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COUrs CHECK: LIST
OF
NortTH AMERICAN Burbs.
SECOND BEDI TFION, Webised to Wate, and entirely Wewritten, under Direction of the Author, WITH A DICTIONARY OF THE
EDYMOLOGY, ORTHOGRAPHY, AND ‘ORTHOEEY
OF THE
SCIENTIFIC NAMES;
THE CONCORDANCE OF PREVIOUS LISTS, AND A CATALOGUE OF HIS ORNITHOLOGICAL PUBLICATIONS.
BOSPOM:
1882.
Copyright, 1882, By Estes AND LAURIAT.
UNIVERSITY PRESS: Joun WiLson anp Son, CAMBRIDGE.
INTRODUCTION.
In 1873, shortly after the publication of the author’s ‘‘ Key to North American Birds,” appeared the original edition of this ‘* Check List,” which was almost imme- diately reissued in connection with the same writer’s ‘‘ Field Ornithology,” in 1874. That list reflected the classification and nomenclature of the ‘‘ Key” with much exactitude, although it included, in an Appendix, a few species additional to those described in the ‘‘ Key,” and made some slight changes in the names. Excepting some little comment in foot-notes and in the Appendix, the original ‘* Check List” was a bare catalogue of scientific and vernacular names, printed in thick type on one side of the paper.
Meanwhile, the science of Ornithology has progressed, and our knowledge of North American birds has increased, both in extent and in precision, until the orig- inal list, faithful as it was at the time, fails now to answer the purpose of adequately reflecting the degree of perfection to which the subject has been brought. A new edition has therefore become necessary.
The list has been revised with the utmost care. The gratifying degree of accu- racy with which it represented our knowledge of 1873 is exhibited in the fact, that it is found necessary to remove no more than ten names. On the other hand, the progress of investigation has resulted in adding one hundred and twenty names to the list, and in showing the necessity or expediency of making many changes in nomenclature. The exact analysis of the differences between the two lists is given beyond.
In revising the list for the main purpose of determining the ornithological status of every North American bird, the most scrupulous attention has been paid to the matter of nomenclature, — not only as a part of scientific classification, deter- mining the technical relations of genera, species, and varieties to each other, but
also as involved in writing and speaking the names of birds correctly. The more closely this matter was scrutinized, the more evidences of inconsistency, negligence,
4 INTRODUCTION.
or ignorance were discovered in our habitual use of names. It was therefore determined to submit the current catalogue of North American birds to a rigid examination, with reference to the spelling, pronunciation, and derivation of every name, —in short, to revise the list from a philological as well as an ornithological standpoint.
The present ‘‘ Check List,” therefore, differs from the original edition in so far as, instead of being a bare catalogue of names, it consists in a treatise on the ety- mology, orthography, and orthoepy of all the scientific, and many of the vernacular, words employed in the nomenclature of North American birds. Nothing of the sort has been done before, to the same extent at any rate ; and it is confidently expected that the information given here will prove useful to many who, however familiar they may be with the appearance of these names on paper, have comparatively little notion of the derivation, signification, and application of the words; and who unwittingly speak them as they usually hear them pronounced, that is to say, with glaring impropriety. No one who adds a degree of classical proficiency to his scientific acquirements, be the latter never so extensive, can fail to handle the tools of thought with an ease and precision so greatly enhanced, that the merit of ornitho- logical exactitude may be adorned with the charm of scholarly elegance.
The purpose of the present ‘* Check List” is thus distinctly seen to be twofold: First, to present a complete list of the birds now known to inhabit North America, north of Mexico, and including Greenland, to classify them systematically, and to name them conformably with current rules of nomenclature; these being ornitho- logical matters of science. Secondly, to take each word occurring in such technical usage, explain its derivation, significance, and application, spell it correctly, and indicate its pronunciation with the usual diacritical marks; these being purely philological matters, affecting not the scientific status of any bird, but the classical questions involved in its name.
In the latter portion of his task, which, as is always the case when thorough work of any kind is undertaken, proved to be more difficult and more protracted than had been expected, and delayed the appearance of the list for nearly a year after the ornithological portion had been practically completed, the author of the original list has received invaluable assistance from Mrs. S. OitviA Weston-AIKEN, who cor- dially shared with him the labor of the philological investigation, and to whose scholarly attainments he is so largely indebted, that it is no less a duty than a pleasure to recognize the co-operation of this accomplished lady.
ANALYSIS OF THE TWO EDITIONS.
Tue original edition of the ‘‘ Check List” ostensibly enumerates only 635 species of North American Birds. This is owing to the fact that only full species are num- bered, the many subspecies being given as a, 4, &c., and some names being inter- polated without corresponding numbers, both in the body of the list and in the Appendix. By actual count there are found to be, in the body of the list, 750; to. which 28 are added in the Appendix: 750 + 28 = 778.
First, with regard to subtractions. It is in gratifying evidence of the general accuracy of the original list, that it is found necessary to remove only ten (10) names. our of these are extra-limital; siz are mere synonyms. The following
is the — LIST OF SUBTRAHEND NAMES.
4#giothus fuscescens. Summer plumage of 2. linaria.
. Centronyx ochrocephalus. Fall plumage of Passerculus bairdi. Sphyropicus williamsoni. Male of S. thyroides,
. Lampornis mango. Extra-limital.
Agyrtria linnei. Extra-limital.
Momotus cceruleiceps. Extra-limital.
. Ibis thalassina. Young of Plegadis guarauna.
Ardea wuerdemanni. Dichromatism of A. occidentalis.
Sterna “longipennis.” Meaning S. pikii Lawr. Young of S. macrura. . Podiceps cristatus. Extra-limital, as far as known.
COMNAAPHW YH
ry
On the other hand, the numerous accessions to the list are in no less gratifying evidence of the progress of our knowledge. There are no fewer than one hundred and’ twenty additions to be made. The large majority of these are bona fide species, and actual acquisitions to the North American list, being birds discovered since 1873 im Texas, Arizona, and Alaska, together with several long known to inhabit Green- land. It may be here remarked that although the Greenland Fauna has long been usually claimed and conceded to be North American, yet the full list of Greenland
6 ANALYSIS OF THE TWO EDITIONS.
birds has never before * been formally incorporated with the North American, as is done in the present instance. Aside from such additions, the increment is repre- sented by species or (chiefly) subspecies named as new to science since 1873; by a few restored to the list; and by two imported and now naturalized species. The
following is the full — LIST OF ADDEND NAMES. [Continued on p. 10.]
Turdus migratorius propinquus. Since described by Ridgway. Western U.S. . Turdus iliacus. Greenland.
Harporhynchus curvirostris (verus). Restored. Arizona. Cyanecula suecica. Alaska.
Regulus satrapa olivaceus. Recognized as a subspecies.
Parus rufescens neglectus. Since described by Ridgway. California. Parus cinctus. Alaska.
. Psaltriparus melanotis. Restored. Nevada. Arizona.
. Catherpes mexicanus (verus). Restored. Texas.
. Thryothorus ludovicianus miamensis. Since described by Ridgway. Florida. . Anorthura troglodytes pacificus. Recognized as a subspecies.
. Telmatodytes palustris paludicola. Recognized as a subspecies.
. Alauda arvensis. Greenland; “ Alaska;” Bermudas.
. Motacilla alba. Greenland.
. Mniotilta varia borealis. Recognized as a subspecies.
. Parula nigrilora. Since described by Coues. Texas.
. Helminthophaga lawrencii. Since described by Herrick. New Jersey. Helminthophaga leucobronchialis. Since described by Brewster. Mass. . Helminthophaga cincinnatiensis. Since described by Langdon. Ohio. . Peucedramus olivaceus. Arizona.
. Dendrceca palmarum hypochrysea. Since described by Ridgway.
. Siurus nevius notabilis. Since described by Grinnell. Wyoming.
. Cardellina rubrifrons. Arizona.
. Vireo flavoviridis. Restored. Texas.
. Vireo solitarius cassini. Recognized as a subspecies.
26. Passer montanus. Naturalized.
27. Leucosticte atrata. Since described by Ridgway. Colorado.
28. Leucosticte australis. Recognized as a species.
29. Leucosticte tephrocotis litoralis. Recognized as a subspecies.
30. A giothus linaria holboelli. Recognized as a subspecies.
31. A giothus hornemanni. Greenland.
32. Astragalinus notatus. Restored. Kentucky.
33. Passerculus sandvicensis alaudinus. Recognized as a subspecies.
34, Ammodramus caudacutus nelsoni. Since described by Allen. Illinois. 35, Peucza estivalis illinoensis. Since described by Ridgway. Illinois. 36. Peuczea ruficeps boucardi. Arizona.
37. Junco hiemalis annectens. Recognized as a subspecies.
38. Junco hiemalis dorsalis. Recognized as a subspecies.
39. Junco hiemalis cinereus. Arizona.
40. Passerella iliaca megarhyncha. Recognized as a subspecies.
41. Molothrus zeneus. Texas.
42. Sturnella magna mexicana. Texas.
ee FOODNDOR OD
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* “A Catalogue of the Birds of North America,” by Robert Ridgway, in Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, pp.
163-246, published since the above was written, includes Greenland birds, together with various Mexican species not yet found within our limits.
43. 44, 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. ole 52. 53. 54, 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64, 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. al: 72. 73. 7A. 75. 76. ate 78. 79. 80. Si 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94, 95. 96.
ANALYSIS OF THE TWO EDITIONS.
Icterus vulgaris. Restored. South Carolina. Quiscalus purpureus zneus. Recognized as a subspecies. Cyanocitta stelleri annectens. Recognized as a subspecies.
Perisoreus canadensis fumifrons, Since described by Ridgway.
Sturnus vulgaris. Greenland.
Pitangus derbianus. Texas.
Myiodynastes luteiventris. Arizona.
Myiarchus erythrocercus. Texas.
Empidonax flaviventris difficilis. Restored. Western U. S. Ornithium imberbe. Texas.
Nyctidromus albicollis. Texas.
Selasphorus alleni. Since described by Henshaw. California. Calothorax lucifer. Arizona.
Amazilia fuscicaudata. Texas.
Amazilia yucatanensis. Texas.
Iache latirostris. Arizona.
Chordediles popetue minor. Florida.
Crotophaga sulcirostris. Texas.
Picus stricklandi. Arizona.
Scops asio maxwelle. Since described by Ridgway. Colorado. Scops trichopsis. Inserted on Ridgway’s authority. Arizona. Strix cinerea lapponica. Recognized by Ridgway. Alaska. Strix nebulosa alleni. Since described by Ridgway. Florida. Surnia funerea ulula. Recognized by Ridgway. Alaska.
Alaska.
Speotyto cunicularia floridana. Since described by Ridgway. Florida.
Astur atricapillus striatulus. Recognized as a subspecies. Western N. Am.
Falco sacer obsoletus. Recognized as a subspecies. Falco islandicus. Restored. Greenland.
Falco sparverioides. Florida.
Buteo albocaudatus. Texas.
Urubitinga anthracina. Arizona.
Thrasyaétus harpyia. Texas.
Haliaétus albicilla. Greenland.
Engyptila albifrons. Texas.
Coturnix dactylisonans. Naturalized. Charadrius fulvus (verus). Alaska.
Charadrius pluvialis. Greenland.
4égialites hiaticula. Greenland.
Vanellus cristatus. Greenland.
Hematopus ostrilegus. Greenland.
Gallinago media. Greenland.
Arquatella couesi. Since described by Ridgway. Alaska. Pelidna alpina (vera). Greenland.
Actodromas acuminata. Alaska.
Limosa egocephala. Greenland.
Rhyacophilus ochropus. Nova Scotia. Numenius pheopus. Greenland.
Ardea cinerea. Greenland.
Grus canadensis (vera = fraterculus). Recognized. Parra gymnostoma. Texas.
Rallus longirostris saturatus. Since described by Henshaw. Louisiana.
Porzana maruetta. Greenland. Cygnus ferus. Greenland. Cynus bewicki. Restored. Arctic America.
8 ANALYSIS OF THE TWO EDITIONS.
9'77. Anser albifrons (verus). Greenland.
98. Bernicla brenta nigricans. Recognized as a subspecies.
99. Somateria mollissima dresseri. Recognized as a subspecies.
100. Phaéthon ethereus. Newfoundland.
101. Phalacrocorax violaceus resplendens. Recognized as a subspecies. California. 102. Larus cachinnans. Alaska.
103. Larus affinis. Greenland.
104. Larus canus. Labrador.
105. Céstrelata bulweri. Greenland.
106. Podicipes auritus (verus). Greenland.
107. Brachyrhamphus brachypterus. Restored. Pacific Coast.
108. Brachyrhamphus hypoleucus. California.
109. Brachyrhamphus craverii. California.
110. Lomvia troile californica. Recognized as a subspecies. California.
The original number of names, 778, minus 10, plus 120, gives the total of 888 of the present edition of the ** Check List.” The number seems large, in comparison, and I am free to confess that it includes some — some twenty or thirty, perhaps — which my conservatism would not have allowed me to describe as valid, and the validity of which I can scarcely endorse. I have nevertheless admitted them to a place, because I preferred, in preparing a ‘* Check List” for general purposes, rather to present the full number of names in current usage, and let them stand for what they may be worth, than to exercise any right of private judgment, or make any critical investigation of the merits of disputed cases. Probably, however, there are not more than thirty cases of birds retained in this list whose claims to be recog- nized by subspecific names can be seriously questioned.
It shouldbe observed, that the list is not yet to be regarded as finally filled. Our southern border has proved so fruitful of Mexican species, that various others doubtless remain to be there detected; and several species described as Texan by Giraud in 1841 remain to be confirmed. With the accessions that may reasonably be expected, and under current usage in the discrimination of subspecific forms, the list will probably in a few years contain about 900 names of birds occurring in North America north of Mexico and inclusive of Greenland.
It is to be added here, that the present southern boundary of ‘‘ North. America ” is a political one, wholly arbitrary so far as natural Faunal areas are concerned. It would be far more satisfactory, from a scientific standpoint, to ignore the present political line, and construct the ‘* North American” list upon consideration of the limits of the ‘* Nearctic Region” of Sclater and Baird. This would be to extend our area along the table-lands and higher region of Mexico to about the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, but not so far in the terras calientes of either coast of that country: on an average about to the Tropic of Cancer. Such course would give us the natural instead of the political Ornis of our country; and I have no doubt that it will some day be taken. A few Cape St. Lucas birds have been so long in the ‘‘ North American” list, that it is not thought worth while to displace them; but with these exceptions, it is not intended to include any species not known to occur north of Mexico.
ANALYSIS OF THE TWO EDITIONS. 9
Aside from those modifications which affect the ornithological or scientific status of the ‘* Check List,” the changes in nomenclature are numerous and in many cases radical. Without counting merely literal changes in the spelling of words, nominal changes are made for one or another seeming gdod reason in upwards of 150 cases. In probably not more than 30 of these, however, is the ornithological status of any bird modified ; the changes being simply nomenclatural.
This portion of the subject is concluded with the following table, showing the number of birds ascribed to North America by several authors who have published complete lists from 1814 to the present year.
SUMMARY COMPARISONS. Total of North American Birds given by WILson im(Si4 es «283%
rT Ti 6“ ae BoNAPARTE 01838." : . . 471% 7: 6 “ 6 BREWER OC tee) 6 sal ae 5 | ZOOL
“ “ 66 b AupuBpon ‘$1844... . 506* “ “ “ 6 Bairp eSB hs. |. C44 ts 6 6“ 6 CouES oye oo. Na ane Pivot “ “ ‘“ 6 Ripa@way ‘1880... . 924$ es “ & ‘“ Cours US ihetePy A AG) oe. eletelSI|
* Fide Baird: I have not made the count myself.
+ The number is ostensibly 738; but 5 numbers are duplicated in printing, and 1 species is not numbered, making 744; of which 22 are admitted to be extra-limital, but enumerated.
{ Total of numbered species in the body of the Check List 635; actuakediumber of species and subspecies 750; with 28 additional in the Appendix, making 778.
§ Total of numbered species in the Catalogue 764; actual number of species and’subspecies 924 ; of which 37 are admitted to be extra-limital, for all that is known to the contrary; and several others do not appear to be fully established as North American.
{| Being the 778 of the orig. ed., minus 10 subtracted, plus 120 added, = 888.
Note. Mr. Ridgway’s Catalogue contains the following 52 names of birds which I do not admit in the Check List, for reasons which may be inferred from the remarks set against each of them. But the Mexican (not insular) species may all be expected over our border; and the recognition of subspecies in some cases depends upon the perspective in which we may elect to view them.
. Harporhynchus graysoni. Extra-limital. Socorro Is., NW. Mexico.
. Regulus obscurus. Extra-limital. Guadalupe Is., Lower California.
. Regulus cuvieri. “Pennsylvania” (Audubon). Not since identified.
. Parus meridionalis. Extra-limital. Mexico. Since found in Arizona. . Certhia familiaris mexicana. Extra-limital. Mexico.
. Salpinctes obsoletus guadalupensis. Extra-limital. Guadalupe Is.
» Thryomanes brevicauda, Extra-limital. Guadalupe Is.
. Troglodytes insularis. Extra-limital. Socorro Is.
. Parula pitiayumi insularis. Extra-limital. Socorro Is.
. Perissoglossa carbonata. “Kentucky” (Audubon). Not since identified. . Dendreca montana. “Pennsylvania” (Wilson). Not since identified. Wilsonia minuta. “New Jersey” (Wilson). Not since identified.
. Setophaga miniata. “Texas” (Giraud). Doubtless.
. Ergaticus ruber. “Texas” (Giraud). Doubtless.
. Basileuterus culicivorus. “ Texas” (Giraud). Doubtless.
_ SMD ON DOP OOD
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10 ANALYSIS OF THE TWO EDITIONS.
16. Basileuterus belli. “Texas” (Giraud). Doubtless.
17. Lantus ludovicianus robustus. “ California” (Gambel). Doubtful.
18. Progne subis cryptoleuca, Florida. If recognized as distinct.
19. Euphonia elegantissima. “Texas” (Giraud). Doubtless.
20. Carpodacus purpureus califorricus. California. If recognized as distinct. 21. Carpodacus amplus. Extra-limital. Guadalupe Is.
22. Chondestes grammicus strigatus = grammicus.
23. Junco insularis. Jxtra-limital. Guadalupe Is.
24. Pipilo maculatus consobrinus. Extra-limital. Guadalupe Is.
25. Pipilo maculatus carmani. Extra-limital. Socorro Is.
26. Passerina parellina. F:xtra-limital. Mexico. (Texas, doubtless.)
27. Icterus wagleri. Extra-limital. Mexico.
28. Quiscalus palustris. ‘ California” (Gambel). “Louisiana?” (Ridgway). Dubious. 29. Aphelocoma ultramarina couchi. Extra-limital. Mexico.
30. Myiozetetes texensis. “Texas” (Giraud). Doubtless.
31. Lmpidonax fulvifrons (verus). “Texas” (Giraud). Doubtless.
382. Pachyrhamphus major. Extra-limital. Mexico.
33. Hadrostomus aglaie. Extra-limital. Mexico.
34. Picus villosus leucomelas. NE. N. Amer. If recognized as distinct.
35. Colaptes auratus hybridus. Intermediate specimens of unstable character. 86. Colaptes rufipileus. Extra-limital. Guadalupe Is.
37. Momotus ceruleiceps. Extra-limital. Mexico.
88. Rhynchopsitta pachyrhyncha. Extra-limital. Mexico.
89. Conurus holochlorus brevipes. Extra-limital. Socorro Is.
40. Bubo virginianus subarcticus. Wisconsin. If recognized as distinct.
41. Bubo virginianus saturatus. N. coast of N. A. If recognized as distinct. 42. Falco albigularis. Extra-limital. Mexico, and C. and 8. Am.
43. salon regulus. Extra-limital. “ Atsea, off Greenland, lat. 57° 41' N., long. 35° 23’ W.”
44. Tinnunculus alaudarius. Extra-limital. “ At sea, off Cape Farewell, Greenland.” 45. Polyborus lutosus. Extra-limital. Guadalupe Is.
46. uteo vulgaris. Michigan (Maynard). Identification in question.
47. Buteo borealis socorroensis. FExtra-limital. Socorro Is.
48. Oreortyxr picta plumifera. §. and L. California. If recognized as distinct.
49. Sula cyanops. Extra-limital. Socorro Is.
50. Sula piscator. Extra-limital. Socorro Is.
51. Diomedea culminata. FExtra-limital. “Off Columbia River ” (Audubon).
62. Lomvia arra brunnichi. If recognized as distinct.
POSTSCRIPT.
During the printing of the List, and since the preceding pages were stereotyped, the following additions have been announced. They will be found at the end of the list, raising the addend names from 110 to 120, and the whole number from 878 to 888.
111. Parus meridionalis. Arizona.
112. Myiarchus crinitus cooperi. Arizona.
113. Antrostomus vociferus arizona. Since described by Brewster. Arizona. 114. Buteo brachyurus. Florida.
115. Buteo fuliginosus. Florida.
116. Eurinorhynchus pygmeeus, Alaska.
117. Fulica atra. Greenland.
118. Fuligula rufina. New York.
119. C&strelata gularis. New York.
120. Puffinus borealis. Since described by Cory. Massachusetts. [ December, 1881.
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REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES.
§1. ETYMOLOGY, OR DERIVATION.
Eryuotoey, the érvpodoyia of the Greeks, consists in tracing the derivation of a word back to the root from which it springs, explaining its formation, inflection, and application, thereby more clearly illustrating its virtue or quality than can be done by merely considering any one of the various meanings it may in time acquire. For a good illustration of this definition, see the word Cardinalis.
The large majority of the scientific names of birds are Latin or Greek words, or modern compounds of such, derived conformably to the rules for the construction of classic terms. In general, therefore, it is easy to give the exact meaning of the names in their original acceptation, and to point out their applicability as terms descriptive of the objects designated. On the whole, it has not been our design to go beyond a good fair definition of these Greek and Latin words, considering that all practical purposes are thus subserved. Many of the classic words being themselves derivatives, and the field of philological inquiry being boundless, it was necessary to keep within certain limits ; and we have therefore seldom found it advisable, even were it practicable, in a case like the present, to trace words back of their recog- nized stems. Yet there will be found in the present little treatise, it is believed, much philological information of interest and actual value to all who desire to be put at their ease in the use of the Greek and Latin names of birds.
Many pure Greek or Latin names of birds known in classic times have been transferred in ornithology, in a wholly arbitrary manner, to totally different species. Thus the Zrochilus of the ancients was an Egyptian Plover; in ornithological nomen- clature, it is a genus of American Humming-birds. So also, many proper names, and many of the epithets which classic writers were so fond of bestowing, have been adopted as generic or specific names of birds, with little reason or with none, except the will of the namer. The genus Jache has no more to do with the Greek battle- ery than the name of Smith or Brown has to do with trade or color.
12 REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES.
The remaining names, not classic in origin, are a miscellaneous lot not easy to characterize tersely. Many are modern geographical or personal names in Latin form; as, wilsoni, genitive case of Alexander Wilson’s name, Latinized Wilsonus ; or wilsonianus, an adjectival form of the same; americana for American ; hudson- tcus, after the territory named for Henry Hudson ; noveboracensis, which is liter- ally, inhabiting New York. Some others are post-classic, or late Latin, though in perfectly good form; and there are more of these, we find, than is generally sup- posed. Not a few are wholly barbarous, as Pyranga, Guiraca; and some of these, as cheriway, wurmizusume, are barbarous in form as in fact. Some are monstrous combinations, like Hmbernagra from Emberiza and Tanagra, or Podilymbus from Podi- ceps and Colymbus. Some are simply Latin translations of vernacular names ; as, Puffinus anglorum, the puffin of the English. Finally, some are anagrams, like Dacelo from Alcedo, or pure nonsense-words, as Dafila, Viralva, Xema.
The student who confidingly expects to discover erudition, propriety, and _ perti- nence in every technical name of a bird, will have his patience sorely tried in dis- covering what lack of learning, point, and taste many words imply. Besides the barbarisms, anomalies, and absurdities already indicated, he must be prepared to find names used with as little regard for precision of meaning, almost, as those of Smith, Brown, and Jones. Nothing like the nice distinctions, for example, that the Romans made between ater and niger, both meaning ‘‘ black,” or between albus and
?
candidus, ‘* white,” obtains in modern science, where names are too often mere sounds without sense, and where the inflexible rules of technical nomenclature com- pel us to recognize and use many terms of slight or obscure or entirely arbitrary applicability, if only they be not glaringly false or of express absurdity. Let him for example, compare the several birds whose specific name is fuscus, and see what color-blindness this word covers.
The large majority of the names being, as already said, of Greek or Latin deriva- tion, we are enabled to give a reasonably full and fair account of their etymology, and to point out their significance and application. There are, perhaps, not two
dozen words of the whole list which we are unable to explain and define.
§2. ORTHOGRAPHY, OR SPELLING.
The literation of the scientific names is fixed and exact in nearly all cases. Their derivation being known, and their form having crystallized in a language ‘*dead” for centuries, the proportion of cases in which the orthography is unsettled is comparatively small. In general, there is no alternative spelling of a Greek or Latin word, and the modern derivatives are or can be compounded according to rules so fixed as to leave little latitude. In some instances, of course, two or more admissible forms of the same word occur: as hyemalis or hiemalis, ceruleus or ceruleus, Halivétus or Haliaétus. But, in general, there remains only one right way of spelling, and that way easily ascertained. We say, there remains; for of course
REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES. 13
there were centuries when the classics were undergoing the incessant changes inci- dent to all spoken or living languages, just as our tongue is now. But having, in the usual process of evolution, reached that point which we mean when we use the term ‘‘ classic,” the Greek and Latin have come down to us in a certain form, so measurably fixed as to permit no decided ulterior modification. Our orthography, as far as possible, should reflect the purity and lucidity of such crystallization ; and a little care will enable us to make such reflection clear.
In the cases of actual Greek and Latin words employed as names of birds, there are probably not in the whole list a dozen instances of words which admit of defen- sible alternative spelling. In the modern compounds of Greek and Latin stems, there is necessarily some little margin for variability ; but in all cases, perhaps, at least a defensible orthography may be attained, though some alternative may not be without its claims to consideration. We can only say, that in this matter we have endeavored to reach good results according to definite recognized rules.
In the much-vexed question of forming quasi-Latin genitives from the names of persons, we have adopted the following simple and uniform rule: If the word ends with a consonant add single 2 for a man’s name, @ for a woman’s name; if ending with a vowel, change that vowel to 7; as batrdi, eassini, but lawrencii, bonapartti ; blackburne, gracie. There are but few exceptions to this, as anne, coste. The letter y gives the most trouble: it is best generally to treat it as a consonant, and say suckleyi, ridgwayi ; but it must sometimes be rendered by 7, as lucie for Lucy (Latin Lucia), derbianus from Derby. It is rarely that a case occurs that such practice cannot readily meet. Names of birds derived from those of persons may of course be from any language, and consequently offer combinations of letters unknown in Latin; but it is useless to attempt to Latinize them, further than by giving them a Latin genitive termination. We should be led into the pedantry of brunonis for browni, or even of nigri for blacki, if we attempt any systematic Latini- zation of ‘‘ barbarous” proper names. It is best to apply the above rule even to names already Latin in form, and write, for instance, blasiusi, not blasii. The desirability of such conventional proceeding may be illustrated in the case of a bird named after a Mr. Wilcox; better wilcoxi, and be done with it, than wvilcoe/s.
Hitherto, we have spoken of Latin and Greek names of birds indiscriminately. It will be remembered, however, that we are supposed to write the names always in Latin, be they of that language or actually Greek. This brings up the subject of the transliteration of words from the latter into the former. Most of the letters of the Greek alphabet have their exact and simple equivalents in Latin; but some can only be represented by two Latin letters, and some combinations of Greek letters change in passing into Latin words.
The following are the simple equivalents: a =a; B=6b; y=g;d=d;cex=€ = 2 nes Lt 01. ome y — ee =f 0— Op =p; p= Tore Sea 55 o=]us O = &&
The following are simple substitutions: « =e; v= y.
14 REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES.
The following are expressed by two letters: 6 or 8 = th; 6=ph; xy = ch; y= ps. The letter ¢, though written single z, is double, and equals dz.
There being no letter 4 in Greek, the aspirate is expressed by the sign ‘, preced- ing a vowel or written over it; thus a, é, 6, 6 = ha, he, ho, hy. The letter p also takes the aspirate, in which case p = rh; and when p is doubled, the second is fol- lowed by h; pp = rrh.
Among other transliterations frequently occurring may be noted: Final -7 may or does become -a; final -os or -ov becomes -us or -wm. The diphthong a becomes e ; et, 7; ol, 0€; ov, U; w,yt. The letter y before itself, and before « and yx, becomes nv ; thus yy, y«, yx = ng, ne, nch.
It is needless to give formal examples of these rules here ; for the reader will find one or more of them illustrated on any page following the introductory matter.
§ 3. ORTHOEPY, OR PRONUNCIATION.
Correct pronunciation of Greek and Latin is a lost art. The best we can do now is to follow the usage of those scholars who conform most nearly with what they show reason for supposing to have been the powers of the letters as spoken by the Greeks and Romans. Unfortunately for the student, there are three reputable schools who pronounce certain letters, especially the vowels a, e, and 7, so differently that their respective methods are irreconcilable.
I. Lhe English Method. In England, and generally in America, excepting in the Jesuit colleges, the letters have nearly or exactly their English powers. This school teaches us ‘* how not to do it,” that is, to pronounce as the Greeks and Romans never did. If we imagine a dialogue between an English Professor of Latin and the Manes of Cicero, we are bound to infer that they would not understand each other; in fact, that neither would know that the other was talking Latin; though they might write to each other in identical words. Obviously, therefore, the English method is to be shunned. If the student will pronounce any word in the following list as if it were English, he will give it a sound the furthest possible removed from the right sound. The only excuse for the English method we ever heard is, that, as we do not know the right pronunciation, a conventional and consistent substitute is better than any doubtful approximation ; but such talk is a mere apology for the English pis aller, not a defence of that sorry makeshift.
Il. The Continental Method. This is universal in Europe, excepting in England, and has gained much ground in America through the teaching of the Jesuits and other learned scholars. It is also known as the Italian school. It may be defined, in brief, as a compromise between English Latin and Roman Latin ; the vowels having nearly or quite what is believed to have been their sounds as spoken by the Romans, while the consonants are heard more nearly in their English powers. Leading features of the school are: long a as in father; long e as English a in fate ; long ¢
as in machine; long uw as English 09 in moon; y, as a vowel, practically like 7; 7 like
REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES. 15
y, e and g hard or soft as they would be in English, and most other consonants as in English, nearly or exactly.
Ill. The Roman Method. This way of speaking Latin, if practicable, is obviously preferable ; and it is believed that a close approximation to Latin orthoepy is fea- sible. ‘‘ The world over, nearly all the Latin grammarians of the last quarter of a century have urged a return to first principles. The Latin has rights of its own, and a demonstrated pronunciation which should be respected.” * The credit of lead- ing this reform in America has been ascribed to the late Professor S. S. Haldeman, of the University of Pennsylvania, whose ‘‘ Elements of Latin Pronunciation” was published at Philadelphia in 1851.
Nevertheless, the practicability of introducing such radical reform among natural- ists, to most of whom the writing and speaking of classical words is but an incident of their scientific studies, may be seriously doubted, however desirable it is to do so. We question whether ornithologists, of this generation at least, can be induced to say Kike-ronia, Kirke, and Pikicorwus, or Chicheronia, Chirche, and Pichicorvus for Ciceronia, Circe, and Picicorvus, or wirraynce for virens. It may be most judicious at present, and best on the whole, to pave the way for the final consummation by carrying into practice the many points on which scholars agree, without insisting upon the extremes respecting which diversity of good authority is admitted.
Upon such understanding we offer, for pronouncing the Latin names of North American birds, a scheme which insists upon the Roman sounds of the vowels and diphthongs, but yields the point in the disputed cases of certain consonants ; conced- ing, for example, that ec may remain soft before e, 7, and y, and that v need not be turned into w. We do not profess to go into the subtleties, or even all the niceties of Latin orthoepy. Much of the end we have in view will be attained, if we can succeed in preventing those barbarisms and vulgarisms which constantly come from the lips of some persons of great accomplishment in the science of ornithology. Having ourselves heard Oh-nanth and Fully-gewler for Gnanthe and Fuligula, we need not affect to conceal our belief that some ornithologists may profitably look a little further into the matter than they appear to have hitherto done.
VOWELS.
The difference between a ‘‘long” and a ‘‘short” vowel is essentially one of quantity only, not of quality: it is actually the prolongation of a sound, not neces- sarily involving a difference in sound. Thus, if we dwell never so long on the ‘* short” a of fat, it does not convert the sound of that letter into that heard in the ‘‘long” a of fate. The phonetic quality of a vowel should therefore be distin- guished from its prosodiac quantity. Practically, however, no such discrimination is to be made in the case of the Latin vowels. We only know them as ‘‘ long” or ‘‘short;” we determine their quantity by prosodiac rules, and make their quality
* W. G. Richardson on Latin Pronunciation: In Report of the Commissioner of Education for 1876. 8vo, Washington, 1878. p. 484.
16 REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES.
correspondent. For all that is known to the contrary, the Romans may have had, for example, as many qualities of their a as we have in English; but as we know only their ‘‘ long” and ‘* short” a, it is simply a matter of more or less of the same sound of the letter, not a difference in sound. Our only resource, therefore, is to ascertain the natural or acquired quantity of the vowels according to the standard authorities, and pronounce them conformably therewith.
It is the rule, with few exceptions, that a vowel before two consonants, or before the double consonants x and z, is long. We are inclined to believe that in many eases the full length of the vowel itself is not implied, but rather the length of the whole syllable in which it occurs. For instance, in the word melanorhynchus, the vowel y is encased in five consonants; and the time required to speak the whole syllable -rhynch-, in metric composition, is what makes the y long. The Romans may have had the y as short in quality as the y’s in our word pygmy. Nevertheless, we have no assurance of this, and can only mark the y long, which means that this syl- lable is to be pronounced -rheench-. Take the word fuscescens, again, where each vowel is followed by two consonants. In this country we seldom if ever hear any thing but sounds of all three of the vowels as short as if they were English. We must, however, inark them long, which is equivalent to directing the word to be called foosaysaynce. But it does not follow that a naturally short vowel lengthened only ‘* by position” is to be sounded at full length. Thus, in @finis, trsignis, dbso- letus, from dd-, tn-, 6b-, the long mark indicates the quantity of the syllable rather than of the vowel. The chief exceptions above alluded to are furnished by the con- currence of a mute and a liquid, when the preceding vowel remains short, in prose, at least.
A vowel before a single consonant, or before another vowel, is short, as a rule; lsut there are so many exceptions to this, that each case of the kind requires to be considered on its own merits. An accented vowel is likely to be long from this cause alone. Diphthongs are long, except before another vowel.
In Latin words derived from the Greek, the vowels e and o are likely to be long or short, according to whether they stand for Greek eta or epsilon, omicron or omega. So, also, the Latin ¢ is long when representing the Greek diphthong e:, as it often does ; and a vowel is likely to be long when in any case it comes by the con- traction of two or more vowels into one. Thus, the frequent Latin termination -pus, from the Greek pous, is long, or should be, like the proper Latin pes (foot).
With these slight remarks, we take up the vowels, diphthongs, and consonants in alphabetical order.
A. Orthoepists reckon from four to seven sounds of this vowel in English, the four usually recognized being those heard in fate, fat, far, fall. The English sounds of a in fate, fat, and fall are unknown in Latin. Long a in Latin is always sounded as ain psaim; it is almost exactly the English interjection ai /—the name of the letter r without any roll. Short Latin a is the same sound, but with less stress and less prolonged, like the a in diadem, or the final a in Maria, Amelia, Hannah. Thus
On ee ee oe
a
REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES. 17
in the frequently recurring word americana, all three a’s have the same quality, but differ in quantity ; the first and the last @ being short and the middle a long, simply because there is where the accent, or stress of voice, comes to prolong the sound. If the accent in this case were on the antepenult, all three a’s would have exactly the same quantity and quality.
Long @ as in psalm.
Short @ as in diadem.
E. Long e has the sound of French é in féte, or English e in they, or English a in fate. Short e is like English e in them, not quite so short as in met ; something between mate and met. Example of long e: éxilipés, pronounced ache-seal-i-pace.
Long é as in they.
Short € as in them.
I. Long 7 is invariably like the English 7 in machine, police, oblique, pique ; that is, the English ee in feet, ea in feat, &c. ; but never the English 7 of fight, night. Short 2 is the same sound, but as brief and abrupt as possible, like English ¢@ in poss:dle, ability, imitate. Short and long 7 are both heard in intrigue.
Long 7 as in machine, pique.
Short @ as in ability, imitate.
O. This letter, long or short, has always its pure English sound, there being no qualities of Latin o to correspond to such anomalies as the English o in move, more, come, &¢.
Long 6 as in old, no.
Short 6 as in odd, not.
U. It is not easy to correctly appreciate the powers of this vowel in Latin.. Long uw never has the sound of English w, ew, or ew, as in fury, feud, few; but is: always broad as well as long, like o in move, 00 in moon, fool. Short uw is not the English w in tub or English o in dove, but quite like the English w in bull, full. Take: for example the common word rifts, where the first w is long, the second short. This word is neither roof-wss, nor rewf-uss, nor rewf-ooce ; but if the consonants per- mitted, it would rhyme exactly with rwe-ful. If I am asked ‘‘ How many cats?” I may reply ‘‘ I say ruefully there are a roof-full,” and in so saying twice speak both the long and the short Latin wu.
Long @ as o in move, 00 in moon, ue in rue.
Short @ as in bull, full, pull.
Y. This letter, as a vowel, has practically the sound of 7, long or short; more: exactly, that of the German i (we), as in Miller, which is nearer Miller than Muller. It is scarcely a Latin letter, and chiefly occurs in words from the Greek, correspond-- ing to Greek upsilon ; as hyperboreus, uropygialis.
It is to be remarked, that any vowel is or may be modified in quality as welll as in quantity by its consonantal combination, this being especially the case whem followed by the letter r. ‘It is as if the r were rolling away, and dragging the vowel after. Compare fuscus with turtur; the first with the last syllable of turdus,
18 REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES.
&c. We suspect that some of the less evident powers ascribed by orthoepists to various vowels, are not inherent in the vowels themselves, but due to consonantal modification of the sound.
Let us add that orthoepists commonly and with great propriety recognize what they call the ‘* neutral” vowel-sound, a quality so slight and obscure, that any one of the vowels may express it indifferently. Thus, if we pronounce the word martyr as rapidly as possible, it makes scarcely any appreciable difference whether it be written martar, marter, martir, martor, martur, or martyr; as we say scarcely any thing more than martr, the six ‘‘ neutral” vowels are phonetically interchangeable.
DIPHTHONGS.
In diphthongs, each vowel must be sounded, and the two sounds be smoothly combined. Two vowels coming together do not necessarily form a diphthong. For example, aér is a word of two syllables, and aédon one of three; the vowels in these cases to be separately and distinctly uttered, as in English aérial. Proper diphthongs, ¢. e., two vowel-sounds combined to make a third different from either, are comparatively rare; and all the following components of diphthongs also come together without combining.
44 consists of ah-ay, which when rapidly spoken becomes so nearly like Latin long é (see above) as to be practically the same. It was originally written a7, and is by some directed to be so sounded.
Al is a very composite sound. 7 itself is a compound, being ah-ee, the whole being therefore ah-ah-ee, which when run together becomes very nearly our English eye or the pronoun J. It seems quite like the French na7f, naive, or English knife.
A and O do not combine, and seldom come together.
AU is oftenest heard, but wrongly, as in cause, or as aw in awl, law, awful. It is like the ow in how, now, owl. It is precisely the German aw, as in aud.
E and A do not combine; they frequently come together, especially at the ends of words, but each is separately pronounced. . g., dne-as Bore-as, Arde-a.
EI is frequent. The analysis is ay-ah-ee, contracted to a drawling sound little different from long English a in mate; more exactly, English ez in vein, eight.
E and O do not combine. E-os, H-opsaltria, &¢.
EU is equal to ay-oo. Strongly and rapidly uttered, it becomes the long Eng- lish w in tube, we in due, ew in few, eu in feud, ow in you; and especially when initial represents the whole word you. For example Eugenes = Yougenes = Ayoogenes. It seldom occurs, except in Greek words.
IA, IE, II, 10, IU do not combine. The very frequent za, especially ending a word, and the 77, so frequent in the genitives of persons’ names, are always two full syllables. The common ¢u, in the ending of words makes two syllables: e. g., spuri-us. So seri-es, rati-o have each three syllables. Some apparent diphthongs of vocal 7 with a following vowel, are really of consonantal 7, which is 7, pronounced y; as plebeius, = plebe-jus, pronounced plebe-yus.
REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES. 19
OA and OO and OU do not combine ; b0-ops has two, arcto-us or arcto-a three, and o-ology four syllables. ow diphthong very early passed into long @.
OB, when fully but rapidly said in combination, seems to yield the diphthong @ preceded by a slight w sound; the whole nearly as the English word way. If not this, it is indistinguishable from Latin @. We are inclined to say way-nanthe tor enanthe ; if not this, then ay-nanthe, not ee-nanthe nor ot-nanthe. The combination is sometimes interchangeable with @, as calum or celum. It is to be carefully dis- tinguished from o and e uncombined ; as in Arsinoé, Chloéphaga.
OI. These two letters may combine or not. Generally they do not, each being a distinct syllable. Thus, Pic-o-c-des is a word of four syllables, the second and third of which are o-ee. oz in combination is given by some as in English o7/, but is perhaps more nearly the French oe? in el. As ai passed into @, so ot early became @, and some direct the letter to be sounded as’ ov.
UA and UE, in combination, yield sounds like English wah and way; as suavis, suecica.
UI, equivalent to 00-ah-ce, is like the French oui (yes), very nearly the English pronoun we. The rare UU seems to be simply @ at extreme length: equus.
Y making a diphthong with a following vowel gives the sound of such vowel preceded by w; as, Myiarchus = Mweearchus. It only occurs in Greek words, by transliteration for upsilon.
In some cases three or four vowels come together; but the pronunciation may usually be determined by the foregoing rules. Thus: Ageleus, Powcetes, Haligétus. In these cases respectively ae and oe are combined, and pronounced as above said ; the other vowels are distinct. Hal-i-e-é-tus is a word of five syllables. My-i-o-di- oc-tes is one of six syllables, though in practice reduced to five, by slurring the y and zt together. In trudeaui, again, are four vowels together ; but in this case eau com- bine into long 0, and the word has but three syllables.
ConSONANTS.
Most of the consonants have their English powers, pure and simple. Some, however, call for remark, especially in certain of their combinations.
The letters c and g are now said to be ‘‘ always hard,” without qualification. It is a much vexed question. As it is not demonstrated that the Romans had no soft e and g, we do not see that we may not be permitted to retain these sounds.
C then is hard, like k, before a consonant or a, 0, u, soft before e, 7, y, and before the diphthongs @, at, oe, 07. ch is always hard; there is no sound of ch as in church, still less as in chaise, in Latin.
G is hard or soft under the same circumstances as c, with the important excep- tion, that it is hard before y in words derived from the Greek, when the y results from the Greek upsilon (v). Example: Gymnocitta, not Jymnocitta.
J is simply 7, interchangeable with it, and always pronounced like the y in yes, or as in hallelujah.
20 REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES.
N followed by c hard, k, g, or x has a nasal or twanging sound of ng; as in English ankle, anger, pronounced ang-kle, ang-ger. Preceded by m or g, it does not destroy these letters: as Mniotilta, Gnathodon.
P is not silent before s; thus in psaliria articulate both. So in the digraph ph, some direct to sound both, as in wp-hill. It is difficult, if not impossible, to articulate both letters, especially when, as often happens, a th succeeds. For example, in erythrophthalmus we find that we cannot make four sounds for the phth as in up-hill and hot-house. Practically ph becomes something between f and v, just as in Stephen or Steven. So also the original Indo-European aspirates Ch, dh, gh are not retained in any European language; there is nothing to correspond to log-house.
QU is sometimes followed by another x, as in altiloguus, propinquus. It would seem to be rendered by kwooce.
RB is strongly pronounced with a trill. It is heard at the height of its power in the combination rrh ; as in catarrhactes, pyrrhorrhoa.
S invariably retains its sharp hissing sound. Thus essence is a rhyme with fuscescens (as far as the s-sound is concerned) ; so also virens = virraynce, not vy-renz. Compare hiss or this with his. So particular were the Romans to avoid the z sound of s, that they even altered antecedent consonants; saying, for example, urps and pleps for urbs and plebs.
T always preserves its sound. There is nothing to correspond with the English -tion = shun, &c. E.q., gra-ti-a, rat-i-o, init-t-um.
V is directed by some to be sounded like English w in we. But this is rarely done.
X is always ks or es, never gz or z, even when initial, as in Xema, Xanthocephalus.
Z, which only occurs in Latin words of Greek extraction, is a double letter equivalent to dz, and the best authorities recommend the d sound to be articulated. Thus Aphriza, Spiza, are pronounced Afreedza, Speedza.
A word in regard to the pronunciation of modern proper names, as of persons and places, so often recurring in ornithology. After mature deliberation, we have decided to mark them for their pronunciation in the language to which they belong. It seems finical and pedantic to attempt to Latinize them; for to carry out that plan to its logical result would be to give brunonis instead of browni ; and even then some names would utterly defy us, unless changed beyond all recognition. So we have adopted the rule of preserving the orthography and orthoepy of all modern proper names, even though containing the letter w. Barbarous geographical words of unsettled or no known orthography may, however, be sometimes dressed in quasi- Latin; thus it is perfectly permissible to render avonalaschkae by unalasce. We make this remark to explain what must seem inconsistent in our use of diacritical marks in some places; for we mark the vowels long or short as the syllables are pronounced in the language to which the word belongs, not as they would be in Latin.
REMARKS ON THE USE OF NAMES. 21
ACCENTUATION.
This is a matter of prime importance. For elegant, even for bearable, pronun- ciation, it is essential to place the accent or stress of voice on the right syllable. Fortunately the rules are simple, with comparatively few exceptions.
Accent the penult when it is long.
Accent the antepenult when the penult is short.
These two rules will carry us safely across the great majority of Latin words. In many cases lengthening the syllable, whether penult or antepenult, is actually equivalent to accenting it. We can scarcely recall a case of a short accented penult ; but many short antepenults take the accent, which is simply because it cannot be thrown still further back. Modern proper names of three syllables with the accent on the first, keep it there after addition of the ¢ of the genitive case; as, aud'uboni, rich'ardsoni.
So important is the matter of accent, that were all other diacritical marks dis- pensed with, we could still pronounce the words with measurable accuracy, knowing where to put the stress of voice.
The tendency in English is constantly to throw the accent back as far as possi- ble; and there is much of this same practice in the usual pronunciation of Latin. For the latter language, and especially for words derived from the Greek, we con- sider it vicious and undesirable. It seems to us much more sensible and natural in the case of a word compounded of two Greek words, to keep the stress of the voice on the stem of each, than to throw it, for sake of glibness, on the most insig- nificant syllable, often the mere connective vowel, and a short one at that. Take for example Troglodytes, Lophophanes, Phylloscopus, or any similar words of four syllables, compounds of two words of two syllables each. It is glib to accent the antepenult, but it is done at the sacrifice of the strength and dignity of the stem which stands penult, and which we should prefer to accent, even if short. Where we have found it practicable on etymological grounds to lengthen and accent such penults, we have done so; in general, however, we have closely conformed to routine custom, especially as there is to be strongly set before the inexperienced student the necessity of avoiding the glaring impropriety of accenting the penult of erythrocephalus, for example. The tendency of all persons who find it difficult to handle a long new word, is to dissect it, with two or even three accents ; and per- haps the inclination of the scholar to show his erudition has unconsciously led him to the opposite extreme. Any ‘‘rule” or custom aside, the natural accent of poly- syllabic words is rhetorical — as if each syllable were a word. It may be seen in those words whose looseness of composition, so to speak, leaves them like sen- tences ; as ne'vertheless!, not! withstanding. The naturalness of a!naly!tic, ge!omet!'ric contrasts favorably with the conventionality of ana'lysis, geo'metry ; and there is nothing in the quality of the final syllables to account for the differences in accent. But we are aware that our views of this matter will not pass current, even if they
escape adverse criticism.
EXPLANATIONS.
1. THE names in the Check List are consecutively numbered from first to last, whether they be of species or of subspecies. The latter are sufficiently distinguished by consisting of three terms instead of two.
2. The names in the Dictionary are numbered to correspond, each page containing the same numbers of the two series.
3. The person’s name in parentheses immediately after each bird’s name is that of the original describer of the species or subspecics. The unenclosed name succeeding is that of the authority for the particular combination of generic, specific, and subspecific terms adopted. When the original describer is also the authority for the combination, a single unenclosed name is given. — The following are the principal abbreviations : —
All., Allen. Gamb., Gambel. Lawr., Lawrence. Sw., Swainson. Aud., Audubon. Gir., Giraud. Licht., Lichtenstein. Temm., Temminck. Bd., Baird. Gm., Ginelin. Nutt., Nuttall. Towns., Townsend. Bodd., Boddaert. Gr., Gray. Reich., Reichenbach. V., Vieillot.
Bp., Bonaparte. I., Linneeus. Ridg., Ridgway. Vig., Vigors.
Cab., Cabanis. Lafr., Lafresnaye. Scl., Sclater. Wagl., Wagler. Cass., Cassin. Lath., Latham. Steph., Stephens. Wils., Wilson.
4. After these terms come three letters, ‘‘ B,” ‘‘C,” and “‘R,” each followed by a number. These stand respectively for Baird’s List, 1858, Cowes’s Check List, 1874, and Ridgway’s Catalogue, 1880. The number following each of these letters is that which the bird bears in such lists. Thus, Turdus migratorius was named by Linneus, who is also the authority for the combination, and is 155 of Baird’s list, 1 of Coues’s, and 7 of Ridgway’s. The dash after any one of these letters shows that the species is not contained in B, C, or R, as the case may be.
5. The note of exclamation, in parentheses, indicates that the species is in North America only a straggler from the country that the following initial letter denotes: H., Europe, A., Asia, M., Mexico, W. I., West Indies. G. shows the bird to be only North American as occurring in Greenland.
6. The note of interrogation, similarly enclosed, means that the name is considered to be of slight or uncertain value, — as of a subspecies scarcely distinguished from its stock, or of a species not well known.
7. The Index will be found to contain matter additional to, or corrective of, that in the body of the work. See p. 187.
CHECK LIST
OF
NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
1, Turdus migratorius L. B 155.01. RT.
Robin,
2. Turdus migratorius propinquus Ridg. B—. Cc —. R Ta. (?)
Rocky Mountain Robin.
8. Turdus migratorius confinis (Bd.) Coues. B—.C1a.R8.
St. Lucas Robin.
4. Turdus iliacus L. B—.c—. R6. (G. !E£.)
Redwing.
5. Turdus nevius Gm. B156.C2.R9.
Varied Thrush.
6. Turdus mustelinus Gm. B 148. C3. R1.
Wood Thrush.
1, Tir/-dis mi-gra-td/-ri-is. Lat. turdus,a thrush. Lat. migro, to move from one place to
ele
Si lie
another ; migrator, a wanderer, a migrant; migratorius, migratory.
m. pré-pin’-qiiis [propeenkwooce]. Lat. propinquus, near, neighboring; as related to T. migratorius.
m. c6n-fi’-nis [confeenis]. Lat. confinis, subs. or adj., a neighbor, neighboring ; here in sense of closely related to 7. migratorius.
il-i/-a-ctis. Lat. iliacus, relating to the ilia, or haunches; also, Lat. J/iacus, Gr. *TAcakés, relating to Troy, Trojan; application obvious in neither case. But Aristotle gives a kind of thrush, called iAids, supposed by old ornithologists, as Gesner and Belon, to be this species, said to be called by the modern Greeks iAAds, TvAds, KlxAn idids, or KlyAa iAidda; and the actual form, Twrdus iliacus, was an old name when Linneus adopted it. naé/-vi-tis [nayveus]. Lat. nevius, spotted, from nevus, a mole (birth-mark). — The sub-genus Hesperocichla is Gr. €omepos, Lat. vesperus, evening, t.e., western, and x«{xAa or «lxAn, a thrush,
miis-té-li/-niis. Lat. mustelinus, weasel-like; i.e., in this case, tawny.— The sub-genus Hylocichlu is Gr. #An, a wood, and klxAa,
10.
11.
12.
13.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Turdus fuscescens Steph. B151.C6. R2.
Wilson’s Thrush.
Turdus unalascee Gm. B150.C 4s. R5.
Western Hermit Thrush.
Turdus unalascee auduboni (Bd.) Coues. B 149var. C 4a. R 5a.
Audubon’s Hermit Thrush.
Turdus unalasce nanus (Aud.) Coues. B 149. 0 4. R 5b.
Eastern Hermit Thrush.
Turdus ustulatus Nutt. B152.050. R4.
Oregon Olive-backed Thrush.
Turdus ustulatus alicize (Bd.) Coues. B 154. C 5a. R3.
Gray-cheeked Thrush.
Turdus ustulatus swainsoni (Cab.) Coues. B 153. C5. R 4a.
Olive-backed Thrush.
fiis-cés/-céns |[foosaysaynce]. Present participle of a supposed Lat. inceptive verb fuscesco, I grow dark or swarthy ; Lat. fusco, of same signification. It means, or should mean, less than fuscus ; t.e., somewhat dark ; is not otherwise applicable to the lightest- colored thrush of this group.
. u-na-las/-caé. Of the Island of Unalaska. It is permissible, indeed desirable, to resolve
Gmelin’s barbarous word aonalaschkae into a purer form. With this orthography the word is of sufficiently classical aspect, and corresponds with aluscensis. See Anorthura, No. 78, and Pusserella, No. 288.
This is 7. pallasi var. nanus of the orig. ed. of the Check List. For the change, see Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 1.
. u. atid’-ti-b6n-i. To John James Audubon, the “American Backwoodsman,” and
famous author of the “ Birds of America.”
This is 7. pallasi var. auduboni of the orig. ed. of the Check List.
.u. na/-niis. Lat. nanus, from the Gr. vdvvos or vdvos, a dwarf.
This is 7. pallasi of the orig. ed. It is true that nanus has of late been applied exclu- sively to the Western form, the true unalusce Gm. But the name nanus was originally based by Audubon on a bird from Pennsylvania, and only later amplified by him to include the Western form. The long survival of an error does not justify its continued perpetuation after detection.
. tis-tii-la/-ttis. Lat. ustulatus, perfect participle of ustulo, I scorch, singe; with reference
to the ashy coloration, as if the bird had been charred.
This stands as 7. swainsoni var. ustulatus in the orig. ed. The case is precisely parallel with that of nanus vs. pallasi; for Nuttall named the Oregon bird ustulatus in 1840, and Cabanis did not apply the name swainsoni to the Eastern Olive-backed Thrush till several years afterward.
. u. Bli/-ci-aé. To Miss Alice Kennicott, sister of Robert Kennicott, of Illinois. See
Scops, No. 466. This is 7. swainsoni var. alicie of the orig. ed. See No. 11.
u. swain’-sdn-i. To William Swainson, the zealous and accomplished English natu- ralist.
This is 7’. swainsoni of the orig. ed. See No. 11.
bo Or
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
14, Oroscoptes montanus (Towns.) Bd. B 255. C7. R 10. Mountain Mocking-bird.
15. Mimus polyglottus (L.) Boie. B 253.C 8. R11. vad Mocking-bird.
,16.—Mimuscarolinensis (L.) Gr. B 254. C9. R 12. Cat-bird.
17. Harporhynchus rufus (L.) Cab. B 261. C 10. R 13. Brown Thrush ; Thrasher.
18. Harporhynchus rufus longirostris (Lafr.) Coues. B 260. C 10a. R 13a, Texas Thrasher.
19. Harporhynchus curvirostris (Sw.) Cab. B 259. C —. R. 15. Curve-billed Thrasher.
20. Harporhynchus curvirostris palmeri Ridg. B—. (11. R 15a. Bow-billed Thrasher.
21. Harporhynchus bendirii Coues. B—. C 11bis. R 14a. Arizona Thrasher.
22. Harporhynchus cinereus Bd. B—. (C12. R14. St. Lucas Thrasher.
14, O-rd-scdp’-tés [-tace] m6n-ta/-ntis. Gr. dpos, a mountain, oxémrys, a Mimic; cKérTw, I mock, deride, jeer at. The orthography differs; authority may be found for either Oroscoptes or Oreoscoptes; the former was originally written by Baird; it is shortest: and we usually say orology, orography, &c.— Lat. montanus, relating to mons, a mountain.
15. Mi’-mis [meemus] pdl-¥-glot/-tiis. Lat. mimus, Gr. wquos, a mimic. — Gr. roAvyAwrzos,
polyglot, from mands; Taany, yA@tra, tongue. ya? Y= trial acne & 6, ~“M. ca-r6-lin-én/-sis. Udt. for Carolinian, of Carolina; Carolus, Charles, is the modern
Lat. form of Germ. Sarl, or Serl, a peasant; A. S. earl: Scot. carle, Eng. churl. Carolina is by some derived from Charles II. of England; but Ribault, in 1562, built in Port Royal a fort he called Charlesfort, and Laudonniére, who came to relieve Ribault’s colonists in 1564, one which he says, “je nommay la Caroline, en honneur de nostre prince le roy Charles [IX., of France].”*
17. Har-pd-rhyn/-chiis [7h very strong; ch as k] ri’-ftis. Gr. &prn, a sickle; piyxos, a beak; 2. e., bow-billed. The former word is seen in harpy, so called from its hooked beak. Some purists will have the r doubled in this and all such cases, making Harporrhynchus ; but the current of modern usage has set too strongly against it to be stemmed without liability of seeming pedantic. — Lat. rufus, rufous, reddish.
US. Ei. 5. lon-gi-ros/-tris [loang-gi-roas-tris]. Lat. longus, long, rostris, beaked, from rostrum, beak.
19. H. ciir-vi-rés/-tris. Lat. curvus, curved ; and rostris. — Not in the orig. ed. 20. H. c. pal/-mér-i [sound the /]. Dedicated to one Edward Palmer. 21. H. bén-dil-ri-i. To Capt. Charles Bendire, U. 8S. Army.
22. H. cin-ér/-&-tis. Lat. cinereus, ashy, or ash-colored ; from cinis, genitive cineris, ashes. Gr. xévis, of same meaning, apparently from kalw, kdw, I burn. Related English words are incinerate, cinder, &c.
26
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
23. 24. 25.
26.
27. 28. 29,
30.
31.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Harporhynchus redivivus (Gamb.) Cab. B 256. C 13. R 16. Californian Thrasher.
Harporhynchus redivivus lecontii (Lawr.) Coues. B 257. © 18a. R 16a. Yuma Thrasher.
Harporhynchus crissalis Henry. B 258. C14. R17. Crissal Thrasher.
Saxicola cenanthe (L.) Bechst. B 157. C 15. R 21. (1E.) Stone Chat; Wheat-ear.
Sialia sialis (L.) Hald. B 158. C 16. R 22. Eastern Blue-bird.
Sialia mexicana Sw. B 159. C17. R23. Western Blue-bird.
Sialia arctica Sw. B 160. C 18. R 24. Arctic Blue-bird.
Cinclus mexicanus Sw. B 164. C19. R19. Water Ouzel; Dipper.
Cyanecula suecica (L.) Brm. B—. C —. R 20. (!A.) Blue-throated Redstart.
H. ré-di-vi/-viis. Lat. redivivus, revived, from re-, red-, redi-, in sense of back again, and vicus, living. Gambel discovered in this bird a long-lost species of an older author.
H. r. lé-con!-ti-i. To Dr. John L. Le Conte, of Philadelphia, the famous entomologist.
H. cris-sa/-lis. No such Latin word; there is a verb criso or crisso, used of a certain motion of the haunches ; crissum is a technical word lately derived therefrom, signifying in ornithology the under tail-coverts, which in this bird are red. Cf. Gr. xpioods, kipods.
Sax-i/-c6-14 o€-nan/-thé [oo-ay-nanthe, as if way-nanthe]. Lat. sazicola, a rock-inhab- - itant; sarum, a rock, and incola (in and colo), an inhabitant. — Lat. vitiflora, and Gr. oivavOn, signify precisely the same thing: the bird is prettily named “flower of the vine: ” Lat. vitis, the vine, flora, a flower. The Gr. oivavén, whence Lat. enanthe, is an uncertain bird mentioned by Aristotle and Pliny ; the name was definitely applied to this species in 1555. The word primarily relates to the grape, otvn, as if the bird were one which frequented vineyards, or appeared with the flowering (&v@os) of the vine.
Si-al'-1-4& si/-Al-is. Gr. otaals, a bird, in “Ath. 392 F;” from olaAoy, saliva; verb oiaalcw, I slaver, or make some sibilant noise. To call this Anacreon a slobberer!
S. méx-i-ca/-n&. Latinized from Mexican. The country is called Mexico, Mejico, or Mehico, from Mevitli, the Aztec god of war.
S. arc!-ti-c&. Lat. arctica, northern, arctic; 7. e., Gr. &pktos, a bear, aprtixds, near the bear.
Cin!-cliis méx-i-ca/-niis. Gr. «ly«dos, Lat. Cinclus, the name of a bird, by some supposed to be the European Cinclus aquaticus, by others a kind of Sandpiper; kiyKAiw is to wag the tail. — Lat. mezxicanus, see No. 28.
Cy-an-é/-cii-14 sué/-ci-ca. Cyancecula is a diminutive substantive lately (perhaps not before Brisson, 1760) formed from the Lat. adjective cyaneus, Gr. kudveos or kvavds, blue; mean- ing, as we might say, “bluet.” Rubecula is a word similarly coined. — Lat. suecica or svecica, Swedish ; Sweden having been called Suecia or Svecia. In that country the bird is said to be called “ Charles’s-bird,” Carls-fogel, whence Avis Carolina of some of the treatises written in Latin. —“ Redstart” is a corruption of Rothfterz, meaning “ redtail,” and Ruticilla and Phenicurus are among the translated book-names of the species.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. See Ibis, 1878, p. 422. Alaska.
32.
» 40.
32.
33.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 27
Phylloscopus borealis (Blas.) Dress. B—. © 20. R 34. (!A.) Kennicott’s Warbler.
Regulus calendula (L.) Licht. B 161. C 21. R 30. Ruby-crowned Kinglet.
Regulus satrapa Licht. B 162. C 22. R 33. Golden-crested Kinglet.
Regulus satrapa olivaceus Bd. B—.C—. R 33a, (?) Western Golden-crested Kinglet.
Polioptila ecerulea, (L:) Scl. B 282. ¢ 23. R 27. Blue-gray Gnat-catcher.
Polioptila melanura Lawr. B 284. C 24. R 29. Black-capped Gnat-catcher.
Polioptila plumbea Bd. B 283. € 25. R 28. Plumbeous Gnat-catcher,
Chameea fasciata Gamb. B 274. C 26. R35. Wren-tit.
Lophophanes bicolor (L.) Bp. B 285. € 27. R 36. Tufted Titmouse,
Phyl-16/-scd-ptis bor-é-a/-lis. Gr. vAAov, a leaf; crxords, a watchman; croméw, I look out, survey, examine; as these birds peer about in the foliage. — Lat. boreas, the north- wind, hf. e., the north; borealis, northern.
Rég’/-ti-lus cal-En/-dii-la. Lat. regulus, diminutive of rex, a king; exactly equivalent to “kinglet.”? — Calendula is a substantive which may be formed from the gerund of the verb caleo, I am warm; figuratively, glowing; in allusion to the fiery color on the head. It was apparently coined by Brisson, 1760, for the European Regulus cristatus, but was in 1766 appropriated by Linnezus to the present species. The early ornithologists had a great variety of names for these diminutive birds, mostly indicating royalty or other high station, in obvious reference to the “crown;” as Rex, Regulus, Regillus, Tyrannus or Tvpavvos, Basiliscus or BaotAloxos, Presbys or UpéoBus, BaoiAeds; to say nothing of Orchilus or ’Opxtaos, Trochilus or Tpoxtaos, Parus, Sylvia, Motacilla, Passerculus, Troglodytes, &c. The French Roitelet or Roytelet, and the German Sdniglein, correspond to “ kinglet.”
