Ee ~y Does icte sya oe osc > » ca OL ygwlett Bieds A PRELIMINARY CATALOG — OF THE BIRDS OF MISSOURI BY OTTO WIDMANN ST. LOUIS, MO. 1907 La mum OQ Tle Wea — LOT O18 / Hiya eth ans Hi : anh i Pa hie big \ el id i N x Ata ‘ Me i a On am Mt Hat GS Un i ie ——s =i i i Wi = ss setae ns ——- _ nt PO Hae ANGE is ay Wael) ys NWN LUA LEM 27 i AID MAN ariel ? ; ANA ih) i mht iy ENE ye Bite iy, nit ny ifs a in Nees uh M4 iit an Mies At CN RHR '} he a i ee 5 AN hina Hugi)» Pes Ay Hd ; writ PRAY RET p Hea 4 pty } vi i } ( AAS be y ( A Pai ara pact Roa j it Wy a mes A eon Kita Wc) vi With i HN na ee } Way ey WAN Onan BEN ae De a ai Dae a A) \ Vi 1) tates i ; é a aa : " ity 4 Y, ? vei % ¥ i i Gh Me oo ie i a I Aye iy yy NAN Bah Me th WN) Ne Tat KILN he A PRELIMINARY CATALOG OF THE BIRDS OF MISSOURL* Ortro WIDMANN. I. INTRODUCTION. The need of a list of the birds of Missouri has become more and more apparent as the popularization of Nature Study has made progress during the last few years. Nearly all the northern states have published for many years lists and revised lists, but this is the first attempt in our state. It is based chiefly on personal observations made during the last thirty years. Other sources of information of which I was able to avail myself are comparatively few and very little has ever been published. To those gentlemen who were kind enough to favor me with their notes I would here express my thanks. They are: Mr. Vernon Bailey of Washington, D.C., who visited Stone Co. in 1892 for a short time; Mr. Roger N. Baldwin of St. Louis; Mr. James New- ton Baskett of Mexico, Mo., the author of the Story of the Birds; Mr. John A. Bryant of Kansas City; Mr. B. F. Bush of Courtney, Mo.; Mr. Edmonde Samuel Currier of Keokuk, Ia., who kept very good records of the birds of his vicinity including parts of Clark Co., Mo., for more than twelve years prior to his removal to Oregon in 1903; Dr. Aug. F. Eimbeck and his brother, Mr. Charles L. Eimbeck, of New Haven, Mo., the owners of fine col- lections of mounted birds made in Warren and Franklin Co. during the last forty years; Mr. Ben True Gault of Glen Ellyn, Ill., who has twice collected in parts of southern Missouri, mainly in Dunklin and Reynolds Co.; Mr. Julius Hurter, Sr., of St. Louis, whose collection of mounted birds of the neighborhood of St. Louis is now in Washington University; Mr. John D. Kas- tendieck of Billings, Christian Co., the owner of a large and fine collection of mounted birds taken in his vicinity during the last forty years; Mr. Adolf Lange of Leavenworth, Kan., whose collec- tion of birds contains specimens taken on the Missouri side; Mr. * Presented to The Academy of Science of St. Louis, May 21, 1906. (1) 2 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. John 8S. Marley of Kansas City, Mo.; Dr. Walter Mills of Webster Groves, Mo.; Mr. H. Nehrling, the author of ‘Die Nord-Ameri- kanische Vogelwelt” and ‘Our Birds of Song and Beauty,’’ who lived at Freistatt near Pierce City, Lawrence Co., from October 1882 to April 1887; Mr. Edgar M. Parker of Montgomery City, Mo.; Mr. Otho C. Poling of Quincy, Ill.; Mr. Wm. E. Praeger, who, when living at Keokuk, Ia., often visited Missouri soil on his ornithological excursions; Mr. F. C. Peilett of Salem, Mo.; Mr. C. W. Prier of Appleton City, Mo.; Dr. G. C. Rinker of Union- ville; Mr. Walter Giles Savage of Monteer, Shannon Co., formerly of Jasper, Jasper Co.; Mr. Frank Schwarz of St. Louis; Mr. Philo W. Smith, Jr. of St. Louis, an ardent collector of eggs for many years in different parts of the state, bringing together one of the most complete collections of North American birds’ eggs in the United States; Mr. A. F. Smithson of Warrensburg, Mo.; Mr. B. M. Stigall of Kansas City; Mr. Chas. W. Tindall of Indepen- dence, Mo.; Mr. Sidney 8. Wilson of St. Joseph, Mo.; Mr. Julius T. Volkman of Webster Groves, Mo.; Mr. E. Seymour Woodruff, who visitd Shannon Co. from March 10 to May 16 and Grandin, Carter Co., from May 16 to June 7, 1907, and very kindly sub- mitted all his notes, containing new and valuable records, for use in this list; Mr. Chas. K. Worthen of Warsaw, IIl., who sent me interesting notes on birds taken on the Mississippi River or so near the state line that they must be regarded as worthy of a place in our list. I am also indebted to the gentlemen of the Bureau of Biological Survey of the United States Department of Agriculture, for the loan of the schedules containing the reports on bird migration in Missouri from 1884 to 1905. They com- prise the work of thirty-six observers scattered through nearly as many counties and varying from notes on a few birds in a single season to full reports on a number of species and a long series of years, chiefiy for spring, but some for spring and fall migration. II. BIBLIOGRAPHY. The first local list ever made in the state is that of Dr. P. R. Hoy, published in his Journal of an Exploration of Western Missouri in 1854 in the nineteenth Annual Report of the Smith- sonian Institution for 1864. He enumerates 156 species. Occasional mention of birds of the lower Missouri River is found among the observations of Max Prinz zu Wied in his “Reise in das Innere Nord-America in den Jahren 1832 bis 1834” Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 3 and in his “‘ Verzeichniss der Vogel welche auf einer Reise in Nord- America beobachted wurden” in the‘ Journal fuer Ornithologie,”’ for 1858; also in Long’s Expedition to the Rocky Mountains in 1819 and ’20, published from notes of Thomas Say in 1823; and in F. V. Hayden’s Report on the Geology and Natural History of the Upper Missouri River based on explorations in 1855, 56 and ’57, published in the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, vol. 12, 1863. A few notes on the birds of Missouri are found in J. H. Town- send’s Narrative of a Journey across the Rocky Mountains in 1839 (vol. 21 of Early Western Travels), and a larger number in Audubon’s Missouri River Journals, 1843, in ‘“‘Audubon and his Journals,” by Maria R. Audubon, 1897. Edward Harris, who accompanied Audubon on his journey to the upper Missouri in 1843 published a nominal “List of Birds and Mammalia found én the Missouri River from Fort Leavenworth to Fort Union” in the Fifth Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 1850 (1851). In his “ Notes on an Ornithological Reconnoissance,” Dr. J. A. Allen writes in the Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 3: p. 6, July 1872: ‘Our collections at Leavenworth (in May 1871) were principally made in the heavy timber on the Hast Leavenworth (Mo.) side of the Missouri River opposite Fort Leavenworth. Most of the water-birds were obtained about a lagoon on the Missouri side.”’ In Bull. Nuttall Ornith. Club, vol. 3, p. 148, 1878, is a notice by Dr. J. A. Allen of the occurrence of three species of seaducks and a purple gallinule taken near St. Louis by Mr. Julius Hurter in 1875,’76 and’77. In vol. 4, 1879, page 135- 147, of the Nuttall Bulletin there is a list of 148 species observed by Mr. W. EH. DB. Scott at Warrensburg, Mo., during the spring migration, March 27 to June 15, 1874. In the Ornithologist and Oologist of 1884, Mr. Jul. Hurter of St. Louis enumerates 265 1 species of birds collected by him during fifteen years in the vi- cinity of St. Louis. Mr. Otho C. Poling of Quincy, IIL, in his “Notes on the Fringillidae of western Hlinois,” in the Auk, vol. 7, 1890, speaks of observations made on Missouri soil. Several papers treating of Missouri birds have been published by the author of the present list during the last twenty years in the Auk, the Ornithologist and Oologist, the Osprey, and Bird Lore. The Reports on Bird Migration in the Mississippi Valley by W. W. Cooke also contain a large number of notes and dates on Missouri birds, chie‘ly from St. Louis. The report for the 4 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. spring of 1882 is published in Forest and Stream during October and November of that year; that of the spring of 1883 is pub- lished by the American Field in Bull. no. 1 of the Ridgway Orni- thological Club of Chicago, December 1883. The reports of 1884 and 1885 are contained in Bull. no. 2 of the Department of Agriculture, Division of Economic Ornithology, entitled: ‘“ Report on Bird Migration in the Mississippi Valley in the years 1884 and 1885,” by W. W. Cooke, 1888, edited and revised by Dr. C. H. Merriam. Ill. EXPLANATIONS. The nomenclature is that of the American Ornithologists’ Union check-list, latest (1895) edition and supplements. The numbers are also those of the check-list; the species and sub- species have not been serially numbered, because in a preliminary list it is too difficult to decide which shall and which shall not be numbered; a species doubtful to-day may have to be recognized to-morrow, and species which have occurred lately may soon be found exterminated as far as this state is concerned. Species and subspecies which are known to have bred in the state, or which occur under such circumstances that it is almost certain that they breed within the limits of the state, are marked with an asterisk. Synonyms, both scientific and English, used in the works of American ornithologists, principally those used by Wilson, Audu- bon, Nuttall, Baird, and Coues, are given to enable students to find their way through the many and great changes in nomen- clature made since the first of these books was printed ninety- eight years ago. No attempt is made to describe birds; manuals, handbooks, keys, and general works on North American orni- thology are numerous. The catalog is confined to a detailed treatment of the geographic distribution of each species and sub- species in accordance with the latest sources of information. This is followed by a statement of its range in Missouri, manner of occurrence in regard to season and relative abundance, dates of arrival and departure, and such notes as may be helpful to the student in the search of rare species. Species are called residents when they are found within the limits of the state in every month of the year; they are sometimes called permanent residents when they remain in the same locality throughout the year, but of this kind we have but very few, while of many species some indi- viduals remain through winter with us, though the majority go outh. Of a few species the numbers are larger in winter than Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missourt. 5 in summer, because reinforced by winter visitants from the north. Winter visitants are those which are found only in the colder part of the year and return to the north sooner or later in spring; when they are of regular occurrence and long sojourn in the same locality every winter, they are also called winter residents. Summer residents are those which pass the warmer part of the year in our state, leave us in autumn and return in spring. A few species may properly be termed summer visitants, because they visit the state only for a short time after their breeding season in a more southern home is over. Transient visitants are all those species which breed farther north and winter farther south, passing through our state in migration and spending more or less time in the transit. Residents and summer residents are breeders; transient visi- tants, summer visitants, winter residents and winter visitants are non-breeders in the state. The terms used to indicate relative abundance may be defined thus: Common means of such regular occurrence in all suitable localities at the proper time that individuals can be found with- out any effort. Fairly common, meaning moderately common, is used to indicate that the species, though of regular occurrence in suitable localities, is so thinly scattered that it requires more or less search to find it. Rather rare means uncommon, infre- quent, known to occur only in small numbers, requiring much search. Rare means occurring at wide intervals. As the result - of persecution or adverse circumstance formerly common species have been reduced to this state. Accidental designates those which are entirely unexpected because extralimital. The catalog contains not only species and subspecies fully authenticated, but also a few of such highly probable occurrence that it seems only a question of time and opportunity to establish the proof of their presence. This is a slight deviation from the usual course of relegating everything not fully verified by cap- tured specimens to an appended, generally overlooked, hypo- thetical list. But since this catalog is in an initial stage, far from completion, I hold it to be of the greatest importance to keep constantly before the eyes of the student what should be done in the way of filling the gaps. He should not only know what has already been accomplished, but also what he can do in the locality in which he works toward completing the list. When visiting a new locality it is a great help to know beforehand for 6 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. what one should watch, particularly in order to make a dis- covery of value. Apparently extirpated species are also retained in the list, because it is interesting to know what formerly occurred in the state, and because the possibility still exists that at least a few individuals remain or have returned from adjacent regions. Introduced species are also admitted as naturalized members of our avifauna. The total number of species and subspecies contained in the catalog is 383, of which 162 are breeders. Species not actually taken within the limits of the state are distinguished by being put into brackets. Of this kind there are 30, which subtracted from 383 leave as the present status (July 8, 1907) 353 actually observed species and subspecies for our state. IV. FAUNAL AREAS. Our avifauna is mainly that of the eastern United States generally and differs little from that of the adjoining states on the east, north and south. The Eastern Province reaches from the Atlantic ocean to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, where the Middle Province begins, but many of the western forms of birds extend castward into Kansas and still more so into western Nebraska, thus swelling the number of species and sub- species in the latter state to 415. Illinois, too, has a larger list of breeders as well as of winter visitants, because her fauna is enriched by water birds visiting Lake Michigan and by its great north and south extension, which enters the Alleghanian faunal area of the Transition zone in the north and reaches with its southern end slightly into the Austroriparian area. Missouri belongs almost entirely to the Carolinian faunal area of the upper Austral life zone; only the low alluvial counties of the southeast can be considered a spur of the Austroriparian faunal area of the Lower Austral life zone. The circumstance that all our rivers of the southern slope of the Ozarks have wide, open and Jong valleys leading southward gives an opportunity fo: anorthward advance of southern forms of plants and animals; and our broad, open prairie region of the west and north offers no barrier to an eastward spreading of the western fauna and flora. In comparing the avifauna of Missouri with that of the At- lantic States in the same latitude it should be remembered that, although the mean temperature differs but little, the climate of Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 7 the former is somewhat more severe than that of the latter, the summers being hotter, the winte:s colder. It is therefore not suiprising to find slight differences in the summer and wincer faunas of the two regions, while the migrations occur at nearly the same time, owing to the similarity in temperature of the spring and fall months. Vv. THE CLIMATE. The climate of Missouri, continental as '‘t is in a high degree, is one of great variations. Generally speaking it may be said that it is characterized by hot summers and moderately cold winters, with exceptions of moderately hot summers and very cold winters. Maximum temperatures of eighty degrees and over occur during the summer on eighty to ninety days; ninety degrees and over on twenty to thirty days. In ordinary winters the temperature reaches to and below the freezing point on about eighty days and falls below zero on trom ten to twenty days. There are on record a few exceptionally moderate winters like that of 1905-’06 when the zero mark was hardly reached, or reached only in the more northern counties. There is little difference in the amount and duration of the summer’s heat in the different parts of the state, but there is a difference of five degrees in the average winter temperature between the northwest and the center, and from ten to fifteen degrees between that of the northwest and the southeast. All waves, cold and warm, appear first in the northwest and advance southeastward, requiring about twenty- four hours to reach the southeastern corner of the state. The most pronounced polar waves of midwinter are nearly as cold in one part of the state as in the other, but cold periods are generally of shorter duration in the southeast, moderating more rapidly un- der the more southern sun and the lower elevation. This is espe- cially noticeable in the beginning and at the end of winter, but, due to its northwest-southeast course, the chilling effect of a departing high barometer may still be felt strongly in the southeast when the approaching low barometer has already entered the state ‘n the northwest with rapidly rising temperature. Such conditions are particularly striking in spring, when north-bound migrants are thereby enabled to depart, while no migration reaches us from the south, then still under the influence of the cold east and southeast winds of the departed high pressure. The first frosts occur late in October, in the southern part sometimes not before 8 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. November, but exceptionally the last of September even in the southeast. The last frost occurs in the south about the first, and in the north about the fifteenth of April, exceptionally later as on April 20, 1904, when six inches of snow covered the ground at St. Louis with a temperature of 28° to 30° (max.). Hoarfrosts may kill tender vegetation as late as the middle of May in nearly all parts of the state. The following dates may illustrate the remarkable dissimilarity in dates of opening spring: Peach-trees were in bloom in St. Louis in 1878 on March 15; in 1907 on March 25; in 1879 on April 15; in 1880 on April 1 and in 1881 0n April 28. The same Magnolia which was in flower on March 12, 1878, did not bloom in 1881 before April 24, but in 1882 again as early as March 18, when spring opened on the first of March. Though spring opened in 1881 only on April 16 not a single tree was without its leaves at St. Louis on May 9; but in 1907 the leafing of trees began March 15 and was not completed June 1. An exceptionally early open- ing of spring with us can, of course, have no influence on the starting of migrants from their remote winter homes in southern Mexico, Central and South America, as they cannot know what kind of weather we have in the United States, but a late spring may retard their progress after they have entered our country. Most of the birds which winter beyond the limits of the United States do not reach Missouri before April, and their arrival is there- fore not influenced by our weather prior to that time. ‘They do not come earlier, be the spring ever so early and vegetation corres- pondingly advanced; but it is different with birds which winter within the United States, as nearly all species do which arrive in Missouri prior to April. Though the desire to return to their breeding ground is not dependent on the weather, being the result of a physiological process which through inheritance is fixed to a certain time of the year independent of meterological conditions, a precocious rise in temperature with the consequent develop- ment of plant and animal life exerts some influence by stimulat- ing this desire, and it is for this reason that considerable fluc- tuation occurs in the time of arrival of our earlier migrants as well as in the departure of our winter guests. A backward spring causes a general retardation of all migration that becomes less marked as the season advances, but every cold wave, even in the height of migration, checks farther advancement for the time being and detains transients at the localities where they happen to be when the adverse conditions arise. This is of great prac- Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 9 tical value for the observer or hunter, as it affords him oppor- tunity to find for a longer time and in greater numbers birds which under other, for them more favorable, conditions would have passed on at once or with little delay. The abundance and scarcity of migrants in transit through our state is therefore largely dependent on the time at which prolonged cold or warm spells strike our region. Should the cold spell set in at the time when the bulk of ducks is present, the hunter will have cause to rejoice; but should their arrival be delayed and then be followed by a decided and extensive warm period, the bulk will pass on, proceeding on their way to the northern breeding grounds, and the hunters will find the season a poor one. This is the case with all transients and is the reason why we find certain birds common in one year and rare in another; it is especially noticeable in May when the presence of north-bound warblers, thrushes, and others, is greatly influenced, shortened or lengthened, by these warm and cold waves or spells. A great diversity is also found in the seasonal distribution of precipitation which in a year amounts to thirty-four inches in the northwest and forty-six in the southeast. May and June are the months of greatest precipitation, and five inches of rain fall in each of these months throughout the state. This rainy season is generally followed by dry periods in July and August, when droughts of several weeks duration are not rare. But there are no fixed rules: while in some years no appreciable precipitation takes place from early July to September, in other years rainy periods occur almost every week throughout summer. State- ments of average precipitation, as of average temperature, give no insight into the weather conditions of a region. Four inches of rain may fall within twenty-four hours and not a drop fall for a whole month, or the four inches may come down in install- ments of half an inch distributed over the same period. The effect of such different conditions on bird life is remark- able. Heavy storms with copious downpours in the height of the breeding season destroy immense numbers of broods, and long droughts make insect life so scarce that some species of birds find it impossible to provide enough food for their young. The increase or decrease in the number of individuals of a species is therefore often the direct result of favorable or unfavorable weather of the preceding summer. While spring migration is chiefly influenced by temperature, fall migration is controlled in a large measure by precipitation. 10 Trans. Acad. Sev. of St. Louis. In vears of drought during August and September, and such years are by no means rare, migrants proceed southward on their journey without much delay, because insect food of the kind they like is scarce, and all birds need water for drinking and bathing. The drying up of water courses and ponds has much to do with the early disappearance of birds from their breeding eround. The condition of our lakes and rivers governs the occurrence and abundance of water-birds in autumn. Should our rivers be so full as to cover all sandbanks and mud flats, waders will not remain with us; on the other hand, ducks will be rare when our ponds and sloughs are very low or dry, or when the water is too deep for dabbling. The presence or absence of particular species at certain seasons is therefore the direct result of the great variation in the seasonal distribution of precipi- tation. In winter, too, it is the abundance or scarcity of snow on the ground that regulates the presence of birds more than the tem- perature does. Fortunately in most winters we cannot com- plain of too much snow, though the average snowfall for the state is said to be eight inches in the southeast, and thirty inches in the northwest. First snows usually do not fall before the middle of November; but here, too, the exceptions are almost as frequent as the rule. Snow once covered the ground at St. Louis as early as November 5 and did not entirely disappear from the north sides of houses until the middle of April (1881). In another year (1889) there.was no precipitation of any kind during the entire fall and winter until the first of January, 1890, when exceedingly heavy rain and wind storms followed. Snows falling before Christmas are usually light and drifted by the accompanying cold and high winds. Such snows do not affect. bird life seriously, because they leave much ground un- covered and accessible to the ensuing sunshine. The worst kind of snow, that which is introduced or followed by freezing rain and sleet, falls mostly between the fifth of January and tenth of February, generally in advance of our severest polar waves whose low temperature preserves the icy crust almost intact for days and weeks. They are naturally very destructive to bird life, the more so the further southward they extend and the longer they last. It was one of these periods that came near exterminating our eastern bluebirds in February 1895. The deepest snows fall in the latter part of winter, from the last of February to the first of April, but remain on the ground Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 11 but a few days, giving way to the bright sunshine and strong winds following in their wake. VI. TOPOGRAPHY. Missouri has three topographic divisions: the prairie region in the north and central west, the Ozark region in the south, and the lowlands in the southeast. There is a sharp line sepa- rating the lowlands from the Ozarks, but the dividing line be- tween the other two regions is indistinct, following in the main the Missouri River westward to Boonville, there turning south- westward through Clinton, Appleton City, and Nevada to La- mar, leaving the state where the Spring River crosses the line. The Ozark region has its highest elevation in a plateau, a broad, comparatively even, stretch of high land, which reaches from Perry, Ste. Genevieve, and Jefferson Counties southwestward to the southwest corner of the state. It attains a height of 1100’ in St. Francois Co., 1600’ in Iron and Reynolds Cos., 1400° in Dent, 1700’ in Wright and 1550’ in Stone, Barry and Taney Counties. This upland is not a contiguous stretch, but is inter- rupted by shallow, rather wide troughs and by broad areas where the water disappears and runs in underground channels; but all the drainage of the Ozarks goes from this divide either north to the Missouri and Meramec Rivers or south to the White and Arkansas Rivers, a very small area only being drained eastwardly direct into the Mississippi River. In the region immediately adjoining the plateau the streams have cut deep valleys and narrow gorges with innumerable ra- vines. This is the most rugged part of the whole region, the valleys reaching their maximum depth about midway between the plateau and the border subregion with bluffs and cliffs 300 feet high in places. The Ozark border subregion is the hilly belt inclosing the Ozarks, being less rugged, less stony, but broken up more or less, : and sloping gradually down to the prairie region or terminating on the east and north in the bluffs of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. The prairie region has never been a true, treeless prairie; its name is applied simply because its topog- raphy is of the same type as that of all the prairie regions of the Mississippi Valley; it is in fact the eastern border of the 12 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. vast sloping plain which stretches from the foot of the Rocky Mountains to the Mississippi River. It is lowest along the border line of the Ozarks and along its eastern edge which fronts the Mississippi River, rising from 800’ along this belt to 1100’ south of Kansas City and to 1200’ near the northwestern corner of the state. It is a gently undulating plain of rich soil, largely brought there by glacial action and thus differing greatly from that of southern Missouri, which is the result of decomposed native rocks. The valleys in the prairie region are true flood plains with flat floors, cut into soft shale, generally broad with gently sloping sides and extremely tortuous channels. All the valleys were originally heavily wooded, and remnants of the primeval forests are still found in the Mississippi and Missouri River bottoms and on their bluffs, but most of the timber of the prairie region has been removed, leaving only thin strips of woods along the streams with occasional artificial groves. Tree growth of vari- able size and quality once covered the entire Ozark region, heavy and of valuable kind in the valleys and along hillsides, low and of little value on the dry ridges and flats west of the Pine and White Oak region. The best parts of all the valleys have long been cleared and are devoted to agricultural pursuits; everywhere, high and low, the best timber is being rapidly cut out and removed; whole stretches have been transformed into orchards, and farms are springing up everywhere, even on the remotest hilltops. But there is still a vast amount of tree growth, so much so that, looking over the country from some eminence in the Ozarks, the eye meets hardly anything but vast stretches of woodland for miles and miles in all directions. The character of these woods is rather disappointing, for upon close inspection it is found to be of little commercial value, consisting in large part of medium-sized and small Blackjack and Post Oaks. Formerly Pine trees (Pinus echinata) grew in large quantities on silicious ground along the divide and southern slope of the Ozarks from St. Francois Co. to Taney Co., but they are mostly gone or disappearing at a rapid rate, being replaced only by scrub-oaks with no prospect for a continuation of pine woods in any part of the region, as the growth of Pinus echinata is too slow to make planting profitable and the annual burning over of the forest floor has prevented natural reproduction. The flood-plains of the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers and the bluffs bordering them play such an important part in the dis- Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 13 tribution of vegetable and animal life that they deserve a de- tailed description. Where the Missouri River enters the state at the northwest corner it meanders for sixty miles through a flood plain of from six to ten miles in width with low, gently sloping bluffs hardly 100 feet high anywhere. The alluvial land on the Missouri side extends over a large area, covering one-third of the counties of Atchison and Holt, and smaller areas of Andrew, Buchanan and Pealt Counties. All these bottoms were originally thickly tim- bered with Walnut, Maple, Sycamore, Cottonwood, Elm, Hickory, Oak, Hackberry, Willow, Locust, Boxelder, etc. Below the Nebraska-Kansas line the river encounters harder rock and the floodplain narrows to three or four miles, while the bluffs rise to almost three times their height for a hundred miles, down to near Lexington in Lafayette Co. From there to Glasgow, run- ning through soft shale, the river has carved out a flood plain from six to ten miles in width between low bluffs hardly 100 feet high. Rich alluvial bottoms, in some parts of a marshy nature, and ranging from one to three miles in width, extend for one hundred miles along the great bend of the river in Saline Co. and com- prise one-third of the area of Carroll Co. From Glasgow to St. Charles the Missouri River flows without many windings through hard limestone in a floodplain less than three miles, in some places only two miles wide between steep bluffs 300 and more feet in height. The floodplain of the Mississippi River is generally broader than that of the Missouri River, but less than one-half of it is on the Missouri side, the current of the river being mostly near the bluffs of its western shore. The width of the floodplain where the river reaches the state in the northeast, is about eight miles, with bluffs of 250 feet above low water. Bottomland up to three miles wide, some protected by levees, some subject to overflow, extends through three counties, Clark, Lewis, and Marion. At Hannibal hard limestone causes the floodplain to contract, reaching its minimum width of three to four miles at Louisiana with bluffs over 400 feet high, closely followed by the stream through most of Ralls and Pike counties. In Lincoln Co. the alluvial bottom widens again on our side with land partly pro- tected by levees, partly subject to overflow, and reaches its maximum width in St. Charles Co., where all land east of St. Charles, St. Peters and St. Paul is alluvial, much of it marshy and dotted with ponds and lakes connected by sloughs. 