Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
M. Boyers
1932
\frac{1}{2} mi. E., Miramonte, 3500 ft., Fresno,
Calif.
December 16, 1932
Camp is the Yellow pine (Pinus ponderosa)
with a scattering of Buck-eye, Madrone,
Manzanota, small leafed live Oak
Quercus dumosa, Q. wislenga, also Symphoricarpos
albus Incense Cedars (?) and supposedly
more \frac{1}{2} N.E., also White Fir supposedly
\frac{1}{2} N.E. of Camp. Also Rhamnus crocea, Ceanothus,
About a 4 mi N. of Camp, on my
trip this afternoon, I saw, for
a fraction of a second, a Weasel
running along a fallen log,
partly open to view, and then
disappear in a thick brush patch.
Hypocoliella guttata's as very
numerous, in fact almost the
most common bird present, will
Passerella iliaca a close second,
then the birds seen or heard were:
Sialia sp. (2) head
Merula (20-30) saw
Zoreus n. (4/15) saw
Pipilo fusous (6-8) saw, heard, collected two
Pipilo erythrophthalmus (3-4) heard
Achelobena californica (2-3) saw
Burbo virginianus (2) saw, head
Tophotypx californicus (3-4) saw
Chamara f. (1) heard
Dryopates villosus (2) saw