8 PASSERES 
Regulus cristatus orientalis Seebohm, Birds Jap. Emp. p. So (1890) (part. : «a new trimonial for the Eastern race 
of the Gold-crest ». 
Regulus cristatus coutst Sushkin, Bull. Brit. Ornith. Club, Vol. 14, p. 44 (1904) (« Jugi Sayan zona subalpina »). 
Hab. Japan (Yezo, Hondo, Kiusiu), Corea, Sakhalin, Ussuriland, Manchooria, Eastern and Central 
Siberia as far west as Sayan Range and Tomsk, on the Obj River. 
Obs. It is not impossible that the birds inhabiting the Asiatic continent be different from the typical 
Japanese race. In this case, their proper name would be R. vegulus coatsi Sushkin. 
8. Regulus regulus teneriffae Seebohm. 
Regulus teneviffae Seebohm, Hist. Brit. Birds, Vol. 1, p. 459 (1883) (Canary Islands). _ 
Regulus satelles Koenig, Journ. f. Ornith. Vol. 37, p. 263 (1889) (Canary Islands, type locality : Tenerife). 
Fig. Journ. f. Ornith. Vol. 38, t. 5, f. 1. 
Hab. Western Canary Islands : Tenerife, Grau Canaria, Gomera, Palma, Hierro. 
g. Regulus regulus tristis Pleske. (Plate, Fig. 4.) 
Regulus tristis Pleske, Bull. Acad, Sc. St. Petersb. (n. s.), Vol. 3, p. 146 (1892) (Transcaspia | Merw], W. Turke- 
stan | Tshinas] and East. Turkestan | Ak-su, Jarkend-Darja]). 
Hab, Transcaspia and Turkestan. (The locality Orenburg [fide Pleske| requires confirmation.) 
10. Regulus regulus satrapa Lichtenstein. 
Regulus satrapa Lichtenstein, Verz. Dubl. Berl. Mus. p. 35 (1823) (North America). 
Regulus tricolor Nuttall, Man. Ornith. U.S. and Canada, Vol. 1, p. 420 (1832) (based on Syluia vegulus Wilson, 
Amer, Ornith. Vol. 1, 1808, p. 126, pl. 8, f. 2). 
Regulus yeguloides Jardine, ed. Wilson’s Amer. Ornith. Vol. 1, p. 127 (1832) (North America). 
Fig. Audubon, Ornith. Biogr. Vol 2, 1834, pl. 186. 
Hab. North America, east of the Rocky Mountains, north to Labrador, Keewatin etc., breeding south- 
wards to Massachusetts, New York, N. Michigan, and along Allegheny Mountains to W. North 
Carolina; wintering southwards to N, Florida and west along Gulf Coast S. C. Texas. 
11. Regulus regulus olivaceus Baird. 
| Regulus satvapa] var. olivaceus Baird, Rev. Amer. Birds, Vol. 1, p. 65, in text (1864) (Simiahmoo, Washington), 
Regulus satrapa aztecus (Lawrence MS.) Ridgway, Man. N. Amer. Birds, p. 591, in text (1887) (City of Mexico), 
Hab. Western North America, from Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Coast, southwards in winter to 
highlands of Mexico; breeding from Colorado, eastern Oregon, Sierra Nevada, Mount Shasta etc., 
northward to Kenai Peninsula and Kadiak Island, Alaska. 
12. Regulus regulus clarus Dearborn. 
Regulus satvapa clarus Dearborn, Field Mus. Publ. no, 125, p. 134 (1907) (Sierra Santa Elena, near Tecpam, Gua- 
temala). 
Hab, Highlands of Guatemala. 
13. Regulus cuvierii Audubon. 
Regulus cuvserii Audubon, Ornith. Biogr. Vol. 1, p. 288, pl. 55 (1831) |Fatland Ford, on the Schuylkill River, 
Pennsylvania). 
Hab. Fatland Ford, on the Schuylkill River, Pennsylvania. 
Obs. Only one specimen, the type, known to have been obtained by Audubon on June 8, 1902. This 
alleged species is most probably a hybrid between R. ry, satrapa and R. c. calendula. 
14. Regulus ignicapillus ignicapillus (Temminck). 
Syloia ignicapilla (Brehm MS.) Temminck, Man, d’Ornith., ed. 2, Vol. 1, p. 231 (1820) (« se montre trés rarement en 
Allemagne et dans toutes les contrées orientales, tandis qu’il est tres commun en Irrance et dans les provinces 
belges »). 
Regulus mystaceus Vieillot, Faune Fran¢, Oiseaux, p. 231, pl. 102, f. 3 (1822) (part. : descr, plate and hab 
« Europe » — Amérique sept. errore!). 
« Regulus pyrocephalus mihi (frither Sylvia ignicapilla mihi) » Brehm, Beitr. Vogelk. Vol. 2, p. 130 (1822) (Germany, 
Holland, France and [errore!] America). 
Regulus Nilsonit Brehm, Handb. Naturg. Vog. Deutschl. p. 482 (1831) (« scheint nordéstlich von hier zu wohnen, 
zieht im April... »). 
Regulus ignicapillus minoy Parrot, Ornith. Jahrb. Vol. 21, p. 156 (Dec. 1910) (Ajaccio, Corsica) 1 ). 
1) I cannot appreciate any of the characters given by the describer of this form although further researches may 
prove it slightly different from continental birds. 