14 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. From the mouth of the Illinois River to Alton, a stretch of sixteen miles, the shore on the Illinois side is a wall of cliffs from 100 to 150 feet in height, formerly, and in less degree still the home of interesting birds with feeding grounds mostly on our side of the river. There is some bottom land in the northern portion of St. Louis Co., but from the City of St. Louis to the city of Cape Girardeau very little lowland is found on our side, as the river washes the foot of the bluffs nearly all along—bluffs which in many places attain the dignity of cliffs similar to those above Alton on the Illinois side. At Cape Girardeau the Missis- sippi enters the great alluvial plain, of which the seven counties in the southeastern corner of Missouri form a part, and through which the mighty river, together with the waters of the Ohio winds in a wide belt with frequent changes of its channel and the formation of cut-offs, islands and lakes. The most pronounced physiographic area of Missouri is the swampy region of the southeast. There, remnants of the most magnificent forests are still in existence, though continually encroached upon, and, since the region is now traversed by several railroads, it can be only a question of a few years when but a shadow of its sublime beauty will be left. It is the home of the Bald Cypress, the Water Tupelo, the Sweet Gum and Planer- tree; a paradise for the ornithologist as well as the botanist who finds there representatives of the Floridian and Texan floras; a bonanza for the herpetologist and entomologist. se Terminated northward by abrupt blufis along a north-east south-west line from Cape Girardeau to where the Current River crosses the state line in Ripley Co., the alluvial plain covers about seven counties with an elevation of less than 400 feet above sea level and from ten to twenty feet above the Mississippi River at low-water. A number of rivers and bayous, connected in the eastern portion with the Mississippi, in the western with the St. Francis River, divide into ridges and islands and yearly inundate a large portion of the area when high water overflows their shal- low beds for weeks and months at a time. Thus, Little River, which in very dry summers has hardly enough water to carry a canoe, reaches often a width of from six to seven’ miles; this is also the width of the St. Francis River with its parallel- ane sloughs or arms. AE geet aie a Peninsula of Missouri is called that part of ihe So ntlicat which extends from latitude 36° 30’ south to 36°. With the exception of a narrow strip of sandy ridge between Little and St. Francis Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 15 Rivers the whole region is low and a large part of it under water except in late summer and early fall, or in unusually dry seasons. Originally nine-tenths of the whole area was overgrown with a dense forest, the sandy ridge called Grand Prairie being the only part not fully covered with tree growth. Trees of magnificent size grew here by the millions; Cottonwoods and Cypresses attained gigantic dimensions; Sweet or Red Gums had taken possession of high levels, called islands; while the Bald Cypress occupied the region of the regular yearly overflow, and the Tu- pelos took to the sloughs and rivers themselves. Together with the Sweet Gums holding the higher levels were different kinds of Oak (White, Cow, Red, Shingle, Overcup and Willow Oaks), Red Maples, Elm, White Ash, Sycamore, Pecan, Mockernut, Shagbark Hickory, Hackberry, Sassafras, Black Gum, Tulip, Mulberry, Boxelder, Catalpa, Holly, and others. Dogwoods, Redbud, Papaw, Hazel, Spicebush, and Hercules Club were plentiful among the lower tree growth intertwined with a large variety of climbers, among them Crossvine, Wistaria, Muscadine, Berchemia, Smilax and Cocculus. In the sloughs were Itea, Leitneria, Planera, Micania and many others assisting the broad belts of Polygonum densiflorum and Zizania miliacea to occupy the sides, while Nelumbo, Nymphea and Nuphar covered the deeper portions, filling the whole expanse of the water with plant growth. Excepting the presence of cane-brakes (Arundinaria) in its southern portion, the Peninsula does not differ essentially from the rest of the alluvial southeast in any of its physical features, but, having escaped the so-called civilization longest, retained the primeval conditions longest, and only since the railroads began to penetrate the region ten years ago is it slowly but surely changing its former peculiarly wild and interesting character into one of devastation and desolation. Not only that the best timber is being removed, but hundreds of thousands of giant trees are girdled in the expectation of making the sandy soil agri- culturally available. Levee-building and ditching is going on along the Mississippi River; lakes have been drained and much land has been protected from highwater in the Mississippi; the whole region is in a state of transformation; lumbering and the saw mills have attracted a population whose chief diversion is found in fishing and hunting, in devastating and destroying; surely the Peninsula will soon cease to be the paradise of the an uralist and hunter. Ducks, of which 150,000 were killed in a 16 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Lows. single winter (1893-94) on the Big Lake and shipped from Horners- ville, still visit the region in large numbers in their migrations and many remain in mild winters, but the resident game birds such as the Turkey, and summer residents like the Wood Duck and Hooded Merganser are decreasing rapidly and will, like the Ivorybill, the Snakebird, the Canada Goose, several kinds of ducks and herons, the Bald Eagle and Osprey, in fact like most birds of larger size, disappear and become, as far as their beeding in that part of Missouri is concerned, exterminated. VII. DECREASE OF BIRDS. There is no doubt that the gun is the main factor in the rapid disappearance of all the larger birds. No amount of instruction and law-making will prevent the killing of hawks and owls by farmers and hunters, especially the latter, who sees in every large bird an enemy of his game, a competitor in the chase or fishery. The reduction in the number of the smaller birds is the resuit of quite different causes—causes which cannot be removed because they are the unavoidable consequences of the transformation of a wild, thinly inhabited land into a highly cultivated, thickly settled one. With the felling of the trees, tree-inhabiting wild creatures necessarily disappear; with the draining of the low- lands, marsh birds cannot be expected ary more; the drying-up of the lakes diverts their animal life to other regions, the re- moval of certain plants from a place makes the presence of certain kinds of animal life impossible. When we consider how much one organism is dependent on others, we do not wonder that an annihilation of many forms of animal life, high and low, is in- separably bound up witb such a change as deforestation and subsequent cultivation. While we see a few birds which for- merly lived exclusively in the forest accommodate themselves to the changed conditions and put up with substitutes, such as orchards and artificial groves, many of the true forest-loving birds invariably disappear with the forest and become exterminated as far as that particular locality is concerned. Not counting the secrub-oak barrens of the Ozarks as forest, because very few wood- land birds find a home in them, we can say that only 25 per cent. of the former forest area is left as such at present, and that there- fore 75 per cent. of most of the woodland birds of Missouri have gone since the white man began to settle in the state. But de- Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 17 forestation’is still going on, on even a larger scale than ever be- fore. There may come a time when forestry steps in and takes care of the remaining woodland, and men may even begin to plant new forests as they do in other countries, but such arti- ficial groves compare with the primeval forests as docs a corn- field with a marsh or prairie. Many birds now at home in the forest would feel themselves perfect strangers in such a highly cultivated tract of tree growth. There will be no great variety of trees, no twiners and vines of any kinds, no underbrush and thickets of brambles and briars, no decaying tree-tops and no prostrate monarchs of the forest crumbiing into dust. The floor of the tract will offer no shelter and no hiding places for the nests of ground-builders: no thickets will harbor the many different songsters, which cannot exist without them; no canopy of low trees overgrown with climbers will conceal, as it now so effectively does, the cradles of cur summer guests, and wood-peckers will find no insect-infested trees’ to yield them food and homes. There will be a desolation and stillness throughout these woods that even the few birds present will hardiy have the courage to break. Next to the vanishing of the woodland bird comes that of the marsh bird, whose doom is sealed by the draining of the lowland along our rivers and the transformation of lakes and swampy tracts into cornfields. These are no substitute for sedges, reeds, and flags and the manifold vegetation associated with them; nor will the pond and Jake dwellers return after their watery haunts have yielded to the plow and harrow. Where do they go? We do not know; some of the smaller birds may be- take themselves to meadows, but the great majority disappear forever from the locality and the extermination of some of these species as breeders in our state is rapidly approaching. Those species of birds which frequent the thickets along the edge of woods and the vegetation which fringes the watercourses have a better chance to endure for a while, but these too will constantly be reduced in numbers by the adoption of the ideal clean culture, which does away with all plant growth from fences and roads, and removes even the last remnants along the creeks and small wet-weather branches. The universally deplored decrease of insectivorous and song- birds, generally laid at the door of the egg-collector and the boy with the gun, is therefore easily explained as the direct and in- evitable result of the progress of civilization, which not only changes the physical features of the land, but also introduces 18 Trans. Acad. Sct. of St. Louis. and propagates enemies of the existing fauna not known before. The cat and the dog are responsible for the killing of many of our choicest pets, which like the Bluebirds confidingly seek our protection to be sadly disappointed by Jopsing their young ones to the cat as soon as they leave the nest. Some dogs are as bad as cats in destroying the broods of birds nesting on the ground. Besides.the cat and the dog the hog does the greatest harm to birds which habitually make their nests on or near the ground. In parts of our state where the only woodpatch left standing is given to pasturing swine, no ground nester can long survive, and we find these species now entirely wanting in localities where they usedtobecommon. Cattle, horses and sheep involuntarily inflict losses on birds frequenting their pastures by trampling on their nests or disturbing them in the act of incubating. There are still other ways of destruction unavoidably connected with the tilling or burning over of land at a time when some birds have already nested on the ground and those which escape the fire and the plow may be demolished by the scythe or mower later on. It is easy to see why birds must become scarcer and scarcer, and that it will require all the protection man is able to give to keep them from a lamentable state of rarity. VIII. BIRD PROTECTION. It would be wrong to understand by bird protection simply the restraint from killing them. We have to actively assist them in the battle against adversities. It is not yet too late to save remnants of original forests from destruction; men of means, corporations, or associations of men, should establish such bird reserves in all parts of the state wherever forests remain. All that is required is a strong fence and a guard to keep out the dog and the hog, the cattle and the cat, the axe and the fire, and all other bird enemies, and allow only those persons to enter who appreciate the rare privilege. Land owners and their tenants should be more sparing with axe and fire than they are now; before removing trees, stumps, vines, thickets and hedges they should consider whether it would not be possible to leave them for the birds, especially trees which have already served them for a home. Some birds, and among them the most useful ones, habitually nest in holes in trees; such birds can be helped by setting up bird boxes in trees or on poles in suitable places about the garden, park or orchard. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 19 Birds which nest in thickets can be assisted by planting shrubs and bushes and allowing them to grow thick enough for a bird to hide its nest there. Such birds once attracted will return, like those which build in holes, to the same place every year. Another way of attracting birds to one’s premises is by planting wild fruit trees, especially Wild Cherry and Red Mulberry trees wherever shade and ornamental trees are wanted. It is not only a boon for our little feathered friends, but it keeps them away from our cultivated fruit, for birds need fruit of some kind for their diet, and, being deprived by man of their former wild fruit, they seek a substitute in our orchards, gardens and vine- yards. Our new game, bird and fish protection law of 1905 is as good as can be desired at present, but the enforcement of such a law depends so much on public sentiment that it remains to be seen how much good it will do. A great mistake has been made in framing Section 8 in which the word Chickenhawk is used among birds excluded from protection. Ornithologists do not recognize any particular species under that name, while hunters and others call every large hawk a chickenhawk. By thus inserting the word chickenhawk among birds to be killed, our legislators have doomed the fate of our most useful mice-destroyers, namely the Marsh Hawk, the Red-tailed, Red-shouldered, Broad-winged, and Rough-legged Hawks. All these are commonly known as chickenhawks, though they hardly ever catch chickens, while the Cooper’s and Sharp-shinned Hawks, which really do the damage, are but seldom seen, because they hide in the woods and appear and disappear on their foraging expeditions with such lightning rapidity that they fall seldom to the gun of the hunter who takes pride in killing the slow mouse-hunting species which frequent the fields and perch on fence-posts. The proper thing to do would be to except from protection only the individual caught in the act of stealing, because it cannot be expected that anyone not a tramed ornithologist can at first sight distinguish the harmful from the useful species. Section 8 excepts from protection also the Goshawk and the Great Horned Owl, but the first is a very rare transient visitant, and the latter would never catch a chicken in a cold winter night, if our farmers would properly care for their fowls and keep them in hen-houses during the winter nights. Crows and English Sparrows should, I think, only be destroyed where they do actual damage, but not on general principle. In most parts of our 20 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. state Crows do more good than harm, and if farmers were not prejudiced against them—partly on account of their black garb —and would investigate before passing judgment, they would often find that the damage with which they charge the crow is really done by other animals unseen because nocturnal. The English sparrow does not need much protection. Nature has endowed it with so much sagacity and other useful qualities for self-preservation that its future is safe; and many persons are found who like the bird in spite of everything said against it. It is not true that they drive away our native birds. Until lately every plea for bird protection had to be based on their economic value. The aim of the investigator was to express in dollars and cents the benefit which a species bestows on husbandry by des- troying its enemies, animal and vegetable. On the other hand he had to find out exactly what injury a bird does to man by appropriating things belonging to him, or which he claims as his own because of his superiority in the world of creation. Now the time is coming when one can plead for birds on esthetic grounds without asking, does the actual benefit really outweigh the damage? Or, is the number of insects killed really sufficiently large to pay for the fruit it eats? Or, still worse, what is the percentage of beneficial insects in the insect diet of each par- ticular species? Should a species not be classed among the nox- ious animals, because it was found to destroy 60 per cent. of beneficial insects against only 40 per cent. of injurious ones? There may have been a time when the American farmer could ill afford to lose a bushel of corn, a peck of cherries or something of equally small value with which to pay for the pleasure of being surrounded by bird life all the year round. May be he lacked the esthetic sense which brings the greatest happiness in the enjoy- ment of the beautiful. At present there are many willing and even eager to make sacrifices in order to secure the opportunity for the purest of enjoyments, the admiration of the wonderful works of creation, and certainly not the least among them is the bird! Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 21 Order PYGOPODES. Diving Birds. Suborder Podicipedes. Family Popicrpmpar. Grebes. [1. AECHMOPHORUS OCCIDENTALIS (Lawr.)—Western Grebe.] Podiceps occidentalis. Geog. Dist.—Western North America from central Mexico to western Manitoba, Assiniboia, Alberta and British Columbia; eastward casually to Ontario, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Kansas. Breeds from North Dakota northward, chiefly in Assiniboia and Alberta. Winters mainly along the Pacific coast from British Columbia southward. It has been taken near Omaha, Nebraska, less than fifty miles north of our state line, also at Lawrence, Kan., about the same distance from the western boundary (November 3, 1887), and probably occurs as an irregular visitant on the Missouri River along our western border. 2. COLYMBUS HOLBOELLI (Reinh.). Holboell’s Grebe. Podiceps rubricollis. Podiceps griseigena holboelli. Podiceps holboelliv. Podiceps cristatus. American Red-necked Grebe. Geog. Dist—Northern North America, Greenland and eastern Asia. Breeds from lat. 46° in Minnesota (Elbow Lake and Leech Lake) and from northern North Dakota to the Arctic Ocean, and winters in the United States to South Carolina and southern California. Was taken in western Missouri by Dr. P. R. Hoy in the spring of 1854 and may still visit our state, but is said to have become rare everywhere. 3. CoLymBus auritus Linn. Horned Grebe. Podiceps cornutus. Dytes auritus. Geog. Dist.—Northern Hemisphere. Breeds from northern Wisconsin and northern Nebraska northward, and winters along the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts and in California, migrating through the United States at large. Not recorded from western Missouri, but in the eastern part of the state formerly a fairly common transient visitant in April, 22 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. October and November. Two males in Mr. Hurter’s collection were taken April 13 and November 27, 1877, near St. Louis. 4. COLYMBUS NIGRICOLLIS CALIFORNICUS (Heerm.). American Eared Grebe. Colymbus auritus. Podiceps auritus (in Nuttall and Audubon). Podiceps auritus californicus (in Coues’ Key, 1872). Colymbus californicus (Grin- nell). California Grebe. Horned Grebe. Geog. Dist—Western North America from the Mississippi to the Pacific and from Central America to Great Slave Lake. Breeds in colonies in suitable localities throughout its range, but has suffered greatly from persecution by plume hunters. In Missouri formerly a common transient visitant from April 9 to May 3, and from September 22 to November 2, but much scarcer now; more common west than east. *6,. PoDILYMBUS PODICEPS (Linn.). Pied-billed Grebe. Colymbus podiceps. Podiceps carolinensis. Carolina Grebe. Thick-billed Grebe. Hell-diver. Dabchick. Dipper. Water-witch. Geog. Dist.—North and South America except extreme northern and southern parts. Breeds throughout its range. Winters in southern states and southward. In Missouri by far the commonest of the family. May be found in its migrations in spring and fall on all waters, on rapidly flowing rivers, and even on small ponds. The first arrive in southeast Missouri early in March, at St. Louis the last of March, and in northern Missouri early in April. The bulk is present in April, but migration lasts till early in May. Fall migration takes place from the middle of September until the end of November, chiefly in October. Formerly a common breeder in all reedy lakes throughout the state, but with drainage and persecution it is becoming rarer every year. Suborder Cepphi. Loons and Auks. Family Gaviupas. Loons. 7. GAVIA IMBER (Gunn.). Loon. Urinator immer. Colymbus torquatus. Colymbus glacialis. Great Northern Diver. Walloon. Geog. Dist—Northern part of northern hemisphere. Breeds from northern United States northward to Greenland and Alaska, Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 23 and winters along the Gulf of Mexico and in Lower Cali- fornia; also along the Atlantic coast from Massachusetts south- ward. During their migrations Loons are sometimes found on our larger lakes and rivers in every part of the state from the first week of April to the first of May, and from October 20 to Novem- ber 20, but this being the height of the duck-hunting season, they cannot stay long anywhere and pass on rapidly. 9. [Gavia arctica (Linn.). Black-throated Loon.] Urinator arcticus. Colymbus arcticus. Arctic Loon. Arctic Diver. Geog. Dist.—Northern part of northern hemisphere. Breeds in arctic regions and migrates south in winter to northern United States east of the Rocky Mountains, but apparently extremely rare everywhere on this continent. Students should carefully examine all loons in winter dress, in which they resemble each other extremely. Size is too variable in this family to be a dis- tinguishing feature. Red-throated Loons may easily be separ- ated by the tarsus being longer than the middie toe with claw, but the Common and Black-throated Loons, so different in their beautiful summer dress, can only be told apart by exact mea- surement of the distance from the base of the culmen to the anterior point of the loral feathers, which is greater than the distance from the latter point to the anterior border of the nos- trils in the Common Loon, and not greater in the Black-throated Loon. 11. Gavia LUMM® (Gunn.). Red-throated Loon. Urinator lumme. Colymbus sepientrionalis. Geog. Dist.—Northern part of northern hemisphere. Breeds from New Brunswick and New Foundland to Greenland and through the arctic regions to Alaska. In winter south to United States, coastwise to Florida and southern California and in the interior chiefly on the Great Lakes and larger rivers. Two specimens in winter dress taken November 3, 1902, near New Haven, Mo., are in the collection of Mr. Chas. Eimbeck. It has been taken twice on the Missouri near Omaha in spring and fall (April 6, 1897 and September 28, 1894) and Mr. W. E. Praeger writes me that there is a mounted specimen in Keokuk said to have been shot on the Des Moines River near Ottumwa, Ia. 24 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Order LONGIPENNES. Long-winged Swimmers. Family STERCORARIIDAE. Skuas and Jaegers. 37. STERCORARIUS PARASITICUS (Linn.). Parasitic Jaeger. Lestris Richardsonii. Richardson’s Jaeger (dark phase). Geog. Dist —Northern part of northern hemisphere. Breeds from Greenland along the Arctic sea-coast to the Behring Sea and the Aleutian Islands. In winter from New York, Illinois and California southward to Brazil and in the Old World to South Africa. In migration it has repeatedly been taken in Colorado, in Kan- sas (young male near Lawrence, October 10, 1898, in Nebraska, September 13, 1898, near Lincoln), and Mr. W.E. Praeger has in his collection an immature male shot on the Des Moines rapids October 6, 1896. Mr. J. D. Kastendieck of Billings, Christian Co., Mo., has in his collection of finely mounted birds a specimen taken on a mill-pond near Billings in August 1905. It was alive when he secured it and he kept it several days, feeding it on fresh meat and large insects, which it took eagerly from his hand. Family Larmar. Gulls and Terns. Subfamily Larinae. Gulls. 40. Rissa TRIDACTYLA (Linn.). Kittiwake. Larus tridactylus. Geog. Dist.—Cireumpolar regions in summer. In America in winter south to the Middle States and Great Lakes (Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, Wyoming and Colorado). As a rare straggler this species is placed in our list by Mr. John A. Bryant, who took a specimen near Kansas City in 1897. ” 51. Larus arcentatus Brinn. Herring Gull. Larus argentatus smithsonianus. American Herring Gull. Sea Gull. Geog. Dist.—Northern hemisphere, including the whole of North America. Breeds from Maine, the Great Lakes, Minne- sota and British Columbia to the Arctic Sea. In winter along the whole coast of California, the Atlantic coast, the Great Lakes and the larger rivers south to the Gulf Coast, Cuba and Mexico. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 25 In Missouri the Herring Gull is a transient and winter visitant, most common in early spring and in fall from October 20 to November 20. On the Mississippi and lower Missouri Rivers it may be seen from September 20 to May 5 in varying numbers, leaving us entirely only when the rivers are frozen and returning with the breaking up of the ice. It frequents the lower Missouri River, but is rare in the western part of the state. 54, LARUS DELAWARENSIS Ord. | Ring-billed Gull. Larus zonorhynchus Richards. Common American Gull. Geog. Dist—North America at large, but chiefly in the in- terior. Breeds from the northern United States northward and winters coastwise from British Columbia and Long Island south- ward, also on the Lower Mississippi and in the Gulf States. In Missouri the Ring-billed Gull is a common transient visitant in March and April, October and November. It is much more common in western Missouri than the Herring Gull. 59. LARUS FRANKLINII Sw. & Rich. Franklin’s Gull. Chroicocephalus franklini. Franklin’s Rosy Gull. Geog. Dist.—Interior of North America, migrating chiefly west of the Mississippi River, and breeding from northern United States northward, mostly in the prairie region of Manitoba and Assiniboia. Winters from the mouth of the Mississippi south- ward through Mexico and Central America to Peru. In Missouri formerly a regular transient visitant throughout April and in October and November; now rarely seen in the eastern part of the state. 60. LaARUS PHILADELPHIA (Ord). Bonaparte’s Gull. Larus bonapartei. Chroicocephalus philadelphia. Geog. Dist—Whole of North America, breeding north of the United States, mostly in the wooded region from Hudson Bay to the Yukon marshes and British Columbia. In winter from our southern states to western Mexico. In eastern Missouri a regular transient visitant, formerly com- mon, the latter part of March and early in April, and through October. 62. XEMA SABINII (Sab.). Sabine’s Gull. Larus sabinii. Fork-tailed Gull. Geog. Dist.—Arctic regions. In North America south in 26 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. winter to New York, the Great Lakes, Great Salt Lake and Cali- fornia; casual to Montana, Colorado, Nebraska (September) ; Iowa, October 15, 1891, and October 12, 1894; Kansas, Bahama and coast of Peru. It finds a place in our list on the strength of three specimens taken by Mr. Chas. K. Worthen of Warsaw, IIl., in September 1900, on the Mississippi River, bounding Clark Co., Mo., in the northeast corner of the state. Subfamily Sterninae. Terns. 64. STERNA CASPIA Pallas. Caspian Tern. Sterna tschegrava. Geog. Dist.—Nearly cosmopolitan. In North America breed- ing locally from Newfoundland to Virginia, and in colonies on small islands in Lake Michigan, in Texas, Louisiana and Nevada. In migration widely scattered, having been taken in Wyoming, Nebraska, Minnesota, Iowa, Ohio, etc. Mr. Chas. K. Worthen of Warsaw, Ill., writes me that he took Caspian Terns a number of times during the latter part of May and fore part of June, usually while flying over a big sandbar in the Mississippi River not far from the Missouri shore. Mr. W. EK. Praeger saw Caspian Terns frequently at Keokuk in the fall of 1887 and ’88 from September 9 to October 15. Mr. John D. Kastendiek has a fine specimen in his collection of mounted birds. It was shot on the mill pond at Billings, Christian Co., about April or May, 1895. 