R. sat-ra/-pa. Lat. satraps, satrapes, or satrapa, Gr. catpdrns, from the Persian kbsbatram, meaning a crown or a kingdom: English satrap. Alluding to the bird’s golden crown.
R. s. 6l-i-va-cé-tis. Late Lat. olivaceus, olivaceous, olive-colored. See Vireo, No. 170.
P6-li-dp/-ti-l4 coé-ril/-é-4 |sayrulea]. Gr. woAidés, hoary, gray; mriAov, feather ; in allu- sion to the whitish edgings of the primaries. — Lat. cawrulea or cerulea or cerulea, blue, azure. Any of these forms of the word is admissible. We prefer cwrulea.
P. mél-an-i/-ra. Gr. uéAas, fem. weaawa, black ; odpa, tail. See Index, p. 137.
P. pliim’-bé-a. Lat. plumbeus, plumbeous, lead-colored; from plumbum, lead.
Cham-aé’-a [kam-ay-ah] fas-ci-a/-t&. Gr. yauai, adverb, on the ground. — Lat. fascis, a bundle of faggots; hence, fusciatus, striped. The allusion is to the indistinct bands across the tail-feathers of the bird that lives in bushes close to the ground.
Loph-6'-pha-nés [-nace] bi/-cdl-dr. Gr. Adgos, a crest; and ¢alyw, I appear ; in allusion to the conspicuous crest. — Lat. bicolor, two-colored.
N. B.— The accentuation of this and many similar words is questionable, and per- haps arbitrary. We give the above in deference to technical rule, conformably with Aristo!phanes, &. The actual usage, in this country at least, is Loph-d-pha’-nés; and
41.
42.
43.
45.
AG. 47.
48.
49.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Lophophanes inornatus (Gamb.) Cass. B 287. C 28. R 38. Plain Titmouse.
Lophophanes atrocristatus Cass. B 286. C 29. R 37. Black-crested Titmouse,
Lophophanes wollweberi Bp. B 288. C 30. R 39. Bridled Titmouse,
Parus atricapillus L. B 290. C 31. R41. Black-capped Chickadee.
Parus atricapillus septentrionalis (Harr.) All. B 289. C 31a, R 41a. Long-tailed Chickadee.
Parus atricapillus occidentalis (Bd.) Coues. B 291. © 3c. R 410. Western Chickadee.
Parus carolinensis Aud. B 293. C 310. R 42. Carolina Chickadee. [See Addenda, No. 879.
Parus montanus Gamb. B 294. C 32. R 40. Mountain Chickadee.
Parus hudsonicus Forst. B 296. C 33. R45. Hudsonian Chickadee, i
we instinctively incline to the latter, both as throwing the stress of voice on the radical syllable, instead of on the connecting vowel, and as the a in -phanes represents two vowels, ai or @ as in phenomenon, phenogamous.
L. in-dr-na/-tiis. Lat. in, negative, and ornatus, ornate, adorned; orno, I ornament.
L. 4-tr6-cris-ta/-ttis. Lat. ater, atra, atrum, black ; and cristatus, crested ; crista, a crest. Commonly written atricristatus ; see Parus, No. 44.
N. B. — The tenability of the position taken by Dr. Coues (B.C. V., i, p. 117; 1878) respecting atro-cristatus has been queried by several correspondents; among them Mr. W.C. Avery, of Greensboro’, Ala., who some time since furnished an extensive com- mentary on the names of the old Check List, and whose suggestions have often proved valuable. Mr. Avery maintains atricristatus, adducing albicerata (sc. jficus) from Pliny, 15,18; and atri-, albi, magni-, &c., is undoubtedly a correct form of such compounds. But we take cristatus to be a perfect participle, and put ater in the ablative of instru- ment; there being no such word as atricristatus, unless we coin it. We consider the word equal to cristatus atro, conformably with usage in Picus albo-larvatus, Tyrannus aurantio-atro- cristatus, &e. Compare also the actual Latin awro-clavatus, striped with golden.
L. woll-wéb/-ér-i. To Wollweber.
Pa/-riis 4-tri-cap-il/-lis. Lat. parus,a titmouse; etymology in question, but apparently parus for parvus, small, petty, like the actual adverb parum, little ; Gr. madpos, of same signification, th. madw; cf. pau-cus, pau-lus, pau-per, &c. — Lat. atricapillus, black-hair(ed) ; capillus, hair of the head; a diminutive, allied to caput, and Gr. kegadn, the head. Com- pare English capillary, thready, hair-like, 7. e., as fine as a hair. Notice atri-, not atro- ; ef. Lophophanes, No. 42. If the compound were with capillatus, it would be atrocapillatus.
Ao)
. a. S€p-tén-tri-d-na/-lis. Lat. septentrionalis, northern ; septemtriones (septem and trio) being the constellation of seven stars near the north pole.
. a. 6c-cid-én-ta/-lis. Lat. occidentalis, western ; occido, I fall; 7. e., where the sun sets. . Ca-r6l-in-én/-sis. See Mimus, No. 16.
. mon-ta/-niis. Lat. montanus, relating to a mountain; mons, genitive montis, a mountain.
a} lao} tan)! lao)
. hiid-sdn/-i-ctis. Latinized from the name of Henry Hudson, discoverer of the region.
50.
oF,
52.
50.
faye
52.
53.
54, 55.
56.
57.
58.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 29
Parus rufescens Towns. B 295. © 34. R 46. Chestnut-backed Chickadee.
Parus rufescens neglectus Ridg. B—. Cc —. R 46a. (?) Californian Chickadee.
Parus cinctus Bodd. B—.C—. R 44. (!A4.) Siberian Chickadee.
Psaltriparus minimus (Towns.) Bp. B 298. C 35. R 47. Least Bush-tit.
Psaltriparus plumbeus Bd. B 299. C 36. R 48. Plumbeous Busbh-tit.
Psaltriparus melanotis (Hartl.) Bp. B 297. Cc —. R49. (!M.) Black-eared Bush-tit.
Auriparus flaviceps (Sund.) Bd. B 300. C 37. R 50. Yellow-headed Verdin.
Sitta carolinensis Gm. B 277. C38. R51. White-bellied Nut-hatch.
Sitta carolinensis aculeata (Cass.) All. B 278. C 38a. R 51a. Slender-billed Nut-hatch.
P. rti-fés/-céns. Lat. rufescens, present participle of the inceptive verb rufésco, to grow red; be rufous. — “‘ Chickadee ” is an obvious onomatopeeia, from the bird’s note.
P. r. nég-léc’/-ttis. Lat. neglectus, neglected; verb negligo; equal to nec (non), not, and lectus, chosen, picked, taken ; lego, I gather in, select, &c. Neglect is a nearly exact opposite of collect.
P. cinc/-tiis. Lat. cinctus, girdled; perfect participle of cingo, I surround, encompass, encircle. A cingulum is a little something that goes around as a girdle does, whence surcingle, cinche.
P-sal-tri-pa/-riis min/-i-mis [sound the initial p; the a in parus is properly long ; some- times shortened in composition]. Lat. psaltria, Gr. aéArpia, one who plays on the lute; from the verb psallo, pédAAw, to strike such an instrument; English psaltery, &c.; and parus, a titmouse. See No. 44.— Lat. minimus, least, superlative of parvus, small.
P. plim/-bé-iis. Lat. plumbeus, plumbeous, lead-colored.
P. mél-an-d/-tis. Gr. uédas, genitive uéAavos, black; ots, genitive ards, ear.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List, and scarcely established as North American, though given by Baird in 1858. Supposed to have been seen by Ridgway in Nevada, August, 1868. See Rep. Surv. 40th Par., iv, 1877, p. 415. See Index, p. 137.
Air-i-pa/-riis [owriparus| fla/-vi-céps. Lat. aureus, golden, from aurum, gold; and parus, a titmouse. — Lat. flavus, yellow, for flagvus, from flagro, to glow; whence English defla- grate, flagrant, &c. Ceps is a Lat. termination, from Gr. kepadn, the head; compare caput, cephalic, occiput, &e. —A more strict method of compounding auwre-us with parus would give aureiparus ; but it may be taken direct from aurum, making auriparus admis- sible; as we should say “ gold-tit,” like “ bush-tit,” “coal-tit.”
Sit/-ta ca-rd-lin-én'-sis. Gr. ofrra, cirtn; Lat. sitta, a nut-hatch; the word occurs in Aristotle. It is related to o:rrdn, pirrakos, Lat. sittace, psittacus, a parrot; the implication being some sharp sound made by the bird, as English psit! There is a Greek verb Wirrd(w, to make such a noise. — Lat. carolinensis, see Mimus, No. 15.
S. c. S-cii-lé-a/-t&. Lat. aculeatus, sharpened, dim. aculeus, sharp, acus, a needle ; from acer, sharp. Gr. d«ls, a point ; compare akdy, akuh, &xpos, &c., English acme, acropolis, acer- bity, acrimony, and numberless words in many languages, from ak.
30 59. 60. 61. 62.
_ 63. 64,
, 65.
66.
59. 60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Sitta canadensis L. B 279. Cc. 39. R 52. Red-bellied Nut-hatch.
Sitta pusilla Lath. B 280. C. 40. R 53. Brown-headed Nut-hatch.
Sitta pygmeea Vig. B 281. C41. R54. Pygmy Nut-hatch.
Certhia familiaris L. B 275. Cc 42. R55. Brown Creeper.
Campylorhynchus brunneicapillus (Lafr.) Gr. B 262. 0 43. R56. Brown-headed Cactus Wren.
Campylorhynchus affinis Bd. B—. © 44, R57. St. Lucas Cactus Wren.
Salpinctes obsoletus (Say) Cab. B 264. C45. R58. Rock Wren.
Catherpes mexicanus (Sw.) Bd. B 263. C —. R59. (!M) Canon Wren.
S. ca-nad-€n!-sis. Latinized from Canadian. — Nut-hatch is nut-hatcher or nut-hacker (Fr. hacher, Swed. hacka), the bird that hacks, pecks, nuts; also called nut-jobber, to job being to peck, or thrust at.
S. pu-sil/-14 [puceellah, not pewziller]. Lat. pusillus, petty, puerile; directly formed from puer, pusus, or pusio (Gr. mats), a boy; here and commonly used simply as signifying small. The Sanskrit root reappears in endless forms of kindred meaning.
S. pyg-maé/-a. Gr. muyun, the fist; hence muyyaios, Lat. pygmeus, a pygmy, fistling, or tom-thumb. As a measure of length, from elbow to clenched fist, a muyuh was about 134 inches; the original Pygmies were a race of African dwarfs at war with the Cranes; pygmeus came afterward to mean any thing pygmy, dwarfed, and is here applied to a very small nut-hatch. Compare Machetes pugnax, No. 639.
Cér/-thi-a fam-w-i-a-ris. Gr. «ép0i0s, Lat. certhius, become later certhia. The name occurs in Aristotle, who apparently uses it for this very species, which he also calls xvimoadyos, cnipologus ; that is to say, a gatherer of insects ; kviy, a bug, and Aéya, I col- lect. — Lat. familiaris, familiar, domestic, hence common ; familia, or older familias, the family, the household.
Cam-py-lé-rhyn/-chiis briin-nei-cap-il/-lus {broonaycapeellus]. Gr. kayumdaAos, bent, from kdumrw, I bend; and piyxos (rhynchus), beak. — Lat. brunneus, brown; capillus, hair. The adjective brunneus is post-classic, Latinized from It. bruno, Fr. brun, Germ. braun; A. 8. byrnan, to burn; related are brand, brunt, and many similar words, among them brant ; see Bernicla, No. 700.
C. af-fin/-is |affeen/is]. Lat. affinis, i. e., ad and finis, at the end of, hence bordering on, neighboring ; here in the sense of related to, resembling, having affinity with, No. 63. Sal-pinc/-tés db-s6-lé/-tiis. Gr. caAmiyKThs, a trumpeter, becoming in Latin salpinctes, from odaAmyt (salpigx = salpinx), a trumpet; in allusion to the bird’s loud, ringing song.— Lat. obsoletus, unaccustomed, from 0}, against, and soleo, I am wont ; hence obsolete, in
sense of effaced, all the colors of the bird being dull. — Wren is A. S. wrenna.
Cath-ér/-pés méx-i-ca/-ntis. Gr. caSepris, a creeper ; kaéprw, I creep down, from kard, down, and éprw, I creep, crawl. The stem of the word is seen in herpes, the disease which creeps over the skin ; herpetology, the science of creeping things, repliles ; repto or repo, I creep, in Latin, simply altered from €prw. — Lat. mexicanus, see No. 28.
67.
68.
69. a0} Tale 72.
73. 7A,
75,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 31
Catherpes mexicanus conspersus Ridg. B—. C 46. R 59a. Speckled Canon Wren.
Thryothorus ludovicianus (Gm.) Bp. B 265. C 47. R 60. Carolina Wren.
Thryothorus ludovicianus miamiensis Ridg. B—.C —. R 600. Floridan Wren.
Thryothorus ludovicianus berlandieri (Couch) Coues. B 266. C 47a. R 60a. Texan Wren.
Thryothorus bewicki (Aud.) Bp. B 267. C 48. R 61. Bewick’s Wren.
Thryothorus bewicki leucogaster Bd. B—. C 48a. R 618. White-bellied Wren.
Thryothorus bewicki spilurus (Vig.) Bd. B—. C48». R 61a. (?) Speckled-tailed Wren.
Troglodytes domesticus (Bartr.) Coues. B 270, 272. C 49. R63. House Wren,
Troglodytes domesticus parkmani (Aud.) Coues. B 271. C 49a. R 63a. Western House Wren.
C. m. cén-spér/-stis. Lat. conspersus, speckled; perfect participle of conspergo, from con and spargo (Gr. oreipw), I strew, scatter, sprinkle ; whence English sparse, scattered, and many other words, as disperse, aspersion. — The Span. cajion, brutalized as Eng. canyon, is constantly used in the West for a rocky gorge or mountain-pass.
Thry-6-tho/-ruis li-dd-vi-ci-a/-nis. Gr. @pvov, a reed, rush, and @ovpos, a leaping, spring- ing, from (@épw), @péocxnw, I run or rush through. The penult is marked long, as equiva- lent to Gr. ov. — Lat. Ludoviciana, Louisiana, of or relating to Ludovicus, Louis (XIV., of France). The old Territory was vastly more extensive than the present State is.
T. 1. mi-a-mi-én/-sis. Latinized from the name of the Miami river in Florida.
T. 1. bér-lan/-di-ér-i. To Dr. Louis Berlandier, a naturalist, sometime resident in Mexico.
T. bé/-wick-i. To Thomas Bewick, “the father of wood-engraving.”
T. b. leti-c6-gas/-tér [lewco-]._ Gr. Aevxds, white, and yaorfp, stomach, belly; whence English gastric, gastronomy.
T. b. spil-/-rtis. Gr. omidos, spotted; ovpa, tail.
Trodg-l6/-dy-tés |[-tace] dém-és/-ti-ctis. Gr. tpwyAoduTns, a cave-dweller, from tpéyAn, a cave (literally, a hole made by gnawing —tpéyw, I gnaw), and dvrns, an inhabitant, from dvvw or 5vw, I go in or under. The TpwyAvdita or Troglodyte were a cave-dwelling people of Athiopia. The name was later applied to a kind of wren. — Lat. domesticus, domestic, from domus, a house. — The specific name aédon, applied by Vieillot to this bird, is the Gr. an5év, a songster, par excellence the nightingale; from aefSw, I sing. — The pronunciation of Troglodytes wavers ; we mark it as commonly heard, and also as seems to be defensible, in Latin, the penult being indubitably short; though to do so violates one of the leading principles of Greek accentuation, that no word with the ultimate long is a proparoxytone. Many persons say Tvog/lody'tes, conformably with Exglish Trog/- lodyte’. The case is precisely parallel with that of Lopho'phdnes, q. v., No. 40; and the analogy of Aristo'phdnes is not decisive, the Greek being ’Apioropdyns or ’Apicroparis, not ’Apioréparns.
T. d. park/-man-i. To Dr. George Parkman, of Boston, murdered by Professor John W. Webster, in 1849.
32
eG:
ie
a:
Se
alee
78. 79.
80.
81.
83.
84,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Anorthura troglodytes hiemalis (Wils.) Coues. B 273. C 50. R 65. Winter Wren.
Anorthura troglodytes pacificus (Bd.) Ridg. B—. C —. R 65a. (?) Western Winter Wren.
Anorthura troglodytes alascensis (Bd.) Coues. B—. C 50a. R 66. Alaskan Winter Wren.
Telmatodytes palustris (Bartr.) Cab. B 268. C 51. R 67. Long-billed Marsh Wren.
Telmatodytes palustris paludicola Bd. B—. Cc —. R 67a. (?) Tule Marsh Wren.
Cistothorus stellaris (Licht.) Cab. B 269. C52. R68. Short-billed Marsh Wren.
~Eremophila alpestris (L.) Boie. B 302. C53. R 300.
.. Horned Lark; Shore Lark.
Eremophila alpestris leucolema Coues. B—. C530. R 300a. (?) Western Shore Lark. ,
Eremophila alpestris chrysolema (Wagl.) Bd. B—. C 53a. R 300c. Southern Shore Lark.
An-or-thi/-ra trog-l6’-dy-tés hi-ém-a/-lis. Gr. a or ay, privative, dp6ds, straight, odpa, tail. The name was invented by Rennie, because he considered Troglodytes etymologi- cally inapplicable to a wren. — Lat. hiemalis or hyemalis, of or pertaining to winter ; from (hiemps) hiems or hyems, winter, a weakened form of the Gr. xequa, a gushing, a torrent, or xemav, the rainy, tempestuous, or winter season; Skr. dima, snow. We oftener use the y than the 7, but the latter is correct.
A. t. pa-ci/-fi-ctis. Lat. pacificus, pacific, peaceful, literally peace-making, from paz, geni- tive pacis, peace, and facio, I make, do. The application is to the occurrence of the bird on the west coast of the United States.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. (Baird, Rev. Am. B., i, 1864, p. 145.)
A. t. 4-las-cén/-sis. Alascensis, relating to Alaska.
Tél-m4-t6/-dy-tés pal-iis/-tris. Gr. réAua, genitive réAuaros, a marsh or swamp; dvT7s, an inhabitant, from dw, I go in or under. — Lat. palustris, adjective from palus, a marsh, whence palustrine, like lacustrine from lacus, marine from mare.
T. p. pal-i-di/-c5-14. Lat. palus, genitive paludis, a marsh; and (?n)cola, an inhabitant. See No. 79.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. (Baird, Rev. Am. B., i, 1864, p. 148.)
Cis-t6-thd/-riis stél-la/-ris. Gr. «foros, a shrub, and Oodpos, from (6dpw) @pdaxw, I run or rush through; compare Thryothorus, No. 68. Cabanis, who coined the word in 1850, gives Ciftsdlipfer as the German translation. Lat. stellaris, stellar, starry, adjective from stella, a star, like aster, Gr. aornp ; here in the sense of speckled.
vy
Er-é-m6/-phi-l4 al-pés/-tris. Gr. éepjuos, a desert; piAéw, I love.— Lat. Alpestris (not classic), from Alpes, Alps; perhaps from aA¢és, albus, white ; that is, snowy. E. a. leti-cd-laé/-ma. Gr. Aeveds, white; Aamds, the throat. This is a slight variety, lately described by Coues from the high central plains ; it is the bleached form of that region. (B. N. W., 1874, p. 58.) E. a. chry-sd-laé/-ma. Gr. xpiceos, golden; that is, of a golden color, from xpvaés, gold; and Aamuds, the throat. — A. S. laferc, Scot. laverock, Germ. lerde, Eng. lark.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 33
85. Alauda arvensis L. B—. Cc —. R 299. (!E.)
86.
Si.
So.
85.
86.
87.
88. An/-thtis pra-tén’-sis. Lat. anthus, Gr. &v@os, a kind of bird.
European Skylark.
Motacilla alba L. B—.cC—. R69. (G.)
White Wagtail.
Budytes flavus (L.) Gr. B—. C54. R70.
Yellow Wagtail.
Anthus pratensis (L.) Bechst. B—. © 55vis. R72. (IE.)
Meadow Pipit.
Anthus ludovicianus (Gm.) Licht. B165. 055. R71.
Louisiana Pipit; American Titlark.
Neocorys spraguli (Aud.) Scl. B 166. C56. R73.
Missouri Skylark; Sprague’s Pipit.
A-laii/-da ar-vén’-sis. Lat. alauda, a lark, said to be literally “a great songstress,” or one
who sings on high; from the Celtic a/, great, high, and aud, song. Some say from Gr. &An, roaming, and df, song; z7.e. the bird that sings as she soars. The form of the word might suggest a/a, wing, and laus, genitive laudis, praise; as if the bird sang praises on wing. But the Celtic is the only tenable etymon. — Lat. arvensis, relating to a ploughed field; arvum, arable land; arvus for aruus, ploughed; aro, I plough.
Not in the orig. ed. Said to occur in Greenland, Alaska, and the Bermudas.
M6-ta-cil/-14 al/-ba. Lat. motacilla = wagtail, “ quod semper caudam movet,” early applied
to some small bird; Lat. moveo, motus, I move, motion, and Gr. KiAAw of similar signification. There is a Greek word xiAAoupos, for the wagtail; on the contrary there are the Lat. albicilla, atricilla, meaning white-tail, black-tail, &c. The implication in either case seems to be tail, considered as a movable part. Compare Fr. hochequeue.
Not in the orig. ed. The species is North American only as occurring in Greenland.
‘Bi’-dy-tés fla/-vts. udytes is an unknown word to us, unless conjectured to be durns,
with the augmentative particle Bouv-. See Troglodytes, No. 74. The particle Bov, however, is from Bois, a bull, ox, cow, and becomes “ augmentative,” just as we say “horse-laugh,” “bull-finch,” “elephant-folio,” &c., being therefore of obvious inapplicability to this deli- cate little bird.
Since the above was written, Mr. Henry T. Wharton, of London, has kindly replied to queries respecting various words of which we were in doubt. In this case, his MS. confirms the above etymology, but in a different application; the actual form, Bovdirns, being found in “ Opp., Ix. 3. 2,” for some small bird; qu., one that goes among cattle ?
There is some question whether the yellow wagtail of Alaska be the true B. flavus.
Lat. pratensis, adjective from
pratum,a meadow. For anthus, compare enanthe = vitiflora, under Sazicola, No. 26.
This is North American as found in Greenland, and said to also occur in Alaska. » 4 FANALD A ‘ se ALA. -> . a2
j “ee Pe ‘ a 4h 27 awe & 89. A. li-dd-vi-=ci=a'-niis. Lat. Ludovicus, nom. prop. See Thryothorus, No. 68. Pipit, little
used in this country, though always said for these birds in England, is an onomatopeia (dvouaroroiia, Word-making to express the sense by the sound), like the Lat. pipio, I pip, peep, chirp; see Pipilo, No. 301. Titlark is good English for a small kind of lark, like tit-mouse, tom-tit; tit in all its forms, and with numerous related words, conveying the sense of something little or otherwise insignificant.
90. N&-6/-cé-ry¥s spra/-gui-i [three syllables]. Gr. véos, new; képus, primarily a helmet;
hence applied to the crested lark.—To Isaac Sprague, companion of Audubon on the Missouri.
34
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
‘91, Mniotilta varia (L.) V. B 167. C57. R74.
f
, 93.
94.
95.
96.
91.
e
92.
93.
Black-and-white Creeper.
,92. Mniotilta varia borealis (Nutt.) Ridg. B—. CC —. R 74a. (?)
Small-billed Creeper.
~Parula americana (L.) Bp. B 168. C58. R88.
Blue Yellow-backed Warbler.
Parula nigrilora Coues. B—. Cc —. R 89a.
Sennett’s Warbler.
Protonotaria citrea (Gm.) Bd. B 169. C59. R75.
Prothonotary Warbler.
Helmintherus vermivorus (Gm.) Bp. B 178. C 60. R77.
Worm-eating Warbler.
Mni-6-til/-ta var’-i-a. Gr. uviov, moss, and riAdw, I pluck, or r:Atés, plucked. Neither
the orthography nor the applicability of the word is obvious. Vieillot wrote sometimes mniotilta, sometimes mniotilla. The conjectured application is to the weaving of moss into a nest. — Lat. varia, variegated, as this bird is with black and white.
M. v. bor-é-a/-lis. Lat. borealis, northern. See Phylloscopus, No. 82.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List.
Pa/-ri-l4 Am-Er-i-ca’-na. Lat. parula, diminutive from parus, a titmouse, q. v., No. 44.
— Lat. americana, American. America is generally supposed to derive its name from Amerigo Vespucci, Latinized Americus Vespucius; and is said to have first appeared in the form of America Provincia, on a map published at Basle in 1522. The counter-argu- ment is: (1) The name if from the Italian navigator’s would have been from his surname. (2) His name was Alberico Vespuzio. (3) Americ, or Amerique, is the native name of a range of mountains in Nicaragua. “It is most plausible that the State of Central America, where we find the name Americ signifying great mountain, gave the continent its name.” (Blavatsky, Isis Unveiled, i, p. 592.) The author cited seeks to establish a connection with the Hindu Meru, or Meruah, of similar signification.
94, P. nig-ri-l6/-ra. Lat. niger, black; and lorum, a thong, strap, a bridle-rein; hence the
cheeks, along which the bridle passes. The “lore” has become in ornithology a techni- cal name for a small space on the side of a bird’s head between the eye and the bill.
Not in the first ed. of the Check List. Lately discovered in Texas by Mr. George B. Sennett. See Coues, Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., iv, 1878, p. 11.
95. Pr6-td-n6d-ta/-ri-4 cit/-ré-4. Low Latin for prothonotary ; from Gr. rpéros, first, and Lat. p Pp
notarius, a scribe, a notary-public. The bird is le Protonotaire of Buffon, Latinized by Gmelin as protonotarius in 1788; but for the name, as Pennant observed in 1785, “the reason has not reached us.” — Lat. citrea, of or pertaining to the citron, in allusion to the yellow color.
96. Hél-min-thé/-riis vér-mi/-voér-tis. Gr. éduws, genitive €Aumos, and Onpiov, from Op, an mus, & p p
animal. The word is very incorrectly compounded. Its full form is helminthotherium ; we may perhaps reduce it by elision to helmintherus, but helmitherus, as originally written by Rafinesque, is inadmissible. This is the accepted derivation; but we may suggest a short cut to the same etymon, @yp, an animal; éApuivOoOnpas, a worm-hunter, like the actual dpy.000jpas, a fowler, in Aristoph., Av. 62; being €Amivs and @%pa, the chase, from 6qp; though we hesitate to act upon this by writing Helmintheras.— Lat. vermivorus, worm-eating, from vermis, a worm (verto, I turn, in the sense of squirming or wriggling) and voro, I eat.
98.
99.
100.
101.
102.
108.
104.
105.
106.
By, in E05 = HAM
97.
98.
99.
100.
LOW:
102, 103.
104. 105.
106.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 50 Neti nara Helmintherus swainsoni (Aud.) Bp. B 179. © 61. R76. Swainson’s War fas
Helminthophage. pinus (ia;), Bd) B 1803, 6/62., B79: Blue-winged Yellow Warbler.
Helminthophaga lawrencii Herrick. B—.C—. R 80. (?) Lawrence’s Warbler.
Helminthophaga leucobronchialis Brewster. B—.C—. R 82. (?) White-throated Warbler.
Helminthophaga cincinnatiensis Langdon. B—. ¢C —. R —. (?) Cincinnati Warbler.
Helminthophaga chrysoptera (L.) Bd. B 181. C63. R 81. Blue Golden-winged Warbler.
Helminthophaga bachmani (Aud.) Cab. B 182. C 64. R78. Bachman’s Warbler.
Helminthophaga luciz Coop. B—. C65. R 83. Lucy’s Warbler.
Helminthophaga virginiz Bd. B—. C66. R 84. Virginia’s Warbler.
Helminthophaga ruficapilla (Wils.) Bd. B 183. C 67. R 85. Nashville Warbler.
Civdiw= nate, 3
. Swain’-sdén-i. To Wm. Swainson, Esq., the celebrated English naturalist. Notice that this word, like others containing the letter w, cannot be Latinized without change; the nearest Latin would be swa-tn'-s6niz, in four syllables. See also lawrencii, next but one below ; this should be law-rén/-ct-i or lav-rén’-ct-i.. But it is futile, finical, and pedantic
to undertake such transliterations in the cases of modern i prgper names.
+
Pe
Hél-min-thd'-phi-ga pi/-niis. Gr. €Auis, @ worm, and-pecyetyto~cat. een pinus, Gr. mitus, a pine-tree. Notice that pinus is a substantive, not an adjective; it may be put in the genitive, pinis, of a pine, but is just as well left nominative.
H. law-rén/-ci-i. To George N. Lawrence, Esq., of New York, long time one of the lead- ing ornithologists of America. Not in orig. ed. Since described, Pr. Phila. Acad., 1874, p. 220, pl xv.
H. leii-cé-brin-chi-a/-lis. Gr. Aevxds, white, and Bpdyxos, the throat; this becomes in Latin bronchus, whence the adjective bronchialis, English bronchial, bronchitis, &ec. Not in orig. ed. Since described, Bull. Nutt. Club, i, 1876, p. 1, pl.
H. cin-cin-na-ti-én/-sis. Of Cincinnati, Ohio, where discovered. Not in the orig. ed. Lately described by F. W. Langdon, in Journ. Cine. Soc. Nat. Hist., ii, July, 1880, p. 119, and Bull. Nuttall Club, v, October, 1880, p. 208, pl. iv.
H. chry-sdp’-té-ra. Gr. xpvcdrrepos, golden-winged, from xpuods, gold, and rrepdy, wing.
H. bach’-mian-i. To Rev. John Bachman, D.D., of Charleston, S. C., collaborator with Audubon in the “ Quadrupeds of North America.”
H. li/-ci-aé. To Miss Lucy Baird, daughter of Professor S. F. Baird.
H. vir-gin/-i-aé. To Mrs. Virginia Anderson, wife of Dr. W. W. Anderson, who discov- ered the bird. H, rii-fi-cap-il/-14. Lat. rufus, reddish, and capillus, hair of the head. See Parus, No. 44.
36
LOT.
108.
109.
PO:
LIBAN
Pr:
es.
114.
107. 108.
109.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Helminthophaga celata (Say) Bd. B 184. C 68. R 86. Orange-crowned Warbler.
Helminthophaga celata lutescens Ridg. B—. C 68a. R 86a. Pacific Orange-crowned Warbler. ,
Helminthophaga peregrina (Wils.) Cab. B 185. C 69. R 87. Tennessee Warbler.
Peucedramus olivaceus (Gir.) Coues. B—.C —. R92. Olive Warbler.
Dendroeca zestiva (Gm.) Bd. B 203. C 70. R 93. Summer Warbler.
Dendreeca virens (Gm.) Bd. B 189. C71. R 107. Black-throated Green Warbler.
Dendreeca occidentalis (Towns.) Bd. B 190. © 72. R109. Western Warbler.
Dendroeca townsendi (Nutt.) Bd. B 191. C73. R 108. Townsend’s Warbler.
H. cé-1a!-ta. - Lat. celatus, concealed, from celo; the orange color of the crown being hidden.
H. c. li-tés/-céns. Lat. inceptive verb Jlutesco, present participle lutescens, from luteus, yellow ; from Jutum, an herb used in dyeing yellow. There is actually no such verb as , lutesco, the describer of the species having apparently mistaken liitesco, 1 grow muddy, become miry, for a supposed lutesco, I grow yellow, by some confounding of liteus, muddy, loamy (hence possibly clay-colored or yellowish) with /weus, golden-yellow. The bright yellowness of the bird in comparison with /7. celata being its prime characteristic, the propriety of assuming the derivation to be from /utum, and hence writing lutescens, from a supposed /utesco, is obvious.
A form lately distinguished by Ridgway, Am. Journ. Sci., 5d ser., iv, 1872, p. 457.
H. pér-&-gri/-na. Lat. peregrinus, wandering, alien, exotic, that comes from foreign parts ; from per, through, and ager, a field or land; literally, “across country.”
Peti-cé/-dra-mis 6l-i-va/-cé-ts. Gr. mevien, a pine-tree, and dpauetv, 2d aorist infinitive, from tpéxw, Lrun. The allusion is to the pine-creeping habits of the bird. N.B. Many genera are compounded from the same root, and spelled either -dramus or -dromus. Either is correct. — Lat. olivaceus, pertaining to the olive; in this case, in color, olivaceous.
Not in the orig. ed. Since discovered in Arizona by H. W. Henshaw.
Dén-droé/-ca aés-ti/-va [dayndrwaykah aysteevah]. Gr. Sévdporv, a tree, and oixéw, I inhabit ; ofkos, a habitation. The word was originally compounded Dendroica by G. R. Gray: later emended as above. The full form would be Dendracetes, like Poccetes, Nephacetes (oiknths, an inhabitant). — Lat. @estira, adjective from estas, the summer season ; cestus, heat, ardor (Gr. af@w, I burn). Notice the long accented penult.
D. vir/-éns [pronounced virraynce]. Lat. virens, participle present of vireo, I grow green. ’ 5
D. dc-ci-dén-ta’-lis. Lat. occidentalis, occidental, western; that is, in the place where the sun sets; from occido, I fall down.
D. town’-sénd-i. To J. K. Townsend, Esq., companion of Nuttall during his travels. The first syllable of this word represents the exact pronunciation of Latin au diphthong —like English ow; as if we made it (@-Un-.
HLS.
118. 119.
120.
Le.
122.
123.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. |
Dendreeca chrysoparia Scl. & Salv. B—. C74. R 106.
Golden-cheeked Warbler.
Dendrceca nigrescens (Towns.) Bd. B 192. C 75. R 105.
Black-throated Gray Warbler.
Dendrceca ccerulescens (L.) Bd. B 193. C 76. R 94.
Black-throated Blue Warbler.
Dendreeca coerulea (Wils.) Bd. B201.C077 R98
Coerulean Warbler.
Dendrceca coronata (L.) Gr. B 194. © 78. R 95.
Yellow-rumped Warbler.
Dendrceeca auduboni (Towns.) Bd. B 195. C79. R 96.
Audubon’s Warbler.
Dendrceca blackburnze (Gm.) Bd. B 196. C 80. R 102,
Blackburn’s Warbler.
Dendrceeca striata (Forst.) Bd. B 202. C 81. R 101.
Black-poll Warbler.
Dendroeca castanea (Wils.) Bd. B 197. C 82. R 100.
D.
Bay-breasted Warbler.
chry-s6-par-i/-4. Gr. xpvads, gold, and mape:d, cheek. Greek diphthong «zt becomes long 7 in Latin: hence, -paria, not -pareia; see also beyond, among the names of pigeons ending in -pelta.
. nig-rés/-céns. Lat. nigresco, I grow black; an inceptive verb, present participle
nigrescens, equivalent to being blackish, or partly black. See No. 126.
. coé-riil-és/-céns [pronounced sayrullaysaynce]. Lat. carulesco, I grow blue; a coined
inceptive verb from c@ruleus, blue; this from calum, the (blue) sky ; compare Gr. koiAos, hollow, 7. e., the vault of heaven, and celare or celare, to conceal, as if in a hollow place, &e. N.B. There is constant difference of orthography: either c@- or cv- is defensible ; the former seems preferable. In English we may write indifferently carulean, cerulean, or cerulean.
-
. coé-rtil’/-é-4. See last word.
cér-G-na/-ta. Lat. coronatus, crowned, from corona, a crown, garland, or wreath. Gr. Kopovn.
. alid/-ti-bdn-i. To John James Audubon, “the American backwoodsman,” as he liked
to be called.
. black’-burn-aé. To Mrs. Blackburn, an English lady. Commonly written blackburn,
in four syllables, with accent on the antepenult; more correctly as above. Diacritical marks are futile in such a case as this; the English name is never pronounced blark- boorn, as it would be according to rule for the quantity of the vowels in Latin.
. stri-a/-t&. Lat. participial adjective from strio, I furrow, channel, flute, groove, striate,
stripe ; stria, substantive, a furrow, stripe, &c.
cas-tin’-é-3. Lat. castanea, a chestnut; in allusion to the bay or chestnut color. The word is a noun, but is constantly used adjectivally. Gr. xdoravoy, the nut of Castana, a city of Thessaly.
38
124,
125.
126.
yp V27.
128.
-129.
130.
SL
132.
ee © gh.
125. 126.
127. 128.
129.
130. 131. 132.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Dendrceeca pennsylvanica (L.) Bd. B 200. C 83. R 99. Chestnut-sided Warbler.
Dendrceca maculosa (Gm.) Bd. B 204. C 84. R 97. Black-and-Yellow Warbler.
Dendrceeca tigrina (Gm.) Bd. B 206. © 85. R 90. Cape May Warbler.
Dendrceca discolor (V.) Bd. B 210. C 86. R114. Prairie Warbler.
Dendrceca graciz Coues. B—. C87. R104. Grace’s Warbler.
Dendreeca dominica (L.) Bd. B 209. C 88. R 103. Yellow-throated Warbler.
Dendrceca dominica albilora Bd. B—. CG 88a. R 103a. White-cheeked Warbler.
Dendrceca kirtlandi Bd. B 205. ¢ 89. R110. Kirtland’s Warbler.
Dendrceca palmarum (Gm.) Bd. B 208. © 90. R 113. Yellow Red-poll Warbler.
D. pénn-syl-va/-ni-ca. An adjective coined from sylvanus, sylvan, this from sylva, which is sibilated and digammated from Gr. #An = (o)vAFn, a wood; preceded by the name of William Penn; “ Penn’s woods.” The modern use of the y is less correct than 7 would be. The whole word would preferably be written pensilvanica, as it is in some ornitho- logical works of the last century.
D. ma-cil-d/-sa. Lat. maculosus, spotted or full of spots; macula, a spot.
D. tig-ri/-na. Lat. tigrinus, striped (like a tiger, tigris, Gr. tiypis). The quantity of the antepenult is doubtful, perhaps common. By ordinary rule, it is long, and Tigris makes the final spondee of some hexameter lines. On the other hand, the combination of a mute or f and a liquid does not necessarily lengthen a preceding vowel in prose; and some other combinations of consonants also permit the vowel to remain short, in cases of Greek words, as Cyenus or Cygnus. We leave it short, as usually heard. — Perisso- glossa, a generic name now often used for this species, is the Gr. repioads and yAdooa, in allusion to the peculiarity of the laciniate tongue.
D. dis/-cdl-dr. Lat. discolor (post-classic), party-colored ; opposed to concolor, whole-colored.
D. gra/-ci-aé. To Mrs. Charles A. Page, née Grace Darling Coues, the author’s sister. Would more strictly be written gratia (Lat. gratia, grace, favor, thanks).
D. dém-in/-i-ca. Lat. dominicus, relating to the lord or master of the household, dominus ; domus, a house. So, to dominate, to have dominion. The application is here to the West Indian island named originally Hayti, then San Domingo. The bird was early described from that locality.
D. d. al-bi-16/-ra. Lat. albus, white, and lorum, the lore or cheek. See Parula, No. 94. D. kirt’-land-i. To Dr. Jared P. Kirtland, of Ohio. See remarks under D. blackburne.
D. pal-ma/-rim. Lat. palmarum, of the palms, genitive plural of palma, a palm.
133.
134, 135.
136.
137.
138. 139.
140,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 39
Dendreeca palmarum hypochrysea Ridg. B—. C —. R 113a. (?) Yellow-bellied Red-poll Warbler.
Dendrceeca pinus (Bartr.) Bd. B198. C91. R111. Pine-creeping Warbler.
Siurus auricapillus (L.) Sw. B186. C 92. R115. Golden-crowned Thrush.
Siurus nezevius (Bodd.) Coues. B 187. C 93. R 116. Water Thrush.
Siurus neevius notabilis Grinnell. B—.C—. R 116a. (?) Wyoming Water Thrush.
Siurus motacilla (V.) Bp. B 188. C 94. R117. Large-billed Water Thrush.
Oporornis agilis (Wils.) Bd. B174. C95. R118. Connecticut Warbler.
Oporornis formosa (Wils.) Bd. B 175. C 96. R 119. Kentucky Warbler.
D. p. hy-po-chry’-sé-4. Gr. id, becoming Lat. hypo-, under, below, beneath, and xpiceos, golden; referring to the under parts of this variety, which are yellower than those of palmarum. Properly, hypo- in such connection simply diminishes the force of the adjec= tive ; hypoleucus, hypochryseus,.meaning whitish, yellowish; but the present is an estab- lished usage in ornithology.
Not in the orig. ed. — Since described by Ridgway, Bull. Nutt. Club, i, 1876, p. 84. D. pi/-ntis. See Helminthophaga pinus, No. 98.
Si-ii/-riis aiir-i-cap-il/-lis. Gr. oefw, I wave or brandish, and odpa, tail. The word is pre- cisely equivalent to Lat. motacilla, French hochequeue, English wagtail. It was originally and has since commonly been written Seiurus. (See Coues, Bull. Nuttall Club, ii, no. 2, 1877, p.29.) We keep the? long as representing Gr. et. — Lat. aurum, gold, and capillus, hair ; golden-haired. (See Coues, ibid., p. 30.) See also Lophophanes, No. 42, and Parus, No. 44.
S. naé/-vi-tis. Lat. nevus, a birth-mark, nevus, or spot; whence nevius, so marked, or, in general, spotted in any way.
S. n. n6-ta/-bi-lis. Lat. notabilis, notable, from nota, a note, and the termination -bilis. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Later described by R. Ridgway, from Grin- nell’s MS., in Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 12. Very doubtful.
S. m6-ta4-cil/-14. See Motacilla, No. 86.
Op-or-dr!-nis 4/-gi-lis. Gr. émépa, the autumn, and dpuis, a bird; in allusion to the abun- dance of the species in the fall, in comparison with its scarcity in the spring. — Lat. agilis, agile, from ago, I act; literally, do-able, that is, act-ive; the adjectival termination being simply applied to the root of the verb, both in Latin and English.
O. for-md/-sa. Lat. formosa, beautiful ; primitively, in the sense of shapely, well-formed,
in good or full proportion; forma, form. So said of Juno, in whose “lofty mind”
_ remained judicium Paridis, spreteque injuria forme, h.e., of her slighted beauty. Verg., /in., i, 27.
e
ys
40
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
141. Geothlypis trichas (L.) Cab. B170. C97. R 122
Maryland Yellow-throat.
-142. Geothlypis philadelphia (Wils.) Bd. B172. C98. R 120.
Mourning Warbler.
148. Geothlypis macgillivrayi (Aud.) Bd. B173. C99. R 121.
Macgillivray’s Warbler.
144. Icteria virens (L.) Bd. B 176. C100. R 123.
Yellow-breasted Chat.
146, Icteria virens longicauda (Lawr.) Coues. B 177. C 100a. R 1232,
6. Long-tailed Chat.
146. ee mitratus (Gm.) Aud. B 211. C 101. R 124.
141.
142.
143.
144,
145.
Hooded Fiycatching Warbler.
Gé-dth’-ly-pis trich’-4s. Gr. 77 or yéa, the earth, and @Auzis, “a proper name.” — Gr. Opi,
genitive tp:xds, hair; there is also the actual word tpixas, for some kind of a thrush, occurring in Aristotle. Some take the tp:xas of Aristotle to be the bird named by Linneus Turdus pilaris, t.e., the hairy thrush; but Sundevall reasonably identifies it with 7. musicus. Of course it had originally nothing to do with the present species, to which Linneus applied the term trichas in 1766. — Cabanis coined Geoth/ypis in 1847, simply explaining @Aumis as a “proper name.” The meaning of the term is obscure, but we think it may be explained, considering that @Aumis is the same as @paumis, which latter occurs in Aristotle as the name of some conirostral granivorous bird never satis- factorily identified. Sundevall says @Opavmis ,,wiirde in cinigen codices @Aumis (Thlypis) gefehrieben’’ ; and the identity of the two words appears to be established, seeing that @Adw, I break, bruise, crush, whence @Aavmis, has the same meaning as @patw, whence @pavmis. (See Aristoph., Ay. 466.) In each ease the name is that of a bird considered as granivorous —as a seed-eater, i.e., seed-breaker, famenfreffender, coccothraustes, omopo- OAdorns, «.7.A. But the name, though thus perfectly explicable, is very badly chosen to designate a strictly insectivorous species, its only pertinence being in geo-, signifying the humility of this bird of brake and briar.
G. phil-4-dél’-phi-a. Named for the “city of brotherly love.” Gr. giréw, I love, adeAgds,
>
brother ; the latter from & connective (for gua) and deAgds, the womb, that is, having one mother. But the compound itself, Philadeél'phia, is classic, as the name of a city, and there are the actual words giAadéApea, piradeAgia, amor fraternus, charitas fraterna. The Lat. is marked for quantity as above in the authority consulted; but some contend for the Greek accent, philadelphi’-a.
G. mic-gil-liv-ray’-i.. To William Macgillivray, Esq., of Edinburgh, author of much of
Audubon’s scientific work, besides several other important treatises.
Ic-tér/-i-4 vir’-éns. A dialectic form, invented by Vieillot, of Gr. %erepos or Lat. icterus ;
primarily, the disease jaundice; also a certain yellow bird, probably the golden oriole of Europe, by the sight of which jaundiced patients were fancied to be cured. The name was in 1760 by Brisson applied to the American orioles as a generic term, Jcterus ; and by Vieillot later, in the form JIcteria, to the present genus.— Lat. virens, present parti- ciple of vireo, I grow green.
I. v. l6n-gi-catid’/-& [-cowda]. Lat. longus, long, and cauda, tail.
146, Myi-d-di-del-tés mi-tra/-tiis. Gr. uta, a fly, and didé«rns, a pursuer. — Lat. mitratus,
wearing a turban; Gr. wizpa, a turban or other head-dress. cf. rdw, I weave. The word is sometimes six-syllabled, but properly reducible to five, the 7, from Gr. vi, being slurred; the sound is that of mwee-, not mz- or meé-.
147. 148,
151.
152.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 41
Myiodioctes pusillus (Wils.) Bp. B 213. C 102. R 125. Green Black-capped Flycatching Warbler.
Myiodioctes pusillus pileolatus (Pall.) Ridg. B—. © 10a. R 1254, Pacific Black-capped Flycatching Warbler.
Myiodioctes canadensis (L.) Aud. B 214, 215. © 103. R 127. Canadian Flycatching Warbler.
Cardellina rubrifrons (Gir.) Scl. B—. C —. R 131. Red-fronted Flycatching Warbler.
Setophaga picta Sw. B218. C 105. R 129. Painted Flycatching Warbler.
Setophaga ruticilla (L.) Sw. B 217. C 104. R 128. American Redstart.
Certhiola bahamensis Reich. B 301. C 106. R 159. (!W. I.) Bahaman Honey Creeper.
M® pii-sil’-liis. See Sitta, No. 60.
M: p. pi-lé-6-la/-ttis. Lat. pilewm or pileolum, Gr. widos, a kind of cap, a skull-cap; pileo- latus, capped. In late days, pileum has become a technical word in ornithology, meaning the top of the head.
. .M. can-4-dén/-sis. Latinized from Canada, with the termination -ensis. Canada is said to
be the Iroquois word Kanata, a village or collection of huts.
Car-dél-li/-na rtib-ri/-frons. Apparently an arbitrary variation from Lat. carduelis, a kind of finch, from carduus, a thistle. — Lat. ruber, red, and frons, the forehead. The pro- nunciation of rubrifrons is in question; everybody says roo/brij/rdnz; as it is not a classic word, we can only mark it by analogy with such words as ritbrico, &ec. But see above, Dendreca, No. 126, in favor of rib/rifréns, as the i here comes before f and a liquid.
Not in the orig. ed. of the List; since discovered by H. W. Henshaw in New Mexico.
Sé-td/-pha-ga pic/-ta. Gr. ojs, genitive onrds, an insect; and gayeiv, to eat. The con- necting yowel o need not lengthen before pA, as this is only equivalent in force to fi — Lat. pictus, painted, pictured, here in the sense of brightly or highly colored; pingo, I paint, depict.
S. riit-i-cil/-1a. Lat. rutilus, reddish; for the rest see Motacilla, No.86. The word is exactly equal to redstart, which is Anglicized from the Germ. Roth{tert or Rothfter;, all three words meaning simply redtail.
Cér-thi’/-5-14 ba-ha-mén/-sis. Certhiola is a coined diminutive of Certhia, which see, No. 62; we usually hear it accented on a long penult, which is certainly vicious. — Baha- mensis is Latinized from Bahama.
In the first ed. of the Check List, this species stands as C. flaveola, corrected in the Appendix. If we were to use the latter, it would'be flavitld, not flaveola. Certhiola is correctly formed as a diminutive from Certhia, like lineola from linea; for the general rule, however, in cases when the stem ends in a consonant, we may recall the exquisite lines attributed to the death-bed of Hadrian : —
Animula vagula blandula, Hospes comesque corporis, Que nunc abibis in loca, Pallidula rigida nudula, Nec, ut soles, dabis jocos ?
42
154.
155.
156.
157.
y 158.
159.
160.
161.
154,
155. 156. 157.
158. 159.
160.
161.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Pyranga rubra (L.) V. B 220. C 107. R 161. Scarlet Tanager.
Pyranga estiva (L.) V. B 221. C 108. R 164. Summer Tanager.
Pyranga zstiva cooperi (Ridg.) Coues. B—. C 108a, R 164a. Cooper’s Tanager.
Pyranga hepatica Sw. 8B 222.0109. R 163. Hepatic Tanager.
Pyranga ludoviciana (Wils.) Bp. B 223. C 110. R 162. Louisiana Tanager.
Hirundo erythrogastra horreorum (Bartr.) Coues. B 225. C 111. R154. Barn Swallow.
Iridoprocne bicolor (V.) Coues. B 227. C 112. R 155. White-bellied Swallow.
Tachycineta thalassina (Sw.) Cab. B 228. C 113. R 156. Violet-green Swallow.
Py-ran/-ga rub/-ra. The word Pyranga has a classic twang, as if formed in part from the Gr. mip, fire; but it is a barbarous word, taken from some South American dialect. Several similar combinations of letters occur in Marcgrave. Vieillot wrote it Piranga in 1807, and Pyranga in 1816. The latter has come into general use. — The English tanager is simply altered from the South American tanagra or tangara, both of which words occur in the older authors, the latter being in general use until Linnzus, perhaps by a misprint, gave the former currency.
P. aés-ti/-va. See Dendreca, No. 111. P. a. codp/-ér-i. To Dr. J. G. Cooper, of California.
P. hé-pat!-i-ca. Gr. firap, genitive jmraros, the liver, or Lat. hepar, hepatis, the same; whence #matixds or hepaticus, the direct adjective. The allusion is to the liver-colored plumage.
P. lii-d6-vi-ci-a/-na. See Thryothorus, No. 68.
Hir-iin’-dd ér-y-thrd-gas/-tra hdr-ré-d/-riim. Lat. hirundo, a swallow, from the Gr. xeAddév, of same meaning. —Gr. épu@pds, red or ruddy, and yaorjp, the belly. — Lat. horreum, a barn, in the genitive plural. (On the etymology of hirundo, and various other, including the English, names of swallows, see Birds Col. Vall. i, 1878, p. 369.)
Ir-i-d6-pric/-né bi/-cdl-dr. Gr. *Ipis, genitive “Ip:5os, Lat. Jris, Tridis, Iris, the messenger of the gods; also the rainbow; from efpw or ép@, to announce. The allusion is to the sheen of the plumage. Gr. Mpéxvn, or Lat. Procne or Progne, a proper name, the daughter of Pandion, fabled to have been transformed into a swallow.— Lat. bicolor, two-colored.
Tach-¥-cin-é/-t& thal-ds/-si-na. Gr. raxvxiwnros, moving rapidly, 7.e., a swift runner ; Taxus, swift (Oéw, to run); «wnrhp, from kivéw, to move. —Gr. Padrdoowwos, sea-green, 6dAaoca, the sea, from 4s, the sea, or salt. Observe accentuation of tha/assina. We keep the penult of Tachyciné/ta long as being Gr. y, but are not sure that it should not be transliterated Tachycin!éta.
162.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 43
Petrochelidon lunifrons (Say) Cab. B 226. © 114. R153. Cliff or Eave Swallow.
7% y ~ 6 AVIS ECOL
Cotile riparia (L.) Boie. B 229. C 115. R 157.
We Gs. Bank Swallow.
164.
165. ae
166. ve od 167.
,168.
oe
162.
Stelgidopteryx serripennis (Aud.) Bd. B 230. C 116, R 158. Rough-winged Swallow.
Progne subis (L.) Bd. B 231. C 117. R 152. Purple Martin.
Ampelis garrulus L. B 232. C 118. R 150. Bohemian Waxwing.
Ampelis cedrorum (V.) Bd. B 233. C 119. R 151. Cedar Waxwing.
Phainopepla nitens (Sw.) Scl. B 234. C 120. R 26. Black Ptilogonys.
Pét-r6-chél-i/-d6n li/-ni-fréns. Gr. wérpa, a rock, and xedrdév, a swallow; alluding to the places where the nests are often built. — Lat. /una, the moon, that is, a crescent, and Jrons, the forehead or front ; referring to the white frontal crescent. una is contracted
: 4 ‘ from Lucina, a proper name, epithet of Juno, from duceo, I shine ; luz, light.
163. a 12 rete Torpater
164,
165.
166.
LG 168.
S-ti-le ri-par’-i-4. The generic name was originally written Cotile by Boie, afterward by him Cotyle. The latter orthography came into general use, the alleged etymology being «oTvAn, a cup, in supposed allusion to the excavations in which the bird nests. The proper orthography is Cotile, from kwrtiAds, the swallow; literally, the twitterer, babbler, prattler, from cwtiAAw, I prate. (See Wharton, Ibis, October, 1879, p. 451; and Coues, Bull. Nuttall Club, April, 1880, p. 96.) — Lat. riparia, riparian: ripa, the bank of a stream.
Stél-gi-dip/-té-ryx sér-ri-pén/-nis. Gr. oredyis or orAeyyis, a scraper; and mrépv£, wing. — Lat. serripennis, saw-feathered ; serra, a saw, penna, a feather. Both words mean sub- stantially the same thing, having reference to the peculiar structure of the outer web of the first primary.
Prog’-né siib/-is. Lat. Progne; see Iridoprocne, No. 160.— Lat. subis, a word not known except as applied by Pliny to a bird said to break eagles’ eggs; application in this case unknown.
Am/-pé-lis gar’-rii-liis. Gr. dureals, or &umedos, the grapevine; also, a small bird which frequented vineyards, by some conjectured to be the present species; dumeAiwy also occurs as the name of a bird. —Lat. garrulus, garrulous, loquacious, from garrio, I chatter (Gr. ynpdw or yaptw, I speak, yipus or yapus, voice); also, as substantive, a jay-bird, which is the implication in this case.
A. céd-rd/-riim. Lat. cedrus, genitive plural cedrorum, the cedar ; Gr. «édpos.
Pha-i-nd-pép/-14 nit/-Ens. Dr. Sclater says (Ibis, 1879, p. 223) that he formed the word from gaewds, shining, and that it should be written as above, as he originally did. This, however, is merely a poetic form, from ¢aelve, itself poetic for palyw. It would appear to be most naturally written Phenopepla, like phenomenon, phaenogamous, &e., from the same source; but if the orthography Phainopepla, in five syllables, be preserved, it can be easily defended. Gr. érAa, poetic plural of mémdos, a robe. — Lat. nitens, present participle from niteo, I shine.
44
169, 170. 7a: eeage: 173. 174, Wi7e: 176. Mee
Wyse
169.
LO:
Lele
172.
173.
174.
WO: 176.
WT 178.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Myiadestes townsendi (Aud.) Cab. B 235. C 121. R 25. Townsend’s Flycatching Thrush.
Vireo olivaceus (L.) V. B 240. C 122. R 135. Red-eyed Greenlet.
Vireo flaviviridis Cass. B 241. C —. R 136. Yellow-green Greenlet.
Vireo altiloqguus barbatulus (Cab.) Coues. B 243. C 123. R 137. Black-whiskered Greenlet.
Vireo philadelphicus Cass. B 244. C 124. R 138. Brotherly-love Greenlet.
Vireo gilvus (V.) Bp. B 245. C 125. R 139. Warbling Greenlet.
Vireo gilvus swainsoni Bd. B—. C 125a. R 1394. Western Warbling Greenlet.
Vireo flavifrons V. B 252. © 126. R 140. Yellow-throated Greenlet.
Vireo solitarius V. B 250. C 127. R 141. Blue-headed Greenlet.
Vireo solitarius cassini (Xantus) Ridg. B 251.c —. R 141a. (?) Cassin’s Greenlet.
Myi-a-dés’-tés [mweeadaystace] town’-send-i. Gr. muta, a fly, and edeorqs, an eater; €w, or €doua, I eat; see Myiodioctes, No. 146. (Not to be written My/iadectes, as if fly- “taker,” Muscicapa, from uvia and dexrhs, from b€xoua).— To J. K. Townsend, from whom Audubon received many new birds, and to whom he dedicated several.
Vir’-€-6 [vir/ryoh, not vi/reo] l-i-va/-cé-ts. Lat. wreo, a kind of bird, from vireo, I am green or flourishing. — Late Lat. ol/vaceus, olive-like, olive-colored; green obscured with neutral tint; oliva, the olive, from olea, Gr. éAala, the olive-tree; whence oleuwm, Gr. Zdaov, Eng. oil, oleaginous, &c.
V. fla-vi-vir’-i-dis. Lat. flavus, yellow, and viridis, green, from vireo. See Auriparus, No. 56. Commonly but wrongly written flavoviridis.
This species is not in the first ed. of the Check List; it has only recently been dis- covered in the United States, in Texas, by J. C. Merrill.
V. al-ti/-ld-qiitis bar-ba/-tii-liis. Lat. altus, high, from alo, I bear up, sustain, and loquus, an adjective from loguor, I speak; pronounced ahlty/lockwooce, like ventri/loquist, grandi'loquent, &c. — Lat. barbatulus, having a small beard; barbatus, bearded; barba, a beard. The allusion is to the dusky maxillary streaks.
V. phil-a-dél/-phi-citis. See Geothlypis philadelphia, No. 142.
V. gil/-viis [g hard]. Lat. gilvus, gilbus, galbus, helvus, yellowish, greenish-yellow ; German gelb, Ital. giallo, A. S. gelew, geoluwe ; related to fulvus, flavus, &e.
V. g. swain/-sén-i. To William Swainson.
V. fla/-vi-frons. Lat. flavus, yellow ; frons, forehead. See Auriparus, No. 56.
Oxns. —It would appear from B. C.V., i, 1878, p. 494, that the proper name of this species is V. Sch-r6-leii/-ciis (Gm.) Coues. Gr. dxpds, ochraceous, yellowish, and Aevxds, white.
V. so-li-ta/-ri-ts. Lat. solitarius, solitary ; solus, alone.
V. cas/-sin-i. To John Cassin, of Philadelphia, sometime the “ Nestor of American ornithology ”; the only ornithologist America ever produced who knew any consider- able number of Old World birds. — Not in the orig. ed. ; since recognized.
184,
185.
LSA
182. 183. 184. 185.
186.
187.
188.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 45
Vireo solitarius plumbeus (Coues) Allen. B —. C 127a. R 14108.
Plumbeous Greenlet.
Vireo vicinior Coues. B—. C 128. R 147.
Gray Greenlet.
Vireo noveboracensis (Gm.) Bp. B 248. C 129. R 143.
White-eyed Greenlet.
Vireo huttoni Cass. B 249. C130. R 144.
Hutton’s Greenlet.
Vireo belli Aud. B 246. C 131. R 145.
Bell’s Greenlet.
Vireo pusillus Coues. B—. C 132. R 146.
Least Greenlet.
Vireo atricapillus Woodh. B 247. C 133. R 142.
Black-capped Greenlet.
Lanius borealis V. B 236. C 134. R 148.
Great Northern Shrike; Butcherbird.
Lanius ludovicianus L. B 237. C 135. R 149.
Loggerhead Shrike.
Lanius ludovicianus excubitorides (Sw.) Coues. B 238. C135a. R149a.
V.
Vv.
White-rumped Shrike.
s. plim/-bé-tis. Lat. plumbeus, plumbeous, lead-colored ; plumbum, lead.
vi-ci/-ni-dr. Lat. comparative degree of vicinus, neighboring; vicinia, a neighborhood or Vicinity ; this from vicus, digammated from Gr. ofxos, a house. The allusion is to the close resemblance of the species to others.
. nOv-€-b6r-a-cén/-sis. Very late Latin for of, or pertaining to, New York; novus, new,
and eboracensis, pertaining to Eboracum, the old name of York, England ; Noveboracum is literally New York.
. hut/-tén-i. To William Hutton, of Monterey, California.
bél’-li. To J. G. Bell, of New York, for many years the most skilful and most distin- guished taxidermist of America.
. pu-sil/-lis. See Sitta pusilla, No. 60.
. a-tri-cap-il/-luis. Liat. ater, atra, black; the opposite of a/bus. It properly means dead
black, as niger does glossy black, which latter would have been better in this case. Capillus, hair of the head, from caput, head; whence English capillary, thready.
Lan/-i-iis bor-&-a/-lis. Lat. lanius, a butcher; from lanio, I rend, lacerate. See Falco,
No.502.— Lat. boreas, the north wind, h.e., the north; whence borealis, northern. For reason of the generic change from Col/urio of the orig. ed. of the Check List, and for Shrikes’ names in general, see Birds Colorado Valley, i, 1878, p. 537 et seq.
. la-d6-vi-ci-a/-niis. Lat. Zudovicus, Louis, a proper name. The application here is to
the Territory of Louisiana, formerly of great extent. See Thryothorus, No. 68.
. @x-clib-i-t6-ri/-dés. Lat. excubitor, a watchman, sentinel, from ex, out of, and cubitor,
one who lies down, from cubo; 7. e., an out-lier. The termination of the word is the Gr. eldos, appearance or resemblance (e%5w, I see). There is a difference in the orthography of the word: it has oftenest been written excubitoroides, and pronounced in six syllables, with the accent on the penult. But if this spelling is used, it should be excubitoroides,
46 CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
_“ 189. Hesperophona vespertina (Coop.) Bp. B 303. C 136. R 165.
Evening Grosbeak.
190. Pinicola enucleator (L.) V.. B 304. C 137. R 166. Pine Grosbeak.
191. Pyrrhula cassini (Bd.) Tristr. B—. C 138. R 167. (!A.) Cassin’s Bullfinch.
192. Passer domesticus (L.) Koch. B—. C187. R —. [Imp. and Nat.] Philip Sparrow.
with the dizresis over the 7, and consequently making seven syllables. So long a word is therefore preferably shortened by omitting the connecting vowel 0; which, with the usual change of Gr. ef to long? in Latin, gives the above spelling and pronunciation. The full number of letters in the compound is excubitorieides.
189. Hés-pér-6-phd’-na vés-pér-ti/-na. Gr. éorépa, Hesperus, the west, the place of sunset (xépa, region, being understood); hence, the evening; and gwvf, the voice; pwvéw, I speak ; ¢dw, pnul, related to gatvw, &c.— Lat. Vespertinus, pertaining to the evening, Vesperus being the same as Hesperus. — 'The genus-name is universally written Hesperi- phona, as Bonaparte originally spelled it, but the above is certainly correct, as it is pure Greek for what Vesperisona would be the Latin of. The pleonastic name signalizes a belief, formerly entertained, that the bird sings chiefly at evening. — Grosbeak or grossbeak is corrupted from the Fr. grosbec, thick-bill.
190, Pi-ni’-c6-l4 €-ni-clé-a/-tdr. Lat. pinus, a pine, and incola, an inhabitant, from colo, I cultivate ; formed like many other words in -cola, as saxicola, agricola, &e. — Lat. enucleator, one who “shells out,” or enucleates ; from enucleo, I take out the kernel; nucleus, the nucleus or kernel, this from nuxz, a nut. The two words indicate the characteristic habitat and habit of the bird.
