110 CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OP SCIENCES. • 



British Columbia. John Fannin. — Very abundant 

 resident. 



Henshaw, 1879. This form of Steller's jay has been 

 traced by the expedition from the Coast and Sierra 

 ranges of southern California into the Cascade mount- 

 ains of Oregon, and so on up to the Columbia River, at 

 which point, however, the form does not cease, but con- 

 tinues into Washington Territory. 



Camp Harney. — Bendire. — A rare resident. 



Ridgway. We found this jay only among the pines 

 on the Sierra Nevada. 



121. Aphelocoma woodhousei (Baird). Woodhouse's 

 Jay. 



Ridgway. — At our camp on the western slope of the 

 Humboldt Mountains it was very abundant in September. 

 In Buena Vista Canon it was also common ; also rather 

 common on the eastern slope of the Ruby Range. 



122. Aphelocoma californica (Vig.) California Jay. 

 San Diego. L. B. — Common resident. Campo, Jan- 

 uary, common. 



Poway. F. E. Blaisdell. — Common resident; begins 

 to breed about the last of April. 



San Bernardino. F. Stephens. — Rare resident of the 

 valley and foothills. Agua Caliente, foothills, probably 

 resident. 



Henshaw, 1876. Found on the mountains to a height 

 of about 5,000 feet; farther up than which it begins to 

 be rare. 



Alameda and Contra Costa counties. W. E. Bryant. 

 Common resident. 



L. B. — Common in most of the agricultural districts 

 of California; rarely seen above 3,500 feet in the Sierra, 

 latitute 38°. Common at Red Bluff, February, 1885; 