69. STERNA FORSTERI Nuttall. Forster’s Tern. Sterna havelli. Havell’s Tern. Geog. Dist.—North America generally. Breeds locally in the United States from the Atlantic to the Pacific, but chiefly in the interior north to latitude 57°. In winter southward to Brazil. In Missouri, both east and west, formerly a fairly common, now rather rare, transient visitant in April and May, and again in September and October. 70. STERNA HIRUNDO Linn. Common Tern. Sterna wilsonii. Sterna fluviatilis. Common Sea Swallow. Wilson’s Tern. Geog. Dist—Northern hemisphere. In America chiefly along the Atlantic coast north to the Arctic coast and west on large Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missourt. 27 lakes to Alberta. Breeds from Arizona, Texas and Florida northward. Winters from Virginia southward and along the Gulf coast to western Mexico. In Missouri now a rare transient visitant in the second half of May. In the eastern part of the state it was formerly much more common than in the western, but it has also been taken at St. Joseph by Mr. Sidney 8. Wilson (May 28, 1895). *74, STERNA ANTILLARUM (Less.). Least Tern. Sterna minuta. Sterna argentea. Sterna superciliaris. Sterna frenata. Geog. Dist.—Northern South America, northward to southern California, Dakota and New England, breeding throughout its range, and wintering south of the United States. The Least Tern was formerly a not uncommon summer resi- dent on sandbars in the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers from May 1 to September 15, but none have been seen the last few years, though they may still breed in small numbers within the state. *77. HyDROCHELIDON NIGRA SURINAMENSIS (GMEL.). Black Mer. Hydrochelidon larijormis. Sterna nigra. Hydrochelidon fissipes. Sterna fissipes. Hydrochelidon plumbea. Short-tailed Tern. Geog. Dist —Temperate and tropical America from Alaska to Chile and Brazil. Breeds from the middle United States west of the Alleghanies northward, the marshy districts of Manitoba and Assiniboia being its chief breeding grounds at present. In Missouri the Black Tern was formerly a fairly common breeder in marshy regions, but it is now rare except in migra- tion, when fairly common from the end of April to the last of May and in August and September, sometimes to October 21. Order STEGANOPODES. Totipalmate Swimmers. Family ANHINGIDAE. Darters. *118. ANHINGA ANHINGA (Linn.). Anhinga. Plotus anhinga. Plotus melanogaster. Darter. Snakebird. Water Turkey. Geog. Dist.—Tropical and subtropical America, north in United States to South Carolina on the Atlantic coast and south- ern Missouri in the Mississippi Valley. 28 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. With drainage, deforestation and settlement of swampy regions this species is fast receding southward. Twenty years ago Mr. E. W. Nelson observed the Anhinga in the vicinity of Cairo, where Hennicott hadreported it as of common occurrence in 1865. In 1896 it was still a fairly common summer resident in the watery region of Dunklin and Pemiskot Counties, but since the railroads penetrated the Peninsula in all directions and made it easily accessible to the lumberman and hunter, there is little hope for a continuance of its abode in Missouri, though a few pairs may still be found in secluded spots. Family PHALACROCORACIDAE. Cormorants. 120. PHALACROCORAX DILOPHUS (Swain.). Double-crested Cor- morant. Pelecanus (Carbo) dilophus. Graculus dilophus. Geog. Dist —Eastern North America, north to Great Slave Lake, east to Utah and Wyoming. Breeds chiefly north of United States and winters from the Gulf States southward. In Missouri Cormorants are still common in migration frem the middle of March till the end of May and in fall from September 25 to November 15, chiefly in April and October. They are rarer in the western part of the state. *120a. PHALACROCORAX DILOPHUS FLORIDANUS (Aud.). Florida Cormorant. Phalacrocorax floridanus. Southern Double-crested Cormorant. Geog. Dist.—South Atlantic and Gulf States and lower Miss- issippi Valley to the mouth of the Ohio. In the Peninsula of Missouri Cormorants are still breeding in considerable numbers. When feeding young in their nests in the high timber along the Mississippi, troops of them are continually flying to and from the distant feeding grounds in the bayous or lakes and sloughs in the Little River and St. Francis basin. [121. PHALACROCORAX MEXICANUS (Brandt). Mexican Cormo- rant]. Carbo mexicanus. Geog. Dist.—Mexico, Western Gulf States and lower Missis- sippi Valley to mouth of the Ohio. It was taken near Cairo in the Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 29 spring of 1879 and twice in Kansas. (April 2, 1872, at Lawrence, and in Mitchell Co.) Being a very common summer resident in several sections of Louisiana it seems probable that roving individuals, following the example of several other species of birds, may straggle up the Mississippi Valley into our state. Students should be on the lookout for them when visiting the Peninsula in summer or early autumn. Family PELECANIDAB. Pelicans. 125. PELECANUS ERYTHRORHYNCHOS Gmel. American White Pelican. P. americanus. P. trachyrhynchus. P. onocrotalus. Geog. Dist——North America; rare in northeastern states, common in the interior; north to Mackenzie River, lat. 61e. Breeds from Minnesota, Great Salt Lake, Utah and Eagle Lake, Cal., northward. Winters south of United States to Central America. In Missouri the White Pelican is a regular and still common transient visitant in April, September and October, occurring in large flocks on the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, where it finds a safe retreat on the immense sandbars in the middle of these rivers. For feeding purposes it visits also smaller bodies of water, but retires to the large rivers for rest and roost. Small parties are sometimes seen in summer (May, June, July and August)—individuals which either did not get to breeding, or have been disturbed and driven from their nesting grounds. In his Preliminary Report on the Animals of the Mississippi Bottom near Quincy, Mr. H. Garman mentions the presence of a flock of forty Pelicans in August 1888; also troops of Cormorants. This tends to show that these species may wander about before their regular time for migration has come. From the notes of early explorers it is evident that Pelicans were formerly abundant along the lower Missouri River. Under date of April 28, 1833, Max, Prince zu Wied writes: “One hundred or more Pelicans go north in wedge or crescent shape.”’ and the next day, April 29, 1833, he saw a still larger flock. Audubon often speaks of flocks of Pelicans when he went up the Missouri in April, 1843, and saw some as late as May 9 near the corner of the state. Also on his way back in October, 1843, he mentions great flocks of geese 30 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. and pelicans on the 10th near Leavenworth and an abundance of geese and pelicans on the 13th near Brunswick. Mr. Jasper Blines of Alexandria, Mo., writes in Forest and Stream, vol. 39, p. 294: “On September 25, 1892, immense flocks of pelicans appeared along the Mississippi (Clark Co.) pursuing their annual migration southward. One flock I observed was a quarter of a mile in length and contained hundreds of these great birds. The pelicans are the only wild fowl which seem to maintain their average numbers.” Order ANSERES. Lamellirostral Swimmers. Family ANATIDAE. Ducks, Geese and Swans. Subfamily Merginae. Mergansers. 129. MERGANSER AMERICANUS (Cass.). American Merganser. Mergus americanus. Mergus merganser. American Sheldrake. Fish Duck. Goosander. Buff-breasted Sheldrake. Geog. Dist—North America generally. Breeds now chiefly from Newfoundland, Labrador and British Columbia northward, locally also in northern United States, and sparingly in the mountainous regions of the West. Winters through the southern United States to the Gulf coast. In Missouri the Merganser is a common transient visitant and one of the earliest migrants in spring, coming as soon as the ice breaks up; some remain in mild winters. 130. MeRGANSER SERRATOR (Linn.). Red-breasted Merganser. Mergus serrator. Red-breasted Sheldrake. Fishduck. Geog. Dist.—Northern portion of northern hemisphere. Breeds from Newfoundland and Greenland through the wooded region to the Aleutian Islands; south sparingly to the northern United States. Winters in the United States, mostly coastwise, rare in the interior. A specimen, of this, in Missouri apparently rare species, was taken near Kansas City, April 20, 1902, by Mr. John A. Bryant. Mr. W. E. Praeger took two females near Keokuk, February 14, 1890,and Mr. Edmonde §. Currier of Keokuk gives the following dates: February 21 and 23, 1892, March 28, 1899, May 4, 1902, October 19, 1902, November 12, 1896. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 31 7*131, LOPHODYTES CUCULLATUS (Linn.). Hooded Merganser. Mergus cucullatus. Sawbill. Hooded Sheldrake. Fishduck. Geog. Dist—Whole North America; breeding through most of its range; south in winter to Cuba and Mexico; a few remain in the southern states. In Missouri the Hooded Merganser is, in favorable localities, a fairly common summer resident from early in March till No- vember. The heavily wooded bottoms of the larger rivers and the swampy southeastern counties are the breeding grounds of this species, often mistaken for Wood Ducks, especially the females and young ones, sometimes even the males, the dress of which is much plainer in summer than in early spring. More common and generally distributed are the transient visitants in spring and fall. Some stay in mild winters, but as a rule the last leave the state in December and return in March. Subfamily Anatinae. River Ducks. ®” *132. Anas BosHAs Linn. Mallard. Anas domestica. Geog. Dist.—Northern hemisphere. Breeds chiefly north of United States from Greenland to Alaska. Formerly a breeder in most of the United States west of the Alleghanies and north of the Ohio Valley, it is now rare in the Eastern, but still common in some of the Western States. Winters through the Southern States to central Mexico and Lower California, rarely to Central America and Cuba. In Missouri the Mallard is a very common transient visitant; in spring from the breaking up of the ice in January or February to about April 25, most numerous in the second and third week of March; in fall from early in September to the middle of Decem- ber. The bulk generally does not come before October 10 to northern Missouri, and not before October 20 to the southeast, and leaves the former about November 20 and the latter nearly a month later. Many remain in open winters, and even in severe winters a few are known to have wintered in northern Missouri, taking refuge in air holes caused by warm springs in rivers and visiting cornfields in the daytime. A few pairs still find safe breeding grounds in the large tracts of spartina grass in the marshes of north Missouri, but, as the open season for duck 32 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. shooting is now extended to the first of May, there is no hope for an increase in their numbers. 133. ANAS oBscURA Gmel. Black Duck. Black Mallard. Dusky Duck. Geog. Dist.—Eastern North America, breeding formerly in the northern United States east of the Mississippi River, now chiefly from Newfoundland and the Maritime Provinces to Hudson Bay and west to the Red River. In migration it has been found as far west as eastern Nebraska and eastern Kansas. Its chief winter home is on the Atlantic coast from Long Island to northern Florida, though quite a number winter in Louisiana. In Missouri the Black Duck is sometimes, though rather rarely, taken with Mallards in their migrations to and from their winter habitat. Dates of their capture run from March 10 to April 10 and from October 13 to December 1. 133a. ANAS OBSCURA RUBRIPES Brewster. Red-legged Black Duck. Geog. Dist.—The breeding range of this lately separated sub- species includes northern Labrador and the Hudson Bay region. The southern limit has not yet been determined. It winters somewhat farther north than the Black Duck, as far north as Nova Scotia and as far south as South Carolina. In migration it has been taken as far west as Nebraska, and as far south as Mississippi Co., Arkansas (Nov. 5, 1887), but nothing is known of its winter home in the interior. A specimen in the possession of Mr. Emmett Cole of Malta Bend was taken in Saline Co. and, if students will pay more attention to the separation of the different subspecies, this more northern form of Black Duck will probably be found to be a regular transient visitant in our state. 135. CHAULELASMUS STREPERUS Linn. Gadwall. Anas strepera. Gray Duck. Geog. Dist.—Northern hemisphere. The breeding range in America extended formerly from the upper Mississippi Valley to the Pacific, now chiefly through the prairie region of Canada, north to lat. 68°, and from the Rocky Mountains west to British Columbia, south to Colorado and nearly throughout California. It is rare, even as a mere straggler, in Ontario and Quebec and Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog oj the Birds of Missouri. 33 the northern Atlantic States. It winters from North Carolina to Florida, but chiefly in the lower Mississippi Valley and thence westward to Central Mexico and Lower California. In Missouri the Gadwall is a fairly common transient visitant from the last of February to the end of April, when they are generally found in pairs. They used to be summer residents in northern Missouri, and only a few years ago were considered rare breeders in Clark Co., Mo., by Mr. Ed. 8. Currier of Keokuk, Ia. In the southward migration they appear about the middle of October and remain in the southeast well into December. 136. Marnca PENELOPE Linn. Widgeon. Anas penelope. Geog. Dist —Northern part of Old World and Aleutian Islands. In America a frequent straggler, chiefly along the Atlantic coast from Greenland and Newfoundland to Florida. In the interior it has been reported from Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wiscon- sin, and Nebraska. On the Pacific coast it has occurred several times in California, British Columbia and Alaska. A remarkable fact is, that, while the Atlantic coast records are nearly all made in winter (October 20to February 5) and none later than March 25, those of the interior are all made in spring (March 23 to April 18). Mr. Frank Schwarz of St. Louis mounted a male which was killed by a hunter in the vicinity of St. Louis, April 10, 1905. W137. MARECA AMERICANA Gmel. Baldpate. Anas americana. American Widgeon. Geog. Dist —Whole of North America with the exception of its northeastern part, being only a straggler north of the Great Lakes and Chesapeake Bay. Breeds sparingly on the plains of Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota, more commonly in Colo- rado, Utah and Nevada (formerly east to Indiana and Wisconsin), now chiefly from Minnesota, North Dakota, Manitoba and Assini- boia northwestward to the Arctic circle. In Alaska to Kotzebue Sound. South to Oregon. It winters in California, and in the East from Virginia and the Ohio River to Cuba, Mexico and Guatemala. In Missouri the Baldpate is a common transient visitant. It is present in spring from the last of February in the southeast, and from the middle of March in the north, to the middle of 34 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. April, occasionally to the end of the month (April 28, 1904, Kansas City, Bryant). Those seen in April are generally in pairs. In fall migration they reach us early in October, are common from October 10 to November 20; some linger on the southeastern waters well into winter. Some writers use the term ‘‘ wintering ”’ when a species is seen in every month of winter, but this is misleading. Many birds stay with us until the first part of January when the severest period of winter begins, are gone for over a month, but return to us before the end of February, at which time the strength of win- ter is broken and the ice of the rivers has moved out. / Y 139. Nerrion carotinensis (Gmel.). Green-winged Teal. Anas crecca. Anas carolinensis. Querquedula carolinensis. Geog. Dist—Whole of North America. Breeds from New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador west to British Colum- bia, northwest to Kotzebue Sound and throughout the Aleutian Islands, north to Mackenzie River. Also in the mountains of the western United States, and formerly in many localities of the Eastern States from northern Illinois and Nebraska northward. At present the main breeding grounds extend from Manitoba northwestward to Lake Athabaska. It winters along the Pacific coast from British Columbia to Jalisco and through the.southern Atlantic and Gulf States to southern Mexico, rarely to Cuba and Honduras. In Missouri the Green-winged Teal is a very common transient visitant. It returns to the southeast soon after the middle of February, to the marshes of north Missouri and the western part of the state about the first of March. The bulk is present from March 10 to 25, but the last has not left the state before a month later. In autumn the first begin to reappear between September 15 and 22 and from the end of the month to the middle of No- vember they may be found in many parts of the state. They are . mostly all gone by the middle of December, but in mild winters | a few may be found in January. ff . . al 1 “ 140. QuERQUEDULA piscors (Linn.). Blue-winged Teal. . Anas discors. Geog. Dist.—North America, chiefly east of Rocky Mountains | and west of Great Lakes. Breeds locally from northern Ohio, southern Indiana, Missouri, Texas and New Mexico, but mainly Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 35 from northern United States northward to Saskatchewan; rarely east to New England and Newfoundland and Labrador, or west to Nevada, central Oregon, British Columbia and Alaska. It winters from the South Atlantic and Gulf States south through the West Indies and Mexico to Central and northern South America as far as Brazil and Chile. In Missouri it is a very common transient visitant. The first reach the southeast early in March, sometimes even in February. On the marshes near St. Louis the first are usually taken between the 10th and 17th of March and in northern Missouri about a week later. The bulk is present from March 15 to April 15 and the last transients are found about April 25. Pairs seen in the latter part of April or in May intend to remain and would breed if let alone; but, as they are hunted wherever seen, they probably succeed but seldom in rearing a brood. The last instance of eggs being found in the state is given by Mr. E. 8. Currier, who states that on May 23, 1889, a nest was found by boys in Clark Co., and an ege was brought to Mr. F. M. Crawford at Wayland. A pair of Bluewings was seen by me June 17, 1906, near Malta Bend, Saline Co., and others in the same month near Peruque, St. Charles Co. The first flocks of southbound Bluewings have been seen in northern Missouri on the first of September, but the bulk is with us from September 15 to October 25, and some linger for another month (November 22, 1905, St. Charles Co.). 141. QUERQUEDULA CYANOPTERA (Vieillot). Cinnamon Teal. Anas cyanoptera. Red-breasted Teal. Geog. Dist.—Western America from Mexico to British Co- lumbia and from Peru to the Straits of Magellan and the Falkland Islands. Breeds east to Wyoming and southern Texas, strageling in migration into the Mississippi Valley, and wintering south of the United States, chiefly in Mexico. An occasional straggler in Missouri it has been taken as far east as the vicinity of St. Louis, as several mounted specimens in private collections attest. It is said to occur with flocks of Blue- winged Teals. W149. SPATULA CLYPEATA (Linn.). Shoveller. Anas clypeata. Spoon-bill. Spoon-billed Duck. Geog. Dist.—Northern hemisphere; in America, rare on the Atlantic coast north of the Potomac, common from Indiana 36 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. westward to California. Breeding formerly in most of its range, it is now restricted in the United States to western plains and mountain parks. In Canada it breeds from Manitoba west to central British Columbia and northwest to Kotzebue Sound, being most abundant between 51° and 54° lat. It winters from Virginia to Georgia and through the Gulf states to Mexico and Guatemala, rarely to Florida and the West Indies or South America. In Missouri the Shoveller is a fairly common transient visitant from Mareh 10 to April 25 and from October 1 to November 20. In mild weather earlier and later dates have been obtained in central Missouri (February 20, 1903, New Haven, Dr. Eimbeck, and December 4, 1902, St. Charles Co.), and in southeastern Missouri some have been taken in January. The Shoveller is known to have bred in the state (Clark Co., E. S. Currier), and even now pairs are seen late in April or even in May (May 16, 1905, Warrensburg), which would probably breed, if conditions were favorable. ¢ 143. Dariva acura (Linn.). Pintail. Anas acuta. Anas caudacuta. Sprig. Sprigtail. Geog. Dist——Northern hemisphere; breeding sparingly in western United States, but chiefly from Manitoba, Assiniboia and British Columbia northward to the Arctic coast, rarely eastward from Hudson Bay to New Brunswick. It is the commonest duck in Alaska. It winters from Virginia and Louisiana southward to Cuba and through Mexico to Costa Rica, rarely to Panama. Also along the Pacific coast from British Columbia south through - California. In Missouri the Sprig, as it is commonly called, is a very com- mon transient visitant in spring and fall, lingering long with us in spring, but passing through rapidly in fall. Flocks of Sprigs may be found in one part of the state or another from the end of January to April 20, and from October 1 to December 15, more commonly from March 1 to 25, and from October 10 to November 25. With Mallards the Sprigs are the first ducks to return to us as soon as the snow disappears from the ground and before the ice has broken up in the lakes or left the rivers. They appeared near St. Louis February 24, 1905, three days before the ice broke up in the Mississippi and only four days after the first thaw followed one of our severest winters, in which the ground was covered for four weeks with a solid sheet of icy snow. The Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 37 first appear even at our northern state line seldom later than the end of February. 0 e144, Arx sponsa (Linn.).. Wood Duck. Anas sponsa. Dendronessa sponsa. Summer Duck. Geog. Dist—North America from latitude 54° southward to Cuba and southern California. Breeds through most of its range and winters in the South Atlantic and Gulf States and in Cali- fornia, returning early to the breeding grounds. As a transient visitant it is still fairly common from March 15 to April 20, and from October 20 to November 25. It is also a fairly common summer resident in all heavily wooded river bottoms, especially in those of the Peninsula, and many succeed in rearing broods in spite of continuous persecution. In August and September gatherings of from 75 to 100 birds may yet be found in favorite secluded spots in our river bottoms, to which they repair daily for weeks, if not disturbed too much. They are early breeders, and young out of nest may be met with in the second week of May. Subfamily Fuligulinae. River Ducks. 146. AYTHYA AMERICANA (Hyt.). Redhead. Anas ferina. Fuligula ferina. Fuligula americana. Pochard. Geog. Dist.—North America to about latitude 54°, rare on the North Atlantic coast. Breeds from southern California sparingly to British Columbia and locally from Nebraska northward, most numerously in the reedy marshes of Manitoba, Assiniboia, Alberta and Saskatchewan. It winters from the coast of British Columbia and from the Potomac through the southern states southward to southern Mexico. In Missouri the Redhead is a fairly common transient visitant from March 1 to April 10, exceptionally earlier in February and even in January, or later (April 19, 1894, Currier) and in fall from October 15 to December 1. While abundant in large flocks in spring, it is less often met with in the fall. 147. AYTHYA VALLISNERIA (Wils.). Canvas-back. Anas vallisneria. Fuligula valisneria. White-back. Geog. Dist.—Whole of North America; rare on north Atlantic coast, more plentiful from Quebec and Ontario westward to 38 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Alberta, where most abundant; northwestward to Sitka. Breeds locally from Minnesota, North Dakota, Colorado and Nevada northward. Winters from Fraser River to Mazatlan and from Chesapeake Bay and the Ohio River southward through the southern states to central Mexico. Though not rare the Canvas-back is a less regular transient visitant in Missouri than the Redhead and in smaller troops. t occurs sometimes in February, but mostly between March 1 and April 15, and in fall from October 25 to December 10, oftenest from the middle to the end of November. 148. AyTHYA MARILA (Linn.). Scaup Duck. Aythya marila nearctica. Anasmarila. Fuligula marila. Fulix marila Big Black-head. Big Blue-bill. Geog. Dist—Northern hemisphere; in America breeding from Minnesota and British Columbia throughout northwestern Canada to Kotzebue Sound and the Aleutian Islands, more commonly northward. Winters from the Aleutian Islands along the Pa- cific coast almost to Mexico, in the lower Mississippi Valley and abundantly from Long Island to Chesapeake Bay, less commonly along the South Atlantic and Gulf coast to southern Texas. Like the Canvas-back, and even more so, the Big Blue-bill is irregular in its appearance in Missouri, and never occurs in large flocks like its smaller cousin. Available dates of its capture on the marshes of northeastern Missouri range from February 28 to April 1 (One taken May 18 was probably a cripple). In fall from November 10 to December 5. f 149. Ayruya AFFINis (Kyt.). Lesser Scaup Duck. Fuligula affinis. Fulix affinis. Fuligula mariloides. Fuligula minor. Fuligula marila in Audubon’s works. Little Blue-bill. Little Black- head. Geog. Dist——North America, breeding from the northern border of the United States northward through the prairie region to the Arctic Circle, and from Hudson Strait to the Yukon River; rarely in northern United States and on the Pacific coast. It winters in the South Atlantic States and southward to the Greater Antilles; it is especially common along the Gulf coast to Guatemala; less common in California. In Missouri the Blue-bill is a very common transient visitant, occurring in large flocks from the last of February to the middle of April, and from October 1 to December 5. Earliest for St. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 39 Charles Co., February 16, 1904; latest December 4, 1902. Ear- liest for Clark Co. (Currier), February 21, 1892; latest in spring, April 25, 1897; in fall, December 5, 1899. Pairs are occasionally seen in summer (June 18, 1901, Clark Co., Currier, and June 17, 1906, in Saline Co.), but whether they breed has not been ascer- tained. an AYTHYA COLLARIS (Donov.). Ring-necked Duck. Anas collaris. Fulix collaris. fFuligula collaris. Anas fuligula. Anas (Fuligula) rufitorques. Ring-neck. Ring-bill. Blackjack. Geog. Dist.—North America, rare on North Atlantic Coast. Breeding from southern Minnesota and North Dakota northward to Lake Athabasca; sparingly west of the Rocky Mountains. In winter chiefly along the Gulf Coast to Central America and Cuba; north to the Carolinas and the Ohio River. The Blackjack is a very common transient visitant in Missouri. The first arrive from the south about a week after the first Mal- lards and Sprigs have come. In short winters the species may be absent a few weeks only. In the vicinity of St. Louis the first have been noted February 18, 1898; in some years they were not seen before the middle of March, but usually varying numbers are frequenting the marshes of northeastern Missouri from March 10 to April 10, sometimes to the end of the month (April 28, 1893, Clark Co., Currier). Their presence in fall is also governed largely by the weather conditions. In 1903 they were plentiful in St. Charles Co. from October 3 till December 4; in other years they came as late as October 20 and were gone a month later. 151. CLANGULA CLANGULA AMERICANA (Bonap.). American Golden-eye. Glaucionetta clangula americana. Fuligula clangula. Bucephala amer- icana. Anas clangula (in Wilson). Clangula glaucium. Clangula vul- garis. Bucephala clangula. Whistler. Great Head. Garrot. Whistle- wing. Geog. Dist—North America; breeding from Newfoundland, New England, northern Michigan, North Dakota, Montana and British Columbia northward in wooded regions to the Mackenzie River and Alaska. It winters abundantly on the Atlantic coast from the British Provinces to South Carolina, along the Pacific coast, and less commonly on the Gulf coast. In Missouri the Whistle-wing is a frequent transient or winter 40 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. visitant on the larger rivers. At Keokuk, which is situated on the Mississippi River at the foot of the rapids, Mr. E. 8S. Currier had the opportunity to observe it every winter for eleven years and found it in flocks of from 30 to 100, sometimes much more numerous, as on January 17, 1903, and March 5, 1895, when a thousand were present. His dates of those first seen vary from November 9, 1895, to December 4, 1892, and those for last seen from January 17,1903, to April 7,1899. A female in the Hurter collection was taken near St. Louis, January 1, 1875. 152. CLANGULA ISLANDICA (Gmel.). Barrow’s Golden-eye. Glaucionetta islandica. Anas islandica. Rocky Mountain Garrot. Geog. Dist —Northern North America; breeding from moun- tains of western United States and from Bay of Fundy to Green- land and Alaska. It winters around the Gulf of St. Lawrence, in the northern United States, the Rocky Mountains and on the Pacific coast south to central California. Mr. E.8. Currier gives the species as rare, but occurring amongst the immense number of Golden-eyes which winter on the Des Moines rapids. Mr. W. E. Praeger obtained a female shot March 27, 1888, on Lima Lake, IIl., a few miles east of the state line. In a letter sent to Mr. R. Ridgway and published in Forest and Stream, vol. 36, p. 485, Mr. Frank W. Sparks of St. Louis writes under date of February 10, 1891: “This fall, while shooting at the same place (New Albany, southeast Missouri) I killed a specimen of Barrow’s Golden-eye. Unfortunately this duck, or more properly drake, was half picked by one of the boys in camp when I discovered it. He is rare so far east, is he not?” To this Mr. R. Ridgway replied: ‘Regarding your capture of Barrow’s Golden-eye in Missouri, this is not so remarkable, as specimens have previously been taken in the vicinity of St. Louis, in Kansas and southern Illinois. These localities represent, however, about the southern limit of the winter range of the species, which is a northern and not a western bird, as you seem to regard it.” 153. CHARITONETTA ALBEOLA (Linn.). Buffle-head. Anas albeola. Fuligula albeola. Clangula albeola. Bucephala_ albeola. Butterball. Dipper. Geog. Dist.