- 84 — 



342. Turdus aliciae Baird. Gray-cheeked Thrush. (757.) — 

 North America, breeding in Labrador and northwestward to 

 Alaska, and migrating through eastern North America to Central 

 America. This bird is a common migrant, passing northward in 

 May and southward in September and October. 



343. Turdus aliciae bicknelli {Ridgw.). Bicknell's Thrush. 

 (757^) — Breeds in the higher parts of the Catskills and northward 

 to the White Mountains and Nova Scotia ; winters in the tropics. 

 So far as records go, this is a rather rare migrant, occurring in 

 May and September and October, but careful search will 

 doubtless show it is more common than is generally supposed. 



*344. Turdus ustulatus swainsonii {Cab.). Olive-backed 

 Thrush. (758.) — Breeds from Manitoba and New Brunswick to 

 Alaska and Labrador, and southward in the Rocky Mountains,, 

 and along the Alleghanies to Pennsylvania. The Olive-backed 

 Thrush is a common migrant in this vicinity. It passes northward 

 in May and southward in September and October. 



*345- Turdus aonalaschkae pallasii {Cab.). Hermit Thrush. 

 (759^0 — Eastern North America, breeding from northern Michigan 

 and Massachusetts northward, and southward along the Alleghanies 

 to Pennsylvania; winters from southern Illinois and Pennsyl- 

 vania to the Gulf States. This species is an abundant migrant and 

 occasionally is found in small numbers during the winter. In the 

 spring it reaches us about April 10 and has passed by May 1; 

 its fall migration takes place between October 1 and November 1. 

 There is a record of its probable breeding at Lake Ronkonkoma,. 

 L. I. {Dutcher, Auk, III, 1886, p. 443). 



*346. Merula migratoria {Linn.). American Robin. (761.) 

 — "Eastern North America to the Rocky Mountains, including 

 eastern Mexico and Alaska. Breeds from near the southern border 

 of the United States northward to the Arctic Coast; winters from 

 southern Canada and the Northern States (irregularly) southward". 

 The Robin is our most abundant summer resident, and in favorable 

 localities a few may be found in the winter. Migrants begin to 

 arrive toward the last of February and the species is abundant 

 until December. (See Group, Gallery, between Cases A and B.) 



347. Saxicola cenanthe {Linn.). Wheatear. (765.)— 

 'Europe, North Africa, Asia, Alaska, Greenland, and Labrador^ 

 straggling south to Nova Scotia, Maine, Long Island and the 