191. Pyr/-rhii-la cas’-sin-i. Lat. pyrrhula, a bullfinch; a diminutive of Pyrrhus, a proper
name; Gr. wupfds, fiery-red, from zip, fire; in allusion to the bright color of the bird. — To John Cassin.
It is still uncertain what relation this bird may best be considered to bear to the Old World form P. coccinea, as no Alaskan specimens, since the type, have been forthcoming. We give it as it stands in the body of the orig. ed. of the Check List.
Notre. — Another species of this genus has lately been reported from Greenland by Kumlein (Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 15, p. 74; 1879) ; but the case remains very dubious.
192. Pas/-sér dém-és/-ti-citis. Many interesting words are grouped about this ubiquitous bird, which has been named in nearly or quite all civilized languages; some of them may be here noticed. — 1. Passer domesticus, literally “house sparrow,” is itself a very old Latin biblionym, though used for less than a century as a technical term. Passer is good Latin for sparrow, and particularly for this very species, which is said to have been noted, if not named, for its salacity ; but the etymology of this word is unknown to us, as it also appears to be to the authors of several lexicons; one says passer for padser, from pando, I spread. Passer seems to have become of general signification, almost as broad as English “ bird” or “ fowl.” The Ital. is passera, passere, passara, and this lan- guage also had passer domesticus in passara cazarenga. The word passes directly into the Fr. passerat, passereau, and to the Eng. technical adjective passerine, sparrow-like; while the Span. pararo (as if pacsaro) or pajaro is apparently the same. — 2. The Gr. name for this species was otpov@ds, in Aristotle; which in modern technic has become, in the form struthio, the name of the ostrich, Struthio camelus L., and has given our Eng. adjec- tive struthious, ostrich-like. The actual application to the ostrich, however, dates back to Aristotle, whose orpov0ds 6 év A:Bin, or Libyan fowl, was the ostrich — like the. Lat. passer marinus, i. q., the bird brought from over the sea.—3. The Gr. word mupyizns, from mupyos, a tower, and meaning a dweller in the tower, has been of late years used to some
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 47
193. Passer montanus (L.). B—. C—.R—._ [Imp. and Nat.]
193.
194,
/ ils)ey 196.
European Tree Sparrow.
Carpodacus purpureus (Gm.) Gr. B 305. C 139. R 168.
Purple Finch.
Carpodacus cassini Bd. B 307. C 140. R 169.
Cassin’s Purple Finch.
Carpodacus frontalis (Say) Gr. B 308. C 141. R 170.
Crimson-fronted Finch ; House Finch; Burion.
extent as the generic name, under the form Pyrgita: though having originally no refer- ence to the species whatever, it is a very apt designation of a bird which nests so habit- ually about buildings. —4. The word F’ringilla, one of a large group, giving name to the Finch family, F'ringillide, and to the English adjective fringilline, is the origin of the word finch itself; though it is only for about a century that it has had any thing to do with the present species. /’ringilla is the Latin name of the same bird that the Greeks called omi(a or omi(n, spiza, the F’. calebs L., English Chaffinch. F'ringilla or fringuilla has been derived by some from frango, I break, as the bird does seeds (just as we have in Gr. @Aumis or Opavris). But its etymology appears when we regard the non-nasalized form frigilla, from frigutio or frigultio (= fringutio or fringultio, formed like singultio, I hiccup), I twitter, chirp, stammer; these words being themselves lengthened from Srigulo, I croak, as a crow, and this from /frigo, I squeak, squeal. (Cf. Gr. ppiyw, and the actual ¢pvytdos, the name of a bird in Aristophanes, and source of the modern genus Fregilus, a jackdaw. The idea seems to be some short sharp sound, as the hissing, sizzling of something cooking, — friyo or ¢ptyw, I cook.) Fringilla reappears in several Italian forms, from two of which two series of words branch off; from such as fringuello, Jrinco, are derived, with loss of the r, Germ. find, finf, and Eng. finch ; while from such as frinsone we pass through grinson, quinson, pinson, or later Fr. pincon to Eng. spink, a name of /’. celebs. —5. An entirely different set of words gives the pedigree of modern Eng. sparrow, back from which we pass to sparrowe, or sparowe, or sparwe, Gothic sparwa or sparva, A. S. spearwa; related forms being spérr, spar, sper, spurr, spurv, sparf, spatz, sperq, sperk, sperlingk, round again to the present Germ. fperling or baus{perling, housesparrow, passer domesticus. — 6. Eng. sparrow also curiously leads us back again to Latin, through such a form as sparva, Latinized as sparvius; so, also, Falco sparverius, i. q. fringillarius, omtas, Fr. espervier or épervier, anglice sparrow-hawk.—7. There is said to be an old Flemish name mousche for this bird, which may not improbably connect with O. Fr. moucet, moisson. —8. The present Fr. is moineau, or moineau franc, or moineau de ville. — 9. Several languages have applied cant names to this sturdy vulgarian; Span. gorrion, thief, rogue, scamp; Fr. gamin; American tramp, hoodlum. —10. An onomatopeia as interesting as Fringilla itself has arisen from the sharp, abrupt, dissyllabic note. This is represented by the syllables yellop (cf. Gr. éAddm-os), yellup, or phyllup, easily becoming Philip. Early in the sixteenth century appear the “ Boke of Phyllup Sparrowe” and the “Praise of Philip Sparrow”; and this name is Shakspearian. Introduced, but now thoroughly naturalized every where.
P. m6n-ta’-nis. Lat. montanus, of mountains.
Not in the orig. ed. ; since introduced from Europe, and naturalized in some places.
Car-po/-da-ciis pir-piir’-é-tis. Gr. capzds, a fruit, and dd«os, from ddxvw, I bite; 2d aorist
%axov, or Sdxov. — Lat. purpureus, purple; Gr. mopptpeos, English porphyry, &e. ; (i muppdpos (mip, pépw) the fire-bearer, an epithet of Prometheus. — The quantity of the penult is in question; we usually hear carpoda’-cus in this country ; but carpd'-ducus is preferable.
C. cas/-sin-i. To John Cassin.
C. frdn-td/-lis. Lat. frontalis, relating to the forehead ; frons, forehead, front.
48
:197.
198.
199.
200.
201.
202.
203.
204.
197.
198.
199.
ZN.
202.
203.
204.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Carpodacus. frontalis rhodocolpus (Cab.) Ridg. B—. C 141a. R 170a.
Rose-breasted Finch.
Loxia leucoptera Gm. B 319. C 142. R173.
White-winged Crossbill. ‘
Loxia curvirostra americana (Wils.) Coues. B 318. C 143. R 172. Common American Crossbill. Loxia curvirostra mexicana (Strickl.) Coues. B—. C 148a. R 172a,
Mexican Crossbill.
Leucosticte atrata Ridg. B—.C —. R176.
Ridgway’s Rosy Finch.
Leucosticte australis Allen. B—. C —. R177.
Allen’s Rosy Finch.
Leucosticte tephrocotis Sw. B 322. C 144. R175.
Swainson’s Rosy Finch.
Leucosticte tephrocotis litoralis (Bd.) Coues. B—. C — R 175a.
Baird’s Rosy Finch.
C. f. rh6é-d6-cdl/-ptis. Gr. pddov, the rose, and KoAzos, the breast; in allusion to the rose-
red color of that part. The form C. f. hamorrhous, given in the orig. ed. of the Check List, is the Mexican race; the above should replace No. 141a.
Lox’-i-4 leii-cOp/-té-ra. Gr. Aotias, an epithet of Apollo, whose oracles were sometimes
obscure or equivocal; from Aogos, oblique, devious, deviating from a straight line; very pertinent to the Crossbill. — Gr. Aevids, white, and mrepov, wing.
. Cur-vi-rés/-tra. Lat. curvus, curved; and rostrum, bill. In this and numberless similar
cases of a noun compounded with an antecedent adjective, the whole word is treated as an adjective, capable of inflection according to gender. Thus curvirostra is as if curviros- ter or curvirostr-us, -a, -um. So we even find longicaud-us, -a, -um, like auricom-us, -a, -um, and the Vergilian centiman-us, -a, -um. In such a case as the present, the adjectival form curvirostris (like -ventris) might be more elegant. But cwrvirostra has the sanction of several centuries’ use as a noun, having apparently been invented as a Latin synonym of Loria; it is not, however, classic. Other synonyms are crucirostra, crucifera, cruciata ; Fr. Bec-croisé, Germ. Kreubfdnabel, &e.
L. c. méx-i-ca/-na. Lat. mexicana, of Mexico. See Sialia, No. 28.
Leii-c6-stic’-té a-tra’-ta. Gr. Aevxds, white, and otierh, variegated; from ori¢w, I punc-
ture, brand, or mark. — Lat. atrata, blackened; a participial adjective, from an obsolete or rather hypothetical verb atro.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List; described from Colorado by Ridgway, Amer. Sportsm., iv, No. 16, p. 241, July 18, 1874.
. alis-tra/-lis. Lat. australis, southern; from auster, the south wind, hot and dry; this
from Gr. avw, I dry up or parch. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List, as then not supposed valid.
. téph-rd-cd/-tis. Gr. reps, gray, ashy, from téppa, ashes; and-ods, genitive-wrds, the
ear; the connective consonant c being introduced for euphony.
. t. li-t6r-a/-lis. Lat. litoralis, littoral ; from litus, the shore, of sea, lake, or river. The
word is commonly written littoralis, but preferably as above. Not in the first ed. of the Check List, as not then supposed to be valid.
205.
206.
207.
208.
209.
210.
Aik ale
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 49
Leucosticte griseinucha (Brandt) Bd. B 323. C 144a. R 174. Brandt’s Rosy Finch.
Leucosticte arctoa (Pall.) Bp. B 324. c 145. Rk —.
_ Pallas’s, Rosy Finch.
CANCEL
4zZ¢iethus linaria (L.) Cab. B 320. C 146, 146a. R 179.
Common Red-poll.
4Xgiothus linaria holboelli (Brehm) Coues. B—. C —. R 1794. (?)
Holboll’s Red-poll.
4égiothus hornemanni (Holb.) Coues. B 321. C —. R178. (G.)
Greenland Mealy Red-poll.
4égiothus exilipes Coues. B —. C 146d. R 178a.
American Mealy Red-poll.
Linota flavirostris brewsteri (Ridg.) Coues. B—. C 147. R 180. (?)
Brewster’s Linnet.
. gris-€i-nii/-cha. Lat. griseus, gray, and nucha, the nape or scruff of the neck. Neither
part of the word is classic ; griseus is Latinized from such a word as seen in Fr. gris, Ital. griso, English grisly ; and nucha, a technical word in ornithology, is Latinized from Fr. nuque, the nape (A. S. enep, a knob, knoll), which is the same as Gaelic enoc, Welsh cnwe. Nape is thus closely related to neck itself; A. S. hnecca, Dan. nakke, Dutch nak or nek, Germ. nacen, &ce.
. arc-t6/-4. Gr. apxros, a bear; also, the constellation; hence, the north; adjective
apkT@os, same as apxtixds, northern, whence Lat. arctous and arcticus, of same signi- fication.
A€g=f=6-thits li-na/-ri-a. Gr. A’yio#os, given by Cabanis as a proper name: supposably
A.
derived from aiyis, a goat-skin, or egis, and ri@yui, to put or place, as if the shield- bearer, like Agisthus. The application is far from being evident. The word is probably enly another form of av¥yi6os, the name of an unknown bird, occurring in Aristotle, Hist. ix. 1, conjectured by some to be this very species. — Lat. linaria ; from linum (Gr. Atvoy), flax; the root is seen in many words, as line, linear, linen, lint, linnet, &e.
. 1. h6l’-boél-li. To Carl y. Holboll, a Danish naturalist, chiefly known in ornithology
for his researches in Greenland. Not recognized in the first ed. of the Check List.
hodrn’/-é-man-ni. To Hornemann, who had to do with Greenland birds.
This species is not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. It is only American inasmuch as it is found in Greenland. It is absolutely confined to that country, and is the bird usually quoted as Greenlandic “ canescens,”
&x-il/-I-pés. Lat. ezilis (for exigilis, from exigo), small, slender, &c., and pes, foot. See Ardetta, No. 667.
Li-nd/-ta fla-vi-rds/-tris brews/-tér-i. See Linaria, above: the word is not classic, being
directly Latinized from the Fr. linotte, one of the numberless words from linum, linea, &¢c.— Lat. flavirostris, yellow-billed.— To William Brewster, of Cambridge, Mass., an excellent ornithologist.
This is questionably North American, and questionably a good species.
f
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
‘
PX. Chrysomitris pinus (Bartr.) Bp. B 317. C 148. R 185.
Pine Linnet; American Siskin.
®
213. Astragalinus tristis (L.) Cab. B 313. C 149. RK 181.
American Goldfinch.
214, Astragalinus lawrencii (Cass.) Coues. B 316. C 150. R 183.
Lawrence’s Goldfinch.
215. Astragalinus psaltria (Say) Coues. B 314. C 151. R 182.
Arkansaw Goldfinch.
216. Astragalinus psaltria arizonee Coues. B—. C 151a. R 182a.
Arizona Goldfinch.
212. Chry-sd-mi’-tris pi/-nis. Gr. ypvoouirpis, having a golden head-dress or girdle ; xpucéos,
golden, and puirpa,a mitre. There are other forms of the word, varying in the vowels, as Xpuoouitpns and xpvcou7Tpis. ‘The latter, which occurs in Aristotle, is translated aurivittis by Gaza; as Sundwall remarks, heightening the probability that it is the same word as xpuvoouitpns, and is based upon the bright appearance of the European Goldfinch, F’. carduelis L.— Some other names of classic origin for the Goldfinch and its relatives may be here conveniently noted. Aristotle had three species of ‘ Acanthophaga” as he called them ; 7. e., birds living upon prickly plants; as we should say, “thistle-birds.” 1. One of these was the @paumis or @Aumls, concerning which see Geothlypis, No. 141. 2. The Xpvcoujrpis, as just said. 3. His axavéls, which was undoubtedly the Fringilla canna- bina L. This in Latin becomes spinus, of late years taken as the specific name of F’. spinus L.— The exact Latin of “ thistle-bird” is carduelis, occurring in Pliny; it is from carduus, a thistle, and reappears in numerous shapes; as Ital. carduello, cardello ; carduelino, cardellino (compare Cardellina, No. 150), and also gardello and gardellino; Fr. chardonneret, &c. Aristotle speaks of the sharp voice of his éxav@is — Avyupd; whence ligurinus, another of the many names for birds of this kind. So have we later derived siskin from the sharp note; Swedish siska, Dutch sijsken, Germ. jiefig, Polish czyz, &e. — Another Greek name for some kind of thistle-bird, perhaps the European Goldfinch, is aorpayadivos, in 1850 applied by Cabanis to the American Goldfinch, as a generic term: see next word. — Lat. pinus, a pine-tree.
213. As-tra-ga-li/-niis tris/-tis. Gr. aorpayadivos is given by Cabanis as the word, and as a
214. A. Osea.
216. “A:
name of a thistle-bird; it is evidently an adjectival form from daorpdyados, a die, one of the ankle-bones, and also, in Dioscorides, the name of some kind of plant; whence the modern botanical genus Astragalus. The original application of aotpayadtvos is undoubtedly to some bird that lived upon, or frequented, the plant in mention, its recent transference to an American Goldfinch being of course arbitrary. When the present species was first described it was called chardonneret de I Amérique, t. e., carduelis ameri- cana: see No. 212. — Lat. tristis, sad, in allusion to the plaintive cry of the bird.
law-rén’-ci-i. To George N. Lawrence, of New York, the eminent ornithologist.
psal’-tri-4. See explanation of Psaltriparus, No. 53. Psaltria is not a Lat. adj. to be made agreeable in gender with Astragalinus, but a Greek noun, WéAtpia, signifying a female lutist. ‘“ Arkansaw” is not, as it would seem to be, “ Kansas” with a prefix, nor is it the name by which the aborigines of that country knew themselves; nor is “Kansas” the right name of any tribe of Indians. The meaning of neither of these
words is known. “Arkansaw” is preferable to Arkansas, as nearer the original “ Arkanso.”
p. 4-ri-zd/-naé. Named after the Territory of Arizona, where discovered in 1864. See Peucea, No. 258.
BLT.
Bs.
222.
223.
224,
PM ET 218.
219.
) 220.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 51
Astragalinus psaltria mexicanus (Sw.) Coues. B 315. C 1510, R 182s, Mexican Goldfinch.
Astragalinus notatus (Du Bus) Coues. B 310. C —. R 184. (!M.) a aie ee Goldfinch.
Plectrophanes nivalis (L.) Meyer. B325. C 152. R 186.
D yy Bunting ; Snowalake. AA PATAAL Ci
{eSponicus (L.) Kaup. B 326. C 153. R 187. Lapland Longspur.
Centrephaneés pictus (Sw.) Cab. B 327. C 154. R 188. Painted Longspur.
Centrophanes ornatus (Towns.) Cab. B 328, 329. C 155. R 189. Chestnut-collared Longspur.
Rhynchophanes maccowni (Lawr.) Bd. B 330. C 156. R 190. Maccown’s Longspur.
Passerculus bairdi (Aud.) Coues. B 331. C 157, 157bis. R 191. Baird’s Savanna Sparrow.
A, p. méx-i-ca/-na. Lat. mexicanus, of Mexico. See Sialia, No. 28.
A. not-a/-ttis. Lat. notatus, noted, marked; noto, I make note of. In allusion to the dis- tinction between this species and C’. magellanicus. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Said by Audubon to have been actually taken in ee (2)
Pléc-tro/- -pha-nés niv-a’-lis. The Gr. rAnkrpov, or Lat. plectrum, was an instrument for striking the lyre, from mAjoow, I strike; also used for a quill, a spur, &c.; the meaning in this case is the hind claw of, the bird, Which is remarkably long and straight. The rest of the word is from paiuw, to. appear, “to seem, &c., the claw in mention being likened to the instrument spoken of. Obs. There is continual difference in opinion respecting the pronunciation of this and similar words, according to whether we consider them as Greek or as Latin. The rule in Greek would retain the accent upon the root of each word entering into the composition, giving Plec’-tro-pha!/-nes. But in Latinizing it is allowable, and indeed preferable, to accent as above; as we have also done in the-eases of /Helmin- tho'phaga, Lopho'phanes, &c. The gender of the many coined words ending in -phanes is practically in question among ornithologists; we make them masculine.
Gén-tri!-pha-nés lap-pdn/-i-ciis. Gr. «évrpov, a prick, nail, claw, &c., from kevréw, I
RAK. A P= =F hur _prick or goad. The reference, as in the case of Plectrophanes, is to the long hind claw.
ys
221,
222. 223.
224,
~ See Plectrophanes. —Lat. lapponicus, pertaining to Lapland, formerly Lapponia.
C. pic/-tiis. Lat. pictus, painted, from pingo, I paint or ornament; in allusion to the variegated colors.
C. dr-na/-tiis. Lat. ornatus, adorned, decorated, from orno, I ornament.
Rhyn-ch6/-pha-nés miac-cdwn/-i. Gr. pvyxos, snout, muzzle, beak, and ¢alyw; in allu- sion to the large bill. See Plectrophanes. —To Capt. J. P. McCown, then of the U.S. Army.
Pas-sér’-cti-liis baird/-i. Lat. passerculus, a little sparrow; diminutive of passer.— To Spencer F. Baird, long time the leader in North American ornithology.
Centronyx ochrocephalus, No. 157 bis of the first ed., is this species in fall plumage.
231.
232.
233.
234,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Passerculus princeps Mayn. B—. C 158. R 192. Ipswich Savanna Sparrow.
Passerculus sandvicensis (Gm.) Bd. B 333. C 159d. R 193. Sandwich Savanna Sparrow.
Passerculus sandvicensis savana (Wils.) Ridg. B332. C 159. R 193a. Common Savanna Sparrow.
Passerculus sandvicensis anthinus (Bp.) Coues. B 334. C 159a. R 194. Pipit Savanna Sparrow.
Passerculus sandvicensis alaudinus (Bp.) Ridg. B 335. C —. R 1930. Lark Savanna Sparrow.
Passerculus rostratus (Cass.) Bd. B 336. C 160. R 196. Beaked Savanna Sparrow.
Passerculus guttatus Lawr. B—. C 160a. R195. St. Lucas Savanna Sparrow.
Pocecetes gramineus (Gm.) Bd. B 337. C161. R 197. Bay-winged Bunting; Grass Finch.
Pocecetes gramineus confinis Bd. B—. C 161a. R 197a. Western Grass Finch.
Coturniculus passerinus (Wils.) Bp. B 338. C 162. R 198. Yellow-winged Sparrow.
P. prin’-céps. Lat. princeps, first, principal; from primus, first, and -ceps.
P. sand-vi-cén/-sis. Named after Sandwich Island, one of the Kurile or Aleutian Archi- pelago.
P. s. sa-va/-na. Properly Span. sabana or savana, anglicized savanna or savannah, a meadow. As a quasi-Latin word, it should have but one n, as in the Spanish. The quantity of the penult is marked by the general rule for accentuation in Spanish, that words ending in a vowel have the accent on the penult.
P. s. an-thi/-niis. Arbitrarily formed from anthus, a pipit, which see, No, 89.
P. s. al-atid-i/-niis. Arbitrarily formed from Lat. alauda, a lark ; this from the Celtic al, high, and aud, song.
Not in the orig. ed., as then not recognized as valid.
P. rds-tra/-ttis. Lat. rostratus, beaked, 7.e., having a large beak ; rostrum, a beak; this from rodo, to gnaw, corrode, &ce.
P. giit-ta/-tiis. Lat. guttatus, spotted, speckled; from gutta, a drop; as if marked with droppings.
P5-0@!-cé-tés gra-min/-é-tis. Gr. mda, rola, én, olin, grass, herbage; and oikérns, an inhabitant; from ofcos, a dwelling. The orthography of this word has been unsettled: it was first written Poocetes by Baird in 1858, and has since been variously spelled. The stem of the first word is mo, giving po-; and otxérns becomes in Latin ecetes; the above form seems eligible, as first emended by Sclater in 1859. It may be susceptible, but not preferably, of further contraction into Pacetes. — Lat. gramineus, grassy, figura- tively applied to a bird that lives much in the grass ; gramen, grass.
P. g. con-fi/-nis. Lat. con/inis, like affinis, allied to, &c.; con, with, and finis, the boundary, limit, edge, or end of a thing.
Co-tiir-ni/-cii-liis pas-sér-i/-niis. Arbitrary diminutive of cotwrnix, a quail; said to be so called from the resemblance of the sound of its voice to the sound of the word. — Passerinus, an arbitrary adjective from passer, a sparrow; sparrowlike.
235.
236. 237.
238.
239.
240.
241.
242.
243. 244,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
on Co
Coturniculus passerinus perpallidus Ridg. B—. C 162a. R 1984. Bleached Yellow-winged Sparrow.
Coturniculus henslowi (Aud.) Bp. B 339. C 163. R 199. Henslow’s Sparrow.
Coturniculus lecontii (Aud.) Bp. B 340. C 164. R 200. Le Conte’s Sparrow.
Ammodramus maritimus (Wils.) Sw. B 342. C 165. R 202. Seaside Finch.
Ammodramus maritimus nigrescens Ridg. B —. C 165a. R 203. Floridan Seaside Finch,
Ammodramus caudacutus (Wils.) Sw. B 341. C166. R 201. Sharp-tailed Finch.
Ammodramus caudacutus nelsoni Allen. B—. GC —. R 201a. Nelson’s Sharp-tailed Finch.
Melospiza lincolni (Aud.) Bd. B 368. C 167. R 234. Lincoln’s Song Sparrow.
Melospiza palustris (Bartr.) Bd. B 369. C 168. R 233. Swamp Song Sparrow.
Melospiza fasciata (Gm.) Scott. B 363. C 169. R 231. Song Sparrow.
C. p. pér-pal’-li-dis. Lat. pallidus, pallid, pale, and the intensive particle per. C. hén’/-slow-i. To Prof. J. S. Henslow, of Cambridge, Eng. C. 1é-c6n/-ti-i. To Dr. John L. Le Conte, of Philadelphia.
Am-md/-dra-miis mir-it'-i-miis. Gr. duos, sand, sea-sand; for the rest of the word, see under Peucedramus, No. 110. The name was originally written as above by Swainson, and we see no necessity of changing it to Ammodromus. It is commonly accented on the penult. — Lat. maritimus, maritime ; mare, the sea.
A. m. nig-rés/-céns. Lat. nigrescens, present participle of nigresco, I grow black; niger, black.
A. caiid-a-cii/-tiis [kowdakootus not cordakewtus]. Lat. cauda, tail, and acutus, acute, sharp; acus, a pin or point, Gr. ak or axis, whence the Lat. verb acuo, of which acutus is the perfect participle.
A. c. nél/-sén-i. To E. W. Nelson, of Illinois, who discovered it near Chicago.
Not in the orig. ed. Since described by Allen, Pr. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., xvii, 1875, p. 93.
Mél-5-spi/-za lin/-cél-ni. Gr. uédos, a song, melody, and oma or ori¢n, some small bird ; from omi(w, I chirp. Not to be confounded, as some writers have done, with om(las, a kind of hawk. The emia of Aristotle is supposed to be Fringilla celebs. —To Robert Lincoln, sometime a companion of Audubon. —In strictness, the above generic name should be pronounced melospeedzah; and the / in lincolni be heard.
M. pal-is!-tris. Lat. palustris, pertaining to aswamp; from palus, a swamp.
M. fas-ci-a/-ta. Lat. fasciatus, striped ; fascis, a bundle of fagots. The allusion is to the indistinct bands upon the tail feathers; so obsolete are they, in most cases, that it is only recently that it has been admitted that this is the species described by Gmelin. But the markings are as obvious, in some cases, as those on the tail of Chamea fasciata. The species is given as M/. melodia in the orig. ed. of the Check List.
54
245.
246.
247.
248.
249.
250.
- R201.
252.
253.
245.
246. 247, 248.
249.
250.
251.
252.
253.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Melospiza fasciata fallax (Bd.) Ridg. B 367. © 169a. R 231a.
Gray Song Sparrow.
Melospiza fasciata guttata (Nutt.) Ridg. B—. C 169d. R 231d.
Oregon Song Sparrow.
Melospiza fasciata rufina (Brandt) Ridg. B 366. C 169c. R 231e.
Rufous Song Sparrow.
Melospiza fasciata heermanni (Bd.) Ridg. B 364. C 169d. R 2316.
Heermann’s Song Sparrow.
Melospiza fasciata samuelis ( Bd.) Ridg. B 343, 365. C 169. R 281c.
Samuels’ Song Sparrow.
Melospiza cinerea (Gm.) Ridg. B—. C 169% R 232.
Bischoff’s Song Sparrow.
Peuceea zstivalis (Licht.) Cab. B 370. C 170. R 226.
Bachman’s Summer Finch.
Peuceea zestivalis illinoensis Ridg. B—. C —. R 226a.
Illinois Summer Finch.
Peuceea zestivalis arizonee Ridg. B—. C 170a. R 227.
Arizona Summer Finch.
M. f. fal/-lax. Lat. fallax, false, fallacious, deceitful; in allusion to the perplexity attend-
S
ing the attempt to distinguish it specifically from M. fasciata.
. f. giit-ta/-ta. Lat. guttatus, spotted ; gutta, a drop. . f£. ra-fi’-na. Lat. rufus, reddish, of which rufinus is an arbitrary form.
. f. heér/-man-ni. To Dr. A. L. Heermann, of Philadelphia, sometime naturalist of the
Pacific R. R. Survey.
. f. sam-t-é/-lis. To E. Samuels. Samuelis is more euphonic than the usual form
samuelsi would be. This is M/. gouldii of the first ed. of the Check List, the name now adopted having priority.
. cin-ér/-&-tis. Lat. cinereus, ashy(-colored): from cinis, genitive cineris, ash. So cin-
der, in-cin-erate, &c.
This is M. insignis Bd. of the first ed. of the Check List. As Ridgway has shown (Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 3) the “Cinereus Finch” of Pennant, on which Gmelin named a Fringilla cinerea, from Unalashka, is this bird.
Peii-caé/-4 aés-ti-va/-lis. Gr. wevxf, a pine; supposed to be from vx, to prick, in allu-
sion to the “needles” of this tree. Lat. e@stivalis = estivus, pertaining to summer ; estas, summer.
. a. i-li-nd-én/-sis. To the State of Illinois, with the termination -ensis, indicating
locality. Illinois is the French corruption of the name by which the aborigines called themselves — Illini, “the men.”
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List; since described by Ridgway, Bull. Nutt. Club, iv, 1879, p. 219.
. a. Z-ri-zd/-naé. To the Territory of Arizona. Arizona is probably a corruption of
Orazona, the significance of which is unknown; but it may be observed that zona is the word in the Opata language for the fruit of the mezcal, a characteristic product of the region.
254.
255.
256.
257.
262.
254, 255.
256.
257.
258.
259. 260.
261.
262.
ce] Qn
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Peuczea cassini (Woodh.) Bd. B 371. C 170bis. R 228. Cassin’s Summer Finch,
Peuczea ruficeps (Cass.) Bd. B 372. C171. R 230. Rufous-crowned Summer Finch,
Peuceza ruficeps boucardi (Scl.) Ridg. B—. C —. R 230a, Boucard’s Summer Finch.
Peuceza carpalis Coues. B —. C 17lbis. R 229. Bendire’s Summer Finch.
Amphispiza bilineata (Cass.) Coues. B 355. C 172. R 224, Black-throated Finch.
Amphispiza belli (Cass.) Coues. B 356. C 173. R 225. Bell’s Finch.
Amphispiza belli nevadensis Ridg. B—. C 173a. R 2254, Nevada Finch.
Junco hiemalis (L.) Scl. B 354. C174. R 217. Common Snowbird.
Junco hiemalis aikeni Ridg. B—. C 174a. R 216. White-winged Snowbird.
P. cas/-sin-i. To John Cassin, of Philadelphia.
P. ri/-fi-céps. Lat. rufus, reddish, and -ceps, a termination denoting the head; from Kepadn. j
P. r. boii-car’-di. To Adolphe Boucard, a French naturalist, who collected in Mexico and Central America.
P. car-pa/-lis. Gr. xapwés, fruit, berry, grain; also, the wrist; Latinized as carpus. The derivation supposed to be kdépgw, I gather, as fruit; Lat. carpo, I take, seize. The quasi- Latin carpus is only used as signifying the wrist; the adjective carpalis is an arbitrary form, denoting of or pertaining to the wrist; carpus and carpal are common terms in anatomy. The allusion is to the bright color on the carpal-joint of the bird’s wing.
Am-phi-spi/-z4 bi-lin-é-a/-ta. Gr. dud/, on both sides, and omi(a, a finch; in allusion to the close relation of the genus to those about it. See Melospiza, No. 242. Lat. bilineata, two-lined ; lis, twice, and lineatus, striped ; linea, a line: see Linaria, No. 207.
This is the Poospiza bilineata of the first ed. of the Check List.
A. bél/-li. To J. G. Bell, of New York.
A. b. n&év-a-dén!-sis. To the Territory of Nevada. It were better written nivadensis, in Latin, but is directly from the Spanish adjective nevada, snowy, white as snow ; Lat. niveus, snowy, from nix, genitive, nivis, snow. The Territory was named for the snow- capped peaks of its Sierras Nevadas.
Jin/-cd [pronounced yoonco] hi-é-ma/-lis. Lat. juncus, a reed or rush; cf. jungo, I join, junctus, joined; either, reeds growing densely together, or used as withes to bind with ? — For hiemalis, see Anorthura, No. 76. J. h. ai/-kén-i. To Charles E. Aiken, of Colorado, its discoverer. This and several other connecting forms of Junco (Nos. 264, 266, 267) are not in the orig. ed. of the Check List.
56 &
7283. 264, 265. 266. 267. 268, 269.
p270.
Bil,
272.
263.
264. 265.
266. 267.
268.
269,
270. 271.
272.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Junco hiemalis oregonus (Towns.) Coues. B 352. 0 175. R 218. Oregon Snowbird,
Junco hiemalis annectens (Bd.) Coues. B—. C—-. R 219. Pink-sided Snowbird.
Junco hiemalis caniceps (Woodh.) Coues. B 353. C 176. R 220. Gray-headed Snowbird.
Junco hiemalis dorsalis (Henry) Coues. B 351. Cc —. R 221. Red-backed Snowbird.
Junco hiemalis cinereus (Sw.) Coues. B 350. C —. R 222. Cinereous Snowbird.
Spizella monticola (Gm.) Bd. B 357. C177. R 210. Tree Chipping Sparrow.
Spizella domestica (Bartr.) Coues. B 359. C178. R 211. Chipping Sparrow ; Hairbird.
Spizella domestica arizonee Coues. B—. C 178a. R 21 1a. Arizona Chipping Sparrow.
Spizella agrestis (Bartr.) Coues. B 358. C 179. R 214. Field Chipping Sparrow.
Spizella pallida (Sw.) Bp. B 360. C180. R 212. Clay-colored Chipping Sparrow.
J. h. Gr-€/-g6-ntis. To the Territory of the Oregon. The name is much in dispute; by some derived from the name of a plant (origanum) growing there. It is probably, how- ever, the Algonkin name of the “ great river,’ the Columbia.
J. h. an-néc/-téns. Present participle of annecto, I join together, connect, annex; ad, to, and necto, I fasten, join. The bird is very closely related to several others.
J. h. ca’-ni-céps. Lat. canus, hoary, grayish white, and -ceps, the termination indicating head, from keparn. ®
J. h. do6r-sa’-lis. Lat. dorsum, the back, whence the late Latin adjective, dorsalis.
J. h. cin-€r/-&-tis. Lat. cinereus, ashy (-colored) ; cinis, ash.
The true Mexican cinereus has been found in the United States (Arizona) since the orig. ed. of the Check List appeared.
Spiz-él’-14 [pronounced speedzaylla] m6n-ti/-c5-14. An arbitrary diminutive, in Latin form, from Gr. ovi¢a, a finch. — Lat. monticola, a mountain-dweller, from mons, genitive montis, @ mountain, and colo, I dwell. ons is from a root min, whence emineo, for exam- ple, I project ; eminent, imminent, prominent, and also the deponent verb minor, to threaten, whence minatory, &c., are all allied.
S. dém-és/-ti-ca. Lat. domestica, from domus, a house.
This is S. socialis of the orig. ed. of the Check List.
S. d. a-ri-zd’/-naé. To the Territory of Arizona. See Peucea, No. 253.
S. ag-rés-tis. Lat. agrestis, of or pertaining to a field; ager, a field, supposed by some to be related to ago, as something that may be worked ; others say from the Gr. aypés, land. This is S. pusilla of the orig. ed. of the Check List.
S. pal’-li-da. Lat. pallidus, pale, pallid.
276.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 57
Spizella breweri Cass. B 361. C 180a. R 212.
Brewer’s Chipping Sparrow.
Spizella atrigularis (Cab.) Bd. B 362. C 181. R 215.
Black-chinned Chipping Sparrow.
Zonotrichia albicollis (Gm.) Bp. B 349. C 182. R 209.
White-throated Crown Sparrow.
Zonotrichia leucophrys (Forst.) Sw. B 345. C 183. R 206.
White-browed Crown Sparrow.
Zonotrichia leucophrys intermedia Ridg. B 346. C 1836. R 207a.
Intermediate Crown Sparrow.
Zonotrichia gambeli Nutt. B 346. C 183a. R 207.
Gambel’s Crown Sparrow.
Zonotrichia coronata (Pall.) Bd. B 347. C 184. R 208.
Golden Crown Sparrow.
Zonotrichia querula (Nutt.) Gamb. B 348. C 185. R 205.
Harris’s Crown Sparrow.
Chondestes grammicus (Say) Bp. B 344, C186. R 204, 204a.
Lark Finch.
273. S. bréw'-Er-i. To Thomas Mayo Brewer, of Boston, long the leading odlogist of the
274.
275.
276.
Uc
278.
279.
280.
281.
United States. This is given in the first ed. of the Check List as a var. of pallida.
S. 4-tri-giil-a/-ris. Lat. ater, atra, atrum, black ; and gularis, pertaining to the throat; gula,
the throat, gullet.
Z6-nG-trich’-i-4 [pronounced Dzonotreekeya] al-bi-cdl/-lis. Gr. (évn, a girdle, band,
Zz.
zone, and tpixds or Tprxids, some kind of bird; in allusion to the conspicuously banded heads of sparrows of this group. Or, the latter part of the word may be directly from tpixtas (Opit, genitive rp:xés), hairy; i.e. having the head striped. — Lat. albicollis, white-throated ; albus, white, and collum, the collar, neck.
. leti-cd’/-phrys. Gr. Aevxds, white, and éppus, eyebrow.
. 1. in-tér-mé&d/-1-4. Lat. intermedius, intermediate, between two things; inter, between,
among, and medius, middle; related to Gr. uéoos, of same meaning. Not in the orig. ed. ; since discriminated both from leucophrys and from gambelt.
. gam/-bél-i. To William Gambel, of Philadelphia, one of the pioneers in Californian
ornithology. In the orig. ed. this is given as a var. of leucophrys; since decided to be distinct.
. cdr-6-na’-t&. Lat. coronatus, crowned, participle of corono, I crown; corona, a crown.
Coronis or Kopévis was the name of a Thessalian princess ; also, a scroll with which writers marked the end of a piece of writing —“ finis coronat opus.” Corone or kopavn was also a crow or raven, into which the princess was fabled to have been transformed by her spouse Apollo, and survives in ornithology in the term Corvus corone L.
quér’/--14. Lat. querulus or querulosus, plaintive, querulous ; from queror, to complain, lament.
Chin-dés/-tés gram/-mi-ciis. Gr. xévdpos, cartilage ; also, a kind of grain; -estes is from
the root %w, I eat. Is not the word more properly to be written chondrestes ? We suppose it to be masculine. — Lat. grammicus, from gramma, a line, word, mark, in allusion to the
285.
286.
282.
283.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Passerella iliaca (Merr.) Sw. B 374. C 188. R 235.
Kox Sparrow.
Passerella iliaca unalascensis (Gm.) Ridg. B 3875. C 189. R 235a.
Townsend’s Fox Sparrow.
Passerella iliaca schistacea ( Bd.) All. B 376. C 189a. R 235c.
Slate-colored Fox Sparrow.
Passerella iliaca megarhyncha (Bd.) Hensh. B—. C —. R 235d.
Large-billed Fox Sparrow.
Calamospiza bicolor (Towns.) Bp. B 377. C 190. R 256.
Lark Bunting.
Spiza americana (Gm.) Bp. B 3878. C 191. R 254.
Black-throated Bunting.
Spiza townsendi (Aud.) Ridg. B 379. C 192. R 255. (?)
Townsend’s Bunting.
stripes on the head; Gr. ypduma, ypaymixds. Usually written grammaca or grammacus, for which there is no authority. And even the corrected form is bad enough; for grammicus does not mean /ineatus, striped, marked with lines, but /inearis, linear, having the quality of a line.
Pas-sér-él/-14 i-li’-4-ca. An arbitrary diminutive of Lat. passer, like spizella from spiza.
— For iliaca, see Turdus iliacus, No. 4. Applicability of the name inobvious ; it may be intended to note some resemblance to the thrush in mention, or refer to the conspicuous markings of the flanks.
. i. i-na-las-cén/-sis. The name of the Aleutian Island for which this species is named,
has no settled orthography: Unalashka, Unalaschka, Unalascha, Ouna-, Oona-, Aoona-, Aona-, &c. In the present case, Pennant wrote Unalascha Bunting, of which Gmelin made Emberiza unalaschcensis, and was nearly followed by Ridgway; but the word may be euphonized as above, just as we have alascensis as the name of a wren, No. 78.
This stands as Passerella townsendii in the orig. ed.
284, P. i. schis-ta/-cé-3. Lat. (late) schistaceus, slaty, relating to slate; in this case, in color;
285,
schistos or ox.74s, split, cleft, or fissile, capable of easy cleavage, as slate-stone is. The same stem is seen in schism, schismatic. This stands as P. townsendii var. schistacea in the orig. ed.
P. i. m&ég-4-rhyn/-cha. Gr. péya, great, large, and piyxos, Lat. rhynchus, snout, muzzle,
beak. More exactly to be written megalorhyncha. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List ; since revived by H. W. Henshaw.
286, C&l-a-m6-spiz/-4 bi/-cdl-dr. Lat. calamus or Gr. xdéAauos, a reed, rush, cane, flag; and
spiza. See under Passer, No. 192, and Melospiza, No. 242.— Lat. bicolor, two-colored ;. bis, twice ; in allusion to the black-and-white -of-the-male.
‘287. Spiz/-& [pronounced Speedzah] 4m-ér-i-ca/-na. See under Melospiza, No. 242.
This stands as Euspiza amer. in the orig. ed. For the change, see Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 3.
288. S. town/-sénd-i. To J. K. Townsend.
Given as Euspiza towns. in the orig. ed. No second specimen of this alleged species is known, and it is not improbable that the type came from an egg laid by S. americana. But even such immediate ancestry would not forbid recognition of “specific characters ;” the solitary bird having been killed, it represents a species which died at its birth.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. o9
a
ry Lape &
Pere 289. Zamelodia ludoviciana (L.) Coues. B 380. C193. R 244, Rose-breasted Song Grosbeak.
va 290. Zametodia melanocephala (Sw.) Coues. B 381. C194. R 245. Black-headed Song Grosbeak.
291. Guiraca coerulea (L.) Sw. B 382. C195. R 246. Blue Grosbeak.
292. Passerina ciris (L.) Gray. B 384. C196. R 251. Painted Finch; Nonpareil.
293. Passerina versicolor (Bp.) Gray. B 385. C 197. R 250. Versicolor Painted Finch.
-294, Passerina amoena (Say) Gray. B 386. C 198. R 249. ca Lazuli Painted Finch. :
-295. Passerina cyanea (L.) Gray. B 387. C199. R 248. Indigo Painted Finch; Indigo-bird.
296. Spermophila moreleti Pucheran. B 388. C 200. R 252.
2? eer s Seed-eater. CALE Lin 297. Phonipara zena (L., 1758) Bryant. B—. C201. R 253. (!W.I.) a Black-faced Finch.
. pee 289. Za-mél-6/-di-a li-dd-vi-ci-a/-na. Gr. ¢¢, an intensive particle, and pedwdia, singing, ’ , fad ry Do e
weliorve ‘.~ — melody ; in allusion to the strikingly rich song. — To Louisiana ; see Thryothorus, No. 68.
ly aR Liven ‘hy This is given as Goniaphea lud. in the orig. ed. For the change, see Coues, Bull. en * Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 98.
ha wu S90. Z. mél-an-6-céph/-a-la. Gr. wédas, feminine péAaiva, neuter peéAay, black ; kepady, the head.
291. Guir’-a-ca [pronounced Gweerahcah] coé-riil/-€-4. The generic word is barbarous, from some South American vernacular, and of uncertain meaning. It occurs, with several similar words, as guira, in Maregrave. We mark the accent (for which there is no author- ity) as usually heard. — For caerulea, see Polioptila, No. 36.
292. Pas-sér-i/-na ci’/-ris. Passerina, formed from Passer, as Passerella and Passerculus also are. — Ciris, Gr. ketpis, a kind of bird, into which Scylla, daughter of Nisus, is fabled to have been changed. — Nonpareil = “ the incomparable.”
For use of Passerina, instead of Cyanospiza of the orig. ed., see Coues, Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 96.
293. P. vér-si/-cél-6r. Lat. versicolor, of changing or versatile colors, many-colored, party-col- ored ; verso, I turn about, change, am occupied with, versed in, &c.; color, color.
294, P. 4-moé/-na [ahmwaynah]. Lat. amena, delightful, charming, dressy.
295. P. cy-an’-€-4. Lat cyaneus, Gr. kudveos or xtavos, dark blue.
296. Spér-md/-phi-l4 more-lét/-i. Gr. orépua, genitive omépuaros, a seed; from omeipw, equal to the Lat. spargo, I sow seed: and $éAos, from :Aéw, Llove. The word is contracted ;
Morelet, a French naturalist.
the full form is spermatophila. — 'To 297. Pho-ni'=pa=rx zé/-na. Gr. dw}, a sound, the voice; pul, I speak; the English “ phonetic” isfrom thesame. The rest of the word appears to be from Lat. parvo, I bring forth, beget, produce, having the same root as is seen in primi-para, par-turient, viv par Os, &e.; if so, the word is a hybrid which would be better written son/para or vocipara. The mean- ing of zena we do not know; we suppose it not to be of Greek or Latin derivation. This is given as P. bicolor in the orig. ed. of the Check List, after Fringilla bicolor L., 1766; but it seems that /’. zena L., 1758, is the prior tenable name.
60
298.
299.
300.
301.
302.
303.
304.
305.
298.
299.
300.
301.
302.
303.
304. 305.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. °
Pyrrhuloxia sinuata Bp. B 389. C 202. R 243.
Texas Cardinal Grosbeak.
Cardinalis virginiana Bp. B 390. 0 203. R 242.
Cardinal Grosbeak; Virginia Redbird.
Cardinalis virginiana ignea (Bd.) Coues. B—. C 203a. R 242a.
Fiery-red Cardinal Grosbeak.
Pipilo erythrophthalmus (L.) V. B 391. C 204. R 237.
Towhee Bunting; Chewink.
Pipilo erythrophthalmus alleni Coues. B—. © 204a. R 237a.
White-eyed Towhee Bunting.
Pipilo maculatus oregonus (Bell) Coues. B 392. € 205. R 2380.
Oregon Towhee Bunting.
Pipilo maculatus arcticus (Sw.) Coues. B 393. C 2054, R 238.
Arctic Towhee Bunting.
Pipilo maculatus megalonyx (Bd.) Coues. B 394. C 2058. R 238a,
Spurred Towhee Bunting.
Pyr-rhii-lox!-i-4 sin-t-a/-ta. A forcible combination of Pyrrhula and Loria: see these
words, Nos. 190 and 199; or may be said to be more properly compounded of pyrrhus, muppos, fiery-red, and Aog/as; in which event, it should be written pyrrholoxia. — Lat. sinua- tus, bent, bowed, curved, as the bill of the bird is; from sinuo, the verb; sinus, the noun, a curve, bending, bay.
Car-din-a/-lis vir-gin-i-a/-na. Lat. cardinalis, pertaining to a door-hinge; cardo, genitive
C.
cardinis, a door-hinge ; hence, that upon which something turns or depends ; as, cardinal points of the compass; hence, any important thing or person; applied with obvious sig- nification to the chief officials of the Pope. These ecclesiastical dignitaries wear red ; hence the phrase “ cardinal-red.” The term is applied to the bird as descriptive of its rich red color. Asa Latin word, cardinalis is only an adjective; used substantively, its gender is either masculine or feminine. We take the latter, because most words ending in is- are feminine.— Lat. virginiana, of Virginia, euphemistically named for Elizabeth, daughter of Henry VIII.
v. ig/-né-4. Lat. igneus, fiery, flaming; said of color as well as of other properties ; agnis, fire.
Pi/-pil-6 é-ryth-rdph-thal/-mtis. Vieillot, in forming the word, wrote both pipilo and
pipillo. It is a Latin verb, meaning, like prpio, I pip, peep, chirp. Notice the accentua- tion and quantity of the vowels. —Gr. épu@pes, red or reddish; épev@w, I redden ; op@ar- ds, the eye, from drroua, a verb obsolete in the present, or dpadw, I see; we find both words in “ophthalmic,” “ optic.” The species is red-eyed. — The curious English words “towhee ” and “chewink” are onomatopeic: that is, coined to imitate the sound of the bird’s voice.
. €. Al/-lén-i. To Joel Asaph Allen, of Cambridge, Mass., one of the leading naturalists
of the United States.
. ma-cil-d/-tiis dr-é-gd/-ntis. Lat. maculatus, spotted ; macula, a spot.— To the Oregon
River. Quantity of the penult in question, perhaps better ore/gdnus. The stock species, P. maculatus, is not North American.
.m. arc/-ti-ca. See Sialia, No. 29. . m. mé-gal’-d-njx. Gr. peydAn (feminine of péyas), large, great, and dvvut, Lat. onyx, a
nail, claw, talon. The word is commonly accented on a long penult; a practice perhaps defensible on the ground that megald-Onyx = megalonyzx.
306. 307. 308. 309. 310.
rs 9 i Be
a.
306.
307.
308.
309. 310. 311.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 61
Pipilo fuscus mesoleucus (Bd.) Ridg. B 397. © 206. R 240.
Brown Towhee Bunting; Canon Bunting.
Pipilo fuscus albigula (Bd.) Coues. B —. C 206a. R 240a.
White-throated Towhee Bunting.
Pipilo fuscus crissalis (Vig.) Coues. B 396. C 2060. R 2400.
Crissal Towhee Bunting.
Pipilo aberti Bd. B 395. C 207. R 241.
Abert’s Towhee Bunting.
Pipilo chlorurus (Towns.) Bd. B 298. © 208. R 239.
Green-tailed Towhee Bunting.
Embernagra rufovirgata Lawr. B 373. C 209. R 236.
Green Finch.
Dolichonyx oryzivorus (L.) Sw. B 399. © 210. R 257.
Je
Jet 12h
Bobolink ; Reed-bird; Rice-bird.
fiis/-ctis més-6-lei/-ctis. Lat. fuscus, fuscous, dark, dusky, like furvus ; both allied to Gr. épés, of same meaning, from dpprn, night or darkness ? — Gr. péoos, middle, Aeukés, white ; in allusion to the color of the middle under parts. This word is derived from Aevoow or yAavaow, I shine; this from a@yAaia, splendor, the name of one of the Muses.
This is given as P. fuscus in the orig. ed.; but the bird of Arizona is said to be dis- tinguishable from the Mexican stock species.
. f. al-bi'-gii-14. [Not albigew'ler.] Lat. albus, white; gua, throat. This is one of num-
berless cases where the termination of the word is in question, Albigula may be taken as a feminine noun, and left in this form, whatever the gender of the word with which it is associated; or it may be considered an adjective in -us, -a, -um, and made masculine to agree with P. fuscus. There is ample authority and precedent for the latter course, which our taste disinclines us to take. English affords a parallel latitude of construc- tion, as when we say indifferently “‘ yellow-rump warbler” or “yellow-rumped warbler,” “Carolina chickadee ” or “Carolinian chickadee.” A better form than either albigulus or albigula would be albigularis.
f. cris-sa/-lis. Late Lat. crissalis, pertaining to the crissum, or under-tail coverts, which in this bird are highly colored. There are no such classic words, they having been in- vented by Illiger in 1811; but there is a verb crisso, expressing a certain action of the parts.
4/-bért-i. To Lieutenant J. W. Abert, of the U. 8. Army, who discovered it.
chld-rii/-riis. Gr. yAwpds, green, from xAda, green grass ; odpa, tail.
Em-bér-na’-gra rii-fo-vir-ga/-ta. Hmbernagra is a villanous word, concocted by Lesson
out of Emberiza and Tanagra. Emberiza, a bunting, is a word the derivation of which is not classic. It is said, doubtless correctly, to be Latinized from the O. H. G. Embritz ; “Charleton (1668) has Embryza” (Wharton’s MS.) ; and we may add that there were various other forms of the word before it settled into the present one. — There are Latin words Tanager and Tanagra; but these are geographical proper names, having nothing to do with the present case. Tangara or Tanagra is a South American vernacular word. — Lat. rufus, rufous, reddish, and virgatus, literally, made of twigs; from virga, a rod, switch, the application being the stripes with which the bird is marked. Commonly written rufivirgata : see Lophophanes, No. 42.
312. D6dl-ich’-5-nyx 5-ry-zi'-vd-riis. Gr. doArxds, long, and dvvt, a nail, claw, talon. The gender
is in question; but the Greek évvé, Lat. onyx, is masculine, though Latin words in -yx are
Beet has Se Ua. ae ae usually feminine. The usual pronunciation is dolichd'nyx: but see Pipilo, No. 305. Gr. 3pu¢a, or Lat. oryza, rice, and voro, I devour.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
o
818. Molothrus ater (Bodd.) Gray. B 400. C 211. R 258.
Cowbird.
314. Molothrus ater obscurus (Gm.) Coues. B—. C 211a. R 258a.
Dwarf Cow-bird.
815. Molothrus zeneus Cab. B—. C —. R 259.
Bronzed Cowbird.
8316. Ageleeus phoeniceus (L.) V. B 401. C 212. R 261.
Red-winged Marsh Blackbird.
817. Ageleeus phoeniceus gubernator (Wagl.) Coues. B 402. C 2124. R 261a.
Red-shouldered Marsh Blackbird.
818. Agelzeus tricolor Nutt. B 403. C 212d. R 262.
Red-and-white-shouldered Marsh Blackbird.
8313. M6-ld/-thriis a/-tér. Unde derivatur? The orthography and etymology of molothrus are
314. M.
alike in dispute. Swainson himself says, “ woAo@pos, qui non vocatus alienas aedes intrat ;” that is, an uninvited guest. There being no such Greek word as poAoépos, but there being a good Greek word podoBpds, meaning one who roams in quest of food, a vagabond, a beggar, a parasite, a “ tramp” (as we should say now), and therefore exactly answering to Swainson’s explanation of his molothrus, it has been supposed by Cabanis that Swain- son meant to say molobrus, and the word has consequently been changed. Though this is very true, it is also to be observed that Swainson wrote molothrus more than once, showing it not to be a misprint or other mistake, and that, further, it is quite possible to construct the word molothrus from uados and Opdckw (Oopety, Adpw, Ovw), and answer all the conditions of Swainson’s definition ; mo/othrus being, in this case, a bird which takes uninvited possession of other birds’ nests, and there leaves an alien egg in mockery of the rightful owners. We therefore see no necessity to replace molothrus by molobrus. ‘The first o is marked long as being Gr. w, the second as lengthened by position. This stands in the orig. ed. as M/. pecoris, corrected in a footnote.
a. db-scii/-riis. Lat. obscurus, obscure, dark; olscuro, I darken; Gr. oxid, shadow,
shade.
315. M.
316. A-
Suita eee
318. A.
This stands as M. pecoris var. obscurus in the orig. ed.
a. aé/-né-itis. Lat. wneus, of brass, brassy, brazen, bronzed; from es, genitive eis, brass. Not in the orig. ed. ; since discovered by J. C. Merrill, in Texas.
gél-aé/-tis phoé-ni/-c&é-tis. Gr. dyedaios, pertaining to flocks and herds, from ayéeAn, a flock: this from ayelpw, I assemble, from &yw, I lead; in allusion to the gregariousness of these Blackbirds. — Gr. ¢oiwieos, or Lat. pheniceus, deep red; “a color first intro- duced into Greece by the Phenicians.” The fabulous bird Phoenix, and the name of Phenician, and the word for flame-color, are all the same, gofmé. This itself is a radi- cal word, but related through goivds, ¢dvos, with pévw, paw, I kill, slay, as if the idea of the whole set of words were that of murder, from its traditional color of blood. The obvious application is to the scarlet on the wings.
p. gitb-ér-na’-tdr. Lat. gubernator, Gr. kvBepyjrns (cybernetes), a pilot, helmsman ; gubernum or qubernaculum, a rudder, tiller ; guberno, Gr. kuBepydw or KuBepya, T steer a ship; hence, to direct or govern in general. Govern, governor, are directly from guberno, and the actual Latin lingers in gubernatorial. The implication is the red shoulder-knots or epaulettes of the bird, as if signs of rank or command.
tri/-cdél-dr. Lat. tricolor, three-colored; tres, three, becoming in composition tr7-. This stands as A. pheniceus var. tricolor in the first ed., but proves to be sufficiently distinct.
319.
319.
320.
321.
322.
323.
324,
325.
326.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 63
Xanthocephalus icterocephalus (Bp.) Bd. B 404. © 213. R 260. Yellow-headed Swamp Blackbird.
Sturnella magna (L.) Sw. B 406. C 214. R 263. Meadow Starling; Field-lark.
Sturnella magna mexicana (Scl.) Ridg. B—. C —. R 263a. Mexican Meadow Starling.
Sturnella magna neglecta (Aud.) Allen. B 407. C 214a. R 264. Western Meadow Starling.
Icterus vulgaris Daud. B 408. C —. R 265. (! W.L) Troupial.
Icterus spurius (L.) Bp. B 414. C 215. R 270. Orchard Oriole. 7
Icterus spurius affinis (Lawr.) Coues. B—. © 215a. R —. (?) Texas Orchard Oriole.
Icterus galbula (L., 1758) Coues. B 415. © 216. R 271. Baltimore Oriole.
X4n-th6-céph/-al-tis ic-tér-5-céph/-al-tis. Gr. fav6ds, bright yellow.— Gr. %krepos, or Lat. icterus, see Icteria, No. 144. Related apparently to Zw, I attack, as disease does.
Stir-nél/-14 mag’-n4a. Diminutive of Lat. sturnus, a starling; as spizella from spiza.— Lat. magnus, great, large ; root mag, as seen in Gr. uéyas; whence also mactus, magnified, glo- rified : magi, magician, magic, are all allied.
S. m. méx-i-ca/-na. Latinized Mexican. See Sialia, No. 28. Not in the orig. ed. Since discovered in Texas by J. C. Merrill.
S.m. nég-léc/-ta. Lat. neglecta, neglected, that is, not chosen, not heeded; from nec, not, and lego, I choose, select, &c. See Parus, No. 51.
Ic/-tér-tis viil-ga/-ris. See Sturnus, No. 363. — Troupial or troopial, from the Fr. trouper, is simply trooper, the bird that goes in troops.
Not in the orig. ed. Said to straggle to Southern States. No late case of its so doing.
I. spi/-ri-tis. For /cterus, see Icteria, No. 144, and Xanthocephalus, No. 819. — Lat. spurius, illegitimate, bastard, spurious; related to the Gr. omopa, seed, generation, birth, &c., ameipw, I sow seed. The bird was formerly called “ Bastard Baltimore Oriole,” whence the undeserved Linnzan name.
I. s. f-fi/-nis [accent the penult]. Lat. affinis, ad, and finis, allied, affined.
This subspecies is very slightly distinguished from its stock.
I. gal’-bii-14. Lat. galbula or galgula, some small yellow bird of the ancients; doubtless derived from some word signifying yellow ; there are Latin words galbus, galbanus, Germ. gel, &e., of such meaning. — The curious English word oriole, for which no derivation is given in some standard works, has evidently a similar reference to the color yellow, being equivalent to aureole ; Lat. awrum or Gr. aépoy, gold: such form of the word for gold, with or- instead of aur-, is seen in the Fr. or. —“ Baltimore,” the former specific name of the bird, is not directly from the city of that name, but from the name of Sir George Calvert, first Baron of Baltimore, the colors of the bird being chosen by him for his livery, or, as Catesby has it (N. H. Car., i, 1731, p. 48), the bird being named from its resemblance in color to the Lord’s coat of arms — “ which are Paly of six Topaz and Diamond, a Bend, interchang’d.” The name baltimore, L., 1766, as given in the orig. ed. of the Check List, is antedated by Coracias gulbula L., 1758 ; see Coues, Bull. Nutt. Club, April, 1880, p. 98.
64
y 827.
328.
329.
330.
331.
3382.
333.
327. 328.
329.
330.
331.
332. 333.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Icterus bullocki (Sw.) Bp. B 416. C 217. R 272. Bullock’s Oriole.
Icterus cucullatus Sw. B 413. C 218. R 269. Hooded Oriole.
Icterus parisiorum Bp. B 411. C 219. R 268. Scott’s Oriole.
Icterus melanocephalus auduboni (Gir.) Coues. B 409. C 220. R 266. Audubon’s Black-headed Oriole.
Scolecophagus ferrugineus (Gm.) Sw. B 417. C 221. R 273. Rusty Grackle.
Scolecophagus cyanocephalus (Wagl.) Cab. B 418. C 222. R 274. Blue-headed Grackle.
Quiscalus macrurus Sw. B 419. C 223. R 275. Great-tailed Crow Blackbird.
I. bil/-ldck-i. To William Bullock, sometime a collector in Mexico, and proprietor of a famous museum in London.
I. cii-ciil-1a/-titis. Lat. cucullatus, hooded; cuculla, a kind of hood or cowl fastened to a gar- ment, to be drawn over the head.
I. par-is-i-6/-riiri. Lat. Parisiorum, of the Parisians. The Parisii were a people of Gaul, settled on the river Senones, now the Seine; their chief city, Lutetia, called also Lutetia Parisiorum and Parisi, is now Paris. There is no applicability of the name to the bird: Bonaparte probably so called it from national vanity, or because he found a specimen in a museum in Paris. The name is commonly but wrongly written parisorum.
I. mél-an-6-céph/-al-iis aiid/-t-bdn-i. Gr. uéAas, feminine wéAava, black; and repadn, head. — To J. J. Audubon.
Scd-lé-cd/-pha-gis fér-rii-gin’-E-iis. Gr. oxwAnkopdyos, a worm-eater ; oxdAnt, genitive okéAnkos, a worm, and dayw, leat. It is also a Latin word, scoler, worm. — Lat. ferrugi- neus, rusty-red, color of iron-rust; from ferrugo, iron-rust; ferrum, iron.— The curious Eng- lish word grackle or grakle is anglicized from Lat. graculus or gracculus, a yery uncertain
‘/f bird, by some supposed to be the jackdaw, by others the cormorant or sea-crow; and
the Latin word itself is supposed to be merely in imitation of a hoarse croak, gra, gra. See what is said under Querquedula, No. 714. S. c¥-An-d-céph/-al-tis. Gr. xvavos, or Lat. cyaneus, blue; and kepadn, head.
Quis/-c4-lis mac-ri/-riis. Unde derivatur quiscalus? We have no proof whence it comes or what it means: it varies in form, as quiscala, quiscula. Mr. W. C. Avery asks: “Is quiscalus an onomatopeon? I can find no Latin or Greek word like it.” Mr. H. T. Wharton observes: “ Quiscalus seems a native name; if it is, the termination -vs only obscures its origin without Latinizing it.” Professor A. Newton remarks at greater length: “ Quiscalus was doubtless taken by Vieillot from the Gracula quiscula of Linnzus (S. N., ed. 10, p. 109). I cannot find this word or any thing like it in any older author ; but I have an instinctive conviction that it must occur somewhere ; for, as far as my studies of Linnzus’s work go, they show me that he did not invent names. From his printing the word in both eds. (10th and 12th) with a capital initial letter, it is obvious that he regarded it as a substantive, and I should think he must have found it in some book of travels as the local name of a bird. The word seems to me Spanish or quasi- Spanish — say Creole—and the regular Castilian quisquilla, which dictionaries explain to be a trifling dispute, suggests a meaning, especially when one reads of the noisy and fussy bickerings of your Boat-tails.” If, as seems highly probable, we are here on the
334.
335.
334, 335. 336.
337
338.
339.
340.
341. 342,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 65
Quiscalus major V. B 420. C 224. R 277. Boat-tailed Crow Blackbird ; Jackdaw.
Quiscalus purpureus (Bartr.) Licht. B 421. C 225. R 278. Purple Crow Blackbird ; Purple Grackle.
Quiscalus purpureus eneus Ridg. B—. c —. R 2780. Bronzed Crow Blackbird.
Quiscalus purpureus aglzeus (Bd.) Coues. B 422. © 225a. R 278a. Florida Crow Blackbird.
Corvus corax L. B 423. 424. C 226. R 280. Raven. :
Corvus cryptoleucus Couch. B 425. C 227. R 281. White-necked Raven.
Corvus frugivorus Bartr. B 426. C 228. R 282. Common American Crow.
Corvus frugivorus floridanus (Bd.) Coues. B 427. C 2284. R 282a, Florida Crow.