—North America; breeds from Maine, Ontario, Wisconsin, Wyoming and British Columbia northward in all the forest country to the upper Yukon. In winter along all coasts oe Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 41 of the United States, and less regularly on the Great Lakes and larger rivers of the interior; south to Mexico and Lower California. In Missouri the Butterball is a fairly common transient visitant in early spring and late fall. It is sometimes taken in February, even in the western and northern part of the state (February 5, 1904, Kansas City, Bryant; February 22, 1885, Keokuk, Prae- ger), but small troops are met with most frequently between March 1 and April 10, exceptionally later (May 4, 1892, Keokuk, Currier). In fall the earliest record is October 10, 1904, (Kansas City, Bryant) and the latest December 4, 1892 (Keokuk, Currier). The largest number of dates were obtained between October 10 and November 20. 154. HareLpA HYEMALIS (Linn.). Old-squaw. Anas hyemalis. Clangula hyemalis. Harelda glacialis. Anas glacialis. Anas longicauda. Long-tailed Duck. South-southerly. Old-wife. Geog. Dist —Northern hemisphere; breeding along the Arctic coast, and wintering from the Aleutian chain down the whole Pacific coast to California, and on the Atlantic coast from St. Lawrence to North Carolina; less regularly on the Great Lakes and larger rivers of the interior south to the Ohio River, excep- tionally even to Louisiana (February 28, 1885, and February 13, 1899). In Missouri an irregular winter visitant between November 20 and April 1. Old birds are always rare, but young birds are some- times common. 155. Hisrrionicus Histrionicus (Linn.). Harlequin Duck. Anas histrionica. Fuligula histrionica. Histrionicus torquatus. Histrion- icus minitus. Anas minuta. Geog. Dist——Northern North America, Iceland and Eastern Asia. Breeds in America from Newfoundland, Labrador and the east coast of Greenland, south of the Arctic Circle, on rapid streams of the interior west to Alaska and British Columbia, and in the mountains of the western United States south to lat. 38°. In winter irregularly to the northern United States from the coast of Maine to California, but everywhere rare and apparently on the decrease. In Missouri a rare winter visitant. One was taken March 21, 1897, in Montgomery Co. by Mr. K. M. Parker, and another, taken near St. Louis, October 29, is in the abmte collection. 42 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Near Omaha, Neb., it has been taken as early as September 16, 1893, and September 19, 1895 (Osprey vol. 3, p. 131). [162. SOMATERIA SPECTABILIS (Linn.). King Eider]. Fuligula spectabilis. Geog. Dist—Northern part of northern hemisphere. Breeds in Arctic region from the Atlantic to Pacific; in America in winter south to New Jersey and the Great Lakes, rarely south to Georgia and California. Mr. Wm. E. Praeger has in his collection a young male which was shot on the Mississippi River near Keokuk, November 10, 1894 (Auk, vol. 12, p. 86). 163. OIDEMIA AMERICANA Swains. American Scoter. Anas nigra. Fuligula americana. Black Secoter. Sea Coot. Scoter Duck. Geog. Dist.—Northern North America and eastern Asia. In summer in the Hudson Bay country, but breeding most abun- dantly on the Pacific coast from the Aleutian Islands to Kotzebue Sound and northeastern Asia. In winter to the coasts, lakes and larger rivers of the United States, chiefly north and eastward, rarely to lower Mississippi Valley and on the Pacific coast to California. Also in Japan. Black Scoters in immature plumage are probably not as rare in Missouri as appears from captured specimens. They have repeatedly been taken in southeastern Nebraska, and Mr. W. E. Praeger obtained one at the Des Moines rapids near Keokuk, October 31, 1895. An immature specimen killed near St. Louis, November 24, 1875, is in the Hurter collection, and there is a report, though somewhat questionable, of a flock of fifty being seen May 2, 1883, on a millet field near Anna, Union Co., in southern Illinois, feeding on the newly sown seed. 165. OIDEMIA DEGLANDI Bonap. White-winged Scoter. Anas fusca. Fuligula fusca. Oidemia fusca. Oidemia bimaculata. Oidemia velvetina. Melanetta velvetina. Oidemia fusca velvetina. Velvet Scoter. White-winged Coot. Black Surf Duck. Velvet Duck. Geog. Dist.—Northern North America; breeding from Gulf of St. Lawrence to 59° lat. in Labrador, and from North Dakota and Alberta to Hudson Bay and mouth of the Mackenzie River; less commonly from British Columbia to Kotzebue Sound and the coast of northeastern Siberia. In winter to the coast of the Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 48 Pacific from British Columbia to Lower California, and on the Atlantic from Nova Scotia to South Carolina, also on the Great Lakes and irregularly throughout the United States south to the Gulf Coast. In Missouri a rather rare winter visitant on the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. A male in the Hurter collection was taken near St. Louis, October 18, 1883, and two in immature plumage, November 24, 1877. A female taken near Kansas City is in the Public Museum of that city. Mr. W. E. Praeger has one in his collection taken October 26, 1895, onthe Des Moines River near Keokuk. In southeastern Nebraska specimens were secured October 14, 1899, and December 8, 1900. 166. OIDEMIA PERSPICILLATA (Linn.). Surf Scoter. Anas perspicillata. Fuligula perspiciilata. Pelionetta perspicillata. Pelionetta trowbridgii. Surf Duck. Sea Coot. Surf Coot. Gray Coots (young and females). Spectacled Coot. Skunkhead. Geog. Dist.—North America; breeding from Newfoundland and Labrador (Greenland?) along the Arctic coast to Alaska. In winter along the Pacific Coast from the Aleutians to Lower California; on the Atlantic Coast from Maine to Florida, chiefly from Massachusetts to North Carolina; in the interior throughout the United States irregularly as far south as Louisiana. In Missouri a rare winter visitant. An immature specimen taken near St. Louis, May 3, 1876, is in the Hurter collection. Mr. Wm. E. Praeger has specimens taken near Keokuk, October 19, 1895, and October 22, 1896. A young male was secured October 29, 1887, at Lawrence, Kan., and one, also a male, at Lincoln, Neb., October 7, 1896. A167. ERISMATURA JAMAICENSIS (Gmel.). Ruddy Duck. Anas rubidus. Erismatura rubida. Fuligula rubida. Anas jamaicensis. Spine-tailed Duck. Bristle-tail. Fool Duck. Geog. Dist.—From northern South America through the Greater Antilles and Central America to the Great Slave Lake. Breeds locally throughout its range, but mainly in the reedy lakes of Manitoba, Assiniboia and Alberta. In winter to California, South Atlantic and Gulf States and southward. In Missouri the Ruddy Duck is a fairly common, but generally distributed, transient visitant. In spring it is with us from the latter part of February (February 26, 1884, St. Louis) to the end of April (April 25, 1881, a fine male in the Hurter collection) 44 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. and in fall from October 10 to November 20. According to Mr. Hy. Nehrling the Ruddy Duck was formerly a rare breeder in southwestern Missouri. Subfamily Anserinae. Geese. 169. CHEN HYPERBOREA (Pall.). Lesser Snow Goose. Anser hyperboreus. Anser albatus. Chen hyperboreus albatus. Snow Goose. White Brant. Geog. Dist.—Northeastern Asia and western North America to the Mississippi Valley. Breeds within the Arctic circle from Liverpool Bay to Alaska. In winter from British Columbia through the interior valleys to southern California, Mexico, Texas and Louisiana. In Missouri the Snow Goose, often called Brant, is a fairly common, generally distributed transient visitant from the end of February (February 25, 1884, St. Louis) to the middle of April (April 16, 1902, New Haven; April 17, 1894, Vernon Co.), chiefly in March, and in fall from October 10 to November 20. 169a. CHEN HYPERBORHA NIVALIS (Forst.). Greater Snow Goose. Anas hyperboreus. Chen hyperboreus nivalis. Geog. Dist.—Eastern North America, east of the Mississippi River except the region north of Virginia, migrating in spring through Manitoba and eastern Assiniboia, in fall through western Assiniboia and Alberta. Breeds in Arctic regions and winters along Atlantic coast, the Gulf States, and irregularly in the Greater Antilles. In Missouri a transient visitant of probably regular occurrence, together with intermediate forms, among troops of the former subspecies. Typical specimens have been secured by Mr. Chas. kK. Worthen of Warsaw, IIl., several times on Lima Lake, and Mr. E. W. Nelson stated that he found the two subspecies in about equal numbers in Illinois, sometimes in separate flocks, or mixed with the other subspecies, and also with the Blue Goose. Dr Rud. M. Anderson writes in his Birds of Iowa on page 183: “On the basis of these measurements (78 skins collected in Iowa) only ten or twelve per cent. of the specimens from Iowa can defi- nitely be considered as Greater Snow Geese, the remainder being the Lesser variety, with every grade of intermediates between. In the face of such perfect intergradation, the attempt to differ- a at cect aa Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 45 entiate between the varieties seems to be almost a useless refine- ment.” 169.1. CHEN CABRULESCENS (Linn.). Blue Goose. Anas caerulescens. Anser caerulescens. Blue-winged Goose. Young of Snow Goose. Geog. Dist.—Interior of North America. Breeding ground unknown but thought to be on eastern shores of Hudson Bay. In winter through Mississippi Valley to Gulf coast, chiefly west of the Mississippi River. In Missouri the Blue Goose is a fairly common transient visi- tant in spring in flocks by themselves or mixed with Snow Geese. Available dates run from March 17 to April 2; no fall record is at present at hand. Formerly considered to be the young or a colored phase of the Snow Goose, this species did not receive that measure of observers’ attention which it deserves. More- over the young of the two species resemble each other perfectly in form and size, and enough in color to make identification at a distance difficult. Both, old and young, were formerly not rare in the St. Louis market. Two fine specimens of adult birds are in the Eimbeck, one in the Hurter collection and some in several other private collections in St. Louis. W171. ANSER ALBIFRONS GAMBELI (Hartl.). American White- fronted Goose. Anser gambeli. Anser albijrons. Anser frontalis. Speckle-belly. Laugh- ing Goose. Geog. Dist.—North America generally, rare on the Atlantic coast, common in migration in the Mississippi Valley and in the Pacific States. Breeds in Greenland and on the mainland along the Arctic coast to the Yukon River. Winters from British Columbia to Cape St. Lucas and Jalisco, and from lower Missis- sippi Valley and southern Texas to northern Mexico; also in Cuba. In Missouri the Speckle-belly, also called Brant by hunters, though less abundant than formerly, is still a fairly common transient visitant from early in March to the latter part of April, and in October and the first half of November. 172. BRANTA CANADENSIS (Linn.). Canada Goose. Anas canadensis. Bernicla canadensis. Wild Goose. Geog. Dist—North America; breeding from Tennessee, Ar- kansas, northern:Colorado, southern Oregon, northward to and 46 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. through the British Provinces from Newfoundland to British Columbia and northward to the Mackenzie River basin and the interior of Alaska. In winter to California and from Long Island, Ohio Valley and lower Missour: Valley southward through’the south Atlantic and Gulf States. As the settlers of the country moved west and northward the breeding grounds of the goose were encroached upon. Its southern limits at present extend through the northern tier of states, but the bird will soon be driven from there as well as from the southern provinces of Can- ada. In Missouri the Wild Goose is a common |transient visitant and a not very rare winter resident, being present in larger or smaller numbers from early in October to the latter part of April, leaving the state entirely only for a short time during the severest winter weather when the ground is covered with snow and the rivers are frozen. When the first white men flocked into the state, they found the geese nesting all‘along the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. In his “ Reise durch Nord America”? Pring zu Wied tells us that he found on April 25, 1833, a2 nest in a tree at the mouth of Nodaway River, and that the next day he met with a group of goslings guarded by their parents. During the last decade of the past century the Peninsula of Missouri still harbored a small number of breeding pairs, usually nesting on cypress stumps in the overflow, 6 or 8 feet above the water. The natives hunted their eggs and young, and bevies of semi-domesticated Wild Geese were acommon sight in Pemiscot and Dunklin Counties. Pairs thus reared were allowed to make their own nests in the fields of the farmer and incubated their eggs themselves, the gander keeping guard and _ boldly attacking all intruders. As there has been a great influx of settlers into that country during the last few years, it is probable that the days of the Wild Goose breeding in Missouri are past, but some may still at least try to remain. Non-breeders are sometimes seen in northern Missouri long after the transients are all gone (May 3, 1887, St. Louis; May 18, 1902, New Haven; June 7, 1886, Mt. Carmel). 172a. BRANTA CANADENSIS HUTCHINSII (Rich.). Hutchin’s Goose. Anser hutchinsii. Bernicla hutchinsii. Little Wild Goose. Lesser Canada Goose. Geog. Dist.—Western North America; in the north-east to a ae Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 47 Hudson Bay region, rarely to the Atlantic coast. Breeds from Yukon Delta northward along the Arctic coast and islands and migrates through the western states and the Mississippi Valley to winter in California and the southern United States. In Missouri a fairly common transient and winter visitant, generally in company with its larger cousin, from which it is readily distinguished by its much smaller size. The first Hutch- in’s Geese Audubon ever saw, he killed October 14, 1843, near Brunswick, Mo. [172c. BRANTA CANADENSIS MINIMA Ridgw. Cackling Goose.] Branta minima. Geog. Dist —Coast of Alaska, chiefly about Norton Sound and Lower Yukon, migrating southward into western United States, east to Wisconsin. A fine example of this very small Goose, killed in the vicinity of Quincy, Ill., and now in the bird collection of the Public Library, extends its range as a casual visitant to the eastern border of Missouri. 178. DENDROCYGNA FULVA (Gmel.). Fulvous Tree-duck. Anas fulva. Penelope mexicana. Geog. Dist—Southern border of United States; east to eastern Louisiana (Rigolets Pass), north to central California (Marys- ville) and Nevada (Washoe Lake); south into Mexico. Occurs also in South America, southern Asia, Africa and Madagascar. Accidental in Washington (October 3, 1905, Grays Harbor); North Carolina (Swan Island, July, 1886). Of its occurrence in Missouri we find the following record in Forest and Stream: vol. 36. p. 485: “St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 10, 1891. Dr. T. H. Bean. Dear Sir: While duck shooting last fall at New Albany, southeastern Missouri, I killed what was then to me a new duck, but which I have since identified as Dendro- cygna fulva, a South American bird, if I have placed it right. Is not this a rare bird so far north? I have mounted the skin and would present it to the Smithsonian, if it will be of any use to that institution. Yours very truly, Frank W. Sparks.’ To this the following reply was added: ‘“‘Smithsonian Institution, Washington, June 12, 1891. Mr. Frank W. Sparks, 2516 No. Broadway, St. Louis. Dear Sir: I write to thank you on behalf of the National Museum for the very fine specimen of the Fulvous 48 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Tree-duek, Dendrocygna fulva, which you had the kindness to present through Dr. Bean. Besides being a very acceptable specimen on account of its good preparation, it is particularly so from the very exceptional locality which it represents, being, so far as the Eastern United States are concerned, much the most northern example on record—Currituck Sound, N. C. (a single accidental specimen), Louisiana and Texas being the most northern localities for the species known to me, except in California where it is not uncommon as far north as Stockton. It has also been taken near Carson, Nev. Yours truly, R. Ridgway, Curator Dep’t of Birds.” Subfamily Cygninae. Swans. 180. OLor coLUMBIANUS (Ord). Whistling Swan. Anas columbianus. Olor americanus. Cygnus americanus. Cygnus bewickii. Cygnus jerus. Cygnus musicus. American Swan. Geog. Dist.—North America; breeding along the coast of the Arctic Sea from Baffinland and Nottingham Island to Alaska, where it has been found as far south as 58° (Becharof Lake). Winters on Pacific coast from British Columbia to southern California; on the Atlantic coast from New Jersey to Florida; rare in the interior and Gulf States. In Missouri a rare transient visitant in early spring (March 26, 1898, St. Joseph, Wilson; March 27, 1894, Keokuk, Currier; March 24, 1885, St. Louis; March 16, Hurter collection). Seldom met with in fall (October 8 and 9, Keokuk, Praeger). It may not be out of place to remind students, as Dr. Coues does in his Birds of the North-west, page 546, “that the yellow spot on the bill is not constant, in young birds especially, often no trace can be observed. In such cases the species would be distinguish- able from O. buccinator by the smaller size, fewer tail feathers, and shorter, differently shaped bill.” 181. Otor BuccINATOR (Rich.). Trumpeter Swan. Cygnus buccinator. Geog. Dist.—Interior of North America, breeding formerly from Iowa and Nebraska through the North-west Territories, now from about 60° to the Arctic Ocean. Winters from British Columbia to southern California and migrates through the Mis- Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 49 sissippi Valley to the Gulf of Mexico. Rare or casual on the Atlantic coast. In Missouri the Trumpeter Swan is a regular, formerly fairly common, now rather rare, transient visitant from the middle of February to the middle of April, chiefly n March. The innum- erable large and small lakes in the flood plains of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers offer temporary resting places for the passing swans, which wander in small troops and, where not molested, remain sometimes for weeks on favorite feeding grounds. Ona small lake on a St. Charles Co. game preserve a party of eight remained in 1895 from March 15 to April 9; and they are known to return to the same lake every spring. In autumn these lakes are usually too shallow and small to suit swans, though they attract geese and ducks, as well as other water birds and waders. As this species is known to have bred in Lowa and Nebraska the swans, which Audubon saw May 4, 1848, on the Missouri River between Leavenworth and St. Joseph may have been on or near their nesting grounds. That swans bred formerly also in north- eastern Missouri is well known to old hunters. Mr. Jasper Blines of Alexandria wrote October 31, 1888, in Forest and Stream vol. 31, p. 343: “What has become of the swan? This noble fowl was tolerably plentiful here in former times and even hatched its brood along the densely covered shores of our low- land lakes. But they have bidden us good-bye and have sought climes more genial, and their musical voice is no more heard in our land.” Order HERODIONES. Herons, Storks, Ibises, ete. Suborder Ibides. Spoonbills and Ibises. Family Iprpipan. _ [bises. (184. Guara ALBA (Linn.). White Ibis.] Scolopax alba. Tantalus albus. Ibis alba. Eudocinus albus. Geog. Dist.—South Atlantic and Gulf States to West Indies and northern South America; north to North Carolina, southern Illinois, Great Salt Lake and Lower California, casually to Long Island, Connecticut and South Dakota. There are two White Ibises in immature plumage in collections at Quincy, Illinois, one in the Seaman collection in the High 50 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. - School, the other in the Public Library. Upon inquiry it was found that both were killed at the same time out of a flock of four by Mr. Slingerland of Quincy in the neighborhood of that city. This extends the range of the species in the Mississippi Valley northward to the region of northern Missouri. [186. PLEGADIS AUTUMNALIS (Hasselq.). Glossy Ibis.] Tantalus falcinellus. Ibis and Plegadis jalcinellus. Ibis Ordii. Ibis falci- nellus var. ordii. Green Ibis (young). Bay Ibis. Geog. Dist—Warmer parts of Old World and West Indies, irregularly to southeastern United States, wandering north along Atlantic coast to New England and in the Mississippi Valley to Nebraska (three specimens taken in eastern Nebraska near Omaha), and Wisconsin. One in immature plumage was killed February 27, 1880, within a few miles of St. Louis in the Illinois bottom, and is now in the Hurter collection of Washington University of St. Louis. 187. PLEGADIS GUARAUNA (Linn.). White-faced Glossy Ibis. Scolopaz guarauna. Ibis and Tantalus guarauna. Ibis thalassinus (young). Geog. Dist.—Northern South America through West Indies and Mexico to Texas, southwestern Louisiana, California, strag- gling northward to British Columbia, Oregon, Wyoming, Kansas and Nebraska. Also found breeding (June 26, 1894, and June 22, 1895), at Heron Lake, Minn. The Kansas records are one in fall, 1879, near Lawrence; one near Wichita, October 17, 1890; and one near McPherson, April 29, 1891. Of the three specimens taken in Nebraska, two were killed near Omaha, August 19, 1898, and April 6, 1897. There is also a record from Calhoun Co., Ia., where one was killed out of a flock of thirteen in April 1891. In a case of mounted birds presented to the Cuivre Hunting Club by one of its former members, Mr. John T. Davis, is a fine specimen of a White-faced Glossy Ibis in adult plumage. All birds in the case were taken on the club grounds in St. Charles Co., but unfortunately dates of capture have not been preserved. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 51 Suborder Ciconiae. Storks, etc. Family Ciconupakr. Storks and Wood Ibises. Subfamily Tantalinae. Wood Ibises. 188. TANTALUS LOCULATOR Linn. Wood Ibis. Water Turkey. Colorado Turkey. Gourdhead. Geog. Dist —From southern South America to southeastern California, Arizona, and the Gulf coast, wandering in summer northward through the lower Mississippi Valley to Missouri, irregularly to Utah, Colorado, Indiana and Wisconsin, casually to Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. The Gourdhead, as it is called by the natives, is a regular sum- mer visitant in the Peninsula of Missouri from July to September, occurring in troops of from ten to thirty. Some years these troops follow the Mississippi River into northern Missouri, visiting the lakes of the bottom land, rarely ascending the lower Missouri River. Dr. A. F. Eimbeck observed them but once in thirty-five years, a flock of seven at New Haven, August 11 to September 11, 1902. Suborder Heroadii. Herons, Egrets, Bitterns, ete. Family ArpEIDAE. Herons, Bitterns, ete. Subfamily Botaurinae. Bitterns. *190. BoTAURUS LENTIGINOSUS (Montag.). American Bittern. Ardea stellaris canadensis. Botaurus minor. Ardea minor. B. mugitans. Stake Driver. Thunder Pump. Indian Pullet. Look-up. Geog. Dist—From Guatemala northward throughout the United States and in Canada to Hudson Bay and Mackenzie River, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Breeds in suitable localities in most parts of the United States, chiefly northward. In Missouri the Bittern can still be regarded a fairly common summer resident and breeder in all marshes from about the first of April to the end of October. In migration it may be met with in unexpected places, on small pools in the woodland, on the prairie, as well as on the broad marshes of the great flood plains, 52 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. especially numerous in the St. Francis basin. In the more southern part of the state the first appear in March, but April and October are the months when the transient visitants are most common and generally distributed. A few linger through November. November 19, 1906, one was caught in the heart of St. Louis in a sleet storm unable to continue its flight, because covered with sleet and frozen rain. In the very backward spring of 1907 a transient individual was met with in Calvary Cemetery at St. Louis as late as May 9. Numerous examples are known, proving that such birds as Bitterns do not follow certain migra- tion routes, but travel broadcast over the country. Mr. E. Sey- mour Woodruff found a Bittern on April 8, 1907, beside a small pool of rainwater in a shallow depression on top of the plateau in the woods of Shannon Co. *191. ARDETTA PXILIS (Gmel.). Least Bittern. Ardea exilis. Little Bittern. Geog. Dist.—Northern South America and West Indies to southern British Provinces. Breeds throughout the United States from Maine to southern Oregon, except in the mountainous regions of the West. Winters from the Gulf coast southward. In Missouri the Least Bittern is a locally common summer resident from the middle of April in the south, and nearly a month later in the north, to September. It is a denizen of the reedy lakes and sloughs in the flood plains of the Mississippi and Mis- souri Rivers. Even where plentiful, they are seldom seen in the daytime, but become active toward evening, when they move about by clasping the reed stalks just above the water and flying from one part of the lake to another low over the plant growth. In the love season their peculiar chat-like note may often be heard coming from the dense reeds. Specimens taken near Springfield (Dr. D. T. Kizer) and at Billings (J. D. Kastendieck) show that the Least Bitterns do not follow the large rivers in their migrations, but cross the Ozarks. Subfamily Ardeinae. Herons and Egrets. *194. ARDEA HERODIAS Linn. Great Blue Heron. Blue Crane. Fish Heron. Geog. Dist—From northern South America to Nova Scotia, Quebec, Manitoba and British Columbia, rarely to the Northwest Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 53 Territories and Alaska. Breeds locally throughout its range and winters from the Gulf and South Atlantic States and California southward. The Blue Crane, as this bird is generally called, is a fairly com- mon summer resident in Missouri from the middle of March, occasionally earlier, to November. It is surprising that a bird so large and subjected to such universal persecution still survives in the numbers in which we find it to-day. During the breeding season there is probably no county in the state where some indi- viduals cannot be seen fiying from the distant nest to some fav- orite feeding grounds. Perhaps the largest numbers may be seen in the flood plains of the great rivers, where whole colonies nest on the highest trees along the shores or on the islands; but they are also found in the remotest counties of the Ozarks, where they build their nests in the high trees of the valleys in one county and have their feeding grounds ten or more miles away in another county. *196. HeRODIAS EGRETTA (Gmel.). American EKeret. Ardea egretta. Herodizs alba egretta. White Crane. White Heron. Geog. Dist.—Originally whole of South America, Central America, West Indies, and in North America throughout the United States, excepting the mountainous regions of the West, to southern Canada. Now greatly reduced in numbers and rare where formerly common. Breeds now locally from Virginia and Missouri southward and wanders after the breeding season northward. Winters from the Gulf States southward. Until the early nineties, when the plume craze reached our country and every trapper became a plume hunter, the swamps of the southeast harbored large colonies with hundreds of breeding Kerets. After a very few years of slaughter the birds had grown so scarce that the good men had to give up hunting cranes as an unprofitable occupation. As late as 1900, small numbers were still breeding in colonies together with Great Blue Herons on islands in the Mississippi as far north as St. Charles and Lincoln Counties, making the shallow lakes in the marshes their feeding grounds, but none have been seen there the last few years. Twenty years ago hundreds congregated around these lakes in August and early September and many ascended the lower Mis- sourl Valley on these roving expeditions at least as far as New Haven (Dr. Eimbeck). 54 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. 197. EGRETTA CANDIDISSIMA (Gmel.). Snowy Heron. Ardea candidissima. Garzetta candidissima. Little White Egret. Geog. Dist.—Formerly from Argentina to the northern United States, casually to Nova Scotia, Ontario and British Columbia, breeding from Virginia and southern Illinois southward. Now nearly exterminated in the United States. Like other herons the Snowy used to wander northward in the Mississippi River flood plain after the breeding season and was a common bird on the marshes of St. Charles Co. in August and September, but none have been seen there for the past ten years. A few may have survived the slaughter and destruction of their colonies in southeastern Missouri and with proper protection may again become an ornament of our late summer landscape. Mr. J. D. Kastendieck shot some on the mill pond at Billings in August and September 1895, and Mr. W. E. Praeger reports them as having occurred near Keokuk, but Snowy Herons seem never to have visited the more northern and the western part of the state in large numbers. [198. DicHROMANASSA RUFESCENS (Gmel.). Reddish Egret. Ardea rufescens. Demiegretta ruja. Dichromanassa ruja. Ardea rufa. Ardea rujescens. Ardea pealei. Demiegretta pealei. Peale’s Egret (white phase.) Geog. Dist.—Gulf States, Mexico (both coasts), Central Amer- ica and West Indies, north to the Ohio in the Mississippi Valley. Observed and found quite common during the last week of August 1875 in the vicinity of Cairo, Ill., by Mr. E. W. Nelson. 