APPENDIX. 611 
(95.) Page 564, P. hudsonicus. This includes two additional forms, as follows: 
740a. Parus hudsonicus stoneyi Ripaw. Kowak Chickadee. 
Similar to P. hudsonicus, but much grayer above, sides of neck purer ash- 
gray, sides much paler rusty, and throat clear slate-black instead of sooty 
blackish ; wing 2.55-2.75 (2.62), tail 2.60-2.65, (2.62), exposed culmen .30-.35 
(.32), tarsus .62-.70. Zab. Kowak River, Alaska. 
740b. Parus hudsonicus columbianus Ruoaps. Columbian Chickadee.’ 
Larger than P. hudsonicus (wing averaging 2.70, tail 2.64). “Colors much 
darker throughout. Black of throat jet, without sooty suffusion, its posterior 
border abruptly defined and lacking invasion of white tips seen in hudsonicus. 
Bill black, lacking any tinge of brown. Brownish loral area of hudsonicus 
replaced by sooty black and connected by a distinct frontal band of same color. 
Crown and hind neck slaty drab with brownish tinge obsolete or barely per- 
ceptible. Back, rump, and tail-coverts grayish brown as in Audsonicus. Wings 
and tail darker slate gray, the former without the brownish or grayish tips 
always (?) present in hudsonicus and stoneyi (?). Sides and flanks chocolate 
(nearly blackish) brown.” Had. “ Rocky Mountains, from the Liard River 
south into Montana.” 
(96.) Page 565, after P. plumbeus: 
744.1. Psaltriparus santaritee Rinew. Santa Rita Bush-Tit.° 
Similar to P. plumbeus Bairp, but decidedly smaller, with sides of head 
paler, and male with a more or less distinct blackish line or streak along sides 
of occiput (immediately above auriculars), as in the female of P. lloydi Sennurr. 
Hab. Santa Rita Mountains, southern Arizona. 
(97.) Page 565, under Psaltriparus melanotis: 
745. Psaltriparus lloydi Sznn. Lloyd's Bush-Tit.* 
Similar to P. melanotis, but much grayer, the back, scapulars, and rump 
ash-gray instead of brown, and the under parts white, tinged with vinaceous 
on flanks, instead of having only the chin and throat white. Hab. “ Mountains 
of western Texas, between the Pecos and the Rio Grande.” 
P. melanotis iulus Jouy (Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. xvi. 1894, 776), from the 
Sierra Madre of Mexico (Jalisco to Chihuahua), is intermediate in coloration 
between P. melanotis and P. loydii, but nearer the former, the back being 
grayish brown instead of ash-gray (as in P. Woydi) or yellowish bistre-brown 
(as in P. melanotis). 
P. melanotis does not occur within our limits. 
1 Parus stoneyi Ripew., Man. N. Am. B, 1887, 591.—Parus hudsonicus stoneyt Ripew., in Suppl. to Code 
of Nom. and Check List, A. O. U. 1889, 17. 
3 Parus hudsonicus columbianus Ruoaps, Auk, x. Jan. 1893, 23. 
8 Pealtriparue santarite Ripew., Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. «. Oct. 12, 1887, 697. 
4 Pealtriparus Uoydi Sexy., Auk, v. Jan. 1888, 43, 
