AVES. 217 



PASSERES. OSCINES. 



TURDID.\E. 



1, p. 182. "to the north of Pensylvania." Seebohm and 

 Sharpe, Monogr. Turdidae, 1898, pt. 4, pi. 44. Egg, Capen, 1886, 

 pi. 1, fig. 7. 



Swamps and undergrowth along streams; nests on or near the 

 ground, rarely in trees. 



Me. — Common summer resident. (? April 17, 26) May 1- 

 Sept. 20 (Oct. 1). Eggs, June 1-18 (July 1). 



N. H. — Common summer resident below 1500 ft. May 10- 

 Sept. Eggs, June 9. 



Vt. — Common summer resident. May 11-Sept. Eggs, May 

 30-June 28 (July 26). 



Mass. — Common summer resident. (April 30) May 1-Sept. 

 27 (Oct. 14, 1871, Fresh Pond, Cambridge). Eggs, May 20-June 

 30. 



R. I. — Common summer resident. (April 29)-Sept. 25. Eggs, 

 May 26-31. 



Conn.- — Common summer resident. May 1-Sept. 1. 



395. Hylocichk.^ fuscescens salicicola Ridgway. 

 Willow thrush; Newfoundland thrush. 



Ridgw., Proc. U. S. nat. mus., 1882, vol. 4, p. 374. "Rocky 

 Mountain region. . . .Fort Garland, Colo.," etc. 



Swamps and undergrowth bordering streams; nests on or near 

 the ground. 



Mass. — Rare migrant: Lanesboro, Sept. 27, 1900; Lowell 

 (these are the race "fuliginosa" Howe, considered by the A. O. U. 

 committee inseparable from salicicola and by Ridgway as s^Tiony- 

 m.ous with H. fuscescens). 



R. I. — Rare migrant: Bristol, Sept. 24, 1899; Newport, Sept. 

 25, 1885. 



Conn.— Rare migrant. May 5, 6, 14, 16; Sept. 23 (= salici- 

 cola, Bishop). 