199. HyDRANASSA TRICOLOR RUFICOLLIS (Gosse). Louisiana Heron. Ardea ludoviciana. Demiegretta ludoviciana. Hydranassa tricolor ludovici- ana. Ardea leucogastra v. leucophrymna. Ardea tricolor ruficollis. Geog. Dist—Gulf States, Mexico, Central America and West Indies; casually northward to New Jersey and Indiana. Mr. E. S. Currier killed one near Sand Ridge, Clark Co., Mo., April 13, 1890, as it rose from a small prairie pond. ~ 200. FLorRIDA CAERULEA (Linn.). Little Blue Heron. Ardea caerulea. Little White Heron (young). Geog. Dist—From northern South America through the West Indies and Central America to eastern United States; breeding Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 55 in the southern states, formerly to southwestern Indiana and Missouri and wandering after the breeding season northward to the more northern states, accidentally to Wisconsin, Maine and Nova Scotia. It winters south of the United States, returning to Louisiana about the middle of March and to Missouri more than a month later (April 30, 1880, Hurter collection). Not known to breed in Missouri at present, but appears in the Peninsula in large troops, composed entirely of birds of the year, late in July or early in August, remaining till September. Some of them wander up the Mississippi to the region of the mouth of the Illinois River, irregularly, farther north (Warsaw, IIL., Worthen) or along the Missouri River north to southern Nebraska. It has been taken in Platte Co., Mo., opposite Leavenworth, Kan., by Mr. A. Lange, and a specimen in the Kansas City Public Museum was taken near that city. *201. BUTORIDES VIRESCENS (Linn.). Green Heron. Ardea virescens. Shytepoke. Fly-up-the-creek. Geog. Dist—From northern South America, through the West Indies and Central America to southern Ontario, through- out the United States east of the Great Plains and in Cal- ifornia and Oregon. Breeds throughout its range and winters south of the United States. In Missouri the Green Heron is a common summer visitant of general distribution not confined to low or swampy regions like other herons, but frequenting wooded streams and ponds, nesting sometimes far away from water on cultivated land, frequently in orchards in small colonies of from six to ten nests on one acre. It arrives in southern Missouri about the 10th of April, in central and northern parts from one to two weeks later (Shannon Co., April 10, 1904; Vernon Co., April 15, 1894; St. Louis Co., April 17, 1886; Kansas City, April 18, 1904; Keokuk, average date, April 25). It leaves the breeding grounds in family groups during September and very few are seen after the first of October. (Latest record October 138, 1896, Keokuk, Currier.) W202. NycTICORAX NYCTICORAX NAEVIUS (Bodd.). Black-crowned Night Heron. Ardea naevia. Nyctiardea grisea naevia. Nyctiardea gardeni. Night- Raven. Qua-bird. Squawk. Quawk. Geog. Dist.—Nearly the whole of South America, parts of West Indies, and through the United States to New Brunswick, 56 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Ontario and Manitoba. Breeds throughout its range and winters from California and the Gulf Coast southward. In Missouri formerly a locally numerous, now a greatly re- duced, summer resident in the flood plains of the larger rivers, chiefly the Mississippi, from April 10 to October 10. More generally distributed in migration, especially in early fall, when young birds may be met with at ponds and pools far away from their usual haunts. When on wing in the twilight going from nesting to distant feeding grounds they resemble ravens, which, with some similarity in their croak, has given rise to the popular name, Night Raven. *203. NYCTANASSA VIOLACEA (Linn.). Yellow-crowned Night Heron. Nycticorax violacea. Nyctiardea violacea. Nycterodius violaceus. Geog. Dist—From Brazil to the South Atlantic and Gulf States; in the Mississippi Valley to the mouth of the Ohio; on the Pacific coast to Lower California; casually north to Massa- chusetts, Minnesota, Nebraska and Colorado. Breeds in all parts of its regular summer range, which formerly extended to Indiana, Illinois and Kansas. Winters south of the United States to which it returns in March. Thirty-three years ago the breeding range of the Yellow- crowned Night Heron extended up the Illinois bottom to the mouth of the Illinois River. A young of the year in the Hurter collection was captured opposite St. Louis, July 12, 1873, and an adult, April 10. Ten years ago they were still fairly common summer residents in the Peninsula, but of late they have become few and their total extermination as breeders in the state is fast approaching. Order PALUDICOLAE. Cranes, Rails, ete. Suborder Grues. Cranes. Family GRuIDAE. Cranes. 204. GruS AMERICANA (Linn.).. Whooping Crane. Ardea americana. Grus hoyanus (young). Hooping Crane. Geog. Dist.—Interior of North America from Mexico, Texas and Florida to Saskatchewan and Athabasca, migrating chiefly Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 57 through the Mississippi Valley and breeding formerly in the north- ern United States and Canada from the Red River to the Rocky Mountains, now driven to the northernmost portions of its range by the irresistible encroachment of civilization. Available records of its occurrence in Missouri are few. The first for the state is that of Dr. P. R. Hoy in his “Journal of an Exploration of western Missouri”? under date of April 18, 1854. One in the Hurter collection of birds taken in the vicinity of St. Louis is dated March 17, 1884. Mrs. Musik reported five cranes seen at Mount Carmel, Audrain Co., March 25, 1885. Mr. Hy. Nehrling saw 26 Whooping Cranes at Freistatt, Law- rence Co., March 27, 1886. I had the pleasure of seeing twelve pure white, beautiful cranes flying low over St. Louis on the after- noon of March 25, 1888. Mr. P. L. Ong reported the occurrence of two cranes (G. americana) at Laclede, Linn Co., March 20 and 27, 1889. The last record at hand is March 9, 10 and 15, 1894, from Stotesbury, Vernon Co., made by Mr. T. Surber in his migration report to the Dep’t of Agriculture. There is no fall record for Missouri, but T. M. Trippe saw “quite a number” in the fall of 1872 in Decatur Co., Iowa, just across the line of north- central Missouri. One winged on the Grand Prairie in Dunklin Co. in 1864 was kept alive by Dr. Cook of Cottonplant and after his death by his widow for over thirty years. 205. GRUS CANADENSIS (Linn.). Little Brown Crane. Grus fraterculus. Northern Sandhill Crane. Geog. Dist.—Arctic and subarctic America. Breeds in the high north along the Arctic coast, and migrates south through western United States to Texas and New Mexico. A female was shot in Clark Co., Mo., April 10, 1896, and brought to Mr. W. E. Praeger, who has the skin in his collection. It has repeatedly been taken in eastern Nebraska (and Wisconsin), and is regarded as a common migrant in Kansas. 206. GRUS MEXICANA (Miill.). Sandhill Crane. Grus canadensis (part.). Brown Crane. Grus americana (By Audubon supposed to be young of Whooping Crane). Geog. Dist.—From central Mexico and Florida to southern Canada. Rare east of the Alleghanies north of Georgia. West to California. Breeds locally throughout its range from Arizona 58 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. to southeastern British Columbia, and formerly east to Florida and Ohio. Winters in the Gulf States and Mexico. In Missouri formerly a fairly common transient visitant, mainly from the middle to the end of March, sometimes earlier (March 4 and 5, 1882, St. Louis) or later (April 10, 1894, Keokuk). W. i. D. Scott mentions the Sandhill Crane as being a common migrant at Warrensburg, arriving early in April 1874. Prince of Wied on his way up the Missouri River in 1833 makes the following entry in his diary: ‘April 18, 1833. Below Lexington. A large number of Sandhill Cranes filled the air with their voices; they went in flocks northeastward.” Fall records are less fre- quent; they come from the center of the state, Saline and How- ard Counties, October 14 to 25, 1885 and 1890. Audubon saw many Sandhill Cranes October 13, 1848, near the mouth of the Grand River. There is no doubt that only a small percentage of their former numbers survive. Very few notes of the last ten years are to be had, while as late as 1872 J. M. Trippe writes from our northern boundary (Decatur Co., Iowa): ‘‘ Vast numbers pass over in spring and fall; they bred formerly.’”’ On his jour- ney up the Missouri River in 1843 Audubon saw five Sandhill Cranes near the mouth of Nodaway River as late as May 7; and Dr. Hoy met with a pair on the prairie between Utica and Lexington May 18, 1854. He writes: “My brother waved his hat and shouted two or three times, when the male bird com- menced, by bowing and hopping in a ludicrous manner,—a series of amusing antics, interluded with brief samples of vocal powers that made ample compensation in strength for any lack of melody.” Suborder Ralli. Rails, Gallinules, Coots, ete. Family Ratimpaz. Rails, Gallinules, Coots. Subfamily Rallinae. Rails. *208. RaALLUS ELEGANS (Aud.). King Rail. Great Red-breasted Rail. Marsh Hen. Geog. Dist.—Eastern United States; north to Connecticut, southern Ontario, Minnesota; west to eastern Nebraska and Kansas. Breeds in fresh-water marshes throughout its range. Winters in the southern states. In Missouri a fairly common summer resident in the marshes Widmann—A Premcnary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 59 along the large rivers; arrives from the last of March to the end of April and remains to the latter part of October. Specimens in the collections of Dr. D. T. Kizer of Springfield and Mr. J. D. Kastendieck of Billings were taken in Greene and Christian counties in the Ozark border region and Mr. Philo W. Smith, Jr. of Eureka Springs reports this species as a rare breeder in the White River valley along our southern boundary (1906). Young were seen as early as June 1, 1905, at Mudlake, St. Charles Co. *212. RALLUS VIRGINIANUS Linn. Virginia Rail. Little Red-breasted Rail. Geog. Dist—From Central America and Cuba to New Bruns- wick, Ontario and Manitoba; on the Pacific coast to British Columbia. Breeds throughout its range in the United States, but chiefly northward. Winters in the South Atlantic and Gulf States, Mexico and California. In Missouri the Virginia Rail is a fairly common transient visi- tant in spring, occurring not only in the marshes of the larger rivers, but in wet places of the Prairie and Ozark border regions. It may be found all through April and early May (earliest date March 31, 1887, St. Louis; latest May 19, Warrensburg). It has been found breeding in Clark Co. by Mr. E. 8S. Currier. There is no record of its occurrence in fall. *214, PORZANA CAROLINA (Linn.). Sora. Rallus carolinus. Ortygometra carolina. Common Rail. Ortolan. Car- olina Crake. Geog. Dist—From northern South America and the West Indies to British Provinces (rarely to Greenland); in the West to lat. 55°; in the Mackenzie River region. Breeds chiefly north of lat. 38°, and winters from the South Atlantic and Gulf States southward. In Missouri a common transient visitant in all parts of the state, the Ozarks not excepted. Some may be found as early as April 1, but they are most plentiful and generally distributed during the second half of April, and in the north to the middle of May. Fall migration begins early in September and lasts through October (latest November 19, 1893). It has been observed in summer in St. Charles and Howard Co., and nests have been found near Kansas City (ten eggs, Mr. O. C. Sheley, Independence) and in Clark Co. (Mr. E. S. Currier). 60 Trans. Acad. Sct. of St. Louis. 215. PorzANA NOVEBORACENSIS (Gmel.). Yellow Rail. Rallus noveboracensis. Ortygometra noveboracensis. Geog. Dist.—North America to Hudson Bay, chiefly eastern ; in the West to Utah, Nevada and California. Nowhere common. No extralimital records except Cuba and Bermuda. Breeds from Connecticut, northern Indiana and Wisconsin northward, and winters in the southern States, often met with on rice fields in Louisiana. In Missouri an apparently rare or irregular transient visitant chiefly in April. Earliest date of capture, March 27, 1876, Hurter collection. Records are chiefly from the Mississippi bottom north of St. Louis, but there is a specimen in Mr. Chas. W. Tindall’s collection taken near his home, Independence, and one in the collection of Dr. G. C. Rinker at Unionville. Mr. E. 8. Currier regards them as irregular transients at Keokuk, where Mr. W. E. Praeger found them common April 22, 1888, and April 21, 1889, at Sand Ridge, Clark Co., Mo. In the late and cold spring of 1897 Mr. O. Poling found it numerous in May near Quincy. Mr. Chas. K. Worthen thinks that they sometimes breed near Warsaw, Ill., as he has found it occasionally during the breeding season. There is no record for fall migration, but this is not surprising when we consider how difficult it is to flush them or make them fly any distance since they always prefer to escape by running and skulking. 216. PoRZANA JAMAICENSIS (Gmel.). Black Rail. Rallus jamaicensis. Little Black Rail. Geog. Dist—From the West Indies and Chile to New England and Oregon. Seems to breed locally throughout its range, but easily overlooked on account of its small size and secretive habits. Nowhere common. Winters in Central America. Taken only once in Missouri (St. Charles Co.), but probably of frequent occurrence in spring and fall, possibly a summer resident, since nests have been found in Illinois and Kansas (nest with 8 eggs near Manhattan, June 1880; nest with 10 eggs, June 19, 1875, Calumet River, Hlinois). The earliest date for the vicinity of our state is March 18, 1886, Neosho Falls, Kan., and the latest in fall, October 11, 1885, Iowa City, Ia. Since the above was written I am informed by Dr. G. C. Rinker of Hamilton, Kan., that he took a Black Rail at Unionville, Putnam Co, Mo., and has it in his collection. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 61 Subfamily Gallinulinae. Gallinules. 218. IoNORNIS MARTINICA (Linn.). Purple Gallinule. Fulica martinica. Gallinula porphyrio. Porphyrio martinica. Geog. Dist —From northern South America, West Indies, Mex- ico to South Atlantic and Gulf States, irregularly north to Middle, and casually to Northern States and Canada. Winters chiefly south of United States. In Missouri probably only an accidental visitant, having been taken but twice in the vicinity of St. Louis; April 18, 1877, Hurter collection; and April 22, 1877, near St. Charles in the Blanke collection. (A record from Manhattan, Kan., is dated April 14, 1893, and one from northern Illinois, [April 24, 1900.) *219. GALLINULA GALEATA (Licht.). Florida Gallinule. Crex galeata. Gallinula chloropus. Mudhen. Moorhen. Waterhen. Geog. Dist.—From Brazil and Chile to southern Canada and central California. Breeds throughout its range and winters chiefly south of the United States. Twenty years ago Florida Gallinules used to be numerous breeders on the lakes and sloughs in the neighborhood of St. Louis. Gradually they became fewer and fewer until now we must class them among the rare birds. There is no record of their breeding in the southeast, and the only one from the west comes from Independence (Tindall, June 1, 1904). In the bottom- land from St. Louis northward there are still a few secluded spots, where they can raise a brood, but with the generally established drainage of their favorite waters the only places left to them will be game preserves where neither drainage nor summer shooting is allowed. Fortunately Gallinules have learned to come late, after the first of May, when the hunting season is over and when there is enough plant growth to afford hiding places. Transients are seldom noticed; those breeding north of central Missouri seem to pass over or by us without stopping. The only record for a fall transient is October 3, 1905, St. Louis, a young of the year found alive with broken legs in the street near one of the St. Louis water towers against which it had probably flown in the night. Early in October, 1906, another one, now in the bird cage in Forest Park, was caught in the streets of St. Louis. 62 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Subfamily Fulicinae. Coots. *991. FULICA AMERICANA Gmel. American Coot. Fulica atra. Coot. Mud hen. Geog. Dist.—From northern South America through West Indies and whole of North America to Canada, rarely to Alaska and Greenland. Breeds from Texas and Louisiana northward and winters from the Southern States southward. In Missouri the Coot is a very generally distributed and com- mon transient visitant from the middle of March to April 20 and from October 10 to November 25. Also a not very rare summer resident and breeder in suitable localities, not only in the flood plains of the larger rivers, but in the prairie and Ozark regions and reported as breeding at Montgomery City (Parker), War- rensburg (Smithson), Independence (Tindall), Pierce City (Nehr- ling), White River (Philo Smith Jr., Eureka Springs), Fayette (Kilpatrick). Order LIMICOLAE. Shore Birds. Family PHALAROPIDAE. Phalaropes. 222. CRYMOPHILUS FULICARIUS (Linn.). Red Phalarope. Tringa julicaria. Phalaropus fulicarius. Gray Phalarope. Geog. Dist.—Northern parts of northern hemisphere, breeding within the Arctic regions and coming south in winter chiefly coastwise to the Carolinas on the Atlantic and Cape St. Lucas on the Pacific; rare in the interior as far south as the Ohio Valley. Has been taken two or three times in the Mississippi River between Missouri and Illinois by Mr. Chas. I<. Worthen of War- saw, Ill. Also recorded from Lawrence, Kan., about 40 miles from our state line, where a young female was taken November 5, 1905. Other records are from Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Wyoming (September 14, 1897). 223. PHALAROPUS LOBATUS (Linn.). Northern Phalarope. Tringa lobata. Lobipes lobatus. Tringa hyperborea. Phalaropus hyper- boreus. Lobipes hyperboreus. Red-necked Phalarope. Gray Phalarope (winter). Geog. Dist—Northern hemisphere, breeding in America from Labrador and Greenland both in wooded country and on Barren Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog oj the Birds of Missouri. 63 Grounds to Alaska. In winter to the tropics, migrating chiefly along the Pacific, less commonly in the interior and along the Atlantic coast. A specimen in the Hurter collection was taken October 9, 1878, near St. Louis. One in Mr. J. D. Kastendieck’s collection was killed near Billings, and another in Mr. A. Lange’s possession was captured by him in Platte Co., Mo., opposite Leavenworth, Kan. Specimens were obtained at Lincoln, Neb., August 23 and September 18, 1904, and May 14, 1905; taken also in Kan- sas, May 25, 1883. 224. STEGANOPUS TRICOLOR (Vieill.). Wilson’s Phalarope. Phalaropus tricolor. Phalaropus lobatus. Phalaropus or Steganopus Wilsont. Geog. Dist.—From southern South America to Saskatchewan, chiefly in the interior. Breeds from Wisconsin and northern Nebraska, the mountains of Colorado and the Death Valley northward; formerly in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri. Winters south of the United States. In Missouri this beautiful and graceful bird, formerly common, must now be classed with the rarer transient visitants. It should be looked for in the latter part of April and first of May and in August and September. Earliest date in spring, April 22, 1880, St. Louis, Hurter collection, and in fall, August 5, 1878, St. Louis, Hurter collection. Mr. Currier found it near Keokuk, May 6, 1898. Mr. Tindall at Independence, May 1, 1900. There is a fine specimen in Mr. Kastendieck’s collection. Mr. H. Nehrling found it with young in July, 1884, in Lawrence Co., and it may still be a local breeder in some parts of the state. In Hayden’s Report on the Natural History of the Upper Missouri in 1855, 56 and 57, we read: “Quite abundant during spring months along marshy bottoms and lakes of the lower Missouri River.’’ Family REcURVIROSTRIDAE. Avocets and Stilts. ¥ 995, RECURVIROSTRA AMERICANA Gmel. American Avocet. Geog. Dist—From Guatemala and West Indies to lat. 549, rarely as far north as Great Slave Lake; common from Kansas and Nebraska westward; now rare in the eastern United States and accidental on the Atlantic coast. Breeds locally in most of the western states, but now chiefly in Alberta, Assiniboia and 64 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Saskatchewan. Winters in southern California, but mainly south of the United States. In eastern Missouri the Avocet has always been regarded as a rare transient visitant. A female in the Hurter collection taken near St. Louis is dated October 28, 1878. ‘Mr. Praeger saw a mounted specimen which was killed on the bars in the Missis- sippi near Keokuk previous to 1885. In western Missouri it seems to be less rare. Mr. Thad Surber met with a flock of one hundred, April 8, 1894, near Stotesbury in Vernon Co., and Mr. A. Lange of Leavenworth, Kan., took some Avocets in Platte Co., Mo. f (226. Himantorus mMexicanus (Miill.). Black-necked Stilt.] Charadrius mexicanus. Himantopus nigricollis. Recurvirostra himan- topus. Stilt. White Snipe (Utah). Lawyer. Long-Shanks. Geog. Dist.—From northern Brazil and Peru to northern United States, now rare in eastern United States except Florida. Breeding area in United States now restricted to the West from Mexico, southwestern Texas and Colorado to Oregon. Winters from Florida and Louisiana southward through West Indies, Mexico and Central America to Brazil and Peru. As there are five records of its capture near Omaha, Neb., April 20, 1895, May 6, 1894, May 10, 1893, and October 3 and 9, 1894, it is very probable that stragglers can be found in western Missouri, if students will look out for them on flooded lands after heavy rains in spring and fall. Family SCOLOPACIDAE. Snipes, Sandpipers, ete. *298, PHILOHELA MINOR (Gmel.). American Woodcock. Scolopaz minor. Rusticola minor. Microptera americana. Geog. Dist.—Eastern United States and southern Canada from Nova Scotia and New Brunswick to Manitoba; west to the Plains; breeding throughout its range and wintering in the southern states. In spite of all persecution the Woodcock is still a fairly common summer resident in eastern Missouri; some winter in the Penin- sula, but the bulk returns to it in February, to southern Missouri generally early in March and to northern Missouri in the latter part of that month, where they remain till the middle of Novem- ber. Young birds well on the wing were seen June 2, 1905, in Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 65 St. Charles Co. Though Mr. Nehrling found the Woodcock com- mon in autumn 1884 in Lawrence Co. and mounted specimens are in the collections of Mr. LeBlanc at Springfield and Mr. Kastendieck at Billings, the species does not seem to be of fre- quent occurrence in the western part of the state. € 930, GALLINAGO DELICATA. (Ord). Wilson’s Snipe. Scolopax delicata. Scolopax gallinago. Scolopax Wilsoni. Gallinago Wilsont. Scolopax Drummondi. Scolopax Douglasti. Am. Snipe, Long-bill. Jack Snipe. Geog. Dist.—From northern South America through Central America and West Indies north to the Arctic circle. Breeds from northern United States northward and winters from Florida and southern Texas southward. In Missouri the Snipe is a common transient visitant of general distribution, both east and west, spring and fall, though varying much both in time of presence and in numbers. In some seasons the first Snipes are taken in the neighborhood of St. Louis in the second half of February (February 17, 1897; February 20, 1898; February 24, 1886; February 28, 1904; in others in the first part of March, in some years not before the midlde of March (March 15, 1888; March 15, 1902; March 13, 1903). The bulk of the species is present from the 15th to the 20th of March till from the 20th to 25th of April; the last are all gone before the end of the month. In the more northern parts of the state the first appear seldom before the middle of March (March 13, 1900, Keokuk), usually between the 20th and the 25th and remain to the close of April, sometimes into May (May 9, 1896, St. Joseph; May 7, 1894; May 7, 1897; May 12, 1895, Keokuk). In their southward migration in fall they are even more uncertain in time and numbers than in spring. Exceptionally early dates are August 17, 1897, and September 3, 1893, Keokuk, and August 31, 1886, St. Louis. After the middle of September their appearance may be expected along our northern boundary (September 19, 1902; September 20, 1899, Keokuk). In central Missouri the first are taken in the second week of October, but Snipes are seldom plentiful in Missouri before the middle of October and cease to be so after the first week of November, though some linger into the latter part of the month (November 21, 1897 and 1899: November 24, 1896 and 1900, Keokuk) and exceptionally longer (December 14, 1904, St. Charles Co.) even in northern Missouri. In the most southern part of the state a few may remain in mild 66 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. winters, as they are known to do in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. The new game protection law of Missouri gives no protection to this species, the open season extending over the whole period of its presence in the state, namely from September 15 to April 30. [231. MACRORHAMPHUS GRISEUS (Gmel.). Dowitcher.] Scolopax grisea. Scolopax noveboracensis. Red-breasted Snipe. Brown Back. Gray Snipe. Gray-back (winter). Geog. Dist.—Eastern North America, breeding far north; south in winter to Brazil. Irregularly to Alaska, Oregon, Idaho, Nebraska and formerly common in Wisconsin. As the two species of this genus were formerly regarded as varieties and were said to be indistinguishable in the winter and immature plumage, not enough attention was paid to them to enable us to say in what proportion they visited the state while Dowitchers were yet plentiful; but since it is known, that the eastern form or species occurs in the Mississippi Valley along with the western, the claim for a place in our list may yet be established. 932. MACRORHAMPHUS SCOLOPACEUS (Say). Long-billed Do- witcher. Limosa scolopacea. Macrorhamphus griseus scolopaceus. Red-bellied Snipe. Red-bellied Dowitcher. Greater Long-beak. Geog. Dist—Western North America; breeding in Alaska to the Arctic coast; migrating through western United States and Mississippi Valley, rarely through Eastern States, to Mexico. Twenty years ago Dowitchers were fairly, though irregularly, common transient visitants in all suitable localities of Missouri. They migrated in flocks, and large numbers were sometimes found in the St. Louis market, chiefly in April. In fall they were still more irregular in their appearance and have been known to occur from August to the end of October (October 28, 1873, Hurter collection). At present they must be classed among the rare birds and, if spring shooting is not abolished, they may be brought to the point of extermination. © 933. MicROPALAMA HIMANTOPUS (Bonap.). Stilt Sandpiper. Tringa himantopus. Tringa Douglasti. Tringa Auduboni. Geog. Dist.—Eastern North America; west to the foot of the Rocky Mountains; north to the Arctic coast. Breeds north of Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 67 the United States and winters in the West Indies, Central and South America. In Missouri the Stilt Sandpiper, which is said to move rapidly through the United States spring and fall (Audubon), is a rare transient visitant in August and September and very irregularly in spring. (April 30, 1902, Kansas City; September 28, 1878, Hurter collection). 234. TRINGA CANUTUS Linn. Knot. Tringa cinerea. Tringa islandica. Tringa rufa. Robin Snipe. Red- breasted Sandpiper. May Bird. Grayback (young). Blue Plover (young). Geog. Dist.—Chiefly on the sea coasts; in northern hemisphere in summer; in southern hemisphere in winter. Breeds far north; migrates mainly along the Atlantic coast. The Knot is probably only an accidental visitant in Missouri. It has been taken in Platte Co., opposite Leavenworth, Kan., by Mr. A. Lange of that city and another was taken October, 1874, at Brownville, Neb., which is on the Missouri River opposite the northwest corner of our state; three others were reported from southeastern Nebraska, May 16, 1896, August 27, 1896, and September 30, 1893. Two specimens were shot in the spring at Neosho Falls, Kan., within fifty miles of our western state line. According to Prof. Snow the species was formerly common in Kansas (Birds of Kansas, 1873) and seems to have been met with oftener in the interior generally, especially in the region of the Great Lakes. 235. ARQUATELLA MARITIMA (Brinn.). Purple Sandpiper. Tringa maritima. Winter Snipe. Rock Snipe. Geog. Dist.—Northern portions of northern hemisphere. In America chiefly the northeastern portions, breeding in the high north and wintering from Greenland southward along the coast to the Carolinas, casually to the Great Lakes and larger streams in the Mississippi Valley. The Purple Sandpiper is admitted on the strength of its being mentioned in Dr. P. R. Hoy’s list of birds taken in western Mis- sourl in the spring of 1854. V 239. ACTODROMAS MACULATA (Vieill.). Pectoral Sandpiper. Tringa maculata. Tringa pectoralis. Jack Snipe. Grass Snipe. Geog. Dist.—Whole of North America, rare in California. 68 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Breeds in the Arctic regions, chiefly Alaska; migrates through United States and West Indies to South America as far south as southern Brazil and Chile. In Missouri a common transient visitant from March 15 to June 6 and through August, September and October to the middle of November (November 5, 1901, November 14, 1896, November 24, 1900, Keokuk, Currier). Mr. Praeger gives it as abundant at Keokuk from March 28 to April 23, and from August 11 to October 21. Mr. Nehrling reported it as very common during the first half of April in Lawrence Co. The species is said to be common at Independence (Tindall) and at Fayette (Kilpatrick) from March 15 to April 10. Records show , that some linger through May and even into June; (May 11, 1882, St. Louis; May 14, 1895, May 16, 1898, May 27, 1901, and June 6, 1893, Keokuk). ' 240. Acropromas FuscicoLiis (Vieill.). White-rumped Sand- piper. Tringa fuscicollis. Tringa schinzti. Tringa bonapartei. Bonaparte’s Sandpiper. Geog. Dist.—Breeding in Arctic regions, chiefly from Hudson Bay to Mackenzie River; it migrates through United States, mainly east of the Rocky Mountains, West Indies and Central America to South America as far south as Falkland Islands. In Missouri formerly a fairly common, now a rather rare, transient visitant late in May and early in June, and again early in autumn. Twenty years ago Mr. Nehrling regarded it a common transient visitant in Lawrence Co., and Mr. Kastendieck collected specimens in 1882 at his mill-pond in Christian Co. Mr. E. 8. Currier met with a flock of ten at Sand Ridge, Clark Co., May 16, 1898, and again, June 2, 1901, a flock of eight near the mouth of Des Moines River on a sand-bar. His latest date is June 5, 1894, when the first was seen near Keokuk, May 22. Mr. E. 8. Woodruff found a flock of about twelve at Jacks Fork of Current River in Shannon Co., May 15, 1907. 241. AcTODROMAS BAIRDII Coues. Baird’s Sandpiper. Tringa bairdii. Bull-peep. Geog. Dist.