66 BAYLOR UNIVERSITY BULLETIN 



532. Folioptila pInmlKa. Plumbeous Gnatcatcher. 



Abundant summer resident of the high mountains of the trans-Pecos 

 F^on, east during the migrations to Rio Grande City (Oberholser: 

 Ridgway). 



FAHBLY Tnrdidae. Thrushes, Bluebirds, etc. 



533. Flya^estes towusndiL Townsend's Solitaire. 



Western Texas, resident rare in summer. Reported as breeding at 

 Saragossa by Uoyd. Prade shot one example in the Davis Mountains 

 in the middle of May. 



534. Syloddila mnsteUna. Wood Thrush. 



Eastern section of the State, summer resident. Reported as a mi- 

 grant &om most localities south of the northeastern comer. Rare 

 migrant at Waco. 



535. Hylodchla foscescens. Wilson's Thrush. 



Migrant, not very common, through the eastern half of the State. 



536. Hyloddilt foscescens salidcok. Willow Thrush. 



Rare migrant The only authentic record I could find was the speci- 

 men from Cooke county (Gainesville) mentioned In Cook's "Bird Mi- 

 gration in the Mississippi Valley." 



537. Hyloddila aliciae. Gray-cheeked Thrush. 



Migrant through the eastern half of the State. Rare at Gaines- 

 ville (Ragsdale), common at San Antonio (Attwater), rare at 

 Waco. 



538. Bylodcbla nstuktas shubsobIL Olive-backed Thrush. 



Migrant not common. Reported from Gainesville (Ragsdale), Tom 

 Green county (Lloyd) and Waco. 



539. Hylodcfah guttata. Kadiak Dwarf Thrush. 



liGgrant througn the western half of the Stata Ridgway mentions 

 this thrush finom the following localities: El Paso, Tom Green and 

 Concho counties, San Antonio, Leon Springs. Langtry, Mouth of the 

 Pecos. 



540. Hyloddia guttata aHdnbooL Rocky Mountain Hermit llu-ush. 



Migrates tbiough Western Texas as far east as San Antonio. 

 Bailey reooids it from the Guadalupe Mountains, probably breed- 

 ing. 



