. Bird-lore . g (88) Winter Feeding-Stations at Highland Park 89 of the Red-breasted Nuthatch in the Highland Park Pinetum, five young beingraised in an Audubon bird-house No. 2, placed for them on an electric wirepole in the midst of thick hemlocks. The parents and young often come to thesuet to feed. They left the nest on June 28. This is the first record we haveseen of this bird breeding in Monroe County, N. Y. Of course, the Chickadees, White-breasted Nuthatch, Downy Woodpecker,Hairy Woodpecker, Tree Sparrows, Brown Creeper, and Pheasants visited thestations, feeding as reported last year.
. Bird-lore . g (88) Winter Feeding-Stations at Highland Park 89 of the Red-breasted Nuthatch in the Highland Park Pinetum, five young beingraised in an Audubon bird-house No. 2, placed for them on an electric wirepole in the midst of thick hemlocks. The parents and young often come to thesuet to feed. They left the nest on June 28. This is the first record we haveseen of this bird breeding in Monroe County, N. Y. Of course, the Chickadees, White-breasted Nuthatch, Downy Woodpecker,Hairy Woodpecker, Tree Sparrows, Brown Creeper, and Pheasants visited thestations, feeding as reported last year. While last year the Pheasants were fedin the thick portions of the evergreens, this year a station was established inthe edge of them, where they were watched from the Herbarium windows, asmany as eight being seen at a time, usually in early morning or late afternoon. The suet is kept out all summer and is much enjoyed by Red-breastedand White-breasted Nuthatch, Catbird, Robin, Wood Thrush, and AMERICAN CROSSBILL AT HERBARIUM FOOD-SHELFPhotographed by R. E. Horsey The Migration of North American Birds SECOND SERIES XII. ARIZONA JAY, CALIFORNIA JAY, AND THEIR ALLIES Compiled by Harry C. Oberholser, Chiefly from Data in the Biological Survey(See Frontispiece) ARIZONA JAY The Arizona Jay (Aphelocoma sieberii arizonce) is a subspecies of SiebersJay, of which there are several subspecies in Mexico, but of which only thepresent and following form occur in the United States. The Arizona Jay ispractically resident wherever found, and ranges from southeastern Arizonaand southwestern New Mexico south to northeastern Sonora and northernChihuahua. COUCHS JAY Couchs Jay (Aphelocoma sieberii couchii) is the other United States race ofSiebers Jay, and ranges from southern Nuevo Leon northwest through theMexican state of Coahuila to just over the United States boundary in the ChisosMountains of central western Texas. FLORIDA JAY The Florida Jay (Aphelocoma cyanea) is resident,
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