Corvus caurinus Bd. B 428. C 2280. R 2820. Northwestern Crow.
right track of the word, we may perhaps go a step further, and trace the undoubtedly barbarous word quisculus through quisquilla to the similar Lat. quisquilie, which the lexi- cons give as meaning refuse, dregs, or other trifling worthless matters; as we might say,. riffraff, rag-tag ; and such would not be wholly inappropriate to these vagabond troopers, so common everywhere as to come under the contempt of familiarity. — Gr. uaxpés, long,, large, and odpa, tail. . ma/-jor. Lat. major, greater, comparative of magnus. . pur-ptr/-é-tis. See Carpodacus, No. 194. . p. aé/-né-ts. See Molothrus, No. 316. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List: since recognized. . p. ag-laé/-tis. Gr. ayAalos or ayAads, shining, from ayAa/a, splendor; also the name of one of the Muses. Obs.— Not to be confounded with ageleus, which see, No. 316. Cor!-viis cér/-ax. Lat. corvus, a crow. — Lat. corax or Gr. képat, a raven. — Corvus is by some considered an onomatopeon, and referred through the Gr. cpa(w, Kp w, to croak, back to a Sanscrit root of same signification. — Corar is more obviously a word of similar formation, as may also be the English crow.
C. cryp-t6-lei/-ctis. Gr. kpumrds, hidden (with which compare Eng. crypt), and Aeuxés, white; the allusion being to the concealed white at the bases of the feathers of the neck.
Oo O00
C. frii-gi/-v6-riis. Lat. frugivorus, fruit-eating; frux, genitive frugis, fruit, and voro, I devour. Frux is from fruor, fruitus, fructus, as it is something that may be enjoyed. Voro is rooted in Bop, as seen in Popa, food, and Bérkw (Bow), I eat.
This is given as C. americanus in the orig. ed. of the Check List.
C. f. fl6-ri-da/-ntis. To Florida. Flora, Goddess of flowers ; jlos, a flower.
C. caii-ri/-niis. There is no such Latin word. Caurinus has been supposed to be equiva- lent to corvinus, crow-like, but is directly derived from caurus, the North-west wind, the species having been discovered on the North-west coast of the United States.
This stands as C. americanus var. caurinus in the orig. ed.: it has been redetermined to be distinct, as originally described by Baird.
343,
344,
345.
346.
347.
348.
349.
350. 351,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Corvus maritimus Bartr. B 429. C 229. R 283.
Fish Crow.
Picicorvus columbianus (Wils.) Bp. B 430. C 230. R 284.
Clarke’s Nutcracker.
Gymnocitta cyanocephala Maxim. B 431. C 231. R 285.
Blue Nutcracker.
Psilorhinus morio (Wagl.) Cab. B 444. C 232. R 288.
Brown Jay.
Pica rustica hudsonica (Cab.) Ridg. B 432. C 233. R 286.
American Magpie.
Pica rustica nuttalli (Aud.) Coues. B 433. C 233a. R 287.
Yellow-billed Magpie.
Cyanocitta cristata (L.) Strickl. B 434. C 234. R 289.
Blue Jay.
Cyanocitta stelleri (Gm.) Strick]. B 435. C 235. R 290.
Steller’s Jay.
Cyanocitta stelleri annectens (Bd.) Ridg. B—. C —. R 2908. (?)
Connective Jay.
C. mar-it/-i-mtis. See Ammodramus, No. 288.
This stands as C. ossifragus in the orig. ed.
Pi-ci-cér/-viis c6-lim-bi-a/-niis. The generic name is compounded of pica and corvus:
see these words, Nos. 347 and 388.— The specific name refers to the Columbia River, whence Lewis and Clarke first brought specimens.
Gym-n6-cit’-ta cy-an-6-céph’-a-la. Gr. yuuvds, naked; in allusion to the nostrils being
exposed, as is unusual in this family ; «fra or kiooa, a jay. — See Scolecophagus, No. 332.
Psi-ld-rhi/-niis mor!/-i-d. Gr. WAds, smooth, bare, bald, in allusion to the uncovered nos-
trils, from iw; and ffs, genitive pids, the nose. — The specific name is morio, “a dark brown gem,” in allusion to the color, which is remarkable in this group of birds.
Pi/-c4 riis/-ti-ca hiid-sdn/-i-ca. Lat. pica, a magpie. It is supposed by some to be for
piga, that equivalent to p/gta or picta, from pingo, I paint; hence signifying painted, speckled, pied. The same dubious etymology is ascribed to the masculine form of the word, picus, which see, No. 433. — Lat. rusticus, rustic, rural, from rus, the country as dis- tinguished from the city. —To Hudson’s Bay, named after Henry Hudson, the explorer. This stands as P. melanoleuca hudsonica in the orig. ed.; but rustica has long priority.
P. r. nit!-tal-li. To Thomas Nuttall, the botanist and ornithologist.
This stands as P. melanoleuca nuttalli in the orig. ed.
Cy-an-5-cit!-ta cris-ta’-t&. Gr. xvavds, cyaneus, blue, and xirra, a jay. — Lat. eristatus,
crested ; crista, a crest; related to cresco, I grow, and crinis, hair, through a common root. For use of Cyanocitta instead of Cyanurus, as in the orig. ed., see Coues, Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 98.
C. stél/-lér-i. To G. W. Steller, surgeon and naturalist.
C. s. an-néc’-téns. Lat. annectens (ad and necto, to bind), annexing, annectant, connecting,
tying together; because this subspecies is intermediate between others of the same stock, serving to link them to each other. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List.
6352.
357.
358.
359.
360.
352.
353. 354.
355.
356. 357.
358.
359.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 67
Cyanocitta stelleri macrolopha (Bd.) Coues. B 436. © 235a. R 290c. Long-crested Jay.
Cyanocitta stelleri frontalis (Ridg.) Coues. B—. ¢ 2350. R 290a. Blue-fronted Jay.
Aphelocoma floridana (Bartr.) Cab. B 439. C 236. R 291. Florida Jay.
Aphelocoma floridana woodhousii (Bd.) Allen. B 438. C 236a, R 292. Woodhouse’s Jay.
Aphelocoma floridana californica (Vig.) Coues. B 437. C 2360. R 293. Californian Jay.
Aphelocoma ultramarina arizonz Ridg. B 440. C 237. R 295. Arizona Jay.
Xanthura luxuriosa (Less.) Bp. B 442. C 238. R 296. Rio Grande Jay.
Perisoreus canadensis (L.) Bp. B 443. © 239. R 297. Canada Jay.
Perisoreus canadensis fumifrons Ridg. B—. ¢ —. R 2970. Alaskan Jay.
C. s. mac-r6/-l6-pha. Gr. waxods, long, and Adgos, a mane, crest, comb, from Aézw, as is also Aemls, A€mos, a scale, and many similar words. Usually pronounced macrolo'pha.
C. s. fron-ta/-lis. Lat. frontalis, relating to frons, the forehead, front.
A-phé-16/-c6-ma fl6-ri-da/-na. Gr. adeAjs, smooth, sleek, and koun, Lat. coma, hair; in allusion to the lack of crest. The word primarily means smooth, even in the sense of free from stones ; a privative, and peAds or peAAds, a stone; PeAAeds, rocky soil, &c.
A. f. wodd-hois’-i-i. To S. W. Woodhouse, M.D., of Philadelphia, who explored in New Mexico and Arizona.
A. f. cal-i-f6r/-ni-ca. To the State of California.
A. ul-tra-mar-i'-n4 4-ri-zd/-naé. Lat. witra, beyond, from the adverb ws, beyond, opposed to cis, on this side; and marina, marine, relating to the sea, mare; in allusion to the deep blue color, as of the high sea; “ultramarine ” blue. — See Peucea, No. 253.
This stands in the orig. ed. as A. sordida, “ Sieber’s Jay.”
X4n-thi/-ra lix-i-ri-d/-sa. Gr. favdds, yellow, and odpa, tail.— Luruosa was doubtless
intended by Lesson for Lat. luxuriosa, luxurious, in allusion to the elegant coloration. This stands in the orig. ed. as X. yncas var. lucuosa, but proves to be distinct from the Peruvian yncas.
Pér-i-sd/-ré-tis can-3-dén’-sis. Unde derivatur? One of the dictionaries gives a soriz, defined as a bird dedicated to Saturn ; whence Perisoreus might be derived as an adjec- tival form, intensified by the preposition peri-. This would accord in idea with the term infaustus bestowed by Linneus on the European species, and also with Dysornithia, the generic term invented by Swainson; there being some superstition attaching to the jays of this genus. But we advance this etymology as mere conjecture. We may note also the Gr. copés, a tomb or sepulchre.
P. c. fi/-mi-frons. Lat. fumus, smoke, and frons, forehead; related to Gr. 6dw, I offer
incense. Described since the orig. ed.; Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 5.
68
361.
367.
368.
362.
364,
365.
366.
367.
368.
369,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Perisoreus canadensis obscurus Ridg. B —. C 239a. R 298. Oregon Jay.
Perisoreus canadensis capitalis Bd. B—. C 2390. R 297a. Rocky Mountain Jay.
Sturnus vulgaris L. B—.cC—. R 279. (G. !E.) European Starling.
Pitangus derbianus (Kaup) Scl. B—. C —. R 308. Lord Derby’s Flycatcher.
Myiodynastes luteiventris Scl. B—.cC—. R 310. Sulphur-bellied Flycatcher.
Milvulus tyrannus (L.) Bp. B 122. C 240. R 302. (!8. A.) Fork-tailed Flycatcher.
Milvulus forficatus (Gm.) Sw. B 123. C 241. R 301. Swallow-tailed Flycatcher; Scissor-tail.
Tyrannus carolinensis (L.) Bd. B 124. C 242. R 304. Tyrant Flycatcher; King-bird; Bee-martin.
Tyrannus dominicensis (Gm.) Rich. B 125. C 243. R 303. Gray Tyrant Flycatcher; Gray King-bird.
P. c. 6b-scii/-riis. See Molothrus, No. 314.
P. c. cap-i-ta’-lis. Lat. capitalis, capital, relating to the head, caput, the color of which distinguishes the race from the stock species.
Stiir/-niis vil-ga/-ris. Lat. sturnus, a stare or starling. — Lat. vulgaris, vulgar, common ; vulgus, or volgus, the people or folk, is digammated Gr. FoAxos, with transposition of letters from &xAos, a crowd.
Not in the orig. ed. Only American as occurring in Greenland, and there only acci- dentally, in one known instance.
Pit-an/-giis dér-bi-a/-ntis. Pitangus is a barbarous word, of some South American ver- nacular ; it occurs, in several forms, in Marcgrave.— The species is dedicated to the Earl of Derby.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Since discovered in Texas by G. B. Sennett. See Coues, The Country, i, p. 184, July 15, 1878.
Myi-d-dyn-As/-tés lit-&i-vén/-tris. Gr. pvia, a fly, and duvacrys, a sovereign, ruler, &c. ; divas, power, from dvvaua, I can, Iam able. — Lat. luteus, luteous, yellow, from /utum, a plant used for yellow dye, and venter, genitive ventris, the belly ; said to be digammated from Gr. évrepoy, the entrails.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List: since discovered in Arizona by H. W. Henshaw. See Hensh., Rep. Expl. W. 100 Merid., v, 1875, p. 346, pl. xiv.
Mil’-vii-liis tyr-an’/-niis. Lat. milvulus, diminutive of milvus, a kite. — Lat. tyrannus, Gr. tUpayvos, a ruler, despot, “tyrant ;” well applied to a bird of this genus.
M. for-fi-ca/-tiis. Lat. forficatus, a participial adjective, as if from a verb forfico; forfex, a pair of shears, scissors, which the deeply forked tail resembles.
Tyr-an/-niis c4-rd-lin-én/-sis. See Milvulus, No. 366.— Named after the State of Caro- lina: the direct adjective from Carolus, Charles. See Mimus, No. 16.
T. ddm-in-i-cén/-sis. Named after the island of Hayti, or St. Domingo; dominicus, do- mtnus, domus. See Dendraca, No. 129.
374.
375.
376.
S(T,
370.
371.
372.
373.
374.
375.
376. 377.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 69
Tyrannus verticalis Say. B 126. C 244. R 306. Arkansas Tyrant Flycatcher.
Tyrannus vociferans Sw. B 127. C 245. R 307. Cassin’s Tyrant Flycatcher.
Tyrannus melancholicus couchi (Bd.) Coues. B 128, 129. C 246. R 305. Couch’s Tyrant Flycatcher.
Myiarchus crinitus (L.) Cab. B 130. C 247. R 312. Great Crested Flycatcher. [See Addenda, No. 880.
Myiarchus erythrocercus Scl. and Salv.? B132?C —. R 311. (?) Rufcus-tailed Crested Flycatcher.
Myiarchus cinerescens (Lawr.) Scl. B 131. C 248. R 313. Ash-throated Crested Flycatcher.
Myiarchus lawrencii (Gir.) Bd. B. 133. C 249. R 314. (!M.) Lawrence’s Crested Flycatcher.
Sayiornis sayi (Bp.) Bd. B 136. C 250. R 316. Say’s Pewit Flycatcher.
T. vér-ti-ca/-lis. Lat. verticalis, vertical, 7.e., relating to the verter, top or crown of the head, which has a flame-colored patch. The etymological meaning of vertex is vortex, the turning or whirling thing, from verto, I turn.
T. v6-ci/-fér-ans. Lat. present participle vociferans, vociferating, vociferous, from vocifero ; vox, genitive vocis, voice, and fero, I bear.
y
T. mél-an-ch6l/-i-ciis. Gr. weAayxodikds, melancholy, from péAas, feminine néAawa, black, and xéaos, gall, bile; Lat. melancholicus, atrabilious. The ancients had some notions on this subject which make the term not wholly inapplicable to a bird of splenetic, irri- table disposition, as all of this genus are. — To Lt. D. N. Couch, U. 8. A., who collected extensively in Matamoras and Texas.
Myi-ar/-chiis cri-ni/-tiis [not “crinnytus,” as usually heard]. Gr. uuta, a fly, and apxds, a ruler, leader, chief, from é&pxw, I am first, lead, rule, or épx7, the beginning. This theme is seen in our prefix arch-, as arch-bishop, &c. — Lat. crinitus, haired, 7. e., crested, from crinis, hair of the head. See Myiodioctes, No. 146.
M. é-ryth-r6-cér’-ciis. Gr. épuOpds, reddish, and képxos, tail.
Not in the Check List, orig. ed. Since discovered in Texas by G. B. Sennett. The proper name of the species is much in question. The bird is the M. crinitus erythrocercus of Coues, Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., iv, no. 2, p. 82, and v, no. 3, p. 402; the J. eryth- rocercus var. cooperi of Ridgway, Pr. Nat. Mus., i, p. 188; and the M. mexicanus of Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, p. 14.
M. cin-ér-és/-céns. Lat. present participle of an inceptive verb cineresco, I grow ashy ; in the sense of being somewhat ashy; cinereus, ashy, from cinis, ash. N. B.— The name has always been written cinerascens, for which we find no authority; while there is actually a verb cineresco: we therefore emend as above.
M. law-rén/-ci-i. To George Newbold Lawrence, of New York.
Say-i-6r’-nis sady’-i. “ Sayornis” is a violent combination of the name of Mr. Thomas Say, of Philadelphia, with the Greek word for bird, dps. It may be somewhat improved as above, when the combination of vowels becomes no more unusual than is seen in myo-dioctes, myia-rchus, &c. In equally loose style, Bonaparte made the specific name sayus,—a direct Latinization of the same person’s name; but it must either be put in
70 878. 879.
380.
378. 379. 380.
381.
382. 383.
384.
385.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Sayiornis nigricans (Sw.) Bp. B 134. C 251. R 317.
Black Pewit Flycatcher.
Sayiornis fusca (Gm.) Bd. B 135. C 252. R 315.
Pewit Flycatcher ; Phoebe-bird.
Contopus borealis (Sw.) Bd. B 137. C 253. R 318.
Olive-sided Pewee Flycatcher.
Contopus pertinax Cab. B—. C 254. R 319.
Coues’s Pewee Flycatcher.
Contopus virens (L.) Cab. B 139. C 255. R 320.
Pewee Flycatcher; Wood Pewee.
Contopus virens richardsoni (Sw.) Coues. B 138. C 255a. R 321.
Western Pewee Flycatcher.
Empidonax acadicus (Gm.) Bd. B 143. C 256. R 324.
Acadian Flycatcher,
Empidonax trailli (Aud.) Bd. B 140. © 257. R 325a.
Traill’s Flycatcher.
Empidonax trailli pusillus (Bd.) Coues. B 141. © 257a. R 325,
Ss. Ss.
Little Western Flycatcher.
the genitive, say: or sai, or in adjectival form, sayana or saiana; it must in the latter case be feminine to agree with sayiornis. The above emendation of both generic and specific names is respectfully submitted. (See Coues, Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 99.) nig’-ri-cans. Present participle of nigrico, I am blackish; niger, black.
fiis/-ca. Lat. fuscus, dark, dusky, swarthy. See Pipilo, No. 306.
COn/-t6-piis boér-é-a/-lis. Gr. kovros, in some sense unknown to us, and mods, foot. — Lat. , ’
borealis, northern; boreas, the northwind. — “ Pewee,” like “ pewit,” is an onomatopeon.
N. B. — Many words ending in -opus, from the Gr. rods and a connecting vowel o, are habitually accented on the lengthened penult, and the last syllable is made short. But as -pus here stands for Gr. rovs, and the connecting vowel is invariably short, we should throw the accent back to the antepenult, and dwell on the last syllable. Thus, not Conto'-piis, Haemato'-piis, Phalaro'-piis, but Cont!d-pus, Hema’to-pus, Phalar'd-pus.
. pér’-ti-nax. Lat. pertinaz, pertinacious, holding fast on to; from per and tenaz, tenacious,
from teneo, I hold; this species closely resembling C. borealis.
. vir/-éns. See Dendraca virens, No. 112.
. v. rich/-ard-s6n-i. To Dr. John Richardson, an author of the Fauna Boreali-
Americana, &¢.
y
Em-pid-d/-nax 4-cad/-i-ctis. Gr. éumis, genitive eumidos, a small kind of insect, gnat; and
évaé or avat, king. — Acadicus, Latinized adjective for Acadian; from Acadia or Acadie.
N. B. — This species has never been found, and probably does not occur, in the region formerly called Acadia; the name is therefore geographically false. The name “ Aca- dian Flycatcher,” whence Muscicapa acadica Gm., no doubt actually refers to Traill’s or the Least Flycatcher, the proper name of the present species being probably E’mpidonax subviridis (Bartr.) Coues. Lat. subvirtdis, somewhat green, greenish.
. trail/-li. To Thomas Stewart Traill, a Scottish naturalist. He was professor of medi-
cal jurisprudence in the University of Edinburgh, and editor of one of the later editions of the “Encyclopedia Britannica.”
386, E. t. pii-sil/-lts. See Sitta, No. 60.
1 ae
888.
392. 393. 394.
395. 387. 388.
389.
390. 391.
392.
393.
394,
395,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 71
impidonax minimus Bd. B 142. C 258. R 326. Least Flycatcher.
Empidonax flaviventris Bd. B 144. C 259. R 322. Yellow-bellied Flycatcher.
Empidonax flaviventris difficilis Bd. B 144a. C —. R 323. (?) Western Yellow-bellied Flycatcher.
Empidonax hammondi (Xant.) Bd. B 145. C 260. R 327. Hammond’s Flycatcher.
Empidonax obscurus (Sw.) Bd. B 146. C 261. R 328. Wright’s Flycatcher.
Mitrephorus fulvifrons pallescens Coues. B —. C 262. R 329. Buff-breasted Flycatcher.
Ornithium imberbe Scl. B—. c —. R 331. Beardless Flycatcher.
Pyrocephalus rubineus mexicanus (Scl.) Coues. B 147. C 263. R 330. Mexican Vermilion Flycatcher.
Nyctidromus albicollis (Gm.) Burm. B—. C —. R 356. Pauraque.
E. min/-i-mts. Lat. minimus, least, smallest, superlative degree of parvus, little.
E. fla-vi-vén/-tris. Lat. flavus, yellow; ventris, pertaining to the belly, venter, belly; prob- ably digammated from Gr. évrepor, the entrails.
E. f. dif-fi/-ci-lis. Lat. difficilis, difficult, not facile ; dis-facilis, not easily do-able ; facio, I do; like agilis, active, or utilis, useful, from ago and utor. It is applied to the bird as the French would call a person difficile, that is, hard to get at, manage, understand, impracticable ; the subspecies not being readily distinguished from L. flaviventris.
E. ham/-m6nd-i. To Dr. W. A. Hammond, sometime Surgeon General, U.S. Army.
E. Gb-scii/-riis. See Molothrus, No.314.—To C. Wright, the discoverer. Swainson’s bird is very uncertain, and our species might be called /. wrighti.
Mi-tré/-phor-iis fiil’-vi-frons pal-lés/-céns. Gr. witpa or itp, a mitre or other head- dress, and gopds, bearing, from gépw, same as Lat. fero, I bear. We believe either mitrephorus or mitrophorus to be admissible; the former has currency, though the latter may be preferable. — Lat. fulvus, yellowish, fulvous, and frons, forehead. — Lat. palles- cens, somewhat pale, from pallesco, I grow pale ; palleo, of same meaning. The allusion is to the pale coloration in comparison with the stock-form fulvifrons. [See Index, p. 137.]
Or-nith’-i-tim im-bér/-bé. Gr. épvl@ov, a little bird; diminutive of opus, a bird. — Lat. imberbe, beardless, from in, negation, and barba, beard. The genus is commonly written Ornithion, but it is customary to change -ov of the Greek into -um in Latin.
Not in the orig. ed.; since discovered in Texas by G. B. Sennett. See Coues, The Country, i, p. 184, July 13, 1878.
Py-r6-c&éph/-4-liis riib-in/-&-tis méx-i-ca/-ntis. Gr. mip, genitive mupds, fire, Kepadr, head. — Lat. rubineus (not classic), equivalent to rubens, ruby-colored, rose-red.
Nyc-ti/-drd-miis al-bi-cdl/-lis. Gr. vv, genitive yuerds, night, and dpduos, act of running: in allusion to the nocturnal activity of the bird. See Ammodramus, No. 238.— Lat. albus,
white, and collis, neck. ; Not in the orig. ed. ; since discovered in Texas by G. B. Sennett, and J. C. Merrill.
4399,
400.
399.
400. 401.
402.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Antrostomus carolinensis (Gm.) Gould. B 111. C 264. R 353. Chuck-will’s-widow.
Antrostomus vociferus (Wils.) Bp. B 112. C 265. R 354, Whip-poor-will. [See Addenda, No. 881.
Phalznoptilus nuttalli (Aud.) Ridg. B 113. C 266. R 355. Nuttall’s Whip-poor-will.
Chordediles popetue (V.) Bd. Bit. c 267. R 357. Night-hawk.
Chordediles popetue henryi (Cass.) All. B115. C 267a. R 357a. Western Night-hawk.
Chordediles popetue minor (Cab.) Ridg. B—. C —. R 3570. (!W. 1.) Cuban Night-hawk.
Chordediles acutipennis texensis (Lawr.) Ridg. B 116. C 268. R 358. Texan Night-hawk.
An-tr6/-st6-mtis ca-r6-lin-€n/-sis. Gr. avrpoy, Lat. antrum, a cave, oroua, mouth; in allusion to the cavernous capacity of this fissirost.— The curious English name, like “ whip-poor-will,” is an onomatopeon, being an attempt to express the bird’s cry in words.
A. v6-ci/-fér-ts. Lat. vociferus, vociferous, clamorous, from voz, genitive, vocis, voice, and Jero, I bear; vox is said to be digammated from Gr. &y.
Phal-aé-nop’-til-iis niit-tal-li. Gr. padAawva, a moth, and mridov, plumage; in allusion to the peculiar velvety plumage, like the furriness of a moth’s wing. — To Thomas Nuttall. This is given as Antrostomus nuttalli in the orig. ed. The genus has since been estab-
lished by Ridgway, Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 5.
Chor-dé-di/-lés popetue. Gr. xop5#, a chord, a stringed instrument, and defAy, con- tracted from SeleAos, root eYAw, the evening, here apparently meaning to close in, as evening does. The allusion is to the crepuscular habits of the bird, its curious notes being oftenest heard at evening. Swainson originally wrote chordeiles, — an inadmissible contraction, and further erroneous in retaining Gr. ec instead of changing to long Lat. 7. The word has sometimes been written chordiles. Cabanis properly emends as above. Swainson was very negligent in these matters : for instance, he made a genus aipunemia, the proper form of which is e@pycnemis. — The-word popetue is barbarous, of meaning and_ pronunciation. alike unknown to us. We have heard it as-three-and as four sylla- bles, accented-in-each ease on the antepenult.
This stands as Chordeiles virginianus in the orig. ed.
C. p. hén/-ry-i. To Dr. T. Charlton Henry, who collected and observed in the West.
C. p. min/-6r. Lat. minor, minor, less, smaller, this form holding such relation to the stock species. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Stated to have occurred in Florida. See Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus,, iii, 1880, p. 219.
C. A-cii-ti-pén/-nis téx-én/-sis. Lat. acutus, acute, sharp, pointed, and penna, wing or feather, in allusion to the long wings. — Terens/s, adjective formed from Texas. Texas is properly a plural noun, singular Texa, meaning the Texas; as we should say now, the Texans, a race of the Caddos. Tachies and Taxus are also found.
This stands as C. texensis of the orig. ed.
405.
406. 407.
408.
409.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 73
ALUM AAAAL SE i
Panyptila.saxatilis (Woodh.) Coues. B 107. C 269. R 349. White-throated Rock Swift.
Nepheecetes niger borealis (Kenn.) Coues. B 108. € 270. R 350. Black Rock Swift.
Cheetura pelasgica (L.) Steph. B 109. © 271. R 351. Chimney Swift.
Cheetura vauxi (Towns.) De Kay. B 110. C 272. R 352. Vaux’s Chimney Swift.
Basilinna xantusi (Lawr.) Elliot. B—. C 273. R 347. Xantus Humming-bird.
Eugenes fulgens (Sw.) Gld. B—. © 274bis. R 334. Refulgent Humming-bird.
Trochilus colubris L. B 101. C 275. R 335. Ruby-throated Humming-bird.
Pan-yp!-ti-la_sax-at/-i-lis. Gr. mdéyv, much, very, from.ras, raca, may, all, and mrfAov, wing: in allusion to the -great-length of this member. — Lat. saratilis, rock-inhabiting : sarum, a_rock. Gey et ey a ae WOT 5 .
Néph-o€@/-cé-tés nig’-Er bodr-&-a’-lis. Gr. vépos, a cloud, and oixérns, an inhabitant; well applied to this bird of great wing and high flight. See Powcetes, No. 252. — Lat. niger, black. — Lat. borealis, northern.
Chaé-tti/-ra pél-as/-gi-ca. Gr. xairn, a stiff hair, a bristle, and odpa, tail, in allusion to the spines which project from the ends of the tail-feathers.
The specific word was written pelagtea by Linneus in 1758, and pelasgia by him in 1766. The word has occasioned much conjecture as to its orthography, derivation, and applicability. We cannot suppose it to be pelayica, pelagic, relating to the high seas, like marine. It is apparently one of Linnzus’s whims of nomenclature, by which he likened this migratory species to a Pelasgian, one of the nomadic tribes of Greece, the Pe/asg’, TleAaoyoit. There is indeed a geographical name pelasgia, but such would hardly be used in this form, and would be geographically false, moreover. Excluding pelasgia or pelugica as out of the question, and supposing the allusion to be to the nomadic Pelasgi, we con- clude that the proper form of the word is as above given, pelasgica, the adjective meaning Pelasgian, 7.e., in a tropical sense, nomadic, migratory.
C. vatix’-i. To William S. Vaux, of Philadelphia.
Bas-il-in/-na xan/-tiis-i. Gr. BaofAwva, a queen, feminine form of BaciAevs, a king. To Louis John Xantus de Vesey, who later called himself John Xantus, an energetic and successful collector in South-western United States, and Mexico. We suppose the name originally meant yellow, tav4ds, xanthus, and in fact it is written ranthusi sometimes.
This is given as Heliopedica xantusi in the orig. ed. of the Check List.
Ei’-gén-és fil/-géns. Gr. edyevis, well-born; from e@, well, and yévos, birth; ylyvoua, I am born. — Lat. fulgens, glittering, refulgent, from fi/geo, I shine, flash, gleam, glitter. Not in the orig. ed.: since discovered in Arizona by H. W. Henshaw.
Trodch/-i-lis cdl!-ti-bris. Gr. rpéxiAos or tpoxlaAos, Lat. trochilus, a kind of bird; from tpoxés, arunner. The bird originally so called by Herodotus was an Egyptian species of plover, of the genus /gialitis, which was so named from its habit of coursing the banks of streams. The name was also applied by the ancients to some small bird, species uncertain, perhaps a warbler, wren, or kinglet. Very curiously, the name was afterward transferred to the American humming-birds, becoming fixed in modern nomen-
410. 411.
412.
413. 414,
415.
416.
417.
418.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Trochilus alexandri Boure. and Muls. B 102. € 276. R 336. Alexander Humming-bird.
Selasphorus rufus (Gm.) Sw. B 103. C 277. R 340. Rufous Humming-bird.
Selasphorus alleni Hensh. B—. C —. R 341. Allen Humming-bird.
Selasphorus platycercus (Sw.) Gld. B 104. C 278. R 339. Broad-tailed Humming-bird.
Calypte anneze (Less.) Gld. B 105. © 279. R 338. Anna Humming-bird.
Calypte costz (Bourc.) Gld. B 106. C 280. R 337. Costa Humming-bird.
Atthis heloisze (Less. and De Lat.) Reich. B—. C 281. R 342. Heloise Humming-bird.
Stellula calliope Gld. B—. C 282. R 343. Calliope Humming-bird.
Calothorax lucifer (Sw.) Gray. B—. Cc —. R 349. Lucifer Humming-bird.
clature as a genus in that family in consequence of such usage on the part of Linneus. — The name colubris might be an adjective formed from coluber, a snake, in allusion to the scales on the hummer’s throat; but this is unlikely. There are old treatises on birds in which the terms colibri, kolibri, colibry occur, and the word is doubtless barbarous.
T. a-léx-an/-dri. To —— Alexandre. Sé-las’-ph6r-tis rii/-fs. Gr. oédas, céAaos, light, and gopds, bearing, pépw, I bear ; eupho- niously compounded, at the expense of strict propriety. — Lat. rufus, rufous, reddish. S. al/-lén-i. To C. A. Allen, of Nicasio, California. Not in the orig. ed.; since distinguished from S. rufus by Mr. Henshaw: see Bull. Nutt. Club, ii, 1877, p. 54. S. plat-y-cér’-ctis. Gr. mAatvs, broad, wide; «épkos, tail. C. an’-naé. Dedicated to the Duchess of Rivoli. This is Selasphorus anna in the orig. ed. Ca-lyp’-t€ cds’/-taé. Gr. Kadumr#, a proper name; Kadvmrw, I conceal. — To —— Costa. This is Selasphorus coste in the orig. ed.
At’-this hél-6-i/-saé. Gr. ’A7r6is, Attic, Athenian ; probably in allusion to some peculiar charm of the bird. Attic was ne plus ultra Greek, as Parisian is par excellence French. This is Selasphorus heloise of the orig. ed.
Stél/-lu-14 cal-li/-d-pé. Lat. stel/ula, a little star, diminutive of stel/a, a star. — Gr. Kaa- Aidmn, Calliope, one of the Muses; cadds, feminine cadAh, beautiful, &e., and oy, voice. The application of the word toa voiceless bird is not obvious, unless it be simply dedicatory.
Cal-6-tho’-rax li/-ci-fér. Gr. «adds, beautiful, and @épat, thorax, chest. — Lat. Lucifer, Lucifer, the light-bearer, from Juz, lucis, light, and fero, I bear. Both words note the glittering plumage.
Not in the orig. ed.; since discovered in Arizona by H. W. Henshaw; and first announced from that locality under the erroneous name of “ Doricha enicura,” in Am. Sportsm., v, p. 828, Feb. 20, 1875. See Lawr., Bull. Nutt. Club, ii, 1877, p. 108.
419.
419.
420,
421.
422.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 75
Amazilia fuscocaudata (Fras.) Elliot. B. —. C —. R 345.
Dusky-tailed Humming-bird.
Amazilia cerviniventris Gld. B—. Cc —. R 346.
Buff-bellied Humming-bird.
Iache latirostris (Sw.) Elliot. B—. Cc —. R 348.
Circe Humming-bird.
Trogon ambiguus Gld. B 65. C 284. R 384. (1M)
Copper-tailed Trogon.
Ceryle alcyon (L.) Boie. B 117. C 286. R 382.
Belted Kingfisher.
Ceryle americana cabanisi (Reich.) Coues. B 118. C 287. R 383.
Texas Kingfisher.
Crotophaga ani L. B 66, 67. C 288. R 389.
Black Ani.
Am.-a-zil’-i-4 fiis-c6-catid-a/-ta. The word amazilia is apparently Latinized from Lesson’s
word amazili, used in the plural form amazilis for a group of hummers. We do not know what it means. — Lat. fuscus, dark, and caudata, tailed; cauda, tail.
Not in the orig. ed.; since discovered in Texas by J. C. Merrill. This has been called Pyrrhophena riefferi in papers relating to the Texas specimens. See Merrill, Bull. Nutt. Club, i, 1876, p. 88, and Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., i, 1878, p. 147.
. Cér-vi-ni-vén/-tris. Lat. cervinus, relating to a deer, cervus; and ventris, pertaining to
the belly, venter. The allusion is to the fawn-colored under parts. Not in the orig. ed.; since discovered in Texas by J.C. Merrill. See Bull. Nutt. Club, ii, 1877, p. 26, and Pr. Nat. Mus., i, 1878, p. 148.
I’-4-ché 14-ti-rGs/-tris. Gr. fay, a battle-cry; also a proper name, whence derived. — Lat.
latirostris, broad-billed ; latus, wide, like Gr. tAards, of same meaning; and rostrum, beak. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List; since discovered in Arizona by H. W. Henshaw. See Amer. Sportsm., Feb. 20, 1875.
Tro/-gon am-bi/-gii-tis. Gr. tpdéywv, a gnawer, rodent, from tpéyw, I gnaw, eat away,
corrode ; from the stout, dentate bill; see T’roglodytes, No. 74. The word was applied by Moehring in 1752 to the Brazilian Trogon, called curucui by the natives, and made generic by Brisson in 1760. — Lat. ambiguus, ambiguous, equivocal, of more than one meaning, in a double sense; hence, doubtful, uncertain; from ambo, both, on two sides, and ago, to act or do. Ambiguity is literally a double-dealing, “with double sense deluding ; ” compare Fr. double entendre, and such homely expressions as “ back and fill,” “ blow hot and cold,” “on the fence,” “hedge” (to bet on both sides). It was badly applied to this fine species when considered doubtfully distinct from 7. mexicanus.
This stands as 7. mexicanus in the orig. ed. For its actual occurrence in Texas, see Pr. Nat. Mus., i, 1878, p. 118.
423. Cél-ry-lé al/-cy-dn. Gr. kfpvdos, a kingfisher. — Gr. adxvdy, Lat. haleyon or alcyon, a
kingfisher. *AAxvdyn or Alcyone was a mythical character, daughter of /olus, fabled to have been transformed into a kingfisher when, out of love for her shipwrecked husband Ceyx, she threw herself into the sea. The kingfisher was also believed to nest on the water, at a time the waves were stilled; hence the term “ halcyon days.”
424, C. am-ér-i-ca/-n3i cab-An!-is-i. To Dr. Jean Cabanis, long time one of the leaders of
German ornithology, and editor of the Journal fiir Ornithologie.
425, Crd-td/-pha-gi a/-ni. Gr. xpordy, a bug, tick, plant-louse; and pdyos, from paryouc, I eat.
427.
428.
432.
433.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Crotophaga sulcirostris Sw. B—. C —. R 390. Groove-billed Ani.
Geococcyx californianus (Less.) Bd. B 68. C 289. R 385. Ground Cuckoo; Chaparral Cock; Road-runner.
Coccygus erythrophthalmus (Wils.) Bd. B70. C 290. R 388. Black-billed Cuckoo.
Coccygus americanus (L.) Bp. B 69. C 291. R 387. Yellow-billed Cuckoo. P
Coccygus seniculus (Lath.) V. B71. C 292. R 386. Mangrove Cuckoo,
Campephilus principalis (L.) Gr. B72. C 293. R 359. Ivory-billed Woodpecker.
Hylotomus pileatus (L.) Bd. B90. © 294. R 371. Pileated Woodpecker.
Picus borealis V. B80. C 296. R 362. Red-cockaded Woodpecker.
C. stil-ci-r6és/-tris. Lat. sulcus, a groove, furrow, channel; a word sibilated from Gr. 6Akos, a trace, track, trail; and rostris, pertaining to the beak, rostrum.
Not in the orig. ed.; since discovered in Texas by G. B. Sennett. See Coues, The Country, i, July 13, 1878, p. 184.
Gé-6-cic/-cyx cAl-i-for-ni-an/-ts. Gr. yj or yea, the earth, and kéxxvt, a cuckoo. The latter word is onomatopeic, and runs in similar forms through many languages, the idea being always to express the cuckoo’s voice in a word: Lat. cuculus; Fr. coucou; Eng. cuckoo, cuckow; Germ. Rufuf, &e. See Coccygus, No. 428.
Coc!-cy-giis &-ryth-rdph-thal/-miis. The generic name is modified from «é«xuvt, a cuckoo. Its orthography has given rise to much variance of opinion. It was originally written by Vieillot coccyzus ; such spelling has been accepted by Sclater and others, and is per- haps defensible on the ground that there is a Greek verb koxxd(w, I make a noise like a cuckoo, whence a noun koxkv(os, becoming coccyzus in Latin, might be formed. Boie first emended Vieillot’s name to coccygus, in which he was followed by Cabanis and many others. Other forms of the word found in ornithological writings are: coccyzon, coccy- gius, coccysus, coccyzius, coccygon. We adopt Boie’s form coccygus, being directly from the genitive of «dé«xvt, not wishing to unnecessarily interfere. — For erythrophthalmus, see Pipilo, No. 301.
C. am-ér-i-ca/-niis. To America. See Parula, No. 93.
C. s&én-i/-cii-ltis. Lat. seniculus, a little old man; diminutive of senex, an old man. The allusion is probably to the gray on the head, a sign of senility.
Cam-pé/-phil-tis prin-ci-pa/-lis. Gr. xaumn, a caterpillar, from its bending ; well-illus- trated in the way a “ measuring-worm” bends. The word primarily means a bending: kaurrés, bent; cdumrtw, I bend; the same word is seen in Campylorhynchus, for example. piados, piréw, I love. — Lat. principalis, principal, chief, from the great size of the bird.
Hy-ld/-t5-miis pi-lé-a/-ttis. Gr. ddorduos, cutting wood, i.e. a woodcutter: wan, wood, and réuvew, to cut. — Lat. pileatus, capped, ?.e., crested; from pileus or pileum, a cap ; related to pilus, a hair; the same root is seen in depilatory, pile, as of velvet, &c.
Pi/-ctis bor-&-a/-lis. Lat. Picus, a mythical person, and also a woodpecker, because the former, one of the victims of Circe, whose love he had scorned, was transformed into a woodpecker. The etymology of picus is doubtful ; the word is said by some to be prob-
434,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. TT
Pieus scalaris Wagl. B79. C 297. R 363. Texas Woodpecker,
Picus scalaris nuttalli (Gamb.) Coues. B78. C 2974. R 364. Nuttall’s Woodpecker.
. Picus scalaris lucasanus (Xant.) Coues. B—. C 2970. R 363a.
St. Lucas Woodpecker.
Picus stricklandi Malh. B—. Cc —. R 365. Strickland’s Woodpecker.
Picus villosus L. B74. C 298. R 360, 360. Hairy Woodpecker.
Pieus villosus harrisi (Aud.) All. B75. C 298a, R 3600. Harris’s Woodpecker.
Pieus pubescens L. B76. C 299. R 361. Downy Woodpecker.
Picus pubescens gairdneri (Aud.) Coues. B77. C 299a. R 361a. Gairdner’s Woodpecker.
ably for pigus, from pingo, I paint, and hence to mean pigtus or pictus, painted, spotted ; if so, it is well applied to the woodpecker, a bird of variegated colors, a much pied bird: compare Pica, No. 847. Others hold, however, that picus is from the same root as the Gr. mimw or mimos, a little bird, a peeper, chirper; just as Gr. trmos or txos and Lat. equus (which was formerly spelled very differently, and with ¢ instead of q) are cognate. This would make it an onomatopeon, like pipit, pipilo, &c. — Lat. lorealis, northern ; boreas, the north-wind.
Nore. — According to Professor Newton (Ibis, 3d ser., vi, 1876, p. 94 seq.), the type of the Linnean genus Picus is P. martius. The same author adds, in a private note addressed to Dr. Coues, that “the adjective in any other combination loses its classical allusion, which all naturalists, including Linneus, until comparatively recent times, recognized.” It would also appear that our H. pileatus, No. 482, is congeneric with P. martius. On these premises, No. 482 should stand as Picus pileatus, and some other generic name be found for Nos. 433-441. It is regretted, that, as the untoward circum- stances (tent-life in unbookish Arizona) under which these proof-sheets are being cor- rected do not permit us to follow up the matter at present, we are obliged to let the cutrent nomenclature pass with this explanation.
P. sca-la/-ris. Lat. scalaris, ladder-like; scala, a flight of stairs, a ladder. scale, shortened from scandla, from scando, I climb. The idea in Wagler’s mind may have been the climbing or scaling of trees by the bird; more likely the bars on the back, resembling the rounds of a ladder.
. s. nut!-tal-li. To Thomas Nuttall. — Perhaps entirely distinct from No. 434.
. S. lii-c&s-a/-niis. To Cape St. Lucas, S. Cala., where discovered.
. strick/-land-i. To Hugh E. Strickland, the eminent English ornithologist.
Not in the orig. ed. Since discovered in Arizona by H. W. Henshaw. See Amer. Sportsm., v, p. 328, Feb. 20, 1875.
. vil-1d’-stis. Lat. villosus, shaggy, hairy, villous ; from villus, a hair, tuft of hair.
. v. har/-ris-i. To Edward Harris, companion and friend of Audubon.
. pi-bé/-scéns. Lat. pubescens, present participle of pubesco, I come to puberty, 7. e., the time when the hair grows on the genitals; pubes, the parts on which such hair grows; hence, pubescent, hairy, downy.
P. p. gaird’-nér-i. To Dr.
TU Unto
J 0 'U
Gairdner, a Scottish naturalist.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Xenopicus albolarvatus (Cass.) Bd. B 81. C 295. R 366.
White-headed Woodpecker.
, 443. Picoides arcticus (Sw.) Gray. B 82. C 300. R 367.
443.
444, 445, 446.
447,
448,
449,
Black-backed Three-toed Woodpecker.
Picordes americanus Brehm. B83. C 301. R 368.
Banded-backed Three-toed Woodpecker.
Picoides americanus dorsalis (Bd.) Allen. B 84. © 301a. R 368a.
Striped-backed Three-toed Woodpecker.
Sphyropicus varius (L.) Bd. B 85. C 302. R 369.
Yellow-bellied Woodpecker.
Sphyropicus varius nuchalis Bd. B 86. C 302a. R 369a.
Nuchal Woodpecker.
Sphyropicus varius ruber (Gm.) Ridg. B 87. € 3028, or 303. R 3698.
Red-breasted Woodpecker.
Sphyropicus thyroides (Cass.) Bd. B 88, 89. C 304, 305. R 370.
Brown-headed Woodpecker.
X€n-6-pi/-cuis al-bd-lar-va'-tiis. Gr. éévos,a guest, stranger; févos, rare, foreign, &c. — Lat.
albolarvatus, white-masked ; albus, white, and larva, a mask. The same word is used for insects in their early stage, when the characters of the ¢mayo, or perfect insect, are masked or hidden in the caterpillar.
Given as Picus a. in the orig.ed. For generic characters, see Ridgw., Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 6.
Pi-c6-i'-dés arc’-ti-ctis. Lat. picus, a woodpecker, and Gr. efdos, resemblance. The word
14,
is one of the numerous bastards in the genera of Picide, which authors seem bent on producing; there is no such word as Picus in Greek, yet they have constantly com- pounded it with Greek adjectives. The e? becomes long 7; the o is the connecting vowel; the word should have the disresis over the 7, and be pronounced in four sylla- bles, with accent on the penult. All such hybrid words are so far wrong as to be past praying for, and scarcely worth the trouble of trying to twist into some decent shape. am-ér-i-ca/-ntis. To America. See Parula, No. 93.
P. a. dér-sa’-lis. Lat. dorsalis, pertaining to dorsum, the back.
Sphy-r6-pi/-ctis var’-i-tis. Gr. cpipov, a hammer, and Lat. picus. It was originally written
S.
Ss.
Ss.
sphyrapicus by Baird; but the connecting vowel should be o in this case. It is usually accented on the antepenult, with shortening of the 7 in picus, for which we see no reason, | beyond our extreme tendency to throw the accent always backward. The word is a hopeless hybrid, even when emended as above; sphyrocopus (apupoxdmos) would have been classic for a hammerer. — Lat. varius, various, varied, variegated; referring to the coloration in this case. v. ni-cha-lis. Quasi-Lat. nuchalis, relating to the nape, nucha, which is red in this bird, not in S. varius. See Leucosticte, No. 205. v. rub/-ér. Lat. ruber, red.
This stands as S. ruber in the body of the orig. ed. of the Check List: as above in the appendix. thy-ro-i/-dés. Gr. @upeoesdqs, resembling a certain kind of shield; in allusion to the shield-shaped black spot on the breast; @upeds, a shield, e?S0s, resemblance. The fuller form of the word would be thyrcoides, in five syllables. It has always been wrongly written thyroideus. See especially Picoides, No. 443.
Nore. —S. williamsoni, No. 805 of the orig. ed., is the male of the same species.
450.
451, 452.
453.
454,
455.
456.
457.
458.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 79
Centurus carolinus (L.) Bp. B91. C 306. R 372. Red-bellied Woodpecker.
Centurus aurifrons Wagl. B 92. C 307. R 373. Yellow-fronted Woodpecker.
Centurus uropygialis Bd. B93. C 308. R 374. Gila Woodpecker.
Melanerpes erythrocephalus (L.) Sw. B 94. C 309. R 375. Red-headed Woodpecker.
Melanerpes formicivorus bairdi Ridg. B95. C 310. R 377. Californian Woodpecker.
Melanerpes formicivorus angustifrons Bd. B—. C 310a. R 377a. Narrow-fronted Woodpecker.
Asyndesmus torquatus (Wils.) Coues. B 96. C 311. R 376. Lewis’s Woodpecker.
Colaptes auratus (L.) Sw. B97. © 312. R 378. Golden-winged Woodpecker; Flicker.
Colaptes chrysoides Malh. B99. C 313. R 379. Gilded Woodpecker.
Cén-ti/-riis ca-r6-li/-niis. Gr. xévtpov, a point, prickle, and ogpa, tail; spine-tailed. The full form would appear to be Centrurus (like Centrocercus, for example), but there is a way of getting Centurus from Kévrn-; kevtéw is the verb to prick, goad, &c. — Carolinus is badly syncopated from carolinianus ; carolinensis would have been better still.
C. air’-i-frons. Lat. aurifrons, golden-forehead ; aurum, gold (yellow), and frons, forehead.
C. u-r6-py-gi-a’-lis. There is a very late Latin word uropygium, the rump, from which the above is derived as an adjective. But this is merely a modern Latinizing of the good Gr. ovpor’yiov or opporvy.ov, the rump; from oipa, tail, and muyh, the buttocks. The allusion in this case is to the conspicuously white rump of the bird, which a Greek would have called miyapyos (pygargus).
Mél-an-ér!-pés &-ryth-rd-céph/-a-lis. Gr. uéaas, genitive uédavos, black, and épr7s, a creeper ; €p7w, I creep, crawl. See Catherpes, No. 66. The full form would be melano- herpes. — Gr. épv0pés, red, and kepadn, head.
M. f6r-mi-ci/-vér-tis baird/-i. Lat. formica, an ant, and voro, I devour, in allusion to a habit of the species. — To Prof. Spencer Fullerton Baird. See Ridg., Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 21, 1881, p. 85. Given in the orig. ed. as M. formicivorus,
M. f. an-giis/-ti-frons. Lat. angustus, narrow, straitened, from ango, I press upon, draw together, &c.; Gr. &yxw, I squeeze, strangle, distress, &c.; the same root and idea is seen in anxious, anxiety, &c.; frons, forehead. The allusion is to the narrowness of the yellow frontal band.
A-syn-dés/-miis tdr-qua/-tiis. Gr. 4 privative, ovv, together, with, Seouds, a bond; in allu- sion to the loosened texture of the feathers of the under parts. — Lat. torquatus, collared ; torquis, a necklace, collar; torqueo, I twist, twine around; tortus, twisted, distorted, con- tortion; so also torture, as of one wrenched or racked. The allusion is to the ashy collar on the neck of the bird. — The English name is that of Merriwether Lewis, the explorer in company with Clark (Clark’s Crow, Picicorvus).
Col-ap’-tés atir-a/-tiis. Gr. xoAamwrfs, a chisel, hammer; koAdrrw, I use such an instru- ment; very appropriate to a woodpecker. — Lat. auratus, gilded, golden (colored) ; aurum, gold; also very apt to this bird.
C. chry-sé-i'-dés. Gr. xpiceos, xpucois, golden, of the color of gold, xpuads; «ldos, resemblance.
80 CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
459. Colaptes mexicanus Sw. B98. C 314. R 378a. Red-shafted Woodpecker.
460. Conurus carolinensis (L.) Kuhl. B 63. C 315. R 392. Carolina Parrot; Paroquet.
461. Aluco flammeus pratincola (Bp.) Coues. B 47. © 316. R 394. American Barn Owl.
462. Bubo virginianus (Gm.) Bp. B 48. © 317. R 405. Great Horned Owl.
463. Bubo virginianus arcticus (Sw.) Cass. B—. C 317a. R 405a, 405. Arctic Horned Owl.
464. Bubo virginianus pacificus Cass. B—. C 317). R 405c. E Pacific Horned Owl.
459. C. méx-i-ca/-nts. To Mexico.
460, Co6-ni-rtis ca-r6-lin-én’-sis. Gr. xévos, Lat. conus, a cone, pine-cone, whence our word for a figure of that kind ; ovpa, tail; in allusion to the wedged or cuneate tail.
Notre.— The nomenclature of our owls, Nos. 461-488, must be considered still unsettled in several instances, though we have endeavored to approximate toward a fixed terminology in this difficult group, where the species and subspecies are not readily determined, and where authors have bandied about the generic and specific names so indiscriminately as to produce great confusion. The names here provisionally adopted are in the main according to results reached by Mr. Ridgway, who has given special attention to these birds.
461. Al-i/-cd flam/-mé-ts prat-in’-cd-1a4. The meaning of Aluco we do not know, further than that it has long been used for some kind of owl; perhaps related to éAeds, which occurs in Aristotle as the name of some owl, and is enumerated by Brisson among the syno- nyms of the European barn owl. Numberless names of owls in very many languages are doubtless more nearly related than their diverse orthography would show at first sight, and mostly appear to be onomatopqaic, in imitation of the hooting, howling cries of these inauspicious birds of the night: Eng. owl, owlet, howlet; A.S. ul, eul, ule ; Dutch, uil; Dan. ugle; Sw. uggla; Germ. eule; Fr. hulotte ; Ital. alocho (compare aluco) ; Sansk. uluka, &e. — Lat. flammeus, flaming, fiery-red; flamma ( flag-ma), a flame, blaze; the root is seen in flagrant, flagitious, deflagrate ; flagro, I flare up, am inflamed; and many kin- dred words. The allusion, rather strong, is to the flagrant colors of this species in com- parison with most owls.—Lat. pratincola, an inhabitant of fields; pratum, a meadow, tncola, an inhabitant (zn and colo, I cultivate).
This stands as Strix flammea americana in the orig. ed., and Ridgway has A. flammea americana; but pratincola Bp. (1838) antedates americana Aud. (1859); and, on the gen- eric nomenclature of owls, especially on the type of Strix L., see Newton, Yarr. Br. B., 4th ed., i, p. 150, and Ibis, 3d ser., vi, 1876, p. 94.
AG62. Bi/-bd vir-gin-i-a/-niis. Lat. bubo, the horned owl; perhaps related to bubulus or bubalus ; bos, Gr. Bots, a bull, horned cattle; there is a similar Greek word Bvas, for a horned owl. So, also, the verb bubo or bubalo, to low, hoot; the word for the bittern, butor, botaurus (bos, taurus), and others, are related, all being onomatopeic, with reference to the low- ing or bellowing of cattle. — Virginianus, see Cardinalis, No. 299.
463. B. v. arc/-ti-ctis. See Sialia, No. 29.
464, B. v. pa-cil-fi-ctis. Lat. pacificus, pacific, peaceable, peace-making ; pax, peace, facio, I do, make; “the stilly sea.” The reference is to the habitat of the bird.
We retain the three forms of Bubo as given in the orig. ed. Mr. Ridgway, after dis-
missing Mr. Cassin’s var. pacificus, has four: B. v., and B. v. arcticus, as we have them;
77
, CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 81
Abit Za aA Les ta _ 4
465.-Seops: asio (L.) Bp. B49. C 318. B 402.
Screech Owl; Mottled Owl; Red Owl.
466. Scops asio kennicotti (Elliot) Coues. B—. C 318a. R 402d. Kennicott’s Screech Owl. 467. Scops asio maxwelle Ridg. B—. C —. R 402c. Rocky Mountain Screech Owl. 468. Scops asio maccalli (Cass.) Coues. B50. C 318. R 4028, McCall’s Screech Owl. -469. Scops asio floridanus Ridg. B—. C 318c. R 402a. / Florida Screech Owl. 470. Scops trichopsis Wagl. B—. Cc —. R 403. (?) Mexican Screech Owl. 471. Scops flammeolus (Licht.) Scl. B—. ¢ 319. R 404. Flammulated Screech Owl. 472. Asio wilsonianus (Less.) Coues. B 51. © 320. R 395 wg Long-eared Owl. with B. v. subarcticus, after Hoy, and B. v. saturatus, Ridg., from the North-west coast, Ph A the latter being var. pacificus of Hist. N. A. B., iii, p. 66. ; 465. “Scops as/-i-6. Lat. scopes or scops, Gr. cxé, a kind of owl. Here we have a name for UEUd <4, _ owl which cagunda the bird in an entirely different sense from that implied in any of the ' “*“<© onomatopeic names. The etymology is disputed. Some say from oxémrw, I mock, scoff, deride, which would make scops the same as oxémrns, a mocker, mimic; the actions of an owl seeming to travesty the beholder. Others have it from cKoméw, I look out, survey, contemplate, the root of this being seen in scope, telescope, &c.; or from onérroua, I examine, scrutinize, am sceptical about any thing; the reference being to the great staring eyes of the bird, or its air of contemplation. — Lat. asio, a horned owl; occurring in Pliny ; apparently a word of Hebrew extraction, the significance of which is unknown to us. 466. S. a. kén-ni-cdt!-ti. To Robert Kennicott, of Illinois, an ardent and able naturalist, who sadly lost his life on the Yukon River, in Alaska, where the variety was procured. 467. S. a. max’/-wél-laé. To Mrs. M. A. Maxwell, of Boulder, Colorado, the discoverer.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List; since described. See Field and Forest, June, 1877, pp. 210, 213.
468. S. a. m&ac-cal/-li. To Colonel G. A. McCall, U. S. A., of Philadelphia, who studied ornithology in Texas.
The S. a. enano, recently attributed to Texas by Coues and Sennett, has been identi-
fied with this by Ridgway. 469. S. a. fl6-ri-da/-nus. To Florida. 470. S. trich-dp/-sis. Gr. pit, genitive tpixés, hair, and &yp, aspect, countenance ; 7. q., hairy- faced, bristly about the bill? or general plumage of that character ?
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. If not the species itself, then its identifica- tion with any United States specimens, would appear to be dubious. The name is inserted upon Mr. Ridgway’s authority.
471. S. flam-mé/-6-lis. Lat. flammeolus, diminutive of flammeus: see Aluco, No. 461. 472. As/-i-6 wil-sén-i-a/-niis. For asio, see Scops, No. 465.— Latinized Wilsonian; to Alexander
Wilson, “father of American ornithology.” This stands as Otus vulgaris var. wilsonianus in the orig. ed., but is now regarded as
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
7473. Asio accipitrinus (Pall.) Newt. B52. C 321. R 395.
Short-eared Owl.
474, Strix cinerea Gm. B53. C 322. R 399.
Great Gray Owl.
475. Strix cinerea lapponica (Retz.) Coues. B—. C —. R 399a. (!A.)
Lapland Great Gray Owl.
476. Strix nebulosa Forst. B 54. C 323. R 397.
Barred Owl.
477. Strix nebulosa alleni Ridg. B—. Cc —. R 397a.
Florida Barred Owl.
478. Strix occidentalis (Xant.) Ridg. B—. © 324. R 398.
Western Barred Owl.
- 479, Nyctea scandiaca (L.) Newt. B61. C 325. R 406.
473. A.
Snowy Owl.
sufficiently distinct from the European bird, — The genus Otus is from the Lat. otus, Gr. &ros or rds, the eared owl; Gr. ods or &s, genitive &rds, an ear; from odas, a handle. (See Bubo, No. 462, and compare Bias and Bods.) — The genus Aso would appear to be eligible for the group of long-eared owls commonly called Otus of late years. — It is quite likely that the most available specific name for our bird is americanus (Steph.), as Ridgway has it. ac-cip-it-ri/-niis. Lat. accipitrinus, accipitrine, hawk-like; see Accipiter, No. 494.
This stands as Grachyotus palustris in the orig. ed. But both the eared owls may well be put in one genus, and the name accipitrinus has priority over brachyotus. This last word is literal Greek for “ short-eared.”
ATA, Strix cin-ér/-é-4. Lat. strix, stryx, or strynz, or Gr. orplyt, a screech-owl; from strido, I
475. S.
A76. S.
477. S.
478. S.
screech, utter shrill strident sounds of any kind; Gr. orpl(w; sibilated from tpi. The same root is seen in the English strident, stridulous.— Lat. cinereus, ashy ; cinis, ashes. See Harporhynchus, No. 22.
This stands as Syrnium lapponicum var. cinereum in the orig. ed., by a blunder ; for the latter name has priority over the former. The late rectifications made by Newton in the genera of owls cause Strix to be referred to the common Brown Owl of Europe, strictly congeneric with our Barred Owl. If the great Gray Owls be considered generi- cally distinct, they may be called Scotiaptex. Mr. Ridgway uses the genus Ulula for this group, which he separates from Strix proper.
c. lap-podn!/-i-ca. To Lapland.
This European conspecies of the great Gray Owl has lately been attributed to North America by Ridgway: see Bull. Nutt. Club, iii, 1878, p. 87; Alaska. Not in orig. ed. néb-u-l6’-sa. Lat. nebulosus, nebulous, misty, foggy, in the sense here of dark clouded color; from the Gr. vepéan (vépos), a cloud. So, also, Lat. nubes, a cloud; nubo, I marry, nubilis, marriageable; the bride being veiled (nupta) for the nuptials.
This is Syrnium nebulosum of the orig. ed.
n. al/-lén-i. To J. A. Allen, of Cambridge, Mass. See Pipilo, No. 302.
Not in the orig. ed.; since described. See Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 8. Gc-ci-dén-ta’-lis. Lat. occidentalis, occidental, western, where the sun sets ; occido, I fall down (0b and cado, not occido, I slay).
This is Syrnium occidentale of the orig. ed.
479, Nyc’/-té-4 scan-di-a’-ca. Gr. Nuxrevs, Lat. Nycteus, a proper name; as an adjective, noc-
turnal; Lat. nor, Gr. vt, night. There are very many derivatives, of which Nyctala is one. — Lat. Scandiaca, Skandinavian, relating to Scandia or Scandinavia.
482.
483.
484,
480.
481.
482.
483.
484,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 83
Surnia funerea (L.) Rich. & Sw. B 62. C 326. R 407. American Hawk Owl.
Surnia funerea ulula (L.) Ridg. B—.cC—. R407. (?) (!A.) European Hawk Owl.
Nyctala tengmalmi richardsoni (Bp.) Ridg. B55. © 327. R 400. Richardson’s Owl.
Nyctala acadica (Gm.) Bp. B56, 57. C 328. R 401. Acadian Owl; Saw-whet Owl.
Glaucidium gnoma Wagl. B 60. C 329. R 409. Pygmy Owl.
Siir’-ni-4 fii-né/-ri-4. Surnia and Syrnium are forms of the same word, the meaning and derivation of which are alike unknown to us; we follow Newton in using the former; see Sund., Tent., p. 104. — Lat. funereus, funereal; from funus, a funeral, burial pro- cession. Applicable to an owl, either regarded as a bird of ill omen, or with reference to its dismal cry, as if wailing the dead.
This stands Surnia ulula hudsonica in the orig. ed. Names of owls are “confusion worse confounded.” See Ridg. Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 8.
S. f. w-il-4. Lat. ulula,a Plinian name of the screech-owl; ululo, Gr. cAoAv¢w, I howl, hal- loo, make a “hullaballoo”; all onomatopeic. Compare also the Hebrew, en, whence hallelujah.
Not in the orig. ed. The old world Hawk Owl, at best hardly distinguishable from the American, is stated to occur in Alaska as a straggler from Asia; and all the Hawk Owls of Great Britain are said to be of the American variety. The case itself is as perplexing as its nomenclature is involved.
Nyc’-ta-l4 téng/-m4l-mi rich/-ard-s6n-i. Gr. yd«rados or vicrados, drowsy, sleepy. See Nyctea, No. 479, for basis of the word.— To P. G. Tengmalm, a Swedish naturalist. —To Sir John Richardson, the English naturalist.
N. 4-cad/-i-ca. To Acadia, or Acadie, a locale now in Maine, scene of Longfellow’s “ Evangeline.”
Glaii-cid/-i-tim gnd/-ma. There is a Greek word yAaveidioy, but that is some kind of fish, not a bird. It is, however, related to yAadé, which means an owl. There is also an adjective yAaveddns, from yAadé and eldos, from which Glaucidium may be modified. The allusion in all these cases is to the eyes of the bird; if not in color, then in the general aspect and expression of these remarkable organs of vision. There being actu- ally no owls with blue eyes, as yAavxés, glaucus, is commonly translated, the direct impli- cation is probably to the owl as the bird of wisdom, sacred to Minerva, yAavedms being one of the most familiar Homeric epithets of the “blue-eyed” goddess. Such may therefore be the meaning of yAavé, without reference to the color of the bird’s own eyes. — The word gnoma is very pat for an owl, and especially interesting in such application. Gr. yvaua, an opinion, decision ; yrvdéun, reason ; yyouwy, a judge, arbiter ; all from yryvéone, I know; whence also gnostic, and the very English word know, with countless related forms, all rooted in the idea of knowledge. Hence gnoma is apt for the bird of Minerva, goddess of wisdom, and is given just as Athene was made a similar epithet. Further- more, the English word gnome, by which we may directly translate gnoma in this case, is from the same root, meaning etymologically “the knowing one,” “one who arbi- trates certain destinies”: by metonymy, a kind of sprite or elf presiding over mines. Gnoma is thus an eligible epithet of a bird which combines a reputation for wisdom with certain superstitions connected with the gnome-like or goblin-like quality of its
knowingness.
84
485. 486. 487. 488. 489. 490. 491,
492.
485. 486.
487.
488.
489.
490.
491.
492.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Glaucidium ferrugineum (Maxim.) Kaup. B—. C 330. R 410. Ferrugineous Owl.
Micrathene whitneyi (Coop.) Coues. B—. C331. R 411. Elf Owl.
Speotyto cunicularia hypogeea (Bp.) Coues. B58, 59. C 332. R 408. Burrowing Owl.
Speotyto cunicularia floridana Ridg. B—.C—. R 408a. Florida Burrowing Owl.
Circus cyaneus hudsonius (L.) Coues. B 38. C 333. R 430. Marsh Hawk; Harrier.
Rostrhamus sociabilis plumbeus (—) Ridg. B 37. C 334. R 429. Everglade Kite.
