331. 
ou: 
337b. 
349. 
474c. 
475. 
477. 
478c. 
WYOMING Birps. III 
Marsh Hawk. Have specimen. 
Sharp-shinned Hawk. 
Western Red-tail. Possibly some noted have been Kridert. 
Swainson’s Hawk. Common. 
Golden Eagle. Have seen nest said to have been there 28 
years. 
Sparrow Hawk. Summer resident. 
. Desert Sparrow Hawk. Summer resident. 
Barred Owl. Mounted specimen at Newcastle. 
Saw-whet Owl. I have a specimen. 
. Rocky Mountain Screech Owl. Nests about Arlington. : 
. Western Horned Owl. Very abundant. 
Burrowing Owl. Abundant about the “dog towns.” 
Belted Kinghsher. Abundant. Breeder. 
. Rocky Mountain Woodpecker. Probably this form, but doubt- 
ful. 
. Batchelder’s Woodpecker. Have seen it in Laramie County. 
Red-headed Woodpecker. Very common. 
. Northern Flicker. In the proportion of 1 to 20 of 413. 
Red-shafted Flicker. Abundant. 
Poor-will. Have heard them. 
. Western Nighthawk. Abundant. Nests on bare, gravelly 
knolls. 
Broad-tailed Hummingbird. Abundant. 
Kingbird. In Laramie County. 
Arkansas Kingbird. Abundant. 
Say’s Phoebe. Common. 
Western Wood Pewee. Have them in eastern Laramie County. 
Desert Horned Lark. Abundant. Resident and is around the 
ranch all winter. During the winter of 1911-12 an elevator 
burned at Pine Bluffs, Wyoming, and 50 carloads of grain 
were destroyed. These birds collected there in immense 
flocks to feed upon the scattered grain. They remained the 
entire winter. 
Magpie. Abundant. Breeder. 
Blue Jay. Reported in Carbon County. I saw a Blue Jay 
about 12 miles over the line at Edgemont, South Dakota. 
Black-headed Jay. Abundant about Arlington, in the Wind 
River Mountains. 
