452 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



Adult male.— Wing 502-524 (511) ; tail 373^27 (398.4) ; culmen from 

 cere 34.5^0 (37.2) ; tarsus 159-175 (166.6) ; middle toe without claw 

 78-88 (83.5 mm.).2* 



Adult female.— Wing 400-463 (435.9) ; tail 325-360 (345) ; culmen 

 from cere 31-34 (32.3) ;, tarsus 124-159 (133.6) ; middle toe without claw 

 66-73 (68.8 mm.). 25 



• Rcmge.—Reisident in the Transition and Upper Austral Zones in the 

 mountains of central and southwestern Colorado (up to 7,000 feet ; Canyon 

 City; Upper Arkansas River; Raton Pass; Las Animas; South Park; 

 Oak Hill; Pueblo County, San Miguel County), New Mexico (Manzano, 

 Chusa, Santa Fe,. San Luis, San Mateo, and Sacramento Mountains; 

 Upper Pecos River up to 11,000 feet; Valverde, La Jara, Cloudcroft, 

 Fort Thorn, Gila River, etc.) ; Arizona (Huachuca, Santa Catalina, and 

 San Francisco Mountains' ; near Winslow ; Fort Whipple ; White Moun- 

 tains; Williams; San Pedro River; Copper Mine; Bill Williams River; 

 etc.) ;,and southwestern Texas (Guadelupe Mountains). 



Type locality. — Forty-seven miles southwest of Winslow, Ariz. 



Meleagris mexicana (not of Gould) Baird, Rep. Pacific R. R. Sury-, ix, 1858, 618 

 (Fort Thorn, N. Mex.) ; Cat. Nprth Amer. Birds, 1859, No. 458.— Coues, Ibis, 



1865, 165, in text (Fort Whipple, Ariz.) ; Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 



1866, 93 (Fort Whipple, Ariz.) ;, ,1868, 84 (mountains of New Mexico and 

 Arizona). — Elliot, New and Unfig. North Amer. Birds, pt. 10, 1868 (vol. ii), 

 pi. 38 and text, part; Monogr. Phasianidae, i, 1872, pi. 28, and text, part. — 

 Baird, in Cooper, Om. California, Land Birds, 1870, 523, part (w. Texas to 

 Ariziona). ,,. , 



Meleagris gallopayo, var. mexicana Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway, Hist. North Amer. 

 Birds, iii, 1874, 410, part. 



Meleagris gaU'opavo mexicana AmeRicak Ornitholcigxsts' Union, Check-list, 1886, 

 No. 310a, part; ed. 2, 1895, No. 310a, part (w. Texas to Arizona).— Scort, 

 Auk, iii, 1886, 389 '(San Pedro River and Santa Catalina Mountains, Ariz.). — 

 (^ooK^, Bird Migr. Mississippi Valley, 1888, 107, part (w. Texfis ; Arizona) ; 

 Colorado State Agr. Coll. Bull. 37, 1897, 72 (mountains of Colorado up to 7,000 

 ft.) ; Condor, xv, 1913, 104 [-105], fig. 32 (map) (range in Colorado).— 

 MeArns, Auk, vii, 1890, 52 (San Francisco Mountains, Ariz.). — Mitchell, 

 ' Auk, XV, 1898, 307 (San Migiel County, N. Mex., 8,000 feet to timberline). 



M[eleagris] gallopavo .mexicana Ridgway, Man. North Amer. Birds, 1887, 207, part 

 (w. Texas to Arizona). , 



Meleagris gallopaiJo (not of Linnaeus) Woodhouse, in Sitgreaves Expl. Zuni and 

 Colorado Rivers, 1853, 93, part (Copper Mines and Bill Williams River, Ariz.). — 

 RidgwAy, Bull. Essex Inst., v, 1873, 186 (Colorado) ; Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 

 iii,: 1880, '195; Norn. North Amer. Birds, 1881, No. 470.— Coues, Check List 

 North Amer. Birds, 1874, No. 379, part.- Henshaw, Auk, iii, 1886, 80 (upper 

 Pecos River, N. Mex.). — Ogilvie-Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xxii, 1893, 

 387, part (Sante Fe Mountains, N. Mex.; w. Texas; Arizona). — Cooke, Colo- 

 rado State Agr. Coll. Bull. 37, 1897, 71 (Colorado; rare resident; distr.) ; 

 Bull. 56, 1900, 203 (South Park, Colo.).— American Ornithologists' Union, 



"Eight specimens from Arizona and New Mexico. 

 " Twelve' speciijjens ff pm Arizona and New Mexico. 