Ictinia subccerulea (Bartr.) Coues. B 36. C 335. R 428. Mississippi Kite.
Elanus glaucus (Bartr.) Coues. B 35. C 336. R 427. White-tailed or Black-shouldered Kite.
G. fér-rii-gin’/-€-tim. Lat. ferrugineum, rusty-red ; ferrugo,iron-rust ; ferrum, iron.
Mi-cra-thén/-@ whit/-néy-i. Gr. uixpds, small; *A@hyn or ’A@yvaor’AOnvala, the Greek goddess of wisdom, to whom the owl was sacred. There was already a genus Athene, when Dr. Coues constructed the above. The genus Atthis, No. 416, is rooted with the same, asare Attic, Athens, Athenian, Atheneum, &c. —'To Professor J. D. Whitney, Director of the Geological Survey of California.
Spé-6/-ty-t6 ctin-i-cii-la/-ri-4 hy-pd-gaé/-4. Gr. oméos, a cave, excavation ; tuT#, a kind of owl. The first refers to the burrowing of this species; the last, like ulula, is onoma- topeic, in imitation of an owl’s hooting or “tooting”’; tyto, a “ tooter.” — Lat. cunicu- larius, 2 miner, burrower; cuniculus, a mine, pit, hole. — Lat. hypogewum, a vault, cellar; Gr. imdéyeios, under ground, subterranean; émd, under, yéa, y7, the ground. Thus all three words refer to the same thing.
S. c. fldr-id-a/-na. To Florida, “land of flowers.”
Not in the orig. ed. ; since described; Ridg., Am. Sportsman, July 4, 1874, p. 216.
Cir-ctis cy-an’-&-tis hiid-s6n/-i-tis. Gr. kipxos, Lat. circus, a kind of hawk, so called from its circling in the air. — Gr. kvavos, Lat. cyaneus, blue; the color of the old male. — To Hudson’s Bay.
Rdstr-ham/-ts s6-ci-a/-bi-lis pliim/-bé-tis. Lat. rostrum, beak, and hamus, Gr. xauos, a hook, from the greatly decurved form of the upper mandible. It is a queerly com- pounded word, meaning literally bill-hook, though the person who invented it meant to say hook-bill, hamirostrum. It is very bad form as it stands, but we hardly know how to emend without entirely changing it. — Lat. sociabilis, sociable, gregarious ; socius, a companion. — Lat. plumbeus, plumbeous, lead-colored.
Ic-tin’/-i-A stib-coé-riil/-€-4. Gr. ixtiy or ixtivos, a kite ; probably rooted same as Yerepos, a disease, in the idea of attacking ; Lat. ictus,a blow, &c.— Lat. sub, a prefix of diminishing force, and c@ruleus, blue; bluish, pale blue. See Dendraca, No. 117.
This stands as J. mississippiensis in the orig. ed. See Coues, Pr. Phila. Acad., 1875, p. 345.
El/-an-iis glaii/-ctis. Lat. elanus, a kite; derived from the Gr. éAatdyw, I drive on, urge forward, press upon, harass, &c.; a good name for a bird of prey which exhibits what the French would call edan.— Lat. glaucus, Gr. yAavkos, bluish, glaucous; from Aevw, Aevoow, I shine. See Glaucidium, No. 484.
This is Elanus leucurus in the orig. ed. See Coues, Pr. Phila. Acad., 1875, p. 545.
493.
“A494,
495.
496.
497.
498.
493.
494,
495.
496.
497.
498.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 85
Elanoides forficatus (L., 1758) Coues. B 34. C 337. R 426. Swallow-tailed Kite.
Accipiter fuscus (Gm.) Bp. B17. C 338. R 432. Sharp-shinned Hawk; Pigeon Hawk.
Accipiter cooperi Bp. B 15, 16. C 339. R 431. Cooper’s Hawk; Chicken Hawk.
Astur atricapillus (Wils.) Bp. B14. C 340. R 433. American Goshawk.
Astur atricapillus striatulus Ridg. B—. Cc —. R 433a. (?) Western Goshawk.
Falco sacer Forst. B—. C 341. R 4120. American Continental Gyrfalcon.
El-in-5-i/-dés f6r-fi-ca’-ttis. Lat. elanus (see No. 492) and Gr. efS0s, resemblance. — For Sorficatus, see Milvulus, No. 367.
This is Nauclerus furcatus of the orig. ed. See Coues, Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., iv, No. 1, 1878, p. 42.
Ac-cip’-i-tér fiis’-ciis. Lat. accipiter,a general name for a hawk; accipio, I take, seize ; from ad and capio: Gr. kdmTw, of similar meaning. Some, however, derive the word (as it seems to us, fancifully) from acuo and peto, i. e., the swift flyer. The root cap- is a very general one for words denoting this idea of taking; as in English accept, except, captive, capable, capacious, &c. — Lat. fuscus, fuscous, dark-colored.
A. coodp/-ér-i. To William Cooper, of New York.
As/-tiir a-tri-ca-pil/-lis. Lat. astur,a hawk; evidently related to aster, a star; asterias, starry, z.e., speckled; French autour is the same. The European Goshawk was called Asterias and “Star-hawk” by some of the old ornithologists, and the term dorepias tépaté is classic. The Italian is astore or asturo, and some dialectic form of this is said to give the name to the Acores or Azores Islands, from the abundance of hawks there. — For atricapillus, see Parus, No. 44. The word gos- prefixed to hawk is Anglo-Saxon; goshafoc is goose-hawk ; hafoc, and many similar words, are related to fuucon, fulcon, falco, which see, No. 498.
A. a. stri-a/-ti-luis. Lat. striatulus, diminutive of striatus, striate, streaked, striped; imply- ing not the smallness of the streaked object, but the fineness of the stripes themselves.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Since described by Ridg., Hist. N. A. B., iii, 1874, p. 240.
Fal’-c6 sa/-cér. Gr. dddxwy, Lat. fulco, a falcon, from the falz, falcis, a sickle, scythe: in allusion to the fulcate form of the hooked beak. The English is directly from falco, and the word reappears in many languages: Fr. faucon; Ital. falcone ; Span. halcon, &.— The word Gyrfalcon or Jerfalcon has much exercised the ingenuity of the dictionaries. To us the etymology seems clear and indisputable. It is found in many forms, as ger-, gir-, gyt-, giro-, ter-, tier-, and this leads directly to ftepds, divine, sacred, noble, auspicious, chief, &c.; iepeds, a priest; whence iépaé, the actual Greek word for a hawk, as used in divination, and therefore sacred. The idea is the same as that in hierarch, &c. The English Gyrfalcon or Jerfalcon is therefore a mere transliteration of /ierofalco. In the same spirit, Steenstrup recently made a genus Gyralca for the principal bird of the auk tribe, already known in many vernaculars by a corresponding epithet. Speculations respecting gyr- as meaning gyrus, a whirl, from the hawk’s gyrations, are superfluous. — Lat. sacer, sacred, consecrated, sanctified, &c.; the root sac- is the Greek root ay, as seen in ay.os, ayvds.
By the above name we indicate the continental Gyrfalcon of Arctic America, corre-
86 499.
500.
, BOS.
506.
499.
500.
501.
502.
503.
504.
505.
506.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Falco sacer obsoletus (Gm.) Ridg. B—. C —. R 412c¢.
Labrador Gyrfalcon.
Falco islandicus Gm. B12. C0 —. R 412a.
Iceland Gyrfalcon.
Falco candicans Gm. B11. C 341a. R 412. (G.)
Greenland Gyrfalcon.
Falco mexicanus Licht. B10. C 342. R 413.
American Lanier Falcon.
Falco peregrinus Tunstall. B5, 6. C 343. R 414.
Peregrine Falcon; Duck Hawk.
Falco peregrinus pealii (Ridg.) Coues. B—. C 343a. R 414a. (?)
Peale’s Peregrine Falcon.
Falco columbarius L. B7. C 344. R 417.
Pigeon Hawk.
Falco columbarius suckleyi Ridg. B—. C 344a. R 417a. (?)
Suckley’s Pigeon Hawk.
sponding to F’.. gyrfalco of Continental Europe, without raising the much-vexed question of their identity. We give the dark Labrador bird as a variety of this, and the Ice- landic and Greenlandic as both specifically distinct ; though we suppose all the northern Hierofalcones to be but geographical races of a single species.
. S. Ob-sdl-é/-tiis. Lat. obsoletus, unaccustomed, unwonted, disused, obsolete; here refer-
ring simply to the ill-defined character of the markings; ob and soleo, 1 am accustomed. Not in orig. ed. This is /alvo labradorus of Audubon, lately accredited by Mr. Ridg- way with varietal distinction, and identified with F’. obsoletus Gm.
. is-land/-i-ctis. [ees-]. Latinized directly from the native name of Ice-land (island,
otherwise known as Eisland and Ijsland), and thus meaning Icelandic,—not “ in- sular.”
can’-di-cans. Lat. candico, 1 am white; present participle of the verb ; candidus, white ; candeo, I am shining, &e. Candid is pure, clean, hence truthful; candescent, brilliantly glowing ; candidates were so called because clothed in white; candles give light; canescent hairs grow white; in all these, and countless words, the same root is seen.
In the orig. ed. as Falco sucer var. candicans ; see above, No. 498.
. méx-i-ca/-niis. To Mexico, whence Lichtenstein described it. It has been identified
with F’. polyagrus of Cassin. “ Lanier” or “ Lanner” is the name applied in ornithology and faleonry to certain Old World species; it is from laniarius, of a butcher, laniator, a butcher, from Janio, I lacerate, mangle; lanius (which see, No. 186) is the same thing.
. pér-&-gri/-niis. See Helminthophaga, No. 109.
This stands as F’. communis in the orig. ed. It is well to stretch a point in favor of Tunstall, 1779, to be able to restore this well-known name.
. p. péal/-i-i [in three syllables]. To Titian R. Peale, of United States Exploring Expe-
dition fame. Of doubtful standing.
. col-iim-ba/-ri-iis. Post-classic Lat. columbarius, pertaining to a pigeon, columba; or, a
pigeon-fancier, as this spirited little falcon is.
. c. sick’-léy-i. To George Suckley, known in ornithology for his researches in Oregon
and Washington Territories. The first syllable is long, and pronounced with the full Latin force of u, like 00 in moon. A very dubious bird.
510.
511.
ol72.
513.
507.
508,
509
510.
ol.
512.
513.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 87
Falco columbarius richardsoni Ridg. B —. ¢ 345. R 418.
Richardson’s Pigeon Hawk.
Falco sparverius L. B 13. C 346. R 420.
Sparrow Hawk.
Falco sparverius isabellinus (Sw.) Ridg. B—. © 346a. R 420a.
Isabel Sparrow Hawk.
Falco sparverioides Vig. B—. CO —. R 421. (!W.1.)
Cuban Sparrow Hawk.
Falco fusciccerulescens V. B9. C347. R419.
Kemoral Falcon.
Buteo unicinctus harrisi (Aud.) Ridg. B46. © 348. R 434.
Harris’s Buzzard Hawk.
Buteo albocaudatus V. B—.c—. R441.
F.
Ee
White-tailed Buzzard Hawk,
e. rich’-ard-sén-i. To Sir John Richardson, the species having been described and figured in the Fauna Boreali-Americana.
spar-vé’-ri-tis. — Post-classic Latin, meaning, relating to a sparrow, as columbarius from columba. There is a quasi-Latin word sparvius, from which sparverius is directly formed. The word sparrow in some of its forms doubtless antedates any corresponding word in the South European languages. We have not traced the Latin sparvius or sparverius back of Gesner, 1555. See Passer, No. 192.
- S. I-sa-bél-li’-nts. The Lady Isabel, having confidence in her husband’s prowess,
vowed not to change her chemise until that warrior had taken a certain town. He was longer about it than she expected, and she wore the garment until it assumed a peculiar brown tint: hence the term “ isabel-color” ; whence quasi-Latin isabellinus.
. Spar-vé-ri-6-i/-dés. This is an aggravated case of bastardy. Anglo-Saxon and Gothic
sparwa or sparva, Latinized as sparvius, a sparrow, whence sparverius, a sparrower, so to speak, or sparrow-catcher, as this hawk is; with the Gr. efdos, to denote the resemblance of the West Indian to the North American bird.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Lately said to have occurred in Florida. See Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, p. 220. o
. fiis-ci-coé-ril-Es/-céns. Lat. fuscus, dusky, and caerulescens, growing blue; 7. e., being
bluish: caruleus, blue. This was written fuscocerulescens by Vieillot, but the above is preferable. “Femoral” relates to the color of the thigh; femur, the thigh-bone. This is F’. femoralis of the orig. ed. See Sharpe, Cat. Accip. Br. Mus., i. p. 400.
Bii/-té-6 t-ni-cinc’-tiis har/-ris-i. Lat. buteo, a buzzard-hawk; of doubtful etymology ;
the word occurs in Pliny. — Lat. uni, once, and cinctus, girded; unus, one, and cingo, I gird, bind about; with reference to the single zone of white color on the tail.— To Edward Harris, of Philadelphia.
. al-bd-caiid-a!-tiis. — Lat. albus, white, caudatus, tailed; cauda, tail. The latter part of
the word being a participial adjective of a supposed verb caudo, permits albus to be in the “ablative of instrument,” “white” being that wherewith the bird is “tailed”’ In another form, it would be albicauda, like albicilla for instance. See No 42.
Not in the orig. ed.; since discovered in Texas both by G. B. Sennett and J. C. Merrill. See Coues, The Country, July 13, 1878, p. 184; and Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., i, Oct. 2, 1878, p. 154.
88
514.
B15, 516. 517. 518. 519. B20. 521. 522.
523.
514, 515.
516. 517. 518. 519. 520.
521. * 522.
— 523.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Buteo cooperi Cass. B 29. C 349. R 437. (?)
Cooper’s Buzzard Hawk.
Buteo harlani (Aud.) Bp. B 22. C 350. R 438.
Harlan’s Buzzard Hawk.
Buteo borealis (Gm.) V. B23. C 351. R 436.
Red-tailed Buzzard Hawk; Hen Hawk.
Buteo borealis calurus (Cass.) Ridg. B 20, 24. C 351a. R 4366.
Western Red-tailed Buzzard Hawk.
Buteo borealis lucasanus Ridg. B—. C 351d. R 436c.
St. Lucas Buzzard Hawk.
Buteo borealis krideri Hoopes. B—. C 351c. R 436a. (?)
Krider’s Buzzard Hawk.
Buteo lineatus (Gm.) Jard. B 25. C 352. R 439.
Red-shouldered Buzzard Hawk.
Buteo lineatus elegans (Cass.) Ridg. B 26. C 352a. R 439a.
Western Red-shouldered Buzzard Hawk.
Buteo abbreviatus Cab. B—. C 353. R 440.
Band-tailed Hawk.
Buteo swainsoni Bp. B 18, 19, 21, 28. C 354. R 442.
DW ww wD
Swainson’s Buzzard Hawk.
. coop’-ér-i, To Dr. James G. Cooper, of California, well known for his studies of the
birds of that country. Doubtful species: only one specimen known.
. har/-lan-i. To Dr. Richard Harlan, of Philadelphia, author of Medical and Physical
Researches, Fauna Americana, ete.
. bor-é-a/-lis. Lat. borealis, northern; boreas, the north wind.
. b. cal-ii/-riis. Gr. «adds, beautiful, and odpa, tail.
b. li-cas-a’-ntis. Named after Cape St. Lucas, Lower California.
. b. kri/-dér-i. To John Krider, the veteran taxidermist of Philadelphia. Dubious.
. li-n&é-a/-tiis. Lat. l/geatus, lineated, limned, from /inio ; linea, a line. In reference to the Re ,
streaking of the plumage.
. 1. @-lé-gans. Lat. elegans, elegant, because select, chosen: e and ligo, I pick out.
. ab-brév-i-a/-ttis. Lat. abbreviatus, shortened; ab and brevio, I abridge, contract; brevis,
short; Gr. Bpaxvs. Applicability unknown to us. This stands as B. zonocercus in the orig. ed. See Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, p. 220.
swain’-son-i. To William Swainson, Esq., the celebrated English naturalist.
Mr. Sharpe has lately called this B. obsoletus (Gm.), but very erroneously, Gmelin’s bird of that name being a Gyrfalcon. — B. insignatus of Cassin is simply a melanism. — B. bairdi of Cassin is the young. — This bird is the nearest form we have to the Euro- pean B. vulgaris, which latter has been attributed to Michigan: see Maynard, Bull. Nutt. Club, i, No. 1, 1876, pp. 2-6.
The meaning of the word “buzzard” is unknown to us. It runs through several languages, as buzhard, buzard, busard, buse. Some think it onomatopeic, related to buzz; that seems doubtful; more likely related to the Latin buteo. Butes is a Latin proper name, but of no obvious connection.
24, ae
pe a
sg 525.
526.
527.
530.
531.
524. 525.
526.
527.
528.
529.
530.
531.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 89
Buteo pennsylvanicus (Wils.) Bp. B 27. C 355. R 443. Broad-winged Buzzard Hawk. {See Addenda, Nos. 882, 883.
Archibuteo lagopus sancti-johannis (Gm.) Ridg. B 30, 31. € 356. R 447. American Rough-legged Buzzard.
Archibuteo ferrugineus (Licht.) Gr. B 32. C 357. R 448. Ferrugineous Rough-legged Buzzard.
Asturina plagata Schl. B 33. C 358. R 445. Gray Hawk.
Urubitinga anthracina (Licht.) Lafr. B—.C —. R 444. Anthracite Hawk.
Onychotes gruberi Ridg. B—. C 359. R 446. Gruber’s Hawk.
Pandion haliaétus (L.) Sav. B 44. C 360. R 425. Fish Hawk; Osprey.
Thrasyaétus harpyia (L.) Gr. B—. Cc —. R450. (!M.) Harpy Eagle.
B. pénn-syl-van/-i-ctis. See Dendreca, No. 124.
Arch-i-bii’-té-6 lig-6'-piis sanc-ti-j6-han/-nis. Lat. archi-, equivalent to Gr. apxos, a leader, a chief; &pxw, I rule, I am first; the word simply means “arch-buzzard,” like archbishop, archetype, architect, &e. — Lat. lagépus, Gr. Aayérous, hare-footed, from Aayds, a hare, and mods, a foot: in allusion to the feathering of the tarsi. The penult here remains long in Latin as it is in Greek; but words in -opus, where the o is simply a connecting vowel, shorten the penult. — Lat. sancti-johannis, of Saint John, alluding to the place in Newfoundland so called.
A. fér-rii-gin’/-€-tis. See Scolecophagus, No. 331.
As-tir-i/-na pla-ga/-ta. Asturina is simply formed from Lat. astur, which see, No. 496, without any difference of meaning. — Lat. plagata, striped, from plago, I strike ; plaga, a blow, stroke, stripe ; Gr. tAny, a blow, wound, from mAfjoow or tAnTTw, I strike. Com- monly written plagiata, for which we see no good reason.
U-ri-bi-tin’/-ga4 an-thra-ci/-na. Urubitinga is a barbarous word, of some South American dialect ; urubu means a vulture; we do not know what the rest of the word is, nor the quantity of the first two vowels; we hear them long and leave them so. — Lat. anthra- cinus, Gr. avOpdkivos, carbuncular ; &vOpak, genitive &vOpaxos, a carbuncle ; also a live coal, acoal. The application in the present case is not to a glowing coal, like a carbuncle, but to a dead coal, coal-black; the glossy black of anthracite coal, as the bird is.
O-nych’-8-tés gri/-bér-i. Gr. dvvt, genitive dyvxos, a claw; the rest of the word is the regular suffix -rys, -tes, making the whole signify “the clawed one.” Notice the accent. — To F. Gruber, a taxidermist of San Francisco. This bird is questionably North American; but distinct from any Hawk in this list.
Pan-di/-6n hal-i-4-é/-tiis. Lat. Pandion, Gr. Mavdlwy, was the alleged father of Progne and Philomela: see Coues, B. Col. Vall., i, 1878, p. 8371. Observe quantity and accent of the penult.—Gr. GAs, genitive aAds, salt, the sea, and ards, an eagle ; “ sea-eagle.” See Haliaétus, No. 533.
Thra-sy-a-é/-ttis har-pyi/-A or har-py’-i-4 [either three or four syllables; in either case pronounced harpweelah]. Gr. @pacvds, bold, audacious, and antés, eagle; see No. 533, Generally written Thrasaétus, as originally by Gray : but the above is preferable ; com- pare Thrasyas, Thrasybulus, Thrasymachus, &c., all retaining the y (v). — The “Aprurat,
90 CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
532. Aquila chrysaétus (L.) Cuv. B39. © 361. R 449. Golden Eagle.
533. Haliaétus albicilla (L.) Leach. B42. Cc —. R 452. (G.) White-tailed Eagle; Sea Eagle.
534. Haliaétus leucocephalus (L.) Savig. B 41, 43. C 362. R 451. White-headed Eagle; Bald Eagle.
535. Polyborus cheriway (Jacq.) Cab. B45. C 363. R 423. Caracara Eagle.
Harpyie or Harpies were fabulous monsters, embodying the idea of female rapacity as birds of prey, with crooked talons and beak (ap77).
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List; lately ascertained to occur in Texas. See Oswald, Am. Nat., 1878, p. 151; and Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, p. 221.
532. A!-quil-4 chrys-4-é/-tus. Lat. aquila, an eagle. The etymology is disputed. It is given by some, without qualification, as from Gr. w«tbs, Lat. acer, ocior, sharp, swift, from y/ac or Var. Some say from aquilus, dark, swarthy ; others, as related to aquilo, the north wind; others from Gr. e&yxtAos, crooked, hooked, as the bird’s beak is: this would corre- spond to the derivation of gryps, ypiw, a griffin, from ypurds, bent, hook-nosed. It is conjectured, also, from a@yxvAn, the curve of the limb, or the curved limb, with which the bird, as Jove’s lightning-bearer, grasped the thunder-bolts. Some allied forms of the word, in which g appears instead of the g, as aguila, azgle, eagle, favor the supposition that the name has something to do with the great wings of the bird. — Gr. ypuvcaiertos or xpuvoderos, golden eagle; xpucds, golden, derds, eagle. See Haliaétus, No. 533.
533. Hal-i-a-é/-ttis al-bi-cil/-14. Gr. Gs, genitive adds, salt; the (salt) sea; and derds or anrds or aierds, an eagle; there is also the actual Greek aAidetos or aduatetos, for the “sea- eagle,” that is, the osprey. There is also the actual Latin transliteration “ halieetos,” for the same bird. So many vowels coming together, with such variation in the original Greek, has kept the orthography incessantly fluctuating. Savigny, who was a classical scholar, as well as an ornithologist, originally spelled the genus he founded Halicétus. This is perfectly correct, in fact, the poetic form, as transliterated from daAaleros, with only the usual and proper change of Greek a: into Latin ew. Many purists keep to this spelling, which is perfectly defensible, and has the advantage of being that used by the founder of the genus. But, as Haldeman remarks, however desirable Haliwétus may be in poetical writing, it is more consonant with a strict scientific spirit to simplify the word into Haliaétus, deriving it in this case from aetés or antés. We accept and adopt this form upon such understanding. Having settled this, the next question arises respecting the quantity of the vowels, and accentuation of the syllables. If derived from derds, the word would be Halia'étits ; if from antds, it would be Haliae'tits. We prefer the latter. In any event, the form “ Haliztus,” in four syllables, is inadmissible: the word must have at least five syllables. But ornithologists may be forgiven for anything in this case, seeing that the grammarians have disputed it for some centuries. — Lat. albicilla, white-tailed. See AMotacilla, No. 86.
This species, though frequently attributed to North America, has of late years been dropped. It is now restored, on the strength of its occurrence in Greenland, though not elsewhere in North America that we know of. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List.
534, H. leii-cd-c&ph’-a-liis. Gr. Acuxds, white, and kepadh, head.
535, Pol-¥'-bdr-tis cheriway. Gr. moAvBédpos, eating a great deal, very voracious. — Cheriway and Caracara are both barbarous words, the meaning of which we know not: from some South American dialect. This stands in the orig. ed. as P. tharus var. auduboni.
536.
537.
538.
059.
540.
041.
537.
538.
539.
540.
541. 542,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. gi
Pseudogryphus californianus (Shaw) Ridg. B 2. C 364. R 453. Californian Vulture.
Cathartes aura (L.) Ill. B1. C 365. R 454. Turkey Buzzard.
Catharista atrata (Bartr.) Less. B 3. C 366. R 455. Carrion Crow.
Columba fasciata Say. B 445. C. 367. R 456. Band-tailed Pigeon.
Columba erythrina Licht. B 446. © 368. R 457. Red-billed Pigeon.
Columba leucocephala L. B 447. C 369. R 458. White-crowned Pigeon.
Engyptila albifrons (Bp.) Coues. B—. C —. R 463. White-fronted Pigeon.
Pseiti-d6-gry’-phts cal-i-for-ni-a/-niis. Gr. Wedd5os, false, from Weddw, I deceive, and Lat. gryphus, for gryps, genitive gryphis, a griffin, a fabulous bird; from Gr. ypy, the same, from ypu7ds, bent, hook-nosed. The word is badly formed in two languages: had better have been Pseudogryps. Gryphus is a name early transferred by ornithologists from its fabulous prototype to the condor of the Andes; and Mr. Ridgway made Pseudogryphus from the resemblance of the Californian vulture to the latter.
This stands as Cathartes cal. in the orig. ed. See Ridg., Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, pg:
Cath-ar'-tés aii/-ra [ow-rah, not or-ah]. Gr. «aSaprhs, a purifier, from Kxa@alpw, I cleanse, purify, purge; from the good offices of the bird as a scavenger in warm countries. — Aura is a name applied to this bird by the oldest writers who speak of it, and, in all its various forms, as rendered by De Laet and others who treat of tropical American Cathartide, it is of South American or Mexican origin, and apparently related to urubu or ourubu. It early crystallized in its present orthography, and was soon Latinized, or at least declined as a Latin word; as, rex aurarum, or regina aurarum (genitive plural), “king of the vultures.” That it has any connection with Lat. aura, Gr. avpa, air, atmosphere, may well be doubted. :
Cath-ar-is/-ta 4-tra/-ta. Badly framed from ka@ap{(w, only another form of ka@aipw, of same meaning; see No. 537.— Lat. atrata, participial adjective, blackened ; ater, black. This stands as Cathartes atratus in the orig. ed. See Ridg., Bull. Nutt. Club. v, 1880, p. 80. Cél-im/-ba fas-ci-a/-ta. Lat. columba, a pigeon; etymology unknown.—See Chamea, No. 39. C. &-ryth-ri/-na. Lat. erythrina, Gr. épvpivos, reddish ; from épvépés, red. This is C. flavirostris of the orig. ed. As the bill is not at all yellow, another name is desirable. See Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 9.
C. leti-cd-céph/-4-14. Gr. Acveds, white, and repadn, head.
En-gyp’-ti-la 4l’-bi-frons. Gr. éyyvs, narrow, slender, contracted, and wA(Aov, a feather ; from the attenuated outer primaries. — Lat. albus, white; frons, forehead. Not in the orig. ed.; since discovered in Texas by G. B. Sennett. See Coues, Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., iv, 1878, p. 48, and Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 100; Ridg., Pr; Nat. Mus., i, 1878, p. 158.
92 _/ 848. » B44, BAS, 5AG. yp 47. 5A8, 549,
550.
543.
544.
545.
546.
547.
548. 549.
550.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Ectopistes migratorius (L.) Sw. B 448. © 370. R 459. Wild Pigeon; Passenger Pigeon.
Zenaidura carolinensis (L.) Bp. B 451. C 371. R 460. Carolina Dove.
Zenaida amabilis Bp. B 449. C 372. R 462. Zenaida Dove.
Melopelia leucoptera (L.) Bp. B 450. © 373. R 464. White-winged Dove.
Chameepelia passerina (L.) Sw. B 453. C 374. R 465. Ground Dove.
Chamezepelia passerina pallescens (Bd.) Coues. B—. C 374a. R—. (?) St. Lucas Ground Dove.
Scardafella inca (Less.) Bp. B 452. C 375. R 466. Scaled Dove.
Geotrygon martinica (Gm.) Reich. B 454. C 376. R 467. Key West Pigeon.
Ec-t6-pis’-tés mi-gra-t6/-ri-tis. Gr. éxtomorhs, a wanderer, passenger; éxrorl(w, I wander, change place; from ex, out of, and rémos, place; “out of place.’ — Lat. migratorius, of same meaning; migro, I migrate.
Zén-a-i-du/-ra ca-r6-lin-én/-sis. We think zenaida is a barbarous word. Its meaning we do not know. See Phonipara, No. 297, and compare zena there given. The rest of the word is formed by adding the Greek odpa. Bonaparte originally wrote zenaidura, which has usually, of late, following Dr. Coues’ lead, been turned to zenedura; but if the word is not classic, there is no occasion for the modification.
Zén-a-i/-da am-a/-bil-is. Zenaida, a proper name, perhaps Spanish; meaning unknown to us: see No. 544. — Lat. amabilis, lovable, lovely ; amo, I love.
Mél-6-pél-i/-4 leti-cop’-tér-4. Gr. wédros, melody, and méAeia, a dove. Name derived from 7eAAos, the peculiar dark slaty-blue color, so characteristic of pigeons; we say to-day in sporting parlance “ blue-rocks ” for the ordinary domestic pigeon. The word, like many others ending in -pelia, is often wrong-written -peleia. Observe that the Greek et becomes long i in Latin, giving us -pelia, accented on the penult.— Gr. Aeukds, white, and mrepdy, a wing.
Cham-aé-pél-i’-4 pas-sér-i/-na. Gr. yauai, an adverb, on the ground, and wéAea, a dove. See No. 546. See Chamea, No. 39. This word is spelled about a dozen different ways, by writers or printers who are careless or ignorant. — Lat. passerina, sparrow-like, in allusion to the diminutive size: passer, a sparrow. See No. 192.
C. p. pal-lés/-céns. See Mitrephorus, No. 392. Scarcely distinguishable from No. 547.
Scar-da-fél/-14 in’/-ca. Scardafella is an Italian word, thus accounted for by Bonaparte, who founded the genus, in his “Coup d’Csil sur l’Ordre des Pigeons” (p. 48 of the separate copies) : “ une expression du Dante m’a inspiré le nom de scardafella, qui peint Vapparence é€cailleuse de notre treizieme genre.” The “scaly appearance ” is due to the coloration, not the texture, of the feathers. — Jnca is a barbarous word ; the incas or yncas were Peruvian chiefs.
This is S. squamosa var. inca in the orig. ed.; later determined to be distinct.
Gé-6-try’-g6n mAr-tin/-i-cd. Gr. yéa, the earth, the ground, and tpuydév, a pigeon; from tpi(w, to coo; onomatopeeic, like turtur. There seems to be reason for keeping the penult long, and accenting it.— Lat. martinica, Latinized adjective from Martinique, one of the West Indies.
557.
558.
551,
552.
553.
554, 555.
556. 557. 558.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 93
Starnoenas cyanocephalus (L.) Bp. B 455. © 377. R 468. Blue-headed Pigeon.
Ortalis vetula maccalli (Bd.) B 456. C 378. R 469. Texan Guan. Meleagris gallipavo L. B 458. C 379. R 470.
Domestic Turkey; Mexican Turkey.
Meleagris gallipavo americana (Bartr.) Coues. B 457. C 379a. R 470a. Common Wild Turkey of the United States.
Canace canadensis (L.) Bp. B 460. C 380. R 472. Canada Grouse ; Spruce Partridge.
Canace canadensis franklini (Dougl.) Coues. B 461. C 380a. R 472a, Franklin’s Spruce Partridge.
Canace obscura (Say) Bp. B 459. C 381. R 471. Dusky Grouse.
Canace obscura richardsoni (Dougl.) Coues. B—. C 381a. R 4710. Richardson’s Dusky Grouse.
Star-noé/-nas cy-an-6-céph/-a-lus. From 2 (probably Italian; Agassiz gives Starna as a proper name), and Gr. oivds, Lat. nas, the vine: also, a kind of pigeon ; enas seems to have been transferred to the pigeon, as @nanthe was to some other bird; see Saxicola, No. 26. The oivds of Aristotle is Columba livia L. —Gr. kvavds, cyanus, blue, and redadn, head.
Or’-tal-is vét’-ii-14 mac-cal/-li. Gr. opradls, a pullet, a kind of quail. This word was universally written ortalida, until Mr. Wharton showed that the way Merrem, writing Latin, constructed the sentence in which the word first occurs made it the accu- sative case; arguing hence that Merrem meant to found a genus ortalis, not ortal:da. See Ibis, October, 1879, p. 450. The Rev. Mr. Avery’s MS. in our possession makes the same correction, though without comment. — Lat. vetula, a little old woman; derisive diminutive from vetus, old, veteran; digammated from Gr. éros, a year.— To General George A. McCall, U. S. Army.
Mél-é-ag'-ris gal-li-pa’-vd. Gr. pedreaypls, Lat. meleagris, a guinea-hen ; literally, a field- tender, farmer; from née, relating to the care of a thing, and &ypos,a field. The word not transferred from the African Numida to the American Turkey until near the middle of the 16th century, and occasionally confounded for many years after that. J/e/eager or MeAecaypés was a mythical person who suffered a cruel fate : his sisters, the A/eleagrides, who bitterly lamented his death, were changed into guinea-hens ; the profusely-spotted plumage of which gives evidence of the tears they shed for him. — Lat. gallipavo, usually written gallopavo, a very late combination of gallus, a cock, and paro, a pea-fowl, bird of Juno; the latter word from the Gr. rads or raas or ta@yv, a pea-fowl.
M. g. am-ér-i-ca/-na. Of America.
Can’-a-cé ca-na-dén’-sis. Canace, a proper name; she lived in incest with her brother; application not obvious, unless referring in a general way to the polygamy of gallina-
ceous birds. This and following species are given as Tetrao in the orig. ed. ; but may be properly
separated generically from Tetrao urogallus. C. c. frank/-lin-i. To Sir John Franklin, of Arctic fame and sorrow. C. db-scii/-riis. Lat. obscurus, obscure, i. e., dark-colored.
C. o. rich/-drd-sén-i. To Sir John Richardson, often already mentioned in this List.
94
559.
560.
561.
562.
560.
561.
562.
563.
564.
565.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Canace obscura fuliginosa Ridg. B—. C 3810. R 471a. Fuliginous Dusky Grouse.
Centrocercus urophasianus (Bp.) Sw. B 462. C 382. R 479. Sage-cock ; Cock-of-the-Plains,
Pedicecetes phasianellus (L.) Elliot. B—. C 383. R 478. Northern Sharp-tailed Grouse.
Pedicecetes phasianellus columbianus (Ord) Coues. B 463. C 283a, R478a Common Sharp-tailed Grouse; Prairie Hen of the Northwest.
Cupidonia cupido (L.) Bd. B 464. C 384. R 477. Pinnated Grouse; Prairie Hen.
Cupidonia cupido pallidicincta Ridg. B—. © 384a. R 477a. Pale Pinnated Grouse.
Bonasa umbella (L.) Steph. B 465. C 385. R 473. Ruffed Grouse; ‘ Pheasant” in the Middle and Southern States.
C. o. fii-li-gin-d’-sa. Lat., post-classic, fuligincsa, of a dark sooty color; fuligo, soot ; fulica, or fulix, a coot; so called from its color.
Cén-tr6é-cér/-ciis t-r6é-pha-si-a/-ntis. Gr. «évrpov, a spine, and xépxos, tail; “ sharp- tailed.” —Gr. ovpa, tail, and daciavds, Lat. phasianus, Fr. fuisan, Eng), pheasant, pertaining to the river Phasis in Colchis. The scientific name of the English pheasant is Phasianus colchicus.” The name “ pheasant” has been ignorantly transferred to various American birds of this family.
Pé&d-i-o0é/-cé-tés pha-si-an-él/-lis. Gr. wed(ov, a plain; as we should say, prairie; from médov, the ground; and oikérys, an inhabitant; see Powcetes, No. 252. The word was originally written Pediocetes. — Lat. phasianellus, diminutive of phasianus; see Centro- cercus, No. 560.
P. p. cdl-tim-bi-a/-niis. To the Columbia river, whence the birds were brought by Lewis and Clarke.
Cii-pi-d6/-ni-a cii-pi/-d6. The bird was named by Linneeus Tetrao cupido, after the “blind bow-boy,” son of Venus, not with any allusion to erotic concerns, but because the little wings on the bird’s neck were likened to “Cupid’s wings.” The same idea is repeated in the English “ pinnated” grouse. Professor Reichenbach formed his genus Cupidonia by merely adding a suffix. If he had written ecupidinea, he would have had a classic word, directly formed, like cupidus, from cupido, exactly expressing the sense intended by Linnzus to be conveyed. — The Latin tetrao, from the Gr. rerpdwy, and tetrix, from the Gr. rérpit, were certain gallinaceous birds, so called from their wont to cackle, retpacew: all onomatopaic.
C. c. pal-li-di-cinc/-ta. Lat. pallidus, pallid, pale; and cinctus, begirt, encircled; cingo, I bind.
Bon-a'-sa Gm-bél’-liis. Gr. Bdvacos, Lat. bonasus, a wild bull. The allusion here is to the “drumming” noise made by the bird, likened to the bellowing of a bull; see Bubo, No. 462, and Botaurus, No. 666. Also written Bonasia.— Lat. umbellus, or umbella, an umbel, umbrella; from wmbra, shade, shadow, whence penumbra, umbrageous, &c. The allusion is to the tuft of feathers on the side of the neck, as in the case of cuprdo, which see, No. 563. Linneus wrote Tetrao umbellus, masculine; but we see no reason why umbella, the noun feminine, should not be used with Bonasa; it is equally good Latin. The adjective wmbellata would be preferable to either.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 95
Bonasa umbella umbelloides (Dougl.) Bd. B 465*. © 385a. R 4734. Gray Ruffed Grouse.
Bonasa umbella sabinii (Dougl.) Coues. B 466. C 3850. R 4730. Oregon Ruffed Grouse.
Lagopus albus (Gm.) Aud. B 467, 4702. C 386. R 474. Willow Ptarmigan.
Lagopus rupestris (Gm.) Leach. B 468. C 387. R 475. Rock Ptarmigan.
Lagopus leucurus Sw. B 469. C 388. R 476. White-tailed Ptarmigan.
Ortyx virginiana (L.) Bp. B 471. C 389. R 480. Virginia Partridge; Quail; Bob-white.
Ortyx virginiana floridana Coues. B—. C 38%qa. R 480a. Florida Partridge.
Ortyx virginiana texana (Lawr.) Coues. B 472. C 3898. R 4800. Texas Partridge.
Orortyx picta (Dougl.) Bd. B 473. C 390. R 481. Plumed Partridge; California Mountain Quail.
Lophortyx californica (Shaw) Bp. B 474. C 391. R 482. Crested Partridge; California Valley Quail.
Lophortyx gambeli Nutt. B 475. C 392. R 483. Gambel’s Crested Partridge; Arizona Quail.
Callipepla squamata (Vig.) Gr. B 476. C 393. R 484. Scaled Blue Partridge.
B. u. tm-bél-16-1/-dés. Lat. wmbellus, which see, next above, and e7dos.
B. u. sa-bi’-ni-i. To J. Sabine.
Lag-6/-piis al/-bts. Gr. Aaydérous, Lat. lagopus, hare-foot; Aayds, a hare, and rods, foot. — Lat. albus, white. For the length of the accented penult, see Archibuteo, No. 525.
L. ru-pés/-tris. Late Lat. rupestris, pertaining to, or inhabiting, rocks; rupes, a rock.
L. leti-cti/-riis. Gr. Aevids, white, odpa, tail.
Or’-tyx vir-gin-i-a/-na. Gr. dprvt, a quail; related to épradls; both are akin to dpyis, a bird. The word is masculine in Greek, but in transliteration into Latin becomes feminine, like other nouns of same termination. — The English word partridge, Scot. patrick, Fr. perdrix, Span. perdiz, Ital. perdice, Lat. perdix, Gr. wépdié, are all the same.
O. v. fld-ri-da/-na. To Florida.
O. v. téx-a/-na. To Texas.
Or-Sr-tyx pic/-ta. Gr. dpos, a mountain, and dprvt; see Oroscoptes, No. 14. — Lat. pictus, painted, depicted ; pingo, I paint; in allusion to the beautiful colors.
Loph-6r’-tyx cal-i-for/-ni-ca. Gr. Aogos, a crest, helmet, and dprvé.
L. gam/-bél-i. To William Gambel, of Philadelphia. See Zonotrichia, No. 278.
Cal-li-pép/-14 squa-ma/-ta. Gr. «adds, feminine xaAAj, and mémAos, a certain robe of
state; ckaAAurémAos, beautifully robed, as this quail is. — Lat. squamata, squamous, scaled, covered with scales, the peculiar colors presenting such an appearance; squama, a scale.
96
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
578. Cyrtonyx massena (Less.) Gould. B 477. C 394. R 485.
Massena Partridge.
579. Coturnix dactylisonans Meyer. B—.cC—.R—.
Migratory Quail (imported).
, 680. Squatarola helvetica (L.) Cuv. B 510. C 395. R 513.
Black-bellied Plover; Bull-head.
581. Charadrius dominicus Miill. B 503. C 396. R515.
American Golden Plover.
582. Charadrius dominicus fulvus (Gm.) Ridg. B—.C—. R 515a. (!A.)
Asiatic Golden Plover.
583. Charadrius pluvialis L. B—.c—. R514. (G.)
European Golden Plover.
578. Cyr-td/-nyx mas-sé/-na. Gr. xcupréds, bent, curved, crooked, and éyvt, a claw, nail; related
to Lat. uncus, a hook.— To the French Marshal André Massena, Prince d’ Essling.
579. Co6-tir'-nix dac-tyl-i/-sdn-ans. Lat. coturnir, a quail; onomatope@ic, a sono vocis,
from the sound of the voice, just as we have invented “ bob-white ” and “ whip-poor- will.” — Lat. dactylisonans, sounding a dactyle. The dactyle, in poetry, is a foot con- sisting of a long and two short syllables; from SaxtvaAos, the finger, which has a long and two short joints. Sono, I sound; sonorous, &c.
This bird, lately imported, has become naturalized, with the same right to a place in the list that Passer domesticus has acquired.
580. Squa-ta-rd/-la hél-vé/-ti-ca. Of squatarola the authors learned little, until a note from
Professor Newton supplied the desired information, in substance as follows: As a generic term it is of course from the Linnean Tringa squatarola, and Linneus obviously got his trivial name from Willughby, who says (Ornith., ed. 1676, p. 229), —“ Pluvialis cinerea. Squatarola Venetiis dicta, ubi frequens est. The Gray Plover.” The word is not to be found in the best Italian dictionaries ; but Salvadori, in his Fauna d’ Italia — Uccelli, seems to acknowledge it as a genuine word; though probably it is only local in its application. It may possibly have to do with the regular Italian squartare, “to quarter.” — Lat. helvetica, from ancient Helvetia, now Switzerland; the bird is still often called “Swiss plover.” The Helvetians were probably so called from their fairness, with flaxen or auburn hair ; helvus, helveolus (related to gilvus), meaning some such color.
581, Ch§&r-ad/-ri-itis dém-in’-i-ctis. [Ch- hard; second syllable long.] Gr. xapd5pios, some
582. C.
kind of a bird, supposed to be a plover, and the same as tpdxAos ; from xapd5pa, the watery places inhabited by such birds. As used by Aristotle, the word apparently refers to Oedicnemus crepitans. — Lat. dominicus, see Dendraca, No. 129.
This stands as C. fulvus var. virginicus in the orig. ed., but Miiller’s name has priority over Gmelin’s. See Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 9; and Cassin, Pr. Phila. Acad., 1864, p. 246.
d. fil/-vis. Lat. fidvus, fulvous, yellow. Not in the orig. ed. Since discovered in Alaska. See Cou :. in Elliot’s Prybilov Report, 1875, 179; and Birds N. W., 1874, p. 450, note.
. pltiv-i-a/-lis. Lat. pluvialis, rainy, pertaining to rain, bringing rain; pluvia, rain; pluo,
to rain: the bird was supposed in some way related to rain or the rainy season: “ plover” is the same.
Not in the orig. ed.; ascertained to occur in Greenland; see Newt., Man. N. H. Greenl., 1875, p. 101; Freke, Zodlogist, September, 1881, p. 374.
584.
.585.
‘586.
534.
585.
586.
587.
588.
589.
590.
591.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 97
4Hgialites vociferus (L.) Cass. B 504. C 397. R 516.
Kildeer Ring Plover.
Afgialites wilsonius (Ord) Cass. B 506. C 398. R 522.
Wilson’s Ring Plover.
4égialites semipalmatus (Bp.) Cab. B 507. C 399. R 517.
Semipalmated Ring Plover; Ring-neck.
Axgialites melodus (Ord) Cab. B 508. C 400, 400a. R 520.
Piping Ring Plover; Ring-neck.
Zeigialites melodus circumcinctus Ridg. B—. C 400a. R 520a. (?)
Belted Piping Plover.
46gialites hiaticula (L.) Boie. B—. C —. R518.
European Ring Plover.
Axgialites curonicus (Gm.) Gray. B—. C 400dis. R 519.
European Lesser Ring Plover.
Aggialites cantianus nivosus (Cass.) Coues. B 509. C 401. R 521.
Snowy Ring Plover.
Aég-i-4/-li-tés vd-ci!-fér-iis. Gr. aiyaAirns, masculine, or aiyiadtris, feminine, or atya-
Aevs, an inhabitant of the seashore ; aiy:adds, the coast, from the breaking of the waves upon it (&yvyu). The name is very appropriate to these beach-birds. Both forms, egialites, masculine, and egialitis, feminine, are in common use; either is perfectly correct; but as Boie wrote egialites originally, this form should be preserved. — Lat. vociferus, vociferous; vor, genitive vocis, voice, and fero, I bear; vor digammated from &y.
. wil-s6n/-i-tis. To Alexander Wilson.
. sém-i-pal-m@/-tiis. Lat. semi, half; sibilated from Gr. jut, hemi-, a contraction of
fyuovs, half, and palmatus, palmated, web-footed ; palma, the palm of the hand, the hand itself; from Gr. taddun, of same meaning. The bird is conspicuously webbed between the toes, in comparison with its allies.
. mél-d/-diis. Lat. melodus, Gr. wedwdds, melodious, sweetly singing ; “éAos, melody, and
&54, a song, an ode. (Notice the long 0, being in place of the Gr. omega with iota subscript.)
. m. cir-ciim-cinc’-tiis. Lat. circum, around; cinctus, belted, girded. See Parus, No. 52.
The black is said to form a complete necklace.
. hi-d-ti!-cii-l&. Of this word we can give no satisfactory account. It is “classic” in
ornithology, going back for over two centuries; in form, it is a diminutive of /iatus,,
from hio, I yawn, gape. Not in the orig. ed. Since ascertained to inhabit Continental North America, as
well as long known in Greenland. See Brewer, Bull. Nutt. Club, iii, 1878, p. 49 seq.
. cii-rdn’-i-ctis. Lat. Curonicus, Curonian, of the region formerly called Curonia.
The bird described as 42g. microrhynchus, Ridg., Am. Nat., viii, 1874, p. 109, has since been identified with the above. See Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 10; 1881, p. 67. The bird. is very questionably North American.
. can-ti-a/-niis niv-d'-stis. Lat. Cantianus, Kentish. — Lat. nivosus, snowy, in allusion)
to the color; niz, genitive nivis, snow; Gr. vip, vipds, snow.
592.
592.
593.
594,
595.
596.
ao) 598.
599,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Podasocys montanus (Towns.) Coues. B 505. C 402. R 523. Mountain Plover.
Vanellus cristatus Meyer. B—.C—.R 512. (G.) Lapwing.
Aphriza virgata (Gm.) Gray. B 511. C 403. R 511. Surf Bird.
Heematopus ostrilegus L. B—. C —. R 506. (G.) European Oyster-catcher.
Heematopus palliatus Temm. B 512. C 404. R 507. American Oyster-catcher.
Hematopus niger Pall. B 513. C 405. R 508. Black Oyster-catcher.
Strepsilas interpres (L.) Ill. B 515. C 406. R 509. Turnstone.
Strepsilas interpres melanocephalus (Vig.) Coues. B 516. C 406a. R510. Black-headed Turnstone.
Pdd-As-6/-cys mGn-ta/-ntis. The word Podasocys is simply the transliteration of the familiar Homeric epithet of Achilles, “swift as to his feet”? —modas ais "AxiAAevs. — Lat. montanus, pertaining to mountains.
Va-nél’-liis cris-ta/-tiis. Lat. vanus, empty, void, vain, whence vanellus, as a diminutive, for the restless, idle, and noisy bird. ‘In the spring the wanton lapwing gets himself another crest.” (Tennyson.) — Lat. cristatus, crested.
Not in the orig. ed. Only North American as occurring in Greenland. See Reinh., Tbis, 1861, p. 9.
Aph-ri/-z4 vir-ga/-ta. Gr. appds, surf, sea-foam, and (dw, I live; badly formed, but euphonious. Compare Aphrodite, the Greek Venus, foam-formed. Audubon, who invented the word, gives the above etymology; but Wharton’s MS. suggests more direct derivation from a¢pi¢w, I foam. — Lat. virgata, striped, streaked; virga, a rod, green sprout, osier ; from vireo, I am green.
Haém-at’-6-pis 6s-tri/-lé-giis. Gr. aiuaromois, red-footed; atua, genitive afuaros, blood, and mods, foot. The word is commonly but wrongly accented on the penult; but that would be aiuatwrdés, meaning red-eyed. — Lat. ostrea, an oyster, and lego, I collect, gather. Commonly written osfra/egus; but the above seems to be the correct form, agreeable with frugilegus, for example, and conformable with the actual word ostriferus in the following lines : —
Quam quibus in patriam ventosa per equora vectis, Pontus et ostriferi fauces tentantur Abydi. — Verg., Georg., i, 206, 207. Not in orig. ed. Only North American as occurring in Greenland. See Ibis, 1861, p. 9.
H. pal-li-a/-ttis. Lat. palliatus, wearing the pallium, a kind of cloak; to “palliate” is literally to hide, cover up as with a cloak. The allusion here is to the particular colora- tion of the bird. See Contopus, No. 380.
H. nig'-ér. Lat. niger, black.
Strép/-si-las in-tér/-prés. Gr. orpépw, future orpdébw, I turn; orpéyis, a turning over ; and Ads, a stone; literally “turn-stone.” — Lat. interpres, a go-between, factor, broker, agent ; literally, an interpreter, that is, inter-pretor; prator,a Roman magistrate, from pre and eo, I go before.
S. i. mél-an-6-céph/-Al-tis. Gr. uédas, genitive uéAavos, black, and kepaadn, head.
600. oe 601. 602. 603. meh. _/ 808.
600.
601.
602.
603.
604.
605.
606.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 99
Recurvirostra americana Gm. B 517. C 407. R566. American Avocet.
Himantopus mexicanus (Miill.) Ord. B 518. © 408. R 567. Black-necked Stilt.
Steganopus wilsoni (Sab.) Coues. B 519. © 409. R 565. Wilson’s Phalarope.
Lobipes hyperboreus (L.) Cuv. B 520. C 410. R 564. Northern Phalarope; Red-necked Phalarope.
Phalaropus fulicarius (L.) Bp. B 521. © 411. R 563. Red Phalarope; Gray Phalarope.
Philohela minor (Gm.) Gr. B 522. C 412. R 525. American Woodcock.
Scolopax rusticula L. B—. C 413. R 524. (!E.) European Woodcock.
Ré-ciir-vi-ros/-tra Am-ér-i-ca/-na. Lat. recurvus, bent upward, recurved, and rostrum, beak: as the bill of the avocet notably is. — The English word is either avocet or avoset, the meaning of which we know not.
Him-4n’-td-piis méx-i-ca/-niis. Gr. fuavrdémous, Lat. himantopus, the stilt, from iuds, genitive iudvros, and mods, foot. The former word means a thong or strap; applied to this bird onaccount of its very long leathery legs like straps. Commonly accented on the penult ; see Contopus, No. 380.
This stands as H. nigricollis of the orig. ed.; see Cassin, Pr. Phila. Acad., 1864, p. 246.
St&ég-An!-6-piis wil/-sén-i. Gr. oreyavdmous, web-footed; oreyavds, webbed; oreydyn, a web; oréyw, I cover, roof in, and mods, foot. Commonly accented on the penult; see Contopus, No. 380.
Lob/-i-pés hy-pér-bdr’/-&-tis. Gr. AoBds, Lat. lobus, a lobe, flap, and Lat. pes, foot; “lobe- foot,” in allusion to the flaps on the toes. — Lat. hyperboreus, Gr. irepBépeos, hyperborean, in the extreme north, “beyond the north wind,” in the sense of where the north wind comes from.
Phal-ar’-6-piis fil-i-ca/-ri-tis. Gr. gadapls, the coot, so called from the conspicuous white of the bill, gaAapés meaning white, bright, clear, &c.; and mods, foot; phalaropus is “coot-foot;” the phalarope was early called “ coot-footed tringa,” from the flaps on the toes, like those of a coot. The full form of the word would be phalaridopus. — Lat. fulicarius, relating to a coot; the specific name being derived, like the generic, from the lobate feet. See also Fulica, No. 686. See Contopus, No. 580.
Phil-d/-hél-& min/-dr. Gr. /dos, loving, or a lover, and éAos, a swamp. Commonly accented on a wrongly lengthened penult. — Lat. minor, comparative degree of parvus, smaller (than the European woodcock).
Scdl’-5-pax riis-ti/-cti-14. Gr. oxoddat, Lat. scolopax, a snipe; the name of this very species. The dictionaries give it as a theme, and any possible derivation is open to conjecture. cf. cxddo, from the shape of the bill (most likely) ; okdéAné, & Worm; oKdAdw, I scratch. — Lat. rusticus, a rustic, a countryman; diminutive rusticulus ; from rus, the country, as opposed to the city. The word occurs as rusticola in Linneeus, and has so almost universally been written ; but as Wharton shows (Ibis, 1879, p. 453), this is erroneous. The word would be ruricola, if from rus and colo, I inhabit. Rusticula is good Latin, and the epithet of “little countryman ” is very appropriate to the bird.
100
607.
607.
608.
609.
610.
613. 614.
615.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Gallinago media Leach. B—. C —. R526. (G.) European Snipe.
Gallinago wilsoni (Temm.) Bp. B 523. © 414. R 526a. American Snipe; Wilson’s Snipe.
Macrorhamphus griseus (Gm.) Leach. B 524. C 415. R 527. Red-breasted Snipe; Gray-back Snipe; Dowitcher.
Macrorhamphus griseus scolopaceus (Say) Coues. B525. C415a. R527a. Western Red-breasted Snipe.
Micropalama himantopus (Bp.) Bd. B 536. C 416. R 528, Stilt Sandpiper.
Ereunetes pusillus (L.) Cass. B 535. C 417. R 541. Semipalmated Sandpiper.
Ereunetes pusillus occidentalis (Lawr.) Coues. B —. C 417a. R 541a. (?) Western Semipalmated Sandpiper.
Actodromas minutilla (V.) Coues. B 532. C 418. R 538. Least Sandpiper.
Actodromas bairdi Coues. B—. C 419. R 537. Baird’s Sandpiper.
Gal-lin-a/-g3 méd!-i-a4. Lat. gallus, a cock, gallina, a hen, gallinula, a chicken, gallinarius or gallinaceus, relating to poultry; the present word is an arbitrary derivative, as a Latin word, though the forms gallinago, gallinazo, and others are found in different lan- guages. It is formed from gallina like fringillago from fringilla, or like virago from vir. — Lat. medius, median, medium, in the middle (in size, between certain other species).
Not in the orig. ed.; only North American as occurring in Greenland.
G. wil/-sén-i. To Alexander Wilson.
Mac-r6é-rham/-phis gris/-é-ts. Gr. waxpds, great, large, long; and faudos, beak, bill. Notice that the 6 is aspirated, requiring to be followed by Af, as many writers forget. — Griseus, gray, grisly, grizzly ; not classic; a late Latinizing of an Anglo-Saxon word; compare Fr. gris and Gr. ypats or ypnis, yepatds, yépas or vijpas — all these relate to age, when people grow gray. The word “grous” or “grouse,” “the gray bird,’ may be related. See Leucosticte, No. 205.
M. g. scél-5-pa’-cé-iis. The word is formed as an adjective from scolopax, which see, No. 606; scolopaceous, scolopacine, snipe-like.
Mic-ré-pal/-4-ma him-Aan/-td-piis. Gr. wixpds, small, and waddun, the palm, the hand;
same as the Lat. palma; referring to the webbing between the toes. — Himantopus, see No. 601.
E-reti-né/-tés ptis-il/-ltis. Gr. épevyntis, a searcher; from the way in which the bird probes with its bill. — Lat. pusillus, puerile; see Sitta, No. 60.
E. p. dc-ci-dén-ta/-lis. Lat. occidentalis, western. See Dendreca, No. 113.
Ac-td/-drém-4s min-i-til/-14. Gr. axr#, the seashore; from &yvumi, %yw, I break, as the waves do there; Spouds, rapidly running: see Ammodramus, No. 238, and Eudromias, No.
591. — Lat. minutus, small, minute, diminutive, of which minutilla is an arbitrary diminu- tive; minuo, I lessen, diminish; it ought to have been minutula.
A. bair'di. ToS. F. Baird.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 101
616. Actodromas maculata (V.) Coues. B 531. C 420. R 534.
Pectoral Sandpiper.
_617. Actodromas bonapartii (Schl.) Coues. B 533. C 421. R 536.
White-rumped Sandpiper.
618. Actodromas cooperi (Bd.) Coues. B 527. C 422. R 535. (?)
Cooper’s Sandpiper.
619. Actodromas acuminata (Horsf.) Ridg. B—. Cc —. R533. (!A.)
Sharp-tailed Sandpiper.
_,620. Arquatella maritima (Briinn.) Bd. B 528. C 423. R 530.
Purple Sandpiper.
621. Arquatella couesi Ridg. B—.C—. R 531.
Aleutian Sandpiper.
622. Arquatella ptilocnemis (Coues) Ridg. B —. C 426bis. R 532.
Prybilov Sandpiper.
623. Pelidna alpina (L.) Boie. B—. C —. R539. (G.)
616. A. 617. A. 618. A. 619. A
European Dunlin.
ma-cil-a/-ta. Lat. maculatus, spotted; macula, a spot.
om
6-na-par’-ti-i. To Charles Lucien Bonaparte, Prince of Musignano and Canino.
odp’/-ér-i. To William Cooper, Esq. Only one specimen known.
oO fare
. Ac-i-mi-na/-ta. Lat. acuminata, acuminate, sharpened, from acumino; like aculeata
from aculeus. See Sitta, No. 58. Not in the orig. ed. Since observed at St. Michael’s, Alaska. See Pr. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, p. 222.
620. Ar-qua-tél’-14 mé&r-it/-i-ma. Argquatella, for arcuatula, is an arbitrary diminutive of arqua-
GZ A
622. A.
tus, bent, bowed: this is poor Latin for arcuatus, curved, arcuate ; arcuo, I bend; arcus, a bow, anarc. It refers to the slightly curved bill. — Lat. maritimus, maritime ; mare, the sea.
m. coués’-i. To Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S.A. The name of this person is Norman- French, and is still not infrequently found in the north of France, pronounced in two syllables, with the grave accent on the last : Cou-es — Coo-ayz. On the removal of his ancestors to the Isle of Wight, the pronunciation naturally became corrupted into Cowz. The original spelling, though sometimes changed to Cowes, has been preserved in the family, no grown male members of which are known to be living in the United States excepting the person here in mention and his brother, Dr. S. F. Coues, U.S. N. The meaning of the word is unknown to us. Not in the orig. ed. Since described, from Alaska, Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 160.
m. ptil-Gc-né’-mis. Gr. rridov, a feather, and xynuis, a greave, boot; the crus being feathered to the heel.
This is the Tringa crassirostris of the orig. ed., very wrongly so named; also, it is T. gracilis, Harting. See Coues, Elliott’s Prybilov Islands, 1875.
623. Pél-id’-na al-pi/-nd. 2? Gr. wedidvds, gray; from méAos, some dark color. — Lat. Alpina,
Alpine; Alpes, Alps. See Eremophila, No. 82.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Only North American as occurring in Green- land. See Newton, Man. Nat. Hist. Greenland, 1875, p. 103, where the Dunlin of Greenland is recognized as distinct from var. americana.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
624, Pelidna alpina americana (Cass.) Allen. B 530. C 424. R 539a.
American Dunlin.
625. Ancylochilus subarquatus (Giild.) Kaup. B 529. C 425. R 540.
Curlew Sandpiper.
.626. Tringa canutus L. B 526. C 426. R 529.
Red-breasted Sandpiper; Robin Snipe; Knot. [See Addenda, No. 884.
_627. Calidris arenaria (L.) Ill. B 534. C 427. R 542.
Sanderling.
628. Limosa foeda (L.) Ord. B 547. C 428. R 543.
Great Marbled Godwit.
629. Limosa hzmastica (L., 1758) Coues. B 548. C 429. R 545.
624. P.
Hudsonian Godwit.
a. Am-ér-i-ca/-na. See Parula, No. 93.
625. An-cy-l6-chi/-liis stib-ar-qua/-tiis. Gr. ayxvAdyeidos, having a curved bill: dynvaos,
crooked, bent, from ay«déy, the bent elbow, and xetAos, the mouth, from a word signify- ing to open, to gape. — Lat. subarquatus, slightly curved ; see Arquatella, No. 620.
626. Trin’-ga can-i/-tis. Lat. tringa, or trynga, or tryngas, a sandpiper; not classic. Derived g ga, ynga, yng pip
from Gr. tptyyas, an obscure and obsolete word, occurring in Aristotle as the name of some unknown bird. The species was very aptly named by Linnzus after old King Canute, who, it is said, sat on the seashore and allowed the waves to reach him, to rebuke his toadying courtiers who had declared the sea would obey his majesty, —a myth according well with the habits of sandpipers. — Canutus, if it has any relation with, or is of same meaning as canus, gray, hoary, woAcds, is well suited either to the old king, or to this sandpiper in its winter dress.
627. Cal-id/-ris 4-ré-na/-ri-4. Gr. oxadlSpis or Kadldpis, Lat. scalidris or calidris, an obscure
Aristotelian bird, by some supposed to be the modern totanus calidris. The word is apparently from oxaAls, some digging instrument, from oxdAdw, I scrape, rake, &c., and refers to the same probing habits of this sandpiper that erewnetes signalizes. But the form Chalidris also occurs, as in Belon for example; whence some refer the word to the Gr. xdait, Lat. calx, calculus, &c., considering that it alludes to the pebbly or shingly beaches which the bird frequents. — Lat. arenarius, relating to sand; arena, sand, or a sandy place, as the arena was, where gladiatorial and other sports were witnessed by the Roman brutes.
628. Li-md/-sa foé/-da. Lat. /imosus, miry, muddy ; limus, mud, slime.— We can learn nothing of
629. L.
any such word as fedoa, and take it to be a misprint or other mistake for fadus, -a, -um, ugly, unseemly, &c. It might be supposed to have some relation to fwdus, a compact, treaty, the sense of which is seen in federal, confederate, &c., and the application of which would be to the gregariousness of the bird. But fedus, in the latter sense, is not an adjective ; it is fdus, fderis, and the adjectival form would be federatus ; while there is an adjective frdus, ugly, as well as a verb fedo, to defile, the participial of which is fedatus. In view of these facts, we propose to substitute fada for fedoa, until some satis- factory explanation of the latter can be given. Fedoa occurs at least as far back as Edwards as the name of this species, and has since passed unchallenged.
haém-as/-ti-ca. Gr. aluacrinds or afuatixds, hemastic or hematic, of a bloody-red color; aiudoow, I make bloody; aiua, blood; referring to the red under parts, so con- spicuous in this species.
This stands as ZL. hudsonica in the orig. ed. See Coues, Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 100.
630. 631. 632.
633:
630.
631. 632.
633.
634, 635,
636.
