, August 9 and 11, 
1914. 
ANTHUS GUSTAVI Swinhoe. 
SCHLEGEL’S TITLARK. 
A pair taken at Copper Island, on May 26, —, was purchased. 
