390 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MaSEiJM. 



Lophophanes hiornatus (not Parus inornaius Gambel) Cooper, Orn. Cal., 1870, 42, 



part (near San Diego, California). — Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway, Hist. 



N. Am. Birds, i, 1874, 91, part. 

 [LopJiophanes] inomatus CouBS, Key N. Am. Birds, 1872, 80, part. 

 Llophophanes] inornaius Coues, Key N. Am. Birds, 2d ed., 1884, 264, part. 

 Parus inomatus American Ornithologists' Union, Check List, 1886, no. 733, 



part.— Bailey (Florence M.), Handb. Birds W. U. S., 1902, 456, part. 

 (?) Parus inornaius (not of Gambel?) Morcom, Bull. Bidgway Orn. Club, no. 2, 



1887, 55 (San Gorgonio and Cajon Pass, s. California. — Grinnell (J.), Pub. 



ii, Pasadena Ac. Sci., 1898, 49 (Los Angeles Co., California, resident). 

 Parus inornaius inomatus Grinnell ( J.) , Pacific Coast Avifauna, no. 3, June 25, 



1902, 70, part. 



Parus inornaius griseus (not Lophophanes inomatus griseus Eidgway, 1882) 

 Anthony, Zoe, iv, 1893, 246 (San Pedro Martii* Mountains, Lower California). 



Parus inornaius Emerson, Bull. 7, Calif. Ac. Sci., 1887, 424 (San Diego Co., 

 California). 



P\arus'] {B[aeolophus~\) inomatus inornaius Hellmayr, Tierreich, 18 Lief., March, 



1903, 43, part. 



B.ffi;OLOPHUS INORNATUS GRISEUS (Ridgway). 

 GRAY TITMOUSE. 



Similar to L. i. Tnurinus^ but paler and grayer, the upper parts 

 drab-gray or smoke gray ; wing and tail longer, and bill larger. 



Adult maU.~l^&a^tV (skins), 123.5-136 (131.6); wing, 70-75 (72.2); 

 tail, 54.5-62.5 (59.6); culmen, 12.5-14 (12.9); tarsus, 20.5-22.6 (21.5); 

 middle toe, 12-13 (12.3).« 



Adult female.— Ijength (skins), 122-131.5 (127.9); wing, 69-73.5 

 (70.1); tail, 55.5-60 (67.1); culmen, 12-13.5 (12.6); tarsus, 19.6-21 

 (20.6); middle toe, 11-12 (11.8).* 



Mountains of the arid interior districts of western United States; 

 north to Nevada (Washoe and Storey counties), Utah (Beaver County), 

 and Colorado (El Paso and Fremont counties); east to western Texas 

 (Guadalupe Mountains); west to eastern base of Sierra Nevada and 

 southeastern California (Panamint Mountains); south to Mexican 

 boundary line in New Mexico and Arizona, probably into northern 

 Chihuahua and Sonora. 



Lophophanes inomatus (not Parus inornaius Gambel) Woodhouse, in Hep. Sit- 

 greaves' Expl. Zuiii and Col. R., 1853, 69 (San Francisco Mt., Arizona). — 

 Baird, Eep. Pacific E. E. Surv., ix, 1858, 386, part (Mimbres to Eio Grande, 

 New Mexico); Cat. N. Am. Birds, 1859, no. 287, part; Eeview Am. Birds, 

 1864, 78, part (San Francisco Mts., Arizona; Fort Defiance and Fort Thorn, 

 New Mexico). — Coues, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., xviii, 1866, 79 (Fort Whip- 

 ple, Arizona); Check List, 1873, no. 28, part; 2d ed., 1882, no. 41, part; Birds 

 N. W., 1874, 20, part; Birds Col. Val., 1878, 114, part.— Cooper, Orn. Cal., 

 1870, 42, part (New Mexico).— Aiken, Proc. Bost. Soc. N. H., xvj 1872, 195 

 (Colorado).— Eidgway, Bull. Essex Inst., v, 1873, 179 (Colorado), 189, part 

 (crit.); vii, 1875, 12 (Carson City, Nevada); Field and Forest, iii, 1877, 196 

 (Colorado); Orn. 40th Parallel, 1877, 410, excl. syn., part (e. slope Sierra 



oTen specimens. ''Nine specimens. 