—Breeds from Hudson Bay along Arctic coast to Point Barrow and migrates through the interior of North Amer- ica, rarely along the Atlantic coast, south to Chile and Patagonia. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog oj the Birds of Missouri.=69 In Missouri a fairly common migrant from March till the close of May, and in fall from August till the middle of October, often in company with its nearest relatives, the Pectoral Sand- piper (October 13, 1893, Independence, Tindall; October 14, 1888, Keokuk, Praeger). 242. ACTODROMAS MINUTILLA (Vieill.). Least Sandpiper. Tringa minutilla. Tringa wilsonii. Tringa pusilla. Peep. Mud-peep. Stint. Geog. Dist.—The whole western hemisphere; breeding from Magdalen Islands and Anticosti to the interior of Alaska; win- tering from South Carolina and southern California southward. In Missouri the Least Sandpiper is a fairly common transient visitant from the middle of April through May to the first of June, and from the middle of August to November, frequenting with other sandpipers and plovers the extensive mud flats of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. 943a. PELIDNA ALPINA SAKHALINA (Vieill.). Red-backed Sand- piper. Tringa alpina pacifica. Tringa cinclus. Pelidna pacifica. Red-breast or Red-back (in spring). Lead-back (in fall). Black-bellied Sandpiper. Dunlin. Ox Bird. Geog. Dist.—North America and Hastern Asia, chiefly coast- wise, rare or irregular in the interior. Breeds from Hudson Bay along Arctic coast to northern Alaska. Winters in California, the South Atlantic and Gulf coast and southward. In Missouri the Red-backed Sandpiper is a rare transient visitant, spring and fall. It was first taken in the state by Dr. J. A. Allen opposite Leavenworth, May 1871 (Bull. M. C. Z., vol. 3, 1872). A female in the Hurter collection was taken near St. Louis, October 7, 1880, and Mr. Praeger took one near Keokuk, October 4, 1885. Dates of specimens taken near Lincoln, Neb., are May 22, August 23, September 4 and 11, 1904, and May 14, 1905; May 16 and 30, 1896; May 22, 1899; Novem- ber 7, 1896; and near Omaha, May 12, 1895. W246. EREUNETES PUSILLUS (Linn.). Semipalmated Sandpiper. Ty fee pusilla. Tringa semipalmata. Ereunetes petrificatus. Sand-peep. Geog. Dist—Eastern North America, west to Utah, breeding from Labrador to Point Barrow and migrating through the 70 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. United States south to the West Indies and northern South America. In Missouri a common transient visitant in late April and May and again in August and through September to October 17. Earliest in fall, August 6, 1887, St. Louis; latest, October 17, 1880, Hurter collection. 247. EREUNETES OCCIDENTALIS Lawr. Western Sandpiper. Ereunetes pusillus. Hreunetes petrificatus (of western localities). Geog. Dist.—Western North America, breeding chiefly in Alaska and migrating through western United States, mostly along Pacific coast, to Central and South America. Casually eastward through the interior to the Atlantic coast in company with the Semipalmated Sandpiper. Has been taken a few times in spring on sandbars in the Mis- sissipp1 River by Mr. Chas. K. Worthen of Warsaw, Ill. In the spring plumage the Western is easily distinguished from the Semipalmated Sandpiper by its bright chestnut on head, back and rump. 248. CALIDRIS ARENARIA (Linn.). Sanderling. Tringa arenaria. Calidris calidris. Calidris rubidus. Beach Bird. Geog. Dist.—Almost cosmopolitan; breeding in arctic and subarctic regions and in America, migrating through United States, both coastwise and through interior; wintering from California and southern Texas to Chile and Patagonia. In Missouri the Sanderlings were formerly fairly common transient visitants from the latter part of August to October. They were found in small flocks on the extensive sand bars in the Mississippi River, frequenting the same place for weeks, together with other sandpipers and plovers. In spring they appeared to be more in a hurry, never remaining long in one place. Like all waders their numbers have greatly decreased during the last twenty years and the species seems never to have been as common westward as in the eastern part of the state. - 249. Limosa FEDOA (Linn.). Marbled Godwit. Scolopax jedoa. Limosa foeda. Marlin. Dough Bird. Geog. Dist.—North America to southern Canada; rare on the Atlantic coast. Breeding formerly from Iowa, Wisconsin and eastern North Dakota northward, now restricted mainly Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 71 to Alberta, Assiniboia and Manitoba, becoming scarce every- where. In winter to the Gulf coast, California, Mexico and parts of Central America and the West Indies. In Missouri Marbled Godwits could formerly be called fairly common transient visitants in April and September; they are now rare. 251. Limosa HAEMASTICA (Linn.). Hudsonian Godwit. Scolopax haemastico. Limosa hudsonica. Black-tailed or Ring-tailed Godwit or Marlin. Geog. Dist —From southern South America to Arctic regions, breeding in the high north and wandering through the east- ern United States to South America. Rare on the Atlantic coast. In Missouri a rather rare transient visitant in April and Oc- tober. A male in the Hurter collection was taken in St. Louis Co., April 19, 1872, and two in the collection of the Cuivre Club were killed on their grounds in St. Charles Co. 254. TOTANUS MELANOLEUCUS (Gmel.). Greater Yellow-legs. Scolopax melanoleuca. Gambetia melanoleuca. Scolopax vociferus. Totanus vociferus. Tell-tale. Stone Snipe. Greater Yellowshanks. Geog. Dist.—Nearly the whole of America; breeding formerly from Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin northward, at present from northern Nebraska north to the Mackenzie River and Sitka. In winter from southern California and the Gulf States south to Argentina and Chile. In Missouri Greater Yellow-legs are still fairly common and generally distributed transient visitants, especially in spring, less so in fall. The first appear from the south during the last week of March, seldom earlier (March 9, 1903, Kansas City, Bryant). They become more general during the second week of April and are most plentiful in the second half of that month. In ordinary seasons they disappear in the first half of May, but in cool Mays some have been known to stay toward the end of May and even into June (June 5, 1894, Keokuk, Currier). In fall migration their appearance is more irregular. Near Keokuk they have been found as early as August 28, 1899, and as late as November 9, 1895, also at Independence (Tindall) November 7, 1892, but they are most likely to be present about the middle of October. 72 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. 255. TOTANUS FLAVIPES (Gmel.). Yellow-legs. Scolopax flavipes. Gambetta flavipes. Lesser Tell-tale or Yellowshanks. Geog. Dist.—Nearly the whole of America; breeding from northern United States to Arctic ocean, chiefly in the interior; migrating south in winter to southern South America. Much rarer west of the Rocky Mountains. In Missouri the Yellow-legs is a common transient visitant oc- curring sometimes in very large flocks from the middle of March to the middle of May, and in smaller numbers from August 2 to the middle of October. 256. HeLopROMAS SOLITARIUS (Wils.). Solitary Sandpiper. Tringa solitaria. Totanus solitarius. Rhyacophilus solitarius. Totanus chloropygius. Wood Tattler. Tip-up. Geog. Dist.—Eastern North America, west to Utah, Wyoming, British Columbia and Alaska. Breeds locally within the north- ern and western United States, but chiefly northward through the Northwest Provinces to latitude 64°. Winters in South America. In Missouri a common transient visitant, never in flocks, but scattered along water-courses and even small pools throughout the state from April 15 to May 25, and from August 1 to October 10, chiefly from August 20 to September 25. Latest in spring, May 27, 1894, Keokuk; and in fall, October 9, 1902, Jasper Co. — 258. SYMPHEMIA SEMIPALMATA (Gmel.). Willet. Scolopax semipalmata. Totanus semipalmatus. Semipalmated Tattler. Geog. Dist.—Eastern North America, north to British Prov- inces, west to the Mississippi. Breeds from Florida to New Jersey, rarely northward. South in winter to West Indies and South America. Formerly not separated from the western Willet from which it differs very little. Records for Willets do not show which of the two subspecies is meant, but both may occur in Missouri, the one in the eastern, the other in the western part. 258a. SYMPHEMIA SEMIPALMATA INORNATA Brewster. Western Willet. Geog. Dist.—Western North America, east to the Mississippi Valley, north to latitude 56°. Breeds from Texas and Louisiana northward and winters in Mexico. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog oj the Birds of Missouri. 73 While in the breeding plumage it may be comparatively easy to tell the two subspecies apart, in the plain gray and white dress which they wear in migration, they are said to be distinguishable only by size, but even this difference is said to be not absolutely reliable. All Willets taken in Missouri should therefore be sub- jected to a close scrutiny to establish their identity as subspecies. In Missouri Willets were formerly fairly common transient visitants in late April and early May, and again in September. That they occurred even in large flocks is proved by Audubon, who writes in his Journal that he met with a large flock of Willets near St. Joseph, Mo., May 5, 1843. At present they are con- sidered rare throughout the state. An exceptionally late date is given by Mr. Currier of Keokuk, namely October 27, 1896. *261. BARTRAMIA LONGICAUDA (Bechst.). Bartramian Sand- piper. Tringa longicauda. Tringa bartramia. Totanus bartramius. Actiturus bartramius. Bartram’s Tattler. Field Plover. Upland Plover. Grass Plover. Geog. Dist—Eastern North America, west to Utah and Oregon, north to Nova Scotia and Alaska. Breeds throughout most of North American range, but chiefly in the prairie and plains region with its breeding center in western Manitoba and eastern Assiniboia. Winters in South America, as far south as Brazil and Peru. In Missouri Field Plovers used to be fairly common summer residents in the Ozark border and Prairie regions; in some local- ities a few may still be found nesting (Appleton City, Prior, 1906), but with an open season till the first of May there is little hope for them. In migration, too, their numbers have been greatly reduced, not one-tenth of the transient visitants of twenty years ago being left. In the southern part of the state the first Field Plovers make their appearance in the latter part of March, in northern Missouri seldom before the middle of April. Tran- sients are mostly gone by the first of May, but begin to reappear in family groups the middle of July and continue to be present through August and nearly to the end of September. vA 262. TRYNGITES SUBRUFICOLLIS (Vieill.). Buff-breasted Sand- piper. Tringa rujescens. Tryngites rujescens. Tringa subruficollis. Geog. Dist—Common on their breeding-grounds along the Arctic coast and on the Barren Grounds from Anderson River 74 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. to Point Barrow, and breeding scatteringly in other parts of the north from Ontario, Minnesota and British Columbia; it is strangely scarce in the United States in migration, except perhaps on the coast prairie of western Louisiana and Texas, where it is found in dense flocks in spring. It is not found in California and very rarely on the Atlantic coast. In winter it goes to South America as far as Uruguay and Peru; frequently found in Europe and Cuba. On September 15, 1901, Mr. Chas. W. Tindall killed nine Buff-breasted Sandpipers on a sandbar in the Missouri River near Independence. Mr. Chas. K. Worthen of Warsaw, IIl., once took a small flock of this species on a sandbar in the Missis- sippi River. There are quite a number of fall records from the neighborhood of Chicago, and from southeastern Nebraska, among them two of recent date, September 11, and 18, 1904, Lincoln, Neb.; but spring records are few, through G. 8. Agers- borg states (Auk vol. 2, p. 286), that he found the Buff-breasted - Sandpiper in southeastern South Dakota in abundance in spring, “when it arrives in large flocks. Only very few are seen on the return passage.”’ *263. ACTITIS MACULARIA (Linn.). Spotted Sandpiper. Tringa macularia. Totanus macularius. Tringoides macularius. Peet- weet. Sand-lark. Tip-up. Teeter-tail. Common Sandpiper. Geog. Dist.—Whole of North, Middle and South America, except Greenland. Breeds throughout the United States and almost to the Arctic coast. Winters south of the United States, going as far south as southern Brazil. In Missouri a fairly common summer resident along the large rivers from April 15 to October 20, and a common transient visitant in spring on all streams, ponds and lakes, and in July, August and September numerous on the sandbars of the larger rivers. 264. NUMENIUS LONGIROSTRIS Wils. Long-billed Curlew. Sickle-bill. 5 Geog. Dist.—Formerly an inhabitant of the whole United States, breeding from Texas northward as well as in the South Atlantic States and locally in the Mississippi Valley north to Wisconsin and Minnesota; now their breeding range is restricted to the western and northwestern states, east to western Kansas Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missourt. 75 and western Nebraska, north through Assiniboia and Alberta into British Columbia. In winter to California, the Gulf coast and south to some parts of the West Indies and Central America. In Missouri formerly a fairly common transient visitant early in April and from August to October (latest record, October 15, 1905, Jasper Co. , Philo. W. Smith, Jr.), now rare like other waders of large size. (265. Numentus Hupsonicus Lath. Hudsonian Curlew.] Scolopax borealis. Numenius borealis. Numenius intermedius. Jack Curlew. Short-billed Curlew. Geog. Dist.—Whole western hemisphere; breeding in the far North, the exact localities not well known, and migrating through United States, chiefly coastwise; wintering from the Gulf states to Patagonia. In Missouri probably a rare transient visitant about the middle of April and early in October. Apt to be confounded with the Eskimo Curlew, and the large females with the Long- billed Curlew. It is recorded from different points in eastern Nebraska, and according to Agersborg (Auk vol. 2, p. 287) used to be a common migrant in southeastern South Dakota. 266. NUMENIUS BOREALIS (Forst.). Eskimo Curlew. Scolopax borealis. Dough-bird. Esquimaux Curlew. Geog. Dist.—Eastern North America; breeding on the Barren Grounds to the southward of Fort Anderson and along the coasts of Behring Sea and Kotzebue Sound. Spring migra- tion chiefly through the interior, generally with Golden Plovers, formerly very common on the plains, now said to go by way of thinly settled parts of western Nebraska and western Kansas. In autumn migration formerly common in New England, now flying from Nova Scotia south over the ocean. In winter south throughout South America. In Missouri a now rare transient visitant in spring, formerly very common in western Missouri late in March and throughout April. Mr. Thad. Surber reports seeing a flock of one hundred in Vernon Co., April 16, 1894. Mr. W. G. Savage met with a flock of ten in Jasper Co., May 1, 1902. 76 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Lows. Family CHARADRIIDAE. Plovers. 270. SQUATAROLA SQUATAROLA (Linn.). Black-bellied Plover. Tringa squatarola. Squatarola helvetica. Charadrius helveticus. Chara- drius apricarius. Beetle-head. Bull-head. Ox-eye. Geog. Dist.—Nearly cosmopolitan, but chiefly in the northern hemisphere. In America breeding from Hudson Bay along Arctic coast to Alaska and migrating through United States both coastwise and in the interior, to the West Indies, Columbia and Brazil. In Missouri a rather rare, formerly irregularly common, transient visitant from the middle of April to the middle of May, and in fall to the end of October. Latest record, November 5, 1889, when Mr. Chas. W. Tindall killed one at Independence. 272. CHARADRIUS DOMINICUS Mill. American Golden Plover. Charadrius pluvialis. Charadrius virginicus. Charadrius jfulvus var. virginicus. Charadrius marmoratus. Green Plover. Field Plover. Bull-head. Geog. Dist.—Western hemisphere except coast of Behring Sea. Breeds in Arctic regions from Parry Islands to Norton Sound. Migrates through United States, chiefly the interior, in spring, and along the Atlantic coast in fall; very rare in Cali- fornia. In winter to South America as far south as Patagonia. In Missouri a common transient visitant from latter part of March to nearly the end of April, and rarely in fall. Formerly in very large flocks about the middle of April on the marshes and fields of northern Missouri, where it still occurs, but in much smaller numbers. The new law of 1905, which forbids spring shooting of plovers in Missouri, will probably be instrumental in increasing plovers of all kinds. Earliest date in spring, March 28, 1872, St. Louis (Hurter collection); latest April 30, 1892, Keokuk (Currier). Fall records are from Keokuk (Currier) October 19, 1902, October 29, 1893 and November 9, 1895; from Independence, November 8, 1892, when Mr. Chas. W. Tindall killed one on a sand bar in the Missouri River. *273. OXYECHUS VOCIFERUS (Linn.). Kiulldeer. Charadrius vociferus. Aegialites vociferus. Aegialitis vocifera. Willdee Plover. Geog. Dist.—United States, Mexico and southern Canada, Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 77 breeding throughout its range, wintering from California and the Gulf States southward to northern South America. In Missouri it may still be called a common transient visitant spring and fall, though it is by no means as abundant as formerly, when it was also well known as a summer resident, not only in the prairie region of the north and west, but also in the Ozark border region and even in the valleys of the Ozarks themselves. A few may still breed in the state, as it is reported to do so at Apple- ton City by Mr. C. W. Prier, 1906. Killdeers are among the first migrants to return to us in earliest spring. The first reach Missouri during the latter part of February (February 17, 1898, St. Louis; February 18, 1902, Jasper Co.; February 26, 1904, St. Charles Co.; February 28, 1904, Independence; February 28, 1893, Keokuk). The bulk of transients is with us from the middle of March to the middle of April, and in fall from September 1 to the middle of November. Exceptionally late dates are November 17, 1896, Keokuk; November 26, 1905, Jasper Co. (Philo. Smith); and December 18, 1887, St. Louis. 274. AHGIALITIS SEMIPALMATA Bonap. Semipalmated Plover. Tringa hiaticula Wils. Charadrius hiaticula Ord. Charadrius semipalmatus. Semipalmated Ring Plover. Ring Plover. Ring-neck. Geog. Dist.—Arctic and subarctic America from Ungava Bay to Norton Sound, rarely south to Ontario and Manitoba. Migrates through United States and winters from Louisiana and Texas to Brazil, Peru and Galapagos Islands. In Missouri a fairly common transient visitant from April 20 to May 20, and in fall from August 20 to September 25 in scat- tered flocks on the mud-flats of our larger rivers together with other plovers and sandpipers. 277a. AEGIALITIS MELODA CIRCUMCINCTA’ Ridgw. Belted Piping Plover. Lately and apparently unnecessarily separated from Aegialitis meloda, the Piping Plover of the Atlantic States, Charadrius hiaticula var. Wils., Charadrius melodus of Ord., Aud. ete. Geog. Dist.—Mississippi Valley, Manitoba and Assiniboia, west to Wyoming. Breeding formerly from Illinois, Indiana and southern Wisconsin northward, now from northern Nebraska. Also found on the Magdalen and Sable Islands. Winters from the Gulf coast southward. 78 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. In Missouri now a rather rare transient visitant about May 1, and more commonly in August and September with other waders on the mud-flats and sand bars of the larger rivers. Subfamily Arenariinae. Turnstones. 283. ARENARIA MORINELLA (Linn.). Ruddy Turnstone. Tringa interpres. Strepsiles interpres. Calico-back. Geog. Dist.—Breeding in arctic America from Mackenzie River eastward; in migration southward through the United States, coastwise and by way of Great Lakes and larger rivers to South America as far south as Patagonia and Falkland Islands. In Missouri a transient visitant on the sand bars of the Missis- sippi River from the middle of August to the middle of September. Occurs probably also in spring, as it has been taken on the Missouri River near Omaha in May and on the Mississippi at Burlington, May 21, 1892. A male was taken on the Kansas River near Topeka, Kan., August 16, 1898, and a single specimen in winter plumage was observed on a sandbar near Cairo, IIl., by Mr. E. W. Nelson, August 30, 1875. OrperR GALLINAE. Gallinaceous Birds. Suborder Phasiani. Pheasants, Grouse, Partridges, Quails, etc. Family TETRAONIDAE. Grouse, Partridges. Subfamily Perdicinae. Partridges. *289. COLINUS VIRGINIANUS (Linn.). Bob-white. Tetrao virginianus. Perdix virginiana. Ortyx virginianus. Quail (in New England). Partridge (Middle and Southern States). Geog. Dist.—Hastern United States, north to southern Maine, southern Ontario and Minnesota, west to South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and eastern Texas. Lately introduced into New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Idaho, California, Oregon and Washington. Breeds throughout its range and is non-migratory, able to withstand the rigors of the northern states, where with sufficient protection in winter it would become half-domesti- cated and very plentiful. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 79 According to our new game law of 1905 November and De- cember are the only months in which Bob-whites may lawfully be killed in Missouri, and it is to be hoped that this lovely bird may regain its former abundance. Feeding the whole year round on insects, weedseeds, and waste grain it is one of the most beneficial birds on the farm and should, therefore, receive all the protection the farmer can give. Though generally considered non-migratory, local migrations from exposed to more sheltered places have often been noticed, and according to Dr. A. F. Eimbeck of New Haven, Franklin Co., a regular north and south migration is a fact well known to people living along the shores of the Missouri River, where Quails are seen toward evening flying across the river, southward in September, northward in April. The river being over half a mile wide some of the birds become exhausted and fall into the water where they are picked up by the people along the shore. Subfamily Tetraoninae. Grouse. *300. BoNASA UMBELLUS (Linn.). Ruffed Grouse. Tetrao umbellus. Pheasant. Partridge (in northern states). Geog. Dist.—Eastern United States and southern Canada, south along the Alleghanies to Georgia and eastern Tennessee; sparingly through Ohio, Indiana and Illinois to Missouri (nor- thern Arkansas); west to eastern Nebraska and Minnesota. Non-migratory. Until twenty years ago the Ruffed Grouse, here called Pheas- ant, was numerous in most wooded parts of Missouri. Early travelers mention it. Audubon killed a pair at the mouth of Grand River, April 30, 1843, and Dr. Hoy has it in his list of birds found above Boonville in early summer, 1854. In 1872 Trippe found it an abundant breeder in Decatur Co., Ia., just across our northern state boundary, and Mr. Nehrling saw a specimen killed in 1883 near Pierce City in the Ozark border region of southwest Missouri. Dr. Eimbeck and his brother, who has a very fine mounted male in his collection, say it was common near New Haven until about 1886. About that time Mr. Hurter received a set of eggs from Pevely, Jefferson Co. Mr. W. F. Rasmus born in 1888 near Marthasville, Warren Co., writes that in his youth pheasants were plentiful near his home as well as near Herman and Wash- 80 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. ington, where he lived later for a while. In 1888 Professor Kilpatrick reported from Fayette, Howard Co., “formerly plenty, now scarce.” Mr. F. C. Pellet of Salem stated recently that pheasants were once found in Dent Co., but are not found there now. Mr. W. G. Savage writes me that fifteen years ago pheasants were considered common in Shannon Co. and that some still occur there, though rarely. One was shot near Mon- teer in the winter of 1905-06. Mr. B. T. Gault met with Ruffed Grouse in two places near Edgehill in Reynolds Co. in June 1894. Mr. E. S. Currier found a nest with eggs on hilly ground in Lee Co., Ia., just across the Des Moines River from Clark Co., Mo., about ten years ago. Although Ruffed Grouse must at present be regarded as rare in Missouri, there are some very recent records which prove that they are not entirely exterminated. Dr. Williams of Flat River knows where to find pheasants along the Big River in St. Francois Co. and Dr. W. Mills and Mr. Jul. Volkman of Web- ster Groves have lately located small colonies along the Meramec River in St. Louis Co. and on the bluffs of the Missouri River in Franklin Co. Mr. Philo Smith found pheasants only a few years ago in the hills back of Herman in Gasconade Co. The new game law (section 10) prohibits their capture or killing until December 1, 1910, when it is expected they will again be plentiful enough to permit an open season of one month in late fall or early winter. While they formerly inhabited not only the hilly part of the state, but also the slopes along the then wooded river bottoms of northern Missouri, they are now re- stricted to the bluff regions of the larger rivers and, to a less extent, to ravines and hillsides along some of the smaller streams, but are never found on the wide ridges of the Ozarks themselves, where‘ conditions do not seem to suit them. Some think the reason why Ruffed Grouse are not more plentiful in the Ozarks and why they have entirely disappeared from localities where they were not much molested by man, is to be found in the ter- rible increase and spread of the chigger (Trombidium), which is said to kill the young grouse. That the chigger, carried from place to place by pasturing animals, is steadily increasing and alarmingly spreading to regions not infested before, is a well- known fact nearly throughout Missouri and, since enemies may determine the breeding range of an animal as well as food and other conditions, I give it as a not impossible theory. Another explanation of their disappearance from the forests of the Ozarks Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 81 may be found in the annual burning over of the floor of these forests in the erroneous opinion the grazing-ground is thereby improved. As this custom has been followed for fifty years, it has succeeded in extirpating a large number of plants, some of which may formerly have been helpful or needed in making the region a desirable abode for the Ruffed Grouse. *305. TYMPANUCHUS AMERICANUS (Reich.). Prairie Hen. Tetrao cupido. Cupidonia cupido. Pinnated Grouse. Prairie Chicken. Geog. Dist.—Prairies of the Mississippi Valley from Louisiana and Texas to Manitoba, now rare east of the Mississippi River west through eastern parts of the Dakotas, Nebraska and Kan- sas with a tendency to spread with deforestation and the settle- ment of the country, but disappearing when the population becomes dense. That the Prairie Hen was once a common resident in the prairie region of Missouri, there is ample proof, but as long ago as 1888 reports came from observers in the state with that la- mentable annotation so often met with in recent bird list “Once common, now rare.’’ With the increase of population and prosperity the number of hunters increased wonderfully during the last decade, and when the new game law of 1905 was framed, the danger of total extinction of the Prairie Hen seemed imminent, but instead of following the example of other states prohibiting all killing for a number of years, the legis- lature made an open season from November 15 to December 15. In a state which issues over 65,000 hunters licenses one month’s open season undoubtedly suffices to prevent any considerable increase of the small remnants left. But even with the best protection laws the Prairie Chicken, such an easy mark for every boy hunter—and every Missouri boy in city or on farm is a hunter now-a-days—,has no prospect of ever becoming numerous again except on well-guarded preserves, where they may easily become semi-domesticated. Though as a rule non-migratory the Prairie Hen of northern Iowa and Minnesota has been known to migrate (some say the females only) southward into and through western Missouri in November and December, returning northward in March. Large flocks of such transients or winter visitants were noticed formerly, but their numbers seem to be too much reduced everywhere to notice such a movement at the present time. 82 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. 307. TYMPANUCHUS PALLIDICINCTUS Ridgw. Lesser Prairie Hen. Geog. Dist.—Eastern edge of the plains from Kansas south — to western Texas. A specimen of this smaller, paler-colored species in the Hurter collection is said to come from southwestern Missouri. In the Nuttall Bulletin, vol. 2, p. 52, Geo. N. Lawrence writes: “Tn the latter part of January 1877 I found in Fulton Market (New York) about thirty specimens of this form. * * * I ascertained that they came from Pierce City, southwestern Missouri. * * * I lately learned from a large dealer that they had been quite abundant in market, all coming from Southern Missouri.” Family PHastANIDAE. Pheasants and Turkeys. PHASIANUS CoLcHIcUS Linn. English Pheasant. Geog. Dist.—Eurasia from Black Sea to Mongolia; south to Persia. Naturalized in Britain and other countries of western and central Europe. PHASIANUS TORQUATUS Gmel. Ring-necked Pheasant. Geog. Dist.—Southern Siberia, Corea and northeastern China. Several apparently unsuccessful attempts to introduce Pheas- ants into Missouri have been made. Major Geo. H. McCann of Springfield, Mo., president of the St. Louis Park and Agri- cultural Co., and the best informed man on all endeavors of stocking our state with game, was kind enough to write to me under date of June 12, 1907, the following interesting account: “The St. Louis Park and Agricultural Co. has liberated some- thing over 400 birds about equally divided of English and Ring-necked Mongolian Pheasants. They were liberated in Taney Co. on our preserve. We also raised some 382 birds by the Game-keeper’s wife and several covies were raised on and about the preserve, but they leave after the first frost in fall when leaves begin to drop. They go—where I know not. I don’t believe we have a pair of birds on the preserve. I have inquired for miles around the preserve, they have seen them, but they left. I have labored with them for the past ten years to try and help stock our state, but feel I have made com- plete failure. I can breed and raise, but when turned loose after a few days they are gone. Springfield, Greene Co., organ- Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 83 ized a club of some ninety members a few years ago, leased several thousand acres, raised and liberated some 600 birds. For a year we felt success, but as with the St. L. P. & Agr. Co., it proved failure and I am unable to locate a bird in Greene Co. Some five or six thousand dollars has been spent on those birds. I sent several pairs to north Missouri with like results.” *310. MELEAGRIS GALLOPAVO SILVESTRIS (Vieill.). Wild Turkey. Meleagris gallopavo. Meleagris gallopavo fera. Geog. Dist.