FLYCATCHERS: ASH-THROATED FLYCATCHER 425 
from as low as 4,200 feet at Lordsburg (Bailey); to 7,000 feet in the Pinos Altos 
Mountains (Fisher); the same altitude at Fort Wingate (Hollister); to 7,400 feet on 
the top of Mesa Yegua, and to 7,500 feet at Glorieta (Bailey). Young just able to fly 
were noted July 2, 1894, at Silver City (Fisher); and young barely grown August 9, 
Map 26. Ash-throated Flycatcher 
Triangles mark breeding and breeding season records, mainly in Upper Sonoran Zone 
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NEW MEXICO 
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1901, in the Guadalupe Mountains (Bailey). [Fifty miles north of Roswell a nest 
with young was found, June 21, 1918 (Ligon). A specimen was taken at Silver 
City, May 14, 1917 (Kellogg); and one was seen at Lake Burford, May 26, 1918 
(Wetmore).] 
None remain in the State during the winter, and the latest one seen at Beaver 
Lake was on August 26, 1908 (Birdseye). It is probable that a few remain as late as 
the first of September. 
In the spring, the first was taken April 1, 1892, on the southern New Mexico 
boundary line 60 miles west of the Rio Grande (Mearns). This was probably un- 