637.
638.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 103
Limosa zgocephala (L.) Leach. B —. C —. R 546. (G.) Black-tailed Godwit.
Limosa uropygialis Gould. B—. © 430. R 544. (!A.) White-rumped Godwit.
Symphemia semipalmata (Gm.) Hartl. B 537. 0 431. R 552, Semipalmated Tattler ; Willet.
Totanus melanoleucus (Gm.) V. B 539. C 432. R 548. Greater Tattler; Stone Snipe.
Totanus flavipes (Gm.) V. B 540. C 433. R 549. Lesser Tattler ; Yellowshanks,
Totanus glottis (L.) Bechst. B 538. C 434. R 547. (!E.) Greenshanks.
Rhyacophilus ochropus (L.) Ridg. B—. Cc —. R551. (!E.)
Green Sandpiper.
Rhyacophilus solitarius (Wils.) Bp. B 541. C 435. R 550. Solitary Tattler.
Tringoides macularius (L.) Gr. B 543. C 436. R 557 Spotted Tattler; Spotted Sandpiper.
L. aég-d-c€ph/-4-14. Gr. aiyorépados, an Aristotelian epithet of some unknown bird; it literally means “goat-headed,” but what application? About the middle of the sixteenth century it was applied by Belon to a species of Limosa, perhaps from the cry of the bird being fancied like the bleating of a goat; “bleating” is a term in every-day use now to express the peculiar sounds made by some snipes. — The curious English word godwit is derived by Johnson from Anglo-Saxon god, good, and wiht, animal: by others from god, and veide, game; latter not unlikely.
Not in the orig. ed. Only North American as a straggler to Greenland.
L. i-ré-py-gi-a’-lis. See Centurus, No. 452.
Sym-phé/-mi-4 sém-i-pal-ma/-ta. Gr. cdupnur; odtv, with, and onuf, I speak ; alluding to the noisy concerts of the birds. — Lat. semipalmata, half-webbed: see d2gialites, No. 584. “Willet” is derived from the sound of the bird’s voice; sometimes written “ pilwillet.”
T6-ta/-niis mél-4an-5-leii/-ctis. Totanus is Latinized from the Italian totano, a name of some bird of the kind. We suppose it should be accented on a lengthened penult. — Gr. méAas, genitive uéAavos, black, and Aeveds, white.
T. fla’-vi-pés. Lat. flavus, yellow; pes, foot.
T. glot/-tis. Gr. yAdooa or yA@rra, the tongue; referring to the noisiness of the bird. This is given in the orig. ed. as Totanus chloropus.
R. Sch/-rd-piis. Gr. dxpds, pale, sallow, wan, and mods, foot. From this word come Lat. ochra, and our ochre, ochreous, ochraceous, as names of some dull yellowish color. Linneus had originally ocrophus by misprint.
Not in the orig. ed. Since found in Nova Scotia as a straggler from Europe. See Bull. Nutt. Club, iii, 1878, p. 49.
Rhy-4-cd'-phil-iis sdl-i-ta/-ri-iis. Gr. fiat, genitive pvaxos, a stream, brook; féw or pia, I flow; and {Aos, loving, loved, a lover. — Lat. solitarius, solitary ; solus, alone.
Trin-g6-i/-dés m&c-tl-a/-ri-tis. See Tringa, No. 62 and add cldos, resemblance. Note that the word is in four syllables, accented on the penult. — Lat. macularius, not classic ; like maculatus and maculosus, spotted; macula, a spot.
104
639.
640.
641.
642.
643.
644.
640.
641.
642.
643.
644.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Machetes pugnax (L.) Cuv. B 544. C 437, R 554. (!E.) Ruff (¢); Reeve (9).
Bartramia longicauda (Bechst.) Coues. B 545. C 438. R 555. Bartramian Tattler.
Tryngites rufescens (V.) Cab. B 546. C 439. R 556. Buff-breasted Sandpiper.
Heteroscelus incanus (Gm.) Coues. B 542. C 440. R 553. Wandering Tattler.
Numenius longirostris Wils. B 549. C 441. R 558. Long-billed Curlew.
Numenius phzopus (L.) Lath. B—. Cc —. R 561. (G.) European Whimbrel.
Mach-é’-tés piig/-nax. Gr. uaxnris, a fighter, combatant, in allusion to the pugnacity of the male in the breeding season; paxoua, I fight; uaxyn, a battle. — Lat. pugnar, pugna- cious, combative ; pugno, I fight; pugna, a battle; properly, fisticuffs, as the primitive mode of fighting; pugnum, the fist ; root pug, whence come the whole set of words, and others, as pygmy, &c.
Bar-tram/-i-a l6n-gi-catid/-4. To William Bartram, “ grandfather of American orni- thology.” — The usual generic name, actiturus, is from the Gr. aerirns, a doer by the sea, a beach-inhabiter, a “longshoreman,” from a«th, the seashore, and ovpa, tail. — Lat. longus, long, and cauda, tail.
This is Actiturus bartramius of the orig. ed. See Coues, Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 100. :
Tryn/-gi-tés rii-fés/-céns. See Zringa, No. 626. Here we have another form of the word, nearer the original Gr. tpvyyas, with the termination -rns, -tes; this suffix commonly denoting active agency, as the English -er, for example, makes work-er from work. — Lat. rufescens, present participle of rufesco, I grow reddish.
Hét-&-rd/-scél-tis in-can’-Us. Gr. érepos, opposite, different, otherwise, and oxéAos, the leg, shin; from the peculiar scutellation of the leg. — Lat. incanus, very gray, quite hoary, as the bird is: %n and canus.
Ni-mé/-ni-tis lon-gi-ris/-tris. A curious etymology is this, if the derivation assigned be true. Gr. véos, new, young, and uj, a month, wjvn, the moon; the narrow arcuate bill being likened to the new crescent moon. The same word is seen in meniscus, a kind of lens, but primarily and literally a little moon. But numenius might also be derived directly from numen, a nod, a bending of the head downward and forward (hence assent, command, and hence a divinity, who nods assent or expresses its will by such gesture) ; Gr. vedua, a nod, vebw, I nod; very applicable to the attitude of the bird. Whichever of these derivations we approve, they amount to practically the same thing; for numenius certainly refers to the shape of the bill, being used by the ornithologists of the heroic age as synonymous with arquata or arcuata. — Lat. longirostris, long-billed; longus and rostrum. — “Curlew” is not an imitation of the bird’s voice, but a mangling of the French name cour-lieu, “run-place,” from the coursing of the birds: compare courlis, courly, courlan, cocorli, &e.
N. phaé/-d-piis. Gr. gaids, dark colored, dusky, gray, swarthy; its exact meaning is expressed when we say “ gray of the morning:” related to @alyw, I appear; mods, foot. “ Whimbrel” is apparently Anglo-Saxon; related to whim, whimsical, in the sense of flighty, a gad-about. Not in the orig. ed. Only North American as a bird of Greenland.
645.
646.
647.
648.
649.
650.
648.
649.
650.
651.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 105
Numenius hudsonicus Lath. B 550. C 442. R 559. Hudsonian Curlew.
Numenius borealis (Forst.) Lath. B 551. C 443. R 560. Eskimo Curlew.
Numenius taitensis (Gm.) Lath. B—. C 442bis. R 562. (!A.) Otahiti Curlew.
Tantalus loculator L. B 497. C 444. R 500. Wood Ibis.
Plegadis falcinellus (L.) Kaup. B 500. C 445. R 503. Glossy Ibis.
Plegadis guarauna (L.) Ridg. B —. © 445bis, 445¢er. R 504. White-faced Glossy Ibis.
Eudocimus albus (L.) Wagl. B 499. C 446. R 501. White Ibis.
N. hiid-s6n/-i-ctis. To Hudson’s Bay, after Henry Hudson. N., bér-é-a/-lis. Lat. borealis, northern ; boreas, the northwind.
N. t&-i-tén’-sis. Of Otaheite, one of the Society or Friendly Islands. The original orthog- raphy, tahitiensis, is resolvable into the above, which is less barbarous in sound and look. Though named for the island called in English Otaheite, or better Otahiti, the first syl- lable is to be dropped as being merely the definite article the. It is the native name O-tahiti, the-island ; 7. e., the principal island.
This is NV. femoralis, Peale, of the orig. ed., Appendix.
Tan'-tal-tis 16-cti-1a/-tér. Gr. Tévrados, Tantalus, the Phrygian king, who, admitted to the councils of the gods, betrayed their secrets, and was tormented, “ tantalized,” with food and water in sight but unattainable. — Lat. locus, a place; loculus, a little place, division, compartment; Joculatus or loculosus, furnished with compartments, full of “pigeon-holes” ; but qu. loculator and its application to this bird 2
Plé/-ga-dis fal-cin-él/-lis. Gr. rAnyds, a scythe, sickle, from mAhoow or tAftTe, I strike. The actual form, Plegadis, may be a diminutive; if so, it is exactly Greek for the quasi- Latin falcinellus, falcicula, or falcunculus, a little scythe, small hook ; falz, a reaping-hook or any thing of that falcate shape, as the bill of this bird is. See Falco, No. 498.
This stands in the orig. ed. as /bis falcinellus var. ordi. But it has proved to be not satisfactorily distinguished from the European form; while as to the generic designa- tion, see Ibis, 1878, p. 112.
P. gii-4-rat/-na. A barbarous word, of some South American (Brazilian) dialect. It occurs as such in Marcgrave and other early ornithologists.
This stands as bis guarauna in the orig. ed.; see No. 649. The Ibis thalassinus of Ridg., Am. Nat., viii, 1874, p. 110, inserted in the Appendix of the orig. ed. as No. 445 ter, proves to be the young of this species: see Coues, Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Sury. Terr., iv, No. 1, 1878, p. 57.
Eii-doc/-i-miis 4l/-biis. Gr. eddd«uos, well-tried; hence, approved, famous, of high repute: from ed, well, and ddéimos, assayed and found acceptable; d¢xoua, I accept. The ibis or %@.s of the ancients (not this species) was a celebrated and sacred bird ; it was the Egyptian bird, now called Jbis ethiopica. — Lat. albus, white.
This is Zbis alba in the orig. ed. See Elliot, Ibis, 1877, p. 482.
652.
653.
654,
655.
656.
657.
658.
659.
660.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Eudocimus ruber (L.) Wagl. B 498. C 447. R 502. Scarlet Ibis.
Ajaja rosea (Briss.) Reich. B 501. C 448. R 505. Roseate Spoonbill.
Mycteria americana L. B—. C 448vis. R 499. (!M.) American Jabiru.
Ardea herodias L. B 487. C 449. R 487. Great Blue Heron.
Ardea occidentalis Aud. B 488, 489. C 450, 451. R 486. Great White Heron; Florida Heron.
Ardea cinerea L. B—.C—. R 488. (G.) European Blue Heron,
Herodias egretta (Gm.) Gr. B 486, 486*. C 452. R 489. Great White Egret.
Garzetta candidissima (Gm.) Bp. B 485. © 453. R 490. Little White Egret; Snowy Heron.
Hydranassa tricolor (Miill.) Ridg. B 484. © 454. R 492. Louisiana Heron,
E. rttb/-ér. Lat. ruber, red. This is bis rubra in the orig. ed.
Ajaja ro/-sé-a. Lat. roseus or rosaceus, rosy, rose-red; rosa, a rose; related to Gr. $d5or; see for instance in rhodocolpus, rose-breasted. — Ajaja or ajaia or aiaia or ayaya is the old Brazilian name of this bird, of signification and pronunciation alike unknown to us.
This stands as Platalea ajaja in the orig. ed.; for the change of this long-standing name, see Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, p. 10.
Myc-té/-ri-4 4m-ér-i-ca/-na. Gr. wuxrhp, the nose, snout; uuxrnpi¢w, literally, “I work the nose,” 7. e., turn up the nose at, sneer, scorn, deride, &c. ; well applied to the expres- sion of this ugly bird.
Ar’-dé-4 hér-6/-di-as. Lat. ardea, a heron. —Gr. éepédias, epwids, or épwdios, a heron. There is also a proper name /Zerodias.
A. Gc-ci-dén-ta’-lis. See Dendraca, No. 113.
Notr. — The Ardea wurdemanni of the orig. ed. is a dichroism of this species. See Ridg., Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., iv, No. 1, 1878, p. 227.
A. cin-ér/-&-4. Lat. cinereus, ashy. See Harporhynchus, No. 22.
Not in the orig. ed. Only North American as occurring in Greenland. See Reinh., This, 1861, p. 9.
Hér-d/-di-as é-grét/-ta. Latin proper name Herodias: see Ardea, No. 655. — Egretta is Latinized from the French aigrette, a top-knot, plume; whence also egret. These words are said to be related to heron itself, all springing from O. H. G. hiegro, a heron.
Gar-zét’-ta can-di-dis’-si-ma. Garzetta is the Italian name of the corresponding Euro- pean species. — Lat. candidissima, very white, entirely white; superlative of candidus. See Falco, No. 501.
Hyd-ra-nas/-sa tri/-cdl-dr. Gr. ddwp, water, giving in Latin hydra-, and vaooa or vijooa, a waterfowl; from a verb meaning to swim. We have here two words very fruitful of derivatives ; one giving us the compounds of hydr-, as hydrawic, the other those relating to the sea, a ship, or swimming: nautical, aeronaut, navy, navigate, nausea ; the latter is originally “sea ”-sickness, and literally “ship ”-sickness. — Lat. tricolor, three-colored.
This stands as Ardea leucogastra var. leucoprymna in the orig. ed. See Ridg., Bull. U.S. Geol. Surv. Terr., iv, No. 1, 1878, p. 224.
661.
662.
663.
664,
665.
667.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 107
Dichromanassa rufa (Bodd.) Ridg. Reddish Egret.
Florida ccerulea (L.) Bd. Little Blue Heron,
B 482, 483. C 455. R 491. B 490. C 456. R 490.
Butorides virescens (L.) Cab. B 493. © 457. R 494.
Green Heron.
Nyctiardea grisea neevia (Bodd.) Allen. B 495. C 458. R 495.
American Night Heron.
Nycterodius violaceus (L.) Reich. Yellow-crowned Night Heron.
B 496. C 459. R 496.
Botaurus mugitans (Bartr.) Coues. ’B 492. C 460. R 497. American Bittern.
Ardetta exilis (Gm.) Gr. Least Bittern.
B 491. C 461. R 498.
Di-chro-ma&-nas!-sa ru/-fa. Gr. dis, twice; xp@ua, chroma, color; originally, probably, flesh-color; and vacoa, a water-fowl; alluding to the dichroism or dichromatism which prevails in this and other herons, these birds of the same species being found either pure white or variously colored. — Lat. rufus, reddish.
This stands as Ardea rufa in the orig. ed. See Ridg., Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., iv, No. 1, 1878, p. 246.
Fl6/-ri-da coé-rul-é-a. Lat. floridus, florid, flowery ; /los, a flower; but the genus is named for the State of Florida. — Lat. cwruleus, blue ; see Polioptila, No. 36.
Bi-t6r-i/-dés vir-és/-céns. Lat. butio or butor, a bittern; equal to bo-taur, bo-taurus, bos- taurus? see Bubo, No. 462; eios, resemblance. There is also a proper name Butorides — Lat. virescens, present participle of viresco, I grow green, am greenish, from vireo, which see, No. 170.
Nyc-ti-ar’-d&é-4 gris/-€-4 naé!/-vi-a. Badly formed from Gr. vvé, gen. vuxrds, night, and Lat. ardea, a heron; better Noctiardea, like Noctiluca, &c.— Lat. griseus, see Macrorham- phus, No. 609, and Leucosticte, No. 205. — Lat. neevius, see Turdus, No. 5.
Nyc-tér-6/-di-tis vi-6-la/-cé-ts. Gr. vvé, night, and épwdids, a heron, like the Latin ardea. Commonly written nyctherodius; but we see no occasion for the h, the e not being aspi- rated; though the A is seen in the Lat. herodias. — Lat. violaceus, violet-colored ; viola, a violet, pansy.
B6-taii’/-riis mi-gi’-tans. The many words bittern, bitorne, bitore, butor, butio, are all onoma- topeic, from the hollow guttural sound of the bird’s voice, and are referable to bos- taurus or bo-taurus? see Bubo, No. 462. — Lat. mugitans, bellowing ; mugito, I low like a cow ; as the children say, “ moo.”
Ar-dét!-ta @x-i/-lis. Ardetta is an Italian word, equivalent to ardeola, diminutive of ardea. — Lat. exilis, contracted from ezigilis, equivalent to exiguus, from exigo, this equal to ex and ago, literally, I drive out. Any thing exacted or exact, is carefully measured, con- sidered, strictly accounted for; hence likely to be scanty, as opposed to abundant, or superfluous; therefore, poor, thin, mean, small; any of these latter adjectives well suited to this lean little bird. We have the idea in several applications in the English words exigency, an emergency; exiguous, small; the French exigeant, exacting; and in our rare though actual word exile, small. (The latter must not be confounded, however, with ezile, banishment, one banished; though this might seem exactly from exigo, “I drive out,” it is from another root: ezsulo, exsul.)
108
668.
669.
- 670.
Gil.
672.
. 673.
668.
669,
670.
671.
672.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Grus americana (L.) Temm. B 478. C 462. R 582.
White Crane; Whooping Crane.
Grus canadensis (L.) Temm. B 480. C 463. R 584.
Northern Sandhill Crane.
Grus pratensis Bartr. B 479. C—. R583.
Southern Sandhill Crane.
Aramus pictus (Bartr.) Coues. B 481. C 464. R 581.
Scolopaceous Courlan ; Limpkin.
Parra gymnostoma Wagl. B—. C —. R 568. (!M.)
Mexican J acana.
Rallus longirostris crepitans (Gm.) Ridg. B 553. C 465. R 571.
Clapper Rail; Salt Marsh Hen.
Griis 4Am-ér-i-ca/-na. Lat. grus, genitive gruis, feminine noun of the third declension, a
crane. The word refers to the hollow guttural voice of the birds, and is apparently related to English grunt.
G. can-4-dén!-sis. It was doubtless upon the northern bird, figured by Edwards, that
Linneus based this name. G. fraterculus of Cassin has been found distinct from the common sandhill crane of the United States, and identical with the northern bird. It is therefore properly a synonym of canadensis, and another name must be found for the United States bird commonly called canadensis. See next species. See Ridg., Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 187; Coues, ibéd., p. 188.
G. pra-tén/-sis. Lat. pratensis, relating to pratum, a field.
Not in the orig. ed. See last species.
Ar’-4-miis pic/-ttis. The word aramus is unknown tous. Agassiz gives it as “nom.
propr.” A correspondent remarks: “ Vieillot’s Analyse is very incorrectly printed, and some letter may have been omitted or changed; hence the clue is still to seek. The origin seems hopeless, unless revealed by accident.” Under these circumstances, it is consoling to reflect that the word is more decorous in form than many of known classic derivation. — Lat. pictus, see Setophaga, No. 151.
Par’-ra gym-n6/-sté6-ma. Parra is a good Latin word, being the name of some unknown
bird regarded as of ill-omen; as occurring in Pliny, said to be the European Lapwing, Vanellus cristatus. Transferred by Linneus to a mixed lot of spur-winged birds, chiefly of America. “ Jagana” is the Brazilian name of a species of this genus ; made a generic term by Brisson in 1760, and we do not see why it should not be employed instead of* Parra. — Gr. yuuvds, naked, and oréua, mouth; in allusion to the caruncular skin at the base of the bill.
Not in the orig. ed.; since discovered in Texas by J. C. Merrill: see Bull. Nutt. Club, i, 1876, p. 88; Pr. U.S. Nat. Mus., i, 1878, p. 167.
673. Ral’-liis lén-gi-ris!-tris crép/-i-tans. al/us is said to be contracted from rarulus, a
diminutive of rarus, rare; and to mean thin, slight; if so, the adjective has become an apt generic name for these lean narrow birds. It is more likely, however, to be onomatopeic, Latinized in late days from the French ras/le, rdle, a rattling cry, Engl. rail, to reproach, deride, &c., having nothing to do with the English rai (of a fence) ; very applicable to these clamorous birds. — Lat. longirostris, long-billed. — Lat. crepitans, present participle of crepito, I creak, crackle, clatter, crepitate; a frequentative or inten- ~ sive form of crepo, of same signification.
This is &. longirostris of the orig. ed.
674,
675.
676.
Cid. 678.
679.
680. 681.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 109
Rallus longirostris obsoletus (Ridg.) Coues. B—. C 466a. R 570.
California Clapper Rail.
Rallus longirostris saturatus Hensh. B—. C —. R 571a.
Louisiana Clapper Rail.
Rallus elegans Aud. B 552. C 466. R 569.
King Rail; Fresh Marsh Hen.
Rallus virginianus L. B 554. C 467. R 572.
Virginia Rail.
Porzana maruetta (Leach) Bp. B—. Cc —. R573. (G.)
Spotted Crake.
Porzana carolina (L.) V. B 555. C 468. R 574.
Carolina Crake; Rail; Sora; Ortolan.
Porzana noveboracensis (Gm.) Cass. B 557. C 469. R 575.
Yellow Crake.
Porzana jamaicensis (Gm.) Cass. B 556. C 470. R 57
R.
RR:
Black Crake.
. 1. Gb-sdl-é/-ttis. Lat. obsoletus, obsolete, grown unaccustomed, passed out of vogue;
ob, opposition, and solesco, I grow accustomed; soleo, lam accustomed. The application is to the faded, as if worn out and disused, coloration.
This is R. elegans var. obsoletus, of the orig. ed., Appendix: see Bull. Nutt. Club, vy, 1880, p. 139.
. 1. s&t--ra/-ttis. Lat. saturatus, saturated, satiated, filled full; 7.e¢., having eaten
enough; satis, enough: whence satisfied, &c. The allusion is to the color, which is full, i.e. rich, dark, heavy.
Not in the orig. ed.; since described. See Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 140. é/-lé-gans. Lat. elegans or eligans, elegant ; literally, choice, select ; from e and lego, I pick out; quite equivalent to electus, chosen, picked, eclectic, &c.
vir-gin-i-a/-niis. To Virginia, ‘‘ mother of Presidents,” and wet-nurse of Secession.
Por-za/-n4 m4a-ru-ét!-ta. Porzana is an Italian word, the meaning of which we know not ;
Pe 5
it has been in book-use for several centuries, as the name of some marsh bird. — Maruetta is likewise Italian: said to be applicable to anything by the sea, and hence to be equiva- lent to maritime. — Crake is to crackle, cackle, creak, croak, quack, &c.; see Crex, No. 683, Querquedula, No. 714.
Not in the orig. ed. Only North American as occurring in Greenland. See Reinh., Ibis, 1861, p. 12.
. Ca-rd-li/-na. To Carolina. This is the rail of sportsmen. It is also called sora or
soree ; why, we know not: the word is colloquial and local, and has scarcely crept into the books. The word “ortolan” has a curious connection with this species. It is Italian and French, equal to the Latin hortulanus, relating to a garden: the “ortolan” is Emberiza hortulana, a bunting, esteemed a great delicacy by gourmands; and our crake has been called ortolan for no better reason than that it is also edible and sapid! The same name is sometimes applied to the bobolink, Dolichonyx oryzivorus, because it is found abundantly in the same marshes in the fall, and sells in the same restaurants as the same bird as the rail, the two being brought in together by the gunners.
nd-vé-bdr-a-cén/-sis. No New York. See Vireo, No. 181. jam-a-i-cén/-sis. To Jamaica. The name signifies in the vernacular the island of springs, of flowing water.
110
682.
683.
684.
6385.
686.
637
688.
689.
682. 683.
684.
685.
686.
687.
688.
689.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Porzana jamaicensis coturniculus Bd. B—. C 470a. R 576a. Farallone Black Crake.
Crex pratensis Bechst. B 558. C 471. R 577. (!E.) Corn Crake.
Gallinula galeata (Licht.) Bp. B 560. C 472. R 579. Florida Gallinule.
Ionornis martinica (L.) Reich. B 561. C 478. R 578. Purple Gallinule.
Fulica americana Gm. B 559. C 474. R 580. American Coot. [See Addenda, No. 585.
Phcenicopterus ruber L. | B 502. C 475. R 585. Red Flamingo.
Cygnus buccinator Rich. B 562. C 476. R 589. Trumpeter Swan.
Cygnus columbianus (Ord) Coues. B 561bis. C 477. R 588. American Swan.
P. j. cd-tiir-ni/-cii-lis. Lat. diminutive of Coturnix, which see, No. 579.
Créx pra-tén/-sis. Gr. «pez, Lat. crex, a crake; all three of these words are the same, meaning the creaking, crackling cry of the bird; xpéxxkw, I make such a noise. — Lat. pratensis, see Grus, No. 670. (A subgenus, “ Crescicus,” which passed in some American works for the black rail, was simply a misprint for creciscus, which is a Greek diminu- tive form of xpéé.)
Gal-lin/-ii-14 gal-é-a/-ta. Liat. gallinula, a diminutive of gallina, a hen: see Gallinago, No. 608. It is commonly but wrongly accented on the penult, and pronounced gally-new'-ler ! But gahl-leen!-u-lah is doubtless nearer the sound a Roman would have made if he had used the word. — Lat. galeata, helmeted ; galea, a helmet ; galeo, I crown with a helmet ; very apt, in allusion to the frontal shield of a bird of this genus.
I-6n-Sr/-nis mar-tin/-i-c4. Gr. Yov, iwvia, a violet, and épyis, a bird; well applied to these luxurious porphyritic or hyacinthine “ sultans.” — English violet is from Lat. viola, and this is very easily gotten from the Greek. — To the island of Martinique.
Fil’-i-ca Am-ér-i-ca/-na. Lat. fulica, same as fuliz, a coot, from the sooty color of the bird ; fuligo, soot, whence fuliginosus, &c.
Phoé-ni-cop/-tér-ts rtib/-Er. Gr. dowikdrrepos, Lat. phenicopterus, the flamingo ; literally, red-winged: goivié and mré€pov: see Ageleus, No. 316. — Lat. ruber, red. — English flamingo seems to come directly through the Spanish flamenco, the name of this bird; both these, as the French flamant, are of course from the Latin flamma, flame, fiery-red.
Cyg’-ntis biic-cin-a/-tér. Gr. «dvos, Lat. cyenus or cygnus, a swan; famed for its dying song; also name of a person fabled to have been transmuted into the bird. The name is probably rooted in the idea of singing, this being one of the most persistent and ubiquitous myths. — Lat. buccinator, a trumpeter, who uses his cheeks so much in blowing his instrument; buccina, or Buxavy, a trumpet; bucca, the cheek.
C. cé-lim-bi-a/-niis. Of the Columbia River, where specimens were noted by Lewis and Clarke, afterwards named by Ord. This stands in the orig. ed. as C. americanus. For the change, see Coues, Bull. U.S. Geol. Surv. Terr., 2d ser., No. 6, 1876, p. 444.
690.
691.
692.
693.
694.
690.
691.
692.
693. 694, 695. 696. 697,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Cygnus musicus Bechst. B—. C —. R586. (G.!E.) Whooping Swan.
Cygnus bewicki Yarr. B-—-. C —. R 587. (!E.) Bewick’s Swan.
Anser albifrons (Gm.) Bechst. B—. C —. R593. (G.) European White-fronted Goose,
Anser albifrons gambeli (Hartl.) Coues. B 565, 566. C 478. R 593a. American White-fronted Goose.
Chen ccerulescens (L.) Ridg. B 564. © 479. R 590. Blue Goose.
Chen hyperboreus (Pall.) Boie. B 563. C 480. R 591. Snow Goose.
Chen hyperboreus albatus (Cass.) Ridg. B—. C 480a. R 591a. Lesser Snow Goose.
Chen rossi (Bd.) Ridg. B—. C 481. R 592. Ross’ Snow Goose.
£14
C. mi/-si-ciis. Gr. povoixds, Lat. musicus, relating to a muse, any one of the Muses; hence, “ music” is primarily and most properly to be predicated of high ideals in gen- eral, whether in science, letters, or art. The term musicus, however, as applied to a swan, is a lucus a non lucendo, unless a relationship between the Muses and the Graces
be imagined.
Not in the orig. ed., and here admitted with doubt. Greenland only, as straggler from Europe. See Reinh., Ibis, 1861, p. 13, and Freke, Zoologist, September, 1881,
p- 372. See next species.
C. bé’-wick-i. To Thomas Bewick.
Not in the orig. ed., and here doubtfully admitted. See Pr. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, p- 222, where Ridgway revives the record given in Fn. Bor.-Am. ii, 1851, p. 465, and states that the description of specimens killed at Igloolik, Arctic America, lat. 66°, indicates the true Bewick’s Swan. But on the doubt in the case of these Arctic Swans, if any different from C. columbianus, see Newton, Man. Nat. Hist. Greenl., 1875, p. 113,
and especially Freke, Zodlogist, September, 1881, p. 566.
An/sér 4l'-bi-frons. Lat. anser, a goose. How anser came about we do not know; we sup- pose it related more or less radically to anas, and so to vaooa, a duck; see Hydranassa,
No. 660. — Lat. albifrons, white forehead. Not in the orig. ed., and here admitted with doubt, the identification of the land white-fronted geese being questionable. cf. Reinh., Ibis, iii, 1861, p. 12
Geear ; Newt.,
Man. Nat. Hist. Greenl., 1875, p. 113, and Freke, Zodlogist, September, 1881, p. —.
A. a. gam/-bél-li. To William Gambel.
Chén [pronounced cane] coé-riil-és'-céns. Gr. x4v, a goose. — See Dendraca, No. 117.
C. hy-pér-bdr'-é-iis. Lat. hyperboreus, hyperborean, northern; see Lobipes, No. 603.
C. h. al-ba’-ttis. Lat. albatus, whitened, made white.
C. rds/-si. To Bernard R. Ross, Chief Factor, H. B. Co.
112 CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
698. Chloéphaga canagica (Sevast.) Eyt. B 573. C 482. R 598. Painted Goose.
699. Bernicla leucopsis (Bechst.) Boie. B 572. © 483. R 597. (1E.) Barnacle Goose.
700. Bernicla brenta (Pall.) Steph. B 570. C 484. R 595. Brant Goose.
701. Bernicla brenta nigricans (Lawr.) Coues. B 571. C —. R 596. Black Brant Goose.
702. Bernicla canadensis (L.) Boie. B 567. C 485. R 594. Canada Goose; Common Wild Goose.
703. Bernicla canadensis leucoparia (Brandt) Coues. B 568. C 485a. R 5940, White-cheeked Canada Goose. [594c.
704. Bernicla canadensis hutchinsi (Rich.) Coues. B 569. © 4850. R 594a. Hutchins’ Canada Goose.
705. Dendrocygna fulva (Gm.) Burm. B 575. C 486. R 600. Fulvous Tree Duck.
706. Dendrocygna autumnalis (L.) Eyt. B 574. C 487. R 599. Autumnal Tree Duck.
698. Chld-é’-pha-ga ca-na’-gi-ca. Gr. yAda or xAdn, young grass, whence xAwpds, green ; gayw, I eat.—Mr. H. W. Elliott informs us there are Eskimos of Alaska who call them- selves “ Kanagiamoot,” i. e., “the people of the Kanag’”— whatever that may be; whence quasi-Lat. canagica.
699. Bér'-ni-cla leti-cdp/-sis. Bernicla or bernicula is Latinized from the French bernicle or bernache, Engl. barnacle. We only know this word as the name of the little cirriped crus- taceans out of which this goose was fabled to sprout, ripen, and fall like a fruit from its stem. A correspondent observes: “ Max Miiller says Aibernaculum, but he gives no reason whatever (nor for Aibernicule) founded on the word having been ever used.” (cf. Lect. on the Sci. of Lang., 2d ser.) — Gr. Aeuxds, white, and dys, appearance.
This species is Greenlandic, but otherwise North American only as a straggler. For a résumé of occurrences, see Freke, Zodlogist, September, 1881, p. 372.
The geese of this genus stand in the orig. ed. as species of Granta; but that word having been found unavailable as a generic term, the name Lernicla is restored.
700. B. brén/-ta. Latinized from brent, brant, brand, or branded goose; the forms brentus and brenthus are also found. See Campylorhynchus, No. 63. Brent or brant goose is therefore simply burnt goose, from its blackish appearance, as if charred.
701. B. b. nig/-ri-cans. Lat. nigricans, being blackish, like nigrescens. — Not in the orig. ed. 702. B. ca-na-dén!-sis. See Myiodioctes, No. 149.
703. B. c. leti-cd-pa-ri/-4. Gr. Aevads, white ; maperd, the cheek.
704. B.c. hiitch’-in-si. To Hutchins, to whom we were at one time indebted for most
that was known of the birds of interior British America.
705, Dén-drd-cyg’-na fil/-va. Gr. dévdpor,a tree, and kv«cvos, a swan; see Cygnus, No. 688. — Lat. fulvus, fulvous, reddish.
706. D. ati-tim-nda’-lis. Lat. autumnalis or auctumnalis, relating to the autumn, when the increase of the earth is harvested; auctumnus, the autumn; auctus, an increase, increased ; auctor, a producer, author ; augeo, I increase, furnish forth, augment.
714,
MONG.
708. 709.
TOMO
Tiatale
712.
713.
714,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 113
Anas boscas L. B 576. C 488. R 601. Mallard.
Anas obscura Gm. B 577. C 489. R 602. Dusky Duck.
Anas obscura fulvigula Ridg. B—. C 489a. R 603. Florida Dusky Duck.
Dafila acuta (L.) Jen. B 578. C 490. R 605. Pintail; Sprigtail.
Chaulelasmus streperus (L.) Gr. B 584. © 491. R 604. Gadwall.
Mareca penelope (L.) Selby. B 586. C 492. R 606. (!E.) European Widgeon.
Mareca americana (Gm.) Steph. B 585. C 493. R 607. American Widgeon.
Querquedula crecca (L.) Steph. B 580. C 494. R 611. (!E.) English Teal.
An/-as bis/-cas. Lat. anas, a duck; doubtless related to vaooa. See what is said under Hydranassa, No. 660.— Gr. Booxds, Lat. boscas or boscis, a duck, probably this very species ; from Bécrw, I graze. This word has almost invariably, in ornithology, been written boschas — very wrongly, as Wharton was lately at pains to point out (Ibis, 1879, p. 453).
A. Ob-scii/-ra. Lat. obscurus, dark, obscure.
A. o. fil-vi/-git-14. Lat. fidvus, fulvous, and gula, throat. This and many similar words are viciously accented on a long penult.
Da/-fi-14 4-cii/-ta. Dafila is a nonsense-word, invented by W. E. Leach, like Harelda, meaning nothing. — Lat. acuta, sharpened, pointed; as the tail of the bird is.
Chaii-lé-las/-miis strép/-é-riis. Gr. xavAos, prominent, projecting, protuberant; and éAacués, a layer, plate, lamella; referring to the denticulations of the bill..— Lat. stre- perus (not classic), noisy, clamorous; as we should say, obstreperous ; strepitus, a noise ; strepo, I make a fuss.
Ma-ré/-ca pé-nél/-d-pé. Mareca is said to be a Brazilian vernacular word for some kind of duck; long after, it was transferred to the widgeon. But it may also be remarked that there is the Lat. Marica, a water-nymph. Ray has Mareca (Syn., p. 149). — Penel- ope was the celebrated wife of Ulysses, mother of Telemachus ; penelops, or in Gr. mnvérow, was some kind of duck. Linnzus wrote the latter.
M. 4m-ér-i-ca-na. See Parula, No. 93.
Quér-qué/-dii-la créc/-cd. Lat. querquedula, a kind of small duck; etymology obscure, and not at all to our way of thinking in the authorities consulted; apparently from kapkalpw, képxw, kepkis, Kipkn, Kpexw, kpeE, a set of onomatopeic words formed to express a shrill or harsh creaking sound; hence related to creak, quack, crackle, &c , and quite equivalent to the very word crecca, which we have here, and which seems but an arbitrary adjective formed from xpékw. Charleton calls one of the ducks Anas “ caudacuta, The Cracke (a strepitu).” The form quacula is found in some writers; and “quack” is the usual word to express a duck’s voice. See Crex, No. 683.
114
ELS.
ha:
TAU
PLS.
ro).
- 720.
paki
722.
(123.
Cey,
WAG:
CAC us:
719.
720.
Pe 722,
723.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Querquedula carolinensis (Gm.) Steph. B 579. C 495. R 612. Green-winged Teal.
Querquedula discors (L.) Steph. B 581. C 496. R 609. Blue-winged Teal.
Querquedula cyanoptera (V.) Cass. B 582. C 497. R 610.
Cinnamon Teal.
Spatula clypeata (L.) Boie. B 583. C 498. R 608.
Shoveller. Aix sponsa (L.) Boie. B 587. C 499. R 618. Summer Duck; Wood Duck. [See Addenda, No. 886.
Fuligula marila (L.) Steph. B 588. C 500. R 614. Greater Black-head 5; Scaup Duck.
Fuligula affinis Eyt. B 589. C 501. R 615. Lesser Black-head; Scaup Duck,
Fuligula collaris (Donoyv.) Bp. B 590. C 502. R 616. Ring-neck ; Black-head.
Fuligula ferina americana (Eyt.) Coues. B 591. C 503. R 618. American Pochard; Red-head.
Q. ca-ré-lin-én/-sis. To Carolina. — The genus Nettion, in which this teal has been placed by some, is the Gr. vfrriov, a little duck; contracted from yvyrrdpioy, a diminutive of vijooa or yatta: see Hydranassa, No, 660. Very curiously, it seems to have been used by the Greeks as a familiar term of endearment, just as we sometimes now say “ little duck,” or “ ducky darling.”
Q. dis/-cdrs. Lat. discors, discordant, disagreeing, unlike ; literally “ two-hearted,” from dis, twice, and cor, the heart ; opposed to concors, concordant.
Q. cy-an-dp’-té-ra. Gr. xvavds, blue, mrépov, wing.
Spa/-tti-l4 clyp-é-a'-ta. Lat. spatula or spathula, Gr. ora@ts, a spathe, spatula, spoon, ladle ; with reference to the spathulous or spoon-like shape of the bird’s bill. — Lat. elypeatus, furnished with a shield, wearing a shield; c/ypeus or clipeus or clupeus or clipeum, a shield: commemorating in this case the rounded expanse of the bill.
A’-ix spon/-sa. Gr. aft or a; application not obvious. Nor is the orthography settled. If the word be from the monosyllable avé it should be Latinized wx; if from the dissyl- lable & it becomes air. In the uncertainty, we do not change the accustomed form; though we suspect ex to be preferable. — Lat. sponsa, a bride, a spouse, a betrothed ; that is, a promised one; spondeo, I promise sacredly, I vow. Prettily applied to this lovely duck, as if the bird were arrayed for bridal.
Fil-ig’-ti-l4 ma-ri/-14. Lat. fuligula or fulicula, diminutive of fuica or fulix, a coot ; fuligo, soot. — Marila we know nothing about; qu., a proper name? gu. Gr. waplfan, embers, charcoal, from the scaup’s pitch-black foreparts #
F. af-fin’-is. Lat. affinis, affined, allied ; ad, and finis. See Campylorhynchus, No. 64.
F. col-la/-ris. Lat. collaris, relating to the neck, collum; this species having a ring of color, like a collar, round the neck.
F. fé-ri/-na 4m-ér-i-ca/-na. Lat. ferina, wild, in a state of nature, feral.
724.
725.
726.
G2.
728.
729.
730.
724,
725.
726. C2.
728.
729.
730.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 115
Fuligula vallisneria (Wils.) Steph. B 592. C 504. R 617. Canvas-back.
Clangula glaucium (L.) Brehm. B 593. C 505. R 620. Golden-eye.
Clangula islandica (Gm.) Bp. B 594. C 506. R 619. Barrow’s Golden-eye.
Clangula albeola (L.) Steph. B 595. C 507. R 621. Buffle-head ; Butter-ball; Spirit Duck.
Harelda glacialis (L.) Leach. B 597. © 508. R 623. Long-tailed Duck; Old Wife.
Camptolzemus labradorius (Gm.) Gr. B 600. C509. R 624. Labrador Duck.
Histrionicus minutus (L.) Coues. B 596. © 510. R 622. Harlequin Duck.
F. val-lis-nér’-i-a. _ Vallisneria is a genus of aquatic plants, the wild celery, V. spiralis U.., named for Antoine Vallisner, a French botanist. The name was applied to the bird from its fondness for this plant as food. The name canvas-back, from the peculiar coloration of the upper parts, is an Americanism which has been in use at least since 1800. (e.g., see Barton, Med. and Phys. Journ., pt. i, vol. ii, 1805, p. 161.)
Clan/-gii-la glaii/-ci-tim. Lat. clangula, diminutive of clangor, a clang, noise; the corre- sponding Gr. kAayyfj means particularly the outcry of wild animals; cAd(w, future kAdyéw, I cry out. It was applied to this bird several centuries ago. — Gr. yAav«voy or yAavxiov, a kind of wild duck, perhaps this very species. Under the varying forms of glaucion, glaucium, glaucius, and glaucia, it has been definitely applied to this duck for more than three centuries.
C. is-land/-i-c&. To Iceland. See Falco, No. 500.
C. al-bé/-6-1la. Diminutive (irregular) form of albus, white: albula would be better form. “ Buftle-head” is a corruption of buffalo-head, from the puffiness of the head: “ butter- ball” from the fatness of the bird at times: “spirit duck,” from the quickness of diving.
Har-él’-da gla-ci-a'-lis. Harelda is a nonsense-word, invented by Leach. — Lat. glacialis, glacial, icy, relating to ice; glacies, ice. (Unde derivatur? cf. Gr. yAadxos.)
Camp-t6-laém/-ts lab-ra-d6/-ri-ts. Gr. xaumrds, flexible, as leather is, for instance; kdprw, I bend; and Aamos, the throat; but the whole word refers to the soft leathery expansion of the bill, as if Camptorhynchus, for which latter word, preoccupied in zodlogy, it was proposed as a substitute. — To Labrador; which name is said to have been given to the country by the Spaniards, it being considered cultivable, as Greenland was not; Span. labrado, cultivated land; labrador, laborer; labrar, to work.
His-tri-6/-ni-ctis mi-ni/-ttis. Lat. Aistrionicus, histrionic, relating to histrio, a stage- player ; because the bird is tricked out in various colors, as if it were dressed to play some part on the stage. The word is related in the most interesting manner to historia, history, and histology, the science of tissues of the body; the idea being the weaving together of things, to make, as history, a connected account, as in histology, a tissue of organs. We still say, for example, a tissue of falsehood, &c. These words are all related to iorés, a loom, or the web woven on it.
116
‘731,
732.
733.
734,
735.
736.
737.
738.
739.
Wal.
732.
733.
734.
735,
736.
737.
738. 739.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Somateria stelleri (Pall.) Jard. B 598. C 511. R 625. Steller’s Duck.
Somateria fischeri (Brandt) Coues. B 599. C 512. R 626. Spectacled Eider.
Somateria mollissima (L.) Boie. B—. C —. R 627. Eider Duck.
Somateria mollissima dresseri (Sharpe) Coues. B 606. C 513. R 6274. American Eider Duck.
Somateria v-nigra Gray. B 607. C 514. R 628. Black-throated Eider.
Somateria spectabilis (L.) Boie. B 608. C 515. R 629. King Hider.
Gdemia americana Sw. B 604. C 516. R 630. American Black Scoter.
CG&idemia fusca (L.) Flem. B 601. C 517. R 631. Velvet Scoter; White-winged Scoter.
C&demia perspicillata (L.) Flem. B 602. C 518. R 633. Surf Duck.
Sd-mat-é/-ri-4 st&l/-lér-i. Gr. cdua, genitive cduaros, the body, and épiov, wool, down; with reference to the famous “ eider-down ” produced by species of this genus. — To G. W. Steller, the surgeon and naturalist of Behring’s second voyage, 1741-42.
S. fisch’-ér-i. To Gotth. Fischer von Waldheim, a Russian naturalist.
S. mol-lis/-si-ma. Lat. mollissima, superlative degree of mollis, soft; this a contraction for movilis, mobile, moveable, from moveo, I move. The reference is of course to the downy plumage.
See next species. Since the American bird has been distinguished from the Euro- pean, the latter has been said to be also found in North America, on the west side of Cumberland Gulf. See Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, p. 222. This requires us to restore the name S. mollissima, but it is No. 734 that equals No. 518 of the orig. ed.
S. m. drés-sér-i. To Henry E. Dresser, of London, author of the “ Birds of Europe,” &c. This is the S. mollissima of writers on American birds and of the orig. ed. of the Check List. See Sharpe, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 1871, p. 51. See last species.
S. v-nig’-ra. This is a queer way of saying that the bird has a black v-shaped mark on the throat — “ digammated,” indeed!
S. spéc-ti/-bi-lis. Lat. spectabilis, that may be seen, hence, worth seeing, a spectacle ; specto, spicio, specio, I look at; whence a thousand derivatives.
Oé-dé/-mi-A Am-ér-i-ca/-na. Gr. ofSnua, Lat. wdema, a swelling, tumefaction; oiddw, I swell; referring to the humpiness or gibbosity of the bill.
O. fiis/-c3. Lat. fuscus, fuscous, dark; not well applied to this black bird.
O. pér-spic-il-14/-ta. Irregularly formed from perspicio; equivalent to perspicibilis, con- tracted to perspicilis, and then given a participial termination, as if from a verb per- spicillo; meaning perspicuous, that may be clearly seen, hence conspicuous, spectacular ; see Somateria, No. 736.
740.
741.
742.
743.
744.
"745.
746.
747.
743.
744,
745,
746.
747.
748.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. DT,
C£ademia perspicillata trowbridgii (Bd.) Coues. B 603. C 518a. R —. Long-billed Surf Duck.
Erismatura rubida (Wils.) Bp. B 609. C 519. R 634. Ruddy Duck.
Nomonyx dominica (L.) Ridg. B 610. C 520. R 635. St. Domingo Duck.
Mergus merganser L. B 611. C 521. R 636. Merganser ; Goosander.
Mergus serrator L. B 612. C 522. R 637. Red-breasted Merganser.
Mergus cucullatus L. B 613. C 523. R 638. Hooded Merganser,
Sula bassana (L.) Briss. B 617. C 524. R 650. Gannet; Solan Goose.
Sula leucogastra (Bodd.) Salv. B 618. C 525. R 652. Booby Gannet.
Pelecanus trachyrhynchus Lath. B 615. C 526. R 64’. American White Pelican.
O. p. trow-brid/-gi-i. To W. P. Trowbridge, who collected in California,
Er-is-m4-tii/-ra riitb/-i-da. Gr. @peicua, a stay, prop, pier, and odpa, tail, as the stiffened member of the bird might seem to be. — Lat. rubidus, ruddy, reddish.
N6m-d/-nyx ddm-in/-i-ca. Gr. vduos, law, order, regular way, and dvvé, nail. The nail at the end of the bill in all the species of so-called Erismatura, except rubida, is formed in a particular way. — See Dendraca, No. 129.
Mér’-giis mér-gan’-sér. Lat. mergus, a diver; mergo, I dive, mergere, mersi, mersum} whence submerged, immersed, &c. — Merganser is simply mergus + anser, i. e., diving- goose.
M. sér-ra/-tor. Lat. serrator, a sawyer; serratus, sawn, i.e., saw-shaped, serrate, serried, as the prominent teeth of the bill look like those of a saw; serra, a saw ; supposed to be equal to secra, from seco, I cut.
M. cii-cul-la/-tiis. Lat. cucullatus, hooded, wearing the cucullum, a kind of hood, a capu- chon, perhaps from its circular shape («vU«Aos). Very appropriate in this case.
Sii/-14 bas-sa/-na. Sula, by Agassiz given as a proper name, was Latinized lately from y Ag g prop y the French name, Ze Sule. — Quasi-Lat. bassanus is an adjective derived from the name of one of the great haunts of the bird, the Bass Rock, Firth of Forth, Scotland.
S. leti-c6-gas/-tra. Gr. Aeveds, white, and yaornp, the belly. This stands as S. fiber in the orig. ed. See Salv., Tr. Z. S. ix, pt. ix, 1875, p. 496.
Pél-&-ca/-niis trach-y-rhynch/-ts. Gr. meAexav, or meAexivos, or Lat. pelecanus, a pelican. The etymology is obscure; but the pelican was fabled to strike and wound its own breast, that the young might be nourished with blood ; and there are various Greek and Latin words signifying some cutting and striking instrument, as an axe, which are nearly identical in form with the above. — Gr. rpaxvs, rough, uneven, and piyxos, the beak; with reference to the deciduous excrescence or “ centre-board” on the upper mandible.
118 749. 750. Pol moe 758. 75A, mos, 756. wo.
758.
749. 750.
751. 752.
753. 7T5A. 755.
756. OMe 758.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Pelecanus fuscus L. B 616. C 527. R 641. Brown Pelican.
Phalacrocorax carbo (L.) Leach. B 620. C 528. R 642.
Common Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax dilophus (Sw.) Nutt. B 623. C 530. R 643. Double-crested Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax dilophus cincinnatus (Brandt) Ridg. B 622. € 529. White-tufted Cormorant. [R 6456.
Phalacrocorax dilophus floridanus (Bartr.) Coues. B 624. C 530a. R 643a. Florida Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax mexicanus (Brandt.)S. & 8S. B 625. C 531. R 644.
Mexican Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax penicillatus (Brandt) Heerm. B 626. C 532. R645. Tufted Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax perspicillatus Pall. B 621. © 533. R 648. Pallas’s Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax bicristatus Pall. B—. C 534. R 647. Red-faced Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax violaceus (Gm.) Ridg. B 627. C 535. R 646. Violet-green Cormorant.
P. fis/-ctis. Lat. fuscus, fuscous, dark.
Phal-a-crd/-cér-ax car/-bd. Gr. dadaxpoxdpat, Lat. phalacrocorar, a cormorant; from gaadakpos, bald, and kdpat, a raven. Compare Phalaropus, No. 604. The cormorant was often ealled “‘ sea-crow,” and “ cormorant” is nothing but corvus marinus ; Fr. cormoran ; Ital. corvo marino; Span. cuervo marino or cuervo calvo (bald-headed crow). — Lat. carbo, a coal, charcoal; whence carbon; from the black color.
The cormorants are all given as Graculus in the orig. ed. But this was according to a way which G. R. Gray had of determining the types of genera, which has been found not available. Graculus signifies that the bird is so like a crow in color; cf. Eng- lish “‘ sea-crow,” above.
P. di/-ldph-iis. Gr. d/s, twice, and Adgos, crest.
P. d. cin-cin-na/-tiis. Lat. cincinnatus, having curly hair; Lat. cincinnus, Gr. kixwwvos, a curly lock.
P. d. fld-ri-da/-ntis. To Florida. Bartram named the bird before Audubon did.
P. méx-i-ca/-niis. To Mexico. See Sialia, No. 28.
P. pé-ni-cil/-14/-tiis. Lat. penici/lum, a pencil, or painter’s brush ; equivalent to peniculus, a little brush; this from penis, a tail, or the male organ: compare pendeo, I hang; as something pendent or appendaged. The reference is to the tufts of lengthened feathers on the bird.
P. pér-spic-il-l1a/-ttis. See (demia, No. 739.
A")
. bi-cris-t@/-tiis. Lat. bis, twice, and cristatus, crested. Exactly equal to the Gr. diAogos.
P. vi-d-1d/-cé-tis. Lat. violaceus, violet-colored ; viola, a violet. See Jonornis, No. 685.
759. 7 760. 761. 762. 763. 764,
765.
759.
760.
761.
762.
763,
764.
765,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 119
Phalacrocorax violaceus resplendens (Aud.) Ridg. B—. C—. R 646a. Baird’s Cormorant.
Plotus anhinga L. B 628. C536. R 649. Anhinga; Darter; Snake-bird.
Tachypetes aquilus (L.) V. B 619. C537. R 639. Frigate Bird; Man-of-war Bird.
Phaéthon ethereus L. B—. C —. R655. (?!) Red-billed Tropic-bird.
Phaethon flavirostris Brandt. B 629. C 538. R 654. Yellow-billed Tropic-bird.
Stercorarius skua (Briinn.) Coues. B 652. C 539. R 696. Skua.
Stercorarius pomatorhinus (Temm.) Lawr. B 653. © 540. R 697. Pomatorhine Jager.
P. v. rés-plén’-déns. Lat. resplendens, resplendent, splendid, or lustrous; resplendeo or splendeo, I shine, gleam. Splendor is derived by some etymologists from oAn(v) des, live coals.
Not in the orig. ed. Since recognized by Ridgway, Pr. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, p. 222.
Farallone Islands.
Pl6/-ttis an-hin’-ga. Gr. mAwtds, being a good swimmer; from mAdéw or tAéw, I swim, navigate; Lat. plotus; and very early applied, in ornithology, to divers swimming birds. — Anhinga is a barbarous word, from the Portuguese ankina, and equivalent to the Lat. anguina, snaky ; anguis, a snake; very well applied to this curious bird, which in its subaqueous excursions strangely resembles a swimming serpent. See Coues, Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, 1878, p. 101. We should like to substitute the Latin form of the word, but that would probably be going too far.
Tach-y’-pét-és 4/-quil-tis. Gr. raxumérns, Lat. tachypetes, flying rapidly; taxvs, swift, and méroua, I fly. —Lat. aquilus, swarthy, dark-colored. The word is vaguely sup- posed by most persons to have something to do with aquila, an eagle, in consideration of the raptorial prowess of this piratical high-flyer; but it would in that case be either aquila, substantive, an eagle, or aquilinus, adjective, aquiline. Aquwia and aquilus are doubtless the same word, etymologically ; but the present specific name has nothing further to do with the genus Aquila, which see, No. 582.
P. aé-thé!’-ré-tis. Gr. aidépios, Lat. ethereus, etherial, relating to the ai@jp, ether, ether, or serene upper air, as opposed to ap, aér, the lower aérial region; the birds of this genus being noted for soaring aloft. Th. at@w, &w.
Not in the orig. ed. If there be no mistake in identification, this species has straggled to Newfoundland. See Freke, Comp. List B. of Eur. and N. A., p. 44 (repaged from Proc. Roy. Soe. Dubl., 1879).
Pha/-&-th6n fla-vi-rds/-tris. Gr. daédwyv, Lat. Phaéthon, a proper name, an epithet of the sun; Phaéthon having once undertaken to drive the chariot of the sun, his father Helios ; well applied to these highly aerial birds of the Tropics. Sometimes very wrongly written Phethon, and even Pheton. — Lat. flavirostris, yellow-billed.
Stér-cr-a/-ri-tis skii/-3. Lat. stercorarius, having to do with ordure, a scavenger ; stercus, excrement; from the filthy habits of the bird. — Skua is the name applied to the bird by the Feroése.
S. pd-mi-td-rhin/-iis. Gr. maua, genitive méuaros, a flap, lid, cover; and fis, genitive pivos,
766.
767.
768.
769. 770.
Wilelie lis
Ce
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Stercorarius parasiticus (Briinn.) Gray. B 654. C 541. R 698.
Parasitic Jager.
Stercorarius buffoni (Boie) Coues. B 655. C 542. R 699.
Arctic Jager; Long-tailed Jager.
Larus glaucus Briinn. B 656. C 543. R 660.
Glaucous Gull.
Larus leucopterus Faber. B 658. C 544. R 661.
White-winged Gull.
Larus glaucescens Licht. B 657, 659. C 545. R 662.
Glaucous-winged Gull.
Larus marinus L. B 660. C 546. R 663.
Great Black-backed Gull.
Larus argentatus Briinn. B—. C 547. R 666.
‘Herring Gull,
Larus argentatus smithsonianus Coues. B 661. © 547a. R 666a.
Ss.
Ss.
Smithsonian Herring Gull.
the nose; from the scale-like covering of the nostrils. Temminck, habitually careless in such matters, originally wrote pomarinus, and we have almost always said ‘ pomarine” jaiger, with some vague notion of the sea in the case of this marine bird; but Newton’s explanation of the word, as above, is undoubtedly correct. Siger or jaeger is the German for hunter, these birds being habitual hunters and plunderers of the gulls and terns. The name was originally applied to a class of wild huntsmen who lived on the banks of the Rhine, and supported themselves entirely by plunder and robbery.
par-4-si'-ti-ctis. Gr. mapacitixds, Lat. parasiticus, parasitic; Gr. mapdovros, Lat. para- situs, a parasite, from mapa, by the side of, and o7ros, grain, food; literally, one who sits at the table of another; as we should say now, in vulgar parlance, a “ free-luncher,” “bummer,” “ dead-beat ” ; hence, in general, any kind of a hanger-on.
biif-fon’-i. To Jean Louis Le Clerc, Compte de Buffon, the famous French panegyrist of nature, particular friend of Linneus, who wrote a great history of birds with the help of the Abbé de Montbeillard, and caused Daubenton to prepare the celebrated 1008 Planches Enluminées.
Lar’-tis glaii/-ctis. Gr. Adpos, Lat. larus, a gull. — Lat. glaucus, glaucous, bluish, yAaukés.
See Glaucidium, No. 484. Gull is supposed to be named for its gluttony, from gulo, a glutton (gu/a, the gullet); Welsh, gwylan; Fr., goeland.
. leti-cdp/-tér-tis. Gr. Aeuxds, white, and mrepdy, wing.
. glaii-cés’-céns. Lat. (decidedly post-classic) glaucescens, the present participle of a
suppositious inceptive verb glaucesco, 1 grow bluish ; meaning here somewhat bluish.
. ma-ri/-ntis. Lat. marinus, marine; mare, the sea.
. ar-gén-ta/-tiis. Lat. argentatus, silvered, silvery; the participle of an obsolete verb
argento; argentum, silver, money, from &pyupos, silver, apyés, white, the color of the metal. One writer has criticised the use of argentatus to denote a silvery color, arguing that argentatus would mean silvered over, silver-plated, or frosted, and proposed to sub- stitute some other derivative of argentum. But this is hypercriticism; the word is more apt or fit for the bird than most specific names are.
a. smith-sdn-i-a/-niis. To the Smithsonian Institution; this named for James Smith. son, illegitimate son of Hugh Percy, Duke of Northumberland.
774.
775.
776.
Lae
(rest
779.
780.
781.
Mas
TET Che T/TAS) wt.
780.
(Ashi
782.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 12
Larus occidentalis Aud. B 662. C5475. R 664.
Western Herring Gull.
harmis Cachianans Pall. 8 —) ¢—- R667.
Pallas’s Gull.
Larus affinis Reinh. B—. C —. R 665. (G.)
Reinhardt’s Gull.
Larus californicus Lawr. B 663. C 548a. R 668.
Californian Gull.
Larus delawarensis Ord. B 664. C 548. R 669.
Ring-billed Gull.
Larus canus L. B—. 0 —. R671. (!E.)
Mew Gull.
Larus brachyrhynchus Rich. B 665, 673. C 549. R 670.
American Mew Gull.
Larus heermanni Cass. B 666. C 551. R 672.
White-headed Gull.
Rissa tridactyla (L.) Bp. B 672. C 552. R 658.
Kittiwake Gull.
. Gc-cid-én-ta/-lis. See Dendraca, No. 113.
. ca-chin/-nans. Lat. cachinnans, laughing immoderately; cachinno, I roar with laughter ;
Gr. kaxdw or kayxd(w, of same meaning. Well expressing the outcry of the gull. Not in the orig. ed.; since determined to occur in Alaska. This is Z. borealis of
Baird, Trans. Chicago Acad., i, 1869, p. 305.
. af-fi/-nis. Lat. affinis, allied; ad and jfinis. See Campylorhynchus, No. 64.
Not in the orig. ed.; since determined to be a good species; North American only as accidentally Greenlandic. See Reinh., Vid. Medd. Nat. For. Kjgb., 1855, p. 78.
. cal-i-for/-ni-cts. To California. . dél-4-war-én/-sis. To the State of Delaware; named for Lord De La Ware.
. ca/-ntis. Lat. canus, ashy, hoary-gray. Mediately derived from kraiw, to burn, con-
sume, the root here seen giving rise to many words, as cinereus, kinetic, &e. Not in the orig. ed. Since ascertained to inhabit Labrador. See Saunders, P. Z. S.,
1878, p. 178, and Brewer, Bull. Nutt. Club, iii, 1878, p. 50.
. brach-y-rhynch/-iis. Gr. Bpaxds, short, and puyxos, beak.
Nore. — We give all these Lari, excepting one, as good species, in deference to recent investigation; but much doubt that the method of treating them in the orig. ed. is not more natural after all.
. heér/-man-ni. To Dr. Adolphus L. Heermann, of Philadelphia, who collected exten-
sively in the south-west. This stands in the orig. ed., very erroneously, as L. belcheri.
Ris/-s& tri-dac!-t¥-1a. Rissa or Ritsa is the Icelandic vernacular name. — Lat. tris, thrice,
and dactylus, digit, whether finger or toe: Gr.. 8d«rvdos. This bird has the hind toe rudimentary, leaving only three perfect digits. — Kittiwake is an old Scotch name of this species; perhaps from its cry.
(oe
792.
783. 784,
785.
786.
787. 788. 789.
790.
791. pao.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Rissa tridactyla kotzebuii (Bp.) Coues. B—. C 552a. R 658a. (?) Kotzebue’s Kittiwake.
Rissa brevirostris Brandt. B 674, 675. C 553. R 659. Short-billed Kittiwake.
Pagophila eburnea (Gm.) Kaup. B 676, 677. C 550. R 657. Ivory Guill.
Chroicocephalus atricilla (L.) Lawr. B 667. C 554. R 673. Laughing Gull.
Chroicocephalus franklini (Rich.) Bruch. B 668, 66). C 555. R 674. Franklin’s Rosy Gull.
Chroicocephalus philadelphia (Ord) Lawr. B 670. B 556. R 675. Bonaparte’s Rosy Gull.
Rhodostethia rosea (Macg.) Bruch. B 678. C 557. R 676. Wedge-tailed Gull.
Xema sabinii (Sab.) Leach. B 680. C 558. R 677. Fork-tailed Gull,
Xema furcata (Prov. & Des Murs) Bruch. B 679. C 559. R 678. Swallow-tailed Gull.
Sterna anglica Mont. B 681. C 560. R 679. Gull-billed Tern; Marsh Tern.
R. t. kdt-zé-bui/-i. To Otto de Kotzebue, the Russian navigator.
R. bré&-vi-rés/-tris. Lat. brevis, short, and rostris, pertaining to the bill, rostral; from rostrum.
Pa-god/-phi-l4 €-biir/-né-a. Gr. mdyos, ice, and pidos, loved. — Lat. eburnea, of ivory, like ivory (in whiteness or hardness) ; ebur, ivory ; directly from the Sanscrit word for elephant.
Chro-i-cd-céph/-4-liis 4-tri-cil/-14. Gr. xpwirds, colored, and repadn, head. This word has given great trouble from Eyton’s, the founder’s, saying it was from xpo:kos, there being no such word. Various attempts to derive it from xpod or xpola, or from xpss, xpods, color, and to rectify the supposed erroneous orthography, have resulted in kroikocephalus, chracocephalus, chroiocephalus, chroocephalus. Wharton has shown Eyton’s original orthography to be correct, lacking only the diwresis over the 7, there being actually such an adjective as xpacds, not given in the common dictionaries. (See Zoologist, March, 1878, p. —.) — Lat. atricilla, black-tailed; only applicable to the young bird. See Motacilla, No, 86.
C. frank'-lin-i. To Sir John Franklin. C. phil-4-dél/-phi-a. To the City of Brotherly-Love. See Geothlypis, No. 142.
Rh6-d6-sté/-thi-4 rds/-E-4. Gr. pddov, the rose, and o77@0s, the breast ; rose-breasted. — Lat. roseus, rosy.
X&/-m&A sa-bin/-i-i. Xema is a nonsense word, invented by Leach: it is sometimes written zema. — To Edward Sabine, by his brother.
X. fir-ca’-ta. Lat. furcatus, forked, furcate, bifurcate, forficate ; furca, a fork.
Stér’-na ang!-li-c&. Sterna is not classic, having nothing to do with sturnus, a starling, or with sternum, the breast-bone, or sterno, to strew. Agassiz gives the latter etymon. It is
793.