—Formerly entire eastern United States from Florida to Maine, Ontario and Minnesota; west to Kansas and Nebraska; but at present extinct or at the point of extinction in most states except in the southern Alleghanies, the Ozarks and heavily timbered bottoms of southern rivers. Non-mi- gratory. In Missouri: Wild Turkeys occurred formerly in all parts of the state, along the densely wooded river bottoms of the prairie region, in the flood plains of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, in the swamps of the southeast and throughout the Ozarks. All the early travelers speak of the abundance of the Wild Turkeys. Audubon met with them along the Missouri River to the north- west corner of the state (May 6, 1843), and on his way back he speaks of their abundance, October 14, 1843, between Brunswick and Glasgow. When visiting the Grand River valley near Chillicothe, Livingston Co., Dr. Hoy makes the following note: “Skinned a fine old gobbler shot by a friend; wild turkeys are plenty in this vicinity.” Across the boundary of north central Missouri, Trippe writes from Decatur Co., Ia., in 1872: ‘Not uncommon, but shy and vigilant.” But as early as 1888 Mr. Lientz reports from Fayette, Howard Co., “Formerly plenty, now scarce.” At present (1906) Wild Turkeys are all gone from northern Missouri, but are still found in small numbers in most parts of the Ozarks and in the swamps of the southeast. According to Dr. W. Mills of Webster Groves a few still breed in St. Louis and Franklin Co’s. and the species may hold its own for a while yet, though with two months of open season (No- vember and December), which the new (1905) law allows, this will be a difficult matter. 84 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Order COLUMBAE. Pigeons. Family CoLumBipAr. Pigeons. 315. EcTOPISTES MIGRATORIUS (Linn.). Passenger Pigeon. Columba migratoria. Ectropistes macrura. Wild Pigeon. Geog. Dist.—Formerly eastern North America to Hudson Bay, west to Great Plains and straggling to Wyoming, Nevada and Washington, breeding from latitude 32° in Mississippi to latitude 65° in Mackenize. In later years so extremely rare that their occurrence anywhere may be regarded as casual, un- less it be some unsettled parts along the northern border of the United States or in Canada. Our new game law does not protect the Wild Pigeon at all, considering it extinct in the state of Missouri, though once in a while we find the capture of a few of them reported in the newspapers. That they were formerly abundant in Missouri is attested by the early travelers and explorers and is well known to all the old inhabitants. Available records are the following: 1833, April 21. Prince of Wied killed some above the mouth of the Kaw River. 1843, May 6. Audubon killed one or two north of the present site of St. Joseph. 1855, 56 and ’57. EF. V. Hayden says in his report: “Quite abundant on the lower Missouri River.’’ 1872. Large flocks were observed by Dr. A. F. Eimbeck at New Haven, and his brother, Charles L. Eimbeck, who has two fine specimens in his collection of mounted birds. 1874, April6. W.E. D. Scott saw a flock of seven at Warrens- burg. 1878. Last seen at Fayette by Prof. Kilpatrick (Reported in 1885). 1880, September 29. Mr. J. D. Kastendieck took his last Wild Pigeon at Billings, but saw some several years afterward. 1882, February 5 and 6. Several large flocks were seen going north by the writer at St. Louis. 1883. Last year common (in the fall) at Keokuk (Currier). 1884, September 9 and 21. Seen at Mt. Carmel, by Mrs. Musick. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 85 ty 1885, April 18, September 27 (twenty), September 28 (fifty) and the last on September 30 at Mt. Carmel. 1885, September 19. Last seen at St. Louis by the writer. 1888, October 31. Mr. Jasper Blines of Alexandria, Clark Co., Mo., writes in Forest and Stream, vol. 31, p. 343: “ During the whole year I have seen but few passenger pigeons. They were in former years very numerous here and could be seen in flocks composed of millions of birds every spring and fall.” 1893. Last shipment of Wild Pigeons received at St. Louis by N. W. Judy & Co., the game dealers, who handled more dead and live pigeons than any other firm in the country, and who had their netters employed all the year around, tracing the pigeons to Michigan and Wisconsin in spring and to the Indian Territory and the south in winter. Silvan Springs, Ark., from where the last shipment was received according to Judy’s letter to Mr. R. Deane (Auk, vol. 12, p. 298), is only twenty-five miles south of the southwest corner of the state. 1894, April 15. Mr. EK. S. Currier sees ten pigeons at Keokuk, his first since 1888. 1896, May 19. The same sees one among doves, and again one October 18 of the same year. 1896, September 17. Mr. W. Praeger shoots a male near Keokuk. 1896, December 17. Out of a flock of fifty near Attic, Oregon Co., Mo., Mr. Chas. U. Holden, Jr., kills a pair and sends them in the flesh to Mr. R. Deane of Chicago (Auk vol. 14, p. 317). 1897, August 17. A flock of 75-100 is seen twenty-five miles west of our state line in Johnson Co., Neb. 1902, September 26. Last seen at New Haven by Dr. Eim- beck. ri "ie *316. ZENAIDURA MACROURA (Linn.). Mourning Dove. Columba macroura. Columba carolinensis. Zenaidura carolinensis. Caro- lina Dove. Geog. Dist.—Breeds from Mexico and Cuba throughout the United States to Quebec, Manitoba and British Columbia and winters from about lat. 40° southward to the West Indies and Panama. In Missouri the Dove still remains a common summer resident in spite of almost constant persecution, not only in the prairie and border regions, but on all cultivated ground throughout the 86 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Ozarks and the southeast. The first spring arrivals appear at very irregular times, seldom before the middle of March, most frequently in the second half of that month; about once in four years the first Doves are not seen before some day in the first half of April, then soon followed by the bulk, which is to be ex- pected between April 10 and 25, when they become generally distributed and begin nesting. Small troops may be seen flying northward as late as early May. Where not molested they lose much of their timidity and build nests in close proximity to human habitations. From July to October, though not forming real flocks, Doves are found in large aggregations on the wheat stubble and in corn-fields, gleaning the waste grain and ripening grass and weed seeds. After the middle of October they become scarce, but small numbers continue in northern Missouri into, and sometimes through, November, and in southern Missouri through December. As the law sanctions their destruction till the first of January, very few get a chance to prove their endur- ance of our more severe winter weather of January and February, when snow and sleet drive them to the farmyard for food and shelter and place them at the mercy of the farmer. Order RAPTORES. Birds of Prey. Suborder Sarecorhamphi. American Vultures. Family CaTHARTIDAR. American Vultures. *325. CATHARTES AURA (Linn.). Turkey Vulture. Vultur aura. Rhinogryphus aura. Turkey Buzzard. Red-headed Vulture. Geog. Dist.—From Patagonia and the Falkland Islands to Assiniboia in the interior, to British Columbia on the Pacific and to Sandy Hook on the Atlantic side, rarely to New England and the British Provinces. Winters from southern California, Ohio River and Chesapeake Bay southward. The Turkey Vulture or Buzzard, as it is commonly called, is the only one of all our larger birds which has not diminished in numbers during the past twenty-five years. It is also one of the few birds that can be seen in any of the 114 counties of Missouri on any day during six months of the year from April to October. It can hardly be called a permanent resident, not even in the most southern part of the state. Some think Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 87 that a species can be said to winter with us, when we see an individual in every one of the winter months, but this is not correct. Though frost may occur in Missouri on any day from the middle of October to the middle of April, our really severe winter weather comes usually only between the middle of January and the middle of February. Moderately cold weather with frequent mild, and even warm spells may prevail through December and part of January and induce hardy birds to remain with us, but a prolonged period of intensely cold, even zero weather is likely to set in as late as the fourth week of January and last uninterruptedly until the middle of February, fully three weeks, when suddenly the weather may turn warm, ob- literate all traces of ice and snow within one week and make it possible for the vanguard of migrants to invade the state before the end of the month. Among the first to put in an appearance after the withdrawal of severe weather are a few forerunners of this species, but records for February are not many. Excep- tionally early dates are for St. Louis, February 10, 1888, and for Keokuk, February 17, 1897; for Mt. Carmel, February 18, 1886. The majority of Turkey Buzzards return in March, filling up their ranks very slowly and some of their old haunts are not reached before the first half of April. Troops of migrating Buzzards are seen late in Marchand early in April and again in the first half of October. After the middle of that month the species becomes scarce, but does not entirely disappear from the state for some weeks yet and lasts have been reported by different observers all the way from October 16, 1904, Kansas City, to December 14 and January 18 at Montgomery City, though mainly in November. Whether Turkey Vultures have increased since the white man has settled the country, is difficult to say, but it is remarkable that Audubon does not mention them among the birds observed on his way up the Missouri River in April 1843, while Dr. Hoy found them ‘nesting in cliffs all along the river” in April 1854. For reasons only known to the solons of Jefferson City our latest game law, that of 1907, has placed the Buzzard into section 7 together with the English Sparrow, Chicken Hawk, Blackbird and Crow among the birds “not protected by this act.’’ *326. CATHARISTA URUBU (Vieill.). Black Vulture. Vultur atratus. Catharista atrata. Cathartes atratus. Vultur iota. Carrion Crow. Geog. Dist.—South Atlantic and Gulf States to western Texas, 88 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. north to North Carolina, and in the Mississippi Valley to the mouth of the Ohio; casually to the northern states and Canada; south through the West Indies, Mexico, Central America and in South America to lat. 41°. In Missouri a regular, though not numerous, summer resident in the alluvial counties of the southeast, where it is said to make its nests on cypress stumps in the overflow in similar situations as the Canada Goose. Also seen by the writer along the White River in southwestern Missouri in Stone Co. in June 1905, and in Taney Co., May 1906, in company with Turkey Vultures. Mr. H. Nehrling reported it as having occurred twice in Law- rence Co. Mr. E. 8. Woodruff identified one April 29, 1907, in Shannon Co. Suborder Falcones. Falcons, Hawks, Buzzards, Eagles, Kites, ete. Family Fatconipar. Falcons, Hawks, Hagles. Subfamily Accipitrinae. Kites, Buzzards, Hawks, Hagles. *397. ELANOIDES FORFICATUS (Linn.). Swallow-tailed Kite. Falco jorficatus. Falco furcatus. Nauclerus forficatus. Nauclerus furcatus, Milvus jurcatus. Elanus furcatus. Fork-tailed Kite. Swallow-tailed Hawk. Geog. Dist.—Whole of South and Central America, and in North America through the interior north to Minnesota 47° and North Dakota 49° lat.; on the Atlantic coast to the Caro- linas, rarely to New England; west casually to Colorado. Breeds regularly from Ohio River southward; irregularly north to Iowa, northern Nebraska, southern Wisconsin, and wanders after the breeding season in flocks of various size indifferently over the country, chiefly west of the Mississippi River. Winters south of United States. In the cotton field region of southeastern Missouri the Swallow- tailed Kite is a regular, though not numerous, summer resident, nesting in the adjoining cypress swamps. In the rest of the state it is of very irregular occurrence, though apparently paying occasional visits to all parts of it. It has been found nesting in Clark Co. in the northeast corner of Missouri by Mr. E. 8. Currier of Keokuk, and Mr. John 8. Marley took an egg from a nest near Kansas City. Trippe found it breeding in 1872 just across the state line in Iowa. Nearly all observers in Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 89 Missouri have met with the species at one time or another. Audubon saw one near the northwest corner of the state, May 10, 1843, probably near its breeding ground. Dr. Hoy has it in his list of birds observed in western Missouri between April 16 and June 15, 1854. Scott noted it once at Warrensburg, April 15, 1874. In his “Birds of the North-West”? Dr. Coues writes on page 333: “I had the pleasure of observing it myself in Missouri opposite Fort Leavenworth in May 1864.” Early in the eighties Mr. Nehrling found it a pretty regular visitant in Lawrence Co. Mr. Jul. Hurter once observed a troop of 40 in early August in the city of St. Louis remaining in the same locality over a week. In 1884 Mrs. Musick saw them repeatedly in troops of six to eight at Mt. Carmel, Audrain Co. It was also reported from Fayette, May 9 and 25, 1884. There is also one date saved from my old notes lost by fire, August 20, 1885, St. Louis. Mr. Currier and Mr. Praeger give me the following dates of occurrence at Keokuk: March 2 and March 19 (unusually early) and May 18, 1897. Mr. Tindall saw one July 16, 1904, at Independence, and Mr. Bush, August 30, August 31 and Septem- ber 4, 1906, at Courtney. Fine specimens taken in the state are in the Hurter collection at St. Louis, in the Eimbeck col- lection at New Haven, in the Kastendieck collection at Billings, and one taken by Mr. Ollie C. Shelley at Independence loaned to the Public Museum of Kansas City. (328. ELANuS LEUCURUS (Vieill.). White-tailed Kite.] Milvus leucurus. Falco dispar. Elanus glaucus. Elanus dispar. Black- shouldered Hawk. Geog. Dist.—From Chile and Buenos Ayres to South Carolina on the east (except West Indies), Indian Territory and Texas in the interior, and northern California on the Pacific. Rare within the United States except in California, where fairly common. There is one record from southern Illinois where Mr. R. Ridgway observed a pair at Mt. Carmel in the summer of 1863 or 1864. In Mrs. Bailey’s “Handbook of the Birds of Western United States,” the species is said to occur to the latitude of St. Louis in the interior, but no record of its occurrence in Missouri has been obtained. If it enters our state, it is probably as an accidental visitant from the southwest. 90 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Lowis. *329. ICTINIA MISSISSIPPIENSIS (Wils.). Mississippi Kite. Falco mississippiensis. Falco plumbeus. Ictinia plumbea. Ictinia sub- caerulea. Geog. Dist.—Southern United States east of Rocky Mountains; south to Guatemala; north to South Carolina, Missouri and Kansas, casually to Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and Dakota. Winters south of the United States. The region of the cypress swamps and cotton fields in the south- east is the only part of Missouri where Mississippi Kites may be called common summer residents, where half a dozen or more may be seen circling playfully above the timber, or hunting peacefully like so many Nighthawks low over the sandy fields. In the eighties a pair made its home for several summers in a small secluded piece of primeval forest in the southwestern part of St. Louis, arriving there near the end of April and remaining till August. As most of the stately trees have since then been removed and the place has become common hunting ground, the gentle, dove-like pair is gone, but a few Mississippi Kites still find their way to St. Louis County and probably nest on the bluffs of the Missouri River. There are no records for the species from that part of the state north of the Missouri River, but the bird is not unknown in the Ozark region of south- ern Missouri. Mr. Kastendieck has specimens in his collection taken near his home in Billings, Christian Co., and in the early eighties Mr. Nehrling found them “pretty numerous” in Law- rence Co. The writer was pleased to see them lately (May 1906) in pairs in Webster and Howell Counties, in localities where they are likely to survive for some time yet. A *331. CrRcUS HUDSONIUS (Linn.). Marsh Hawk. Falco hudsonius. Circus cyaneus hudsonius. Falco uliginosus. Falco cyaneus. Circus cyaneus. American Harrier. Mouse Hawk. Geog. Dist.—Breeds from Alaska, Great Slave Lake, Hudson Bay and Cape Breton Island southward to the southern border of the United States, and winters from about lat. 40° southward to Panama and Cuba. The Marsh Hawk was undoubtedly formerly a very common summer resident in the prairie region of Missouri. Audubon met with it near the northwest corner of the state, May 6, 1843. Trippe in 1872 called it abundant; ‘“‘many breed”’ in Decatur Co., Ta., just across the state line. Mr. E.S. Currier found it breeding Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog oj the Birds of Missouri. 91 in Clark Co. in the nineties, and it is reported as breeding from Kansas City and Montgomery City. The last record comes from St. Charles Co., June 1905, where in the tall grasses of the elub grounds it still succeeds in raising a brood. There are probably a few more localities in the marshes of the Mississippi flood plain and on the broad meadows of northern Missouri where they can nest unmolested, but such chances become fewer every year. As a transient visitant the Marsh Hawk plays a prominent part still, not so much in spring from the middle of March to the middle of April, as throughout fall and early winter or until deep snow and severe cold drives it farther south. The only time for which we have no records is from the middle of January to the first of March, the period of lowest temperature and deepest snow, often enforced by sleet and freezing rain. This species is one of the so-called Chicken Hawks of our hunters, who see in every large hawk a competitor and therefore an enemy. It is accused of killing quails, young rabbits and other game, though a careful study of its feeding habits by the Department of Agriculture has shown that it is extremely useful, because feeding principally upon meadow mice and other injurious rodents. While this may be of no concern to the hunter, it should be the aim of the farmer to give, at least on his own grounds, the fullest protection to a benefactor that removes the pest which eats his grain and girdles his fruit trees. Unlike other hawks with which they are commonly confounded, par- ticularly the Cooper’s Hawk, the real robber of young chickens, the Marsh Hawks are so little shy that, while hunting low over the ground, they often pass within easy range of the gunner, who seldom fails to kill the poor bird. In spring and fall they serve as scavengers preying upon crippled and dead birds, which frequently lie far from the spot where they received the shot, and are lost to the gunner. #339 AccIpITmR VELOX (Wils.). Sharp-shinned Hawk. Falco velox. Falco fuscus. Accipiter fuscus. Nisus fuscus. Astur velow. Accipiter, Astur and Nisus pensylvanicus. Accipiter fringilloides. Geog. Dist.—Breeds throughout the United States and the wooded parts of the British Dominion and Alaska. Winters from latitude 40° southward to Central America. The Sharp-shinned Hawk, for which a better name would be Sparrow Hawk, particularly so because it exactly represents 92 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. the European bird of that name, is well known all over Missouri, but is nowhere common at any time. It is seen oftenest in spring and fall from March 10 to the first week in May and from early in September to about the twentieth of November. Records for December, January and February are few, but it is reported as a rare winter visitant not only from the southern part of the state, but even from the northwestern corner by Mr. E. S. Currier, January 4, 1903, and February 9, 1897, and from the western border December 30, 1902, by Mr. J. A. Bryant of Kansas City. Reports of its breeding in Missouri are also rare; they come from Montgomery City (Parker), Independence (Tindall), and St. Louis County, where Mr. Philo W. Smith, Jr., took a set of eggs in 1904 and saw the birds again in the summer of 1905. Unlke most other hawks this species does not seem to have suffered great losses In numbers. It has probably never been much more numerous than it is now, for the reason that it is not such an easy mark as the so-called chicken or hen- hawks of our farmers and hunters. It does not sit around on fence posts and quietly await the approach of the cruel gunner; it is always on the alert and so quick in its movements that it is generally out of range before the beholder has recovered from his astonishment. It is sometimes seen circling high in the air, but its home is in the woods and its hunting is done low over the ground, often at the edge of the forest, along fences and hedges or the varied plant growth fringing our creeks and wet- weather branches. Its strategy is surprise; it snatches the frightened bird before it can reach the protecting thicket. Living almost entirely on small birds and young poultry it 1s decidedly harmful, but its recently acquired taste for the plump and saucy English sparrow has been regarded as a redeeming feature. An additional record of its breeding in the southern part of the state is furnished by Mr. E. 8S. Woodruff, who took on May 2, 1907, in Shannon Co., a female containing three nearly developed eggs, proving they breed there. *333. ACCIPITER COOPERII (Bonap.). Cooper’s Hawk. Falco cooperti. Astur cooperii. Falco stanleyi. Accipiter mexicanus. Blue Hawk (adult). Geog. Dist.—Breeds from Gulf of Mexico to the southern Brit- ish provinces, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia. Winters from about lat. 39° southward to southern Mexico. In Missouri the Cooper’s Hawk may still be called a fairly Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 93 common summer resident in all parts of the state where culti- vated fields alternate with remnants of high timber in which it can make its home. There are no records of its occurrence for the period from January 20 to February 19, and it is therefore not safe to class it among the permanent residents, especially since its presence during the whole time from October 30 to March 28 is exceptional rather than the rule. Transient visitants are most numerous from early in April to the first week of May, and in fall from the middle of September to late in October. Wholesale migration has been noticed from about the twentieth to the twenty-sixth of September, when singly or in pairs they have followed each other at intervals of a few minutes, from ten to twenty being visible to the spectator, but, as they are known to advance in a broad front, the whole movement must mean the depopulation of a large district. This is the true chicken- hawk for the depredations of which so many harmless species have to suffer, and it is the only hawk that does enough damage to warrant indiscriminate destruction with a view to total extermination. Fortunately for this bold and clever marauder this extremity is not to be expected for a long time to come, as he knows how totake care of himself and his family. He selects his hunting grounds miles away from his aerie, high up and far out on the branch of an old tree in a quiet part of the woods. Poultry raisers should know the different species of hawks; they should know well the one that does most of the harm of which so much capital is made in order to justify the murder of each and every hawk. But as this is hardly possible, the best plan would be to kill no hawk except the one caught in the very act of making inroads on one’s property. Since the worst damage is done among young poultry, the owner should know that the same hawk will come back for more after he has succeeded in carrying off one; he is likely to be back about the same time of day and thereby offers an opportunity to watch for him with gun in hand. Even if missed once or twice—and this may happen to a good marksman—it will secure safety for one’s pets, as the cautious hawk will probably not return any more. 334. ACCIPITER ATRICAPILLUS (Wils.). American Goshawk. Falco atricapillus. Astur atricapillus. Falco palumbarius. Astur palum- barius. Geog. Dist.—Breeds in northern North America in the wooded districts north of the range of the Cooper’s Hawk, south in the 94 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Lows. Rocky Mountains to New Mexico, and in the West to Eastern Washington and Oregon, being replaced westward by the sub- species striatulus. Winters in the United States, chiefly south- ward, but is nowhere common. Missouri collectors know that it is not easy to get a Goshawk for their collections, and taxidermists say that years pass before they get to see one. An exception was made this fall (1906) when Mr. F. Schwarz, our leading St. Louis taxidermist, received five fine adult birds (males and females) within one month from the middle of November to the middle of December. From observations of a long series of years we cannot but class the Goshawk among the irregular and rather rare transient visitants with a majority of dates from March 20 to April 10 and between November 13 and December 20. As we find no record for Janu- ary and only one for February we can hardly call it a winter resident, though future observations may supply the missing dates. An exceptionally early fall date is October 8, 18938, obtained from Mr. Currier of Keokuk in the northeast corner of the state, and an equally extraordinary late spring date, May 6, 1848, one of Audubon’s notes made near the northwest corner on his journey up the Missouri River to the Yellowstone River. *337. BUTEO BOREALIS (Gmel.). Red-tailed Hawk. Falco borealis. Falco leverianus. Buteo aquilinus. Red-tailed Buazard. Geog. Dist.—Eastern North America; north to New Found- land, the British Provinces, Hudson Bay, Saskatchewan and Alberta; west to eastern Nebraska and Colorado; south to eastern Mexico. Breeds nearly throughout its range and winters mostly in the Southern States, though some remain even in the Northern States and all return very early to their breeding ground. Within the last years the Red-tailed Hawk has decreased so much in Missouri at all seasons that not more than one is left where ten were seen twenty years ago. Every hunter and many farmers deem it their duty to kill every one of these singu- larly .defamed and misjudged benefactors, universally, but in- appropriately, named Hen or Chicken Hawks. It cannot be disputed that some individuals, when pressed by hunger or by the clamor of a nestful of hungry mouths, take recourse to the chicken yard and relieve a sickly old hen of all her troubles, or teach a careless mother to take better care of her youngsters, Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 95 but their usual business is to remove as many mice and other noxious rodents from the farmer’s field as their time and capacity will allow. As a summer resident it used to be well known in all parts of the state; the timber along the streams of our northern and western prairie region suited it as well as the wooded hill-sides in the Ozarks; even the watery southeast was not entirely deserted, though it prefers partly open country to densely wooded regions. The wooded bluffs which border our river valleys and mountain streams are at present the best loca- tions for the stately Red-tail to rear a brood, but it must be very careful not to betray its aerie, for it is an outlaw in this state, whose latest game and bird protection law strangely exempts from protection all large hawks under that ambiguous term, “echickenhawk.”’ The number of transient visitants is still re- spectable, but small compared with what it used to be, when dozens could be seen in suitable localities, where mice abounded, on a drive of a few miles through farming country, especially in fall. They are most common from the middle of September to the end of November, but, though some are with us in all kinds of winter weather, the bulk is gone during the two or three months of real winter. Our summer residents are on their breeding grounds in February, but the majority of transients pass through our state in March. They do not stop with us as long as in fall, neither are they seen in troops as they sometimes are on bright October days majestically soaring high in the air sailing south- ward. There is a perfectly white albino of this species in the bird collection of the Kansas City Public Museum, but the place and time of capture are not given. 337a. BUTEO BOREALIS KRIDERII Hoopes. _Krider’s Hawk. White-bellied Red-tail. Geog. Dist.—Great Plains from Texas to Dakotas and Minne- sota; west to Wyoming and Colorado; east to Wisconsin, north- ern Illinois and Iowa in migration. Typical examples of this subspecies seem to be very rare every- where, but birds closely approaching this peculiar light phase are apparently not very rare in Missouri, even as far east as the Mississippi River. Mr. Praeger killed a fine male near Keokuk, December 22, 1889, and Mr. Currier of the same place gives March 17, 1895, and March 23, 1897, as dates of occurrence. Mr. Charles K. Worthen of Warsaw, Ill., took a specimen on the 96 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. prairie east of that town, where it is occasionally seen in winter. A bird answering the description was observed for several days (November 21-23, 1905) on the grounds of the Horse Shoe Lake club in St. Charles Co., and one taken in spring near Billings, Christian Co., is in Mr. Kastendieck’s collection. Considering that the Krider’s Hawk is only a subspecies of the Plains, a geographical race known to intergrade with the typical eastern form, it seems plausible that Missouri lies in the belt of inter- gradation inhabited or visited by the intermediates. 