The Migration of North American Sparrows 



THIRTIETH PAPER 



Compiled by Prof. W. "W. Cooke, Chiefly from Data in the Biological Survey 



With drawings by Louis Agassiz Fuertes 



(See Frontispiece) 



WORTHEN'S SPARROW 



Little is knownof the distribution of Worthen's Sparrow. So far, it has been 

 taken at only three places: Silver City, N. M., June i6, 1884; Chalchicomula, 

 Puebla, April 28, 1893, and Miquihana, Tamaulipas, June 8, 9, 1898. 



TEXAS SPARROW 



The lower part of the Rio Grande Valley is the home of the Texas Sparrow, 

 and it ranges here northwest to Fort Clark, and along the Gulf Coast to Cor- 

 pus Christi, and San Patricio County. It is non-migratory. It also occurs in 

 northeastern Mexico, in the States of San Luis Potosi, Nuevo Leon, and 

 Tamaulipas. 



GREEN-TAILED TOWHEE 



From its winter home in northern Mexico and along the border of the 

 United States, the Green-tailed Towhee moves slowly northward, occupying 

 more than two months- — late February to early May — in passing across the 

 less than a thousand miles from the northern limit of the winter home to the 

 northern boundary of the breeding range. Some dates of spring arrival are: 

 San Antonio, Tex., February 25, 1885; Carlisle, N. M., March 21, 1890; 

 Camp Grant, Ariz., March 6, 1867; Santa Catalina Mountains, Ariz., March 

 18, 1902; near Fort Lewis, Colo., average April 29, earliest April 27, 1906; 

 Fort Lyon, Colo., April 30, 1885; Beulah, Colo., average May 6, earliest. 

 May 4, 1904; Yuma, Colo., May 3, 1906; Cheyenne, Wyo., May 10, 1889; 

 Pasadena, Calif., April 4, 1896; Murphy's, Calif., April 17, 1877; Carson City, 

 April 25, 1868; Fort Crook, Calif., May i, 1859; Fort Klamath, Ore., May 

 17, 1887. 



The last one seen in the fall at Fort Lyon, Colo., was on September 26, 1885 ; 

 Yuma, Colo., average September 26, latest September 30, 1908; Beulah, Colo., 

 average September 22, latest October 23, 1907; Piney Divide, Colo., October 

 8, 1906. 



(3SI) 