799.
800.
Sor:
793. 794,
795.
796.
OD he 798.
799.
800.
801
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 123
Sterna caspia Pall. B 682. C 561. R 680. Caspian Tern.
Sterna maxima Bodd. B 683. C 562. R 681. Cayenne Tern; Royal Tern.
Sterna elegans Gamb. B 684. C 563. R 682. Elegant Tern.
Sterna cantiaca Gm. B 685. C 564. R 683. Sandwich Tern.
Sterna hirundo L. B 689. C565. R 686. Common Tern or Sea Swallow.
Sterna forsteri Nutt. B 686, 691. C 566. R 685. Forster’s Tern.
Sterna macrura Naum. C 690, 693. C 567, 568. R 687 Arctic Tern.
Sterna dougalli Mont. B 692. C 569. R 688. Roseate Tern.
Sterna superciliaris antillarum (Less.) Coues B 694. C 570. R 690. Least Tern,
a Latinization, perhaps not older than about 1523, of the English fern, or stern, or sterne, or stirn, there being all these, and other old forms of the word; Danish terne, &c. We have a vague impression that the word is onomatopeic, from the cry of the bird One of the names of the bird is the Swiss Schnirring. Most languages, however, have a different set of words, equivalent to our sea-swallow; as Fr. //irondelle-de-mer ; Germ. See-8chwalbe, &e. — Lat. anglica, English; Montagu having named the bird after a country where it is comparatively seldom seen.
S. cas/-pi-a. To the Caspian Sea.
S. max’-i-ma. Lat. maximus, superlative degree of magnus, large. This is S. regia of the orig. ed. We are now willing to accept Boddaert’s name.
S. é/-lé-gans. See Rallus, No. 673. This is S. galericulata of the orig. ed. We are glad to return to the orig. name of this species, which H. S. has shown to be not galericulata Licht., as S. & S. had it.
S. can-ti-a/-ca. An adjective formed from Cantium, a place in Britain, mentioned by Julius Cesar; now Kent, England.
S. hir-tin’-d6. See Hirundo, No. 159.
S. for’-stér-i. To John Reinhold Forster, who wrote, among many other things, a valuable account of Hudson’s Bay birds, published in 1772.
S. m&c-ri/-ra. Gr. paxpds, long, and odpa, tail. The word is often written macroura, and defensibly so, the full form being macrooura. But it is pe.missible to shorten oou into long u, as we habitually do in leucurus for leucoourus.
S. doit/-gal-li. To Dr. McDougall, of Scotland.
This stands as S. paradisea Briinn., of the orig. ed. But Briinnich’s bird being unquestionably the Arctic Tern, No. 799, we do not see why the latter should not be called S. paradisea. ,
S. sip-ér-cil-i-a/-ris. Lat. superciliaris or superciliosus, supercilious ; t.e., relating to the eye-brow, supercilium ; super and cilium, a hair; because one raises the eyebrows in expres-
808.
809.
802.
803. 804. 805.
806.
807.
808.
809.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Sterna trudeaui Aud. B 687. C 571. R 684. (1S. A.) Trudeau’s Tern.
Sterna aleutica Bd. B—. C 572. R689. Aleutian Tern.
Sterna fuliginosa Gm. B 688. C 573. R 691. Sooty Tern.
Sterna anzesthetica Scop. B—. C 574. R 692. Bridled Tern.
Hydrochelidon lariformis (L., 1758) Coues. B 695. C 575. R 693. Black Tern.
Hydrochelidon leucoptera (Meisn.) Boie. B—. C 575vis. R 694. (!E.) White-winged Black Tern.
Anotis stolidus (L.) Gray. B 696. C 576. R 695. Noddy Tern.
Rhynchops nigra L. B 697. C 577. R 656. Black Skimmer.
sion of certain emotions, as, surprise. But when surprised at anything, we question it, or doubt it, and this implies a feeling of superiority in ourselves; hence haughtiness, loftiness, even disdain and scorn, for the person or object which makes us supercilious. Super is the Gr. tép. Cilium is the eyelid, before transferred to the eyelashes ; it is the Greek «vada, the eyelids. Cilia, in the plural, has latterly been much used in the sciences for any sort of little hairs or fringes, or flagella ; as, ciliated epithelium, &c. — Lat. antil- larum, of the Antilles ; in the genitive plural.
S. tri-deaiti/-i. To Dr. James Trudeau, of Louisiana. Included as North American on the authority of Audubon. S. a-leti/-ti-ca. To the Aleutian Islands.
n
. f-li-gin-d/-sa. See Canace, No. 559.
S. an-aés-thé/-ti-ca. Gr. dvaic@ntixds, insensible, unfeeling, not perceiving; hence, as applied to this bird, stupid, foolish; & or ay, privative, and aic@ytiKds, sensible, &c.; aic@nots, sensation, perception, feeling; aic@avoua, I perceive. We have the English esthetic direct from the Greek, though this has experienced a refinement of meaning the original did not possess; also in medicine, anesthesia, the state of insensibility produced by such drugs as ether or chloroform, called from their property, anesthetic. The word has been brutally written anostheta; anestheta is one amendment already introduced, and the above is a further improvement.
Hy-dr6-ché-li/-don lar-i-for/-mis. Gr. t#dwp, water, and xedddv, a swallow, t.e., sea- swallow. — Lat. lariformis, gull-like, shaped like a gull: larus and forma. H. leii-cop/-té-ra. Gr. Aevids, white, and rrépov, wing.
North America in one known instance (Wisconsin); see Brewer, Am. Nat., 1874, p. 188.
A’-nd-iis stdl/-i-diis. Gr. &voos or zvous, literally mindless, unmindful of ; a privative and vous, the mind, intellect, understanding. It is applied to the bird as exactly equivalent to stolidus, or anesthetica, as stolid, apathetic, insensible, in view of its indifference to the presence of man. — Lat. stolidus, stolid; related to stwltus, foolish, silly.
Rhynch/-dps nig/-ra. Gr. pryxos, the beak, and &y, the face; well applied to a bird whose extraordinary beak is such a prominent feature. — Lat. nger, feminine nigra, black.
810.
SH
812.
813.
814.
815.
816.
Sir.
810.
Sia 812.
813.
814.
815. 816. 817.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 20
Diomedea brachyura Temm. B 631. (578. R701. Short-tailed Albatross.
Diomedea nigripes Aud. B—. (579. R700. Black-footed Albatross.
Pheebetria fuliginosa (Gm.) Coues. B 633. C 580. R 703. Sooty Albatross.
Ossifraga gigantea (Gm.) Reich. B 634. C 581. R 704. (!) Giant Fulmar.
Fulmarus glacialis (L.) Steph. B 635. C 582. R 705. Fulmar.
Fulmarus glacialis pacificus (Aud.) Coues. B 636. C 582a. R 705a. (?) Pacific Fulmar.
Fulmarus glacialis rodgersi (Cass.) Coues. B—. C 5820. R 705s. (?) Rodgers’s Fulmar.
Priocella tenuirostris (Aud.) Ridg. B 637. C 583. R 706. (!) Slender-billed Fulmar.
Di-6-mé-dé/-4 brach-y-ii/-ra. Lat. Diomedeus, adjective relating to Diomedes or Atouhdns, Jove-counselled, a Grecian hero famous at the siege of Troy: application probably fanciful. Pliny’s Diomedee aves were birds living on the Island Diomedea in the Adriatic. — Gr. Bpaxvs, short, and ovpa, tail.
D. nig’/-ri-pés. Lat. niger, black, and pes, foot.
Phoé-bé/-tri-a fi-li-gin-d/-sa. Gr. poiBytpia, a prophetess, soothsayer, like g¢o:Bdorpic, Phebastria, another genus of this family invented by Reichenbach; go:Bd(w is to prophesy ; literally, to “play Apollo” with oracular utterances; o7Bos, Phebus, a synonym of Apollo. These words are with great propriety and correct sentiment applied to albatrosses, the import of whose weird presaging will be felt by one who reads Coleridge’s “ Antient Mariner,” or himself goes down the deep in ships.
Os-si’-fra-g gi-gan/-té-a. Lat. oss/fragus, bone-breaking, from os, genitive ossis, a bone, and frango, I break; in the perfect, /regi, participle /ractus: three forms of the word repeated in English in frangible, fragile, fracture: the Latin digammated from Gr. pijyvuur; the stem here seen giving an immense crop of words. — Lat. giganteus, gigantic, giant ; the original “ giants,” gigantes, Piyavres, were a race of Titans, who attempted to scale high heaven; they were the sons of Tartarus and Earth; but, being probably illegiti- mate, took the name of their mother; “ gigantic” meaning literally “ earth-born,” ynyevis; yn, and ylyvoua.
Only North American as astray on the high sea.
Fil’-ma-riis gla-ci-a/-lis. Fulmarus is arbitrary Latinization of fu/mar, which is said to be akin to fulimart, foulmart, or foumart, a polecat ; probably from foul (dirty), and the root of the word murder (Wharton’s MS.). — Glacialis, see Harelda, No. 728.
F. g. pa-ci’-fi-ctis. See Anorthura, No. 77. F. g. réd/-gér-si. To Commodore John Rodgers, U. S. Navy.
Pri-6-cél/-14 tén-t-i-rés’-tris. Priocella we do not recognize, unless, perhaps, it is a frightful concatenation of Prion and Procellaria, two well-known genera of this family. French ornithologists were frequently guilty of such atrocities ; see Embernagra, No. 311, for example. Agassiz gives it as Prion and Procella. Prion is the Gr. mpiwy, a saw, from the prominent teeth of the bill; for Procellaria, see below. — Lat. tenuirosiris, slender-
126 CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
_, 818. Daptium capense (L.) Steph. B 639. C 584. R719. (!)
Pintado Petrel; Cape Pigeon.
819. C&strelata heesitata (Kuhl) Coues. B 638. C 585. R717. (!) Black-capped Petrel. [See Addenda, No. 887.
820. Castrelata bulweri (Jard. & Selb.) Coues. B—. C —.R 718. (G. !E.)
Bulwer’s Petrel.
821. Halocyptena microsoma Coues. B—. C 586. R 720. Least Petrel.
822, Procellaria pelagica L. B 645. C 587. R 721. Stormy Petrel.
823. Cymochorea leucorrhoa (V.) Coues. B 642. C 588. R 723. Leach’s Petrel.
billed; tenuis, slender, slight; more literally thin, as if spread out thin; from tenuo, I make thin, dilute, rarefy ; from Gr. reivyw, I stretch out, spread out, extend. The bird is questionably North American, unless as astray on the high sea,
818. Dap/-ti-tim cap-én’-sé. Gr. darriov or S’rriov, a diminutive of Simrns or Sérys, a diver. This set of words vary in the vowels in different dictionaries, and may not all be found; compounds of them are seen in ornithology in eudyptes, eudytes, &c. They are all from one root. The above is almost universally written daption, but in transliteration from Greek to Latin becomes properly daptium.— Capense, of the Cape of Good Hope, which was the cape in those days; Caput Bonw-Spei, as it was called; caput, head, a headland. —“Pintado” is painted; 7.e., of variegated colors ; pingo, I paint.
Only North American as astray on the high sea.
819. Oés-tré/-la-td haés-i-ta/-ta. Gr. oictpyaAatos, literally, goaded on by a gad-fly, (¢.e., a goad-fly), oforpos, wstrus, as cattle are; hence, goaded on in any way, as these wide- ranging ocean birds seem to be by some mysterious impulse which drives them over the waves. The latter part of the word, -lata, the “ goaded on” part of the whole idea, is from the Gr. édavvw, I urge on, drive. — Lat. hesitata, literally, stuck fast; Awsito, I stick fast, intensified from herco, I hang to, cleave to, adhere; in a tropical sense, I hesitate; the latter is the application in this case, the describer of the bird being uncertain about it, and therefore hesitating to name it. When at length the above generic and specific terms were combined, the bird was put in the bad way of a stuck-fast gad-about !
Only North American as astray on the high sea.
820. O. bil/-wér-i. To Bulwer. Only North American as a straggler to Greenland. See Newton, Man. Nat. Hist. Greenl., 1875, p. 108; Freke, Zodlogist, September, 1881, p. 378.
821. Hal-d-cyp-té/-n4 mic-rd-sd/-ma. Gr. ads, genitive adds, the salt sea, dxvs, swift, wrnvds, winged. — Gr. ulipos, small, c@ua, body; ‘the sharp-winged little sea-body.”
822. Pro-cél-la!-ri-a pél-4/-gi-ca. Lat. procellaria or procellosa, stormy, tempestuous, relating to storm; procella, a storm. — Gr. meAayixds, pelagic, relating to the sea; thoroughly Greek, but transliterable into Latin. — Petrel is commonly fancied to be a diminutive of Peter, Petrus, who attempted to walk on the sea of Galilee, as these little birds seem to be continually doing, in the way they patter over the ocean waves; but there are many forms of petrel, as petteril, peterel, &c., and the word may be related to the verb to patter, just used.
823. C¥-md-chdr-é/-4 leti-cbr/-rhd-4. Gr. kdua, genitive kiuaros, the surging billows, and xopela or xopia, a choir, a dancing; literally, the wave-dancers. One of my critics has favored me with an excellent reason why, according to his faithful dictionary, the
824.
825.
826.
827.
828.
829.
830.
824.
825.
826.
827.
828.
829.
830.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 127
Cymochorea melzena (Bp.) Coues. B 643. C 589. R 724. Black Petrel.
Cymochorea homochroa Coues. B—. C 590. R725. Ashy Petrel.
Oceanodroma furcata (Gm.) Bp. B 640. C 591. R 726. Fork-tailed Petrel.
Oceanodroma hornbyi (Gr.) Bp. B 641. C 592. R 727. Hornby’s Petrel.
Oceanites oceanicus (Kuhl) Coues. B 644. C 593. R 722. Wilson’s Petrel.
Fregetta grallaria (V.) Bp. B 646. C 594. R 728. (!) Lawrence’s Petrel.
Priofinus melanurus (Bonn.) Ridg. B 651. © 595. R 707. (!) Black-tailed Shearwater.
word ought to have been cymatochoreutes. We would refer him to his dictionary again for certain words beginning with sync- and euph-. The stem of the first part of the word is seen in accumulate, to roll up; of the second in chord, choir, choral, choresis, or chorea
Moe
(St. Vitus’s dance), &c. — Gr. Aeveds, white, and dppos, the rump.
C. mél-aé’-na. Gr. uédas, feminine péAava, black. The orthography introduced by Bonaparte, melania, requires to be emended as above.
C. hé-m6/-chrd-4. Gr. duds, equal, like, and xpda, color; in allusion to the unicolor plumage.
O-c&é-an-5'-drd-m& fir-ca’-t3. Gr. "Oxeavds, Oceanus, the divinity of, and the ocean itself; supposed to be avs, swift, and véw, I flow. See Ammodramus, No. 258, and Hydranassa, No. 660.— Lat. furcatus, forked ; furca, a fork.
horn/-by-i. To Admiral Hornby, R. N.
cé-3n-i/-tés 6-c&é-an/-i-ciis. Gr. adxeavirns, a son of the sea; sprung from Oceanus. See Oceanodroma, No. 826. — Gr. wKeavinds, oceanic.
O. O-
Fré-gét’-t4 gral-la!-ri-4. Fregetta, fregeta, fregata, as variously spelled, is from the Ital. JSregata, Span. fragata, Fr. fregate, Eng. frigate; according to Diez, the Lat. fabricata ; originally applied in French ornithology to the bird called man-of-war, Zachypetes aquilus ; applied by English ornithologists about 1790 to some species of the present family, and very lately taken by Bonaparte for a generic term.— Gral/e, among the Romans, was a pair of stilts, the word being contracted from gradula, this from gradus, a step; and the Grallatores were people who acted on the stage on stilts. The word was early taken in ornithology for wading birds, called gralle or grallatores, from their length of leg; from these words we have derived the English adjectives grallarial and grallato- rial; and grallaria is an obvious easy Latin derivative, though probably never used by the Romans.
Only North American as astray on the high sea.
Pri-d/-fin-tis mél-4n-i/-riis. Priofinus, unless we are mistaken, is a dreadful concoction of prion and puffinus, by the same victims of misapplied ingenuity who gave us Priocella ; see this, No. 817, and Puffinus, next below. — Gr. péAas, genitive wéAavos, black, and otpa, tail.
Only North American as astray on the high sea.
128
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
831. Puffinus kuhli (Boie) Bp. B—. C 596. R 708.
Cinereous Shearwater. [See Addenda, No. 888.
832. Puffinus major Faber. B 647. C 597. R 709.
Greater Shearwater.
888. Puffinus creatopus Coop. B —. C 598. R710.
Flesh-footed Shearwater.
834. Puffinus anglorum Temm. B 649. C 599. R711.
Manks Shearwater.
. 885. Puffinus obscurus (Gm.) V. B 650. C 600. R 712.
Dusky Shearwater.
836. Puffinus opisthomelas Coues. B—. C601. R713.
Black-vented Shearwater.
887. Puffinus fuliginosus A. Strickl. B 648. C 602. R714.
Sooty Shearwater.
831. Pif!-fin-tis kthl/-i. Two very different kinds of birds early received the name of puffein
832. P. 833. P.
834. P.
830) PR.
836. P.
837. P.
or puffin: one of these, the F’ratercula arctica, has retained it in English, in place of the old English coulterneb (‘ ploughshare-nose”’), which soon gave way; the French now call it macareux. The other, namely, the shearwater, soon lost the name of puffin; but meanwhile puffin had been taken into the books, and, at the pen of those who wrote their treatises in Latin, became puffinus or puphinus; and this was subsequently fixed as a generic term for the Shearwater Petrels. We do not know the exact meaning of the word, but suppose it has something to do with puff, as suggested by the stout, “ puffy” shape of the bodies of the Auks, as if puffed up. — The species is dedicated to Dr. Hein- rich Kuhl, whose early death left much promise unfulfilled.
ma!-jor. Lat. major, greater, comparative degree of magnus, great.
cré-at!-6-piis. Gr. xpéas, genitive xpéatos, flesh, and ods, foot; in allusion to the color of the feet. We see the same stem in the anatomical term pan-creas, ‘“ all-flesh.”
an-glo/-rim. ‘ Puffinus anglorum” is a curiosity. It simply says in Latin “ the puffin of the English,” just as one might cite Puffinus jonstoni, the puffin of Jonston’s treatise. Willughby, edited in Latin in 1676, called it ‘‘ Puffinus Anglorum,” meaning only that it was the bird “ called puffin in English”; and Temminck, in 1820, not unhappily made the phrase generic and specific as the technical name of the bird. — “‘ Manks” or “ Manx” is the name of the people and of their language, of the Isle of Man; so “ manx shear- water” is as if we were to say “the puffin of the Isle of Man.” — “ Shearwater ” is defined by early ornithologists as “avis aque superficiem radens,’ — the bird that grazes, skims, shaves, shears over the surface of the water; rado, I shave, scrape ; the stem is seen in erase, razor, &c. See above, Puffinus, No. 831.
Ob-sci/-riis. Lat. obscurus, dark-colored.
Nore. — There is doubt that the small dark shearwater of our South Atlantic coast is the P. obscurus of Gmelin, and Finsch has lately proposed to call it P. auduboni. But until we have more light on this obscure group, we prefer not to disestablish several well- settled names in this genus. See Ridg., Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, 1880, p. 12.
5-pis-thd/-mé-las. Gr. dmoGe, backward, and peéAas, black; a Greek way of saying black behind. Nore. — This is supposed by some to be Puffinus gavia (Forst.).
fii-li-gin-6/-stis. See Canace, No. 559.
838.
839.
840.
841.
842.
848.
841. 842. 843. 844,
845.
846. 847,
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 129
Puffinus amaurosoma Coues. B—. C 603. R715. Spectral Shearwater.
Puffinus tenuirostris Temm. B —. C 604. R716. Slender-billed Shearwater.
Colymbus torquatus Briinn. B 698. C. 605. R 736. Great Northern Diver or Loon.
Colymbus torquatus adamsi (Gr.) Coues. B—. C 605a. R 737. Yellow-billed Loon.
Colymbus arcticus L. B 699. C 606. R 738. Black-throated Diver.
Colymbus arcticus pacificus (Lawr.) Coues. B 700. C 606a. R 739. Pacific Black-throated Diver.
Colymbus septentrionalis L. B 701. C 607. R 740. Red-throated Diver.
46chmophorus occidentalis (Lawr.) Coues. B 704. C 608. R 729. Western Grebe.
Axchmophorus occidentalis clarki (Lawr.) Coues. B705. C 608. R730. Clark’s Grebe.
Podicipes griseigena holbcelli (Reinh.) Coues. B 702. C 610. R 731. American Red-necked Grebe.
P. a-mai-rd-sd/-ma. Gr. duavpds, dark, dim, dusky, and céua, body. Nore. — This is probably Proc. grisea Gm., as held by Finsch and Salvin. P. tén-wt-i-rés/-tris. See Priocella, No. 817.
Coé-lym/-btis tdr-qua’-ttis. The Latin colymbus is simply a transliteration from the Greek, and has nothing to do, notwithstanding the great similarity, with the purely Latin columba, a dove; the latter being not Greek at all, nor the former Latin, except as directly transferred from the Greek. The two words are consequently not related, unless it be in a radical manner; Corssen, however, considers them to be the same. Gr. KéAvmBos OY KoAUUBis, a diver or swimmer; KoAvuBaw, I dive, swim. The kéAvufis of Aristotle was a species of grebe (Podic/pes). — Lat. torquatus, see Asyndesmus, No. 456. — “Loon” is an old Scotch word. See No. 874.
. t. a/-dams-i. To Dr. C. B. Adams, of the British Navy.
. arc’-ti-ctis. See Sialia, No. 29.
- a. pa-cil/-fi-ctis. See Anorthura, No. 77.
(ey © @ @)
. S€p-tén-tri-6-na/-lis. Lat. septentrionalis, northern; septentriones, the north, northern
regions ; septem-trio, the constellationof the Wain. See Parus, No. 45. Aéch-m06’-phor-iis Gc-cid-én-ta’-lis. Gr. aixuh, a spear, and gopds, bearing; in allusion to the long, slender, sharp bill. — For occidental’s, see Dendraca, No. 113.— Grebe is a French word, the meaning of which we do not know.
A. o. clark/-1. To J. H. Clark.
P6d-i/-ci-pés gris-&i/-gén-& h6l/-boél-li. The extraordinary word “podiceps excited much curiosity, and stimulated some ingenious surmises. As it stands, podiceps seems to be the Greek zoids, genitive 7odds, foot, and the Latin termination -ceps, denot- ing head; and “foot-head ” it has doubtless been taken to be by many, who, if thinking of it at all, have felt vaguely that some allusion was intended to the bird’s somersaulting
”
has
848.
849.
850. 851.
852.
253.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Podicipes cornutus (Gm.) Lath. B 706. C 611. R 732. Horned Grebe.
Podicipes auritus (L.) Lath. B 708. Cc —. R 733. (G.) European Eared Grebe.
Podicipes auritus californicus (Heerm.) Coues. B 707. C 612. R 733a. American Eared Grebe.
Podicipes dominicus (L.) Lath. B 708a. C 613. R 734. St. Domingo Grebe.
Podilymbus podicipes (L.) Lawr. B 709. C 614. R 735. Pied-billed Grebe; Dab-chick.
Fratercula corniculata (Naum.) Gray. B 713. © 617. R744. Horned Puffin.
in the water, — turning “heels over head,” as we should say. In deriving the name of the family of grebes, some curious words have been ventured; as Podicipine, as if the genitive were podicipis, or Podicipitine, as if the genitive were podicipitis. There is no doubt that podiceps, and everything derived from it, is absurd. We have not traced the word back of 1758, when it probably originated in a misprint. Going back further in the annals of ornithology, we soon come upon the word in its proper form, viz., podicipes, occurring repeatedly in Willughby and various writers of about that period. The word is the Latin podex, genitive podicis, the rump, buttocks, and pes, foot; being simply a translation into Latin of a very vulgar English name. Having crystallized in the shape of podiceps, by Latham’s employ of the word as a generic term, and then been used for a century, it will not be easy to eradicate ; but the attempt should be made to substitute the proper podicipes. The genitive of this is podicipedis, and the family name should be Podicipedide. — Lat. griseus, gray : gena, cheek.
Nore. — There is no technical reason or excuse for using the word at all. For Colymbus, Brisson, 1760, is the proper name for the genus of grebes, having meant Grebe, not Loon, from the time of Aristotle to that-of Linanzeus, when the latter used it for loons and grebes indiscriminately. The loons were called Mergus by Brisson; and Eudytes, Wiger, 1811, seems to be the tenable generic name for them.
P. cGr-ni’-tiis. Lat. cornutus, horned; cornu, a horn; in reference to the tufts of feathers on the head.
P. atr-i/-ttis. Lat. auritus, eared; auris, an ear; Gr. ots, genitive rds, ear; in allusion to the auricular tufts of feathers. Not in the orig. ed. Only North American as occurring in Greenland.
P. cal-i-f6r/-ni-ctis. To California. P. dém-in/-i-ciis. To the Island of St. Domingo. See Dendreca, No. 129.
Pdd-i-lym/-biis pdd-i/-ci-pés. The word podilymbus, sometimes aggravated into pody- limbus, is a peculiarly villanous miscegenation of podi[ceps and co]/ymbus ; see the latter word, No. 840, and Podicipes, No. 847.
Fra-tér’-cti-lA cor-ni-ciil-a/-ta. ‘“ Fratercula” is a singular word, the application of which to this bird is not obvious, and the form of which seems absurd: a feminine noun mean- ing “little brother.” Fraterculus is a proper classical word, a diminutive of jfrater, brother. But there is no larger bird sufficiently near this species for the latter to be called the “little brother.” Fratercula in ornithological writing is much older than 1760, when Brisson made a genus of it, and we are inclined to think that it is humorously
‘used; all the more so by being made feminine, in the same spirit that prompted the comic writer Plautus to invent the verb fraterculo, as he did sororto, to signalize the swellings of the breasts of boys, like twin-brothers, at puberty. If there be anything in
854.
855.
856.
854. 855. 856.
857.
858.
859. 860.
86l. 862.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 131
Fratercula arctica (L.) Steph. B 715. C 618. R 743. Common Puffin; Sea Parrot.
Fratercula arctica glacialis (Leach) Coues. B 714. C 618a. R 743a. Large-billed Puffin.
Fratercula cirrata (Pall.) Steph. B 712, 716. C 619. R 745. Tufted Puffin. .
Ceratorhina monocerata (Pall.) Cass. B 717, 718. C 620. R 746. Horn-billed Auk.
Simorhynchus psittaculus (Pall.) Schl. B 725. C 621. R 747. Parroquet Auk,
Simorhynchus cristatellus (Pall.) Merr. 3B 719, 720. C 622. R 748. Crested Auk.
Simorhynchus pygmeeus (Gm.) Ridg. B 721. C 623. R 749. Whiskered Auk,
3}
Simorhynchus pusillus (Pall.) Coues. B 722, 723. C 624. R 750.
Knob-billed Auk.
Ptychorhamphus aleuticus (Pall.) Brdt. 3B 724. C 625. R 751. Aleutian Auk.
this, the application of the word to the birds is to be sought in their stout puffy shape, that which appears to have caused the English word puffin. See Pujjinus, No. 831. — Lat. corniculata, horned, a diminutive of cornutus: referring to the acute epidermal process on the upper eyelid, which is deciduous, being shed like the horns of deer.
F. arc’-ti-ca. See Sialia, No. 29.
F. a. gla-ci-a/-lis. See Harelda, No. 728.
F. cir-ra/-ta. Lat. cirratus or cirrhatus, having curled locks, or ringlets, curly-haired; cirrus or cirrhus, a curl of hair; well applied to this oddly feather-tufted bird.
Cér-St-6-rhi/-na m6-n6-cér-a/-ta. Gr. «épas, genitive xéparos, a horn, and fis, genitive pwos, the nose; alluding to the prominent deciduous horn which grows up from the base of the bill, over the nostrils. — Gr. udvos, only, alone, single, transliterated as Lat. mono-, in composition, and xépas, horn, Latinized as céras, ceratis, whence an adjective form, ceratus, horned; that is, unicorn, one-horned.
Si-m6-rhyn/-chis psit-ta/-cti-liis. Gr. o.uds, flat-nosed, snub-nosed, like the negro; puyxos, beak; well applied to these birds, whose bills are singularly shaped. The same idea is expressed in the Latin simia, an ape, whence our English simian, become a common word since Darwinism has been so much discussed. — Lat. psittaculus, a little parrot, diminutive of psittacus. See Sitta, No. 57.
S. cris-ta-tél/-lis. Lat. diminutive of cristatus, crested.
S. pyg-maé/-tis. See Sitta, No. 61.
This is S. camtschaticus of the orig. ed.; but Alca pygmea Gm. is based on the young of the same species, called S. cassini by Coues.
S. pus-il/-lus. See Sitta, No. 60.
Pty-ché-rham/-phiis 4-leii/-ti-ctis. Gr. rrdt, genitive mruxds, a fold, and fdugos, the beak ; well alluding to the wrinkled covering of the bill; which, by analogy with what is known of other species, may be taken as an indication that the soft part concerned will be found to grow some kind of excrescence, not yet discovered. — Lat. aleuticus, of the Aleutian Islands, — the country of the people called Aleuts.
870.
863.
864,
865.
866.
869.
870.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Alle nigricans Link. B 738. C 626. R 752. Sea Dove; Dovekie.
Synthliborhamphus antiquus (Gm.) Coues. B 736. C 627. R753. Black-throated Auk.
Synthliboramphus umizusume (Temm.) Coues. B 737. © 628. RB 754.
Temminck’s Auk,
Brachyrhamphus marmoratus (Gm.) Brdt. B 732, 733. C 629. R 755. Marbled Murrelet.,
Brachyrhamphus kittlitzi Brdt. B 735. C 630. R 756. Kittlitz’s Murrelet.
Brachyrhamphus hypoleucus Xant. B—. C —. R 757. White-bellied Murrelet.
Brachyrhamphus craverii (Salvad.) Coues. B—. C —. R 758. (?) Craveri’s Murrelet.
Brachyrhamphus brachypterus Brdt. B 734. C —. R 759. (?) Short-winged Murrelet.
*
Al/-lé nig/-ri-cans. Alle is a local designation of this species and of Uriagrylle. Its mean- ing we do not know. It was long the specific name of the bird, taken for the generic by Link in 1806. — Lat. nigricans, present participle of a supposed verb nigrico, equivalent
to nigresco, L grow black, am blackish.
This stands in the orig. ed. as Mergulus alle: for the reason of the change, see Coues,
Bull. Nutt. Club, iv, 1879, p. 244.
Syn-thli-b6-rham/-phis 4n-ti/-qt-tis. Gr. cvv@AiBw, I compress; atv, with, and OAiBa, I press; fadupos, beak. —Lat. antiquus, antique, ancient ; with reference to the gray of the head, like an old man’s. Antiquus is simply for anticuus, this a form of anticus, from ante, before; one having retained the idea of being before in space, that is, in front of, the other having acquired the idea of priority in time, like antea; the opposition in
either case is with post, postea, behind, after.
S. i-mi-zii/-st-mé. This appalling word we know nothing about exeept that it is transliterated from the Japanese, Temminck having described the species from that
country; ‘‘son nom japonais est wumizusume,”’ he says. We drop the w.
Brach-y-rham/-phiis mar-m6-ra/-tiis. Gr. Bpaxds, short, and fdudos, beak. — Lat. mar- moratus, marbled ; marmor, marble; in allusion to the veined and clouded color. Marmor is the Gr. udpuapos, from papuatpw, I shine, glitter, sparkle, as did the beautiful white stone which Praxiteles carved. — Murrelet is a word coined by Coues in 1868 as a dimin-
utive of murre, like rivulet from river.
B. kitt!-litz-i. To F. H. von Kittlitz, traveller and naturalist.
B. hyp-6-leti/-ciis. Gr. id, under, and Xev«ds, white, meaning neither whitish nor under
the white, but white underneath. Not in the orig. ed. ; since recognized as probably valid.
B. cra-vé/-ri-l. To Sig. Federico Craveri. Not in the orig. ed. ; since recognized as perhaps distinct. B. bra-chyp/-té-riis. Gr. Bpaxds, short, and rrépor, wing. Not in the orig. ed. Since recognized by Ridgway. Pacific Coast.
ee
Srl:
872.
873.
874.
875.
310.
877.
878.
Sil:
872.
873.
874.
875.
876.
877.
878.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 133
Uria grylle (L.) Briinn. B 726. © 631. R 760.
Black Guillemot; Sea Pigeon.
Uria columba (Pall.) Cass. B 727. C 632. R 761.
Pigeon Guillemot,
Uria carbo (Pall.) Brdt. 8B 728. C 633. R 762.
Sooty Guillemot,
Lomvia troile (L.) Brdt. B 729, 730. C 634. R 763.
Common Guillemot; Murre.
Lomvia troile californica (Bry.) Coues. B—. C —. R 763a. (?)
California Guillemot.
Lomvia arra (Pall.) Coues. B 731. C 635. R 764, 764a.
Thick-bililed Guillemot.
Utamania torda (L.) Leach. B711. C 616. R 742.
Razor-billed Auk.
Alca impennis L. B 710. C 615. R 741.
Great Auk.
U’-ri-a gryl/-lé. Gesner and others state that odpfa is the Greek name of a guillemot,
U.
or some other water-bird. Uria occurs all through ornithology from Gesner, and was made a genus by Brisson in 1760. The meaning we do not know; perhaps akin to urinart, Skr. navi, water. — Gylle is said to be from Gr. ypuvAAiGw, I grunt; the bird has been called sibilans by some ; but grisla and grylle are N. European names.
cél-im/-ba. Lat. columba, a pigeon, applied in the same way that we call the bird “sea-pigeon ” in English.
U. car/-bd. Lat. carbo, a coal, charcoal; here used in allusion to the uniformly sooty
color, as if the bird were charred.
Lém/-vi-4 trd-i/-1€. Lomwia and lomvia are two of many forms in which is found spelled
the vernacular name of the bird, in Scotch, Feroése, and related languages; as Dan. lin, Dutch loen, Eng. loon or loom. It was taken by Linnewus for the specific, and much later by Brandt for the generic name. — T7yoile, on the contrary, may be of classic origin, Troilus being the son of Priam; also used as synonymous with Trojan ; application in this case arbitrary, if any. Newton says “possibly a compliment to Troil, the Ice- lander.” Briinnich wrote it Troille in 1764 (Orn. Bor., p. 27).
. t. cal-i-fSr’-ni-ca. Pertaining to the State of California.
Not in the orig. ed. Since recognized by Ridgway.
. ar/-r4. Lat. arra or arrha was purchase-money, or a pledge in earnest of a contract,
and might have been applied by Pallas to a bird in such demand by the natives as to serve as a sort of unit or standard of exchange in barter. “ Salerne says the great blue parrot of Brazil is called Arras or Aras; this seems here transferred to the sea-parrot.” (Wharton’s MSS.)
U-ti-man/-j-3 tdr/-da. Both these words are mere Latinizations of vernacular names.
Utamania or utumania was in the bird-books long before Leach made a genus of it, and so was tord or tordmule. Wedo not know what these words mean, further than that they signify this species. Ray says (Syn., 1713, p. 119): “Ad litora Crete invenitur ; indigenis ‘ Utamania’ dicta.”
Al/-ca im-pén’-nis. Alca is not classic, being merely a Latinization of the vernacular
name, found in several different forms, as alk, alck, alka, auk, awk. The third of these
2)
4
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
is found in the old treatises written in Latin, and the change to alca is of course imma- terial. The meaning of the word is in question. The form awk (which we observe some late English scholars use) might suggest a relationship with awkward, in view of these ungainly fowl; but awkward means simply left-handed. Quite probably alk is related, and not distantly, to e/k, the bird and the beast being the largest, or most notable, or most prevailing animals of their respective kinds in the consideration of the people. But e/k is in Latin alce (quite like alca), and this is uniform with the Greek a&A«/), mean- ing strength, prowess; one of the names of Hercules, for example, being derived there- from. The probability that alk, elk, alce, and @An7 are radically if not still more closely related, is heightened by the other vernacular names of this bird, gare-fowl, goir-fugel, &e., these qualifying prefixes being similar to those seen in gerfalcon, and recognized by Steenstrup in inventing his genus Gyralca, the idea of size, strength, or other predomi- nance being evident. If this be so, the alk, the Gare-fowl, is the fowl, par excellence, as elk, alce, is the great beast, as Ger-falco is the falcon; with the implication of some honor or special esteem. We are thus led directly to /Zierofalco, which see, No. 498. — Lat. impennis, featherless, 7. e., wingless, with reference to the diminutive wings, unfit for flight ; im, negative, and penna, a feather. :
Though the Great Auk is extinct in North America, and has doubtless disappeared
from the face of the earth, we still keep the place <x memoriam of this “ most honourable and antient fowle.”
ADDENDA.
Tue foregoing list of 878 names agrees with the analysis of the original and of the present edition of the Check List: 778 — 10 + 110 = 878.* But in the course of the year during which this edition has been printing, the following ten addi- tions to the bird-fauna of North America have been announced : —
879. Parus meridionalis Scl. B 292. c —. R 43. Mexican Titmouse.
880. Myiarchus crinitus cooperi (Bd.) Coues. B 132. 0 —. R 311. Mexican Great-crested Flycatcher.
881. Antrostomus vociferus arizonae Brewst. B—.c—.R—. Arizona Whippoorwill.
882. Buteo brachyurus V. B—.cC—.R—. (IS. A.) Short-tailed Buzzard.
879. Pa'-riis mé-ri-di-6-na’-lis. Lat. meridionalis, southern, southerly; for meridialis, from meridies, midday, noon. . Not in the orig. ed. Since ascertained to occur in Arizona. Brewst., Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, No. 4, October, 1881, p. 252.
880, Myi-ar’-chiis cri-ni/-tts co6/-pér-i. To William Cooper. Not in the orig. ed. Since ascertained to occur in Arizona. Brewst., Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, No. 4, October, 1881, p. 252.
881. An-trd/-std-miis v6-ci/-fér-tis 4-ri-z6/-naé. To the Territory of Arizona. Not in the orig. ed. Since described from Arizona. Brewst., Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, No. 2, April, 1881, p. 69.
882. Bi’-té-6 bra-chy-i’-riis. Gr. Bpaxds, short, and odpa, tail. Not in the orig. ed. Since ascertained to occur in Florida. See Ridg., Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, No. 4, October, 1881, p. 210.
* The stereotyped plates of the introductory pages, indicating 878 names, with 110 additions, have been punched to give the total of 888 with 120 additions.
13
883.
884,
885.
886.
887.
888.
883.
884,
885.
886.
887.
888.
CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS.
Buteo fuliginosus Scl. B—. Cc —. R —. (!8. A.) (?) Seoty Buzzard.
Eurynorhynchus pygmeeus (L.) Pearson. B—. C —. R—. (1A.) Spoon-billed Sandpiper.
Fulica atra L. B—.c—.R—. (G.) European Coot.
Fuligula rufina (Pall.) Steph. B—.c—. R —. (!E.) Rufous-crested Duck.
C&strelata gularis (Peale) Brewst. B—.cC—. R—. (!) Gular Petrel.
Puffinus borealis Cory. B—.C—.R—. (?) Northern Shearwater.
B. fi-li-gin-d/-stis. Lat. fuliginosus, sooty, of a dark sooty color; fuligo, soot. Not in the orig. ed. Since ascertained to occur in Florida (if really distinct from B. brachyurus). See Ridg., Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, No. 4, October, 1881, p. 212.
Eii-ry-né-rhyn/-chiis pyg-maé/-iis. Gr. edpdvw, I dilate, widen, spread out; from evpis, broad; and piyxos, beak. It is found spelled in many different ways; often eurtn- or eurhin-, as if supposed to be ed and fis or piv, the nose. — See Sitta, No. 61.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Since given by Ridgway as occurring at Point Barrow, Arctic coast of Alaska, in Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 21, 1881, p. 85. We are informed that the alleged occurrence is questionable.
Ful/-i-ca a/-tra. Lat. ater, atra, atrum, black. Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Since reported to have been obtained in Greenland in 1876. See Ridg., Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 21, 1881, p. 85, and Freke, Zoodlogist, September, 1881, p. 574.
Fil-ig/-ti-l4 rii-fi/-na. Late Lat. rufinus, reddened, reddish, formed from rufus, of same meaning.
Not in the orig. ed. of the Check List. Specimen said to have been procured in Fulton Market, New York, February, 1872, and to be now in the Nat. Mus. at Wash- ington. Ridg., Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 21, 1881, p. 85; Allen, Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, 1881, p. 173.
O€s-tré!-l4-t4 giil-a’-ris. Lat. gularis, pertaining to gula, the throat. Not in the orig. ed. Since ascertained to occur in New York. See Brewst., Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, No. 2, April, 1881, p. 94. Only North American as astray on the high sea. Pif’-fin-ts b6r-&-a/-lis. Lat. borealis, northern.
Not in the orig. ed. Since described as new from Massachusetts. See Cory, Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, No. 2, April, 1881, p. 34. s
LIST OF WORDS DEFINED.
Note (1). — This Index contains matter additional to or corrective of that in the body of the text.
Note (2). — The figures refer, not to the pagination of the book, but to the numeration of the names: e. g., Turdus, No. 1, not page 1.
Note (3). — When a word occurs in the List more than once, —as in cases of most generic and many specific or subspecific names, —the reference is usually to the place where it is first or best defined.
Note (4).— Words differing only in termination, — as american-us,-a,-wm, — are usually not duplicated. 5).
Note (:
abbreviatus, 522 aberti, 309 acadicus, 384, 483 Accipiter, 494 accipitrinus, 473 Actodromas, 614 aculeata, 58 acuminata, 619 acutipennis, 402 adamsi, 841 /Echmophorus, 845 Egialites, 584 EH giothus, 207 egocephala, 630 zeneus, 315 estiva, 111 estivalis, 251 zthereus, 762 affinis, 64 Ageleus, 316 agilis, 139 agleus, 337 agrestis, 271 aikeni, 262
Aix, 719
Ajaja, 653 alascensis, 78 Alauda, 85
alaudinus, 229 alba, 86
albatus, 696 albeola, 727 albicilla, 533 albicollis, 275, 395 albifrons, 542, 692 albigula, 307 albilora, 130 albocaudatus, 513 albolarvatus, 442 Alca, 878
alcyon, 423 aleutica, 803, 862 alexandri, 410 alicie, 12
Alle, 863
allehi (C. A.) 412 alleni (J. A.) 302 alpestris, 82 alpina, 623 altiloquus, 172 Aluco, 461 amabilis, 545 amaurosoma, 838 Amazilia, 419 ambiguus, 422 americana, 93
— Generic names are distinguished by a capital initial letter.
Ammodramus, 238 ameena, 294 Ampelis, 166 Amphispiza, 258 anesthetica, 805 Anas, 707 Ancylochilus, 625 anglica, 792 anglorum, 834 angustifrons, 455 anhinga, 760
ani, 425. Said to be the Bra- zilian name of the bird
anne, 414 annectens, 264, 351 Anorthura, 76 Anoiis, 808 Anser, 692 anthinus, 228 anthracina, 528 Anthus, 88 antillarum, 801 antiquus, 864 Antrostomus, 396 Aphelocoma, 354 Aphriza, 594 Aquila, 582 aquilus, 761
Aramus, 671
Archibuteo, 525
arctica, 29
arctoa, 206
Ardea, 655
Ardetta, 667
arenaria, 627
argentatus, 772
arizone, 253
Arquatella, 620
arra, 876. Both conjectures in the text wrong. Simply onomatopeic; Russian arrie or arra
arvensis, 85
Asio, 472
asio, 465
Astragalinus, 213
Astur, 496
Asturina, 527
Asyndesmus, 456
ater, 313
atrata, 201, 538
atricapillus, 44, 185
atricilla, 786
atrigularis, 274
atrocristatus, 42
Atthis, 416. It is also a proper name
auduboni, 9, 120
aura, 537
aurantia, 121
auratus, 457
auricapillus, 135
aurifrons, 451
Auriparus, 56
auritus, 849
australis, 202
autumnalis, 706
bachmani, 103 bahamensis, 153 bairdi, 224 barbatulus, 172 Bartramia, 640 _Basilinna, 407 bassana, 746 belli, 183 bendirii, 21 berlandieri, 70 - Bernicla, 699 bewicki, 71 bicolor, 40, 286 bicristatus, 757 bilineata, 258
blackburne, 121. This proba- bly should stand D. aurantia, Coues
bonapartii, 617
Bonasa, 565
borealis, 3
boscas, 707
Botaurus, 666
boucardi, 256. Peucea ruficeps boucardi is not in the orig. ed. Since discovered in Arizona by H. W. Henshaw, Ornith. Wheeler’s Surv., 1875, p. 117.
Brachyrhamphus, 866
brachyrhynchus, 780
brachypterus, 870
brachyura, 810
brenta, 700
brevirostris, 784
breweri, 273
brewsteri, 211. The dubious Linota brewsteri may be a hybrid between dgiothus li- naria and Chrysomitris pinus.
See Brewst., Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, no. 4, Oct. 1881, p. 225
brunneicapillus, 63
Bubo, 462
buccinator, 688 Budytes, 87 buffoni, 767 bullocki, 827 bulweri, 820 Buteo, 512 Butorides, 663
cabanisi, 424 cachinnans, 775 cerulea. See ceerulea Calamospiza, 286 calendula, 33 Calidris, 627
calliope, 417 Callipepla, 577 Calothorax, 418 calurus, 517
Calypte, 415 Campephilus, 431 Camptolemus, 729 Campylorhynchus, 63 Canace, 555 canadensis, 59, 149 canagica, 698 candicans, 501
LIST OF WORDS DEFINED.
candissima, 659 caniceps, 265 cantiaca, 796 cantianus, 591 canus, 779 canutus, 626 capense, 818 capitalis, 862 carbo, 873 Cardellina, 150 Cardinalis, 299 carolina, 450, 679 carolinensis, 16 carpalis, 257 Carpodacus, 194 caspia, 793 cassini, 178 castanea, 123 Catharista, 538 Cathartes, 53 Catherpes, 66 caudacutus, 240 caurinus, 342 cedrorum, 166 celata, 107 Centrocercus, 560 Centrophanes, 220 Centurus, 450 Ceratorhina, 857 Certhia, 62 Certhiola, 153 cerviniventris, 420 Ceryle, 423 Chetura, 405 Chamea, 39 Chamepelia, 547 Charadrius, 581 Chaulelasmus, 711 Chen, 694 cheriway, 535 Chloéphaga, 698 chlorurus, 310 Chondestes, 281. P. 57, penul- timate line, for chondrestes ? read chondredestes 2 Chordediles, 899 Chroicocephalus, 786 chrysaétus, 53% chrysoides, 458 chrysolema, 84 Chrysomitris, 212 chrysoparia, 115 chrysoptera, 102 cincinnatiensis, 101. Helmin- thophaga cincinnatiensis may
LIST OF WORDS DEFINED.
be a hybrid between H. pinus and Oporornis formosa. See Ridg., Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. 257
cincinnatus, 752
Cinclus, 30
cinctus, 52. Parus cinctus is not in the orig. ed. Since ascer- tained to occur in Alaska. See Bull. Nutt. Club, ii, no. 1, Jan. 1877, p. 37
cinerescens, 375
cinereus, 22, 250
circumcinctus, 588
Circus, 489
ciris, 292
cirrata, 856
Cistothorus, 81
citrea, 95
Clangula, 725
clypeata, 718
Coccygus, 428
cerulea, 36
cerulescens, 117
Colaptes, 457
collaris, 722
colubris, 409
Columba, 539
columba, 872
columbarius, 505
columbianus, 344
Colymbus, 840
confinis, 3, 233
conspersus, 67
Contopus, 380
Conurus, 460 *
cooperi, (J. G.) 156
cooperi, (Wm.) 495
corax, 338
corniculata, 853
cornutus, 848
coronata, 119, 279
Corvus, 388
cost, 415
Cotile, 163
Coturniculus, 254
coturniculus, 682
coturnix, 579
* couchi, 372
couesi, 621
craverii, 869
creatopus, 833
crecca, 714
crepitans, 673
Crex, 683
crinitus, 878 crissalis, 25, 808 cristata, 349 cristatellus, 859 Crotophaga, 425 cryptoleucus, 339 cucullatus, 528, 745 cunicularia, 487 cupido, 563 Cupidonia, 563 curonicus, 590 curvirostra, 199 curvirostris, 19 cyanea, 295 Cyanecula, 31 cyaneus, 489 cyanocephalus, 332 Cyanocitta, 349 cyanoptera, 717 Cygnus, 688 Cymochorea, 823 Cyrtonyx, 578
dactylisonans, 579 Dafila, 710 Daptium, 818 delawarensis, 778 Dendrocygna, 705 Dendreca, 111 derbianus, 364 Dichromanassa, 661 difficilis, 8389. mpidonax flavi- ventris difficilis was not recog- nized in the orig. ed. dilophus, 761 Diomedea, 810 discolor, 127 discors, 716 Dolichonyx, 312 domesticus, 74 dominica, 129 dominicensis, 369 dorsalis, 266 dougaili, 800 dresseri, 734
eburnea, 785 Ectopistes, 543 egretta, 658 Elanoides, 493 Elanus, 492 elegans, 521, 676 Embernagra, 311 Empidonax, 384 Engyptila, 542
139
enucleator, 190
érémoé/ct, 256 bis. Peucea r.e., Brown, Bull. Nutt. Club, vii, Jan. 1882, p. 26, Texas. (?)— Gr. épjjos, a desert; oixéw, I inhabit
Eremophila, 82
Ereunetes, 612
Erismatura, 741
erythrina, 540
erythrocephalus, 453
erythrocercus, 374
ery throphthalmus, 301
Eudocimus, 651
Eugenes, 408
Eurynorhynchus, 884
excubitorides, 188
exilipes, 210
exilis, 667
falcinellus, 649 Falco, 497 fallax, 245 familiaris, 62 fasciata, 39, 244 ferina, 723 ferrugineus, 331, 485 fischeri, 752 flammeolus, 471 flammeus, 461 flaviceps, 56 flavifrons, 176 flavipes, 634 flavirostris, 211 flaviventris, 388 flaviviridis, 171 flavus, 87 Florida, 662 floridanus, 341 foeda, 628 forficatus, 367 formicivorus, 454 formosa, 140 forsteri, 798 franklini, 556 Fratercula, 853 Fregetta, 829 frontalis, 353, 196 frugivorus, 340 fulgens, 408 Fulica, 686 fulicarius, 604 fuliginosa, 559 Fuligula, 720 Fulmarus, 814
140
fulvifrons, 392 fulvigula, 709 fulvus, 582 fumifrons, 360 funerea, 480 furcata, 791, 826 fuscescens, 7 fuscicerulescens, 511 fuscocaudata, 419
gairdneri, 441
galbula, 326
galeata, 684
Gallinago, 607
Gallinula, 684
gallipavo, 553
gambeli, 278
Garzetta, 659
Geococcyx, 427
Geothlypis, 141
Geotrygon, 550
gigantea, 813
gilvus, 174. Should probably stand as Vireo ochroleucus; Coues
glacialis, 728
glottis, 655
glaucescens, 770
Glaucidium, 484
glaucium, 725
glaucus, 492, 768
gnoma, 484
gracie, 128
grallaria, 829
gramineus, 232
grammicus, 281
griseigena, 847
griseinucha, 205
griseus, 609
gruberi, 529
Grus, 668. See Miiller, Nat. Syst. Suppl., 1776, p. 110; Cass., Pr. Phila. Acad., 1864, p. 245
grylle, 871
guarauna, 650
gubernator, 317
Guiraca, 291
gularis, 887
guttatus, 231
Gymnocitta, 345
gymnostoma, 672
heemastica, 629 Hematopus, 595
hesitata, 819
Haliaétus, 583
haliaétus, 530
Halocyptena, 821
hammondi, 390
Harelda, 728
harlani, 515
Harporhynchus, 17
harpyia, 531
harrisi, 459
heermanni, 248
Helmintherus, 96
Helminthophaga, 98. Accord- ing to Ridgway, Bull. Nutt. Club, vii. no. 1, Jan. 1882, p. 53, the name Helminthophaga is preoccupied, and it has con- sequently been changed by him to Helminthophila
heloise, 416
helvetica, 580
henryi, 400
henslowi, 236
hepatica, 157
Herodias, 658
herodias, 655
Hesperocichla, 5
Hegperophona, 189
Heteroscelus, 642
hiaticula, 589
hiemalis, 76
Himantopus, 601
himantopus, 611
Hirundo, 159
hirundo, 797
Histrionicus, 730
holbeelli, 208
homochroa, 825
hornbyi, 827
hornemanni, 209
horreorum, 159
hudsonicus, 49, 645
hutchinsi, 704
huttoni, 182
Hydranassa, 660
Hydrochelidon, 806
hyemalis, see hiemalis
Hylocichla, 6
Hylotomus, 432
hyperboreus, 603
hypochrysea, 133
hypogea, 487
hypoleucus, 868
Tache, 421
LIST OF WORDS DEFINED.
Icteria, 144
icterocephalus, 319
Icterus, 323
Ictinia, 491
ignea, 300
iliacus, 4, 282. Turdus iliacus is not in the orig. ed. Green- land. Reinh., Ibis, 1861, p. 6
illinoensis, 252
imberbe, 393
impennis, 878
inca, 549
incanus, 642
inornatus, 41
intermedia, 277
interpres, 598
Ionornis, 685
Iridoprocne, 160
islandicus, 500
jamaicensis, 681 Junco, 261
kennicotti, 466 kirtlandi, 131 kittlitzi, 867 kotzebuii, 783 krideri, 519 kuhli, 831
labradorius, 729
Lagopus, 568
lagopus, 525
lapponicus, 220
lariformis, 806
Larus, 768
latirostris, 421
lawrencii, 99. Helminthophaga lawrencii may be a hybrid between H. pinus and H. chrysoptera. See Brewst. Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, no. 4, Oct. 1881, p. 218.
lecontii, 24
lecontii, 237
leucobronchialis, 100. Helmin- thopaga leucobronchialis may be a hybrid between H. pinus and H. chrysoptera. See Brewst., Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, no. 4, Oct. 1881, p. 218
leucocephalus, 534
leucogaster, 72, 747
leucolema, 83
leucoparia, 7038
leucophrys, 276 leucopsis, 699 leucoptera, 198, 546 leucorrhoa, 823 Leucosticte, 201 leucurus, 570 Limosa, 628 linaria, 207 lincolni, 242 lineatus, 520 Linota, 211 litoralis, 204 Lobipes, 605 loculator, 648 Lomvia, 874 longicauda, 145 longirostris, 18 Lophophanes, 40 Lophortyx, 575 Loxia, 198 lueasanus, 436 lucia, 104 lucifer, 418 ludovicianus, 68, 187 lunifrons, 162 luteiventris, 365 lutescens, 108 luxuriosa, 358
maccalli, 468 maccowni, 223 macgillivrayi, 148 Machetes, 639 macrolopha, 352 Macrorhamphus, 609 macrurus, 333, 799 macularius, 638 maculata, 616 maculosa, 125 magna, 320
major, 334, 852 Mareca, 712 marila, 720 marinus, 771 maritimus, 238 marmoratus, 866 martinica, 550, 685 maruetta, 678 massena, 578 maxima, 794 maxwellx, 467 media, 607 megalonyx, 305 megarhyncha, 285 melena, 824
melancholicus, 372
Melanerpes, 453
melanocephalus, 599, 290
melanoleucus, 653
melanotis, 55. Psaltriparus melanotis has lately been definitely ascertained to oc- cur in Arizona
melanura, 387. According to Brewster, Polioptila melanura should read P.californica. See Bull. Nutt. Club, vi, p. 103
melanurus, 830
Meleagris, 553
melodus, 587
Melopelia, 546
Melospiza, 242
merganser, 744
Mergus, 743
meridionalis, 879
mesoleucus, 306
mexicana, 28
miamiensis, 69. Zhryothorus ludovicianus miamiensis is not in the orig. ed. Since de- scribed from Florida. Am. Nat., ix, 1875, p. 469
Micrathene, 486
Micropalama, 611
microsoma, 821
migratorius, 1
Milvulus, 366
Mimus, 15
minimus, 53, 387
minor, 605, 401
minutilla, 614
minutus, 730
mitratus, 146
Mitrephorus, 392. This generic term being preoccupied in Coleoptera, Jitrephanes is substituted (Gr. uirpy, mitre, gatyw, Lappear). See Coues, Bull. Nutt. Club, vii, no. 1, Jan. 1882, p. 55
Mniotilta, 91
mollissima, 733
Molothrus, 313
monocerata, 857
montanus, 14
monticola, 268
moreleti, 296
morio, 846
Motacilla, 86
motacilla, 138
LIST OF WORDS DEFINED. 141
mugitans, 666 musicus, 690 mustelinus, 6 Mycteria, 654 Myiadestes, 169 Myiarchus, 373 Myiodioctes, 146 Myiodynastes, 365
nevius, 5, 136
nanus, 10
nebulosa, 476
neglectus, 51. Parus rufescens neglectus is not in the orig. ed. Since described by Ridg- way, Pr. Nat. Mus., i, 1879, p- 485. California
nelsoni, 241
Neocorys, 90
Nepheecetes, 404
Nettion, 715
nevadensis, 260
niger, 404
nigrescens, 116, 237
nigricans, 378, 701, 863
nigrilora, 94
nigripes, 811
nitens, 167
nivalis, 219
nivosus, 591
Nomonyx, 742
notabilis, 137
notatus, 218
noveboracensis, 181
nuchalis, 447
Numenius, 643
nuttalli, 3848
Nyctala, 482
Nyctea, 479
Nycterodius, 665
Nyctiardea, 664
Nyctidromus, 395
obscurus, 314 obsoletus, 65, 499, 674 occidentalis, 46, 113, 478 oceanicus, 828 Oceanites, 828 Oceanodroma, 826 ochropus, 636 Cidemia, 737 (Enanthe, 26 (Estrelata, 819 olivaceus, 170 Onychotes, 529
142
opisthomelas, 836 Oporornis, 159 oregonus, 263 ornatus, 222 Ornithium, 893 Orortyx, 574 Oroscoptes, 14 Ortalis, 552 Ortyx, 571 oryzivorus, 312 Ossifraga, 815 ostrilegus, 595
pacificus, 77, 464 Pagophila, 785 palliatus, 596 pallida, 272 pallidicincta, 564 palmarum, 132 palmeri, 20 paludicola, 80 palustris, 79, 243 Pandion, 530 Panyptila, 403 parasiticus, 766 parisiorum, 329 parkmani, 75 Parra, 672
Parula, 98
Parus, 44
Passer, 192 Passerculus, 224 Passerella, 282 Passerina, 292 passerinus, 254, 547 pealii, 504 Pediccetes, 561 pelagica, 822 pelasgica, 405 Pelecanus, 748 Pelidna, 623 penelope, 712. Qu. penelops penicillatus, 755 pennsylvanica, 124 peregrina, 109, 503 Perisoreus, 359 perpallidus, 235 perspicillata, 739, 756 pertinax, 381 Petrochelidon, 162 Peucea, 251 Peucedramus, 110 pheopus, 644 Phaéthon, 762 Phainopepla, 167
Phalacrocorax, 750
Phalenoptilus, 398
Phalaropus, 604
phasianellus, 561
philadelphia, 142
philadelphicus, 175
Philohela, 605
Pheebetria, 812
pheeniceus, 316
Pheenicopterus, 687
Phonipara, 297
Phylloscopus, 82
Pica, 347
Picicorvus, 344
Picoides, 445
picta, 151, 221, 574
Picus, 433
pileatus, 452
pileolatus, 148
Pinicola, 190
pinus, 98
Pipilo, 301
Pitangus, 364
plagata, 527
platycercus, 413
Plectrophanes, 219
Plegadis, 649
Plotus, 760
plumbea, 38
pluvialis, 583
Podasocys, 592
Podicipes, 848
podicipes, 852
Podilymbus, 8652
Polioptila, 36
Polyborus, 535
polyglottus, 15
pomatorhinus, 765
Poecetes, 232
popetue, 399
Porzana, 678
pratensis, 88, 670
pratincola, 461
princeps, 225
principalis, 431
Priocella, 817
Priofinus, 880
Procellaria, 822
Progne, 165
propinquus, 2. Turdus migra- lorius propinquus is not in the orig. ed. Since de- scribed by Ridgway, Bull. Nutt. Club, ii, no. 1, Jan. 1877, p. 9. Western U. S.
LIST OF WORDS DEFINED.
Protonotaria, 95
psaltria, 215
Psaltriparus, 53
Pseudogryphus, 536
Psilorhinus, 346
psittaculus, 858
ptilocnemis, 622
Ptychorhamphus, 862
pubescens, 440
Puffinus, 831
pugnax, 659
purpureus, 194
pusilla, 60
pygmea, 61
Pyranga, 154
Pyrocephalus, 394
Pyrrhula, 191. The difficulty with P. cassini may be owing to wrong sexing of the single known specimen
Pyrrhuloxia, 298
Querquedula, 713 querula, 280 Quiscalus, 383
Rallus, 6738 Recurvirostra, 600 redivivus, 28 Regulus, 33 resplendens, 759 rhodocolpus, 197 Rhodostethia, 789 Rhyacophilus, 636 Rhynchophanes, 223 Rhynchops, 809 richardsoni, 583 riparia, 163
Rissa, 782 rodgersi, 816 rosea, 653, 789 rossi, 697 rostratus, 230 Rostrhamus, 490 ruber, 448, 652 rubida, 741 rubineus, 394 rubra, 154 rubrifrons, 150 rufescens, 50 ruficapilla, 106 ruficeps, 255 rufina, 247, 886 rufovirgata, 311 rufus, 17
rupestris, 569 rustica, 347 rusticula, 606 ruticilla, 152
sabinii (J.), 567 sabinii (E.), 790 sacer, 498 Salpinctes, 65 samuelis, 249 sancti-johannis, 525 sandvicensis, 226 satrapa, o4 saturatus, 675 savana, 227 saxatilis, 403 Saxicola, 26
sayi, 377 Sayiornis, 377 scalaris, 434 scandiaca, 479 Scardafella, 549 schistacea, 284 Scolecophagus, 331 scolopaceus, 610 Scolopax, 606 Scops, 465 Scotiaptex, 474 Selasphorus, 411 semipalmatus, 586 seniculus, 430 septentrionalis, 45 serrator, 744 serripennis, 164 Setophaga, 151 Sialia, 27
sialis, 27 Simorhynchus, 858 sinuata, 298
Sitta, 57
Siurus, 135
skua, 764 smithsonianus, 773 sociabilis, 490 solitarius, 177, 637 Somateria, 731 sparverioides, 510 sparverius, 509 spectabilis, 736 Speotyto, 487 Spermophila, 296 Sphyropicus, 446 spilurus, 73
Spiza, 287 Spizella, 268
sponsa, 719 spraguii, 90 spurius, 324 squamata, 577 Squatarola, 580 Starneenas, 551. Ital. starna, a partridge Steganopus, 602 Stegidopteryx, 164 stellaris, 81 stelleri, 350, 731 Stellula, 417 Stercorarius, 764 Sterna, 792 stolidus, 808 streperus, 711 Strepsilas, 598 striata, 122 striatulus, 497 stricklandi, 437 Strix, 474 Sturnella, 320 Sturnus, 363 subarquatus, 625 subceerulea, 491 subis, 165 subviridis, 384 suckleyi, 506 suecica, 31 Sula, 746 sulcirostris, 426 superciliaris, 801 Surnia, 480 swainsoni, 13, 97 Symphemia, 632 Synthliboramphus, 865, pessimé, lege Synthliborhamphus, 864
Tachycineta, 161 Tachypetes, 761 taitensis, 647 Tantalus, 648 Telmatodytes, 79 tengmalmi, 482 tenuirostris, 817, 839 tephrocotis, 203 Tetrao, 563 texensis, 402 thalassina, 161 Thrasyaétus, 551 Thryothorus, 68 thyroides, 449 tigrina, 126 torquatus, 456
LIST OF WORDS DEFINED. | 143
Totanus, 633 townsendi, 114, 169 trachyrhynchus, 748 trailli, 3885 trichas, 141 trichopsis, 470 tricolor, 318 tridactyla, 782 Tringa, 626 Tringoides, 638 tristis, 213 Trochilus, 409 Troglodytes, 74 Trogon, 422 troile, 874 trowbridgii, 740 trudeaui, 802 Tryngites, 641 Turdus, 1. Tyrannus, 368 tyrannus, 366
ultramarina, 357
ulula, 481
umbella, 565
umbeiloides, 566
umizusume, 865
unalasce, 8
unalascensis, 283
unicinctus, 512
Uria, 871
urophasianus, 560
uropy gialis, 452
Urubitinga, 528. U. anthracina is not in the orig. ed. Since discovered in Arizona by H. W. Henshaw, Am. Sportsm., v, Feb. 1878, p. 828
ustulatus, 11
Utamania, 877
vallisneria, 724 Vanellus, 593 varia, 91
varius, 446 vauxi, 406 . yermivorus, 96 versicolor, 293 verticalis, 370 vespertina, 189 vicinior, 180 villosus, 438 violaceus, 665, 758 virens, 112, 144 Vireo, 170
144 LIST OF WORDS DEFINED.
virescens, 663 whitneyi, 486 xantusi, 407 virgata, 594 wilsonius, 585 Xema, 790 virginiz, 105 wilsonianus, 472 Xenopicus, 442 virginiana, 299 wollweberi, 43
v-nigra, 735 woodhousii, 355 Zamelodia, 289 vociferans, 371 Zenaida, 545 vociferus, 397, 584 Xanthocephalus, 319 Zenaidura, 544
vulgaris, 363 Xanthura, 358 Zonotrichia, 275
ry
Boke BON DX.