337b. BUTEO BOREALIS CALURUS (Cass.). Western Red-tail. Buteo calurus. Buteo montanus. Black Red-tail. Geog. Dist.—Western North America from Mexico to Sitka; east to eastern British Columbia, central Montana, Wyoming and Colorado; in migration to Ontario, Wisconsin, northern Illinois, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri. This more or less darker-colored western race, the light ex- treme of which is said to be scarcely distinguishable from true borealis, is probably not a very rare transient and winter visi- tant in Missouri, especially in the west. ‘Two specimens taken within one week in the fall of 1888 near Billings, by Mr. J. D. Kastendieck, show distinctly the rufous bars on the tibiae, one of the characteristics of the subspecies, said by some authors to constitute even in the young a persistent feature, in which it differs from the almost or quite immaculate white of the young eastern Red-tail. Mr. Chas. K. Worthen writes that he has taken this subspecies repeatedly near Warsaw during the breed- ing season. 337d. BUTEO BOREALIS HARLANI (Aud.). Harlan’s Hawk. Falco harlani. Black Warrior. Geog. Dist.—Gulf States and lower Mississippi Valley; north to Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, casually to eastern Nebraska, Indi- ana, Minnesota and Pennsylvania. Probably a regular summer resident in southeastern Missouri, as it has been observed repeatedly in May in different years in Dunklin and Pemiscot counties. A specimen in the collection of Mr. John D. Kastendieck was shot four miles south of Bil- lings, Christian Co., about the middle of November, 1905. A fine adult male was taken on the Mississippi near Warsaw, III, opposite the northeastern corner of Missouri, in March, 1879, Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 97 by Mr. Chas. K. Worthen. Two were seen at that time flying up the river. *339. BuTEO LINEATUS (Gmel.). Red-shouldered Hawk. Falco lineatus. Falco hyemalis. Buteo hyemalis. Circus hyemalis. Astur hyemalis. Falco buteoides. Red-shouldered Buzzard. Geog. Dist.—Hastern North America, north to southern prov- inces of Canada, west to the Plains; south to Mexico. Breeds throughout its range. Winters sometimes in Ontario and the Northern States, but in the Mississippi Valley chiefly south of latitude 39°, returning very early to its breeding places in the North. As a summer resident the Red-shoulder far outnumbers its cousin, the Red-tail, with which it shares the honor of being called Hen or Chicken Hawk, in all wooded parts of Missouri. It is particularly common on the flood plains of the large rivers and in the swampy southeast, where in spring and summer its call is one of the most common sounds. As a denizen of the lowland it follows the river valleys, both north and south, in the prairie as well as throughout the Ozark region, but thanks to the relentless persecution and lack of nesting sites as a conse- quence of the removal of all trees, even those fringing the water- courses, some parts of the state are already without this great benefactor of the agriculturist. It has been found that 65% of its food consists of mice and other injurious rodents; less than 2% of poultry, and the rest of frogs, crawfish, snakes and in- sects. ‘Though some may be found in every month of the year, the majority leave the state in November and December and do not return until late in February and early March, to the more northern part usually not before the middle of that month. North-bound transients do not tarry with us as long as the south-bound in the fall from September to November, mostly inexperienced birds of the year, many of which fall to the ever- ready gun of the duck and snipe hunter. 342. BuUTEO SWAINSONI Bonap. Swainson’s Hawk. Falco buteo. Buteo vulgaris. Buteo montanus Nuttall. Buteo bairdii (juv). Geog. Dist.—From Argentina to arctic regions; in North America from the Pacific coast east to Manitoba, western Minne- sota, Nebraska and middle Kansas; in migration eastward to Ontario, Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Missouri and Arkansas. 98 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Lours. Accidentally to New England. Winters from Texas southward and migrates sometimes in large flocks. The Swainson’s Hawk was reported by Mr. H. Nehrling as a rare breeder in the region of Pierce City, Lawrence Co., in the early eighties. The writer saw it in Platte Co., opposite Leaven- worth, June 28, 1906, a time of the year when a well-bred Swain- son’s Hawk should be on its breeding grounds. In Osprey, Vol. 5, p. 109, we read: ‘On. April 23, 1901, a pair was found building a nest in an elm that grew on the west bank of Sugar Creek, Linn Co., Kansas.’’ This is only 28 miles from our state line. In has repeatedly been found nesting in central Iowa, and once in southeastern Illinois (Richland Co., 1875) by Mr. KE. W. Nelson. In his migration reports to the Department of Agriculture, Mr. W. G. Savage reports this species from Jasper Co., October 12 and 16, 1902, and from Shannon Co., September 15 to 24, 1903. Mr. Chas. K. Worthen has taken it at Warsaw, Ill., and further observations will probably show that it is a not uncommon transient visitant, especially westward, and a pos- sible breeder in the northwestern counties. *343. BuTrEO PLATYPTERUS (Vieill.). Broad-winged Hawk. Buteo pennsylvanicus. Buteo latissimus. Astur pennsylvanicus. Geog. Dist.—From northern South America, Mexico and West Indies through Eastern United States to New Brunswick, On- tario and eastern Manitoba. West to Minnesota, eastern Ne- braska, Kansas and Texas. Breeds throughout its North Ameri- can range and winters from the South Atlantic and Gulf States southward. The Broad-wing is a fairly common summer resident in Mis- souri, mainly eastward, less commonly westward. It prefers undulating ground where wooded tracts, even of medium-sized trees, adjoin creek bottoms, wet meadows and cultivated fields. Such localities still exist in spite of the universal devastation of timber, in most parts of the state. It seems to shun the swampy southeast and the bottoms of the large rivers as well as the dry ridges of the Ozarks and the drier stretches of the prairie region. None winter with us; migration from the north is brisk during the fourth week of September, when on some days dozens may be seen sailing over in loose flocks. It does not stop over as long as the Red-tail and Red-shoulder, but small parties may be met with during the first half of October, after which the Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 99 species becomes rare, though the last may be noted a month later (November 11, 1897, Keokuk, Currier). Its return in spring is rather irregular; it is seldom seen in March, oftener in early April, but summer residents cannot be expected back in their breeding haunts with certainty before the latter part of the month. 347a. ARCHIBUTEO LAGOPUS SANCTI-JOHANNIS (Gmel.). Ameri- can Rough-legged Hawk. Falco sancti-johannis. Falco lagopus. Buteo lagopus. Archibuteo lagopus. Falco niger. Buteo niger. Black Hawk. Rough-legged Buzzard. Geog. Dist.—From the Gulf of Mexico north to Newfoundland, Ungava and through the Barren Grounds to Alaska; rare from foot of Rocky Mountains westward. Breeds in Newfoundland, Ungava and from northern Assiniboia and Alberta northward, exceptionally south to northern border of United States. Win- ters from northern United States southward, but chiefly in the Middle and Southern States, being influenced largely by the amount of snow which covers the ground, depriving it of its favorite food—the meadow mice—for which it often hunts in the twilight. Like most of our winter visitants the Rough-leg is of irregular occurrence in Missouri, both in numbers and time of arrival and departure. It is never seen before the first of November and hardly ever after the first of April (April 6, 1902, Keokuk, Currier). The bulk comes about the latter part of November and has left us by the middle of March. In open, moderately cold winters the fields, pastures, meadows and marshes of northern Missouri are well supplied with this inde- fatigable mouser, which, somewhat resembling a Marsh Hawk, flies low over the ground, every once in a while hovering for a few seconds to subject the ground to a closer examination, or pouncing on its unlucky quarry. [348. ARCHIBUTEO FERRUGINEUS (Licht.). Ferruginous Rough- leg]. Falco ferrugineus. California Squirrel Hawk. Geog. Dist.—Western North America, east to eastern Da- kotas, eastern Nebraska, middle of Kansas and Texas. North to northern Assiniboia; south into Mexico. Breeds from Utah, Colorado and Kansas northward; in California in the interior valleys to San Diego Co. 100 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Lous. It has been taken in Illinois, Iowa and Wisconsin, and is said to occur throughout Nebraska and Kansas, being even a com- mon breeder in the western parts of these states. It should be looked for in our western and northern prairie region, where it will undoubtedly occur as an occasional transient visitant. It is said to be easily recognized by its large size, pale ashy-colored tail, and generally light-colored under parts, strongly contrast- ing with its rufous legs (Bendire). 349. AQUILA CHRYSAETOS (Linn.). Golden Eagle. Falco chrysaétos. Aquila canadensis. Aquila fulva Nuttall. Ring-tailed Eagle. Geog. Dist.—Northern Hemisphere; in America from Central Mexico to the Arctic coast and Aleutian Islands; chiefly western. Breeds in mountainous regions. In winter irregularly over most of United States. In Missouri now a rather rare winter visitant between October 1 and April 1. Formerly much more common, as attested by the large number of mounted specimens in private collections or used for ornamental purposes in public places. *352. HALIAEETUS LEUCOCEPHALUS (Linn.). Bald Eagle. Falco leucocephalus. Falco ossifragus. Falco Washingtonii. Aquila leu- cocephala. Haliaétus Washingtoni. Bird of Washington. White-head- ed Eagle. Black Eagle. Gray Eagle. American Eagle. (National Em- blem). Geog. Dist.—Together with the lately separated subspecies, alascanus, Northern Bald Eagle, the whole of North America, from Mexico to the arctic coast and from Newfoundland to Kamchatka, the new subspecies inhabiting the region north of the United States in summer, but going southward in winter. Since the southern form, which formerly nested throughout its range from Florida to California and from Texas to Minnesota and Maine, is now driven out of most of its former breeding grounds in the upper Mississippi and Missouri Valleys, the Bald Eagles which still visit us in small numbers in fall, winter and spring, are probably mostly of the Northern subspecies. That the Bald Eagle was formerly a well-known breeder along all our larger rivers there is ample proof. On April 25, 1833, when near the mouth of Nodaway River on his way up the Mis- souril, Prince Max of Wied wrote in his Journal: ‘“ White-headed Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 101 Kagles nest frequently on high trees along the shore.” Audubon mentions Bald Eagles repeatedly on his journey through the state. When near the mouth of the Gasconade River on April 27, 1843, he speaks of curious holes in the cliffs, where the Bald Hagles and Turkey Buzzards entered toward dusk. When be- tween Fort Leavenworth and St. Joseph on May 6, 1848, he dis- covered two nests of White-headed Eagles. And again the fol- lowing day, north of St. Joseph, he saw White-headed Eagles on nests. Dr. Hoy names Haliaetus leucocephalus in his list of birds, made in western Missouri between April 16 and June 15, 1854. The swampy region of southeastern Missouri is the place where Baldy held out longest as a resident, but as long ago as the early nineties chances to rear a brood of young Eagles grew very slim, when some of the native market hunters turned into plume hunters. There may still be a few pairs breeding in the cypress swamps, but as a breeder the species must be considered nearly extinct in Missouri. Our new game law means to protect eagles in as much as it does not mention them among the birds exempt from protection, but unfortunately the public does not understand it, and the game wardens do not care, or else the daily press would not continue to make heroes and benefactors of the fellows who wantonly slaughter such a harmless creature and one of the grandest ornaments of any landscape wherever it appears. Since the above was written my son Berthold, dis- covered the existence of at least one pair breeding in the state. On May 23, 1907, he found chained to the porch of a hotel at New Madrid a fully-grown young lately captured from an old eagle’s nest in a bayou near New Madrid. Two young ones were reared, but one could fly and got away. At the same place he met an old trapper, who boasted of having killed within 37 years 487 Eagles, catching them in traps baited with fish. *399. FALCO MEXICANUS Schleg. Prairie Falcon. Falco polyagrus. Falco lanarius var. polyagrus. Falco lanarius mexicanus . Lanner. Geog. Dist.—Western North America from Mexico to Assini- boia and British Columbia; east to the Dakotas, Nebraska and western Missouri; west to California. Breeds throughout its range, and retires from the northern and middle states in winter. Casually to Illinois (Rock Island, Mount Carmel, Bridgeport and Paris) in migration (September and March 19). 102 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. Has been found breeding in Nodaway Co., where April 28, 1880, two eggs were collected near Maryville, now in the collec- tion of Captain B. F. Goss in Milwaukee. Mr. John A. Bryant of Kansas City writes that he took a Prairie Falcon near that city in 1887. *356. FALCO PEREGRINUS ANATUM (Bonap.). Duck Hawk. Falco anatum. Falco communis var. anatum. Falco peregrinus. Pere- grine Falcon. Geog. Dist.—From Chile to the arctic circle and from Green- land to the Mackenzie, being replaced on the North Pacific coast from Oregon to the Aleutian Islands by the subspecies pealez. Breeds locally throughout its North American range, except on the southern and western Plains. Winters in the southern Unit- ed States and southward, but returns with the teals and black- birds. That the cliffs along our great rivers were formerly the homes of many of these noble falcons is evident from the notes of early travelers. Prince of Wied mentions the nesting of Peregrine Falcons in the rocky cliffs near Rockport, April 14, 1833. Au- dubon, when near the mouth of the Gasconade River, April 27, 1843, wrote in his dairy: “Harris saw a Duck Hawk about the cliffs.’ Again when between Leavenworth and St. Joseph on May 4, 1843, he names the Falco peregrinus among the many birds seen on that day. Dr. Hoy, on the day following his de- parture from St. Louis, steaming up the Missouri, makes this entry in his diary, April 14, 1854: “Saw a Duck Hawk fly to her aerie in the face of an inaccessible cliff with a duck in her claws to feed her young.” During the eighties and early nineties a few pairs still nested along the Mississippi River in the vi- cinity of Grand Tower, near the mouth of the Meramec, near Grimsley station below Cliff Cave, between Alton and Grafton, also on some of their old stands on the lower Missouri, but have since deserted their haunts and are not likely to take them up again. In the collection of Mr. Charles L. Eimbeck at New Haven is a most beautiful pair of Duck Hawks taken near Bluff- ton, where they had a nest in the cliffs. There may still be a few pairs nesting in out of the way places in the Ozarks, but their doom as breeders in Missouri has been sealed, and even as transient visitants they are decided rarities, while formerly they used to be pretty regular sights about the blackbirds’ roosts and duck and snipe grounds in March and October. Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 103 1357. FaLco COLUMBARIUS Linn. Pigeon Hawk. Falco (Aesalon) lithofalco var. columbarius. Falco temerarius. American Merlin. ‘‘The little corporal.’’ Geog. Dist.—Breeding, except in mountainous regions, north of lat. 43°; in Canada throughout wooded parts from New- foundland to Alaska. In winter from southern United States to West Indies and northern South America. In Missouri a rather rare, some seasons a fairly common, transient visitant in March and April, and in October; only a few winter records (January and February). Latest spring date, May 6, 1843, when Audubon saw a Pigeon Hawk north of St. Foseph. 358. FALCO RICHARDSONIL Ridgw. Richardson’s Merlin. Geog. Dist.—Interior and western Plains of North America from Mississippi River to the Pacific coast and from Mexico to Saskatchewan and Alberta. Is reported from eastern Kansas and southeastern Nebraska, and should be looked for in migration or in winter in western Missouri. Mr. J. D. Kastendieck found a dead one hanging on a fence in Stone Co., about nine miles south of Billings. Mr. Chas. K. Worthen took one at Warsaw, IIl., and the species has repeatedly been taken in late autumn as far east as southern Wisconsin. It is probably not so very rare, but easily mistaken for a Pigeon Hawk, from which it may be distinguished by lighter colors, slightly larger size, and by five dark and six gray- ish-white bands in the middle tail feathers, while the Pigeon Hawk has only four dark and five lighter bands. *360. Fanco SPARVERIUS Linn. American Sparrow Hawk. Tinnunculus sparverius. American Kestrel. Geog. Dist—From northern South America through eastern North America to Great Slave Lake; west to Colorado, eastern Wyoming and eastern British Columbia, being replaced in the West by the subspecies phalaena. Breeds from Florida to Newfoundland, and from Louisiana northward throughout its range. Motor from about lat. 40° southward, but chiefly south of the Ohio River. This is undoubtedly the most numerous and, because living in the open, the most frequently seen of all hawks. It is a common summer resident on all cultivated lands of the state, arriving in 104 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. March and leaving in October. A few remain all year from the Missourl River southward, especially in open winters; others remain late and return early, soon after the backbone of the winter is broken, about the middle of February, but the species does not become generally distributed before the middle or end of March. ‘Transients are not much in evidence in spring, but large numbers, mostly birds of the year, are present in August and September, when, together with Mourning Doves, they frequent wheat stubble in search of grasshoppers, while the Doves pick up the scattered grain and weed seeds. Of late several pairs winter in St. Louis, captivated with the beauty of our English Sparrows, an article of diet to which they have recourse when nothing better can be had. Subfamily Pandioninw. Ospreys. *364. PANDION HALIAETUS CAROLINENSIS (Gmel.). American Osprey. Pandion carolinensis. Pandion haliaetus. Fish-hawk. Geog. Dist.—From northern South America and the West Indies to the arctic circle, throughout North America from At- lantic to Pacific, and from Newfoundland to Alaska. Breeds throughout its North American range, and winters from the South Atlantic and Gulf States southward. Like the Bald Eagle, the Osprey, commonly called Fish-hawk, was formerly a well-known summer resident in the same localities and, like the Hagle, its present status as a breeder in the state is one of uncertainty and doubt. It is only within the last de- cade that this condition has been brought about, for ten years ago the Fish-hawk was not uncommon during the breeding sea- son in several parts of the southeast. Its home was to be found not only along the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, but also along such streams as the Gasconade and Osage. Mr. B. T. Gault observed it in May, 1888, in the White River bottom below our southern state boundary. Thirty years ago, before Creve Coeur Lake was connected by railroad with St. Louis, a pair had its home in the vicinity of that lake. On June 26, 1906, the writer saw an Osprey in Atchison Co., the northwest corner of Missouri (from where Audubon reported its presence on May 9, 1843), but whether it should be classed among the summer residents, or only as a summer visitant, could not be Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 105 ascertained. As a transient visitant it is sometimes seen in April and in fall from the middle of September to the first of November, rarely later (November 12, 1894, Keokuk, Currier). A perfectly white Albino Osprey was killed on the Mississippi River near Quincy and is in the fine collection of Mr. Slinger- land of that city. Suborder Striges. Owls. Family Srriaman. Barn Owls. #365. STRIX PRATINCOLA Bonap. American Barn Owl. Strix americana. Strix flammea. Ulula flammea. Strix flammea ameri- cana. Strix flammea pratincola. Monkey-faced Owl. Geog. Dist.—Mexico and United States, north to lat. 41° in the Eastern States, to 46° on the Pacific coast; rarely to New England, Ontario, Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota. Said to leave the Northern States in winter; non-migratory south- ward. In Missouri a rather rare resident, possibly not as rare as for- merly and spreading. At present found only in the northern and western prairie, and in the Ozark border regions, but not in the Ozarks and southeast, which are too densely wooded to suit this friend of the open land. According to Mr. H. Nehrling, the species was a fairly common breeder in the vicinity of Pierce City, Lawrence Co., as long ago as from 1882 to 1887. Kggs have been collected at Independence by Mr. Sheley and at Montgomery City by Mr. Parker. Its occurrence in Clark Co. is demonstrated by MM. Praeger and Currier, and at Warsaw, opposite Alexandria, by Mr. Worthen. Several specimens have been captured in the vicinity of St. Louis, some of which found their way into collections. Family Busonipar. Horned Owls, ete. #366. ASIO WILSONIANUS (Less.). American Long-eared Owl. Otus wilsonianus. Otus americanus. Strix otus. Ulula otus. Otus vul- garis var. wilsonianus. Geog. Dist.—From the tablelands of Mexico throughout the United States and in the British Possessions as far north as the forests extend. Breeds throughout its range and winters from British Columbia and northern United States southward. 106 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. The Long-eared Owl has been found breeding in different parts of Missouri. Mr. Currier found it May 4, 1902, in Clark Co.; Mr. Parker in Montgomery Co.; MM. Sheley, Bush and Tindall found it in Jackson Co. Mr. Sheley has a fine set of six eggs in his collection at Independence. Mr. Bush of Courtney writes that they breed in the deepest recesses of the bottom, and nest in willows. Mr. Tindall of Independence found several pairs nesting in old crows’ nests, and says they begin setting from about March 20 to 25. Specimens have been killed during the breeding season in St. Louis and St. Charles Co., but there are at present no such records from the whole region south of St. Louis and St. Clair Co., where Mr. Prier of Appleton City found them breeding in 1906. Specimens without date are in the col- lections of Dr. Kizer at Springfield and Mr. Kastendieck at Bil- lings. That the species occurs in flocks in winter is attested by Mr. Hurter, who saw a flock of 30, January 30, 1873, in one tree in the Mississippi bottom near St. Louis; also by Mr. Bush, who writes from Courtney that they are abundant in river bottoms, with from 50 to 60 on one tree. *367. ASIO ACCIPITRINUS (Pall.). Short-eared Owl. Strix accipitrinus. Strix brachyotus. Ulula_ brachyotus. Otus brachy- otus. Brachyotus palustris. Marsh Owl. Prairie Owl. Cat Owl. Geog. Dist.—Cosmopolitan except Australia and some islands. In North America, throughout United States and British Prov- inces north to the Arctic Sea, and from Greenland to Point Barrow and the Aleutian Islands. Breeds locally from Vir- ginia, Indiana, Missouri, Kansas, Colorado and southern Oregon northward, and winters irregularly from northern United States southward, chiefly south of lat. 40°. There are several records of its breeding in Missouri. A nest containing downy young was found in 1897 near St. Francisville, Clark Co., and another by Mr. Philo W. Smith, Jr., June 2, 1905, near Maple Lake in St. Charles Co. They are also given as breed- ers in Johnson Co. by Mr. A. F. Smithson of Warrensburg, and in St. Clair Co. by Mr. C. W. Prier of Appleton City. Numerous records and specimens show that as winter visitants Short-eared Owls are well distributed over the northern and western prairie region, where they are irregularly common from October 10 to April 1. Sometimes they invade the Ozark border region, as specimens in the collections at Springfield (Leblane and Kizer) and at Billings (Kastendieck) prove. Mr. Prier reports having Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 107 met with a flock of fifty in the fall of 1905 near Appleton City, and smaller troops are not unusual on the marshes of the Missis- sipp! flood plain north of the Missouri River. *368 SYRNIUM VARIUM (Barton). Barred Owl. Strix nebulosa. Syrnium nebulosum. Ulula nebulosa. Hoot Owl. Geog. Dist.—Eastern United States and southern provinces of Canada from Nova Scotia to Winnepeg; south to northern Texas, being replaced in the Gulf and South Atlantic States by the subspecies allent. Breeds throughout its range, and is non- migratory except in the most northern part of its range. In Missouri, in spite of all persecution, still a fairly common resident in all portions of the state, mainly in the heavy timber of the river bottoms, where there are natural cavities in tall trees, particularly sycamores, in which it can hide and nest. Unlike all other owls, it is often heard to hoot and laugh during the day- time, betraying its whereabouts to the hunter, who deems it his duty to go for it and try to kill it. With all other owls, except the Great Horned Owl, the Hoot Owl is now protected by the new game law of Missouri, but as long as the population is not educated enough to understand and appreciate such a law, and as long as the newspapers do next to nothing in informing and instructing their readers in regard to bird protection, no law will save the owls and hawks from being killed whenever opportunity offers. The slow process of elucidation through Nature study in the schools is the only hope that in course of time bird protection laws will receive that measure of sympathy which is necessary for their enforcement. [370. SCOTIAPTEX NEBULOSA (Forster). Great Gray Owl.] Strix cinerea. Scotiaptex cinerea. Syrnium cinereum. Syrnium lapponi- cum var. cinereum. Geog. Dist.—The wooded districts of northern North America from Lake Superior and Hudson Bay to the Pacific, and north to the arctic circle and through Alaska to Behring Straits. In winter irregularly to northern border of United States, casually as far south as New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Wyoming, California. Though at present no record is on hand, this interesting bird may come occasionally as far south as Missouri, as it was taken once near Omaha, Neb., December 12, 1893, and in some winters 108 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. reaches the United States in comparatively large numbers. For instance, between January 5 and March 3, 1897, six specimens were captured in one county (Aitkin Co.) in central Minnesota. In the winter of 1890-91 such a heavy flight of this Owl occurred in parts of New England that a single taxidermist in Bangor, Me., received twenty-seven specimens. Another considerable flight took place in the winter of 1842-43, when seven were taken in Massachusetts alone. We sometimes hear or read of an Owl ‘“‘as big as an eagle’? having been killed; such cases should be investigated as they may enable us to remove these brackets. Since the above was written another great flight took place in the winter of 1906-07 (Auk. Vol. XXIV, 1907, p. 215). [371. CRYPTOGLAUX TENGMALMI RICHARDSONI (Bonap.). Rich- ardson’s Owl.] Nyctale richardsoni. Nyctale tengmalmi richardsoni. Strix tengmalmi. American Sparrow Owl. Geog. Dist.—Northern North America from the limits of trees in Alaska down to the Gulf of St. Lawrence. In winter irregu- larly to the northern border of United States, rarely to Oregon, Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois and New England. Since our neighboring states have had calls from this rare northern guest (Iowa; Illinois, October 15, 1884, December 26, 1902; Nebraska, December 10, 1892, Lincoln), there is some hope that one of our future observers will find it, if his attention is aroused, for which purpose the species has been entered in this list. The American Sparrow Owl is said to be strictly noc- turnal, carefully hiding during the day, and therefore difficult to find, but it may not be as rare as generally supposed. From the Saw-whet it can be distinguished by its slightly larger size, darker color, spotted instead of streaked head, and brownish barred legs and feet. *372. CRYPTOGLAUX ACADICA (Gmel.). Saw-whet Owl. Strix passerina (Wils., 1812). Strix acadica. Ulula acadica. Nyctale acadia (in juvenile plumage albifrons, frontalis, kirtlandi). Acadian Owl. Kirtland’s Owl. Geog. Dist.—Breeding from about latitude 50° southward to latitude 40°, in the mountains of the West south into Mexico. In winter, in California to Monterey, in the Mississippi Valley Widmann—A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. 109 to Louisiana, on the Atlantic coast to Virginia. Being a great hider in day-time, this little owl is regarded as rare everywhere. The Saw-whet has repeatedly been taken, alive and dead, within the city limits of St. Louis in winter, and is reported asa rare winter visitant by Mr. Worthen, Mr. Praeger and Mr. Cur- rier, but a late date, April 16, 1893, given by the latter, would perhaps indicate that the bird was on its breeding ground when captured. That it breeds occasionally in Missouri is demon- strated by the discovery of a nest with three young ones, in the spring of 1904, by Mr. John E. Miiller of Bluffton, Montgomery Co: *373. Mmcascops asio (Linn.). Screech Owl. Strix asio. Scops asio. Strix naevia. Surnia naevia. Ephialtes asio. Mottled Owl. Geog. Dist.—Of the nine subspecies, this is the one which in- habits the eastern United States from Georgia northward to Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Ontario and southeastern Mani- toba; west in the United States to about the 100th meridian. Generally non-migratory, breeding throughout its range. In all parts of Missouri a well-known resident, now apparently preferring the vicinity of human habitation and nesting wher- ever it finds a suitable site in tree-holes or about buildings, using, if permitted, bird-boxes for nesting and roosting. When liv- ing in a suburb of St. Louis the writer reared a nestful of downy young (5), which were presented to him by Mr. Philo W. Smith, Jr. When they were fully fledged and supposedly able to care for themselves, they were given their freedom.