CATALOGUE OF THE AUTHOR’S ORNITHOLOGICAL PUBLICATIONS, 1861-1881.
* ANONYMOUS. + REVIEWS.
1861.
. *Ornithology. — Washington Described, pp. 24-27. (12mo. Washington,
Philp & Solomons, 1861.) A slight sketch of the Birds of the District of Columbia.
A Monograph of the Tringez of North America. — Proc. Acad. Nut. Sci. Phila., xiii, July, 1861, pp. 170-205. Notes on the Ornithology of Labrador. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xiii, August, 1861, pp. 215-257. ” A Monograph of the Genus /Xgiothus, with descriptions of new Species. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xiii, November, 1861, pp. 373-390.
1862.
List of Birds ascertained to inhabit the District of Columbia, with the times of Arrival and Departure of such as are non-residents, and Brief Notices of Habits, etc. By Elliott Coues and D. Webster Prentiss. — Sixteenth Ann. Rep. Smiths. Inst., for 1861, 1862, pp. 399-421.
Synopsis of the North American Forms of the Colymbide and Podicipidae. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xiv, April, 1862, pp. 226-233. Abstract of a monograph published in full in Birds of the Northwest, 1874.
Revision of the Gulls [Larine] of North America; based upon specimens in the Museum of the Smithsonian Institution. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xiv, June, 1862, pp. 291-312.
Abstract of a monograph published in full in the Birds of the Northwest, 1874, pp. 589-717.
146
8.
10.
a.
12.
13.
14,
15.
iG:
We
Key
To:
20.
APPENDIX.
Supplementary Note to a ‘‘Synopsis of the North American Forms of the Colymbidz and Podicepidee.”— Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xiv, Septem- ber, 1862, p. 404.
A Review of the Terns [Sterninee] of North America. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xiv, December, 1862, pp. 535-559.
1863.
Additional Remarks on the North American /Egiothi. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sct. Phila., xv, February, 1863, pp. 40, 41.
On the Lestris richardsoni of Swainson; with a Critical Review of the Sub- family Lestridine.— Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xv, May, 1863, pp. 121-138.
[On the specific validity of Larus smithsonianus.] — Zhe bis, v, July, 1863, p. 367.
1864.
The Crania of Colymbus torquatus and C. adamsii compared.— Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xvi, February, 1864, pp. 21, 22.
A Critical Review of the Family Procellaride; Part I., embracing the Procellariez, or Stormy Petrels. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xvi, March, 1864, pp. 72-91.
A Critical Review of the Family Procellaride: Part II.; Embracing the Puffinee. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xvi, April, 1864, pp. 116-144.
Notes on certain Central-American Laridze, collected by Mr. Osbert Salvin and Mr. F. Godman. — The Ibis, vi, July, 1864, pp. 387-393.
*
1865.
Ornithology of a Prairie-Journey, and Notes on the Birds of Arizona. — The Ibis, 2d ser., i, April, 1865, pp. 157-165.
[Notes on Birds observed at Fort Whipple, Arizona. ]— The Ibis, 2d ser., i, October, 1865, pp. 535-538.
1866.
Field Notes on Lophortyx Gambeli.— The Lbis, 2d ser., ii, January, 1866, pp. 46-55.
List of the Birds of, Fort Whipple, Arizona: with which are incorporated all other species ascertained to inhabit the Territory ; with brief critical and field Notes, descriptions of new species, etc. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xviii, March, 1866, pp. 39-100.
Fifty copies reissued, repaged, under the title: [Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, January 1866.] | — | Prodrome of a Work |
APPENDIX. 147
on the | Ornithology | of | Arizona Territory. | By Elliott Coues, M.A., M.D. | (Ass’t Sur- geon U.S. Army.) | — | Philadelphia: | Merrihew & Son, Printers. | 1866. 8vo. pp. 1-64. Nore. — Part I. of the work here forecast pub. 1877 under the title: Birds of the
Colorado Valley, ete. 21. <A Critical Review of the Family Procellariids :— Part IIL; embracing the Fulmarere. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xviii, March, 1866, pp. 25-33.
22. Critical Review of the Family Procellariide :— Part IV ; Embracing the A‘stre- latese and Prionese. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xviii, May, 1866, pp. 1384-172.
23. Critical Review of the Family Procellariidz ; Part V ; embracing the Diome- deinze and the Halodrominz. With a General Supplement. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xviii, May, 1866, pp. 172-197.
24. From Arizona to the Pacific. — The bis, 2d ser., ii, July, 1866, pp.259-275.
Notes on the birds observed during the journey.
25. The Osteology of the Colymbus torquatus; with Notes on its Myology. —- Mem. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., i, pt. ii, November, 1866, pp. 131-172, figg. 2, pl. 5. Separately reissued, under the title: On the | Osteology and Myology | of | Colymbus torquatus. | By Elliott Coues, A.M., M.D.,| Brevet Captain and Assistant Surgeon United States Army. | [From the Memoirs read before the Boston Society of Natural History, vol. i, part ii.] | Cambridge : | printed at the Riverside Press. | November, 1866. 4to. pp. 181-172, figg. 2, pl. 5.
1867.
26.*;The Birds of New England. — The Round Table, No. 140, Sept. 28, 1867, pp. 213, 214. E. A. Samuels’ work.
1868.
27. A Monograph of the Alcidee. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Soc. Phila., xx, January, 1868, pp. 2-81, figg. 1-16. Also separate, retitled: A Monograph | of | the Alcide. | By | Elliott Coues, A.M., M.D. | (Ass’t. Surgeon U. S. Army.) | — | Philadelphia: | Merrihew & Son, printers, | No. 248 Arch Street, | 1868. 8vo, pp. and figg. as above. See also under 1870. 28. List of Birds collected in Southern Arizona by Dr. E. Palmer; with remarks. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xx, January, 1868, pp. 81-89.
29. Synopsis of the Birds of South Carolina. — Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., xii, October 7, 1868, pp. 104-127.
30. Catalogue of the Birds of North America contained in the Museum of the Essex Institute; with which is incorporated A List of the Birds of New England. With Brief Critical and Field Notes. — Proc. (Comm.) Essex Inst., v, 1868, pp. 249-314.
Fifty copies reissued, with new index, repaged, retitled: A List | of the | Birds of New England. | By Elliott Coues, | Asst. Surgeon, U. S. A. | —| [Reprinted from the
148 APPENDIX.
Proceedings of the Essex Institute, Vol. v.] | — | Salem, Mass. | Essex Institute Press. | 1868. 8vo. pp. 1-71. 31. Instances of Albinism among our Birds. — Amer. Nat., ii, No. 3, May, 1868, pp. 161, 162. About a dozen cases, chiefly of North American species. 32. Bird’s-Eye Views. — Amer. Nat., ii, No. 10, December, 1868, pp. 505-513 ; ii, No. 11, January, 1869, pp. 571-583, figg.
On the structure of the eye in Birds.
1869.
33. On a Chick with supernumerary Legs. — Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., May 19, 1869, pp. 78-82. 34, *Of Doves and Thorns. — The Liberal Christian, July 24, 1869. Breeding of Zenaidura carolinensis. 35. *Of a ‘ Fast” Bird [Geococcyx californianus].— Zhe Liberal Christian, Aug. 14, 1869. 86. *A Skeleton in the House. — The Liberal Christian, Sept. 11, 1869.
Molothrus ater X Polioptila cerulea.
37. Sea-side Homes. — Amer. Nat., iii, No. 7, September, 1869, pp. 837-349.
On the breeding of Sterna antillarum and Agialites wilsonius.
88. On Variation in the Genus “giothus. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xxi, October, 1869, pp. 180-189. Supplementary to the article in op. cit., 1861, p. 373. 89. *Structure of Feathers. — The Liberal Christian, Oct. 9, 1869.
40. On the Classification of Water Birds. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xxi, December, 1869, pp. 193-218.
Reissued, repaged. On _ the | Classification | of | Water Birds. | By Elliott Coues, A.M., M.D., Ph. D., | [ete., 4 lines.] | — | [Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Phila- delphia Academy of Natural Sciences | for December, 1869.] | — | Philadelphia : | Mer- rihew & Son, printers. | No. 248 Arch Street. | 1870. 8vo. pp. 28.
1870.
41, Extracts from a Memoir intituled ‘A Monograph of the Alcidz.’ —Zoologist, 2d ser., v, 1870, pp. 2004-2016, 2081-2090, 2124-2132, 2155-2163, 2205- 2214, 2245-2253, 2289-2296, 2327-2334, 2369-2378, 2396-2403.
Reprinted, modified, from Proc. Phila. Acad., 1868, pp. 2-81.
42. The Clapper Rail [Rallus crepitans].— Amer. Nat., iii, No. 11, January, 1870, pp. 600-607.
43. The Great Auk [Alca impennis].— Amer. Nat., iv, No. 1, March, 1870, Pao. :
APPENDIX. 149
44, The Cow Bird [Molothrus ater].— Amer. Nat., iv, No. 1, March, 1870, p. 58. 45. Foot-notes from a Page of Sand. — Amer. Nat., iv, No. 5, July, 1870, pp. 297-303. Tracks made by Sandpipers, &e. 46. The Natural History of Quiscalus major. — The Ibis, 2d ser., vi, July, 1870,
pp. 367-378.
47. {Ornithological Results of the Exploration of the North-west. — Amer. Nut.,
48.
49.
50
51
iv, No. 6, August, 1870, pp. 867-371.
Review of Dall and Bannister’s and Baird’s papers on the Birds of Alaska, in Truns. Chicago Acad., 1869.
Lect.
Notes on the Natural History of Fort Macon, N. C., and Vicinity. (No. 1.) [Vertebrates.] — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philu., xxiii, May 2, 1871, pp. 12-49.
Birds, pp. 18-47. There are 5 Nos. of this, 1871-1879, the Ist and 4th relating to Birds.
The Yellow-headed Blackbird [Xanthocephalus icterocephalus ].— Amer. Nat., v, No. 4, June, 1871, pp. 195-200, fig.
Biography of the species, with references to other birds observed in Kansas. . ¢Recent Ornithological Publications. — Amer. Nat., v, No. 4, June, 1871,
pp. 284-238.
Bannister on Anserinz, Pr. Phila. Acad., 1870, p. 180; Ridgway on Falconide, ibid.,
p- 138. . TProgress of American Ornithology. — Amer. Nat. v, No. 6, August, 1871, pp- 364-373.
Review of J. A. Allen’s memoir on Florida Birds, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., 1871.
52. Mechanism of Flexion and Extension in Birds’ Wings. — Amer. Wat., v,
Nos. 8 and 9, September, 1871, pp. 518, 514. Abstract of the paper in the Proc. Amer. Assoc. Adv. Sci. for 1871.
58. Bullock’s Oriole [Icterus bullocki]. — Amer. Nat. v, No. 11, November, 1871, pp. 678-682, fig. 120.
54, Singular Albino [Dolichonyx oryzivorus].— Amer. Nat., v, No. 11, Novem- ber ts 7i, pide.
55. The Long-crested Jay [Cyanocitta macrolopha].— Amer. Nat., v, No. 12,
December, 1871, pp. 770-775, fig.
56. ¢Gray’s Hand List of Birds. —Amer. Nat., v, No. 12, December, 1871
57.
Por oe
pp. 775-779. 1872.
Mechanism of Flexion and Extension in Birds’ Wings. — Proc. Amer. Assoc. Adv. Sci., xx, for 1871, 1872, pp. 278-284, figg.
150 APPENDIX.
58. Observations on Picicorvus Columbianus. — Zhe Ibis, 3d ser., ii, January, 1872, pp. 52-59.
59. Ornithological Query [Turdus migratorius].— Amer. Wat., vi, No. 1, Jan- uary; 1872, p. 47.
60. +Two Late American Papers on Ornithology. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 3, March,
1872, pp. 165, 166. Ogden on Chettusia, Pr. Phila. Acad., 1871, p. 191; Lawrence on New Troglodytide
and Tyrannide, ibid., p. 235.
61.*+An Ornithological Blunder [Bonasa jobsii]. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 3, March, 1872, pp. 172, 173.
62. Contribution to the History of the Blue Crow [Gymnokitta cyanocephala] of America. — The Ibis, 3d ser., ii, April, 1872, pp. 152-158.
63. +Newton’s Ornithological Register. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 6, June, 1872, pp. 360, 361.
64. The Nest, Eggs, and Breeding Habits of Harporhynchus crissalis. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 6, June, 1872, pp. 370, 371.
65. A New Bird [Glaucidium ferrugineum] to the United States. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 6, June, 1872, p. 370.
66. Studies of the Tyrannide. — Part I. Revision of the Species of Myiarchus. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xxiv, June 25-July 16, 1872, pp. 56-81.
67. +The Boston Society’s Ornithological Catalogue. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 8, August, 1872, pp. 472, 473. Review of A. Hyatt’s paper on Spheniscide.
68. Nest and Eggs of Helminthophaga lucize. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 8, August, 1872, p. 493.
69. Occurrence of Couch’s Flycatcher [Tyrannus melancholicus couchi] in the United States. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 8, August, 1872, p. 493.
70. +Giebel’s Thesaurus. — Amer. Wat., vi, No. 9, September, 1872, pp. 549-551.
71. Material for a Monograph of the Spheniscidee. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xxiv, September, 1872, pp. 170-212, pll. 4, 5.
72. tRecent Discoveries in Ornithotomy. — Amer. Nat., vi, No. 10, October, 1872, pp. 631-635. Morse on the Carpus and Tarsus of Birds, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist., N. Y., 1872 ; and Rein- hardt, Cranial Bone of Musophagide, Vidd. Meddel. Nat. Foérh. Kjob., 1871.
73. Key | to] North American Birds | containing a concise account of every species of | Living and Fossil Bird | at present known from the continent north of the Mexican | and United States Boundary. | Illustrated by 6 steel plates, and upwards of 250 woodcuts. | By | Elliott Coues, | Assistant Sur- geon United States Army. | — | Salem: Naturalists’ Agency. | New York: Dodd and Mead. | Boston: | Estes and Lauriat. | 1872. 1 vol. imp. 8vo.
74,
BOs
76.
(ee
78.
os
80.
Si.
82.
83.
84.
85
86. Si.
88. 89.
APPENDIX. 151
4 prel. ll., pp. 1-361, 1 1., pll. 1-6, figg. 1-238. (Pub. Oct. 1872. Ed. of 2,200 cop. Copyright, Putnam and Coues.)
[Contributions to] Sharpe and Dressers Hist. of the Birds of Europe, Parts
Mie KM XV, Odes
1873. [Contributions to] Sharpe and Dresser’s Hist. of the Birds of Europe, Parts Kivi, Xx, XX, 1873. ~ Dubois’ Conspectus. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 1, January, 1873, pp. 40-42. Review of C. F. Dubois’ Conspectus Avium Eufopearum. +New England Ornithology. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 1, January, 1873, pp. 42, 43. Review of C. J. Maynard’s paper in Pr. Bost. Soc., xiv, 1872, p. 856. [Circular relating to the ‘‘ Birds of the Northwest.” ] — Headquarters Depart- ment of Dakota, Feb. 14, 1873. ;Handbook of British Birds. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 3, March, 1873, pp. 163-165. Review of J. E. Harting’s work of that name. +Ornithology of the West. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 4, April, 1873, pp. 220-223. Review of J. A. Allen’s paper in Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., iii, 1872, p. 118. yAfrican Ornithology. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 4, April, 1873, pp. 226, 227. Review of J. H. Gurney, Sr.’s, Andersson’s Birds of Damara Land. Some United States Birds, New to Science, and other Things Ornithological. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 6, June, 1873, pp. 321-331, figg. 65-70. New Avian Subclass [Odontornithes]. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 6, June, 1873, p. 364. Color-variation in Birds Dependent upon Climatic Influences. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 7, July, 1873, pp. 415-418. Criticism of R. Ridgway’s papers in Am. Journ. Sci., iv, 1872, p. 454; v, 1873, p. 39.
+Late Local Lists. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 7, July, 1873, pp. 418-421. Reviews of W. H. Dall, Pr. Cala. Acad., 1873; C. H. Holden and C. E. Aiken, Pr. Bost. Soc., xv, 1872, p. 193; W. D. Scott, ibid., p. 219.
‘‘ Birds walking under Water.” — Forest and Stream, Oct. 16, 1873.
Notes on Two little-known Birds of the United States [Passerculus bairdi, Neocorys spraguii]. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 11, November, 1873, pp. 695-697.
Use of small shot. — Amer. Sportsm., Nov. 22, 1873, p. 117.
Specimens of Bird Architecture [Icterus].— Amer. Sportsm., Novy. 29, 1873, p. 129.
90.
91.
92.
93.
94.
95.
96.
97.
APPENDIX.
Range of the Eared Grebe [Podiceps auritus californicus]. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 12, December, 1873, p. 745.
Notice of a Rare Bird [Coturniculus lecontii]. — Amer. Nat., vii, No. 12, December, 1873, pp. 748, 749.
Report | on the | Prybilov Group, or Seal Islands, of Alaska. | By | Henry W. Elliott, | Assistant Agent Treasury Department. | — | Washington: | Government Printing Office. | 1873. 1 vol. oblong 4to. (Appendix. Ornithology of the Prybilov Islands. By Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S.A.)
This is the orig. ed., very scarce (150 copies.). See 1875. A | Check List | of | North American Birds. | — | By | Elliott Coues. | — | Salem. | Naturalists’ Agency. | 1873. 8vo. 2 prel. ll., pp. 1-137, 2 Il.
This is the orig. ed. Separately published December, 1875. Also published with “ Field Ornithology,” 1874.
1874.
Field Ornithology. | Comprising a | Manual of instruction | for | procuring, preparing, and preserving Birds, | and a | Check List of North American Birds. | By | Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S. A. | [Monogram.] | Salem: | Natu- ralists’ Agency. | Boston: Estes & Lauriat. | New York: Dodd & Mead. | 1874. 1vol. 8vo. pp. i-iv, 1-116, 1-137, 2 IL.
Published January, 1874. The ‘Check List” originally published separately, 1873.
[On the Classification of Birds, with Characters of the Higher Groups, and Analytical Tables of North American Families. ] — Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway’s Hist. N. A. Birds, i, 1874, pp. xiv-xxviii.
Glossary of Technical Terms used in Descriptive Ornithology. Including a number of prominent Anatomical and Physiological Terms. — Baird, Brewer, and Ridqway’s Hist. N. A. Birds, iii, 1874, pp. 535-560.
Specimens of Bird Architecture [Cinclus mexicanus].— Amer. Sportsm., iii, Jan. 17, 1874, p. 245.
98.*+The Birds of North America. — The Nation, No. 447, Jan. 22, 1874, p. 65.
99.
100.
LOW,
102.
Review of Theodore Jasper’s work. I
Specimens of Bird Architecture [Chzetura pelasgica]. — Amer. Sportsm., iii, Feb. 14, 1874, p. 3138.
Hybrid Ducks [Anas boscas x Hyonetta moschata].— /orest and Stream, Feb. 19, 1874.
Hybrid Ducks [Anas boscas x Dafila acuta]. — Yorest and Stream, March 5, 1874.
Pet Owls [Bubo virginianus].—-Amer. Sportsm., iii, March 7, 1874, p. 354.
103. +The New Work on Birds. — Amer. Sportsm., iii, March 28, 1874, p. 412.
Review of Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway’s work.
APPENDIX. 153
104, fAvifauna of Colorado and Wyoming. — Amer. Nat., viii, No. 4, April, 1874, p. 240.
105. The Snow-bird [Junco hiemalis] as a Sparrow. — Field and Stream, April 4, 1874. With reference to the construction of a game law.
106. Powder-down. — orest and Stream, ii, April 9, 1874, p. 134.
Luminosity of these feathers in Ardeide. 107. Specimens of Bird Architecture [hole-breeders].— Amer. Sportsm., iv, April li51874, p- £9. 108.*} North American Ornithology. — The Nation, No. 460, April 23, 1874, p. 270.‘ Review of Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway’s work.
109.*}History of North American Birds. — orest and Stream, April 30, 1874, p. 179. Review of Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway’s work. 110. Habits and Characteristics of Swainson’s Buzzard [Buteo swainsoni].— Amer. Nat., viii, No. 5, May, 1874, pp. 282-287. 111. +Birds of Illinois. — Field and Stream, May 2, 1874. Review of R. Ridgway’s paper, Ann. Lyc. N. Y., x, 1874, p. 364. 112. Small Shot. Reply to ‘‘ Arrow.” — Amer. Sportsm., May 30, 1874.
113. The Californian Vulture [Cathartes californianus].— Amer. Sportsm., iv, June 13, 1874, p. 160, fig.
114, Wild Turkeys [Meleagris gallipavo americana] — Grouse. — Field and Stream, June 13, 1874.
115. Dusky Grouse; Blue Grouse; Pine Grouse [Canace obscura]. — Field and Stream, June 27, 1874, p. 154; July 11, 1874, p. 170.
116. English Sparrows [Passer domesticus]. — Amer. Nat. viii, No. 7, July, 1874, p. 436. ef. Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv Terr., v, No. 2, 1879, p. 178. 117. Shooting Wood Ibises [Tantalus loculator]. — Amer. Sportsm., iv, July 11, 1874, p. 225.
118. Plumed Quail [Lophortyx gambeli]. — Field and Stream, July 25, 1874, p. 187; Aug. 8, 1874, p. 203; Aug. 22, 1874, p. 224.
119. New Species of North American Bird [Tringa ptilocnemis ]. — Amer. Nat. viii, No. 8, August, 1874, pp. 500, 501.
120. The Cranes [Gruide] of America. — Forest and Stream, iii, Aug. 20, 1874, p. 20.
121. The Blue Quail [Callipepla squamata].— Wield and Stream, Aug. 29, 1874.
154
APPENDIX.
122. ¢Recent Publications in Ornithology. — Amer. Nat., viii, No. 9, September,
123.
124, 125.
1874, pp. 541-546. Reviews of several papers, chiefly on N. Am. Birds.
New Variety of the Blue Grosbeak [Guiraca ccerulea eurhyncha]. — Amer. Nat., viii, No. 9, September, 1874, p. 563.
How to Shoot. — Field and Stream, Sept. 26, 1874.
On the Nesting of Certain Hawks, ete. — Amer. Nat., viii, No. 10, Octobee, 1874, pp. 596-603.
Falco communis, Buteo swainsoni, Archibuteo ferrugineus, and other birds of Montana.
126.*+A History of North American Birds. — Wield and Stream, Oct. 81, 1874.
WATE 128.
T29. 130.
131.
182.
133.
Review of Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway’s work. The Rails — Family Rallidee. — Amer. Sportsm., v, Oct. 31, 1874, p. 65.
The Sparrow [Passer domesticus] War. — Amer. Sportsm., v, Nov. 21, 1874, p. 113. cf. Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., v, No. 2, 1879, p. 178.
Shells — Paper or Brass? — Forest and Stream, Dec. 24, 1874.
Department of the Interior. | United States Geological Survey of the Terri- tories. | F. V. Hayden, U. 8. Geologist-in-Charge. | — | Miscellaneous Pub- lications — No. 3. | — | Birds of the Northwest: | A Hand-book | of | The Ornithology | of the | Region drained by the Missouri River | and its Tribu- taries. | — | By Elliott Coues, | Captain and Assistant Surgeon U. S. Army. | — | Washington: | Government Printing Office. | 1874. 1 vol. 8vo. pp. i-xli, 1-791.
Pub. Dec. 1874. Ed. of 2,200 copies. 214 copies rebound, reissued, retitled: Birds of the North-West: | a Handbook | of | American Ornithology, | containing accounts of all the birds inhabiting the | Great Missouri Valley, | and many others, together representing a large majority of the | Birds of North America, | with copious biographical details from personal | observation, and an extensive synonymy. |... Boston: | Estes & Lauriat, | Salem Naturalists’ Agency, | 1877.
Monograph of the North American Laride.— Birds of the Northwest, December, 1874, pp. 589-717.
1875.
A Report | upon the | Condition of Affairs | in the | Territory of Alaska. | — | By Henry W. Elliott, | Special Agent Treasury Department. | — | Washington: | Government Printing Office. | 1875. 1 vol. 8vo. pp. 277. (Chap. IX. Ornithology of the Prybilov Islands. By Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S. A. pp. 166-212.)
Reprinted from the orig. ed., 1873. The Fauna | of the | Prybilov Islands | abridged from the | ‘* Report on the
Prybilov Group or Seal Islands of Alaska,” | by Henry W. Elliott; with an Appendix on the | Ornithology by Dr. Elliott Coues (Washington, 1873).
APPENDIX. 155
| By J. E. Harting, F. L. S. F. Z.S. | London | reprinted from the Natural History columns of | ‘‘ The Field” for private circulation | 1875 8vo. pp. 38, pl. 1.
134. The Sparrows [Passer domesticus]. — Amer. Sportsm., v, Jan. 23, 1875, p. 264.
135. On the Breeding of certain Birds [of Montana Territory]. — Amer. Nat., ix, No. 2, February, 1875, pp. 75-78.
136. [On the Nest and Eggs of Gymnocitta cyanocephala.] — The Ibis, 3d ser., v, April, 1875, pp. 270, 271.
137. Albino Black-Bird [Xanthocephalus icterocephalus]. — Rod and Gun, vi, April 10, 1875, p. 24.
138. Duck Shooting & Cheval. — Amer. Sportsm., April 24, 1875.
139. Sparrows [Passer domesticus] —more evidence. — Ltod and Gun, vi, July 17, 1875, p. 249.
140. Ornithology of the Transit-of-Venus ‘‘ Centennial.” — Worest and Stream, Aug. 19, 1875.
141. Fasti Ornithologiz Redivivi.— No. I. Bartram’s ‘ Travels.’ — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., May—September, 1875, pp. 338-358.
142.*+[ Notice of Brewer’s Catalogue of the Birds of New England.]—W. Y. Independent, Oct. 7, 1875. :
143. +A late paper on Birds. — Amer. Nat., ix, No. 10, November, 1875, pp. 970, 571.
W. Brewster’s, in Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist., N. Y. xi, 1875, p. 129.
144, Contributions | to the | Natural History | of | Kerguelen Islard, | made in connection with the American Transit-of-Venus | Expedition, 1874-75. | By | J. H. Kidder, M.D., | Passed Assistant Surgeon U.S. Navy. | — | I. | Ornithology. | Edited by Dr. Elliott Coues, U. S. A. | — | Budl. U.S. Nut. Mus., No. 2, 1875, pp. i-ix, 1-51. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1875. Published November, 1875.
1876.
145. [Peucedramus, g. n., Coues MS.]— Rep. Expl. W. 100 Merid., Vol. v, 1$75,p?202; (Pub. 1876.)
146. On the Breeding-Habits, Nest, and Eggs, of the White-tailed Ptarmigan (Lagopus leucurus). — Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., 2d ser., No. 5, Jan. 8, 1876, pp. 263-266.
Also published separately. 8vo. Washington, 1876.
147. Bewick’s Wren, Thryothorus Bewicki. — Amer. Nat., x, No. 1, January,
1876, p. 48.
156
148.
149. 150.
151.
152.
153.
154,
155.
156. VOT.
APPENDIX.
Range of the Bay Ibis [Plegadis falcinellus]. — Amer. Nat., x, No. 1, January, 1876, p. 48.
Coues to ‘‘ Boone” [on Brant]. — Lod and Gun, vii, Jan. 15, 1876, p. 248.
An Account of the various Publications relating to the Travels of Lewis and Clarke, with a Commentary on the Zoological Results of their Expedition. — Bull. U. 8. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., 2d ser., No. 6, Feb. 8, 1876, pp. 417-444.
Also separate. 8vo. Washington, 1876. Contributions to the Natural History of Kerguelen Island, [ete.]. Oology, ete. By J. H. Kidder and Elliott Coues. — Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 3, February, 1876, pp. 7-20.
A Study of Chionis minor with reference to its Structure and Systematic Position. By J. H. Kidder, U. S. N., and Elliott Coues, U. S. A. — Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 3, February, 1876, pp. 85-116.
Reply to Mr. J. A. Allen’s ‘‘ Availability of certain Bartramian Names in Ornithology.” — Amer. Nat., x, No. 2, February, 1876, pp. 98-102.
Breeding Range of the Snow-Bird [Junco hiemalis].— Amer. Nat., x, No. 2, February, 1876, pp. 114, 115.
Unusual Nesting Sites of the Night Hawk [Chordediles popetue] and Towhee Bunting [Pipilo erythrophthalmus].— Amer. Nat., x, No. 4, April, 1876, p. 239.
Dr. Coues upon Quail, ete. — Rod and Gun, viii, April 1, 1876, p. 9. Dr. Coues on Brant, ete. — Rod and Gun, viii, April 1, 1876, p. 8.
158. +Mr. Gentry’s Book about Birds. — Rod and Gun, viii, April 29, 1876,
159.
Doel Review of Life Histories of the Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania, Vol. I. The Labrador Duck [Camptolemus labradorius].— Amer. Nat., x, No. 5, May, 1876, p. 303.
160.*}Life-Histories of the Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania. — T’he Nation, May 4,
161.
162.
163.
1876. Review of Vol. I. of T. G. Gentry’s work.
The European Woodcock [Scolopax rusticula] shot in Virginia. — Amer. Nat., x, No. 6, June, 1876, p. 372.
Notable Change of Habit of the Bank Swallow [#. e., Stelgidopteryx serri- pennis]. — Amer. Nat., x, No. 6, June, 1876, pp. 372, 373.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 1.—The Oregon Robin [Turdus nevius]. — Chicago Field, June 24, 1876, fig.
This illustrated series of 30 Letters, running from above date to July, 1879, at various intervals, is in part new, partly from the “ Birds of the Northwest.”
APPENDIX. 157
164. Tarsal Envelope in Campylorhynchus and allied Genera. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Ciub, 1, Nos 2, July..1876, pp. 50,51. 165. Brant once more. — Lod and Gun, July 8, 1876. 166. Letters on Ornithology. No. 2.—The American Tree-Creeper [Certhia familiaris].— Chicago Pield, Aug. 12, 1876, fig. 167. Letters on Ornithology. No. 3.— The Blue-gray Gnatcatcher [Polioptila cerulea].— Chicago PMield, Aug. 26, 1876, fig. 168. On the Number of Primaries in Oscines. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, i, No. 3, September, 1876, pp. 60-63. 169. Letters on Ornithology. No. 4. — The Horned or Shore Lark | Eremophila alpestris]. — Chicago ield, Oct. 7, 1876, fig. 170. Peculiar Nesting-Site of the Bank-Swallow [7. e., Stelgidopteryx serripennis]. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, i, No, 4, November, 1876, p. 96. 171. Dr. Coues on ‘‘ Partridge,” ‘* Quail,” Etc. — Rod and Gun, Nov. 11, 1876. 172. Letters on Ornithology. No. 5.— Marsh Wrens. ['Telmatodytes palustris, Cistothorus stellaris].— Chicago Field, Nov. 18, 1876, figg. 173. *Anecdote of a Crow’s [Corvus maritimus] Intelligence. — WV. Y. Indepen- dent, Nov. 23, 1876. 174. The Destruction of Birds by Telegraph Wire. — Amer. Nat., x, No. 12, December, 1876, pp. 734-736. Copied abridged by the press at large. 175. Letters on Ornithology. No. 6.—The Shrike, or Butcher Bird [Lanius borealis]. — Chicago Field, Dec. 2, 1876, fig. 1'76.*}+ Recent Text-books of Zoology. — NV. Y. Independent, Dec. 2, 1876. Reviews of E. S. Morse’s and 8S. Tenney’s works. 177. Letters on Ornithology. No. 7.—The Catbird (Mimus carolinensis]. — Chicago Field, Dec. 9, 1876, fig. 178. Letters on Ornithology. No. 8. — Nuthatches [Sittide].— Chicago Feld, Dec. 16, 1876, fig. 1'79.*+Life-Histories of Animals, including Man. — The Nation, No. 369, 1876. Review of A. §. Packard’s work. 180. Letters on Ornithology. No. 9.— The Red-tailed Buzzard [Buteo borealis ] and other Hawks. — Chicago Field, Dec. 23, 1876, fig. 181.*+The Land-Birds and Game-Birds of New England. — The Nation, Dec. 28, 1876. Review of H. D. Minot’s work. 182. Letters on Ornithology. No. 10.—Titmice, Tomtits, or Chickadees [Paride].— Chicago Field, Dec. 30, 1876, figg.
158
183.
184.
185.
186.
APPENDIX.
1877.
Note on Podiceps dominicus. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, ii, No. 1, January, 1877, p. 26.
Eastward Range of the Ferruginous Buzzard [Archibuteo ferrugineus]. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, ii, No. 1, January, 1877, p. 26.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 11.— Swallows [Hirundinidee].— Chicago Field, Jan. 6, 1877, figg.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 12.— Woodpeckers [Picidie]. — Chicago Field, Jan. 13, 1877, 6 figg.
187.*;The Land Birds and Game Birds of New England. — Forest and Stream,
Jane 205 1871. Review of H. D. Minot’s work.
188.*}+Land Birds and Game Birds of New England. — Rod and Gun, Jan. 27,
189.
190. TOW
192.
Side Review of H. D. Minot’s work.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 18.—The Harrier [Circus cyaneus hud- sonius |. — Chicago Kield, Feb. 3, 1877.
To the Swallow. — Rod and Gun, Feb. 3, 1877.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 13 [bis = 14]. — Grasshoppers [in connec- tion with habits of the Sharp-tailed Grouse, Pediccetes phasianellus columbianus ].— Chicago Field, March 17, 1877, fig.
Corrections of Nomenclature in the Genus Siurus. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, ii, No. 2, April, 1877, pp. 29-33.
193. +Minot’s ‘‘ Birds of New England.” — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, ii, No. 2,
194.
195.
OG:
197.
198.
April, 1877, pp. 49, 50. Review of H. D. Minot’s work. Western Range of Conurus carolinensis. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, ii, No. 2, April, 1877, p. 50. Note on the Cinnamon Teal (Querquedula cyanoptera). — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, 115, Now 2, April sii, p. ol. Remarks on the Birds of the District of Columbia. By Drs. E. Coues and D. W. Prentiss. — Field and Forest, ii, No. 11, May, 1877, pp. 191-193. Also in a separate pamphlet entitled: Catalogue of the Birds of the District of Columbia, prepared by Pierre Louis Jouy, with Remarks on the Birds of the District, by Drs. Coues and Prentiss. 8vo. Washington, 1877, pp. 11. The Song that the Bluebird Sings. — Harper’s Magazine, May, 1877, p. 891. Reprinted in many places. Notes on the Ornithology of the Region about the Source of the Red River
of Texas, from Observations made during the Explorations conducted by Lieut. E> H: Ruffner, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A. By C. A. H.
199.
200.
201.
202.
203.
204.
APPENDIX. 159
McCauley, Lieut. Third United States Artillery. Annoted by Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S. A. — Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., ii, No. 3, May, 1877, pp. 655-695.
Also separate, new cover-title, same pagination.
Birds [ete.]. — The (Baltimore) Mirror, June 1, July 1, Aug. 1, Sept. 1, Oct. 1, Nov, 15, Dee:-1, 1877. From the “ Birds of the Northwest.”
Leptoptila [7ege Engyptila] albifrons, a Pigeon new to the United States Fauna. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, ii, No. 3, July, 1877, pp. 82-83.
Melopelia leucoptera in Colorado. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, ii, No. 3, July, 1877, p. 83.
Dr. Coues replies to Dr. Brewer [in the Sparrow (Passer domesticus) contro- versy ].— Washington Gazette, July 8, 1877.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 15.— Curious Crows [Picicorvus columbianus, Gymnocitta cyanocephala]. — Chicago Field, July 14, 1877, figg.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 16.— The English Sparrow [Passer domes- ticus]. — Chicago Field, July 21, 1877.
Many reprints elsewhere.
205.*+Our Birds of Prey; or, the Eagles, Hawks, and Owls of Canada. — The
206.
207.
208.
Nation, — 1877, p. 341.
Review of H. G. Vennor’s work.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 16 [bis]. —The American Warblers. — Fam- ily Sylvicolide. — Chicago Field, Dec. 15, 1877, fig.
1878.
Department of the Interior | United States Geological Survey of the Terri- tories | F. V. Hayden, U. S. Geologist-in-Charge | — | Miscellaneous Publications — No. 11 | — | Birds of the Colorado Valley | A Repository of | Scientific and Popular Information | concerning | North American Or- nithology | By | Elliott Coues | — | "H16’, 72.02 yeliSav xalas wgas tyouce. | — | Part First | Passeres to Laniide | Bibliographical Appendix | Seventy Illustrations | — | Washington | Government Printing Office | 1878 8vo.
pp. i-xvi, 1-807, figg. 70.
List of Faunal Publications relating to North American Ornithology. — Birds Colorado Valley, Part I, 1878, Appendix, pp. 567-784 or (1]— [218].
This constitutes the First Instalment of Ornithological Bibliography ; for 2d, 3d, and 4th, see 1879 and 1880.
160
209.
210.
211.
212.
213.
214.
215. 216.
27.
218.
219.
220
221.
APPENDIX.
Notes on the Natural History of Fort Macon, N.C., and Vicinity. (No. 4.) By Drs. Elliott Coues and H. C. Yarrow. —Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1878, pp. 21-28.
Supplementary to No. 1, Vertebrates, 1871. Birds, pp. 22-24. (No. 3, Fishes, is by Dr. Yarrow.)
Note on Passerculus bairdi and P. princeps. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii.
No. 1, January, 1878, pp. 1-3, pl. col’d.
The Northern Phalarope [Lobipes hyperboreus] in North Carolina. — Bul. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 1, January, 1878, pp. 40, 41.
The Willow Grouse [Lagopus albus] in New York. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 1, January, 1878, p. 41.
Pipilo erythrophthalmus with spotted Scapulars. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 1, January, 1878, pp. 41-42.
Melanism in Turdus migratorius. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 1, Jan- uary, 1878, pp. 47, 48.
The Sparrow [Passer domesticus] Pest. — The Country, Jan. 19, 1878.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 17.—The Aquatic Wood-Wagtail, or New York Water Thrush. (Siurus nevius.) — Chicago Field, Feb. 2, 1878.
Notes on the Ornithology of the Lower Rio Grande of Texas, from Obser- vations made during the season of 1877. By George B. Sennett. Edited, with Annotations, by Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S. A. — Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., iv, No. 1, Feb. 5, 1878, pp. 1-66.
Also separate, new cover-title, same pagination.
Peculiar Feathers of Young Ruddy Duck [Erismatura rubida].— Amer.
Nat. xii, No. 2, February, 1878, pp. 123, 124, fig.
Justice to the English Sparrows [Passer domesticus]. — The Country, Feb. 6187S.
. tA Book on Bird-Architecture. — The Country, March 16, 1878.
Ernest Ingersoll’s proposed treatise.
On the Moult of the Bill and Palpebral Ornaments in Fratercula arctica. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 2, April, 1878, pp. 87-91.
Habits of the Kingfisher [Ceryle aleyon].— Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 2, April, 1878, p. 92.
Nesting of Vireo olivaceus. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 2, April, 1878, p. 95.
Nest and Eggs of Selasphorus platycercus. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 2, April, 1878, p. 95.
Meaning of the word ‘‘ Anhinga.” — Bull. Nut. Orn. Club, iii, No. 2, April, 1878, p. 101:
228.
229.
230.
231.
232.
233.
234.
235.
236
237.
238.
239.
240.
APPENDIX. 161
Letters on Ornithology. No. 18.— The Yellow-breasted Chat. — Chicago Field, June 29, 1878.
The Eave, Cliff, or Crescent Swallow (Petrochelidon lunifrons). — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 3, July, 1878, pp. 105-112.
jMr. H. Saunders on the Sternine. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 3, July, 1878, pp. 140-144. Review of the paper in the Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond , 1876, p. 638.
Swallow-tailed Kite [Elanoides forficatus] in Dakota in Winter. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 3, July, 1878, p. 147.
New Birds [five species] for the United States Fauna. — The Country, July, 18, 1878, p. 184.
Field-Notes on Birds observed in Dakota and Montana along the Forty-ninth Parallel during the Seasons of 1873 and 1874. — Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., iv, No. 3, July 29, 1878, pp. 545-662.
Also separate, new cover-title, same pagination, 8vo, Washington, 1878.
The Ineligibility of the European House Sparrow [Passer domesticus] in America. — Amer. Nat., xii, No. 8, August, 1878, pp. 499-505. Reprinted, Chicago Field, Aug. 31, 1878; reprinted, The Country, Aug. 3, 1878; and elsewhere. A Hint to Egg-Collectors. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 4, October, LS735 1p. TOL cut.
Nest and Eggs of Helminthophaga pinus. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iii, No. 4, October, 1878, p. 194.
+Wilson’s and Bonaparte’s American Ornithology. — The Nation, Nov. 7, 1878.
Review of the Porter and Coates’ edition of 1878.
1879.
tJones and Shulze’s Illustrations of the Nest and Eggs of the Birds of Ohio.
foto)
— Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 1, January, 1879, p. 52.
[ Note on Dendreeca chrysoparia]. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 1, Jan- uary, 1879, p. 60.
Nests and Eggs of the Clay-colored Bunting [Spizella pallida]. — The Odlo- gist, iv, No. 7, February, 1879, p. 50.
Coues on the Nest and Eggs of the Water Thrush [Siurus nevius]. — Zhe Odlogist, iv, No. 8, March, 1879, p. 57.
The Sparrow [Passer domesticus] Nuisance.— The Washington World, March 17, 1879.
242
248.
244.
245.
246.
247.
248.
249.
250.
251.
252.
2538.
254,
255.
256.
257.
258.
APPENDIX.
History of the Evening Grosbeak [ Hesperophona vespertina ]. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 2, April, 1879, pp. 65-75.
. tLangdon’s Revised List of Cincinnati Birds. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv,
Now 2, April; 1879; pp. 112, 113.
Note on Dendreeca townsendi. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 2, April, 1879, p. 117.
Note on Bucephala islandica. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 2, April, 1879, pp. 126, 127.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 19.—The Curlews [Numenius] of North America. — The Chicago Field, April, 26, 1879.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 20.—The American Bittern [Botaurus mugi- tans]. — Chicago Field, May 10, 1879.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 21.— History of the Red-breasted, or Cinna- mon Teal [Querquedula cyanoptera].— Chicago Field, May 17, 1879.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 22.—The Snow Goose, or White Brant [Chen hyperboreus].— Chicago Field, May 24, 1879.
Private Letters of Wilson, Ord and Bonaparte.— Penn Monthly, June, 1879, pp. 443-455.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 23. —The American Coot [Fulica americana]. — Chicago Field, June 9, 1879.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 24. —The Wood Ibis [Tantalus loculator]. — Chicago Field, June 14, 1879.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 25.—The Solitary Tattler; Wood Tattler [Rhyacophilus solitarius]. — Chicago Field, June 21, 1879.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 26.—Semipalmated Tattler, Willet, Stone Snipe [Symphemia semipalmata].— Chicago Field, June 28, 1879.
To prevent Grease from injuring the Plumage of Birds. — Amer. Nat., xiii, No. 7, July, 1879, p. 456.
[On the Use of Trinomials in Zoological Nomenclature]. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 3, July, 1879, p. 171.
Le Conte’s Thrasher (Harporhynchus lecontii). — The Odlogist, iv, No. 12, July, 1879, pp. 99-100.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 27.—Bartramian Sandpiper or Tattler; Up- land Plover [Bartramia longicauda]. — Chicago Lield, July 5, 1879.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 28. — The Buff-breasted Sandpiper [Tryngites rufescens ]. — Chicago Field, July 12, 1879.
259.
260.
261
262
263.
264,
265.
266.
267.
268.
269.
270.
acl.
272.
278.
. TIngersoll’s Nests and Eggs of American Birds. — Amer. Nat., xiii, No. 8
APPENDIX. 163
Letters on Ornithology. No. 29.—Great Marbled Godwit [Limosa foeda]. — Chicago Field, July 19, 1879.
Letters on Ornithology. No. 30.—The Great White Egret [Herodias egretta]. — Chicago Field, July 26, 1879.
’
Aug. 1872, pp. 515, 516.
. {Texan Ornithology. — Amer. Nat., xiii, No. 8, August, 1879, pp. 516-519.
Nesting of the Great Blue Heron [Ardea herodias] in the West. — Chicago Field, Aug. 2, 1879.
On the Present Status of Passer domesticus in America, with Special Refer- ence to the Western States and Territories. — Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., v, No. 2, Sept. 6, 1879, pp. 175-193.
Including the bibliography of the subject. Also sep. pamphlet.
Second Instalment of American Ornithological Bibliography. — Bull. U.S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., v, No. 2, Sept. 6, 1879, pp. 239-330.
The First Instalment forms the Appendix of “ Birds of the Colorado Valley,” Part I,
1878. — Also sep. pamphlet, new cover-title, same pagination.
Note on the Black-capped Greenlet, Vireo atricapillus of Woodhouse. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 4, October, 1879, pp. 1938, 194, pl. I (colored).
Southward Range of Centrophanes lapponica. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 4, October, 1879, p. 238.
Obituary. [Miss Genevieve E. Jones. ]— Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 4, October, 1879, p. 228.
A Correction [respecting Buteo borealis]. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 4, October, 1879, p. 242.
Note on Alle nigricans, Link. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, No. 4, October, 1879, p. 244.
Destructiveness of English Sparrows [Passer domesticus].— Amer. JVat., xiii, No. 11, November, 1879, p. 706.
Further Notes on the Ornithology of the Lower Rio Grande of Texas, from Observations made during the Spring of 1878. By George B. Sennett. Edited, with Annotations, by Dr. Elliott Coues, U. S. A.— Bull. U. 8. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., v, No. 3, Nov. 30, 1879, pp. 371-440.
Also separate, new cover-title, same pagination.
1880.
The Origin of the Turkey [Meleagris gallipayo].— Yorest and Stream, xiii, No. 22, Jan. 1, 1880, p. 947.
164
274.
275.
APPENDIX.
Sketch of North American Ornithology in 1879. — Amer. Nat., xiv, No. 1, January, 1880, pp. 20-25.
On the Nesting in Missouri of Empidonax acadicus and Empidonax trailli. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 1, January, 1880, pp. 20-25.
276. tIngersoll’s Nests and Eggs of American Birds. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club,
v, No. 1, January, 1880, pp. 38, 39.
277. +The Misses Jones and Shulze’s Nests and Eggs of Ohio Birds. — Bull. Nutt.
278.
279.
280.
281.
282.
283.
284.
285.
286.
287.
Orn. Club, v, No. 1, January, 1880, pp. 39, 40.
Description of the Female Dendreeca kirtlandi. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 1, January, 1880, pp. 49, 50.
Note on Limosa hemastica. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 1, January, 1880, pp. 59, 60.
Capture of Phaéthon flavirostris in Western New York. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 1, January, 1880, p. 63.
Depredations of the European Sparrow [Passer domesticus]. — Amer. Wat., xiv, No. 2, February, 1880, p. 130.
Advent of Passer domesticus in North Carolina. — Amer. Nat., xiv, No. 3, March, 1880, p. 213.
Notes and Queries concerning the Nomenclature of North American Birds. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 2, April, 1880, pp. 95-102.
Further Light on the Moult of the Bill in certain Mormonidze. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 2, April, 1880, pp. 127-128.
Fourth Instalment of Ornithological Bibliography: being a List of Faunal Publications relating to British Birds. — Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., ii, May 31, 1880, pp. 359-482.
This Instalment antedates the Third, below. Also separate, with new cover-title.
[Letters on Passer domesticus in America and Australia.] — Lorest and Stream, April 15, 1880, p. 204.
Shufeldt’s Memoir on the Osteology of Speotyto cunicularia hypogea. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 3, July, 1880, pp. 129, 130, pll. I-III.
. ¢Gentry’s Nests and Eggs of the Birds of Pennsylvania. — Bull. Nutt. Orn.
Club, v, No. 3, July, 1880, p. 179.
. ¢Ober’s Camps in the Caribees. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 3, July,
18305 pair:
Nest and Eggs of Catherpes mexicanus conspersus. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 3, July, 1880, pp. 181, 182.
Number of Eggs of Ardea herodias. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 3, July, 1880, p. 187.
APPENDIX. 165
292. Note on Grus fraterculus of Cassin. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Olub, vy, No. 3, July, 1880, p. 188.
293. Third Instalment of American Ornithological Bibliography. — Bull. U.S. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr., vi, No. 4, Sept. 30, 1880, pp. 521-1066.
Not published till after the 4th, above. Not separate, occupying the whole No. of the Bull.
294. ‘Behind the Veil.” — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 4, October, 1880, pp. 193-204.
Gossip over letters and other relics of Wilson and Audubon.
295. tMarsh’s Palornithology. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 4, October, 1880, pp. 234-236.
Review of O. C. Marsh’s “ Odontornithes.”
296. Rural Bird Life | being | Essays on Ornithology | with instructions for pre- serving objects | relating to that science | by | Charles Dixon | with forty- five illustrations; and a preface | By Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S.A... . Boston | Estes and Lauriat | 299 to 305 Washington Street. | [1880.] 1 vol. sm. 8vo. Title and pp. i-xvi, 1-374, 45 illust.
American Editor’s preface, pp. iii-viii.
1881.
297. <A curious Colaptes [auratus x mexicanus].— Ball. Nutt. Orn. Club, vi, No. 3, July, 1881, p. 183.
298. <A Correction [Trogonide].— Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, vi, No. 3, July, 1881, p. 188.
299. Probable Occurrence of Sarcorhamphus papa in Arizona. — Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, vi, No. 4, October, 1881, p. 248.
300. New England Bird Life | being a | Manual | of | New England Ornithology | revised and edited from the Manuscript of | Winfrid A. Stearns | Member of the Nuttall Ornithological Club ete. | By | Dr. Elliott Coues U.S. A. | Member of the Academy ete. | Part I. —Oscines | Boston | Lee and Shepard Publishers | New York Charles T. Dillingham | 1881 1 vol. 8vo. Title and pp. 1-824, figg. 1-56.
ao University Press: John Wilson & Son, Cambridge, Mass,
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AUDUBON’S BIRDS OF AMERICA. By Joun J. Aupupon. 350 Figures of Birds, all life-size, in one vol., elephant folio. With descriptive text; 8 vols. bound in 4. Together, 5 vols., all bound uniform in heavy half Russia binding. New York, 1857. Reduced from $250.00 to $165.00. This grand work is now out of print and never can be produced again.
&C.,
This magnificent work is in one elephant folio volume, measuring three feet five inches long by two feet three inches wide ; containing upwards of three hundred and fifty beautifully colored figures of birds, portraying their action while in motion, all of which are life-size ; together with a large number of illustrations of the plants and trees most frequented by the birds ; a great variety of charming landscapes adding much to the beauty of the work. The descriptive text consists of. eight volumes bound in four royal octavo volumes, giving the habits of the birds, anecdotes relating to them, by the great ornithologist who made this science the study of his long and useful life, with full descriptive text of all the birds, delinea- tions of American scenery, plants, trees, &c. ; also an account of many very exciting narratives of personal adventures, hair- breadth escapes, — being the experience of Mr. Audubon himself while in pursuit of the birds, — and it is, without exception, one of the most fascinating, valuable, entertaining, and remarkable works published. This set is bound in heavy Russia
half binding, library style, and offered for sale at the above low price,—avery great bargain and arare opportunity. If
ordered from a distance, will be carefully packed in a case made expressly.
The present offers a rare chance to lovers of
works of art to procure, at a small price, one of the most costly and valuable works ever issued.
WILSON’S AMERICAN ORNITHOLO- GY; or, Natural History of the Bir''s of the United States. New and enlarged edition. 3 vols. 8vo. With portrait of Wilson, and 103 plates, exhibiting nearly 400 figures of birds, accurately engraved and beautifully printed in colors. New edition. London, 1877.
Reduced from $25.00 to $12.50.
This is by far the best edition of the American Ornithol-
ogy, both on account of the beautiful plates, and the inter-
esting notes of the editor: and every ornithologist should, if possible, procure this edition.
FISHES OF THE BRITISH ISLANDS (History of the). By Jonathan Couch, F.L.S. Illustrated with 256 carefully colored plates. 4vols. Royal 8vo. Cloth. London, 1877.
Reduced from $42.00 to $23.00.
The author, who is well known as one of the first practi- eal authorities on British fishes, has for fifty years been observing, noting, and drawing with his own pencil, the various fish which live in British waters, —a vast labor, in which he has been assisted by scientific friends living in various portions of the United Kingdom. The drawings are beautifully colored to life, and some of the portraits (espec- jally of the dog-fish) are really marvellous, rendering the recognition of a fish a work of the greatest ease.
SMALLER BRITISH BIRDS. With de- scriptions of their Nests, Eggs, Habits, &c., &e. By H. G. and H. B. Adams. Illustrated with 30 beautiful full page colored plates. Contain- ing hundreds of figures of birds and their eggs, well colored to nature. Small 4to, gilt edges. London, 1874. Reduced from $12.00 to $5.00. The present work is an effort to produce a book which
shall give a concise yet sufficiently full description of the smaller British birds; not a scientific work, but one essen- tially popular in its character, rendered attractive by lifelike portraits of the birds, drawn and colored as closely to nature as the eye and the hand of the artist can make them,
BRITISH GRASSES (Natural History of). By E. J. Lowe, Esq. Illustrated with 74 finely colored plates. 8vo. Cloth. 1874.
Reduced from $10.00 to $6.00.
This is a work not only valuable to the botanical student for its pictorial accuracy, but of use also to the Janded pro- prietor and the farmer, pointing out to them those grasses which are useful and lucrative in husbandry, and teaching them the varied soils and positions upon which they thrive, and explaining their qualities and the several uses to which they are applied in many branches of manufacture and in- dustry.
BRITISH AND EXOTIC (Natural History of). By E. J. Illustrated with 479 finely colored plates. Royal 8vo. Cloth. London, 1872.
teduced from $60.00 to $32.00.
A book which should contain ample means of studying and identifying the Exotie species, accessible to persons of moderate means, has hitherto been a desideratum, This want the present work promises most hopefully to fill. It is admirably “‘ gotup;’’ the plates are carefully and prettily exe- cuted; there is a neat illustrative woodcut at the head of each description, and the letterpress is full and practical, without being deficient in scientific accuracy. It is really the cheapest work for its excellence we have ever seen, and should be “in the hands of every gardener and every private person who cultivates these charming objects.”
FERNS Lowe, Esq.
8 vols.
NEW AND RARE FERNS (Natural His- tory of). Containing Species and Varieties not included in other works. By E. J. Lowe. Illus- trated with 72 colored plates and numerous wood- cuts. 8vo. Cloth. London, 1871.
Reduced from $10.00 to $6.00.
So many new ones have been introduced, that it has been deemed necessary to publish a separate volume, This work will be found to contain colored plates or woodcut illustra- tions of one hundred and fifty-one new species.
BRITISH MOSSES. Their Homes, Aspects, Structure, and Uses. Containing a Colored Fig- ure of each species, etched from Nature. By IF. ik. Tripp. Llustrated with beautifully colored plates. 2vols. Royal 8vo. Cloth. London, 1874.
Reduced from $25.00 to $13.00.
It is a book to read, to ponder, to mark, learn, and in-
wardly digest. .. . Let those who want to know the ‘‘ moral”?
of mosses inquire within the covers of the volume. He will
there find that these humble plants have their uses, their virtues, and their mission.
NATURAL HISTORY (Museum of): being
a Popular Account of the Structure, Habits, and
Classification of the various departments of the Animal Kingdom. By Sir John Richardson and others. With a History of the American Fauna, by Joseph B. Holder, M.D., Fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences. Illustrated with hun- dreds of steel engravings, also many finely col- ored plates, and numerous woodcuts. 4to. Cloth, gilt, extra. New York, 1880. Reduced from $24.00 to $10.50. Not only written in a free, familiar, teaching style, but exquisitely illustrated and beautifully got up. Gives a large amount of information on the subject of animal life, and we commend these handsome volumes very heartily to all in- terested in natural history.
SLRULIS SYLVA BRITANNICA AND SCOTICA; or, portraits of Forest Trees distinguished for their antiquity, magni- tude, or beauty. Drawn from Nature, and etched by Jacob George Strutt. Imperial folio. Com- prising 50 very large and highly finished etchings. Half bound morocco, extra, gilt edges. London, 1826. Reduced from $45.00 to $18.00. Some of the etchings resemble the paintings by Waterloo
very strikingly ; but the whole are various, beautiful, and
interesting.
BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS (History of). Accurately delineating every known Spe- cies, with the English as well as the Scientific Names, accompanied by full Descriptions, Date. of Appearance, Lists of the Localities they haunt, their Food in the Caterpillar State, and other Features of their Habits and Modes of Existence, &c. By Rev. F. O. Morris, B.A. The plates contain nearly 2,000 exquisitely colored speci- mens. In4vols. Royal 8vo. Cloth. London.
Reduced from $60.00 to $32.00. Speaking of entomology, we should place Mr. Morris’s
“History of British Moths *’ at the head. It gives a colored figure of every known British moth, together with dates of appearance, localities, description, and food of caterpillar. It forms a handsome work for a library, and will, we should hope, lead many to commence the fascinating study of ento- mology.
OUR NATIVE FERNS; or, a History of the British Species and their Varieties. By E.
J. Lowe. With 79 colored and 909 wood engray- ings. 2vols. 8vo. Cloth. London, 1874.
Reduced from $20.00 to $12.00.
The importance and value of this work may be inferred from the fact that it contains descriptions of 1,294 varieties of British ferns, with 79 colored plates of species and vari- eties, and 909 wood engravings, containing much interesting information. The localities are described, each synonyme given, and a description of the proper method of cultivation. There are 184 varieties figured.
BRITISH SEA-WEEDS. Drawn from Pro- fessor Harvey’s ‘‘ Phycologia Britannica.’’ With Descriptions, and Amateur’s Synopsis, Rules for Laying on Sea-weeds, an Order for Arranging them in the Herbarium, and an Appendix of New Species. By Mrs. Alfred Gatty. Illus- trated with 80 exquisitely colored plates, contain- ing 384 figures. 2 vols. 8vo. Cloth. London, 1874. Reduced from $24.00 to $15.00. In her present work she has endeavored, and we think
most successfuly, to translate the terms and phrases of science into the language of amateurs. Mrs. Gatty’s famil- iarity with the plants themselves has enabled her to do this office without falling into the errors to which a mere com- piler in separating from the beaten track would be liable.
HISTORY OF BRITISH BUTTER- FLIES. By the Rey. F. O. Morris, B.A. Illustrated with 72 beautifully colored plates. Royal 8vo. Cloth. London, 1576.
Reduced from $10.00 to $6.00. With colored illustrations of all the species, and separate figures of the male and female, where there is any obvious difference between them, and also of the under side, together with the caterpillar and chrysalis,and a full description of each, with copious accounts of their several habits, localities, and times of appearance, together with details as to their preservation, &c., with new and valuable information, — the result of the author’s experience for many years.
ALPINE PLANTS. Descriptions and 200 accurately colored figures (drawn and engraved expressly for this work) of some of the most striking and beautiful of the Alpine Flowers. Edited by David Wooster. 2 vols. Royal 8vo. Cloth. London. Reduced from $20.00 to $13.00. The manner in which *f Alpine Plants” is produced is
creditable alike to author and artist. The literary portion is not the mere dry botanical description often found in such works, but a popular description of the plant, — instructions as to its culture and treatment, — with any interesting infor- mation in connection with it that can be obtained. . .. We heartily commend this work to all lovers of flowers.
OWEN (Richard). Comparative Anatomy and Physiology of Vertebrates. Vol. I. Fishes and Reptiles. Vol. I. Birds and Mammals. Vol. III. Mammals. 3 vols. 8vo. Cloth. Tllus- trated with an immense number of _ beautiful woodcuts. London, Longmans, 1866-68.
Reduced from $24.00 to $10.50. This work has long been the highest authority on this subject, and has received the praise of such men as Tyndall,
Huxley, and others. Humboldt speaks of Owen as the great-
est anatomist of his age,and he is generally called the Cuvier
of England and the ‘* Newton of natural history.”
AMERICAN NATURALIST (The). A popular illustrated Magazine of Natural History. Edited by A. S. Packard, Jr., E. S. Morse, A. Hyatt, and F. W. Putnam. Numerous illustra-
tions, many full-paged. 10 vols. (Complete from commencement to 1878.) 8vo. Cloth.
Salem, 1868-77. Reduced from $50.00 to $25.00.
The Naturalist contains departments of Geography and Travel, Microscopy, and Proceedings of Scientific Societies. A digest of the contents of foreign scientific journals and transactions is also given, together with the latest home and foreign scientific news.
GEOLOGY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. A report comprising the results of Exploration or- dered by the Legislature, by C. H. Hitchcock and J. H. Huntington. Illustrated with nearly 250 illustrations, maps, diagrams (many of which are full-page). 3 vols. Royal 8vo. 1,200 pages. Half moroceo. With large and valuable Atlas completing the work, forming the fourth volume. Concord, 1874. Reduced from $40.00 to $25.00. This great work, which is withouta doubt the most valu-
able report ever published, contains many articles of interest
to the general reader, as well as the geologist, as many of the articles were prepared by gentlemen eminent in their spec- jialties, such as the Natural History and Botany, and a His-
tory of the Explorations among the White Mountains, &c.
NATURALIST’S LIBRARY, JAR- DINE’S. By Sir William Jardine. 42 vols. Foolscap. 8vo. 1,200 colored plates. With numerous Portraits and Memoirs of Eminent Naturalists. Extra cloth, top edges, gilt. (Sold only in sets.) London, 1865.
Reduced from $84.00 to $36.00.
Contents: British Birds; Sun Birds; Humming Birds ; Game Birds; Pigeons; Parrots; Flycatchers; Peacocks ; Lions; Tigers; British Quadrupeds; Dogs, 2 vols ; Rumi- nating Animals, vol. 1 (Deer, Antelopes, &c.); Ruminating Animals, vol. 2 (Goats, Sheep); Seals; Whales, &c.; Mon- keys; British Butterflies; British Moths, &c.; Foreign Butterflies ; Foreign Moths; Beetles; Bees; Introduction, and Foreign Fishes; British Fishes, 2 yols.; Perch, &c ; Fishes of Guiana, 2 vols.
Sir William Jardine’s coadjutors in this admirable series were Swainson, Selby, Macgillivray, Waterhouse, Duncan, Hamilton, Smith, and others.
This book is, perhaps, the most interesting, the most beautiful, and the cheapest series ever offered to the public.
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